The Diamond Exchange

[2] Badd Company, was often accompanied by a pair of female valets known as the Diamond Dolls who were the girls that worked at his club.

Badd Company and Madusa faced the team of the Top Guns (Ricky Rice and Derrick Dukes) and Wendi Richter at the only AWA pay-per-view SuperClash III on December 13, 1988.

[1] When FCW went down, Page was still involved in the club business until Dusty Rhodes returned to World Championship Wrestling.

[5][6] Page managed the Freebirds to a shot at the NWA World Tag Team Championship where they defeated Doom (Butch Reed and Ron Simmons) on February 24.

[14] Hall was named the Diamond Studd, whose gimmick was similar to Ravishing Rick Rude's with the added element of a monster big man heel.

He squashed Tommy Rich in his debut on the June 14 edition of Clash of the Champions XV,[15] and he defeated Tom Zenk at The Great American Bash.

[16] Hall received a significant push in his early days with WCW, but by the end of 1991 this began to fade, starting with the September 2 edition of Clash of the Champions XVI, where Studd was defeated by Ron Simmons.

[17] At Halloween Havoc: Chamber of Horrors, the team of Studd, Abdullah the Butcher, Cactus Jack, and Big Van Vader lost to Sting, El Gigante, and the Steiner Brothers (Rick and Scott).

[18] On the November 19 edition of Clash of the Champions XVII, Studd lost to Zenk in a rematch from The Great American Bash.

[19] With rumors that WCW wanted to take the Diamond Studd away from him,[1] DDP decided to take the advice of Magnum T. A. and begin to wrestle himself.

He headed to the WCW Power Plant where Buddy Lee Parker, The Assassin, and Dusty Rhodes trained the 35-year-old rookie.

He made his wrestling pay-per-view debut at Starrcade in 1991, teaming with Mike Graham in a losing effort to Jushin Thunder Liger and Bill Kazmaier.

[5] Page continued wrestling and brought other wrestlers into his stable, such as Scotty Flamingo (who later became better known as Raven) and Vinnie Vegas (Kevin Nash) in 1992.