Ole Anderson Net Worth: How Much Is Ole Anderson Worth?
Robert Young
Updated on December 31, 2025
Ole Anderson net worth-Former American professional wrestler, Alan Robert Rogowski, professionally known as Ole Anderson was born on September 22, 1942, in Minneapolis, Minnesota in the United States of America.
How much was Ole Anderson worth?
As of the time of his demise, Ole Anderson had a net worth estimated to be from about $500,000 to $2 million as of 2024. He was believed to have amassed his impressive net worth from his profession as a wrestler, a booker, and a promoter.
Ole Anderson assets
As of the time of filing this report, we have no information about Ole Anderson’s assets and lifestyle.
Ole Anderson career
Verne Gagne and Dick the Bruiser trained Anderson how to wrestle. In his first match as “Rock Rogowski” in the Minneapolis Auditorium, he defeated José Quintero on August 19, 1967, in his American Wrestling Association (AWA) debut.
After going on a brief winning streak, he and Mighty Igor Vodik lost their attempt to challenge Harley Race and Larry Hennig for the AWA World Tag Team Championship the following month.
Rogowski won the AWA Midwest Heavyweight Championship from Bob Orton in October 1967, but Orton reclaimed the belt the following month.
He had two more runs at the AWA World Tag Team Championship in December 1967, losing both times to champions Dr. Moto and Mitsu Arakawa with Bill Watts in the other team. Prior to switching to Jim Crockett Promotions in June 1968, Rogowski was a regular wrestler for the AWA.
Anderson started competing for the Carolina-based Jim Crockett Promotions in the middle of 1968. He took on the ring name Ole Anderson and introduced himself as Gene and Lars Anderson’s brother. Known as Minnesota Wrecking Crew, the three wrestlers participated in a sequence of matches as a six-man tag team.
They started a feud with Art Thomas, George Becker, and Johnny Weaver in September 1968. This led to a Texas death match in October 1968, which Becker, Thomas, and Weaver won.
Lars Anderson departed the region to go back to Minnesota after the Texas death match, and the Minnesota Wrecking Crew carried on as a tag team.
In November 1970, Anderson made a comeback to the American Wrestling Association, assuming the ring name “Rock Rogowski” once more. After making a comeback, he defeated Tex McKenzie to reclaim the AWA Midwest Heavyweight Championship, but Stan Pulaski won it the next month.
Anderson successfully challenged his trainer Verne Gagne for the AWA World Heavyweight Championship in November 1970 and forced him to double count out.
Anderson started competing for the Florida-based Championship Wrestling from Florida promotion in July 1971. He and Ronnie Garvin created a tag team shortly after he arrived, and later that month, they won the vacant NWA Florida Tag Team Championship.
The Australians, Ron Miller and Larry O’Dea, defeated them for the crowns the next month. Jack Brisco lost to Anderson in December 1971, and Anderson took home the NWA Florida Television Championship. One week later, he lost to Bob Roop, ending his reign.
Up until the spring of 1972, Anderson was a regular wrestler for Championship Wrestling out of Florida. After that, he left to rejoin Jim Crockett Promotions.
Anderson opposed the move and teamed up with longstanding NWA-approved promoters Fred Ward and Ralph Freed to launch a new organization named Championship Wrestling from Georgia when Jack and Jerry Brisco sold Vince McMahon the majority of their stake in the GCW promotion.
Jim Crockett Promotions and Championship Wrestling from Georgia practically combined in April of 1985. At the same time when Marty Lunde made his JCP debut as Arn Anderson, Anderson was partnering with Thunderbolt Patterson in GCW.
In 1986, Anderson joined Ric Flair, Arn Anderson, Tully Blanchard, manager J. J. Dillon, and other villainous stable members as part of The Four Horsemen.
Anderson wrote a book titled Inside Out: How Corporate America Destroyed Professional Wrestling, but he stopped participating in the sport after that.
In addition, he made hints about his resentment against buddy and former partner Ric Flair, whom he had criticized for wrestling the same match for years. According to Flair’s WWE biography, after losing a loser-leave-town match to Mr. Perfect on national television in 1993, Ole, the top booker at WCW at the time, questioned him about what good he was to WCW.
Flair ended their connection because he saw this as a personal jab. Along with Vince McMahon, Dusty Rhodes, Michael Hayes, Paul Heyman, Eric Bischoff, Tully Blanchard, Jim Herd, Roddy Piper, and Bruiser Brody, Anderson was also outspoken about his personal problems with these individuals.
He was called “an intriguing, almost mythical, figure in the wrestling business” by journalist Mike Mooneyham in 2004.
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