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The Wrestling Thread speaks five languages, and none of them are LOSER!

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- Curt Hawkins spoke with John Pollock for Live Audio Wrestling recently. Check out the highlights:

On his WWE release: "I was with the WWE for eight and a half years, and I saw so many guys get let go and just sit around and feel sorry for themselves, and I feel like nothing good comes of that. To me, wrestling is wrestling. It's what I love to do. If I was able to do it that weekend, why wouldn't I? I was thrilled at the idea that...you know, originally I would be sitting home as a WWE employee like I was doing, collecting a check but not really having any fun. So I was like, "Woo! Alright, sweet." Hit the ground running, you know? For one, it's been like a weight has been lifted. It was just going nowhere, and I sensed that, and I'm thrilled to be back being my own boss and actively wrestling every weekend, which is really just what I want to do. That's all I can ask for. I'm a desperate hopeless romantic for pro wrestling since I was five years old, I just love it. I'm happiest in the ring; I don't care whose ring it is or who owns it, I just want to be in there performing and I'm happy. And I know I'm a sucker in that sense, because it's a business, but that's what makes me happy and that's the truth. What really happened, in my opinion, is when I got hurt in late summer 2012 - I tore my PCL and meniscus, and that was the first time I had to actively stop. I had to have surgery. Ever since then, I never was put on a full road schedule again. It was almost a year and a half of just sitting home and they'd randomly call me for something. It was just bizarre, it never got going again. I think a lot of it was a cost-cutting thing to keep a lot of talent off the road because they weren't going to be used."

On the locker room reaction to Zack Ryder's depush: "The worst part of that whole thing is that it really kind of broke the spirit of the locker room. For years, we were told in all these pep talks that there's a brass ring, you've gotta reach for it and it's there for the taking if you work hard enough and get yourself over. And he did it; he defied the odds and actually does it, and all the boys are rooting for him, like "Oh wow, this is cool as *****. This has never been done before." He got over without the office, without TV time. It was pretty mind-blowing. And then they did just crush it and take it all away from him. To me, I felt the example that set for the rest of the boys was pretty brutal, because then it's like it almost feels hopeless. It's like, you're not going to get pushed unless they pick you to get pushed, and that's kind of it. I thought, above all, that message they sent to the boys was the worst part. They crushed the spirits of a lot of people, like "Okay, so my hard work here isn't going to pay off, huh?"

On working with The Rock for his comeback matches: "That started for his comeback match, the Survivor Series match in 2011. I got a call from John Laurinaitis one afternoon, and that's never a good thing, so I'm like "Oh *****, what could this be about?" It was a conference call with me and Joe Hennig on the line, and he basically explained that Rock needs guy to train with to get ready for his matches, and he's not gonna be at every TV and whatnot. We were basically like his punching bags for whatever he wants to do, whenever he wants to do it. It wound up being incredible. Basically, I could be at home at any point and someone from the office would call me and say, "Hey, Dwayne wants to train tomorrow in Miami, we'll send you the information" and WWE would basically set up a ring, they'd send a ring crew guy and a ref. They'd set up a ring in a warehouse near wherever he was filming. We did it in Miami, we did it in New Orleans. At the drop of a hat, my daily commute would be Miami and back in one day just to get a workout in with Dwayne. It was a blast. Honestly, he could not have been cooler. From jump street, he was the coolest guy."

http://www.411mania.com/wrestling/n...h-Broke-the-Spirit-of-the-WWE-Locker-Room.htm
 
2014-06-25-shield-breakup.jpg
 
- As seen on this week’s WWE Main Event, Roman Reigns was being interviewed in the ring by Renee Young when Reigns suggested that she take off her high heels because if someone came out to attack him, she would need to run away in a hurry. This was done as another rib to Renee. It’s known within WWE that Renee often doesn’t wear shoes when she’s working backstage. Renee was previously ribbed for this by Triple H last month on a post-show.

Source: Wrestling Observer Newsletter

http://dailywrestlingnews.com/reigns-tell-renee-take-heels-recent-wwe-attendance/
 
TNA Impact Wrestling Spoilers 7/17/14

The following are TNA Impact Wrestling tapings results from the Manhattan Center in New York City, airing Thursday, July 17th. Thanks to Tom for the live report:

- There was a pre-show promo from Taz in the ring to get the crowd hype. Kurt Angle also cut a pre-show promo from the balcony.

- Tommy Dreamer and Bully Ray kick off the tapings with a promo for the NYC fans. Dreamer and Bully vs. Ethan Carter III and Rhino is the opening match. Lots of heat for EC3 and Rhino. Dreamer and Bully got the win.

- A Gauntlet Match for the X Division Title starts with Austin Aries and Eddie Edwards. 8 men end up in the match – Aries, Edwards, Manik, Davey Richards, Tigre Uno, DJ Zema Ion, Sanada and Crazzy Steve. Aries retains his title.

- MVP and Kenny King come out and cut a promo before facing Eric Young and Bobby Roode. MVP was on crutches but in his wrestling gear and didn’t really wrestle, just hobbled around the ring. Roode and Young win by DQ when MVP uses one of his crutches.

- Brittany vs. Madison Rayne is next. Fans chanted “this match sucks” before it even began. Madison got the win.

- Jeff Hardy vs. Bobby Lashley for the World Heavyweight Title is next. At one point, Hardy did a swanton onto the steel steps outside of the ring. The match barely went 10 minutes and Lashley retained. The fans were very upset at Lashley winning and gave him a lot of heat.


TNA Impact Wrestling Spoilers 7/24/14


The following are TNA Impact Wrestling tapings results from the Manhattan Center in New York City, airing Thursday, July 24th. Thanks to Tom for the live report:

- Dixie Carter kicks off the show and comes out to huge heel heat with Rockstar Spud, Rhino and Ethan Carter III. Bully Ray ends up interrupting for a fight. Devon makes a surprise return to a big pop and Team 3D reunites in NYC. They clean house and Ray holds EC3 while Devon hits the diving headbutt. They then put Ethan through a table and teased putting Dixie through one.

- Velvet Sky defeated Gail Kim in an Xplosion match.

- Robbie E returns as BroMans come out. Low Ki vs. DJ Zema Ion is next. Low Ki gets the easy win and a big pop.

- The Great Muta came out to barely a reaction which was odd. Muta quickly squashed Robbie E. James Storm came out to have words with Muta. Storm attacked Muta and Sanada ran out. Storm left the ring and Sanada attacked Muta with a steel chair and hit a moonsault.

- Jeff Hardy comes out limping and said we haven’t seen the last of Willow. He brings out Matt Hardy to a pop. Matt cuts a promo about turning his life around and said it’s time to become the TNA Tag Team Champions. The Wolves come out with their titles to respond. A tag team title match is announced for the Destination X tapings.

- In-ring segment with Kurt Angle and Austin Aries. Aries is asked to give up the X Division Title to face Bobby Lashley for the World Heavyweight Title at Destination X. MVP and Lashley were also in the ring. Aries agrees to give up the title and will face Lashley at Destination X.

- King Mo comes out and cuts a promo with Dixie Carter.

- The main event is a Street Fight and it’s Devon, Bully Ray and Tommy Dreamer vs. Rhino, Ethan Carter III and Rockstar Spud. Ezekiel Jackson and Snitsky run in wearing black hoodies and help Team Dixie get the win. Impact ends with Dixie, King Mo, Snitsky, Ezekiel, Rhino, EC3 and Spud posing together.


858160375.jpg

tna-nyc1-628x250.jpg
 
Also, PWInsider is reporting that [BLACKOUT]Josh Matthews[/BLACKOUT] was backstage at the Impact tapings.

Visiting friends? Or seeking employment?
 
[blackout]Snitzky[/blackout] and [blackout]Big Zeke[/blackout] TNA? :lmao:
 
- As seen on this week’s WWE Main Event, Roman Reigns was being interviewed in the ring by Renee Young when Reigns suggested that she take off her high heels because if someone came out to attack him, she would need to run away in a hurry. This was done as another rib to Renee. It’s known within WWE that Renee often doesn’t wear shoes when she’s working backstage. Renee was previously ribbed for this by Triple H last month on a post-show.

I wondered what that was about, it did seem kinda random. The thing was it didn't really make sense as Reigns asked her to take off her heels but she was wearing boots that were easy to run in.

As for Roman's promo, you could tell it was scripted but he did ok, he has a great voice for it and seemed to be trying to channel Taker, I still think they need to tread carefully though, he is talking like Taker talked after he'd been a main eventer for over a decade and fans bought into it as he had the resume to back it up.

Speaking of promos on Main Event, I thought Dolph did a really good job with his at the start of the show, you can tell he was holding back a bit on what he'd like to say but the emotion came across as very real and the crowd connected to that. The 6 man tag that followed was also pretty good.
 
[blackout]Snitzky[/blackout] and [blackout]Big Zeke[/blackout] TNA? :lmao:

I was a fan of the first one, but I don't see how he could contribute to TNA right now. The second one was all about the theme music and sick delts, otherwise a waste of space.
 
I neglected to say something about the passing of former AWA announcer Larry Nelson (real name Larry Shipley) on Monday night from pancreatic cancer. While I was never a big AWA guy (I was much more into the NWA/JCP and the WWF back then), I did watch them whenever I could as a young wrestling fan. I always thought Nelson brought a level of passion and professionalism to their product. That's the very least I can ask of a wrestling announcer or interviewer. Even if I'm not particularly into your product, at least make it seem like you are. Nelson came across as if he loved the AWA brand and tried to make every segment and every angle seem important. I wish WWE's current announce team would do the same.

My thoughts, prayers and condolences go out to his family, friends and loved ones.

Larry_Nelson.jpg
 
You know who use to film there, right?

Yes, I am aware of the Manhattan Center's history with wrestling, from the WWF to ECW to ROH and now TNA.
 
- Curt Hawkins spoke with John Pollock for Live Audio Wrestling recently. Check out the highlights:

On his WWE release: "I was with the WWE for eight and a half years, and I saw so many guys get let go and just sit around and feel sorry for themselves, and I feel like nothing good comes of that. To me, wrestling is wrestling. It's what I love to do. If I was able to do it that weekend, why wouldn't I? I was thrilled at the idea that...you know, originally I would be sitting home as a WWE employee like I was doing, collecting a check but not really having any fun. So I was like, "Woo! Alright, sweet." Hit the ground running, you know? For one, it's been like a weight has been lifted. It was just going nowhere, and I sensed that, and I'm thrilled to be back being my own boss and actively wrestling every weekend, which is really just what I want to do. That's all I can ask for. I'm a desperate hopeless romantic for pro wrestling since I was five years old, I just love it. I'm happiest in the ring; I don't care whose ring it is or who owns it, I just want to be in there performing and I'm happy. And I know I'm a sucker in that sense, because it's a business, but that's what makes me happy and that's the truth. What really happened, in my opinion, is when I got hurt in late summer 2012 - I tore my PCL and meniscus, and that was the first time I had to actively stop. I had to have surgery. Ever since then, I never was put on a full road schedule again. It was almost a year and a half of just sitting home and they'd randomly call me for something. It was just bizarre, it never got going again. I think a lot of it was a cost-cutting thing to keep a lot of talent off the road because they weren't going to be used."

On the locker room reaction to Zack Ryder's depush: "The worst part of that whole thing is that it really kind of broke the spirit of the locker room. For years, we were told in all these pep talks that there's a brass ring, you've gotta reach for it and it's there for the taking if you work hard enough and get yourself over. And he did it; he defied the odds and actually does it, and all the boys are rooting for him, like "Oh wow, this is cool as *****. This has never been done before." He got over without the office, without TV time. It was pretty mind-blowing. And then they did just crush it and take it all away from him. To me, I felt the example that set for the rest of the boys was pretty brutal, because then it's like it almost feels hopeless. It's like, you're not going to get pushed unless they pick you to get pushed, and that's kind of it. I thought, above all, that message they sent to the boys was the worst part. They crushed the spirits of a lot of people, like "Okay, so my hard work here isn't going to pay off, huh?"

On working with The Rock for his comeback matches: "That started for his comeback match, the Survivor Series match in 2011. I got a call from John Laurinaitis one afternoon, and that's never a good thing, so I'm like "Oh *****, what could this be about?" It was a conference call with me and Joe Hennig on the line, and he basically explained that Rock needs guy to train with to get ready for his matches, and he's not gonna be at every TV and whatnot. We were basically like his punching bags for whatever he wants to do, whenever he wants to do it. It wound up being incredible. Basically, I could be at home at any point and someone from the office would call me and say, "Hey, Dwayne wants to train tomorrow in Miami, we'll send you the information" and WWE would basically set up a ring, they'd send a ring crew guy and a ref. They'd set up a ring in a warehouse near wherever he was filming. We did it in Miami, we did it in New Orleans. At the drop of a hat, my daily commute would be Miami and back in one day just to get a workout in with Dwayne. It was a blast. Honestly, he could not have been cooler. From jump street, he was the coolest guy."

http://www.411mania.com/wrestling/n...h-Broke-the-Spirit-of-the-WWE-Locker-Room.htm

I feel bad for guys like Ryder and Ziggler. It must be soul crushing to get over and then have the wwe bury you.

Curt Hawkins was wasted in the WWE. Hawkins was solid on the mic and in the ring. Hawkins could of made a solid midcard heel if he had a little push a decent gimmick. I think he could of got over.
 
- The Great Muta came out to barely a reaction which was odd. Muta quickly squashed Robbie E. James Storm came out to have words with Muta. Storm attacked Muta and Sanada ran out. Storm left the ring and Sanada attacked Muta with a steel chair and hit a moonsault.

As much as I want to see Muta once live before he retires, this would have pissed me off to no end had I gone last night. So glad I refused to go. I'd rather not see Muta in person than see him do something like that.
 
- WWE is now billing Stephanie McMahon as “The principal owner of World Wrestling Entertainment” instead of “one of the principal owners.” When it comes to Vince McMahon, there is some significance in that small change of wording.

With plans falling through months ago for Vince McMahon to return to TV in time for the WrestleMania XXX storylines, the impression was given that while Vince will appear on TV when he has to, such as a tribute to a documentary, the Mr. McMahon character has been retired for the time being and Stephanie would be the McMahon owning the company on TV.

- Shad Gaspard and JTG’s first announced appearance as Crime Time has been confirmed for the September 20th Legends of the Ring convention in Monroe, New Jersey.

- Batista told fans at a Wizard World appearance in Philadelphia last weekend that he will definitely be back to WWE after the release of Guardians of the Galaxy so he should be back in August or September. It was reported when he left that he’d be back in time for SummerSlam.

- There was talk this past week of doing Dean Ambrose vs. Seth Rollins at the July 20th Battleground pay-per-view.

- As noted, Michelle McCool was at the WWE Performance Center on Monday. She was indeed working out with the developmental Divas. McCool and The Undertaker previously spent time at the Performance Center back in September of 2013. As far as we know Taker was not there this week.

- The payoffs from WrestleMania XXX should be coming in the next few weeks and these are the first pay-per-view payoffs since the WWE Network launches. Talents still don’t know how the pay is going to be structured and if they will be paid just on pay-per-view buys or if the pay takes Network revenue into account. Either way, both would be down from recent years.

Source: Wrestling Observer Newsletter

http://dailywrestlingnews.com/mr-mcmahon-retired-wwe-tv-backstage-news-stephanies-role/
http://dailywrestlingnews.com/ambrose-vs-rollins-batistas-wwe-return-crime-time-update/
http://dailywrestlingnews.com/controversial-wwe-payoffs-coming-soon-mccool-wwe/
 
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