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Ric Flair Remembers His Son Reid One Year After His Passing

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WWE Hall of Famer Ric Flair posted the following message on his social media accounts in regards to his son Reid passing away one year ago:

“My dear son Reid,
One year ago today God took you away from your family that loved you so much. As hard as it is to not see and be with you everyday, we all know that you are safe with my parents in heaven and in a far better place than you were here on earth. Your mom, brother, sisters and I miss you so very much. Not a day goes by we don’t all think of you. I adored you as you did me, and I’m forever thankful for you. We traveled the world together and experienced so much side by side. I am so proud to be your father and you will forever be my beautiful son. My world will never be the same without you.

I love you,

Dad”

Official Synopsis For The Rock’s ‘Hercules’ Film

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Partial Credit: PWInsider

Promotional material for The Rock’s Hercules film, which will be released this July, featured the official synopsis for the film, revealing a little more than had initially been announced:

“Everyone knows the legend of Hercules and his twelve labors. Our story begins after the labors, and after the legend…Haunted by a sin from his past, Hercules has become a mercenary. Along with five faithful companions, he travels ancient Greece selling his services for gold and using his legendary reputation to intimidate enemies. But when the benevolent ruler of Thrace and his daughter seek Hercules’ help to defeat a savage and terrifying warlord, Hercules finds that in order for good to triumph and justice to prevail… he must again become the hero he once was… he must embrace his own myth… he must be Hercules.”

The film is based on graphic novel “Hercules: The Thracian Wars” and is directed by Brett Ratner.

WWE’s Tamina also has a small role in the film.

Fighting Spirit Review: Stardom “Third Anniversary” on 1/26/14

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Date: January 26th, 2014
Location: Tokyo Korakuen Hall
Announced Attendance: 1,150

Stardom is another promotion that I am introducing myself to as I broaden my wrestling viewing a bit. I have heard good things about the promotion as they have some skilled wrestlers, so hopefully their first event to be taped for 2014 leaves a positive first impression. This is a big event for Stardom as three of their titles are being defended. Here is the full card:

– Koguma vs. Yuna Manase
– Kaori Yoneyama, Kellie Skater, and Yuhi vs. Toyota, Matsumoto, and Mayu Iwatani
– Takumi Iroha 10 Match Series 4th: Takumi Iroha vs. Yoshiko
– Goddesses of Stardom Championship: Takahashi and Wakizawa vs. Kimura and Alpha Female
– Wonder of Stardom Championship: Act Yasukawa vs. Kairi Hojo
– World of Stardom Championship: Io Shirai vs. Natsuki*Taiyo

Koguma vs. Yuna Manase

Wristlock by Koguma to start, Manase cartwheels out of it and yanks on Koguma’s arm.  Koguma rolls out of it and hits an armdrag, she charges Manase in the corner and delivers a dropkick.  Kicks by Koguma, she picks up Manase but Manase pushes her off and throws Koguma in the corner.  Irish whip by Manase and she hits a running dropkick.  Stomps by Koguma, Irish whip to the corner, reversed, and Manase delivers a running boot to the face.  Koguma falls down to a seated position and Manase stomps on her repeatedly.  Knee by Manase, she pulls out Koguma and covers her for a one count.  Manase picks up Koguma but Koguma clubs her off, and the two trade strikes.  Big boot by Manase but Koguma hits a DDT, cover, but it gets a two count.  Koguma applies a sleeper before applying a stretch hold, but Manase gets out of it.  Front facelock by Koguma but Manase stomps her foot and hits a scissors kick.  Armbar by Manase but Koguma wiggles to the ropes to force a break.  Manase waits for Koguma to get up but Koguma avoids the big boot and hits an elbow.  Slap by Manase, she goes for a scissors kick but Koguma catches it and covers Manase for a two count.  Koguma picks up Manase, Irish whip, reversed, and Manase kicks Koguma in the chest.  Grounded front facelock by Manase and she hits the Payday for a two count cover.  Manase picks up Koguma and goes for it again, but Koguma gets out of it and rolls up Manase for a two count.  Running boot by Manase near the corner, she grabs Koguma and nails the Heel Drop.  Cover, and she picks up the three count.  Your winner:  Yuna Manase

Match Thoughts:  A rookie match, although I am glad that Manase is over 18 with that outfit that she wears.  It was easy to tell these two are still learning, as they still haven’t mastered the staple of Puroresu – strike exchanges.  But besides the awkwardness of those it was not a bad match, just basic which is understandable.  Manase hit her kicks well (the Heel Drop was nice) and it wasn’t long enough to be offensive or anything.  Rookies need experience so while not a great match it wasn’t a bad way to start out the event.  Score:  4.0

Yoneyama, Kellie Skater, and Yuhi vs. Toyota, Matsumoto, and Iwatani

Iwatani and Yuhi start things off.  Yuhi kicks Iwatani to start the match, Irish whip, reversed, Yuhi goes off the ropes as well and Yuhi knocks Iwatani to the mat.  Wristlock by Yuhi and she goes for a springboard move, but Matsumoto shakes the ropes.  Matsumoto comes in the ring and they beat down Yuhi, double Irish whip but Yuhi cartwheels by them.  Skater comes in the ring, and she hits a springboard armdrag while Yuhi hits one onto Matsumoto at the same time.  Yuhi and Skater kick Iwatani and Yoneyama is tagged in.  Toyota and Skater beat down Iwatani, triple Irish whip by Iwatani but she slams on the breaks and Toyota comes off the top turnbuckle with a diving crossbody onto all three.  Skater is singled out in the ring and Matsumoto hits a running splash onto Skater.

A little brown backpack of some sort is put onto Skater’s chest,  Iwatani goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a body splash onto Skater.  They then dump a box full of little brown things (they look like mini-hamburgers), Toyota goes up to the top turnbuckle but Skater moves out of the way of the diving body press. Yoneyama comes back in the ring and attacks Iwatani from behind, German suplex hold by Yuhi to Iwatani but it gets a two count.  Skater waits for Iwatani to get up and kicks her in the chest before hitting a cross-armed Side Russian Leg Sweep for a two count cover.  Matsumoto gets in the ring, the brown bag is put over Skater’s head and Toyota hits a missile dropkick from the top turnbuckle.  Matsumoto grabs Skater and hits a Liger Bomb, cover, and she picks up the three count.  Your winners:  Manami Toyota, Hiroyo Matsumoto , and Mayu Iwatani

Match Thoughts:  I don’t care what all the results say on various websites, it was Matsumoto that got the pin, not Toyota… I know who Toyota is.   Only half of the match was shown but I assume we got the gist of it, I am not 100% sure what the significance of the brown bag is but in the grand scheme of things it doesn’t really matter.  We didn’t really see enough of this to get a great feel for it, but what we saw was fine.  Compared to the last match you could tell these were more seasoned wrestlers as the moves were all hit smoothly and they kept the pace going.  Solid match, just not a lot of it was shown. Score:  5.0

Takumi Iroha vs. Yoshiko

Joined in Progress.  Elbow by Iroha but Yoshiko hits her back and they trade shots.  Yoshiko splashes Iroha from behind and gets her on her shoulders, but Iroha gets out of it.  Iroha goes for a suplex, Yoshiko gets out of it and goes off the ropes but Iroha delivers a dropkick.  Backdrop lift into a front sit-down slam by Iroha, cover, but it gets a two  count.  Iroha waits for Yoshiko to get up and goes for a kick but Yoshiko catches it and headbutts Iroha.  Chokebomb by Iroha and she hits a senton for a two count cover.  Yoshiko positions Iroha in front of the corner, she goes for a reverse splash but Iroha rolls out of the way.  Waistlock by Iroha but Yoshiko elbows out of it, Iroha goes off the ropes and hits a spinning heel kick.  Cover, but Yoshiko kicks out.  Iroha stomps Yoshiko and goes up to the top turnbuckle, delivering a diving body press.  Cover, but again it gets two.  Iroha picks up Yoshiko and applies a waistlock, German suplex hold by Iroha but Yoshiko kicks out.  Iroha picks up Yoshiko and goes for a vertical suplex, but Yoshiko blocks it.  Lariat by Yoshiko, cover, but it gets two.  Yoshiko picks up Iroha and hits a second chokebomb, cover, but Iroha gets a shoulder up. Yoshiko positions Iroha in front of the corner, she goes up to the second turnbuckle and hits a diving senton.  Cover, and she picks up the three count. Your winner:  Yoshiko

Match Thoughts:  Looks like we only saw about half the match.  Yoshiko needs a new killer move, I am generally a big fan of repeating big moves in a match unless its a big title match or something, especially if the move is just a set-up for the finisher.  Iroha is a rookie going through her ‘trial series’ so it is more about her learning than it is about her actually winning matches.  Maybe here she learned that trading strikes with someone twice your size is not a great idea.  Seemed fine for what we saw but I would have liked to have seen the first half of the match.  Score:  4.0

(c) Takahashi and Wakizawa vs. Kyoko Kimura and Alpha Female

This match is for the Goddesses of Stardom Championship.  Kimura and Alpha Female attack their opponents with the belts before the match has started, and beat them down in the ring.  Wakizawa and Takahashi are thrown into different corners but they get the advantage and lariat Kimura and Alpha Female.  Kimura is isolated but she applies The Claw to Takahashi and Wakizawa.  Wakizawa hits a neckbreaker onto Kimura and Takahashi follows with a dropkick.  Wakizawa puts Kimura in a camel clutch while Takahashi poses over them.  Double Irish whip to Kimura but she avoids the double dropkick and kicks both of her opponents.  Kimura tags in Alpha Female, and Alpha Female applies a stretch hold.  Kimura comes back in the ring with some ketchup (I am assuming) in a bottle, and she hits Takahashi with it.  She then sets up Wakizawa in the ropes and sprays ketchup all over her face.  If it had been mayo this would have been a far more disturbing image.  Kimura gets a running start in the ring and kicks Wakizawa in the back of the head while she is still tied up in the ropes.  Kimura tags in Alpha Female, and Alpha Female stands on Wakizawa’s face before rubbing her face into the mat.  Alpha Female stomps Wakizawa into the mat and goes for a lariat but Wakizawa ducks it and rolls up Alpha Female for a two count.  Wakizawa tags in Takahashi, Takahashi clubs Alpha Female against the ropes, Irish whip, reversed, and Takahashi hits an elbow.  Alpha Female returns the favor, Kimura comes in the ring but Takahashi hits a crossbody onto both of them.  Takahashi hits lariats onto both Kimura and Alpha Female in the corner, Wakizawa goes up to the second turnbuckle and hits a diving body press onto Alpha Female.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Wakizawa applies a crossface onto Alpha Female but Alpha Female muscles out of it and hits a side slam.  Alpha Female picks up Takahashi and hits a fallaway slam.  Alpha Female tags in Kimura, knees by Kimura to the head of Takahashi and she tries to hit her with the ketchup, but Takahashi blocks it.  Lariats by Takahashi, cover, but it gets a two count.

Takahashi goes off the ropes but Kimura catches her with a big boot, Kimura goes off the ropes now but Takahashi hits a lariat.  Waistlock by Takahashi but Kimura elbows out of it.  Elbows by Takahashi and she applies another waistlock, Wakizawa comes in the ring to help and Takahashi is finally able to hit the backdrop suplex.  Cover, but Kimura gets a foot on the bottom rope.  We clip ahead as Alpha Female is in the ring and she lariats Wakizawa.  She and Takahashi both go off the ropes but Takahashi’s lariat hits the mark.  Takahashi goes up to the second turnbuckle, Wakizawa then runs in the ring and Wakizawa hurricanranas Takahashi onto Alpha Female.  German suplex hold by Wakizawa to Alpha Female but it gets a two count.  Wakizawa picks up Alpha Female but Alpha Female hits a short-arm lariat.  Alpha Female goes up to the top turnbuckle but Takahashi is back in the ring and hits Alpha Female.  Wakizawa then gets up, she joins Alpha Female on the top turnbuckle and hits a superplex.  Cover, but Alpha Female kicks out at two.  Wakizawa stomps Alpha Female, she goes up to the top turnbuckle but Kimura runs up on the apron and stops her.  Takahashi knocks Kimura out of the ring, while Alpha Female joins Wakizawa on the top turnbuckle.  Wakizawa quickly jumps down and sits Alpha Female on the top turnbuckle, Wakizawa then climbs back up and goes for a Frankensteiner, but Alpha Female catches her.  Kimura comes in the ring and holds Wakizawa, and Alpha Female comes off the top turnbuckle, slamming Wakizawa into the mat.  Cover, but Takahashi breaks it up.  Alpha Female picks up Wakizawa and hits a shoulder drop slam, cover, but again Takahashi breaks it up.  Alpha Female picks up Wakizawa and puts her on her shoulders, but Wakizawa gets off and hits a backslide for a two count.  Wakizawa and Takahashi put their opponents lying in the ring, they both go up to the top turnbuckle and go for diving body presses, but both Kimura and Alpha Female get their knees up.  Alpha Female hits a lariat onto Wakizawa, cover, but Wakizawa barely kicks out.  Alpha Female picks up Wakizawa and nails the Alpha Plex, and she picks up the three count.  Your winners and new champions:  Kyoko Kimura and Alpha Female

Match Thoughts:  A solid match, but the clips in the action made it hard for the wrestlers to really get a good flow going as it was disjointed in parts.  Not that it is their fault, it is just the way the match was presented which is disappointing for a title match.  The wrestling was generally solid although a bit silly at times (such as the ketchup usage and Wakizawa doing a Frankensteiner on her own partner).  There wasn’t anything noticeably wrong with the match, the skipping just hurt the structure.  Score:  6.0

(c) Act Yasukawa vs. Kairi Hojo

This match is for the Wonder of Stardom Championship.  Hojo wants to shake Yasukawa’s hand to start the match, Yasukawa won’t shake it so Hojo dropkicks her in the back instead.  Another dropkick by Hojo and she hits a third before stomping Yasukawa down in the corner.   Snapmare by Hojo and she hits an elbow drop.  Cover, but Yasukawa kicks out.  Hojo applies a single leg crab hold but Yasukawa quickly gets to the ropes to force a break.  Yasukawa slams Hojo into the turnbuckle, Irish whip by Yasukawa and she delivers a dropkick.  Yasukawa picks up Hojo and throws her against the ropes before choking her with her boot.  Yasukawa picks up Hojo, puts her over her shoulder and applies a submission hold.  Yasukawa releases it and picks up Hojo, but Hojo elbows her in the chest.  Hojo goes off the ropes and goes for a spear, but Yasukawa blocks it and spins Hojo to the mat.  Cover by Yasukawa but it gets two.  Yasukawa picks up Hojo and goes for a slam but Hojo slides down her back.  Clubs to the back by Hojo and she stomps Yasukawa.  Hojo goes off the ropes and hits a running neck whip, cover, but it gets a two count.  Cross-armed choke applied by Hojo and she stomps Yasukawa in the back.  Hojo goes up to the second turnbuckle but Yasukawa rolls out of the way of the diving elbow drop.  Yasukawa picks up Hojo and puts her on her shoulder, but Hojo rolls her up for a two count.  Crab hold by Hojo and she pulls it all the way, wrenching Yasukawa’s back.  Elbow drops to the back by Hojo, she covers Yasukawa but she gets a shoulder up.  Hojo picks up Yasukawa, Irish whip, reversed, and Yasukawa rolls up Hojo for a two count.  Yasukawa goes for the Stretch Muffler but her back gives out, preventing her from locking in the move.  Yasukawa picks up Hojo, Irish whip, reversed, and Hojo hits a running shoulder tackle.  Spear by Hojo, cover, but it gets two.

Hojo crosses Yasukawa’s legs and goes for a crab hold but Yasukawa quickly gets a hand on the ropes.  Stomps to the back by Hojo, she puts Yasukawa on her shoulders but Yasukawa hops off and elbows Hojo in the chest.  Hojo elbows her back and they trade strikes, which Yasukawa gets the better of.  Hojo gets back up and elbows Yasukawa against the ropes, double chop by Hojo and she goes off the ropes, but Yasukawa catches her and slams Hojo to the mat.  Cover, but it gets a two.  Yasukawa goes up to the top turnbuckle but Hojo recovers in time and throws her off the top turnbuckle to the mat.  Hojo then goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a diving elbow drop to Yasukawa’s back.  Cover, but Yasukawa gets a shoulder up.  Hojo crosses Yasukawa’s legs and cranks down, twisting Yasukawa’s back.  Yasukawa rakes Hojo in the face to break up the hold and hits Hojo in the head.  Hojo recovers first and elbows Yasukawa while they are still on their knees, and Hojo delivers a headbutt.  Cover, but  it only gets two.  Hojo picks up Yasukawa and elbows her in the head, she goes for another one but Yasukawa catches her with an STO.  Yasukawa goes up to the second turnbuckle and hits a rolling senton, cover, but Hojo gets a shoulder up.  Yasukawa picks up Hojo and puts her on her shoulder, but Hojo lands on her feet and elbows Yasukawa in the back of the head.  Jackknife hold by Hojo, but Yasukawa gets a foot on the ropes.  Hojo picks up Yasukawa, snapmare, she goes off the ropes but Yasukawa ducks the elbow and rolls her up for a two count.  Yasukawa quickly applies the Stretch Muffler, adding in a leg hook to apply more pressure.  Hojo fights it for several moments but she is stuck, and the referee calls for the bell! Your winner and still champion:  Act Yasukawa

Match Thoughts:  This was a really good and well worked match.  The focus by Hojo on Yasukawa’s back was done really well as she never lost focus the entire match.  Yasukawa on her part also sold it the entire match and even failed to be able to apply her finishing move the first time because of it, something that I always enjoy seeing as it just shows that both wrestlers understand the psychology being used and won’t sacrifice that just to get a spot in.  Also the referee calling for the bell without Hojo submitting keeps her strong, as even though it was the right call she protested after the match and stayed crying in the ring while Yasukawa celebrated.  Just overall a really entertaining back and forth battle between these two.  Score:  7.5

(c) Io Shirai vs. Natsuki*Taiyo 

This match is for the World of Stardom Championship.   Tie-up, wristlock by Taiyo but Shirai reverses it into a side headlock.  Taiyo spins out of it, side headlock takedown by Taiyo, headscissors by Shirai and both wrestlers return to their feet.  They lock-up and go into a Test of Strength, monkey flip by Taiyo but Shirai hits a Bodyscissors into an armdrag.  Shirai charges Taiyo but Taiyo trips her up and both are back up again.  Wristlock by Shirai and an Irish whip, and she throws Taiyo to the mat.  Taiyo is back up and goes off the ropes, shoulderblock by Shirai and she flips off the ropes.  They flip around each other for a moment until Shirai hits an armdrag and Taiyo falls out of the ring.  Shirai goes off the ropes but Taiyo rolls back in and dropkicks Shirai in the knee.  Taiyo goes up to the top rope and does a doublestomp on Shirai’s arm as she gets up.  Taiyo kicks Shirai in the arm, elbow by Shirai and they trade elbow shots.  Taiyo gets the better of it, she goes off the ropes and a hard elbow sends Shirai to the mat.  Taiyo picks up Shirai and kicks her in the back and then in the leg.  Taiyo tries to kick Shirai while she is seated on the mat but Shirai ducks multiple times and rolls up Taiyo for a two count.  Taiyo kicks Shirai in the chest but Shirai doe a kip-up and hits a dropkick.  Back up they trade elbows, slaps by Taiyo and she hits Shirai down in the corner.

Taiyo backs up to get a running start and dropkicks Shirai in the chest.  Taiyo goes up to the top turnbuckle and delivers the missile dropkick, she goes for a corner dropkick but Shirai moves out of the way.  Running double knee strike by Shirai in the corner, she goes up to the top turnbuckle but Taiyo is up and jumps up on the top turnbuckle as well.  Shirai grabs Taiyo by the arm and jumps down onto the apron, snapping Taiyo’s arm on the top rope.  Shirai then goes back up top and hits a missile dropkick, cover, but it gets a two count.  Shirai picks up Taiyo and hits a facebuster, cover, but gets a two count.  Shirai applies a crossface into more of a choke hold, and Shirai releases the hold after a moment.  Shirai goes up to the top turnbuckle but Taiyo hops up and hits an armdrag off the top.  Double springboard moonsault by Taiyo, cover, but it gets two.  Shirai grabs Taiyo around the waist but Taiyo trips her up and applies a seated armbar.  Shirai gets to the ropes to force a break, Taiyo goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits the diving body press for a two count.

Taiyo goes back to the arm and goes for a jackknife hold, but Shirai pushes her way out of it.  Sit-down powerbomb by Taiyo, cover, but it gets two.  Taiyo goes off the ropes but Shirai catches her with a dropkick.  Taiyo falls out of the ring, she tries to skin the cat but Shirai dropkicks her in the back.  Shirai bounces off the far ropes and sails out onto Taiyo with a plancha through the ropes.  Shirai goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a moonsault down onto Taiyo as she was starting to get up.  Shirai throws Taiyo into the ring, she then goes on the apron and hits a swandive dropkick.  Tiger feint kick by Shirai and she hits another swandive dropkick, cover, but it gets a two count.  Shirai waits for Taiyo to get up and goes for a kick, Taiyo blocks the first one but not the second one.  Kick to the side of the head by Shirai but Taiyo finally catches one and hits a powerbomb.  Shirai deflects Taiyo’s next attack and delivers another kick to the side of the head.  Shirai positions Taiyo in front of the corner and hits a standing moonsault, she then goes up to the second turnbuckle and hits a moonsault, and finally she hits one off the top turnbuckle.  Cover, but Taiyo kicks out at two.

Shirai goes up top again but Taiyo is up in plenty of time and jumps on top as well.  Taiyo goes for a German suplex off the top but Shirai lands on her feet and delivers a sliding kick to Taiyo.  Cover, but Taiyo gets a shoulder up.  Shirai picks up Taiyo and goes for a suplex but Taiyo slides between her legs.  They trade move attempts before getting into a strike battle, Taiyo grabs Shirai and hits the leg capture suplex hold for a two count.  Taiyo goes up to the top turnbuckle and nails the diving double stomp, cover, but Shirai gets a shoulder up.  Taiyo picks up Shirai, she goes off the ropes and delivers the Taiyo☆Chan Bomb for a two count.  Taiyo picks up Shirai, she goes off the ropes but Shirai catches her with a hurricanrana for a two count.  Shirai picks up Taiyo and hits a hard elbow, but Taiyo returns fire as they trade shots.  Headbutt by Shirai and a slap sends Taiyo to her knees.  Sliding kick by Shirai, cover, but Taiyo kicks out at two.  Shirai positions Taiyo in front of the corner, she goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits the moonsault doublestomp .  Shirai goes up top again and this time she hits a second incredibly accurate moonsault doublestomp.  Suplex de Io by Shirai and she picks up the three count.  Your winner and still champion:  Io Shirai

Match Thoughts:  Well this was a match.  To get straight to the point I thought it was pretty amazing.  There were some little things here and there that didn’t work as they tried to get too cute, but considering the speed in which they go and having very little downtime some missteps here and there are expected.  It may stop the match from becoming an all-time classic but it doesn’t take away from all that they did right.  I have to admit any match with a perfect moonsault doublestomp automatically is good in my book, it is such an awesome looking move when hit properly like the second one was in this match.  I hadn’t seen either of these women before and Shirai is great fun to watch as she was just flying around everywhere.  They didn’t spend a lot of time with submission holds, just a few general ‘weaken your opponent’ ones and seemed content to just drop bombs and big moves on each other.  It felt like a big match, and it was as this was a big anniversary show for them.  Overall just a great match, I can look past a few of the hiccups and a few minor selling when a match is as exciting as this one, definitely a must-see.  Score:  8.5

Final Thoughts:

Best Match: Io Shirai vs. Natsuki*Taiyo.  What have I not already said about this match?  It was exciting, high flying, brutal, and non-stop.  It wasn’t flawless, but both women put on a hell of a match.  A definite recommendation for anyone, even if you are not into Joshi I think that most fans of wrestling would enjoy this one.

MVP:   Io Shirai.  Between the two, Shirai was the more total package of being both elegant and brutal at the same time.  She has great kicks, but also has no issue doing crazy moonsaults all over the place.  I am looking forward to seeing more of her as I continue my review of Stardom in 2014.

Overall:  The event started slow, but each of the three title matches was better than the last one, climaxing with a great encounter in the main event.  The wrestlers were really going all out here for their anniversary show, and win or lose there was certainly no lack of passion.  The last two matches are definitely worth watching, and the others aren’t bad even though some are clipped and as a general rule of thumb I hate clipping in matches.  Definitely worth picking up if you are already a fan of Stardom, but even if not I think this event has a lot of good going for it even with the clipped matches.

Grade:  B

Prince Devitt Headed to WWE? Sign That Says It’s Possible

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Source: F4WOnline
New Japan Pro Wrestling has booked Prince Devitt vs. Ryusuke Taguchi in a Loser Leaves Town match for next Sunday, April 6th at their Invasion Attack 2014 internet pay-per-view from Tokyo. This has led to more speculation that Devitt is headed to WWE.

Devitt reportedly did not sign a new contract with New Japan back in January and it’s no secret that WWE has offered him a deal. There’s a feeling within NJPW that AJ Styles is coming in to take Devitt’s spot, not in the Bullet Club, but as a top talent for the company.

Complete Mid-South Legends Fanfest Schedule For This Friday

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The Mid-South Legends Fanfest announced an updated schedule of event for their Fanfest this Friday 4/4 at the Sigur Center in Chalmette, LA:

8:00 AM – Registration (VIPs pickup materials, buy tickets,) Vendor Setup

9:00 AM – Early Bird entry for all VIPs

9:30 AM – “Breakfast of Champions” Q&A with Rock-n-Roll Express, Midnight Express, Jim Cornette and Superstar Bill Dundee (Open to all VIPs)

10:00 AM – Doors open to Public

11:00 AM – Session One Autograph Signing:
Rock-n-Roll Express (Ricky Morton and Robert Gibson)
Midnight Express (Bobby Eaton and Dennis Condrey)
Jim Cornette
The Fantastics (Bobby Fulton and Tommy Rogers)
Superstar Bill Dundee
11:00 AM – Photo Ops 1: Mr. Wrestling II, Mr. Olympia Jerry Stubbs, SoCal Val

12 Noon – Photo Ops 2: Dark Journey, Porkchop Cash, Sheepherder Luke

1:00 PM – Photo Ops 3: Cowboy Bill Watts, Kamala with Friday

2:00 PM – Session Two Autograph Signing:
Cowboy Bill Watts
Kamala with Friday
Mr. Wrestling II
Mr. Olympia Jerry Stubbs
Sheepherder Luke
Dark Journey
Porkchop Cash
2:00 PM – Photo Ops 4: Fantastics, Superstar Bill Dundee, SoCal Val

3:00 PM – Photo Ops 5: Rock-n-Roll Express, Midnight Express, Jim Cornette

4:30 PM – Photo Ops 6: Bill Watts & Jim Cornette

4:45 PM – Early Entrance to Cajun Style Dinner (Open to Platinum VIPs only)

5:00 PM – Q&A with Cowboy Bill Watts and Jim Cornette (Open to all VIPs)

6:30 PM – Doors open for “Battle Lines” Live Wrestling Event

7:30 PM – Belltime for “Battle Lines” Live Wrestling Event

Registration and ticket pick-up Information

Tickets can be picked up or purchased on the day of the event at the Sigur Center. You will just need to show your id we have all of your other information including tshirt sizes for VIP’s etc. When you check in you will receive your “Battle Lines” event ticket if you ordered a VIP tickets, a lanyard identification and a wristband that will let you to come and go throughout the day. You will need both your lanyard and wristband for entry to the FanFest and Cajun dinner.

In addition to the ticket, lanyard and wristband you will also receive your photo op tickets, t-shirt, souvenir program and any 8×10 photos that you purchased in advance.

Photo Ops

Photo Ops can be paid for and reserved in advance now at MidSouthLegends.com. All photos taken with the Legends will be printed out as 8×10 photos and will be available for pick up within hours at the photo table at the Fanfest venue. All of the stars will be available for photos so reserve your spot with your favorite legend now.

For the Jim Cornette/Bill Watts photo op the goal is to have those photos back to everyone by the end of the Cornette/Watts Q & A session.

Questions and Answer Sessions

There will be two Q & A sessions during the day. The first one will start at 9:30am while a continental breakfast is being served for the VIP ticket holders. Jim Cornette will host the session with the Rock N Roll Express, The Midnight Express and Bill Dundee.

Then the second Q & A session will start at approximately 5:00pm with Jim Cornette and Bill Watts. This will be held during the Cajun Dinner. Seating starts at 4:45pm as the Fanfest winds down.

Have your questions ready for what should be two very entertaining and informative sessions.

Cajun Dinner

The Cajun Dinner for Platinum VIP ticket holders starts at approximately 5:00pm. Seating will start at 4:45pm. The Ballroom for the dinner is in the same building complex as the Sigur Center where the Fanfest will take place. A special entrance to the ballroom for the VIP Platinum ticket holders will be marked. This will be a buffet style dinner with two serving tables. Seating will be at round tables with the legends sitting at many of the tables.

Autographs

Platinum VIP ticket holders only get two free autographs per legend. (Your photo tickets will be given to you at registration).

Autograph tickets can be purchased on the day of the event for a nominal fee.

At registration every ticket holder will be issued a number so that time standing in lines will be shortened. Just like at the deli and announcement will be made on which numbers will be getting their autographs with certain legends at that time.

Battle Lines

In the evening the Legends of Mid South Wrestling and the stars of tomorrow will participate in the Battle Lines wrestling event. The doors open at 6:30pm with bell time at 7:30pm. Platinum and Gold VIP ticket holders will have preferential ring side reserved seating. Just present your ticket at the door to the arena.

To date, tickets have been sold in seven countries and over 20 different states so enjoy the event and we look forward to meeting each of you.

If you have additional questions please send them to questions@midsouthlegends.com. Also stay up to date with the event by visiting our website midsouthlegends.com

The Hardcore Truth: The Bob Holly Story, Summary and ‘Inside’ Information

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The Hardcore Truth: The Bob Holly Story summary and ‘inside’ information

-Holly watched Big Time Wrestling and Portland Wrestling growing up with his stepfather (who would usually order him around, doing chores, etc.). Watching wrestling with his stepfather was the only time his stepfather wouldn’t have him doing chores. He thinks Buddy Rose is a great worker. He thinks Vince told him to get fat for a gimmick then fired him for being too fat. He and one of his friends would wrestle around the yard, but would legitimately be beating each other up, all the way through middle and high school. One match included a coal minor’s glove match (they found a piece of metal bar and duct taped it to a glove). They were never able to go to a live wrestling show growing up.

-He started riding bikes during high school and had a decent job, bought a nice dirt bike and rode all the time. Many, many injuries, but he caught the ‘racing’ bug. He started hill climbing on the bike as well.

-In 2009, someone stole an expensive bike and ATV from his property, pushing them 300 yards down a hill to a waiting truck. The next night, he saw the trucks line up again, he grabbed a gun and hid. They eventually drove away, he gave chase with the gun in his truck, but never found them.

-Holly dated a beautiful girl in high school, Linda. They spent all their time together until she went to the Air Force when he was a senior. After getting divorced, and after his WWE career was over, he found her on Facebook and married her (her husband died a few years earlier).

-He eventually got a girl pregnant, and worked endlessly to put food on the table for her and his daughter. The girl was young and not ready to be a mother. Holly tells stories like the his girlfriend not being able to pick him up from work because she would be ‘making dinner,’ except, after he walked home, there would be no sign of dinner. Her mother eventually gave up custody to her years later with no resistance, and eventually would apologize for the way she acted while they were together.

-He started bar fighting in toughman contests for money at night to bring money home for this girl and his daughter. The girlfriend would be pissed he’d be hanging out in a bar, even though he would never drink much (he never really drank on the road with WWE, either). He would fight in one night tournaments and win, even fighting a bear for money. One time, he was getting ready for a scheduled fight, the regular guy (who he had beat before) left the ring, and someone else stepped in. The ‘someone’ was a semi-pro boxer, who was a ringer from the bar owner. He got beat.

-He was working as a mechanic for the next few years, wanted to get into wrestling, but didn’t know how. He eventually met Marcel Pringle through a friend and begged to be trained, because he didn’t know anyone in the business. Pringle eventually caved and started training in Pensacola with Rip Tyler and Bob Sweetan. He paid $3,000 and they stretched him to get him to quit, which he didn’t. They eventually dropped the class down to three people and trained them. He’d drive almost 90 minutes to train each weekday, train, then go back to his normal job during the day. He started working with Pringle at a larger company as a pipe cutter, than moved up to a welder. He would work his normal job, train, work shows, etc.

-He started out as Hollywood Bob Holly, a plain babyface. No other reasoning other than the heels would control the match, so you’d start out as a babyface. He admits he had zero charisma, zero personality. He started working WOW, taping TV until the middle of the night, and driving back to work. He also did house shows and would still make it work, making it back to work after driving for hours and working the house show. Pat Rose bladed him the first time, and the cut went too deep, he needed to go the ER for two dozen stitches.

-He moved on to Tennessee and worked as a team with Rotten Ron Starr for the Jarretts, who he is not fond of (to put it lightly). He says the Jarretts made a ton of money on the promotion while they starved. The most he made was $189 for two weeks, 12 shows, and they would still have to pay travel expenses. The Jarretts would continually lie about money, so he left, moved home to Mobile, and went back to his old job.

-He started going up to Atlanta for jobs for NWA/WCW, getting $250 for 60 seconds worth of work. He liked it. He worked with Flair who actually have him a lot of offense, and thanked Flair afterward, but Flair brushed him off, and he looks down on Flair for continuing to wrestle after his WWE retirement. He worked Jackie Fulton, and essentially ‘outworked’ him, and Ron Simmons suggested he get a push. He eventually had a falling out with his connection and went back to his old job again.

-He eventually moved again for Cornette and SMW, working as Hollywood Bob Holly again, with a robe, etc, showing more charisma and a push. He would be on the road three days a week and working at another job four days a week. He eventually left SMW and went back to his job full-time and started racing at the local track during his down time, essentially quitting wrestling at this point.

-Percy Pringle was given his tape and he eventually was flown up to see Vince and Dillon after being off for a year or two. No one negotiated a contract back then – he was offered $50 a match, plus airfare, bonuses for PPV matches, merchandise, etc. His first match was against Horowitz, but the first time he was onscreen was the 1994 Royal Rumble, he was surprised they have him so much time in the ring. He drove/hung around with Martel and Savage. He notes that he can’t verify the Savage/Stephanie McMahon rumor, but they were ‘very friendly’ when together.

-His five-on-five match was take off of Wrestlemania X because Michaels and Hall decided to ignore everyone on purpose and go extremely long. When they go to the back, he didn’t say anything, but Savage did, and Holly notes that management always preached to hit your TV time exactly. He notes at this time, Michaels was the biggest asshole in the business, after being nice to him in the past. The clique wasn’t far behind.

-In Europe, the group would fill out order cards every day for meals. For a few days, Bob’s card turned up missing. He didn’t say anything, but eventually told Martel and Savage. Savage told Holly that Shawn had be ripping up his card every day. He went into the clique’s locker room and confronted Shawn, and threatened to cut his fingers off with bolt cutters, Hall started coming toward him and he threatened to “drop him” if Hall came any closer. Hall stopped in his tracks. Savage and Martel stood outside the door, laughing. When he left the room Savage said “That’s the way you fucking handle things, right there.” The next day, Hall and Nash were sitting around, making fun of everyone who walked by. When Bob walked buy, they said something, he turned around, drew an x on Nash’s chin, and said “You say one more word and I’m going to knock your ass out.” Supposedly, Nash and Hall didn’t know what to say.

-His first few months, he made almost nothing in the company. The guys on the bottom would get $50-$100 after expenses and pay was weeks behind, but he kept working hard and gained respect for working hard while being on the bottom. Eventually, Michaels and Nash vacated the tag titles, and he won the tournament with Kid, beating Bigelow and Tatanka. He made $2,500 for the match at the 1995 Royal Rumble.

-The next night, the Gunns dropped him on his head and he was concussed, but they had two more episodes of Raw to tape, so he went back out.

-Bigelow eventually threw him under the bus, saying Holly didn’t want to lose anymore on their house show matches, which, according to Bob, wasn’t true. He confronted Bigelow in front of the locker room. Bigelow backed down, and he noted Bigelow wasn’t too happy, as he didn’t like doing the job to LT, and was eventually run out by the clique. They promised Bigelow a substantial push after losing to LT, but the clique stopped it.

-He went to Vince to drop the “Thurman” name, which Vince agreed to.

-He calls Luger a traitor for leaving for WCW, and Jarrett, too. Holly says Jarrett didn’t like where the program was going with Road Dogg, so he left. Dogg was planning to go with him, but WCW didn’t want him. Jarrett took the offer from WCW and left Dogg without a job. Holly says Jarrett is good in the ring, but an absolutely terrible person in real life.

-He was hoping to do a rematch for the IC title with Jarrett at a PPV, but the clique was moved to face Jarrett and Dogg. He mentions many instances in which the clique took over spots he could have easily filled, and spots taken over by guys he road with, Sid being one. He put over Hunter instead, who he praises as a great worker. He got about $1,000 for the rest of the year for each PPV match, not much else.

-He wasn’t doing much, and was angry about how they were using him, so he went to Vince and pitched the racing idea. Vince got Frito Lay to sponsor him and Holly purchased $300,000 worth of equipment and cars. However, he could never gain steam in the races because he had no time to work in the car each week. When he would get to the track, he only had a few hours to work on the car before qualifying. Eventually, Vince stopped the program, but let Holly keep all of the equipment and cars.

-Sid eventually was forced out by the clique, he couldn’t take it anymore. He was working Holly, and Sid put over Holly, then faked an injury. Hart also took time off. The only one left was ‘Taker. He says the clique pushed everyone out so they could only work themselves at the top, and Hunter eventually joined (he was essentially a bag boy for a year).

-He tells a few story about how cowardly the clique were. He talked about Don Harris going in to their locker room, choking out Shawn, with Kid just standing there. Nash would CONSTANTLY talk about taking out Bret Hart, but never did anything.

-He thinks most of the people who went to WCW in 1996 essentially stabbed Vince in the back (Hall, Nash, Medusa, Dibiase, etc.)

-He thinks his talent held him back. He was so good and reliable, he would work the new guys coming in and that was it. Sid went to bat for him in 1997 and threatened to quit if they didn’t push Bob and put him back on the road. In reality, Sid liked traveling with Holly, so he wanted him back on the road. Sid eventually left, and he left, and took a decent job as a TIG welder.

-Eventually, Pritchard called and wanted him back full-time. They promised to pay him at least as much as he was making as a welder, they signed him but took awhile to call him back up for training, and he didn’t do a thing from August 1997 to March 1998, except for travel to TV a few times and not working.

-He doesn’t think Montreal was a work. He said if it was, it was the greatest work in wrestling history.

-He came back as a babyface, which didn’t take, so they started the New Midnight Express, which obviously didn’t work.

-Holly talks about Brawl for All, and says it was a tool to get Steve Williams over, nothing more. Each guy would get $5,000 per match, win or lose, with the winner getting $100,000. Tiger Ali Singh dropped out, so Bradshaw suggested to management that Holly take his place. Blackman was entered, and started training. Holly labels Blackman as one of the most dangerous men he’s ever met. Once they found out Blackman was going to basically start ripping apart people with kicks, they changed the rules of the competition. Blackman blew out his own knee in training, otherwise, Holly says he still would have one. Holly lost to Gunn in the first round. He said the judges fixed the first Williams’ fight, as this was nothing more than a competition to put him over. The next match, the entire locker room exploded in the back when Gunn knocked out Williams, because they know management wanted Williams to win. Holly says he was next to Williams, who was getting looked over by the training staff, as he had a dislocated jaw and torn hamstring, and Williams said “I don’t know what they’re going to do now … they already paid me the prize money.” He thinks Gunn won the following bouts against Godfather and Bradshaw fair and square. He says the Butterbean match was revenge from management for Gunn knocking out Williams.

-He mentions a few road stories, including Bradshaw ramming Holly through an intersection in their rental cars. Eventually, Bradshaw pissed off Blackman with some juvenile stuff in an airport. Blackman told him to stop, threatened to take him out, and Bradshaw kept up. Blackman punched him a few times before he knew what hit him. Blackman backed up for a massive kick, but got caught for a second by a luggage strap, and Snow, Holly and Simmons stepped in to stop it. Bradshaw stood up and apologized the next day, in front of everyone, at catering when Blackman confronted him again.

-He eventually moved into the JOB Squad and into the hardcore stuff, he was paid $20,000 for his match with Snow and Billy Gunn at Wrestlemania XV.

-He mentions Bradshaw as the stiffest guy he’s worked.

-He talked about the story he held Snow up for a suplex at a house show and moved away his singlet to expose Snow’s dick.

-He talked about Over the Edge 1999. He says Owen flipped his cape back and unhooked the cable by doing so, at least that’s what they were told. Owen jumped off the catwalk without being attached. He thinks they should have cancelled the show. Emotionally, he basically shut himself down in order to continue working and being on the road. He’s says it’s sort of inhumane to do that, but you have to in order to keep working.

-Holly loved the ‘Big Shot’ gimmick and working against Kane and Big Show, and was surprised when that ended and Mike Lockwood came in to work as Crash. He says when they won the tag titles in 1999, there was absolutely no financial benefit, and there isn’t really any benefit to be tag team champions.

-Holly notes that Jarrett did get Vince to pay him $300,000 to appear at No Mercy against Chyna. Jim Ross, who was in charge of contracts, failed to sign Jarrett to an extension (he nearly lost his job because of it). Jarrett walked in without his gear and the belt, and told Vince he wanted all of his past PPV money right now or he wouldn’t appear. Vince wired the money to his account and Jarrett then went to grab his gear. Shane McMahon wanted to beat the crap out of Jarrett.

-He thinks Sable brought the Divas into the mainstream, not Sunny. He thinks Trish Stratus is highly overrated. Chyna would forget stuff all the time when they worked, but tried hard at first, then got a massive ego. He says Gail Kim and Beth Phoenix are great. He says Lawler told Kat to flash her tits on PPV and management didn’t know anything about it. He noted everyone hated Melina, who thought she was the best wrestler in the locker room. Holly understood why John Morrison didn’t stand up for himself when Melina was getting it on with Big Dave while dating John.

-Chyna would offer to be on the ring crew to get a job in 1996, but in 1998, she wouldn’t lift a finger to help anyone or bother to talk to anyone she had been friendly with a year before.

-In the early part of 2000, his contract was expiring. Bischoff called and offered him double whatever Vince would offer him to jump, but he declined. He wanted to be loyal to Vince. He ended up signing a new contract for 40 percent more than he made the previous year. He later mentions part of the reason was he didn’t want to through the process of meeting new staff, trying to prove himself again, etc., and he thought of WWE as his family at the time. They knew his strengths, weaknesses, etc., and could use him appropriately.

-Paul Bearer was going to transition to timekeeper when he was being phased out as a manager, but he made fun of Kevin Dunn at one point. Holly notes that since Kevin Dunn was essentially the #2 before HHH continued kissing Vince’s ass, Bearer was fired.

-He liked Earl Hebner, Korderas, and Chioda was referees. He says Teddy Long was terrible.

-He says Konnan and Douglas weren’t offered jobs when Saturn, Benoit, Malenko, and Guerrero jumped. He thinks Hunter didn’t want Shane because of the heat with the clique back in the day and Konnan wasn’t well-liked by a lot of people in the business. He hates how Benoit was pinned clean by HHH in his first match, Holly says it may have been done to see if Benoit and the group would understand their place when they came in. He was pretty close to Benoit after he came in.

-He mentions Mae Young asked Holly specifically to nail her with a clothesline and mentioned how great she and Moolah were. He said “No, Mae, when I hit a clothesline, I try to rip their head off. It’s TV”. She replied with “Bring it on, motherfucker!” while standing in gorilla. When he asked again, she said “If you don’t, when we get back. I’m going to kick your ass!” He laid her out during the segment. When they go to the back, he asked if she was okay, she patted him on the chest, and said “That’s how you lay a clothesline in, right there!”

-At one point, he was pretty sure Snow and Foley ribbed him, leaving him at an airport with no car, and, backstage at the next show, Hawk ‘blew a gasket’ and want to crush the two. This led to Wrestler’s Court, which they can’t do anymore because of the corporate nature of the WWE. Undertaker would preside. Foley eventually paid Holly $500 to not end up in Wrestler’s Court.

-Edge and Christian were in Wrestler’s Court at one point, as they had been giving/buying gifts for Brian Gerwitz, who wrote for them. At that time, each guy had one writer who would write for the same person each week (Holly’s was Ed Koskey for awhile). The gift giving was a big rule at that point. Simmons would represent the defendants (usually just shrugging his shoulders) and Bradshaw was represent the prosecution. This specific case was settled by having Edge and Christian buy ‘Taker a fifth of JD, the APA some beer, and Holly some protein powder.

-The APA stiffed Public Enemy. Apparently, Holly says Public Enemy still expected the APA to go through tables, even though the APA said they weren’t.

-The 13-man Hardcore Title finished was production’s fault, even though Tim White got chewed out and almost lost his job. Production was counting down White in his earpiece, and White counted the pinfall according to that countdown. However, the countdown on the screen was off from what White was being told through his earpiece. Crash was going to go over and retain, but they switched the title to Holly at that moment and fixed in the next night on Raw.

-Holly notes how the rock was horrible his first few years, and says the Rock agrees. They were almost finished with the Rock when he eventually caught on. He says Rock is still very gracious, humble, and genuine for everything.

-Kurt Angle felt terrible about breaking his forearm with his shin with the moonsault. Until that point, Angle always missed the moonsault, but Holly said to land it this time. Kurt Angle says in his book that right after it happened, he took over and became the ‘ring general’ for the match. Holly disputes this and kept calling everything because Kurt freaked out. Angle felt terrible. He went to the hospital to see Holly, brought him to the hotel, checked him in, brought him breakfast the next morning and helped him to the airport. Angle called him every week to check up on him and sent him care packages during his recovery.

-When he returned, he hoped he would have a program with Angle, but he made his returned and saved Crash from Angle, and that was it. He kept putting people over for the rest of the year, and this was the only year he made more than he downside guarantee.

-Crash began to struggle with how he was being used and constantly complained, while Bob kept his mouth shut and kept working. Crash began to drink heavily but wasn’t a drug guy. After he was released in 2003, Crash was living with Stevie Richards when his drinking problem worsened. Crash eventually found out his girlfriend was screwing one of the guys and died in Stevie’s house.

-Holly, and the rest of the crew, didn’t know anything about the buyout in 2001 until it happened. They were all scared of losing their jobs when they found out. Holly thinks they entire angle was doomed because they didn’t bring over guys like Goldberg and Sting.

-There’s a funny bit about DDP’s last match in WWE, which was against Holly. Benoit warned Holly that DDP scripted every single moment in his matches, literally writing down every facial expression, punch, tie-up, etc. Holly kept putting DDP off during the night of his last match, and DDP was freaking out because they didn’t go over any part of the match before they went out.

-The agents suggested to the guys that they rough up O’Haire and Palumbo at MSG, to put the incoming WCW guys in their place.

-He (and apparently, everyone else) hated Buff Bagwell because he wouldn’t show up on time and acted like a superstar, wouldn’t shake anyone’s hand, wouldn’t dress with anyone, etc. The staff eventually sat Bagwell down and told him the proper protocol and how to act, but he still acted the same way. Holly, Simmons and Bradshaw roughed him up in the ring pretty bad at the direction of Jim Ross.

-He was upset when Hall and Nash came in because it took a spot way from him, and hated they were given spots after being disloyal to Vince. He said alcohol use by Hall at this point ended his career. He thinks the only reason they were given the spot was because of their relationship with HHH.

-During Tough Enough, MTV would push to keep certain contestants because they were good for the show. He said Linda Miles got a massive ego and would complain about the travel, the bumps, the work, constantly and ordered one of the veterans to grab her bag at baggage claim. The word got back to the office and she was fired.

-Holly worked with Randy Orton at the request of management when Orton started out, and Jim Ross asked him to push Orton to see if Orton could handle it. Holly said Orton would listen and took advice, but had a terrible temper. He mentioned Orton should have been suspended more than he was, and told the story of Orton destroying a hotel room when he was the champion in Spain. When the group flight was delayed, Orton did $15,000 worth of damage to a hotel room, which HHH paid for on the spot. Holly thinks Orton grew up once he became a father.

-Holly goes through the Lesnar powerbomb he took, in which he landed on his neck. Holly says he didn’t rotate correctly to get up on Lesnar’s shoulders, and it caused him to be dropped on his neck and his body going numb. They got up and eventually re-did the spot as they were taping TV. He hates that people think he intentionally sandbagged Lesnar, because that wasn’t the case. He went home and during the week, he wasn’t able to carry heavy dishes, etc. When he worked a match that weekend, every bump and punch caused shooting pains in his back and neck. His MRI showed a ruptured disc, cracked vertebrae, and pinched nerves. Lesnar and Vince both called after his surgery to check up on him. He was paid his normal pay while he was out and thought he’d have a feud with Lesnar when he returned.

-Before undergoing neck surgery, the office called about doing an appearance on the third season of Tough Enough. When he was there, the group was going a bunch of chain spots in the ring, smiling, laughing, etc, and he didn’t appreciate them not selling or not being serious. When he went it, he was in with Matt Cappotelli, and went in to rough him up in the corner. When he was putting the boots to Cappotelli, Cappotelli would try to move, get up, and not say still, so Holly kept kicking him and busted him open. He thought it was a disgrace when he saw Cappotelli crying on TV over the incident.

-Mentions Blackman, again, as being the toughest guy in wrestling. Shamrock, the APA, Angle, Shelton Benjamin, Regal, too. He specifically mentions Kendrick and London as legit tough guys, while Cena, HHH, and Batista are not. He mentions Booker T knocked Batista out cold at one point.

-When he returned, he thought there would be more buildup and a long feud with Lesnar, and didn’t think the things they did on TV to build up the match on TV made sense. Lesnar didn’t want to work with him, though, because he wasn’t a top guy. While they had been given 15 minutes for their match at Royal Rumble, Michaels and HHH wanted to go longer in their main event, so it was cut to 8 minutes with entrances. Holly was pissed, especially seeing how HHH and Shawn worked each other every other PPV, and he rarely got a chance to have a spot that high on the card. The HHH-Michaels main event with 29 minutes.

-He didn’t like Lesnar deciding to leave without bothering to put anyone over.

-He didn’t appear at Wrestlemania that year, and feels he was overlooked, again.

-He mentions Eddie Guerrero wanting to drop the title because the schedule and pressure was getting to him.

-Holly went back to working with the newer talent, and mentioned Kevin Fertig/Thorne/Mordecai as being really respectful, and great in the ring. He liked Haas and Benjamin. He hated Robbie of the Highlanders after Robbie disrespected him in the ring. Rory was nice, but Robbie ruined it for both of them with his attitude and showing up in the TNA crowd. Heidenreich was a legit maniac who couldn’t be bothered to show up on time, and also doesn’t understand why the pushed Carlito, and says Simon Dean was a major stooge for the office. He goes on to list a few people who got pushes when they shouldn’t have: Luther Reigns (no knowledge of the business or how to perform), Nunzio (too small), Mark Jindrak (too worried about his looks), Kenzo Suzuki (couldn’t speak English), and the Bashams (didn’t have the ‘it’ factor). He didn’t like all of these guys getting pushes when he wasn’t.

-Sylvain Grenier was pushed because he was in a relationship with Pat Patterson. Holly mentions an inappropriate comment Patterson made toward him backstage.

-Everyone hated Rene Dupree, including Bob, for how he acted backstage. He was with Dupree in Spokane and had to get home because their was hurricane coming through, he asked Dupree to keep his rental car and drop it off the next day. Eventually, his driver’s license was suspended, a warrant was put out for his arrest from the state of Washington. Dupree denied getting a ticket and wouldn’t apologize for the incident or admit anything. When they worked a tag match, Holly stiffed Dupree, Dupree immediately ran to the back, and Holly chased him, tackled him, and started to beat the crap out of him until Finlay and Show pulled him off. Vince chewed him out, but he stood up for himself and Vince understood, but he thinks the situation put him in bad standing with HHH. Dupree eventually admitted to the ticket and apologized.

-He learned from Jjimmy Yang that Daniel Puder kept calling his buddies after Holly put Puder over and Puder would brag that he was beating Holly every night, so he stiffed Puder in the ring. Benoit, Guerrero, and Holly all stiffed Puder when the four of them were the first four in the Royal Rumble.

-He notes Guerrero worked with a ruptured disc in his back when he had the belt and was getting stressed, and his health suffered more because of it. Guerrero had asked for time off and they said no. Guerrero would lay on the trainer’s table backstage at every house show, drink an energy drink before he would get up for his match, work, then come back and lay on the table until everyone left. Holly says Guerrero was finding it hard to cope with everything and Guerrero went off on Holly because of stress at one point. Holly understands that it was because of stress, but that was the last time they spoke, as Guerrero died shortly after that. He thinks the organization, management, and Vince had a part in Guerrero’s death by not giving him time off, and keeping Vicki around may be because Vince feels he’s partly at fault. Again, Holly didn’t really grieve and shut down emotionally to the situation.

-He went to Europe, even though he was having massive problems with his elbow after John Laurinaitis told him they needed him on the tour (Holly ended up only being needed for battle royals). His arm started going numb and he felt like he was sick with the flu. It ended up being a staph infection and they had to schedule surgery, but had to wait for the infection to lessen. He had to have his arm drained during the tour. When he went to his doctor, he went immediately to the hospital on orders from his doctor. He was in the hospital for four weeks and, at first, nothing would lessen the infection. The last-ditch antibiotic worked – if it hadn’t, they would have amputated his arm.

-Before the ordeal, he felt like a locker room leader. He made Kennedy change outside the hallway for a few months for not thanking people who were putting him over when asked to. Holly later found out Kennedy had just lost his father and was distraught about it.

-He confirms the story of Miz eating chicken over Benoit’s bag, and Benoit making the Miz dress in the hallway for six months after that.

-He would do cycles of Deca and testosterone, and doesn’t think the Wellness Program testing was random at all. Vince decided to suspend him once for a violation, even though he claims he had a valid subscription.

-He needed 25 stitches for the 2006 match against Rob Van Dam. They wanted to stop the match, but he wouldn’t let them. He mentions Rob Van Dam was a rare character in the business, always being grateful and appreciative to everyone. He wasn’t happy when they decided to use Test as the top heel rather than himself. He was also pissed because they pushed Lashley, Umaga, and Test ahead of him and Lashley quit and the other two were died two years later.

-Holly was supposed to be in Umaga’s spot for the Trump vs. McMahon angle, but they gave Umaga the spot without telling him. He was also upset he wasn’t involved in the eight-man ECW match at Wrestlemania.

-When he traveled with Big Show, Big Show always paid. He says Show always smoked and rarely worked out, and was never in decent ring shape.

-Chris Benoit was one of the nicest people he knew and was honest about a lot of stuff, unlike the other guys. When they rode together, Benoit would have two or three beers after the match in the car and they would sit in silence. He said it was nice to not have any pressure and to just unwind in silence at times. Benoit would be very nice to everyone, even when dealing with traveling issues. He thinks his intensity in the ring was Benoit relieving stress. Benoit did say that when he wasn’t off the road, he and Nancy drank a lot and argued a lot. Nancy wanted him off the road, but Benoit felt he owed it to the company because they invested so much in him. Chris’ daughter from a previous marriage didn’t accept Nancy as her stepmother, and would literally not speak to her, even though she would spend every summer there. Benoit kept an action figure of Guerrero in the passenger seat of his Humvee after Guerrero passed – the two of them were extremely religious.

-Holly was supposed to stop by Benoit’s house on Wednesday/Thursday, as he was in Atlanta to see a physician. He decided against it, as he figured Benoit just got off the road and wanted to spend time with his kids and Nancy. On Friday, Benoit called and was angry that he never stopped over. This was the Friday that Benoit killed Nancy, killed Daniel on Saturday, and himself on Sunday. He thinks Benoit suffered mental trauma. He thinks Benoit killed Nancy in one of their arguments, and killed Daniel knowing Daniel would grow up without a mother and with a father in prison. Holly says the rumor of Benoit having a relationship with someone on the locker room wasn’t true. Holly wonders if Benoit getting angry at him earlier in the week was Benoit reaching out to him, because Benoit never acted that way.

-He looked down on Matt Hardy when he returned to work with Edge and Lita. Hardy would constantly talk about stiffing Edge in the ring but never did anything about it.

-He started working with Cody Rhodes in a rookie vs. veteran storyline. At first, Cody was great and would listen to anything he said. Eventually, Dusty Rhodes told Cody to outshine Holly and that was the end of the program.

-He was addicted to pain medication in 2003 but scaled back. In 2008, he grabbed a few pills from Kennedy’s bag (with his permission), but it started a rumor because Umaga saw him grab the pills from the bag. When John Laurinaitis asked Kennedy to explain, he said Holly stole the pills. He was upset because Kennedy threw him under the bus at a time when he knew Holly was struggling with a divorce and being written off of TV.

-Eventually, he wanted to bring back Billy Gunn to start a program against Rhodes and Dibiase, but creative didn’t go for it. He was released in January 2009, and lasted 15 years. He says he really only complained to management once, in 2005, and Vince and Stephanie didn’t have an answer for him. He didn’t get any thank you from Vince after he was released.

-He thinks he was released because of politics and slams HHH some more, noting how they didn’t bother bringing back the New Age Outlaws for the reformation of DX, so HHH and Michaels could keep all the money. He hates that HHH comes back for Wrestlemania paydays when he could be giving that spot (and pay) to a younger worker.

-He was never married to BB. He implies they did have a relationship.

-He had a few good years with a downside guarantee of $275,000 and one year in which he made $400,000, and he was smart with his money. He did a few indy shots and enjoyed not having to worry about travel, hotels, etc, while doing some of the shows.

Rob Van Dam’s WWE Return Date Set

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The Wrestling Observer Newsletter reports that Rob Van Dam is scheduled to return to WWE on the April 7th RAW, the night after WrestleMania XXX, for a several month run.

PWInsider further reported that WWE has booked travel arrangements for RVD and that he will be with them during WrestleMania XXX weekend. They say his return to WWE TV is imminent.

Batista Comments On Fans Hijacking Events, Success of Daniel Bryan, And More

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Batista recently spoke with Mike Jones of DC 101 in Washington, DC. Batista commented on the WWE fans hijacking shows these days:

“It’s the whole show that they are missing out on. I love that they love Daniel Bryan, it’s great. He deserves all of his success, but at the same time, we can’t have 16 segments of Daniel Bryan. They would get bored really fast. He is a star on the show, he’s gonna be out there eventually. If you chant his name through every other match that’s going on, it’s just… they’re missing out.”

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