The Wrestling Thread 2015 - IN THE BOOKS! PLEASE LOCK THREAD MODS!

Afraid so, and just like when his son took over the Blackhawks once he died alot of things are really going to change once Steph and Triple H took over and it is going to be overnight.

Survivor Series 92 was a one match show. You can skip everything and go to Shawn vs Bret. Starrcade 95 was mostly ruined by Dusty’s godawful announcing. Seriously he is the worst announcer of all-time.

Starcade 97?

That ppv was hyped for nothing lol

The one i can remember is Halloween Havoc. I forgot what exact year, 1999 i think… It’s where Sting was supposed to wrestler Hogan and hogan just came in and layed down. Most of the matches were terrible too.

funny enough i still own a few of those oldschool roh shirts lol.

Is it wrong to think RVD is one of the most consistent and exciting wrestlers of all time?
Guy was still doing the same moves in his early 40’s as he did in his 20’s.

I’m gonna put my foot down here and put RVD on my top 10 list of best wrestlers of all time.

How unfortunate.

Fuck youuuuu Stuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu

I can’t hate on RVD. He entertains me.

Also… House shows, where new finishers emerge.

And when you see it, you will shit stars.

https://fbcdn-sphotos-d-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xpf1/v/t1.0-9/10485073_325756790928816_1168622204048916909_n.jpg?oh=cc7039c456f9f751201edec49912fc5f&oe=5495B6D1&gda=1418046139_90e8c1d2e21fca827119aa668e0cc7b3

I dunno, RVD has gotten quite stale during the last few years. If you saw one RVD match, you’ve pretty much seen them all. You thought that WWE was holding him back, but seeing his TNA tenure, that wasn’t too different either.

I guess age DOES limit even people like RVD.

Jokes on you. My anus is always prepared

Wait.

Fuck.

Long ass WWE interview with Itami,Steen,Devitt,and Zayn.

[details=Spoiler]On August, NXT sensation Sami Zayn sent out a tweet that, in precisely 140 characters, at once gave hope, elicited excitement and put the sports-entertainment world on notice.

Some 3,000-plus favorite tweets and retweets later and the buzz surrounding “Zayn’s generation” — let’s call it WWE’s new New Generation — has only intensified. As WWE fans await the in-ring debuts of international Superstars Fergal Devitt and the wrestler formerly known as KENTA, Hideo Itami, and independent wrestling demigod Kevin Steen, WWE.com sat down with the NXT Five inside the place they call home — the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Fla. — for a round table discussion to learn about their connections to each other inside the ring and out.
Read on as they discuss their struggles journeying to WWE, why WWE has always been the final destination, and the heavy duty that comes with being the new guard.

WWE.COM: We’ve gathered you all here at 9 a.m. on a Thursday because of a tweet Sami Zayn sent.

SAMI ZAYN: I heard it from these guys yesterday, I’ll tell you. Today is our only day off.

ADRIAN NEVILLE: It’s not a day off. We’ve got a Cocoa Beach show tonight.

ZAYN: Yeah, we do have a show later this evening, but it was a chance to sleep in. It’s really not a big deal, but, of course, these guys are going to rib me a little bit about it.

KEVIN STEEN: I don’t care. I’m happy to do this.

ZAYN: Well aren’t you perfect?

Sami Zayn, Adrian Neville, Kevin Steen, Fergal Devitt and KENTA Hideo Itami talk to WWE.com about the future of pro wrestlingWWE.COM: The tweet really seemed to capture a moment in time, though. What was going through your mind when you sent it?

ZAYN: It’s just crazy to think where we all were a few years ago and where we are now. The other guys I tagged are guys we all crossed paths with for years all over the world on various small, independent shows. We thought we were doing something special at the time, but you don’t know if it’s going to pay off. Now that we’re all here under the WWE umbrella, it kind of validates all that.

WWE.COM: Was getting here always the goal?

NEVILLE: I didn’t really have an interest in getting signed by WWE earlier in my career. If I did have the opportunity to come here, I wanted it to be later when I was a more traveled, well-versed performer. Honestly, with my body type and my style, I never really expected to be here. The fact that I’m here alongside these guys is kind of mind-blowing.

ZAYN: When we were young, we all looked up to the Jerichos and the Guerreros and the Malenkos and all these world-traveled guys who started where they were from and then made a name in Europe, then went to Mexico, then went to Japan, then went to ECW, then WCW and then they ended their careers here in WWE. Those are the guys that I looked at like, “That’s what I want to be.” Now, we’re that generation — we’re the Guerreros, we’re the Malenkos. It’s not a coincidence at all.

STEEN: I actually had a bit of a different mentality. I remember talking with Zayn about WWE, it must have been 2003, and I told him it wasn’t a dream for me — it was the goal. I appreciate all the chances I got to wrestle all over the world and I’m really proud to have wrestled in Japan and Australia and Italy. But it was never a necessity for me, because in my head, I thought, “When I get to WWE, I’ll travel with them and see all those places.” It was never something I felt I needed to do, but now that I’ve lived through those experiences, I realize how important it was in getting here.

WWE.COM: Was it the same for you, Fergal? You were a top star in Japan’s biggest promotion before you signed with WWE.

FERGAL DEVITT: I’d been doing it for about six or seven years when I ended up in New Japan. I was really just a boy and I became a man in New Japan in eight years. It came to a point where I could stay the rest of my career there and have the security of a job or I could step into the great unknown that is WWE and challenge myself. And that’s what I decided to do.

WWE.COM: You raise an interesting point, because getting to NXT is just the beginning of the journey, isn’t it? It’s not like you’re guaranteed a spot on the main roster.

NEVILLE: Honestly, it’s a huge risk, because we’ve got these reputations outside here and I know a lot of us made very comfortable livings outside here. To give up all that on what is essentially a flip of a coin, because a lot of decisions aren’t really in our hands as far as this place is concerned. One thing I liked about coming up is the ball was very much in our hands. Our success was based on what we did. That is the case to a certain degree here, but at the same time …

ZAYN: There are more external forces now.

NEVILLE: Exactly. So it’s definitely a roll of the dice in a certain respect.

STEEN: It is, but there’s no way you can’t roll the dice. When the offer was presented, there was no, “I really got to think about this.” I mean, I did, because I have two kids and I have a wife. It involved them moving from Canada to Florida; it involved my son changing schools, leaving his friends behind; it involved us getting away from our families. Our choice to come here impacted a lot of people, but …

NEVILLE: You were coming either way.

STEEN: I was coming. And they were coming, too. My son’s 7 years old. He watches WWE and he loves John Cena. I’d take him to a WWE show in Montreal and he’d be like, “How come you’re not wrestling?” “Uh, I don’t wrestle for WWE. You get to come see me in front of 200 people.” (Laughter.) Then one day I told him, “Hey, I think I can wrestle for WWE. You want me to?” He’s like, “Yeah!” So I said, “OK, but it means moving, changing schools and not seeing Grandpa every day.” His question was, “Are you going to wrestle John Cena?” (Laughter.)

ZAYN: That was the negotiation process.

Sami Zayn, Adrian Neville, Kevin Steen, Fergal Devitt and Hideo Itami talk to WWE.com about the future of pro wrestling
STEEN: So for me, there was no choice in the matter. They gave me an option. They said, “Well, we’d like you to come. Let us know.” It was already a yes as soon as they asked.

ZAYN: We’ve all got at least a decade to a decade and a half invested here. And without blowing smoke, everyone here is really good, obviously. Before we all got here, we were kind of “the guys.” I firmly believe we once again will be “the guys,” but we had to hit that reset button and roll the dice and start from scratch. But like Kevin said, what are you gonna do? Not take the chance? I didn’t even read my contract!

STEEN: Yeah, same here.

ZAYN: I didn’t even read it, because what was I gonna do? “Oh, sorry, article seven, paragraph two doesn’t work for me.” You had to come here. But [Hideo Itami] is the best example of hitting that reset button. You want to talk about a guy who was firmly established in one place and really had nothing to prove to anyone. He’s the man in Japan. This is a huge reset button for him to come here, and it’s on a total gamble.

NEVILLE: Different culture.

ZAYN: Different language, different life, everything. He’s got a family. It’s a really huge thing for him in my opinion. How long have you been wrestling?

HIDEO ITAMI: Fourteen years.

NEVILLE: WWE was a big risk for you, right?

ITAMI: Yeah. Everything changed.

ZAYN: Why did you choose to leave Japan for WWE?

ITAMI: I wanted more. I wanted to be famous. I wanted to prove to myself.

STEEN: Did you always want to come to WWE? Because things are different in Japan.

ITAMI: When I started, I didn’t think about WWE, but my dream became bigger and bigger.

STEEN: Maybe you also came to WWE to take back the Go to Sleep. (Laughter.)

ITAMI: I hope! (Laughter.)

WWE.COM: Everyone here comes from a different part of the globe. Is it important for each of you to represent your countries in WWE?

ZAYN: The guys at this table are reinventing what it means to be international, because guys from Quebec used to be The Quebecers or they used to be La Resistance. Adrian Neville happens to be British, but he’s not coming out with a giant British flag. He’s not Mr. Britain.

NEVILLE: I’m like a luchador, a Geordie* luchador. (Laughter.)

ZAYN: I don’t know what’s going to become of [Itami’s] career, but I highly doubt you’ll see him with a headband, hitting a gong or anything like that. We’re reinventing what it means to be from these countries. We’re not stereotypes. We’re not here to epitomize your preconceived notions about Canada or Ireland or Japan or England. We just happen to be from these places and we happen to be really good.

STEEN: French is my first language. I didn’t speak English until I was 12 or 13. I started picking it up, because I was watching WWE. That’s how I learned how to speak English.

ZAYN: Jim Ross taught him how to speak English.

STEEN: I was using, “coming down the aisle” and “stomping a mudhole.”

ZAYN: He thought they were regular expressions! “That was a real slobberknocker!”

STEEN: Even though I have an English name, I’m French and I’m proud of that, but it’s really important for me not to be labeled as the French Canadian guy. If I’m ever on a show at the Bell Centre, you can bet I’ll speak French as much as I can, but I don’t want the fact that I’m from Quebec to define me.

ZAYN: It’s not our calling card. And I do feel like wrestling’s evolved past that. I certainly felt it when I did the tours to the Middle Eastern countries. Being an Arab and still being able to come out there and be myself and not have to wrap a turban around my head, that’s really cool. And that’s going to be part of the legacy of this generation of guys: We’re going to smash down many boundaries and preconceived notions.

WWE.COM: Are there any other misconceptions about your generation?

NEVILLE: With guys that come from the indies, people think we find it hard to adapt to this style, but I say the opposite is true.

ZAYN: All you do on the independents is adapt.

STEEN: Yeah. That’s a great point. People think it will be hard for us to learn the WWE style but that’s the first style I knew how to do and then I had to adapt to the Ring of Honor style, because it’s for a different kind of fan. You need to do different things to get a reaction out of those 200 people that are there, but I was trained by a WWE wrestler, so that’s the first style I learned. The adaptation process isn’t going to be as strenuous as people think just because we’re from the indies.

DEVITT: You can teach a lot of things here at the Performance Center, but you can’t teach passion for wrestling. And the five people at this table definitely have it and have had it for a long time. And hopefully, a little bit of that can rub off on the rest of the people here and bring up the whole team.

NEVILLE: It shines through. It shines through in what you do.

ZAYN: There are times when you stop and you think to yourself, “Why do people like me?” And Kevin offered the theory to me years ago that fans can sense passion. They really can. I remember I saw Metallica once and I felt like they were just phoning it in. There was just no connections at all and they were playing these great songs and I was like, “I don’t care, because I don’t feel like you care.” It’s an innate human quality to be able to sniff out phoniness. And everyone at this table has been nothing but honest and true in their journey to get here. That’s kind of what got us here, to be honest. That’s the commonality here. And that’s why we have these 14-year journeys. It’s a really long time and you’re not going to make it through that journey if you don’t have that passion to drive you.

*The term Geordie refers to an inhabitant of the Tyneside region of North East England. Neville himself hails from Newcastle upon Tyne.

WWE.COM: At the same time, you’re competing for a main roster spot with bodybuilders and amateur athletes with no wrestling background at all.

ZAYN: I can’t speak for these guys, but I’ve always had a bit of a chip on my shoulder. Even before I got to developmental, I had that starving artist mentality of, (puts on an obnoxious voice) “Oh, you didn’t do the indies and you didn’t starve and you weren’t in the trenches.” I’m sorry; I completely lost my train of thought. What was your question?

STEEN: It’s that voice you were doing!

ZAYN: The voice threw me off!

NEVILLE: I guess it’s just about having faith in yourself. We don’t begrudge anyone for exploiting an opportunity. It’s just knowing that we’re better.

STEEN: Yeah, when I came here for the camp in March, I walked over to the car rental place and there were 20 guys in line and you could just tell they were here for the tryouts. And I saw a couple of guys that looked like they were born and the first thing they did was go to the gym and start lifting weights. Huge. And I looked at them like, “I’m going to eat you alive.”

ZAYN: I had the exact same experience when I went to my tryout. I got there and I was the smallest guy in the room next to Jimmy Jacobs who was with me. And he was looking at these guys like, “Bro, these guys are huge. Oh my God.” And you probably can’t publish this, but I was like, “I’m going to [mess] their world up.” I was fueled by passion and that starving artist mentality and that chip on my shoulder. Doesn’t matter how big you are. These walls have slowly started coming down.

DEVITT: I do agree with the lads on most of that, but I do believe that we do need guys like that as well. They add something to the show. It’s like the circus. We need all types of people from all walks of life.

STEEN: The guy that I’m talking about actually wasn’t too bad in the ring, but when we did the promos he actually shined a lot. He impressed me. Just because they don’t have the background that we have doesn’t mean they’re not going to bring something. But it’s a thing in our heads. When I saw him, I was like, “I hate you and I will destroy you.”

NEVILLE: Hate’s a strong word.

STEEN: That’s literally what I thought, though.

ZAYN: It’s not personal.

NEVILLE: I don’t dislike them. I’ll just take a step back and say, “OK, we’ll see.”

STEEN: Exactly.

We’re lifers. We have been and we always will be.NEVILLE: I’m just indifferent, because you know we’re reliable. We’ll get knocks, bumps and we’re coming back the next day. We’re going to be here for years and years to come. Certain people, they’ll have a good run and then you’ll never see them again. Whatever. That’s their prerogative, but we’re lifers. We have been and we always will be. And that’s what sets us apart.

ZAYN: You can’t begrudge people for the opportunity they get, but there was a time when it really stung. When I would just stand in a building and no one would come up and say hello or no one would say goodbye — just little small things that drove me nuts. As someone who values etiquette and respect and traditions, it hurts to watch things go by the wayside. And it actually came to a head here, personally.

NEVILLE: I don’t think you need to go into it.

ZAYN: I’ll just touch on it. I don’t mind. I got frustrated at one point where I actually called an all-talent meeting with every member of developmental to try and explain. I’m sure it backfired. I’m sure a lot of people were like, “Who does this guy think he is?”

NEVILLE: I was one of them. (Laughter.)

ZAYN: I just didn’t care. I was so hell-bent on something I felt was bigger than me that I didn’t care if people hated me for it. I had to go up there and explain to them that we need to uphold these values, because if we don’t, it’s dead. NXT really is the future, and it starts and it ends with us, so anything we do now will be the norm in five years.

WWE.COM: Are there guys you can see taking your place in five years?

ZAYN: Absolutely, yeah. I think Adam Cole will be here eventually. I’m a big advocate of his. I’m a huge Kenny Omega fan. I’m a huge fan of a Japanese wrestler named Kota Ibushi. I asked [Itami] when he got here, “Who else do you think would be good for WWE from Japan?” And the first person he said was Ibushi. The Young Bucks. They have a family life and a good thing going, so I don’t know if now is the time for them, but they are phenomenal. Kyle O’Reilly maybe, eventually.

STEEN: Johnny Gargano. There are so many good guys.

ZAYN: They are starting to step into the spots we left behind. It’s funny, because that was us with Daniel Bryan and Low Ki and Samoa Joe and AJ Styles and Christopher Daniels. When we were breaking into the indies, those were the guys we looked up to. Then they started making their way out and we stepped into those spots. And before you knew it, we were kind of like indie legends.

NEVILLE: Indie legends? (Laughter.)

ZAYN: It’s crazy to say, but yes! We stepped into that role of guys who had been around forever on the indies. Now we’re gone and these guys are filling those roles and, hopefully, there’ll be a new crop behind them.

WWE.COM: It’s amazing how the scene repairs itself. One of the early criticisms of the Performance Center was that WWE was killing the indie scene by signing all the top stars …

STEEN: I highly disagree. It all goes back to passion and love for wrestling. When I saw Adam Cole, I was like, “I want to help this guy, because he has a good attitude and he’s great.” It was the same thing with Daniel Bryan, Cesaro and Seth Rollins. Before they left, they did everything they could to help the guys they liked. The scene repairs itself, but anybody who complains that WWE is killing the indie scene is ridiculous.

ZAYN: You do your best to leave it in good hands.

DEVITT: I would say we’ll probably never be satisfied, and that’s the only reason we’re all here at the moment. It’ll probably be when we’re all 60 and at a Hall of Fame ceremony and we’re still thinking about what we can do next, because that’s what’s driven us. This thirst and hunger to keep pushing forward, I don’t think any of us will ever settle, be it a WrestleMania moment or a World Heavyweight Title. We’re all just going to still want more.

NEVILLE: The wheels are definitely in motion.

ZAYN: It’s already happened to me where I’ve looked around and been like, “What happened?” I remember after the 2-out-of-3 Falls Match against Cesaro, and that was a pretty special moment for me for a number of reasons. It was the day before my birthday and the day that perception of me in this company changed a lot. After the match, even though Cesaro and me had just battled, Triple H grouped us together to talk to us as employees, and he said it was a good match. So I remember Triple H telling Cesaro and me how good the match was and over his shoulder, I saw Neville and Seth Rollins and it was like, “What is happening?”

NEVILLE: I think “wrestling” and “wrestler” used to be dirty words. That has turned around. We’re all here to say it’s not a dirty word. In fact, it’s a beautiful word.

ZAYN: We’re proud to be wrestlers.

NEVILLE: This is all we’ve ever wanted. And if you’re [on the main roster] and maybe you’re a little complacent — you’ve lost that fire — that’s fine, but just know that we’re going to be on your heels. We’re coming.[/details]

Read that interview this morning. Loved it.

Yeah but for some reason wwe.com likes to setup their articles like a like a clickbait site, which if they had actual ad’s would make sense.
But they are advertising their own shit so it just gets annoying.

I feel like with rvd give him somebody he likes working with and he will give you a good match. His stuff with adr, orton, rollins was good.

RVD never respected tna. His work there sucked

Yeah, RVD actually did an interview about that. He said in ECW he was super motivated because he felt the fans challenged him, and if he didn’t show up with new stuff or going 100%, they wouldn’t cheer for him anymore.

In WWE (and I’m guessing TNA), the fans will cheer whatever, and you can use the same spots over and over again because they will still cheer them, and for members of the audience, it’s what they came to see.

On the other hand, when he’s with a guy who really wants to throw down, he feels challenged because he wants to be able to keep up with someone who is really trying.

I remember, in terms of WWE, RVD has had a couple of fantastic matches. But his best work was always in ECW, where he had complete creative freedom, was still young, and he was insane in what he would do.

I remember him saying this:

‘I like going out there and doing things that if the average person tries, they would die.’

Intense.

But yeah, most of his E stuff is just Rinse Wash Repeat nonsense that he can get away with because he’s super charismatic and really, really smooth in the ring.

Him vs Cena ONS was my favorite RVD WWE match.

That atmosphere at ons made that match great. The match itself was ok.

Kurt Angle/rvd, the rock/rvd, rvd/angle/austin, rvd/eddie, rvd/jbl, rey/rvd vs kenzo/dupree, rvd/jericho, rvd/christian, rvd/finlay, rvd/hhh…

The thing is in wwe rvd has hit that sweet spot of always over.

In tna even though he was friends with hardy, joe, and angle he was still just doing enough like he was hulk hogan.

I liked his return matches with ambrose, adr, cesaro, rollins, orton. The problem with rvd was his limited schedule and wwe not maximizing their worth of the guy. His nxt match with neville was good.

When he returns would love to see him go down to nxt and work with Itami, Steen, Breeze, and especially Devitt.

Something about an rvd/neville tag team speaks to me. As rvd/rey was so underrated.

Still one of my favourite sequences ever.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tCZD7SBiLf8

I’m definitely a huge fan of RVD, as it’s the reason behind my SRK username for the past 14 years! I became an instant fan of his when I first got into ECW.

Also, I was at Summerslam 2001 and was sitting right by the aisle of the walkway. I had my “The Whole F’n Show” sign. RVD saw it, pointed at it, and did his trademark taunt while saying “the whole fucking show!”. Definitely one of my favorite moments as a fan.

I hated how those trading off sequences/pause for applause became so common place in the 00s especially in the indies and in tna. No fuck you, try to win fuckers. What is that bullshit?