By [email protected]”>Dave Meltzer
We’re looking for your thoughts on tonight’s TNA Slammiversary show, so you can leave a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to [email protected]”>[email protected]
We’re also looking for reports on tonight’s WWE house shows in Roanoke (Roman Reigns, Seth Rollins, Bray Wyatt, Sheamus, Ryback, Dean Ambrose) and Reading, PA (Chris Jericho, Dolph Ziggler, Luke Harper, King Barrett, New Day), as well as the weekend NXT shows in Cocoa Beach, FL on Friday night and Citrus Springs, FL on Saturday night.
TNA SLAMMIVERSARY ON PPV SUNDAY
Robbie E vs. Jessie Godderz
Awesome Kong & Brooke vs. Taryn Terrell & Jade & Marti Bell
Magnus vs. James Storm Non-sanctioned match
Davey Richards vs. Austin Aries – Winner gets to choose the Iron Man stipulation for the TV match already taped as the fifth match in the best-of-five for the tag tiles
Matt Morgan vs. Bram
Bobby Lashley & Ken Anderson vs. Ethan Carter III & Tyrus
King of the Mountain match: Jeff Jarrett, Eric Young, Drew Galloway, Bobby Roode and Matt Hardy
Raw will be Monday night in Washington, DC. This is the one show of this PPV cycle that Brock Lesnar isn’t booked on. He will be back the following Monday.
Smackdown and Main Event will be taped on Tuesday night in Hershey, PA.
A story about the life and career of Buddy Landel, plus the Jose Aldo injury, Kimbo Slice vs. Ken Shamrock and whether it was or wasn’t real and Cora Combs and the last link to the heyday of U.S. women’s wrestling are the main stories in the June 29 issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter.
The Latest Wrestling Observer June 29, 2015 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Buddy Landel obituary, Ken Shamrock vs. Kimbo Slice coverage
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The Wrestling Observer ranges weekly from 35,000 to 50,000 words covering pro wrestling and MMA internationally. Each issue has coverage and analysis of all the major news, plus every issue breaks major news stories before the Internet sties and has the most complete look at the pro wrestling and MMA business anywhere, plus history pieces available nowhere else.
We first look at the injury to Jose Aldo Jr. and thoughts on the 7/11 fight with Conor McGregor. We look at the different options UFC had in this situation.
We’ve got a major story on the life and career of Buddy Landel. We look at the circumstances of his death, why Landel never reached the level of success his ability should have gotten him, his life before and after wrestling, and the story that, at the age of 24, changed the direction of his career.
Landel talked about getting fired from Crockett Promotions at what turned out to be the high point of his career, examine the talk of his being given the world title at the time, as well as his own very candid thoughts about if he had won the title. We look at what was planned for him, and how his firing changed the entire history of the business because it in a roundabout way led to the creation of the Four Horseman.
We look at the situation with Crockett Promotions in the middle of a hot period in 1985, the Starrcade 85 show, and the Flair vs. Rhodes program. We look at the story behind Landel’s statement that he and Flair broke Elvis’ attendance record in Raleigh and the true story of that night.
We also look at his run in Tennessee including the last sellout at the Mid South Coliseum and the angle leading to that, as well as the famous 27 fall Texas death match that was among the best matches of the 80s. We look at his start in sports, growing up as a fan, and how Landel got into pro wrestling. We look at his early years, his first push, the creation of the Nature Boy gimmick, working with Junkyard Dog in Mid South, his return to Crockett Promotions and why he never got another chance, what Buddy Rogers told him, and the last stages of his career and life after wrestling.
We also look in depth at the Kimbo Slice vs. Ken Shamrock right. We look at different kinds of works, and the ones that could not have happened and the ones that could have. We look at what the person closest to the action said about it, as well as a look at the background of Ken Shamrock.
We also have a lot more about the records set for the fight, as well as future matches that both or either could do going out of this. We also look at other business notes for the show, as well as Bellator’s next major event in September, and full coverage of the TV event.
We also have an update on Daniel Bryan, Bret Hart talks Daniel Bryan, Roman Reigns and others, Dolph Ziggler’s future prospects, Talk of another NXT live special this summer, More on the next WWE network special show, notes on a former tag team of the year candidate team that WWE is looking at getting, more on Tough Enough, as well as Dwayne Johnson projects and injuries to Jamie Noble, Erick Rowan and Tyson Kidd.
We also have notes on why Randy Orton wasn’t at TV this past week, frustration from the inside on WWE creative, Hogan talks WrestleMania, Shawn Michaels in a movie, WWE house shows, the sad plight of Chyna, as well as a look at the weekend NXT and WWE house shows as well as weekend business.
We also have coverage of the ROH Best in the World PPV show, and where the company is headed.
We’ve also got a story on the life of Cora Combs, the last link to the Billy Wolfe/Mildred Burke glory days of women’s wrestling. We look at her career, her decision in the promotional split that ended up taking the women’s side of wrestling down, the Moolah years, being in the first woman’s match ever held in New York and the story behind it. We also look at the last period of her career, as Lady Satan, working against her daughter, as well as look at some of the oldest wrestlers of all-time and the oldest living wrestles..
We’ve also got full coverage of the weekly UFC show in Germany and the rise of Joanna Jedrzejczyk. We look at her unique stardom, as well as other coverage of the show.
We also have notes on how the WWE’s Payback PPV did and where the PPV business currently stands.
The Observer is the world’s most detailed weekly pro wrestling publication, in its 32nd year of publication, and is read by the biggest names in the pro wrestling, industry, MMA industry, sports world and on Wall Street.
We also have our regular features such as the most complete look at ratings, plus results of the major house show events each week in pro wrestling and MMA, and complete inside rundowns of all the TV shows.
Also in this week’s issue:
–More on AAA’s Verano de Escandalo show
–Former WWE star signs major deal as a brand ambassador with one of the biggest movie companies in the world and his duties
–Another former WWE star working big shows in AAA
–Notes on future AAA shows
–Ricochet returns to Japan
–Notes on the next Dragon Gate iPPV show
–Final event of the Mitsuharu Misawa Memorial tour
–Notes on the upcoming NOAH GHC jr. tournament
–More G-1 Climax notes as far as TV goes
–New Japan heads to Singapore
–Notes on Dusty Rhodes and Tommy Rogers
–More on Global Force Wrestling
–Lots of PWG notes
–Notes on Tommy Dreamer’s House of Hardcore show
–Pro wrestling returns after 20 years to one of its most famous former arenas
–More on Lucha Underground
–Notes on upcoming ROH shows
–A look at the next month of ROH television
–More on people leaving TNA
–Story behind Hernandez coming to TNA
–More on TNA PPV show
–TNA wrestlers appear on Destination America programming
–UFC press conference coming
–Major official leaves UFC
–Lots of new UFC fights
–More talk about UFC events in the future in Mexico City
–Why Dana White didn’t go to the UFC show in Germany
–Dana White talks about a reality show he’s filming
–Latest on the heavyweight title picture
–Lots of changed matches on the UFC shows
–UFC injury updates
–Lots of new UFC fights
–Stiffest MMA suspension to date to a former champion
If you are a new subscriber ordering 24 or more issues, you can get one free classic issue of your choice sent to you today. With a 40 issue subscription, you can get two free classic issues sent to you today.
New subscribers ordering 24 or 40 issues have to let us know what major stories of the past 11 years you are most interested in and we’ll send the issue with the best coverage of that story. We’ve got coverage of every major PPV event and world wide spectacular, every major star switching promotions, histories of companies like FMW, Rings and New Japan, retirement and obit issues of every major star who fits into those descriptions over the past 11 years, as well as our biggest issue every year, the annual awards issue, and our most controversial issue of every year, the Hall of Fame issue.
Our most requested issues in our history are:
*November 17, 1997 (full details of everything leading to the most famous wrestling match finish of modern times at the Survivor Series plus a history of in-ring double-crosses)
*December 21, 1998 (the complete Vince McMahon-Bret Hart conversation right before the Survivor Series match so you’ll know exactly what was said–the conversation played in edited form both on the inaugural broadcast of Confidential as well as in Wrestling with Shadows, but everything that was said between the two about the match that was going to take place that same night)
*August 1, 1994 (the most detailed coverage anywhere of the Vince McMahon steroid trial, an issue praised in numerous newspaper article and Sex, Lies and Headlocks)
*March 26, 2001 (death of WCW and history of pro wrestling on the Turner networks)a
*October 22, 2001 (why the adult audience has left pro wrestling in such great numbers and what needed to have been done to save them)
*July 8, 1991 (Ric Flair leaves WCW as world champion/Zahorian steroid trial)
*February 8, 1993 (the life and times of Andre the Giant)
*May 13, 2002 (the life story of the most incredible pro wrestling career ever, a look at Lou Thesz, in one of the largest issues of our history)
*January 27, 2003 (part one of the two-part series covering the career and life of The Sheik)
*February 3, 2003 (Part two on The Sheik including thoughts from people who worked with him and where he stands historically)
*March 24, 2003 (history of the WWWF title, inside behind the Sammartino, Backlund and Backlund era)
*April 21, 2003 (history of WWF continues with the expansion nationally, the death of the regional territories and the rise of Hulk Hogan)
*May 12, 2003 (The life and death of Elizabeth and the rise of fall of Lex Luger)
*June 9, 2003 (Part 1 of history of WWF vs. WCW wars and what many say was the greatest year in U.S. wrestling; plus a look at Fred Blassie)
*June 16, 2003 (Freddie Blassie through the eyes of his biggest rivals and friends)
*July 28, 2003 (Part 2 of the history of the WWF vs. WCW war and the plans to make new superstars in the early 90s, what happened, and the night where the three biggest wrestling companies in the world combined for a joint show and what happened)
*August 25, 2003 (2003 Hall of Fame issue with huge profiles on the controversial career of Shawn Michaels, Chris Benoit as well as historical features on Earl Caddock and Francisco Flores)
*September 22, 2003 (Part 3 of the history of the WWF vs WCW war with the seeds that caused the collapse of the industry in the 90s, Zahorian trial, Gulf War controversy, Flair leaves WCW while holding world title and much more)
*October 27, 2003 (The fascinating life of Stu Hart plus the story of Road Warrior Hawk)
*January 19, 2004 (2003 Awards issue)
*February 2, 2004 (History of Toronto wrestling, Jack Tunney life story, Royal Rumble and Battle Royal history)
*February 23, 2004 (History of Guerrero family with Eddy’s win over Brock Lesnar)
*March 1, 2004 (History of WWF continues with the period that brought the company down in early 1992, the mistakes, the real stories and how the business changed)
*March 8, 2004 (History of Wrestlemania, its greatest matches and best and worst shows as voted both by wrestlers and non-wrestlers and Wrestlemania history books)
*July 5, 2004 (A look behind the scenes and Ric Flair’s book and his background with Eric Bischoff and Hulk Hogan)
*July 12, 2004 (A look at more on Ric Flair’s book and his comments on Bruno Sammartino, Bret Hart and Mick Foley)
*August 16, 2004 (History of the Olympians in pro wrestling)
*August 23, 2004 (2004 Hall of Fame issue and biggest issue of the year with huge profiles on Kazushi Sakuraba, Undertaker, Bob Backlund, Masahiro Chono, Ultimo Dragon, Kurt Angle and Tarzan Lopez–this counts as one issue if you are asking for a free issue, but ordered separately, due to size, is $6 in North America and $7 overseas)
*October 4, 2004 (the life and times of Big Bossman; as well as details of the life and times of one of the most influential men world wide in pro wrestling history, Jim Barnett)
*November 15, 2004 (the full story of what happened between Kurt Angle and Daniel Puder, plus coverage of the most important week in the history of TNA)
*January 24, 2005 (2004 Awards issue, Rock and WWE part company)
*March 14, 2005 (the 50 biggest money players in the history of WWF and a look at their Hall of Fame)
*May 9, 2005 (the life and times of Chris Candido)
*June 20, 2005 (The full story behind Paul Heyman and the death of ECW, as well as coverage of One Night Stand, Hardcore Homecoming and behind the scenes of both shows)
*July 18, 2005 (death of Shinya Hashimoto and his records with a look at the fall of New Japan, the Matt Hardy angle, tons of WWE firings, Cornette firing in detail as well as problems of a WWE developmental territory in our biggest news issue of the year which is a double-sized issue and would be $6 on its own and $7 overseas)
*August 24, 2005 (2005 Hall of Fame issue with career profiles of Paul Heyman, HHH and Freebirds plus debut of MMA Hall of Fame)
*September 12, 2005 (History of Mid South Wrestling)
*October 10, 2005 (Life and Times of the Ultimate Warrior)
*November 21, 2005 (Life and Times of Eddy Guerrero and Crusher, double issue $6 on its own and $7 overseas)
*December 5, 2005 (The Eddy Guerrero special issue, double issue $6 on its own, $7 overseas)
*January 9, 2006 (The life and times of Superstar Billy Graham, plus New Year’s Eve 2005 coverage)
*January 16, 2006 (2005 Awards double issue, $6 or $7 overseas)
*April 3, 2006 (Story of Ann Calvello and the history of Roller Derby–many called this the best issue of the Observer ever)
*April 10, 2006 (Behind the scenes at the 2006 Wrestlemania/Hall of Fame week)
*July 24, 2006 (The History of the Von Erichs and World Class Championship Wrestling–the most unreal story ever in wrestling)
*September 4, 2006 (The Rise and Fall of Kurt Angle; 2006 Hall of Fame inductions of Eddie Guerrero, Paul Bowser, Masakatsu Funaki, Aja Kong and Hiroshi Hase including tons of wrestling history around the world from the 20s through the 60s, the evolution of working to not working in Japan, and a look at Guerrero in hindsight, double issue $6 or $7 overseas)
*October 9, 2006 (A look back nine years later at the life and legacy of Brian Pillman with tons of inside information about what made him tick as his real objectives)
*November 15, 2006 (History of WCW part one, Eric Bischoff’s book and how the industry was changed forever)
*November 20, 2006 (History of WCW part two, Why Jim Ross left WCW, How Bischoff changed the company, signing of Hulk Hogan, Beginning of Nitro, Jesse Ventura, Brian Pillman, Chris Jericho and signing Wrestlemania planned celebrity away)
*November 27, 2006 (History of WCW part three, When Bischoff challenged McMahon to fight; Truth and fiction around Bret Hart signing with WCW and why it didn’t click)
*December 6, 2006 (details behind Pride’s offers to sell promotion and Part four of History of WCW part four, Hogan-Goldberg match and why there was no rematch, WCW loses NBC network deal in 1999 and the real reasons the company fell apart)
*January 22, 2007 (2006 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)
*February 14, 2007 (Life and Times of Bam Bigelow)
*March 5, 2007 (WWE begins plans that will change the business)
*March 12, 2007 (Life and Times of Mike Awesome)
*March 19, 2007 (Life and Times of Ernie Ladd)
*April 4, 2007 (Life and Times of Badnews Allen Coage–which many are calling one of the best issues in history)
*July 2, 2007 (Part one of the Benoit double murder-suicide)
*July 5, 2007 (Part two of the Benoit double murder-suicide)
*July 10, 2007 (Part three of the Benoit double murder-suicide)
*July 19, 2007 (Part four of the Benoit double murder-suicide)
*July 23, 2007 (Part five of Benoit double murder-suicide)
*July 25, 2007 (Part six of Benoit double murder-suicide)
*August 15, 2007 (The legend of the God of Japanese wrestling and his influence on MMA, Karl Gotch)
*October 15 (2007 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas including inductions of The Rock, Tom Packs and the original Strangler Lewis)
*November 12, 2007 (Life and times of Fabulous Moolah and history of U.S. women’s wrestling) .
*December 31, 2007 (History of Ric Flair and the heyday of wrestling at the Greensboro Coliseum)
*January 21, 2008 (2007 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)
*March 17, 2008 (Life and times of Johnny Weaver)
*March 24, 2008 (Life and times of Gary Hart)
*April 10, 2008 (Farewell to Ric Flair; My thoughts, Shawn Michaels talks of Flair’s meaning to him; Hall of Fame; Wrestlemania double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas)
*August 11, 2008 (Ric Flair leaves WWE; Updated history of pro wrestlers and MMA fighters who went to the Olympics)
* September 8, 2008 (2008 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas; part one of Killer Kowalski bio)
* September 15, 2008 (Life and Times of Evan Tanner)
* September 22, 2008 (The amazing career of Killer Kowalski, one of our most in-depth bios)
You can also order any of these issues on their own for $4 in North America or $5 overseas.
We now have available personally autographed copies of Tributes II, our latest book, as well as a DVD that comes with it talking more about the subjects in the book. The book covers the life stories of Lou Thesz, Wahoo McDaniel, Elizabeth, Fred Blassie, Road Warrior Hawk, Andre the Giant, Curt Hennig, Johnny Valentine, Davey Boy Smith, Terry Gordy, Owen Hart, Stu Hart, Gorilla Monsoon, The Sheik and Tim Woods..
To get all of those biographies as back issues of the Observer would be a $60 value today. This is a collection of some of the best Observer articles of the past several years in a hardcover, full-color format that is 239 pages. There is also a foreword by Bret Hart. The book price is $12.95 plus $3.50 for shipping costs in the U.S., $20 for shipping costs to Canada and $25 for shipping costs outside North America. You can order the book the same way you order the newsletter.
SUNDAY’S NEWS UPDATE
Nothing from the weekend in combat sports made it to the Google listings. For twitter, the biggest numbers were Yoel Romero (70,800), Jeff Jarrett (3,229), Jacare Souza (3,158), Gay Jesus (6,699) and Slammiversary (3,434).
San Andreas was No. 6 at the box office this weekend and is estimated at doing $5,275,000 and is at $141.9 million domestic after five weeks.
The UFC Canada comment regarding a potential 12/5 show after New York fell through was: “Following the news in New York, we are now looking at the schedule for the remainder of the year and will be making event decisions in the coming weeks. There is nothing to announce or confirm at this time.”
GFW will make the official announcement of Nick Aldis, formerly Magnus, with the promotion tomorrow.
A story on Dwayne Johnson’s new movie project “Rampage”
Conor McGregor will be a guest on Conan O’Brien on TBS on Thursday night. (thanks to Jon Southerland)
This week, Dusty Rhodes was on the cover of Globe Magazine and Kevin Nash, as part of Magic Mike XL (which opens this week) was on the cover of People Magazine (thanks to Jeff Gagliardo)
All Elite Wrestling has a show at Arena Mexico today headlined by Shelton Benjamin & Rush vs. Volador Jr. & Ezekiel Jackson, plus Marco Corleone & La Mascara vs. Hernandez & Heddi Karaoui. Notable that Hernandez was still booked there as of yesterday with the TNA PPV today. Jackson, who is Big Ryck in Lucha Underground, is also notable because All Elite is considered competition to AAA.
Gunner and James Storm are now taking independent bookings through Bill Behrens at [email protected] Gunner is flying out of Greensboro and Storm out of Nashville. Also available is Moose out of Atlanta, as well as A.J. Styles (Atlanta), Drew Galloway (Tampa), Matt Sydal (Tampa), Sean Waltman (Philadelphia), Christopher Daniels (Los Angeles), Frankie Kazarian (Los Angeles), Devon Dudley (Orlando), Tommy Dreamer (New York LaGuardia), DDP (Atlanta), Shane Helms (Raleigh), Earl Hebner (Richmond), Abyss (Cincinnati), Eric Young (Nashville), EC 3 (Tampa), Big Ryck (Los Angeles) and The Young Bucks (Los Angeles).
Santana Garrett and Colt Cabana debut with GFW on the 7/9 show in Appleton, WI. Cherry Bomb Laura Dennis debuts on 7/10 in Erie, PA. Johnny Gargano is booked on 7/11 in Eastlake, OH.
Josh Nason went 5-0 in predictions last night on the UFC show, while David Bixenspan, Front Row Brian, Steve Juon, Jack Encarnacao and Mike Sempervive went 4-1, me and Mike Swayer went 3-2 and John Pollock went 2-3.
Bayley was off the NXT shows this weekend due to a broken hand.
Karen Jarrett talks going to TNA
TNA Slammiversary airs live in France on Mai Chaine Sport at 2 a.m. and will be re-airing on 7/5 at 8 p.m.
Hoosier Pro Wrestling canned food drive show last night in Columbus, IN which brought over 1,200 cans of good to the East Columbus Community Center: Scarecrow b Jonathan Owens, AJ Hawkins b Wicked Clown, Clint Poe b Dewey Brown, Mitch Johnson & Miss Alice b Stompin Steve to win the Intergender tag team titles, Drax O’Brien & Lightning Bolt Jackson b TVZ, Flash Flanagan b TJ Kemp. Next show is 8/1 (thanks to Jerry Wilson)
World League Wrestling from Friday night in Troy, MO: Jon Webb (NOAH) b Michael Magnuson, Derek McQuinn b Jon E. Rock, Leland Race b Dustin Bozworth-DQ, Stacy O’Brien b Heather Patera, Dave DeLorean & Jayden Fenix b Brandon Espinosa & Justin D’Air, Superstar Steve Fender & Derek McQuinn b Dave DeLorean & Jayden Fenix to win tag titles (thanks to Patrick Brandmeyer)
Lucha Xtreme TV from last night in Fresno, CA: Prince Nagi & Kevin El Divino b Johnny Dynamo & Aki So, Mustafa Saed & CB 3 b Vintage Dragon & Cyanide, Johnny Plinko b Marcus Eriks-DQ (thanks to Jon Southerland)
Smash Wrestling on 7/19 at 4 p.m. in Toronto before Battleground at the Franklin Horner Community Center with Matt Cross vs. Tarik in an I Quit match, Chris Hero vs Rich Swann, Johnny Gargano vs. Scotty O’Shea and Drew Gulak & Biff Busick vs. Overdogs, plus Super Smash Brothers, Candice LaRae and more.
The Crash runs Friday night in Tijuana at Auditorio Municipal with La Parka & Psycho Clown vs. Parka Negra & Zorro and ACH vs. Bestia 666 vs. Extreme Tiger (Tigre Uno) vs. Pentagon Jr., plus two other Lucha Underground wrestlers with B-Boy vs. Famous B and Australian Suicide & Rey Hours vs. Flamita & Daga. (thanks to Kris Zellner)
The Iowa Northwoods League baseball team the Waterloo Bucks has pro wrestling night on 7/9 at Riverfront Stadium featuring an appearance by Kevin Nash. He will sign autographs before and during the game, throw out the first pitch and do 1/2 inning of broadcasting. The first 500 fans will get a foam wrestling belt. This is the night before the Tragos/Thesz Hall of Fame events in Waterloo.
Alberto El Patron, Tommy Dreamer and Colt Cabana headline 7/12 in Pasadena, TV o na show called Bustin For Autism produced by Lone Star Championship Wrestling with the show at 6 p.m. Alberto faces Houston Carson, Cabana faces Raj Singh (Jinder Mahal), Hernandez faces Ray Rowe of ROH and Dreamer faces Lance Archer and Cherry Ramons faces Joey Ryan. Also scheduled to appear are Jim Duggan, Scott Norton, Katrina and Ivelisse from Lucha Underground, Candice LaRae, Gene Snisky, Matt Riviera, Greg Anthony and Chaz Taylor.
Great North Wrestling on 8/14 in Brockville, Canada at the Memorial Center with Road Warrior Animal as the referee for Hannibal vs Darko. Honky Tonk Man is also on the show.
Chael Sonnen talks a number of subjects including the heavyweight division of UFC, Joe Rogan, politics, steroids, drug legalization, Mel Gibson, Racism and of course… the current state of the Heavyweight division. It’s an hour and twenty minute interview, so the below video is time coded more specifically to his MMA comment. Some highlights as they relate to MMA.
“That’s a tough dude right there man…. I did not know he was as good as he is. … I was shocked, I did not think that he could hold up against Cain and not only did he hold up, he BROKE Cain. Yeah that submission was there, but if it hadn’t been a guillotine it would have been an armor it would have been a choke, Cain was ready to be done. There were a million different ways to end that fight… That’s the point of fighting. To make the other guy quit.”
On whether there’s a current case to be made for Werdum being among the top 3 heavyweights of all time, Chael addressed Fedor, Werdum’s standing losses, and then of course went full Chael on the heavyweight division –
“The whole point for point thing doesn’t exist. You want to figure it out, let’s get in the cage. A few of us will enter regardless of weight class and we can figure this damn thing out.
… The bottom-line is Jon Jones will show up and kick his ass right now (Werdum). He’d kick his ass it wouldn’t even be a problem. Daniel Cormier could go up and kick his ass! It’s the heavyweight class, he’s a tough guy, but it’s a wimpy weight class it always has been. If you’re a good athlete and you’re a heavyweight, you go into the NFL! You don’t go into cage fighting, the weight-class sucks and I don’t have respect for it, so there.”
Val Venis and Nasty Boys live talk show in the U.K. notes
ON THIS DAY IN PRO WRESTLING HISTORY INTERNATIONAL (thanks to Graeme Cameron)
1963 – El Santo beat Karloff Lagarde to win the Mexican national middleweight title
1966 – Billy Joyce beat Ian Campbell in Edinburgh to win the British heavyweight title
1974 – Jumbo Miyamoto & Junko Sasaki beat Sandy Parker & Betty Niccoli to win the WWWA tag titles
1974 – Anibal beat Adorable Rubi in Mexico City to win the Mexican national middleweight title
1987 – Chigusa Nagayo beat Dump Matsumoto to win the Grand Prix tournament
1998 – Yukihiro Kanemura & Hiromichi Fuyuki & Koji Nakagawa beat Hayabusa & Hiskatsu Oya & Ricky Fuji in Hachinohe to win the FMW six man street fight tag titles
2008 – Minoru Suzuki & Taiyo Kea beat Joe Doering & Keiji Muto in Osaka to win the All Japan world tag title
2008 – Kennichiro Arai & Taku Iwasa & Shinobi beat Shingo Takagi & Gamma & Yamato in Nagoya to win the Open the Triangle Gate titles
2014 – Jun Akiyama & Takao Omori beat Suwama & Joe Doering in Sapporo to win the All Japan world tag tltles
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