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Scheduled Publication Date: December 7, 2006 |
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Something mechanical was buzzing. I peered out from underneath the
blanket. I was in another darkened hotel room. After a while, they
all
looked alike. I reached for that irritating plastic radio/alarm
clock. It read 4:32 a.m. “Why would anyone have the alarm set
for 4:30 in the morning?” I wondered. I pulled the blanket and
the sheets back over my head. “Wait a minute though,” I
thought. “Where am I? … I know I’m in a hotel room, but where?
... I don’t think I’m still in Georgia …. Where am I wrestling
tonight?” I had no idea. I sat up on the side of the bed,
turned on the little table lamp, and walked over to the window. It
must have been very cold, because all I could see were the
ice-covered window panes. By that time, however, I had regained
enough awareness to remember where I was. I had wrestled at
Chicago’s famous International Amphitheater the night before, and I
was in a hotel room only a dozen or so miles north of there. Today,
I would be heading to Minneapolis to begin my 8½-month AWA (American
Wrestling Association) “tour.” It was about 440 miles from the
hotel room to the wrestling office in Minneapolis. I had wanted to
get an early start so I could survey the area and find a nice place
to live.
Ms.
Pamela, the lady who worked with me as my valet for well over a year
in the wrestling business, was still sleeping. “Wake up,” I said.
“We’re going to be on the road in twenty minutes. She made a
guttural sound of discontent and pulled the covers over her head.
“Get up,” I repeated. “Oh, mmm, uh, five more minutes,” was her
response. “In thirty seconds,” I said, “your mattress goes
vertical. Be sure to keep your chin on your chest when you hit the
floor.” She knew that I knew she could take a fall. She wasn’t
entirely sure whether I was joking or not, so she arose fairly
rapidly. At that time in my career, I probably would have lifted
the mattress and laughed as she rolled onto the floor. The thought
of doing so even brings a smile to my face today. Obviously
remnants of my extreme sense of humor have survived.
Ms.
Pamela was carrying the large orange suitcase, my wrestling bag, and
a shopping-type cloth bag to the car. She was complaining about the
cold. “I’m f-f-freezing,” she said. “Couldn’t you at least carry
the suitcase?” I half-smiled as I held my forefinger to my lips and
said, “Shhhh. Someone might hear you. No, you’re my valet, so you
need to carry everything. Otherwise, someone might see us and it
would blow the ‘gimmick.’” “But it’s five o’clock in the morning,
Rock. Nobody else is crazy enough to even be awake,” she
countered. “Ah, yes,” I said, now with a full smile on my face,
“but we can’t afford to take that chance. It’s always about
‘protecting the business.’ You see, it’s totally appropriate that
you are ‘wrestling’ with those bags.” Ms. Pamela wasn’t terribly
amused. “Could we just please get in the car now?” she asked. My
sense of humor told me that it would be fun to say, “No, let’s just
enjoy this nice crisp fresh air for a while.” As badly as I wanted
to say it, and as funny as I thought it would be, I wanted to get on
the road more. We loaded my little green 2-seater Karmann Ghia, and
we were off to Minneapolis.
The
journey took us into colder and colder conditions. I had installed
an auxiliary heater in the car in anticipation of the cold. With
both the regular and the auxiliary heater on, the trip was only a
little on the cool side. I enjoyed the journey, especially after
the snow began. The little sports car had tires that were great in
the snow. We watched other cars slide off the road. We witnessed
an 18-wheeler going sideways for fifty feet or so before the driver
regained control. I maintained my 70 mph speed as I made fun of the
“wimps” who were slowing down. Further down the road, Ms. Pamela
was totally unaware of why my eyes widened and I slowed down a bit
myself. I was glad she didn’t realize that, for a few moments, even
my little Karmann Ghia was not totally under my control.
We
made very good time, especially considering the weather conditions.
It was snowing quite heavily by just after noon when I “checked in”
at the Minneapolis wrestling office. Wally Karbo, a
partner/promoter for the AWA, greeted us and handed me my booking
slip for the upcoming week. My next match would be two days later
in Green Bay, Wisconsin. “Be sure to leave early,” Wally advised.
“We’ve got a blizzard coming in, you know.” “Yes, we know,” I
responded. We had been hearing about it on the car radio for the
past seven hours. “And you know to have survival stuff with you,
right?” Wally asked. “Absolutely,” I responded. “I always have
survival ‘stuff’ in the car.” I smiled and said, “I was an Eagle
Scout, you know? ‘Be prepared.’” Wally looked sternly at me. “If
that’s true,” he said, “don’t ever mention it again. That’s all we
need – for one of our ‘heels’ to be an Eagle Scout.” I looked Wally
square in the eyes and said, “A what? I don’t know what you’re
talking about.” “Good,” he responded. “I’ll see you in Green
Bay.” He turned his back and walked out of the room. I looked at
Ms. Pamela. “I think that’s our cue to leave,” I said.
The
snow was coming down harder. I liked it. We ended up finding a
very nice apartment in the Brooklyn Park suburb of Minneapolis. We
made several trips to the supermarket to stock up on supplies.
Since I wasn’t wrestling that night, we had time to take in a movie
and dine at a nice restaurant. Every time we came back to the car,
there were several more inches of snow on it. “Gee,” Miss Pamela
joked, “I hope we don’t get snowed in.” Entry to the apartment was
through its own street-level front door. The next morning, sure
enough, the door seemed stuck. A “Rock Riddle shoulder block”
opened it enough to see that accumulated show was now covering the
lower five inches. “Wow, this is cool,” I thought.
“Tomorrow should be great, since the blizzard is supposed to really
hit tonight.”
I
was up early the next morning, knowing that it would take
considerably longer to reach Green Bay with the heavy snows. It was
only about a three-hundred-mile drive, but I allowed twelve hours to
get there. This time the shoulder block on the front door did not
work at all. I really was snowed in. Not only had snow blocked the
door, but it had also covered a couple of inches of the bottom of
the bedroom window. I thought it was great to be able to crawl out
that window and be on top of a four-foot snow drift. Luckily, I was
dressed warmly, especially since the temperature, with the wind
chill factor, was equivalent to forty degrees below zero. My hair
must have been less that totally dry, because it froze. The
moisture from my breath froze the bottom of the ski hood I was
wearing. Other people’s cars wouldn’t start, even though they had
been plugged into heaters all night. I dug through the mound of
snow that totally covered my little Karmann Ghia. I smiled at the
other people when my little non-preheated car started right up.
After a little more snow removal, I was on my way. I arrived at the
arena in Green Bay, Wisconsin early. It was a Sunday, the snow was
very deep, and the weather conditions were not pretty. I was
disappointed. “Nobody will come out in this weather to see a
wrestling match,” I thought. “This trip will be a financial
loss.” I never bothered to leave my dressing room to look at
the crowd. I thought it would be too depressing. Imagine my
surprise when I discovered a totally sold-out arena! Yes, I loved
the AWA! Until next week, keep those e-mails coming.