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Original Publication Date: November 16, 2006 |
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Prior to the
mid-1980’s, most automobile odometers were of the five-digit
variety. They could register a maximum of 99,999 miles. Drive
the vehicle another mile, and the odometer would reset
itself to zero. Wrestlers usually bought new cars every year.
Spending six or more hours per day driving meant that the odometer
would turn over at least once during that year. Many of the
wrestlers would sell their “current model new car with only 38,000
miles on the odometer,” for example, without always pointing out to
the buyer that the car had actually been driven 100,000 miles, or,
in a couple of cases, 200,000 miles more than was indicated. “Oh,
I’ve been selling my cars for the past seven years,” said a
particular main-event wrestler in Tennessee. “Nobody ever asked me
if the odometer had turned over a time or two. If they don’t ask, I
don’t tell.”
I went through a lot of cars in my wrestling
travels. A used Canadian Rambler lasted for about a month. I sold
it to an immigrant family for $100.00. They drove it away, but came
back a few days later to complain that I overcharged them. I drove
a new Ford van for a year before it died. It was useless after a
year, so I gave it away. I had a great Cadillac “land yacht” that I
drove for nearly two years. It may have lasted even longer, had the
fans not destroyed it. Yes, I did such a good job as a “bad-guy”
wrestler that they actually torched my car! My Lincoln Continental
looked and rode like a limousine but lasted for less than a year. I
had one car, however, that kept going and going and going – for
nearly half a million miles. It was a Volkswagen Karman Ghia. At
seventy-plus miles per hour, that little 2-seater sports car
maintained a consistent 36 miles-per-gallon.
Shortly after I purchased the Karman Ghia, I
bought a maintenance book. I saved a lot of money doing the routine
maintenance myself. And, of course, when I did the tune-ups and oil
changes, I knew they were done correctly, and I never “overcharged”
myself or did “unnecessary repairs.” I enjoyed traveling alone, and
this was the perfect car for “single pilot” operation.
Occasionally, one of the wrestlers would ask, after a match, if he
could ride back to the base town with me. “Of course,” I would
answer, “but my car’s pretty small.” “Oh, I don’t mind,” the
285-pounder would say. “It’s only a six-hour ride.” Then when the
wrestler saw how small the car actually was, he would usually say,
“On second thought, Rock, I think I’ll ride with one of the other
guys.” That worked out well, because I usually preferred to travel
alone, and I never had to directly say “no” to a ride-along request.
The Karman Ghia, like the VW bug, had
its engine in the rear. I purchased a large orange suitcase that
fit perfectly in the car’s
forward trunk. I customized the suitcase by creating compartments
for its contents. Those contents included a two-burner camping
stove and extra fuel, a toaster-oven, pots and pans, dishes,
silverware, spices and non-perishable food. If I were going to stay
over in a wrestling town, I would usually stop at a grocery store
before the matches. I had a small ice chest behind my seat. I
would buy any additional food items that I might need for dinner and
breakfast – steak or chicken, butter, eggs, cheese, bread – those
sorts of things. Most of the motels had “No Cooking in Rooms”
signs, but I knew those signs were meant for other people, not me.
On a number of occasions the motel manager would call my room. “Mr.
Riddle,” he would say, “somebody’s cooking in one of the rooms. We
can’t have any cooking in the rooms. You’re not cooking in your
room, are you?” “Oh, you smell that, too?” I would respond.
“Whatever it is, it smells great -- like garlic cheese bread. Mmmm.
Actually, it’s making me hungry. Are there any good restaurants
around here?” That usually worked, except
at one particular motel in Georgia.
It was a little motel in the southern suburbs
of Atlanta. I stayed there while wrestling for GCW, the NWA-sanctioned
Georgia Championship Wrestling organization. I cooked in my room
fairly frequently. The managers, a
not-terribly-trustworthy-looking, overweight, unattractive man and
wife (I think) strongly suspected that it was me, but they could
never prove it. The fact that I cooked near an open window with a
fan blowing the smell outside helped. It was an interesting cat and
mouse game that was about to end. I had completed my Georgia
Championship Wrestling “tour,” and I would be leaving in the wee
hours of the next morning for my match at Chicago’s International
Amphitheater. I had accumulated more “stuff” than would fit into my
little car. The nosy motel managers suggested that I could fit
everything in if I left my valet, Ms. Pamela, there. I pondered the
possibility briefly, but decided, instead, that I should ship a
couple of boxes and take Ms. Pamela with me. After all, I was
heading to the prestigious AWA, and the American Wrestling
Association had booked Rock Riddle AND his valet, Ms. Pamela. I
could never disappoint a wrestling promotion.
I carefully packed two large boxes
with publicity materials including hundreds of photos, wrestling
programs, magazines, newspaper articles, and even posters featuring
Rock “Mr. Wonderful” Riddle. Since I did not have a forwarding
address yet, I decided to ship the seventy-plus pounds of publicity
materials and memorabilia to my parents in North Carolina. I called
UPS. They told me what the shipping charges would be and they
scheduled a pick-up from the motel’s office around nine o’clock the
next morning, about five hours or so after I would have left for my
match in Chicago. I put the two boxes behind the counter at the
motel and handed the managers enough cash to cover the UPS bill. I
called my parents to tell them to expect a delivery.
A week later, I called to check that
the boxes had arrived. They had not. A week after that, I called
again. They had still not arrived. Another week went by. No
boxes. I called UPS. I was told that the UPS driver, indeed, had
arrived at 9:00 AM for pickup at the motel lobby, as had been
prearranged, but there were no boxes. I went into detective mode
and discovered that there were also no managers on that fateful
morning. Apparently, Ms. Pamela and I were not the only people to
leave in the wee hours of the morning. The “managers” had also
left, along with a large amount of the motel’s money, my
UPS-assigned money, and my two boxes.
I lost several years' worth of publicity
materials and memorabilia. Gradually, over the years, I have been
rebuilding a small portion of the collection. The photographs, of
course, can not be replaced. But, wrestling fans who know this
story and who have Rock Riddle programs, magazines, newspaper
clippings and the like, have been kind enough to send some of those
items to me. If you know anyone who might have additional materials
concerning my wrestling career, I would greatly appreciate it if you
would have them contact me. Until next week, keep those e-mails
coming.