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Scheduled Publication Date: November 30, 2006 |
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I
had completed my “tour” for Georgia Championship Wrestling and I was
heading to the prestigious Minneapolis-based AWA, the American
Wrestling Association. I knew that the trips would be considerably
longer there. I also knew that the money would be considerably
better. I enjoyed traveling, and I was looking forward to the
journey. The drive from Atlanta to Minneapolis would be a very long
one. Thankfully, the AWA promotion came through for me even before
I “officially” began wrestling for them. “Rock,” the booker
(matchmaker) said, “Let’s split that drive up for you. How about
you work the Amphitheatre in Chicago for us on your way here? Then
you’ll have two more days to get here and to find a place to live
before you’ll be wrestling again. How does that sound?” I thought.
“Fantastic! Yes! Chicago’s International Amphitheatre will be a
major payday! And, two days off? Cool!” I maintained my
business-like composure and replied with a relaxed, “Sure. That’s
fine. I’ll see you in Chicago, and I’ll check in with you at the
wrestling office when I get to Minneapolis.” This was going to be
great!
Ms.
Pamela (my valet for over a year in the professional wrestling
business) and I left Atlanta in the wee hours of the morning,
heading for Chicago. We made very good time, arriving in the
afternoon. We checked into a hotel and had some of the best pizza
I’ve ever eaten, at a little mom-and-pop place in the northern
suburb of Highland Park. I left Ms. Pamela at the hotel. After
all, this was my introduction to the AWA and I wasn’t sure of their
“official guidelines.” Many wrestling promotions had a “no-guests”
policy. “Look,” they would say, “this is your job. You wouldn’t
take your wife or girlfriend or friend with you if you worked a
construction job, and you shouldn’t do it here, either.” I didn’t
want to begin my relationship with a major wrestling promotion by
making mistakes. It was a good, safe decision, I thought, to leave
Ms. Pamela at the hotel. Now, I was on my own, heading for the “big
time” – Chicago’s International Amphitheatre. I drove into one of
the main parking entrances. I looked at the attendant and said the
magic word: “Wrestler.” Immediately I became royalty. The
attendant guided me to the private VIP parking area. I resisted the
urge to smile. After all, I was a “bad guy.”
The
procedure was pretty much the same as with every other arena. As
soon as I entered, I was met by an official greeter, who showed me
to my dressing room. I asked, “How does it look for tonight?” The
gentleman stared momentarily at me with an “oh, this really must
be your first time here; you really don’t know?” look. Then he
said, “A sell-out.” “Oh, good,” I commented matter-of-factly.
Inwardly, I thought, “A sell-out! Fantastic! I’m going to make
more money tonight than most people make in a month – maybe two
months!”
The
local wrestling promoter came in. “Hello, Rock,” he said. “Have
any trouble finding the place?” I smiled and began to answer as he
cut me off. “You’re on third. So, your valet wrestles, too. Must
be rough getting two paychecks. She’s on second.” My jaw dropped,
and I must have turned chalky white. “You got a problem with that?”
the promoter asked. I hesitated for a moment before I spoke.
“She’s not here. She’s at the hotel. Nobody told either of us
that she was booked.” “Oh, #%$^, #@&%**&!,” he said. “Stupid lousy
scum-sucking *$#*@* b*stard help doesn’t do anything right!” “I’ll
call her at the hotel and tell her to get a taxi here,” I
suggested. I was envisioning that double paycheck. “No,” the
promoter said. “There’s not enough time for that. I’ll use the
local girl instead.” He continued his colorful language as he began
to walk away. I wanted to save the situation. I looked towards him
and asked, “Are you sure you don’t want me to have Ms. Pamela take a
taxi in? She could be here within …” That’s as far as I got when
the door slammed very loudly behind him. I looked around the
dressing room with slight bewilderment on my face. “Consider
yourself lucky,” said Bobby “the Brain” Heenan. “He’s in a really
good mood tonight.” Slowly I smiled. It was time for me to get
ready for my match and earn that big paycheck.
It
was my first time wrestling at the Amphitheatre, so I knew the
promoter would be watching. I was determined to “wow” him and every
single person in that sold-out arena. “That promoter will be
amazed and he will tell me how fantastic the match was,” I
thought as I headed to the ring. After fifteen minutes of one of
the best matches I had ever had, I headed back towards the dressing
rooms. I noticed several of pro wrestling’s biggest stars had been
watching – along with the promoter. When I entered the dressing
room, the promoter was there. I stared at him for a moment, hoping
for a response. Finally, with an expressionless look on his face,
the promoter said one monotone word to me on his way out: “Nice.”
This time, the door closed much more quietly behind him.
I
was a little disappointed. In a low tone of voice, I said “’Nice?’
Okay. I was expecting a little more than ‘nice.’” Bobby Heenan
heard me. “Hey, that’s the best compliment anybody’s ever gotten
from that guy.” “Really?” I asked. “Yah,” said Baron Von Raschke.
Horst Hoffman and two of the other wrestlers showed their agreement
by nodding. My smile became a big grin that didn’t go away until
the wee hours of the next morning. I was really going to like it
here in the AWA!
I
said goodbye to the other wrestlers, several of whom would become
lifelong friends. I made sure the promoter didn’t need me for
anything else, and I headed out of the arena. I enjoyed wrestling
“mid-card.” It gave me the opportunity to shower, dress, and leave
the building before the fans. After I had driven a block of so away
from the arena, I said what had become my habit in that situation
over the years: “Ladies and Gentlemen, Elvis has left the
building!” I liked the feeling. It was a feeling of
accomplishment, effortless escape, safety, serenity and
satisfaction. It was infinitely more desirable than the
alternative; being a highly-recognizable, bleached-blond, hated “bad
guy” wrestler attempting to make a getaway through 15,000 waiting
hostile fans.
On
my way back to the hotel, I stopped by the little mom-and-pop
Italian restaurant, bought an extra-large pizza, and headed back to
the hotel. It was a good night. The next morning, I would be
heading to Minneapolis for the official beginning of my “8-month AWA
tour.” --- To be continued next week. Until then, keep those
e-mails coming.