Ted DiBiase Shoot Interview Page 2
Coming into the Mid-South territory- Dick Murdoch got Cowboy
Bill Watts to bring him into the territory. Dick had told him that
he needed to wrestle there to decide if he really wanted to be in the
business. Considering the NCAA had just changed the rules on amateur
eligibility so that he continue playing football even if he was paid
to do another sport, he took Dick up on his offer during the Summer
break in classes. He loved working there so much that he didn't go
back to college when the Summer was up.
Dick Murdoch- He was great but he'll never get the credit that he
deserves. He could be clowning around in his matches yet still be
drawing enough heat to nearly get killed by the fans. His style
reminded him a lot of Iron Mike's, as well as Bruiser Bob
Sweetan.
Killer Karl Kox- His first main event angle ever was against
Kox in Mid-South. Kox mentored Murdoch at one time.
He then goes into a commentary about how you only learn the mechanics
of the business at a wrestling school but you learn how to work in the
ring. He doesn't like how some people today will map out their matches
move-for-move beforehand. He liked going out and just knowing the
finish, and on special occasions having certain spots called for the
beginning of the match.
Harley Race- "Harley will always have a special place in
my heart" not only for being a great friend but also because he
was the guy who ran to ringside to try and save Iron Mike when he had
his in-ring heart attack. Harley told him once that he had
"it" and that he'd try and help him become as good as he
could be and tried to make him into the NWA champion.
The NWA championship- The Funks, Bob Geigel (the
promoter in Kansas City), and Harley Race all wanted to make him the
champion but politics within the NWA board of directors scuttled that.
Instead, they decreed that Dusty Rhodes and Ric Flair were
going to get the title and that there wasn't going to be a third young
champion at the time. The plan was going to be that the three of them
were going to trade the title at some point, but instead it became
Dusty beating Race, Flair beating Dusty, Race beating Flair, and Flair
regaining the belt from Race. He says that Dusty heavily campaigned to
become the champion while he wanted his work to speak louder than
politics.
Georgia- He came in just as Ole Anderson left and Robert
Fuller (Tennessee Lee, Colonel Parker) had the book. Fuller was
okay as a booker but, coming from great bookers like Bill Watts and
the Funks, he could see that Fuller wasn't doing great. Fuller had
also brought his own crew in and pushed them, and also
"pushed" DiBiase by
teaming with him occasionally because Jim Barnett decreed that
DiBiase get a push. "I've
probably gone down in history as the guy who made more champions than
winning championships."
What are some memories of teaming with Fuller and Junkyard Dog?
They were trying to get Georgia hot again so they brought in JYD from
Mid-South. Despite JYD being a huge draw with both black and white
crowds, they still never regained the magic they had a few years
before that. He then talks about how the business goes in cycles and
that there's not much you can do when it's on a downswing. He enjoyed
being in Georgia, though, because he wasn't stuck in the car all the
time like in Mid-South or Amarillo.
His original run in the WWF- Around 1979, he went to New York for the
first time along with Tito Santana. Because of the exposure he'd
gotten in St. Louis, he was brought in as the first North American
champion. He feels that Vince McMahon Sr. liked his work but
that he didn't have the right look for the territory (he looked like a
green kid while the main draws for years were huge musclebound guys).
As a result, he jobbed the title to Pat Patterson when he came
into the territory. Patterson then "won" the tournament in
Rio for the Intercontinental title and the North American belt was
never seen again. (Vince Sr. had found out that Bill Watts had a North
American title so he changed the name.)
Wrestling Hulk Hogan in Madison Square Garden- He was in the TV
taping when Vince Sr. saw Hogan for the first time and "I almost
saw the dollar signs in his eyes." He was on the way out of the
territory, so he offered to job to Hogan and Hogan told him that he
owed him big.
Mid-South again- The territory would cool off every so often but it
never really got to "death" levels. Around that time, the
Funks and everyone else insisted that he go to Georgia and get
national TV exposure so that they could make him the NWA champion. He
met his wife while he was in Georgia. In order to get some heat on the
Freebirds and to get a storyline going for him, they had the Freebirds
drop him on his head and then made a huge show about putting him in
the hospital, where he stayed for a week despite being perfectly fine.
The highlight of Georgia- His match with Dusty Rhodes after Dusty won
the NWA title. People thought he wouldn't do the job for Dusty because
of the ugly political situation behind it, but Ted sees himself as a
businessman and did the job because he was convinced it was the right
thing for business.
Ted had lost favor with Jim Barnett for some unknown reason, so he
fell out of the title hunt. He feels that his criticism of Robert
Fuller's booking probably cost him the title. When Buck Robley
came in, they did the Freebirds angle mentioned beforehand. Gordon
Solie then announced what hospital he was at and people started
calling left and right, so the hospital made him write a list of
people whose calls could come through and he accidentally left Jim
Barnett's name off the list. Once he found out Barnett had been trying
to reach him, he called him up and heard "My boy... I've been
trying to reach you. Why is my name not on that list? I AM paying for
that room.", to which he replied "Well, Jim, I didn't think
you'd call."
What about the famous loaded glove? It was a gimmick that Watts slowly
built over time that got huge. Because the Samoans, Paul
Orndorff, and several other guys left the territory,
they needed a heel bad and asked him to look for one. At the time, he
and JYD were the top babyfaces and an idea hit him, so he went to
booker Ernie Ladd and suggested he turn heel on JYD. Ladd loved
it because he thought no one would ever expect him to turn on JYD.
Back to the glove... Watts did a deal where Ted "broke his
hand" and, once his cast came off, he started wearing the glove
and it happened to be the same night where he wrestled JYD in the
finals of the North American title tournament. At one point in the
match, Ted is out of it on the floor and JYD goes to put him back in
the ring so he can win it fairly. As JYD is getting back in the ring,
he "loads up" the glove and waffles JYD with it to win the
match and the title.
Bill Watts- "Bill Watts was the Vince Lombardi of professional
wrestling. You either learned a lot or you left." Watts was a
bully, but he knew the business and he learned from one of the best, Eddie
Graham. He says Watts paid fair money to non-stars, but the travel
schedule was horrible.
How did things change when he went national? It was too little, too
late because Vince McMahon already had a head start and a lot of
connections in New York City. He talks about how there was a cult
following of Mid-South/UWF over the years and that it is one of the
promotions which is most heavily traded for.
"Dr. Death" Steve
Williams - "One of the biggest jobs Watts ever
gave me was Steve Williams." Doc came in for a Summer between his
junior and senior years at Oklahoma then joined the business after
graduation. Watts had told him to teach Doc how to work. One night, he
had him in a match and told him to reverse the turnbuckle, get in the
center of the ring, and football tackle him. He wanted to take a
backdrop over Doc, but Doc instead hit him with the tackle and drove
him back into the turnbuckle. (Well, driving through a guy IS what's
drilled into your head as a lineman.) After that, he tagged out and
told his partner "He's ALL yours." Doc caught on quick,
though. He says that teaming with Doc helped his face turn after being
the big heel for so many years. They worked against the Sheepherders
(Bushwhackers) and the team of Hector
Guerrero and Chavo Guerrero Sr. at various times.
The Murdoch/Flair deal- Their huge angle in Mid-South was that Flair
came in for a title defense against DiBiase
but his old friend Murdoch came up early in the show and asked for the
title shot. DiBiase responded
that "It isn't your time, it's my time" and gets clocked by
Murdoch, thrown into the post, and bled like there was no tomorrow. He
bled a gusher, literally, because he'd taken aspirin and a shot of
brandy beforehand and then bladed too deep. The announcers played up
that there may not be a title match, but DiBiase
came back out bandaged up like a mummy to fight Flair and got HUGE
babyface heat because the bandages came off in mid-match and the blood
was flying everywhere. Finally, he went for the figure four, Flair
kicked him out of the ring, and he ended up being counted out in the
floor because he couldn't even stand up. Afterwards, Murdoch acts like
he's helping him then giving him a brainbuster on the floor. He spent
a night in the hospital then had a feud with Murdoch afterwards.
Jim Duggan- "I love Duggan. He's another guy I helped
break into the business." Duggan had been playing for the Atlanta
Falcons but he came into wrestling and was in a tag match against DiBiase
and Tommy Rich. He said when he did a lock up with Duggan, it was like
having a vice grip on you as opposed to working "snug" like
trained workers did. "I did one move with him then I tagged Tommy
and said 'He's all yours.'" Duggan came on quick, though, despite
being a sub-par worker in the ring. "It wasn't always about being
a great athlete or worker. JYD was a bad worker but had great
charisma." He also talks about how the average non-fan would take
one look at Dusty Rhodes' flabby, out of shape body and wonder why he
was a champion or announced as a contender, but once they saw his
match they bought it because he has great ring psychology.
He also jokes about how Duggan was afraid of blading so when they had
their series of matches, Ted would be wearing a true crimson mask
while Duggan would blade so gingerly that the little papercut Lex
Luger gave himself at Bash 88 looked like a gusher.
The Freebirds coming into the UWF- It didn't surprise him when they
came in and did great because he'd worked with them in Georgia and
Mid-South before and knew they could connect with the crowd easily.
He'd worked with Buddy Roberts before when he was
still teaming with Jerry Brown as the Hollywood
Blondes. Current WWE road agent Michael P.S. Hayes
"was not a great worker, but he was a great talker and had good
psychology." Terry "Bam Bam" Gordy was great. He hasn't
seen Gordy since he almost died but he was one of the best. One night,
he had just flown back from Japan and was jet-lagged to the point
where he couldn't remember his own name but he wrestled Gordy that
night and had a great match because Gordy lead the match the whole
way. They had a 59 minute match with a finish just to show the fans
that they could have a long match with a finish instead of going for
the hour broadway. He says that people would usually yell about how
the match was boring for the first 15 minutes or so but they would be
totally enthralled after that. He feels that those kind of matches are
what true wrestling is, not telling most of the story in backstage
vignettes or "driving a halftrack through the ring."
Sidenote- This interview is from 2000 and Gordy died in mid-2001. From
what I've seen of Gordy before he died, that particular near-death
experience in the mid-90s where he OD'ed on an international flight
left him with a tremendous amount of permanent damage that contributed
to a death in his mid-40s. That was on top of his first near-death
experience where he was severely dehydrated after a match in Japan
then started convulsing because he drank a lot of beer and had a pain
pill instead of re-hydrating himself.
Working with Stan Hansen and Bruiser Brody in Japan- He loved working
in Japan. It was hard to adapt to working there his first few times,
but he learned to love the country. When Brody and Hansen had their
split, the Japanese fans accepted him as Hansen's partner because he'd
put in his time and had seen him grow as a wrestler. Hansen had asked
him to start coming on all the tours as his partner and he jumped at
the chance, even becoming "Ted the cowboy" in a way to match
Hansen's tobacco-chewing, bullrope-swinging, shit-kicking, redneck
cowboy bad ass gimmick. He knew he was going to be seen as the weaker
link in the team and, as a result, being the guy to play Ricky Morton
before giving Stan the hot tag, but he was fine with it because it was
a great opportunity.
Did Watts have a problem with him splitting time between Mid-South and
Japan- Bill was great about it because he felt, rightly, that
disappearing every so often kept him from burning out in the eyes of
the fans.
Watts getting tired of the business- In the mid-80s, he says that
Watts burned out on the business and retreated to being the owner,
turning over the booking duties to a variety of guys including Ken
Mantell and Bill Dundee. Ted personally feels that
Dundee hot-shotted the entire territory, which was great for a while
but it bottoms out. Mantell and Jim Ross were the guys who got
the job of rebuilding the wreckage left in Dundee's wake.
Coming back to the WWF- Bruce Prichard (Brother Love) was
working for Houston promoter Paul Boesch in the
mid-80s when he went to interview with the WWF. Ted asked him to
mention his name while he was up there because he wanted out of
Mid-South because he was just tired of being there, but didn't expect
anything to come of it. He went to Japan on a tour and got a call
while he was over there from the UWF that Jim Crockett
was buying out the company but that he was one of the guys that
Crockett really wanted to keep and sign to a new deal. Pritchard then
called him up and said "Don't sign anything yet. Vince is very
interested in you."
He went back to the US and did a TV taping for the UWF and was asked
what it would take for him to sign. He told them that he wanted as
much as Lex Luger was getting because Lex hadn't put in nearly as much
time as him and wasn't near the caliber of worker he was, and they
agreed to it in principle plus the right for him to still go to Japan.
A week later, Vince McMahon called him up and told him that he
had an idea for something but that he wouldn't tell him about it over
the phone. He asked him to at least fly him up and hear about it. They
flew him up and gave him the first class treatment all the way but
wouldn't lay out the gimmick unless he signed because Vince thought it
was so great. They talked about how it had never been done before
which made it a great opportunity. Pat Patterson then told him
"Ted, let me put it to you this way... if Vince could climb into
the ring himself, he'd use this gimmick that he's going to give you.
He'll put everything into it that he needs to in order to get it
over." He went home and called Terry Funk for his advice and
Terry told him to go to New York if Vince was going to be that serious
about a huge push. He then called up Jim Crockett and told him
"Jim, he made me an offer I couldn't refuse."
The next time he went to New York, they flew them up first class, put
them in the best hotels, etc. and were told that he was going to
become the Million Dollar Man. He's not sure if the
other guys were jealous of him for getting that because most people
know that something like that is great for all of them and will make
them all money. He loved the gimmick from the start. He and his wife
couldn't believe that not only was he getting a great push, but he was
also getting it in style. Vince paid for a limousine wherever he went
and put him up in first class hotels, etc. in order to get the gimmick
over.
He also goes into a side story about how he always used to imitate
promoter Jim Barnett and that, while he was in New York, Barnett was
working for Vince and was talking with Ted's wife while he was doing
all his interviews. Later on, his wife told him "I almost bit a
hole through my lip because he talked EXACTLY like you imitated
him."
He makes a big deal about how Vince gave him the biggest break in his
career and treated him better than anyone ever did in the business,
but it doesn't keep him for feeling how he does about the direction
where Vince has taken the business.
He says the wrestling business is not wrestling anymore. It used to
always boil down to good vs. evil. He says that suspended disbelief is
what made the business. Wrestlers were even making huge money during
the Great Depression because people just wanted to watch the matches
and be happy. The thing that disappoints him so much about the
business today are things like how Owen Hart, who was
such a good person, dying as an indirect result of the direction of
the business. Owen had refused to do an angle where he had an affair
because he didn't want to have to explain it to his kids, so
management remembered that he hated doing the Blue Blazer
gimmick back in the late 80s when he started with the company and made
him do it again. Owen felt pressured into going along with it, even
being dropped out of the ceiling to the ring, and is dead today as a
result. While it was not intentional, it never should have come to
that.
He also hates how the anti-hero is now the big star in the business
and that the young people idolize wrestling thugs and pimps as a
result. It makes him sick today to have to explain how he was a
wrestler back when things were different instead of today when it's
such a smutty product. He says that people may see him as bitter, but
he wonders what's happened to our society when we're entertained by
guys like Howard Stern and Jerry Springer. He starts talking about how
we might as well revert back to the days of the gladiators, then
immediately brings up ECW. He gives ECW a lot of credit for trying to
compete with the big federations but he questions their product
because they're selling hardcore brutality. He says there was a time
where he would have been proud that wrestling was seven of the top ten
shows on cable TV but he isn't because of the content within them.
He then starts talking about the Roman Empire and how great it was
until they started feeding people to the lions and watching people
kill each other for entertainment.
He thinks that the story of the Hogan-DiBiase
feud was supposed to be that money may buy a lot but eventually it
will blow up in his face when someone refuses to be bought. Whenever
the blowoff came, it would always be the babyface who came away with
the win. These days, if the bad guy can get away with it, he's cool,
and he's disgusted with it as a result. He loves the business because
it's provided for him but he can't stand what it's become today.
WXO- He was approached by Rene Goulet and Barry
Darsow (Demolition Smash) about this. He told them right off the
bat that if it was anything like today's product that he wasn't
interested. They told him that they wanted to bring back the old
wrestling with no crotch shots, double birds, topless women, etc. They
just wanted him to lend his name to it and be the figurehead
commissioner of it. He then signed on with them and feels it was
taking off for a while before the money behind the scenes suddenly
pulled out. He says that the money men were supporting two
organizations and he's not sure if they didn't want one with potential
threatening the other or if they just said "We've already got
one... why do we need two?", but their contract was breached and
the money disappeared. He says their first three shows had subpar
talent but great production values. If it ever resurfaces, he feels
that there's an audience for it.
He then sends out an open message to Vince McMahon claiming that he
has a moral contract with the people watching his product where he
should be putting on a clean product. He feels that integrity is
lacking in the business today. While Vince made him the Million Dollar
Man as a gimmick in 1987, he feels that Vince really HAS become the
Million Dollar Man today.
Sidenote- This was a LONG section and a bit preachy, but Ted was right
on the money with about 90% of it. The hot-shotting of angles in the
last year has proven over the last year that Sportz Entertainment is
not a huge draw in itself... it's more of a nice topping which puts a
few extra people on top of all the ones who come to see wrestling.
Hulk Hogan- Everyone's got a different opinion of him, but he was
always good to him. Hogan would work with who he was comfortable with
and he was chosen because Hogan wanted to pay back the favor DiBiase
had done for him all the way back in Madison Square Garden in about
1980. Whether you like him or not, he was the right guy at the right
place at the right time who caused the business to go through the
roof. Hulk wasn't a great wrestler but he was a great worker because
he could talk, he had charisma, and he could put butts in seats. He
feels that Hogan may have gotten a bit paranoid by being on top
because everyone was always calling him and asking for favors. He's
heard people say Hogan didn't know when to pass the torch and he's not
sure what to think of that. He feels that you're in the business to
make money, so you sell yourself the best you can. If you stop
selling, you need to reinvent yourself so that you can start selling
again. What he never did, though, was to step over people or trash
them backstage in order to get himself an opportunity and he doesn't
think Hogan did it either. He considers Hulk a friend but hasn't
talked to him since he left WCW. He saw when Hogan turned heel it was
because he'd exhausted his drawing power as a face but he also saw
that Hogan would try to leave the business back in the red and yellow
as a face, which he sees now. (This is an oddly appropriate part of
the interview... this is about a three year old interview but Hogan
has shown up for ANOTHER "last" face run in the WWE in the
past week)
Was his size ever a problem in the WWF? No, because he knew how to
work his style around having an opponent much larger than himself. He
would have to do cheapshots when people weren't looking, etc. "If
Andre The Giant could work with a heel and get
sympathy, then I could work with Hogan."
Ric Flair- Most of these 20 year olds in the business don't have the
cardiovascular ability of Ric Flair, but Ric definitely looks his age
(about 50 at the time of the interview). He enjoyed working with Flair
and he was very easy to work with. He says that there are times when
you have to think about hanging it up and that many people in WCW
thought that Ric should retire during the nWo era.
Young guys in the business- He misses the business whenever he sees a
really good match or a young guy who really loves the business and
gives it his all. Some of those guys are Eddie
Guerrero, Chris Benoit, Chris Jericho, Dean
Malenko, etc. There are more but he just can't think of them at
the moment. He doesn't like how psychology has mutated, though, and
Japan in particular drove him nuts because guys would do 30 suplexes,
drop each other on their heads, and powerbomb someone on the concrete
but they'd stand right up. (This is very evident in the business today
because most of the hot young talents such as the guys listed above
either spent a lot of time in Japan or were influenced heavily by that
style in other ways.)
"There is no logic to the business anymore."
Virgil- The name was, in fact, a rib on Dusty Rhodes' real
name, Virgil Runnels. He thinks that either Afa or Sika
of the Wild Samoans had referred Virgil (Mike Jones)
to Vince McMahon. They went
out to eat with Bobby
Heenan one night and wondered what they were going to
call him and Heenan came up with the name Virgil, and the only Virgil
any of them knew was Dusty. When Virgil came into WCW, they asked
Heenan for a new name and he suggested "Vincent".
Dusty in the WWF- He thinks that Vince was sending a message to Dusty
by bringing him in and immediately jobbing him out and making him wear
polka dots. Dusty got the message loud and clear and just went with
what he was told to do. (I think Vince was doing a little more than
that... the whole mess with Sweet Sister Sapphire and how "You
can beat my prices but you can't beat my meat" seems to be an
outright humiliation than a message of who the boss is)
Wrestlemania 4- Honky
Tonk Man refused to drop the Intercontinental Title to
Randy Savage at The Main Event. As a consolation prize for not
shooting on HTM, Savage was given the WWF title at Wrestlemania. One
problem... the belt was already promised to DiBiase.
That is part of why the Million Dollar Belt was created the next year
when he completely dropped from WWF title contention. He was slightly
upset that a world title had eluded him again but he didn't kiss asses
or play the game to get the belt and wasn't going to start then. The
Main Event was still a huge night for him because he got to be a part
of the main event of the first prime time network TV wrestling show in
30 years. On top of that, he got to be involved in Vince finally
taking the WWF title off of Hogan by hiring Dave Hebner's twin brother
Earl to make the illegal three count on Hogan. Walking out of The Main
Event carrying the WWF title and totally screwing over Hogan in the
process put the Million Dollar Man into overdrive.
Wrestlemania 5- He felt his spot slipping a bit since he was
programmed against a returning "Superfly" Jimmy Snuka
after being in the main event match against Savage the year before.
Tiny "Zeus" Lister- Most of the locker room was
pissed off that an actor who had never paid any dues in the ring was
getting a huge push.
Ultimate Warrior- He was a horrible worker yet Vince made him
the champion. "He's given a lot of lip service over the years to
becoming a great worker. Jim Hellwig used the wrestling business. It
was a means to an end. To his credit, he was tremendously dedicated to
keeping his body in shape. That's about it." He does give credit
to him because he was there when Warrior and Sting came into
Mid-South as the Blade Runners and Warrior trusted
him to lead a match. He thought the Wrestlemania 6 match where Hogan
dropped the belt was a great match through Hogan's own force of
willpower. He even told Vince McMahon that he thought that Warrior
getting the title was a mistake though because he didn't appreciate
the business and that he was a monster in the making. Vince's response
to that was "Well, he's my monster and I can control him."
He never told Vince "I told you so" even after Warrior held
him up for money several times. Warrior being a total asshole to the
fans didn't help. He doesn't know if a lot of Warrior's problems were
drug-related or what. He feels that Vince bringing him back the second
time was more desperation than anything else (I think that was the
1996 run) and that he may have been thinking that the success of the
business was all him and not the talent. "Vince will even tell
you that between the first big run and the second big run that he
wasn't listening to people anymore and just did what he wanted
to."
Jake Roberts -
He hasn't seen Beyond The Mat yet but hears that Jake was
exceptionally honest in it. He's known Jake since he was a referee
just waiting to get into the business. "Jake Roberts is another
one of those guys who has an unbelievable amount of talent." He
enjoyed working with him a lot and, even though he wrestled three
times at WM4 and was in the co-main event of WM9, his favorite
Wrestlemania was WM6 because he faced Jake there. He thinks it's sad
what's happened to Jake over the years and has tried to contact him
and get him back on track several times over the years.
Undertaker- "Mark Callus had a look and some raw potential
which has developed well."
Dustin Rhodes- He saw immediately that Dustin had
potential and that him being a second generation talent helped him out
a lot. He enjoyed working with him.
Kerry Von Erich and the Von Erich family- He liked them all a
lot but it was very sad what happened to them. He knew Kerry, David,
and Kevin more than Chris, Mike, and Fritz. David was the best worker
of them. Kerry had the best body of them. He feels it's a real credit
to Kerry that he worked as long as he did with a prosthetic foot and
kept up his body so well. "It was a situation of 'Too much, too
soon'" and he doesn't know if Fritz's unwillingness to believe
his sons were drug addicts was what finally destroyed them all. They
were all, individually, very nice guys and that "Kerry Von Erich
would literally give you the shirt off his back." The police in
Dallas liked the boys a lot, which hurt them in the end because they
kept letting their indiscretions slide until Kerry got busted for
writing his own subscriptions. Kerry then killed himself rather than
face jail time.
What was the vibe in the locker room when Ric Flair came in? It was
probably the same as when any other huge name comes in from elsewhere,
where people wonder if they'll get over, etc. He doesn't feel anyone
begrudged Ric being there, though.
Why'd he leave in 1993? A variety of reasons, mainly the aftereffects
of a personal crisis he had shortly after Wrestlemania 8. He dances
around it a bit, but he mainly says that he did everything that he
could have possible done and that his wife had a confrontation over
it. (He doesn't go outright and say whether it was drug abuse,
affairs, etc., but he says he covered it in his book and I'm sure it's
more complete there.) "There's a fine line between being
confident and being cocky about it and I certainly got cocky about
it." He says that the road becomes a very lonely place and
compares it to being any famous entertainer (TV star, movie star,
etc.) or a travelling salesman. As a part of the whole personal
crisis, he turned back to God and became born again. From the year
between Wrestlemania 8 and Wrestlemania 9, he struggled to keep him
from falling back into old bad habits. He finally decided to leave the
WWF after Summerslam 93 and go back to Japan because he'd be able to
stay at home for a month after each tour. Vince wasn't happy with him
because Vince wanted him to stay. There was also the matter of a
comment where he said "I'm finally glad to be out of here",
which he meant was the pressure every night and the tough road
schedule, while Vince interpreted it as "I'm getting out of this
horrible place."
Going back to Japan- Working in Japan was like something Terry Funk
said once. "In America, you think 'shoot' but you work. In Japan,
you think 'shoot' and almost do, but it's actually a work." Giant
Baba treated him great while he was there and he was back in the main
events with Stan Hansen at Budokan. When he came back to the US, he
had an MRI and was told he probably shouldn't go back to work. He was
told he could have surgery and go back, but there was a small chance
of permanent injury. If he didn't have a Lloyds of London insurance
policy, he probably would have had the surgery and gone back to work.
He said it also weighed heavily on his head that his dad died at 45 in
the ring and that he'd always promised himself that he'd retire while
he could. His last match was in Japan with Abdullah the Butcher and he
was pretty sure that he'd never go back and, after an MRI, made the
final decision to retire. He ended up sitting around the house for
months and gaining 20 pounds because he was eating all the time. He
eventually got together with Francois, the masseuse used by many WWE
wrestlers including Mick Foley, and trained to get back in
shape.
Going back to the WWF- Around the time he was getting back in shape,
Bruce Prichard called him up and asked if he wanted to do commentary
at the Royal Rumble with Vince. He told Vince if he was happy with it,
he was willing to come back as an announcer or a manager. Vince
thought about it for a few months then brought him to Wrestlemana 10
and sat him near the Bill Clinton imitator. Right after that, he
started doing commentary on most of the shows and started up the
Million Dollar Corporation. He only had to work every three weeks for
TV tapings and fly up to Stamford once a week to do commentary.
Eventually, they asked him to start grooming Sid to be a top guy. This
was after he'd just had the infamous scissors incident with Arn
Anderson, so they told him "You need to help him
keep both oars in the water." Prichard eventually asked him to be
a road agent, so he said that he'd do it if they made him a salaried
employee of the company and paid for all his travel and lodging
expenses. He never heard a word about a road agent job again. He said
that back then, agents basically babysat the talent and ran the shows,
so he wasn't interested in it anyway.
What was the locker room vibe when Monday Night Raw launched? Most
people wondered "What the heck is Vince doing?", but they
soon saw the potential after a few shows. Most people were pissed that
they had to come into New York every Monday though.
Did he see potential in Steve Austin? Oh yeah. He saw a lot of
himself in Austin. He told Austin not to change anything he was doing
because it made him different than everyone else, which wouldn't get
him over as fast but would keep him over solid when he made it. He
wasn't happy with HOW Steve got over, though, as he found the whole
Austin 3:16 bit distasteful. If he was still there when it happened,
he would have resigned immediately. "When you make a hero out of
a guy who comes to the ring, chugs a beer, flips everyone off, and
emblazoned upon his chest is Austin 3:16, I wouldn't want to be
there." He knows that Austin 3:16 was a direct result of Jake
Roberts proclaiming himself born again "then Jake started
screwing up again and it was widely known within the company." He
doesn't know if there was personal heat between Austin and Jake,
though.
How did he end up in WCW? He heard through the grapevine that they
wanted him. They'd heard indirectly that he wanted out of the WWF
because he hated being on the road. He would have wanted out anyway
when the Attitude Era hit.
What was Bischoff like compared to McMahon and were politics worse in
WCW? Vince disappointed him because, for all the good things he did,
he went against every principle he ever declared he had. Those
included running a family-oriented program, having no swearing, never
bringing up the competition, his family would never be involved on
camera, etc. etc. etc. He wonders why he went that direction, although
he thinks that Vince's attitude may have gotten worse after the whole
government steroid trial. He sympathizes with Vince fighting the
government because they were wrong, but he feels that Vince has kept a
chip on his shoulder about the whole situation. He doesn't feel that
the program is suitable for ANYONE, like the Howard Stern show. He
wonders where Vince can go now that he's had an 80-year old woman take
her top of on pay per view (one of the few bad spots on an otherwise
great show, Royal Rumble 2000). "It's just like hot-shotting a
territory. There's only so far you can go before it just bottoms out.
After a while, you can't top what you've already done so I don't know
what that's going to lead to."
What was his run like in WCW? He came in as the money man behind the
nWo but they couldn't call him Million Dollar Man because Vince held
the rights to that character. Fortunately for him, he was always known
as Million Dollar Man Ted DiBiase,
so just calling him Ted DiBiase
worked well enough. The big problem he had with the nWo angle was that
Eric Bischoff joined it, a good business move on their part,
which eliminated his position as the spokesperson for the group.
Eventually, he went to Eric told him that he was sick of standing in
the corner holding Hulk's belt because Eric had taken his spot. If
they weren't going to do anything with him, he'd rather just go home.
They sent him home to collect his checks until they came up with
something for him, and when they called him up they just told him
"Be in Detroit, you'll have a ticket." He didn't appreciate
that they weren't showing him the respect he deserved with the
position he had within the industry.
They put him with the Steiner Brothers, but it made no sense
because they didn't need a manager. It was done, apparently, because
Eric couldn't think of something for him to do. He had wanted to be a
commentator but Eric told him they were happy with they people they
had and they weren't looking for anybody to do that. Since Eric ran
out of ideas for him, he became the spokesman for NASCAR and was the
technical advisor for a video game, etc. It was all just excuses for
him to do something to earn his check, which he appreciates because it
was a lot of money for doing nothing. He doesn't think that Eric knew
what he was doing because he was never in the ring, so he didn't
realize what worked and what didn't.
What does he think will happened with Vince Russo involved in WCW?
"It's the blind leading the blind." At least Vince McMahon
knows how to create stars and get guys over. He lost all of his stars
to WCW, which is why WCW was on top for a few years. Since WCW didn't
know what to do with all of them, the WWF created new stars and
surpassed WCW again. He told Eric one night that Vince was never going
away because he was too persistent and that Eric got pissed over it
because he didn't want to hear it. As for Vince Russo, "While the
guy may be a very creative guy, all I see him creating is smut."
When they say "We're giving the public what they want", he
responds with "Do you let your kids do what they want all the
time?"
Where does he see the business and himself in a few years? He's a
full-time minister/evangelist these days and he's done two mission
trips to India already. He does a lot of public speaking. He wants to
eventually found the wrestling equivalent of PowerTeam, which is a
bodybuilder outreach group which tries to keep kids in school, etc.
and will do feats of strength to impress people. Their version would
be a small wrestling show with no pyro, no video wall, no women losing
their tops, etc. As for the business, he knows there's a lot of stuff
in the news about kids doing wrestling moves to each other and people
dying and wonders if the government will get involved. (The particular
situation he describes seems to be the infamous Lionel Tate case,
where the kid basically beat a little girl to death and, on his fourth
or fifth version of the story, started claiming that he'd given the
girl a jackknife powerbomb.) What he does know is that the business he
grew up in has now died and a lot of it is now just brawling. He
compares it to the movies, where you rarely see a great drama anymore
because everyone wants to make a lot of violent movies with no depth.
Eddie Gilbert- "I liked Eddie." He met him when he
was just starting out in the business. Before that, he'd known his
dad, Tommy Gilbert, back from his days in Texas. Eddie was another
second-generation wrestler who caught on quick and developed a great
mind for the business. He wasn't surprised that Eddie became a good
booker.
Shawn Michaels- He met him when he came into Mid-South for the
first time. He used to be shy and withdrawn, which is the furthest
thing from what he is today. He loved the business and they'd had a
lot of conversations about when Shawn would get a break. After he got
his break, though, he became real cocky. He feels it's a growing
process because the same thing happened to him, although he didn't get
THAT cocky and he never mistreated anybody, although he doesn't know
if Shawn did. He also puts Jose Lothario, Shawn's trainer, as a great
guy.
Closing comments- "I talked for a long time on this, so you might
as well label this 'The Epic- Ben Hur." He talks about how he
speaks to high school kids and college kids and tries to help them. He
just wishes that wrestling could remove the garbage and go back to the
clear definition of good and evil.
Matches-
Buddy Roberts and Michael Hayes of the Freebirds vs. Dr. Death and Ted
DiBiase in a lumberjack match.
This is one of the two typical UWF main events, as the match ends in a
DQ because someone gave Hayes a belt, which he uses to choke out DiBiase
and then whips him with it. At least this wasn't the OTHER typical UWF
main event, where the match would go about 10 seconds in before Jim
Ross would say "And we're out of time, see you next week!"
JYD and DiBiase vs. the
Freebirds- This is the infamous match in Georgia where DiBiase
ended up in the hospital. Joined in progress as DiBiase
gets tossed out of the ring and Terry Gordy gives him a piledriver on
the concrete. He just barely crawls back into the ring, so Gordy keeps
giving him piledrivers and going for the pin, but DiBiase
just barely kicks out each time. When Gordy starts to attempt a fifth
piledriver, Tommy Rich throws in the towel for DiBiase
then attacks the Freebirds. Footage is shown of DiBiase
being wheeled from the ring as well as an interview with him in his
hospital bed.
DiBiase vs. Bruiser Brody from
Japan- Long match. Brody eventually wins with a flying knee from the
top rope.
Ted DiBiase and Steve O vs.
"Superfly" Jimmy Snuka and Terry Gordy- Michael Hayes is on
commentary here and they're pushing hard that the Gordy had broken off
from the Freebirds. The match ends as Hayes knocks Superfly off the
top rope for the DQ. Hayes then starts whaling away on Gordy.
Stan Hansen and Ted DiBiase
vs. Riki Choshu and an unidentified Japanese wrestler- This is
severely clipped and appears to be an Iron Man tag match. DiBiase
looks pretty big here, so I think this may be from his tour in 1993
instead of from his first run tagging with Hansen in 1986 and 1987.
The match appears to end at a score of 7 to 6, although I can't say
which side won because I can't read Kanji.
Comments- DiBiase is very well
spoken here and this is an informative and long (nearly three hour)
interview. While some of his feelings are a little too old-school for
my taste, mainly in his preference for hour long matches that build
slowly, he has many valid points and could contribute significant
things to the business today. However, his devotion to being a
minister as well as his distaste for the current direction of the
business will keep that from happening on the national level.
Highly Recommended