 Hardy On Why Some ECW Wrestlers Didn't Mesh Well Posted by Steve Carrier on 11/10/2012 at 01:52 PM
Hosts Jack E. Jones and One Inch Biceps welcomed Matt Hardy of Extreme Rising to IYH Wrestling Radio. Matt was on the show to publicize the upcoming Extreme Rising show on Saturday, November 17 from the Golden Dome in Monaca, PA that will be on IPPV (http://www.WWNlive.com). Matt will be wrestling The Franchise Shane Douglas in the main event that evening.
Highlights of this interview included the following:
When he wrestled in June for Extreme Rising for the first time, was he unsure how the fans would react to him?
No, I was pretty sure and I think I pretty much had it to a T. Im pretty good at being on the pulse of how wrestling fans are going to be. I knew it was going to be a very mixed bag, because wherever I go theres going to be diehard Matt Hardy/Hardy Boyz fans, which are younger kids or people that followed us through our WWE career; theyre going to be there and theyre going to be supportive regardless of whatever. But then the diehard ECW and extreme-niche fans, because Im not an extreme original or an ECW original, I knew those people it was going to be an uphill battle. And you know, its one of those things in time only you earn their respect, especially when you walk into their promotion and on your debut match youre in the main event against Jerry Lynn, who is one of the ECW icons. I knew it was going to be a mixed bag for sure. The people that were diehard extreme wrestling fans, they gave me a hard time, which was great. And my fans were there cheering, so its OK. As long as Im invoking emotion from people, its fine. Ill channel it in the appropriate way in the ring. As long as theyre entertained and Im invoking emotion, Im good.
Were there people that didnt want some of the ECW guys to succeed when they would come over to the WWF?
I think so...The thing that made ECW so good - Paul Heyman was such a genius booker/promoter because he highlighted everyones strengths. I mean, he would take whatever the best qualities were about someone and he would keep pushing that, pushing that, and pushing that and get everything they could out of it, and thats what gets characters over. Thats what gets characters or wrestlers to connect with the crowd emotionally. Public Enemy, they had their deal; they were hip-hop gangstas and they did the hand motion and they would put people through tables, and they ended up being a huge act. When they came to the WWE and were forced to wrestle a couple matches; I know there were some guys who didnt like them. They ultimately had a match with the Acolytes which was very very ugly. Taz was another guy who was over huge in ECW. Once he came to WWE, you can see that never translated. Once again, they took away from playing to his strengths and what his character was built around. And the examples keep popping up over and over if you look at Paul Heymans ECW originally. Sandman, he came out and he would drink beer and he would cane people, and he was over like crazy and people bought tickets to see him. 911 was another example of a guy who was very limited as far as being a complete wrestler overall but he became a huge star there; he was really over...At WWE sometimes they expect people to be a more well-rounded performer 360 degrees and be able to do everything, and my thought is if its business and youre trying to make money you want your acts to be as over as they possibly can be. And if that means like protecting them in some areas that theyre weak at, then why not do it because its your investment in the first place. But thats not always how the WWE crew thinks.
This interview is available for listening at http://www.iyhwrestling.com/viewnews.php?autoid=4836.
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