Thursday, April 18, 2024
News​Tommy Dreamer Discusses Beulah McGillicutty's Final Wrestling Appearance At House Of Hardcore

​Tommy Dreamer Discusses Beulah McGillicutty’s Final Wrestling Appearance At House Of Hardcore

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Source: Pwinsider.com

Tommy Dreamer recently spoke with Pro Wrestling Insider about his wife Beulah
McGillicutty making her final wrestling appearance at the November 15th House of
Hardcore iPPV. Here is what Dreamer had to say…

“[Beulah] actually shockingly came to me and said, ‘Hey my career
started in ECW, so what do you say if I end it there?.’ I was like, ‘Really?’
She said yeah. It’s going to be the last time she’s going to walk me down the
aisle and be in my corner, which is pretty cool. She’s actually been training
hard and is focused. I thought it was cool that she wanted to do it and do it
there, and as you know, we saw so many special moments there and it’s a way to
say goodbye to someone we really used to love.

I lured her back in for One Night Stand 2005. I lured her back for One Night
Stand 2006. It’s always been my fault. Even with Hardcore Justice in TNA, as you
know, her mom had just passed away eight days before that. It was funny, that
day, she said was happy she was there because she got to see all these wrestlers
from her past and everyone made her feel so welcome and she realized that this
is a family. I’ve always said that everything I have is because of ECW….my wife,
my children, my career, so when she got hurt at my show, I really, for the first
time, realized I felt like crap, because it was my fault. I put her in that
situation. Even though it was Lance Storm who stiffed her with a clothesline
[laughs]. Nah, she just took a bad bump. It’s funny, it’s Raven who always says
you have a bump card and I guess she hit her limit. So, I felt horrible and I
didn’t even ask her. She’s always there. She’s got my back. She’ll do whatever
or just watch the show. For her to actually want to compete and have a way to
close her career…she doesn’t do many of these. I have a lot more respect for her
as a competitor because her whole thing is, ‘I want people to remember me when I
was in my prime. I don’t want to be a hanger-on.”