Friday, March 29, 2024
News​AUDIO: Brodus Clay Reacts To His WWE Release & More

​AUDIO: Brodus Clay Reacts To His WWE Release & More

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The RCWR
Show
recently
interviewed former WWE Superstar Brodus Clay. You can read some highlights and
listen to the audio in the player below:

Brodus on getting into
the wrestling industry:
“The first time mostly, I was always a
lifelong wrestling fan. I actually tried a couple of times to get into wrestling
and all failed miserably. I went to a wrestling school in Canada. That did not
work out well, I think I was out there for like a week. I saw that was not going
anywhere. I called the Power Plant (WCW) a couple of times. They never picked up
though. Eventually I got together with some guys who were wrestling fans who
wanted to be wrestlings historians. I used to work for a spot called the “Saddle
Ranch”. Then Wrestlemania came to Hollywood. This was at the Staples Center.
They had Tommy Dreamer, Mike Boche, Chris Masters and a few other guys were
there at the club that night. I did not have them waiting in line and took care
of them and put them up on stage. It was cool, we were just hanging out and
unfortunately or fortunately a fight broke out. There were two little guys that
were fighting over a woman that had already left them. It was kind of funny to
think about it. I was telling these guys to be cool and have a good night. As I
was walking away, one of them hit me. I could not even believe he did that. I
looked at him like, “no you didn’t!” At that point I clocked the two guys heads
together and suitcased them out. What suitcased is where you grab by the belt
around and carry them out by their pants. So they look like suitcases when you
carry them out. Tommy Dreamer thought that was hysterical and he said you need
to be doing that on TV. I laughed back and said, “ya’ll ain’t hiring.” He said,
“well actually I am part of the Talent Relations for WWE.” I said, “well
actually I am the head of Talent Relations for Saddle Ranch so if you want a job
you got it.”

“He [Tommy Dreamer] started working with me throwing guys
out and stuff. Just the experience that night hanging out with them and stuff it
was cool. He told me to keep in touch and send pictures and stuff. He had asked
if I had ever wrestled before. I had said I had watched it my whole life and
played organized sports my whole life. But I had never got the chance to work in
the ring. About four months later he called me up and said we want to bring you
down for a tryout with Bill Demott and I was like, “what?” He (Tommy) said we
will fly you down to Atlanta. He (Bill Demott) had a reputation of being tough
on new guys. I wasn’t too worried about it. I did not do what I would say was
spectacular but I did not quit. All the drills and stuff were a little different
than what I was used to with football. Bill saw something in me and basically
put in the word for me. Then I talked with John Laurinaitis and they signed me.
They sent me to do some training to work on my bumps. It all happened kind of
fast but I had a lot of good people looking out for me. Also the respect that I
had for the business got me. Sometimes guys don’t like what you did before
because you are basically starting over. For me it did not matter what I did
before and I didn’t try to drop names to get myself over, I was trying to earn
my spot. It was like building my own career. I am actually pretty proud of
that.”

Brodus on working with Alberto Del Rio:
“Alberto was a class act. My nickname for him is El Presidente. He just carries
himself in such a way. His knowledge is incredible. We always got along as I had
appreciation of the business and he had a great lineage of the business. I was
just a sponge around him. The same with Ricardo Rodriguez as he just really did
not get enough credit in my opinion because he could be like a Paul Heyman. Just
the way he carries himself whether when he’s in the ring or in a match… he knows
what you are going to do before you’re going to do it. You can look to him for
confidence. It was a no lose situation but a great situation for me to be in. I
think our time was short but it was a great experience.”

Brodus
on the delay of his debut:
“You know, I would love to tell you. But to
be honest with you I was coming into work everyday and thinking, “is today going
to be the day? Today is the day alright. Today is not the day alright, today is
not the day alright.” I honestly think they just did not know whether to let me
be the monster or let me be the Funkasaurus. For a while it was going to be
Heavy G. but no one wants to be called Heavy G when you’re dieting and doing
your thing. That is the last thing you want to have. I actually came up with
Funkasaurus. When me and Rob were at “Hard Knocks” working out we came up with
Funkasaurus. Fortunately the writer was tired and I said, “can I call myself
Funkasaurus?” He said, “what? Yeah alright, cool, whatever! You’re not debuting
tonight anyway.” Ladies and gentleman from the Plant Funk. You could have heard
a pin drop in that arena that night. It was the first time in a long time in
wrestling that we actually kept something a secret.”

On his
version of the Hall of Pain gimmick and if it mirrored Henry’s
version:
“Completely different. Here is the thing, we pitch ideas all
the time. At the time I was Brodus Clay and we decided to go a whole different
direction with the Funkasaurus. Mark is every bit of a super destroyer. He is
the world strongest man. Mark is a world of pain for anybody. Here is the thing,
when you have an idea and it is just an idea, it is something on a piece of
paper. If someone takes it and makes it their own, they make it something new
then it is not yours anymore. So I never felt like he took anything from me
because I would not have done it the same way he did.

His
thoughts on his WWE release:
“I was driving to go train at Hard Knox.
I got a phone call and they were like, “I think you know why we are calling.” I
am like, “ok.” We discussed a few things and I thanked them for their time. We
parted ways and that was it. Then I looked online and on Twitter and it started
blowing up. So I made a statement and as far as I was concerned, I was going to
finish my day. I did not want people to be all negative and all like, “I am so
sorry.” There is people that had really bad mornings and I wasn’t one of them. I
had one of the greatest jobs in the world, but that is not the end of the world.
There’s people out that don’t know if their child is going to make it out of the
hospital or not. Also may not know where their next meal is coming from. There
is people that had some bad days. Like nobody wants to lose their job. They way
I look at it. You can break bread or play dead. Only you can close doors or burn
bridges. I don’t think I have done anything to do that.”

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