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Ric Flair Wishes He Would’ve Picked A Different Wrestler For His Last Match

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Ric Flair recently did an interview with Chris Van Vliet where they discussed various topics. During the “Insight” podcast, Flair mentioned that he regrets not choosing Ricky Morton for his final match.

Ric Flair’s “Last Match” event took place on July 31, 2022, at the Nashville Municipal Auditorium in Nashville, TN. The main event featured Flair and Andrade El Idolo facing off against Jeff Jarrett and Jay Lethal, with Karen Jarrett in their corner. Flair was victorious in the match, making Jarrett submit with the figure four.

The event was a success, generating a gate of over $448,000 and attracting over 24,000 pay-per-view buys.

The Nature Boy said, “Everything went great (for my last match), including the 9,000 people we packed in there which was more than WCW or WWE had-had in the building forever. And then I just walked on the ramp and I just, you know, a combination. I guess I’d be nervous and everything started out fine though. So, I don’t know why I got lightheaded for a second. I made the mistake of saying to one of the guys, ‘I don’t feel so good.’ Well, they all thought I was telling them, like, my heart or something like that. And that’s the worst thing I did and then I was like, I got real lightheaded. And I know that I was in and out all during the match.

I was fighting like hell to get through it. But it was just fighting here (his head). Nothing that I felt, I wasn’t hurting anywhere. I just felt bad because the guys had been all panicking and worried about my health… We had constructed such a great match. If it had come off the way we’ve practiced forever, it would have been a masterpiece, but, you know, when I walked back to the locker room, Taker made me drink three Gatorades. Then I went to Kid Rock and drank all night long.

Oh God (there were more spots we were going to do). They were just gonna slam me off the top, suplex me, stuff on the floor. Everybody just panicked. It all was a concern for me, they didn’t forget their parts. They just (went), ‘Let’s get through this.’ I mean, that’s why I had to fake that heart attack. I went, ‘Slow down, slow down, I’m okay.’ Should have never said anything. So then we got a little bit more back in. But my son-in-law (Andrade) had to put the brass knucks on my hand. He’s going, ‘Wake up sir.’ That was it.

I want to wrestle again right now. Isn’t it crazy? I feel like, because, Ricky Morton, the guy that I should have chosen for my last match, would have been great. Ricky Morton is still wrestling. You know what the best thing for me about it was? Is I forced myself to really get in shape. I’ve heard this from guys over the years. And when they were older, I was like, in my prime. The older guys would say, ‘Aye man, I’m tired of working out.’ And there gets a time when you just get bored working out. You don’t have a goal. I mean, they gave me a goal and I just attacked it. I didn’t stop drinking or anything but I was training literally training three hours a day, five days a week in the ring, or I was doing the sled, the ropes. Yeah, I got my bench press up for two-and-a-quarter. I mean, so from being dead to all that was pretty cool.”