WWE PPV Vs. TNA PPV In September

Source: WrestlingINC

The 2016 WWE Backlash pay-per-view will take place on September 11th from the Richmond Coliseum in Richmond, VA. Tickets go on sale via Ticketmaster pre-sale on Wednesday, July 27th. This is the same day TNA has their Bound For Glory pay-per-view scheduled.

Two Former WWE Superstars Returning To The Main Roster Soon

Source: WrestlingINC

Two names returning to the main WWE roster soon are Rhyno and Curt Hawkins.

No word yet on when they will be returning but PWInsider reports that their returns have been confirmed. The current plan is for them to work the SmackDown brand.

Rhyno has made several appearances for WWE NXT in the past year and since being released from WWE in 2014, Hawkins has continued to work the indies under his real name, Brian Myers.

TNA Impact Wrestling Preview: 7/21/16

TNA Impact Wrestling on Pop TV new day and star time. Thursday at 8/7c.

Fallout form last week’s main event Title vs Title match.

TNA World Champion Lashley to kick off Impact.

Title vs Title – 6 Sides of Steel: TNA World Champion Lashley vs X-Division Champion Eddie Edwards

 

Bound for Glory Playoffs:

Bram vs Drew Galloway

EC3 vs Eli Drake

 

WWE Draft Scores Highest SmackDown TV Rating In Over Three Years

Source: WrestlingINC

The draft episode of WWE SmackDown this past Tuesday gave the program its highest rating in three-and-a-half years. The show registered a 2.20 rating, according to PWTorch.com, and was watched by 3,170,000 viewers in the United States, according to Showbuzzdaily.com.

You’d have to go back to January 11, 2013, when SmackDown was airing on Friday nights on Syfy to find the last time SmackDown did a rating this high.

The rating and viewership (which are two related but distinct metrics) for SmackDown were very similar to that of the RAW on the previous night. RAW’s rating was a 2.22, while viewership for each of the three hours was 3,204,000 for the first hour, 3,236,000 for the second and 2,960,000 for the final hour. So, on a minute-by-minute average, SmackDown was viewed by more people than the final hour of RAW, but didn’t have higher viewership than the first two hours of RAW.

This was the first time SmackDown came this close to equating RAW in ratings within the same week since around Christmas in 2012, when RAW was stuck on Christmas Eve, and its rating suffered to a 2.20. SmackDown the Friday before beat that episode of RAW, with a 2.29.

Before that, on the week of New Years, going into 2008, New Years Eve fell on a Monday, so RAW did a 2.6. SmackDown, which was on Friday at the time, did a 2.9.

The last time SmackDown outdid RAW when a holiday wasn’t involved, was in 2007. RAW on July 30, 2007, did a 2.51 while SmackDown on August 3, 2007, beat it with a 2.62.

It’ll be interesting to watch how much of this audience SmackDown can retain going forward. The impetus for SmackDown moving to Tuesday nights, going live and having its own roster, was to improve that program’s ratings and better satisfy NBCUniversal, the parent of USA Network: the channel RAW and SmackDown are both broadcast on in the U.S.

Nikki Bella Return Update

Nikki Bella had an MRI earlier this week. Apparently she received good news, as she posted on Twitter that she’s heading to the WWE Performance Center:

Heath Slater Statement In Response To Not Being Selected In WWE Draft

After being left out of the WWE Draft, Heath Slater posted the following on his Twitter account in response to WWE’s storyline article on the forgotten Draft pick:

“I hear all the whispers and all those lies people are spewing. Guess what? They are nothing but angry pleas from other guys who WISH they were free like me. You say I’m “optimistic and delusional”? You say I’ve “caught the bug”? I’ve had the bug for a long time now. I’ve been more than ready – since I was a little boy even – to get my time to shine. I know this company has taken down so many others but I’m not going to let them do the same to me. You’ll know my name and you’ll see that I’m stronger still. I’ll rise up from these ashes and you’ll learn to fear my pain, the pain of all the missed opportunities and all the backhanded comments I’ve endured all these years. Yeah you will. I won’t disappear, I definitely won’t be hanging up my boots anytime soon. I’ve got too much to prove before I would ever do that. You’ll be seeing me. You’ll be seeing a lot of me. Where you might ask? Only time will tell…”

WWE Announces New Roles For Jerry Lawler & Booker T

As noted, WWE announced new commentary teams earlier today but left Jerry Lawler off RAW and SmackDown. They just announced that Lawler and Booker T will be key analysts on WWE Network pre-shows and Kickoff specials.

Here is the full announcement on the announcer changes by WWE.com:

It’s a New Era for the entire landscape of WWE, which continues to change and evolve with the WWE Brand Extension Draft. That includes the announce teams for WWE programming. The teams for Raw, SmackDown, “WWE Superstars” and WWE Main Event are all experiencing a major shakeup, including one major voice changing shows and several rising commentators being inserted into the lineup.

The new announce teams for WWE’s New Era will feature Michael Cole, Corey Graves and Byron Saxton Monday nights on Raw, while Mauro Ranallo, JBL and David Otunga handle the commentary for SmackDown Live every Tuesday night.

Also receiving a makeover will be the announce teams for WWE Superstars and WWE Main Event. Both shows will be led by Tom Phillips, and he will be joined each and every week by Graves on WWE Superstars and Otunga on WWE Main Event.

UPDATE: In addition to the commentary booth updates on Raw, SmackDown Live and more, WWE Hall of Famers Booker T and Jerry “The King” Lawler will bring their decades of experience in sports-entertainment to recurring Pre-Shows and Kickoffs as key analysts, among other names still to be announced.

Possible Substance Brock Lesnar Tested Positive For

Source: WrestlingINC

UFC announced  that Brock Lesnar failed a second drug test related to his UFC 200 fight win over Mark Hunt, an in-competition drug test. In-competition is considered in the 12-hour window before and after the fight. Lesnar previously failed an out-of-competition drug test from a June 28th sample taken by the US Anti-Doping Agency.

Lesnar failed both tests for the same banned substance and according to LA Timeswriter Lance Pugmire, Lesnar tested positive for estrogen blocker Clomiphene. This is the same substance Jon Jones previously tested positive for and is common among bodybuilders looking to increase testosterone while cycling off of steroids.

WWE Lawsuit Claims

Source: WrestlingINC

Among the 214 pages of the latest Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy/Traumatic Brain Injuries WWE lawsuit, there’s dozens of interesting claims from the 53 plaintiffs. Some thematic selections from the complaint, which you can read below.

Dress code violations

 

    • Road Warrior Animal (JOSEPH M. LAURINAITIS): He was even threatened with fines for wearing jeans on an airplane and changing a 7 am flight to a later one. (page 21)

 

    • Johnny the Bull (JONATHAN HUGGER): For example, he was fined $500 for wearing a baseball cap on a bus at 3:00 a.m. because the dress code was “business casual.” Hugger states he was fined $500 for wearing certain casual clothing on an airplane arriving at a hotel at 7:00 a.m. on a redeye flight from Los Angeles to Toronto. (page 32)

 

    • King Kong Bundy (CHRIS PALLIES): He was fined for missing a show and threatened with fines for wearing shorts on a plane to the shows. (page 29)

 

On Wrestler Pay

 

    • Omar Atlas (OMAR MIJARES): Although Mijares was well known, he was eventually transformed by the WWE into a “jobber to the stars” and by 1993 he was directed for $200 a night to “put the WWE stars over,” meaning he was asked to repeatedly lose in order to make the WWE headliners look better. (page 37)

 

    • Slick (KEN JOHNSON): As recently as April 2016 WWE paid Johnson $2,500 to induct a wrestler who died at age 41 “Big Bossman” in to the WWE Hall of Fame. (page 51)

 

    • Kamala (JAMES HARRIS): Harris’ last check paid to him in March 2016 was for $98.01 for his annual quarterly royalties for his performances.

 

On Working 300+ Shows

    • Jim Brunzell: Wrestling for WWE from 1985 to 1993, Brunzell would wrestle 300 nights per year often as many as 25-26 days each month. He even once wrestled 43 days in a row. (page 32-33)

 

    • Butch Reed: Reed wrestled close to 300 nights per year, twice on weekends and often wrestled seven days a week. (page 35)

 

    • Marty Jannetty: He wrestled more than 300 shows per year for WWF and twice on weekends. (page 46)

 

    • Warlord (Terry Scott Szopinski): He described the WWE performance schedule as “full time and rigorous” and performed over 300 shows per year (page 45)

 

    • Barbarian (Sione Havea Vailahi): He wrestled as his partner more than 300 nights per year and “worked like a horse.” (page 46)

 

    • Slick (KEN JOHNSON): During most of his tenure at WWE he worked over 300 nights per year sometimes 30-40 nights straight with no breaks. (page 51)

 

    • Boris Zhukov (JAMES HARRELL): Zhukov estimates he wrestled 275-300 nights per year while at WWE. (page 55)

 

    • Akeem/One Man Gang (GEORGE GRAY): I traveled injured, at least 300 nights a year for WWE on the road. (page 52)

 

  • Black Bart (RICK JONES): Some report multiple performances per night and in one instance, Named Plaintiff Rick Jones states he wrestled in 10 shows in a single night. (page 60)

Vince McMahon Stories

    • Rex King (TIMOTHY SMITH): He was told by WWE employee, JJ. Dillon, that he would be paid $500 per week. Smith says received exactly one check, when he called to locate his additional checks he was told by Mr. Dillon “the emperor says he cannot afford to pay you for doing nothing.” Smith’s understanding was that the term “The Emperor” was a reference to VKM (Vincent K. McMahon). (page 47)

 

  • Ahmed Johnson (ANTHONY NORRIS): He was recruited to WWE by Michael Hayes, and was sent to Connecticut to Meet Vince McMahon. Norris brought his lawyer, but upon arrival Mr. McMahon stated that he “hated lawyers” and instructed Norris’ lawyer to leave the office as there was nothing to negotiate. (page 25)

Gimmicks & Names

    • Ahmed Johnson (ANTHONY NORRIS): Norris selected the name Ahmed Johnson over the WWE suggestion of the ring name “Buck” (page 25)

 

    • Akeem/One Man Gang (GEORGE GRAY): Chairman McMahon personally remade his character to “Akeem the African Dream” and required he dress in a yellow Dashiki as a racially stereotypical black, complete with tribal dancers supplied by WWE. (page 129-130)

 

    • Butch Reed: An African American wrestler, he was given the gimmick by WWF to dye his hair blonde, and so be known as “naturally blonde.” He didn’t want to do it but “rolled with it.” He says Vince McMahon liked to force wrestlers to change to gimmicks that McMahon create. (page 35-36)

 

    • Rodney Mack (RODNEY BEGNAUD): His WWE assigned gimmick was to portray himself as an “anti-white” black militant. Begnaud explains it “was a ‘no no’ to discuss injuries or your job would be in jeopardy.” His dialogue consisted of lines such as “Damn Right!” and “Yeah!” with his manager uttering lines such as “Kill Whitey” and “Free James Brown.” (page 55)

 

    • Boris Zhukov (JAMES HARRELL): Zhukov’s gimmick was that of a Russian Communist from the Soviet Union and teamed with another wrestler to form a tag team called the Bolsheviks. Zhukov’s birth name was James Harrell and he is of English/Irish descent. Upon entry into the WWE he legally changed his name to Boris Zhukov, he did so because the WWE and Vince McMahon he learned would “own you” if you didn’t do this. When Vince McMahon learned that he was legally Boris Zhukov he says it caused much friction and accounts for his failure to get a “Push” in WWE. (page 55-56)

 

  • Black Bart (RICK JONES): Jones was given the gimmick of being a “bad cowboy” with a black hat and long beard by Dusty Rhodes and was given the name “Black Bart” by WWE as Vince McMahon wanted to “own your name.” (page 49)

On Getting Hurt

    • Chavo Guerrero Jr (SALAVADOR GUERRERO IV): By way of example on August 24, 2004 he was hit in the head with a knee in a Shooting Star Splash by another wrestler. Guerrero, Jr. was knocked completely unconscious for many minutes, with Stephanie McMahon at ringside before being hospitalized with a concussion and subarachnoid hemorrhage. In 2005 he was kicked in the eye which fractured his orbital bone, yet shortly thereafter he was still required to “drop his belt” (lose to another wrestler) in the ring at the direction of the WWE. (page 24)

 

    • Adam Bomb (BRYAN EMMETT CLARK, JR.): On September 23, 2001, he had a bad neck injury in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania when he was choke slammed by the Mark William Calaway a.k.a. The Undertaker (a famous wrestler) and discs in his neck were injured. Clark eventually had these discs replaced in 2014 and had spinal surgery. (page 25)

 

    • Ken Patera: Patera describes a total and complete lack of concern for wrestler health and safety, providing for example a 1987 match in Madison, Wisconsin where his injuries required 450 stitches and eventual surgery, despite no ambulance, doctor, or even ice on site at the performance. (page 29)

 

    • Slick (KEN JOHNSON): In 1987 in a match in Houston with Hulk Hogan he fell through the ropes and was spitting up blood from internal injuries. (page 51)

 

    • Princess Victoria (VICTORIA OTIS): She was seriously injured in the WWE ring, including when she landed on the top of her head in September, 1984 in Philadelphia, where she felt an “ungodly pain and tingling from head to her toes” after the match. She went to the hospital and it was discovered she had cracked two vertebrae in her neck. (page 40-41)

 

    • Ahmed Johnson (ANTHONY NORRIS): On January 21, 1996, Norris was knocked out completely after a guitar was smashed over his head by Jeff Jarrett in Madison Square Garden leading to a hospital visit and long term neurological injuries. (page 25)

 

On Life After WWE

    • Warlord (TERRY SCOTT SZOPINSKI): Szopinski has no health insurance, and works as a bouncer in a nightclub. (page 45)

 

    • JIM BRUNZELL: He works for a janitorial supply company and has insurance though that job, though Brunzell attributes most of his injuries to his wrestling career. (page 33)

 

    • MARK JINDRAK: He continued his career in wrestling in Mexico where he indicates the working conditions and health and safety practices for professional wrestlers are far more advanced than in the WWE. (page 42)

 

  • Boris Zhukov (JAMES HARRELL): He currently works as truck driver. (page 56)

On Getting Your Bell Rung

    • CHAVO GUERRERO, SR: He never heard the word “concussion.” “You got your bell rung sometimes” but there was rarely treatment, inquiry or intervention by WWE staff or ringside doctors unless it was an obvious medical emergency. (page 24)

 

    • JAMES BRUNZELL: Brunzell believes he sustained several major concussions in his WWE career and numerous times in WWE had his “bell rung.” (page 33)

 

    • Jim Powers (JAMES MANLEY): Manley sustained numerous head injuries while in WWE including being knocked unconscious in a WWE Match in Italy with the Tag Team Demolition (Bill Eadie and Barry Darsow who are also named Plaintiffs in this action), additionally Manley states he has had his “bell rung” numerous times at WWE events. (page 35)

 

  • MARK JINDRAK: After the match the guys were joking about ‘having your bell rung like that’ including jokes from WWE officials. (page 42)

How Wrestlers Deal With Injuries

    • MARTY JANNETTY: He asserts WWE sometimes had doctors who mostly distributed drugs. “Generally we had to take care of ourselves, I would help other guys pop shoulders back into place.” Jannetty described WWE as a place where ‘You lick your own wounds.” That the medical treatment provided was mostly ‘tape and go.’ (page 42)

 

    • SYLVAIN GREINER: The rule was “you don’t get hurt” and medical attention was not sought or administered unless absolutely essential. Seeing doctors was in fact discouraged and the WWE had very little supporting medical staff if any at the matches. (page 37)

 

  • BUTCH REED: The preferred WWE medical treatment was “Take yourself up, spit on it, put a band aid on it.” (page 35)

Speculation On Bayley & The WWE Draft, Heath Slater

Source: WrestlingINC

There’s a lot of speculation that Bayley will end up on the main roster before the month is over, perhaps as Sasha Banks’ mystery partner against Dana Brooke and WWE Women’s Champion Charlotte at Sunday’s Battleground pay-per-view.

RAW only received two WWE NXT picks in the Draft, Finn Balor and Nia Jax, and with Charlotte, Dana and Sasha going to RAW, Bayley would be a good fit. We noted yesterday that WWE had “Hugger Section” signs placed in ringside seats at SmackDown but we’ve heard from one fan that those signs were created and placed by another fan. As noted, only 59 of 60 Draft picks were announced with Heath Slater being “left out” as an apparent comedy bit.