http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/2013/10/15/21197861.html
Three posts.
It may be hard to believe, but Scott Hall hasn't appeared in Canada for over a decade. After all, he's one of the biggest names of the modern wrestling business, yet he hasn't been up here since WrestleMania X8, not for an indy show, a signing, or even to visit friends. Well, that gets rectified this weekend, when Hall appears as part of Border City Wrestling's huge 20th anniversary show in Windsor, Ontario.
"It has been a long time," confirmed Hall in an exclusive interview with SLAM! Wrestling days before the big event. "It was WrestleMania X8 in Toronto. Which is too bad, because I really love Canada. The geography is beautiful. I've been to all the big Canadian cities, but also so many of the little towns all over Canada -- actually, it's probably easier to talk about the places that I haven't been. I really love coming up there, and I'm happy to be back."
It's also a bit closer to home than some of his other upcoming travels, which include some appearances in Europe and Asia.
"I've got some dates coming up in Europe in November with Kevin Nash and Sean Waltman -- doing a WolfPac signing and a question and answer (session). I think we're doing Glasgow, Manchester, and London. Then we're looking at some things in Japan."
Having come off of a major surgery -- Hall had a complete hip replacement about five months ago -- he's being very selective in terms of what shows he'll attend while rehabbing the injury.
A large factor in his travels today is the chance to accompany his son Cody, who has started his own wrestling career, and will be competing at the BCW show.
"Now that Cody's breaking into the wrestling business -- he's had 20 or so matches so far -- we're looking at some international bookings to get him seasoned and ready for anything that may happen for him in the U.S."
The other reason, Hall said, is that he simply loves to travel. He credits catching the travel bug to his childhood. As an army brat, Hall literally grew up on military bases all over the world.
"Yeah, for sure," he confirmed. "That's probably why I'm in my fifties with a ponytail, because I grew up with white-walls. I had a crewcut, and I was saying 'Yes sir, no sir' to everybody."
Still, while his upbringing may have been strict, it was his father that took him to his first wrestling match where a young Scott discovered the life he wanted to live.
"My dad took me and my buddies to a match when I was eight years old," he remembered. "We were stationed somewhere in the south-east U.S., either at Fort Benning, Georgia, or Fort Rucker, Alabama, somewhere in the deep south. There was a little wrestling promotion in town, and we went to the show for my birthday. It was my eighth birthday."
"I'll never forget, it was a hair match, the loser had to have his head shaved. I still have the program and a piece of the dude's hair, at my mom's house," he laughed. "That (show) really made an impact on me. I thought it was just such a cool way to make a living. I thought it was a cool lifestyle, it really appealed to me."
Of course, being eight years old, Hall would have to wait to grow his hair out and turn towards his eventual "outlaw" ways. It wasn't until after high school that he decided to pursue wrestling as a career.
"We were living in Germany, and I was at a really small high school there, kids of American servicemen. I was playing basketball there, and at that school, I was a big deal. And so I thought that maybe I could try playing pro ball. Because they have pro basketball in Europe for guys who aren't good enough to play in the NBA, but can still earn enough to make a comfortable living playing pro basketball in Europe. And that whole life of being a pro athlete was really appealing to me."
"And I was always watching wrestling on TV going along," he continued. "So when high school ended -- I had no interest in going to college -- I thought to myself, 'Wow, I'm out of school, now I have to grow up and make a living and pay bills. What am I going to do with my life?' Sports entertainment was a term that hadn't been coined yet, but pro wrestling was around. And I was always drawn to that carefree lifestyle, and I liked the physicality and the athleticism involved." So the decision for Hall to get into wrestling was an easy one.
Naturally big, Hall trained to bulk up even more, and went from 230 pounds up to 292 to start his career. "And I did that steroid free," he clarified. "I wanted to get big clean, that's what was recommended to me."
Which is not to say that Hall is completely against steroid use. In a candid aside -- and Hall has never been one known for holding back -- he shared his views on steroid use by pro athletes.
"If you're going to try to be a pro athlete, why not use everything available to you? I'm not trying to get too involved in (the discussion), but I don't have a problem with pro athletes being on steroids," he said. "You read about all of these baseball players getting in trouble, but I think there are a lot more important things going on in the world today than whether pro athletes use steroids to perform good. I'm not a big baseball fan, but I remember back when all those guys were hitting home runs all the time, and it was just more fun to watch. I don't think people are getting hurt, I don't think these guys were breaking into peoples' houses or robbing old ladies' purses to get the money to run out and buy steroids."
"When I went to WWF -- it was still WWF at the time -- when I was there as Razor Ramon, it was when the steroids scandal was in full swing. They were testing, and I was fully compliant with the drug policy. I went off steroids like everybody else did. And we all got smaller, but the playing field remained level. Big guys were still big, and the little guys were still little. But the reality is, when you're on the road so many days, I don't see how a little bit of steroids can really hurt anything. There are a lot of things that people could do that are a lot worse."
That being said, Hall does also appreciate that the attitude towards steroids in the business has changed since his heyday. "That was just the time," he noted. "That was then, and now is now. I'm living my life a lot differently now. And I'm happy to hear that the young cats now are not making bad choices -- that's encouraging."
After training and toiling away in various promotions, including CWF in Florida, and the AWA, and a short stint in WCW, Hall hit the true big time when he joined the WWF as wrestling's "Bad Guy", Razor Ramon.
So much has been documented about Hall's storied WWE run that this interview didn't delve too much into this period, other than towards the end, when Hall decided to leave the company and head to WCW. It was a decision purely motivated by the bottom line, Hall said.
Three posts.
It may be hard to believe, but Scott Hall hasn't appeared in Canada for over a decade. After all, he's one of the biggest names of the modern wrestling business, yet he hasn't been up here since WrestleMania X8, not for an indy show, a signing, or even to visit friends. Well, that gets rectified this weekend, when Hall appears as part of Border City Wrestling's huge 20th anniversary show in Windsor, Ontario.
"It has been a long time," confirmed Hall in an exclusive interview with SLAM! Wrestling days before the big event. "It was WrestleMania X8 in Toronto. Which is too bad, because I really love Canada. The geography is beautiful. I've been to all the big Canadian cities, but also so many of the little towns all over Canada -- actually, it's probably easier to talk about the places that I haven't been. I really love coming up there, and I'm happy to be back."
It's also a bit closer to home than some of his other upcoming travels, which include some appearances in Europe and Asia.
"I've got some dates coming up in Europe in November with Kevin Nash and Sean Waltman -- doing a WolfPac signing and a question and answer (session). I think we're doing Glasgow, Manchester, and London. Then we're looking at some things in Japan."
Having come off of a major surgery -- Hall had a complete hip replacement about five months ago -- he's being very selective in terms of what shows he'll attend while rehabbing the injury.
A large factor in his travels today is the chance to accompany his son Cody, who has started his own wrestling career, and will be competing at the BCW show.
"Now that Cody's breaking into the wrestling business -- he's had 20 or so matches so far -- we're looking at some international bookings to get him seasoned and ready for anything that may happen for him in the U.S."
The other reason, Hall said, is that he simply loves to travel. He credits catching the travel bug to his childhood. As an army brat, Hall literally grew up on military bases all over the world.
"Yeah, for sure," he confirmed. "That's probably why I'm in my fifties with a ponytail, because I grew up with white-walls. I had a crewcut, and I was saying 'Yes sir, no sir' to everybody."
Still, while his upbringing may have been strict, it was his father that took him to his first wrestling match where a young Scott discovered the life he wanted to live.
"My dad took me and my buddies to a match when I was eight years old," he remembered. "We were stationed somewhere in the south-east U.S., either at Fort Benning, Georgia, or Fort Rucker, Alabama, somewhere in the deep south. There was a little wrestling promotion in town, and we went to the show for my birthday. It was my eighth birthday."
"I'll never forget, it was a hair match, the loser had to have his head shaved. I still have the program and a piece of the dude's hair, at my mom's house," he laughed. "That (show) really made an impact on me. I thought it was just such a cool way to make a living. I thought it was a cool lifestyle, it really appealed to me."
Of course, being eight years old, Hall would have to wait to grow his hair out and turn towards his eventual "outlaw" ways. It wasn't until after high school that he decided to pursue wrestling as a career.
"We were living in Germany, and I was at a really small high school there, kids of American servicemen. I was playing basketball there, and at that school, I was a big deal. And so I thought that maybe I could try playing pro ball. Because they have pro basketball in Europe for guys who aren't good enough to play in the NBA, but can still earn enough to make a comfortable living playing pro basketball in Europe. And that whole life of being a pro athlete was really appealing to me."
"And I was always watching wrestling on TV going along," he continued. "So when high school ended -- I had no interest in going to college -- I thought to myself, 'Wow, I'm out of school, now I have to grow up and make a living and pay bills. What am I going to do with my life?' Sports entertainment was a term that hadn't been coined yet, but pro wrestling was around. And I was always drawn to that carefree lifestyle, and I liked the physicality and the athleticism involved." So the decision for Hall to get into wrestling was an easy one.
Naturally big, Hall trained to bulk up even more, and went from 230 pounds up to 292 to start his career. "And I did that steroid free," he clarified. "I wanted to get big clean, that's what was recommended to me."
Which is not to say that Hall is completely against steroid use. In a candid aside -- and Hall has never been one known for holding back -- he shared his views on steroid use by pro athletes.
"If you're going to try to be a pro athlete, why not use everything available to you? I'm not trying to get too involved in (the discussion), but I don't have a problem with pro athletes being on steroids," he said. "You read about all of these baseball players getting in trouble, but I think there are a lot more important things going on in the world today than whether pro athletes use steroids to perform good. I'm not a big baseball fan, but I remember back when all those guys were hitting home runs all the time, and it was just more fun to watch. I don't think people are getting hurt, I don't think these guys were breaking into peoples' houses or robbing old ladies' purses to get the money to run out and buy steroids."
"When I went to WWF -- it was still WWF at the time -- when I was there as Razor Ramon, it was when the steroids scandal was in full swing. They were testing, and I was fully compliant with the drug policy. I went off steroids like everybody else did. And we all got smaller, but the playing field remained level. Big guys were still big, and the little guys were still little. But the reality is, when you're on the road so many days, I don't see how a little bit of steroids can really hurt anything. There are a lot of things that people could do that are a lot worse."
That being said, Hall does also appreciate that the attitude towards steroids in the business has changed since his heyday. "That was just the time," he noted. "That was then, and now is now. I'm living my life a lot differently now. And I'm happy to hear that the young cats now are not making bad choices -- that's encouraging."
After training and toiling away in various promotions, including CWF in Florida, and the AWA, and a short stint in WCW, Hall hit the true big time when he joined the WWF as wrestling's "Bad Guy", Razor Ramon.
So much has been documented about Hall's storied WWE run that this interview didn't delve too much into this period, other than towards the end, when Hall decided to leave the company and head to WCW. It was a decision purely motivated by the bottom line, Hall said.