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With what happened recently on Raw between Divas champion Eve Torres and the personality of a footstool commentator Michael Cole do you see a confrontation between the two on a future Raw?
I suppose it is possible, especially if Cole
continues to be disrespectful towards the Divas. That said, I was actually
surprised the Divas didn't play any role in Cole's match with Jerry Lawler at
Wrestlemania. It would have been a great way to give some of them a cameo on the
show.
You are walking down a dark ally at night and to protect you, you can take any 10 wrestlers from any era in their prime who can really wrestle/fight/brawl/hurt someone. Who do you take? I would start with the wrestlers with MMA/UFC connections such as Lesnar, Shamrock and Severn. Throw in Danny
Hodge (guy breaks pliers with his bare hands for god sakes) and maybe a shooter/hooker such as Lou Thesz, Andre the Giant just for his size, Harley Race (cause everyone from his generation says he's a tough guy) and maybe Haku/Meng. Who would be your line
up?
If I am picking ten guys in their prime I would go with Haku/Meng, Harley Race, Tracey Smothers, Earthquake/John Tenta, Andre The Giant, Dynamite Kid, Kurt Angle, Brock Lesnar, Vader and Yoshihiro Takayama.
Has WWE ever expressed any interest in signing former star of Two & Half Men Charlie Sheen to either host Raw or appear at Wrestlemania?
Not that I have heard of, but I would be shocked
if they didn't at least throw a feeler or two out there to try and capitalize on
his media popularity.
When TNA eventually produces a DVD of the Victory Road pay per view featuring the blink of an eye title match between Sting and Jeff Hardy do you see TNA editing any
embarrassing moments that took place during the event?Â
It would probably be in TNA's best interest it pair up Victory Road with another PPV as a "two show set" rather than selling it on it's own. At the very least, they should throw in a lot of bonus matches to make up for that joke of a main event.
When watching the Vintage Collection shows weekly, I've always wanted to know why the ring ropes were so loose and bouncy in the '70's and 80's, unlike the tight and taught ring ropes we see today. Fact, or fiction, I'll take any answer. Thanks.
Call it the evolution of the ring. As use of the ropes for aerial maneuvers became a bigger part of wrestling, tighter ropes became more important.
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