(Jordan Burroughs defeats Sadegh Saeed Goudarzi of Iran to become the 2012 Olympic champion at 74 kilos.)
In an utterly baffling move, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has decided to drop the sport of wrestling, a.k.a the reason the Olympics even exist, as of the 2020 games. The Associated Press reports:
The IOC program commission report analyzed more than three dozen criteria, including television ratings, ticket sales, anti-doping policy and global participation and popularity. With no official rankings or recommendations contained in the report, the final decision by the 15-member board was also subject to political, emotional and sentimental factors.
The IOC, however, did decide in its infinite wisdom to keep the modern pentathlon, a sport which combines pistol shooting, fencing, riding a horse and some other crap. Forgive my facetiousness, but I fail to see how a sport that managed to bring in athletes from just 26 different countries last year has somehow been deemed more important than one that brought in athletes from 71. And oh yeah, golf will be added as an Olympic sport in 2016.
Yup. Golf.
(Jordan Burroughs defeats Sadegh Saeed Goudarzi of Iran to become the 2012 Olympic champion at 74 kilos.)
In an utterly baffling move, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has decided to drop the sport of wrestling, a.k.a the reason the Olympics even exist, as of the 2020 games. The Associated Press reports:
The IOC program commission report analyzed more than three dozen criteria, including television ratings, ticket sales, anti-doping policy and global participation and popularity. With no official rankings or recommendations contained in the report, the final decision by the 15-member board was also subject to political, emotional and sentimental factors.
The IOC, however, did decide in its infinite wisdom to keep the modern pentathlon, a sport which combines pistol shooting, fencing, riding a horse and some other crap. Forgive my facetiousness, but I fail to see how a sport that managed to bring in athletes from just 26 different countries last year has somehow been deemed more important than one that brought in athletes from 71. And oh yeah, golf will be added as an Olympic sport in 2016.
Yup. Golf.
So let’s get this straight – TV ratings, ticket sales and global participation are determining factors in what sports to keep, yet the so-called “modern” pentathlon is in. Where, you may ask, did the idea to create a sport where shooting, fencing, horse riding, swimming and running are put together come from? The AP has the simple answer.
In addition to being wildly popular the world over, these are “the five skills required of a 19th century cavalry officer.”
Timely.
We’re assuming that the “political, emotional and sentimental factors” alluded to by the AP report could not possibly include bribery in the form of cash, trips and favors from interest groups to IOC members because they’ve never been involved in that sort of thing. Oh wait, my mistake. The IOC takes bribes all the time.
We guess wrestling officials should have offered the IOC something a little more exclusive than an all expenses paid trip to Sandals Jamaica.
Wrestling will now join sports like wake boarding and squash in vying for a single spot in the 2020 Olympics. That’s like telling the founder, owner and CEO of a company to reapply for his or her own job. You know, if they had been at that job for a couple thousand years.
If this decision sticks, MMA will truly turn into the only place for high-level wrestlers to go after devoting their lives to learning it (well, other than this noise). One can only imagine the negative effects wrestling’s absence in the Olympic Games will have on the college programs that are already beleaguered and diminishing.
All that remains to be seen. What this writer does know is that he won’t be tuning in to watch any of the games during the summer of 2020 given this blasphemous decision. I don’t care how cute the (of age) gymnasts are. That’s what GIFs are for, anyway.
In case you guys missed seeing “The Demolition Man” Alistair Overeem in action, the popular Dutchman went to Japan for an arm wrestling tournament last weekend. In the finals, he ran into another mixed martial artist who is undeniably popular in Japan—Bob Sapp. This might just be the first physical activity in years where Sapp […]
In case you guys missed seeing “The Demolition Man” Alistair Overeem in action, the popular Dutchman went to Japan for an arm wrestling tournament last weekend. In the finals, he ran into another mixed martial artist who is undeniably popular in Japan—Bob Sapp. This might just be the first physical activity in years where Sapp […]
When you talk about pro wrestling versus MMA, fans are like, ”pro wrestling is fake, nothing’s real and it’s like a soap opera.” Whereas those same people say MMA is real: it’s real competition. We have seen figh…
When you talk about pro wrestling versus MMA, fans are like, ”pro wrestling is fake, nothing’s real and it’s like a soap opera.” Whereas those same people say MMA is real: it’s real competition. We have seen fighters make the transition from pro wrestling to MMA, with some notables like Brock Lesnar, Bobby Lashley, Dave Batista and […]
Wanderlei Silva and Rich Franklin have combined for 39 knockouts in 82 total fights, but their power isn’t going to determine the winner of UFC 147′s headline bout. These violent stand-up fighters must use their technical wrestling and take…
Wanderlei Silva and Rich Franklin have combined for 39 knockouts in 82 total fights, but their power isn’t going to determine the winner of UFC 147′s headline bout. These violent stand-up fighters must use their technical wrestling and takedown skills to win this contest. Franklin has 10 victories by way of submission in his career. […]
Following UFC 146 last month, the rumors of a potential return to the world of MMA for Brock Lesnar were kicked into high gear after a meeting between the UFC president, Dana White, and the former Heavyweight Champion. During an interview last night fo…
Following UFC 146 last month, the rumors of a potential return to the world of MMA for Brock Lesnar were kicked into high gear after a meeting between the UFC president, Dana White, and the former Heavyweight Champion.
During an interview last night following UFC on FX in Florida, White would give an idea on just how well that previously mentioned meeting went after people had been claiming that Lesnar will once again leave the WWE for the UFC.
In the video posted at the top of this article, White goes on to say that the meeting between he and Lesnar didn’t go well after UFC 146, along with saying that it was the worst meeting that the two had through the years.
Even though it’s unknown whether or not Lesnar was trying to make a play to return to the UFC, the former champion should not make a return to MMA as it will likely end with a big paycheck but more loses for Lesnar.
It would make much more sense for Lesnar to continue with the WWE since the schedule is much more manageable along with the incredible amount of money, $5 million, being given to him in his one-year deal with the company that made him a star in the early 2000s.
With the meeting between Lesnar and White ending up wildly unsuccessful after UFC 146, do you think the former UFC and WWE Champion will ever return to the Octagon when his current deal ends following WrestleMania 29?
Chris Humphrey is a WWE Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. You can ask him any question regarding the WWE or any other topic that crosses your mind on either his Facebook or Twitter page.
Seven buses rolled out of the hotel parking lot. Not minibuses. Full sized Greyhounds. Inside were the wrestlers, legends, families and friends of WWE owner Vince McMahon. Traffic was stopped in Miami as they rolled to I-95, then onward to the Miami Do…
Seven buses rolled out of the hotel parking lot. Not minibuses. Full sized Greyhounds. Inside were the wrestlers, legends, families and friends of WWE owner Vince McMahon. Traffic was stopped in Miami as they rolled to I-95, then onward to the Miami Dolphin’s Sun Life Stadium, alone, in a row, in the HOV lane.
Following behind was James J. Dillon. An industry lifer who has worked every job imaginable from VP to referee, Dillon was best known as the manager of the legendary Four Horseman. For his role in the group, a clique of champions that featured a rotating cast of wrestling greats like Ric Flair, Arn Anderson, Tully Blanchard and Barry Windham, Dillon was about to be recognized by wrestling czar Vince McMahon as a hall of famer.
His long time foe and backstage booking partner Dusty Rhodes would introduce Dillon and the gang.
It was the culminating moment of a long, proud career, and J.J. Dillon was scared. Not of the crowd. Not of the moment. But of those two icons, the men who had meant the most to him over his career. The men he was afraid he had done irreparable harm in his 2005 book Wrestlers Are Like Seagulls.
“With everything that had happened, if I was a betting man, I’d have never bet on this happening, me being inducted into their Hall of Fame,” Dillon told Bleacher Report in an exclusive interview. “I was worried. What’s it going to be like when I get there? Will there be a little chill in the air? I didn’t know.”
Dillon had been open and honest in his book. As a true WWF insider once part of McMahon’s inner circle alongside the stalwart Pat Patterson, Dillon had plenty of knowledge about what went on inside the headquarters building in Stamford Connecticut. And he shared—and shared plenty—with fans. A lifetime of frustration poured out on those pages. Now, sixteen years after leaving the WWF, he was about to come face to face with Vince McMahon one more time.
Meeting Vince
J.J. had actually been to one previous WWE event after leaving the company, making the trip to Ric Flair’s final match against Shawn Michaels. He had seen Vince from across the building, but never came into his orbit. Now he found himself at the run through for the WWE Hall of Fame television special, McMahon, as always, running the show. He was all business, but cordial.
“HHH was orchestrating everything, and we were the first one’s out,” Dillon said. “Tully was right in front of me, and Vince stood up, took his headset off, and in front of this room full of people, reached out, shook his hand. He made eye contact with me, saw me standing right behind him, reached around Tully and shook my hand. He said ‘J.J, thanks for being here.’ I said ‘Vince, thank you for inviting me.’ That was the extent of our conversation, our first in 16 years.”
Later, each of the Hall of Famers had a chance to meet with McMahon individually. About 40 minutes before the Ceremony, each was brought into the presence of the closest thing we have to a wrestling god. He had already met with Vince’s wife Linda and his daughter Stephanie (who heir apparent to the company business). Both had been gracious and kind. Vince though? That might be another story.
“He was going to personally present us our rings. I remember going in there, Flair first and then Arn, then it was Tully, me, and Barry Windham was last,” Dillon said. “It was in a room where they were going to take pictures. And as I walked in, I didn’t know. I said ‘Vince, I don’t have the words to thank you for this and what it means to me personally and my family.’ He had a little smile on his face and he put his hand on my shoulder and said ‘We had some great times together didn’t we?’ That was his reply. He handed me my ring, turned around and we took a whole bunch of pictures. I stepped away and Barry got his ring.”
Just thinking about it was enough to make Dillon catch his breath.
“There have been lots of great bookers in the business, and every one of them had a shelf life,” Dillon said. “Eventually their ideas would repeat themselves. And Vince has been the final say since day one. The fact that he’s still there, still has the vision, still has the final say is amazing. The proof to me was seeing the scope of that event [WrestleMania], 78,000 people in Miami setting a record for that venue, and just seeing where he’s taken the business. You can’t have anything but respect for him.”
The Dream
But McMahon wasn’t the only wrestling legend he had unfinished business with. Rhodes, who Dillon had battled in the ring and later worked closely with behind the scenes, had also taken some heat in Dillon’s book. The two had parted on bad terms. Could they reconcile? Thinking about Christmas parties with Dusty and his wife Michelle, Dillon couldn’t miss his chance to make things right with one of his oldest friends.
“There was that big question mark. It was never really talked out between Dusty and I,” Dillon said. “My book came out in 2005. Fast forward to the weekend of the Hall of Fame. Dusty inducted us. There was a party after that. The McMahons threw in the hotel for WrestleMania weekend, first class all the way. Sushi bar, oysters on the half shell, open bar—it was as only they could do it.
“I was tired. It had been a very emotional few days. And I saw Dusty and his wife Michelle sitting four or five tables down. And I just went up and went down there and asked Dusty if he had a minute. I said ‘Something has been bothering me for six or seven years. I’ve never had this conversation with you and I felt I should have.’
“It was very emotional,” Dillon continued, breaking into tears. “It was just him and I one on one. And I basically told him that so much of my success, which was being showcased there that weekend, I owed to him. Going back to Florida…The two of us, in this huge room full of all these people, having a very personal conversation. He told me I was important to him too… Here’s the two of us in this big room. Two grown men and I tell him I love him and he says he loves me. He told Michelle to come over and the three of us had a big hug. And I’m crying. It was like the weight of all those words, all the years, was released. Because he heard from me how I felt and he was very sincere about how he felt. It was a highlight of the weekend for me, this very personal thing.”
The Horsemen
Today Dillon is out of the wrestling business. But he still has plenty of expertise to share and stories to last a life time. His most recent project, a special DVD with Kayfabe Commentaries called Being a Four Horseman, was intended to expand the horizons of the “shoot interview.” Instead of just asking Dillon a series of questions about his career, Kayfabe’s Sean Oliver decided to focus in on a week in his life. There was one question in Oliver’s mind: What was it like to run with the legendary Four Horsemen?
“Of my whole career, the one thing that is kind of a blur is that run with the Horsemen. One day ran into another, and we were working very hard,” Dillon said. “I had these ‘week in a glance’ journals I used for tracking expenses on the road. So I knew what hotels, if there was a cab, a portion of a charter, we chipped in. It gave me some cues about where we were the night before and how we got there.
“How do you take one week, 25 years ago, and expound upon it? It was the most challenging interview that I’ve ever done. In the process we talked about a lot of things that were never asked before. What did [the] guys drink? What were their personalities really like? Things that had never come up in prior interviews. In the end, it’s a general look at what it was like to be in the Horseman and on the road with the Horseman. And I was very pleased with the end product.”
You can follow J.J. Dillon on his website. Jonathan Snowden is the author of Shooters: The Toughest Men in Professional Wrestling. He is a regular contributor to Bleacher Report.