Black Widow
10-05-2008, 04:36 PM
WWE superstar Edge has carved out quite the career for himself. He first became a top star teaming with Christian where the tag-team had many memorable matches against The Hardy Boyz and the Dudley Boyz. Once he broke apart from the team and became a singles wrestler, he didn’t miss a beat. Now, he is a three time WWE World Heavyweight Champion and has become one of – if not the – top performer in all of sports entertainment. And he has done it by being truly despised by the audience.
Beginning this Friday, October 3rd, WWE Smackdown is moving to MyNetworkTV which airs here locally on My65 WRBW. Recently, Edge sat down for an interview on my Between The Ropes radio show to talk about his memorable year, being hated by the fans and much more. Here is part one of that interview. Check back tomorrow for the second part.
We haven’t seen you in a little while. You’ve been off since Summerslam. Are you enjoying the time off?
Yes – immensely. I need to just, kind of get a break and step back from the pace and the 120 mile and hour lifestyle for a little bit.
No major injuries, nothing like that?
No for once! For once, time off without a surgery, without a sling, a neck collar or anything like that. So, it’s been really, really nice.
Do you like it when someone says you have to take some time off when you’re not injured or are you one of the guys where they have to force you because you enjoy it so much?
I actually asked for it. Nobody has to force me to take time off. I’m at the point now where here and there I think it’s a good idea. Not only for the show’s sake or a character’s sake so I don’t burn it out but also just to step back from it and still maintain the kind of passion for it that I want to have. I don’t want to get burned out on it. I don’t want to just call it in. I never want to get to that point. Not that I was but I was getting tired.
That’s natural for everyone like that because you go so fast for so long. Is it better for you to have the physical break or the mental break from the grind?
This time I think the mental grind. Every other time it’s been physical and I think that was the nice part about this is before I got too burned out on either end. If you get too burned out mentally then something physically with give and I think I beat it to the punch this time. I just decided to step back and hopefully somebody else on the show can step up a kind of fill the void if there is a void.
Now, guys are always trying to make it to the top of the wrestling business and make it to the championship level. But once you get there, staying there is very difficult mentally. Do you find that to be the case that once you finally got to that spot, did you find it very heavy on you in a mental way?
It’s definitely more difficult. I always thought getting to the WWE would be the hardest part but actually succeeding to the point where you want to succeed – that’s the really, really hard part. And then staying there – yeah because you’re more involved with it. There’s more pressure on you. Now you can place more pressure than there actually is and really get in to all of that. I really don’t but I did need to just step back a little bit from it. I guess for the first time in my career I put myself first and ahead of the actual business which I’ve never done before.
What a novel idea.
Crazy huh?
Like I said, the last time we saw you was at Summerslam in a Hell in a Cell match against The Undertaker which was phenomenal. How worried are you going into a match like that? You’re talking about a match on a major pay-per-view, main event, Hell in a Cell. There has to be certain expectations that fans have and expectations you have as a performer.
Without a doubt. I think most importantly are the expectations I have for myself and for the match and things like that. I know with my expectations that high that they’ll come through for the people. There were things I wanted to do on that that just physically I wouldn’t have survived – ideas that I had and then you see the new cell and it makes a lot of things impossible that were possible before. It’s huge.
I know that people have seen past Hell in a Cell matches and what (Mick) Foley has done and now I’m like ‘please don’t go to the top’. I really don’t want to see it anymore because it’s so scary.
Well, you actually can’t now. It’s 26 feet so I don’t think you could actually survive a fall from there and trust me, I thought about it. But I just don’t think it’s physically possible now and I tried to come up with every scenario to make it possible. I really don’t think it is anymore and it’s kind of taken away that aspect but it’s forced guys to work around it and maybe get reactions from just good, brutal matches as opposed to stunts.
You had to get more selective the higher up you got on the card and were in a more important position. We saw you in a lot of TLC (tables, ladders and chairs) matches were you guys did some really crazy, crazy things. It seems like that you have to choose those spots now.
You always had to choose them but the good thing was in some of those TLC matches you have six or eight guys to kind of divvy up the huge risks. Anything I’m in now it’s me taking all the risks and my opponent. But you do – you have to be a little more selective. You have to realize that for longevity sake you can only do that so long. You did it to get noticed but now that you’re noticed you realize that’s not necessarily what people want to see all the time. If you do that once in a while, not only physically are you going to last longer but – the guys like Shawn Michaels took the risks earlier in their career and now they tell stories in there and they tell damn good stories. I think that’s the point I’ve gotten to. I’ve paid my dues and shown what I can do but I’m smarter now in how I work.
What has it been like character development-wise because we’ve seen you do so many things that I think people appreciate not only in the ring but also outside the ring with your character? You did the stuff with Vickie (Guerrero) this year and a lot of other stuff. How have you been able to morph into that even better?
I think that was really the last key to having the kind of character where you didn’t have to dive off 15-foot high ladders and that’s when people can get invested either by despising you or enjoying what you do is when you can do the things backstage or when you can go out and carry a 15 minute promo or whatever it is. A lot of that comes with the confidence of being able to do it. I think that was kind of the last ingredient that I didn’t have. Even if I had the opportunity before I didn’t have the way I have it now. And that’s really just feeling comfortable and knowing I can do it instead of doubting myself.
One of the things we saw in building up to Hell in a Cell was the episode of Smackdown where you were going crazy and challenging everything. People were looking at that and going ‘man, what a performance’. I know some people were saying that with Batman coming out, that was like The Joker. People were wondering if you got any inspiration from that. Where did all of that come from?
Honestly, a lot of it came from the Mick Foley promo. I decided to go an take that route because initially it wasn’t going to be that route and that night, I just felt it and I kind of went the psychotic route as opposed to the back pedaling guy who’s afraid to get into this thing. I wanted people actually maybe doubting that I could actually pull this thing out and I thought the only way to do that was to go full bore the other way – totally psychotic and have people going ‘man, he looks a little bent, he might pull this thing out’ and then try to tell that story in the match too. I think we did. And I had a lot of fun doing that. I get headaches after those promos though because I get really wound up. I guess to look at it though and I look at myself and The Undertaker as the Batman and Joker of the WWE in a way. I guess if anybody was the Batman it would be him.
Who is Vickie then? Do we know?
(laughs) Good call. I don’t know – maybe Poison Ivy?
Now, the whole Vickie thing – at first, everyone looked at it like what is going on. When you were initially presented with this situation did you go ‘whoa’ or was this something you thought you could sink your teeth in from the beginning?
At first, honestly, it was thrown at me about ten minutes before we did the first kiss and…
You had no say in the matter.
It was like – well, alright. Vickie, what do you think? Let’s do it. I tried to just really take it and run and that’s what I found. No matter what you’re given, as long as you really invest yourself into it and take it and run, it’s probably going to work. I think what made me feel better too is that Vickie said Eddie would get a kick out of this. He would actually be proud of her for getting the reaction she was getting. That made me feel a lot better about it too. But there were definitely some moments where I was like ‘Eddie, I’m sorry dude’. But she made me feel better about it. I don’t know, maybe she was just trying to make me feel better about it. I don’t know but it worked.
Maybe she just wanted to make out with you.
(laughs) Yeah!
I know originally some fans and even us were like whoa whoa whoa. You’re really going to use Vickie and you’re going to use her in this role? What are you doing? But as it went along, she grew into it. She felt more comfortable and I’m sure she felt more comfortable because she was working with you too.
We had talked about that and she said she was kind of able to play off me out there and feel more comfortable. That’s cool if someone can be out there with me and I make them feel more comfortable in a speaking role. But it was actually fun. It was fun to take it all over the place. Also because I think people thought there’s no way – there’s no way. Huh – it’s working. So, it’s cool to take on that kind of challenge and not necessarily throw it in people’s face but say I knew we could do this.
You got to work with The Undertaker a lot this past year – Hell in a Cell and also at WrestleMania. What was that experience like for you?
It was awesome. The guy is without a doubt – he’s a legend and a future Hall of Famer. It’s cliché but it’s completely true. He might be the best big man - most versatile guy his size – ever in the industry. I always wanted to be able to work a program with him and it just never happened whether he was on Raw and I was on Smackdown or I wasn’t on that level. Whatever it was, it took ten years of me being in the company to really have it where people would want to see. The way that everything worked out – we had this year, year-and-a-half thing that just worked. The first time we ever stepped foot in a ring was in Chile and we went in and had a 45 minute match. Alright, this is going to work. It’s hard work.
You have a 45 minute match in this day and age?
Yeah. It was in Chile and – once again it sounds like an old timer cliché – but we had two, back-to-back nights in Chile and they were sold out and we just we out there and wanted to test the waters. That was the only time we ever had a singles match before WrestleMania. So going into WrestleMania that was only the second time we ever had a singles match but I felt good going into it. I was like I think we’ve got something here that we can take to five, six pay-per-views and have every one of them be different. That was really one of the amazing parts. Probably the best compliment I’ve ever got was after the first match he said I’ve never had chemistry with anyone like that for the first time except with Shawn (Michaels) and Bret (Hart). I put you in that company. I was like ‘whoa!’. You can’t beat that compliment.
You’re a guy that grew up like us. We’re in the same age bracket, you grew up a huge wrestling fan and you made yourself into this world. So it gotta be like…
When you hear that and especially – Shawn and Bret are two guys from a work rate standpoint are obviously greatly respected. For him to ever put me in that category – I’m not saying I’m in that category – but for him to say that it’s like ‘wow – cool’.
OrlandoSentinel.com
Beginning this Friday, October 3rd, WWE Smackdown is moving to MyNetworkTV which airs here locally on My65 WRBW. Recently, Edge sat down for an interview on my Between The Ropes radio show to talk about his memorable year, being hated by the fans and much more. Here is part one of that interview. Check back tomorrow for the second part.
We haven’t seen you in a little while. You’ve been off since Summerslam. Are you enjoying the time off?
Yes – immensely. I need to just, kind of get a break and step back from the pace and the 120 mile and hour lifestyle for a little bit.
No major injuries, nothing like that?
No for once! For once, time off without a surgery, without a sling, a neck collar or anything like that. So, it’s been really, really nice.
Do you like it when someone says you have to take some time off when you’re not injured or are you one of the guys where they have to force you because you enjoy it so much?
I actually asked for it. Nobody has to force me to take time off. I’m at the point now where here and there I think it’s a good idea. Not only for the show’s sake or a character’s sake so I don’t burn it out but also just to step back from it and still maintain the kind of passion for it that I want to have. I don’t want to get burned out on it. I don’t want to just call it in. I never want to get to that point. Not that I was but I was getting tired.
That’s natural for everyone like that because you go so fast for so long. Is it better for you to have the physical break or the mental break from the grind?
This time I think the mental grind. Every other time it’s been physical and I think that was the nice part about this is before I got too burned out on either end. If you get too burned out mentally then something physically with give and I think I beat it to the punch this time. I just decided to step back and hopefully somebody else on the show can step up a kind of fill the void if there is a void.
Now, guys are always trying to make it to the top of the wrestling business and make it to the championship level. But once you get there, staying there is very difficult mentally. Do you find that to be the case that once you finally got to that spot, did you find it very heavy on you in a mental way?
It’s definitely more difficult. I always thought getting to the WWE would be the hardest part but actually succeeding to the point where you want to succeed – that’s the really, really hard part. And then staying there – yeah because you’re more involved with it. There’s more pressure on you. Now you can place more pressure than there actually is and really get in to all of that. I really don’t but I did need to just step back a little bit from it. I guess for the first time in my career I put myself first and ahead of the actual business which I’ve never done before.
What a novel idea.
Crazy huh?
Like I said, the last time we saw you was at Summerslam in a Hell in a Cell match against The Undertaker which was phenomenal. How worried are you going into a match like that? You’re talking about a match on a major pay-per-view, main event, Hell in a Cell. There has to be certain expectations that fans have and expectations you have as a performer.
Without a doubt. I think most importantly are the expectations I have for myself and for the match and things like that. I know with my expectations that high that they’ll come through for the people. There were things I wanted to do on that that just physically I wouldn’t have survived – ideas that I had and then you see the new cell and it makes a lot of things impossible that were possible before. It’s huge.
I know that people have seen past Hell in a Cell matches and what (Mick) Foley has done and now I’m like ‘please don’t go to the top’. I really don’t want to see it anymore because it’s so scary.
Well, you actually can’t now. It’s 26 feet so I don’t think you could actually survive a fall from there and trust me, I thought about it. But I just don’t think it’s physically possible now and I tried to come up with every scenario to make it possible. I really don’t think it is anymore and it’s kind of taken away that aspect but it’s forced guys to work around it and maybe get reactions from just good, brutal matches as opposed to stunts.
You had to get more selective the higher up you got on the card and were in a more important position. We saw you in a lot of TLC (tables, ladders and chairs) matches were you guys did some really crazy, crazy things. It seems like that you have to choose those spots now.
You always had to choose them but the good thing was in some of those TLC matches you have six or eight guys to kind of divvy up the huge risks. Anything I’m in now it’s me taking all the risks and my opponent. But you do – you have to be a little more selective. You have to realize that for longevity sake you can only do that so long. You did it to get noticed but now that you’re noticed you realize that’s not necessarily what people want to see all the time. If you do that once in a while, not only physically are you going to last longer but – the guys like Shawn Michaels took the risks earlier in their career and now they tell stories in there and they tell damn good stories. I think that’s the point I’ve gotten to. I’ve paid my dues and shown what I can do but I’m smarter now in how I work.
What has it been like character development-wise because we’ve seen you do so many things that I think people appreciate not only in the ring but also outside the ring with your character? You did the stuff with Vickie (Guerrero) this year and a lot of other stuff. How have you been able to morph into that even better?
I think that was really the last key to having the kind of character where you didn’t have to dive off 15-foot high ladders and that’s when people can get invested either by despising you or enjoying what you do is when you can do the things backstage or when you can go out and carry a 15 minute promo or whatever it is. A lot of that comes with the confidence of being able to do it. I think that was kind of the last ingredient that I didn’t have. Even if I had the opportunity before I didn’t have the way I have it now. And that’s really just feeling comfortable and knowing I can do it instead of doubting myself.
One of the things we saw in building up to Hell in a Cell was the episode of Smackdown where you were going crazy and challenging everything. People were looking at that and going ‘man, what a performance’. I know some people were saying that with Batman coming out, that was like The Joker. People were wondering if you got any inspiration from that. Where did all of that come from?
Honestly, a lot of it came from the Mick Foley promo. I decided to go an take that route because initially it wasn’t going to be that route and that night, I just felt it and I kind of went the psychotic route as opposed to the back pedaling guy who’s afraid to get into this thing. I wanted people actually maybe doubting that I could actually pull this thing out and I thought the only way to do that was to go full bore the other way – totally psychotic and have people going ‘man, he looks a little bent, he might pull this thing out’ and then try to tell that story in the match too. I think we did. And I had a lot of fun doing that. I get headaches after those promos though because I get really wound up. I guess to look at it though and I look at myself and The Undertaker as the Batman and Joker of the WWE in a way. I guess if anybody was the Batman it would be him.
Who is Vickie then? Do we know?
(laughs) Good call. I don’t know – maybe Poison Ivy?
Now, the whole Vickie thing – at first, everyone looked at it like what is going on. When you were initially presented with this situation did you go ‘whoa’ or was this something you thought you could sink your teeth in from the beginning?
At first, honestly, it was thrown at me about ten minutes before we did the first kiss and…
You had no say in the matter.
It was like – well, alright. Vickie, what do you think? Let’s do it. I tried to just really take it and run and that’s what I found. No matter what you’re given, as long as you really invest yourself into it and take it and run, it’s probably going to work. I think what made me feel better too is that Vickie said Eddie would get a kick out of this. He would actually be proud of her for getting the reaction she was getting. That made me feel a lot better about it too. But there were definitely some moments where I was like ‘Eddie, I’m sorry dude’. But she made me feel better about it. I don’t know, maybe she was just trying to make me feel better about it. I don’t know but it worked.
Maybe she just wanted to make out with you.
(laughs) Yeah!
I know originally some fans and even us were like whoa whoa whoa. You’re really going to use Vickie and you’re going to use her in this role? What are you doing? But as it went along, she grew into it. She felt more comfortable and I’m sure she felt more comfortable because she was working with you too.
We had talked about that and she said she was kind of able to play off me out there and feel more comfortable. That’s cool if someone can be out there with me and I make them feel more comfortable in a speaking role. But it was actually fun. It was fun to take it all over the place. Also because I think people thought there’s no way – there’s no way. Huh – it’s working. So, it’s cool to take on that kind of challenge and not necessarily throw it in people’s face but say I knew we could do this.
You got to work with The Undertaker a lot this past year – Hell in a Cell and also at WrestleMania. What was that experience like for you?
It was awesome. The guy is without a doubt – he’s a legend and a future Hall of Famer. It’s cliché but it’s completely true. He might be the best big man - most versatile guy his size – ever in the industry. I always wanted to be able to work a program with him and it just never happened whether he was on Raw and I was on Smackdown or I wasn’t on that level. Whatever it was, it took ten years of me being in the company to really have it where people would want to see. The way that everything worked out – we had this year, year-and-a-half thing that just worked. The first time we ever stepped foot in a ring was in Chile and we went in and had a 45 minute match. Alright, this is going to work. It’s hard work.
You have a 45 minute match in this day and age?
Yeah. It was in Chile and – once again it sounds like an old timer cliché – but we had two, back-to-back nights in Chile and they were sold out and we just we out there and wanted to test the waters. That was the only time we ever had a singles match before WrestleMania. So going into WrestleMania that was only the second time we ever had a singles match but I felt good going into it. I was like I think we’ve got something here that we can take to five, six pay-per-views and have every one of them be different. That was really one of the amazing parts. Probably the best compliment I’ve ever got was after the first match he said I’ve never had chemistry with anyone like that for the first time except with Shawn (Michaels) and Bret (Hart). I put you in that company. I was like ‘whoa!’. You can’t beat that compliment.
You’re a guy that grew up like us. We’re in the same age bracket, you grew up a huge wrestling fan and you made yourself into this world. So it gotta be like…
When you hear that and especially – Shawn and Bret are two guys from a work rate standpoint are obviously greatly respected. For him to ever put me in that category – I’m not saying I’m in that category – but for him to say that it’s like ‘wow – cool’.
OrlandoSentinel.com