Crayz interview
by Benjamin Tomas
At the last PCW show, Benjamin Tomas
sat down with Crayz. They discussed Crayz' start in wrestling,
his thoughts on Kaos, his feud with the Messiah, the Internet,
and more.
Benjamin Tomas: At what age did
you decide to become a professional wrestler? Where did you start
your training?
Crayz: I started at like 23 or 24,
and I trained out in San Bernardino with some guys who were trained
out there by Jesse and Bill for the EWF.
Benjamin Tomas: Who influenced you
to get into the business?
Crayz: There are a lot of guys.
The Ballards, yeah right. (Shane Ballard was standing right
there.) Bret Hart, The Bulldogs, early Cactus Jack from Texas,
and every WWF or NWA guy from the 80's.
Benjamin Tomas: How hard was wrestling
training initially? Does wrestling get easier as you get older,
or harder?
Crayz: Harder, cause you don't heal
as fast. It's a lot harder on the body.
Tomas: Tell me what feds you currently
work.
Crayz: (laughs) Anyone who
will hire me.
Tomas: Favorite fed, and why?
Crayz: That's kind of a loaded question.
I try to have fun with anyone I work for. I'm a team player. They
ask you to do something and you do it.
Tomas: You used to tag with Tech
9 as Da Naybah Hoodz. How did that come about?
Crayz: Lets see, I was training
Supreme and Kaos from XPW, and what happened was Byron (Tech 9)
was a friend of a friend who started training with us. I decided
I wanted to work tag matches, and we got together. This was before
anybody really knew who Public Enemy was. Before they got famous.
Tomas: How did it feel when, after you'd been broken up for a
bit, WPW had the two of you get back together? Also, how was it
to beat the Ballard Bros., and then pass them the title of best
SoCal tag team?
Crayz: Well, it was great. I wish
more people woulda saw it. It would have been bigger, but the
Ballards were younger and better, so we gave them the little mental,
you know.
Tomas: When you and Tech finally
hooked up one-on-one for Ric Drasin's show in Huntington Beach
at the high school a few years later, did it disappoint the 2
of you that only like 7 people in the crowd knew the history leading
into it?
Crayz: It was a drag that no one
really knew who or what was going on, but for those in the know,
it was a small tribute to all we had done. I wish it could have
been a little bigger.
Tomas: I know you are a guy who
will go on the record for saying he will not be a part of the
WWE, and accept it. What motivates you to keep wrestling?
Crayz: It's like a drug. You can't
stop. I just love wrestling. It's in my blood. But I'm sure I'll
get to where I just can't do it anymore, or I just can't. I'm
getting older, and I'm having a baby, so that might change things
just a bit.
Tomas: What do you think of steroid
use on the Indy level? Is it prevalent?
Crayz: Lets see. In California,
it's probably not real big. Are there guys on the sauce? Of course
there are. At the Indy level, tons of guys are on it. If you're
on it, good for you. I don't bad mouth any guys on it.
Tomas: Who is your favorite opponent,
and dream opponent, and why?
Crayz: My favorite opponent? I always
liked working with Kaos. There were always different finishes,
or different things we'd like to do. We knew what spots worked
well, so we could recycle them over and over again. My dream opponent?
I don't know if I have one. I got to work Terry Funk and Abdullah
the Butcher in the same year. I would like to work Cactus [Jack],
as he's the man.
Tomas: Who is your favorite partner,
and dream partner, and why?
Crayz: My favorite partner would
have to be Tech 9. When you work that long with someone
Dream partner? I like different guys for different reasons. Flair,
you know, there were lots of great guys in the 80's.
Tomas: From the group of young workers
who have only been around a short period of time, whom do you
peg as the one to breakout from the pack and make an impact?
Crayz: I'd like to say Kaos, but
he is being held down, as far as where he is allowed to work.
If he were in Memphis, or Ohio, he'd probably have a job already.
There are a lot of guys. Joey Ryan is very good. There are so
many kids. It's hard for me to get work.
Tomas: To follow that, which SoCal
guy has the best shot at the big time?
Crayz: Well, Daniels probably. Chris
[Daniels] has the best chance. He's the best worker in all of
SoCal.
Tomas: Do you like to wrestle in
front of kids and regular folks, or smarties? Why?
Crayz: I prefer to wrestle in front
of kids. They cheer good guys and boo bad guys. Smart fans are
armchair quarterbacks who think they know how matches are suppose
to work.
Tomas: I know you have an old school
approach in a new school Indy world. How would you approach a
match with, say, Super Dragon?
Crayz: Super Dragon, well, lets
see. I would go along the route of saying sometime you have to
take spots out and put spots in and take more spots out. I wouldn't
work with guys who might hurt me or I'd hurt them
Too many
high spots, too little psychology.
Tomas: Conversely, a match with
Adam Pearce?
Crayz: That's different. He's an
old school guy. He can work matches without a lot of high spots.
He is a consummate pro. It's too bad he's not working matches
on a regular basis.
Tomas: How do you feel about training
guys like Kaos and Supreme, considering how different their careers
turned out from yours? Were you hurt when they took Rob Black's
money to leave the UIWA?
Crayz: Yeah, I think at first it
kinda hurt. You know, you think they're your pals, and I think
they still are. They just took a different approach to things.
I used to love training guys, but training is a funny thing. I
more started them out, trained them a bit to get them the basics.
People change for different reasons. I think XPW changes a lot
of people. Some good, some bad. I talked to Supreme at a show,
and he's happy. That's all that matters.
Tomas: I know promoters tend to
discriminate against the veteran workers, which you, by self-admission,
are. Did it piss you off when EPIC only wanted to book you if
you'd let New Jack cut you to ribbons?
Crayz: (laughs) It was a
little disappointing. It's kinda sad I have this reputation for
being a hardcore guy, when I'm really not. I worked for Fred [Valentine],
and I did these crazy matches. But I did them because I trusted
the guy I worked with. I wasn't gonna go in with New Jack knowing
I was gonna get killed. Money is not always worth the ass beating
you get.
Tomas: When you worked so hard to
build a feud with Messiah, doing his finisher and all, does it
surprise you nothing ever came out of that feud?
Crayz: Yes, I was depressed about
it. MPW decided to blow their load early for his first match there.
They coulda had me work Messiah. It would have made more sense.
[MPW Brass] kinda blew it, but what can you do about it now? I'm
not gonna cry about spilled milk.
Tomas: What is your opinion of the
Internet's effect on the SoCal Indy scene?
Crayz: It's a big black eye. It's
eight smart marks deciding how good someone's match is when he
or she have never been in a ring before. It's too bad the rest
of the public doesn't find out about these Indy shows, so they
would draw decent crowds.
Tomas: When the history of
the SoCal scene is written, what place will Crayz hold?
Crayz: Probably a low one. For those
who liked me, cool. For people who hated me because I was a good
heel, cool. For people who just don't like me, I just don't give
a shit.
Tomas: Putting aside how
you think you will be remembered, how would you write the Crayz
legacy, given the chance to be it's author?
Crayz: Lets see. Good gimmick, and
a decent worker. Good psychology, sometimes.
Tomas: Would you encourage your
children to get into wrestling?
Crayz: Actually, I wouldn't. I'm
31 and wake up with sore knees.
Tomas: If you could pick any cartoon
character to be president, who and why?
Crayz: Shall I date myself? I'm
an old school cartoon guy. I'd probably say someone like Fred
Flintstone. He's got a good head on his shoulders. He's a good
guy. He's kinda stupid sometimes, but he's Fred. He's always looking
for the good in people, so I got to go with Flintstone.
Tomas: Thanks for your time, and
congrats on the new baby.
Crayz: Thank you.