Ruckus interview
by Mark Kawada
Mark Kawada caught up with CZW star
Ruckus after CZW's junior heavyweight tournament, "Best of
the Best". Ruckus, who is set to make his SoCal debut on
June 16th's EPIC show discussed that, XPW, backyard wrestling,
and more.
Mark: We're here with Ruckus on
the night of CZW's second annual "Best of the Best"
tournament. Ruckus, thank you for being here.
Ruckus: No problem.
Mark: First off to start the interview,
a simple question. How did you get started in the wrestling business?
Ruckus: I started off in high school
wrestling, collegiate style. Then from there I just fucked around
in the backyard with some friends. Then I went to wrestling school,
got trained, and started April 18th, 1999. Since then I started
with CZW in the summer of 2000. Then it went on from there.
Mark: Where did you train?
Ruckus: Brainbuster's Wrestling
Academy in Baltimore. I was trained by Chad Olsen.
Mark: Who were some of the other
guys you trained with?
Ruckus: Axl Rotten, Balls Mahoney,
and some others.
Mark: How soon after training did
you have your first match?
Ruckus: Three months.
Mark: Who was your first match with?
Ruckus: It was a battle royal actually.
Mark: What about your first singles
match?
Ruckus: My first singles match was
me versus Chad Olsen.
Mark: How did you get into wrestling?
Did you get into wrestling as a fan growing up?
Ruckus: Yeah, my grandfather [got
me into wrestling]. I'd sit there and watch it with him. I just
fell into it from there.
Mark: Who is your favorite wrestler?
Ruckus: Shawn Michaels and Rob Van
Dam. Also [Keiji] Muto and Masahiro Chono.
Mark: What's your favorite angle?
Ruckus: Michaels, Marty Jannetty.
If you watch some of their matches, they had some of the better
matches for their time.
Mark: What about your favorite match?
Ruckus: Lets see, it's between Owen
Hart and Bret Hart at Wrestlemania 10, and Shawn Michaels and
Razor Ramon's first ladder match. Oh yeah, also Muto and Ric Flair
versus Terry Funk and Sting.
Mark: So, how did you get in to
CZW?
Ruckus: Me and my friend, Hurricane
Kid were doing a show for Power House Wrestling, and Zandig and
a couple guys were there and saw what I can do. So they gave me
a shot and the rest is history.
Mark: How do you feel about CZW?
Ruckus: It's the greatest independent
around right now. They are going to be huge soon.
Mark: What do you think of the locker
room?
Ruckus: The locker room is awesome.
The greatest bunch of talent you'll ever see on any show.
Mark: Where did the Ruckus gimmick
come from?
Ruckus: I was just sitting there
and [the promoters] said I needed a name. I was just going to
wrestle under my real name but the promoters didn't like that.
So [the promoter] just named me Ruckus and it went from there.
Mark: How do you feel about the
matches you had tonight?
Ruckus: Oh, the matches were great.
Jody Fleisch is a great competitor. Tony Mamaluke is unbelievable.
So is Max [Fury]. They are all really good. I was really happy
with all my matches.
Mark: What is your favorite style
to work?
Ruckus: Lucha Libre.
Mark: Why is Lucha your favorite?
Ruckus: Lucha Libre is unbelievable.
I mean, you bring in a unique style of wrestling with Lucha. My
style, I try to mix a little bit of Lucha Libre, plus some stuff
you wouldn't see on a normal show.
Mark: Would you ever consider working
in Mexico?
Ruckus: Oh yeah. Definitely. Any
chance I get I'll take it. I've worked in Japan a lot for Big
Japan. That's a really good experience, so I'm always up for something
new.
Mark: What is your take on the criticisms
you get when people say you are "spotty"?
Ruckus: If you look at it right
now, look at any typical match. That's all spots. Look at the
stuff on Monday nights and it's just punching and kicking. No
one wants to see that. My matches, I'd compare them to an old
kung fu movie. You see a lot of different stuff in my matches.
If a person thinks I'm too spotty then they don't have to watch
me, you know?
Mark: Do you have any gymnastics
or martial arts training?
Ruckus: Judo, Tae Kwon Do, and kickboxing.
I didn't do any gymnastics. I'm self-taught in that.
Mark: How did you end up in Big
Japan?
Ruckus: They called Zandig and told
him they wanted me to come over for a tour, and I just took it.
I guess it was from the popularity of me and Trent's matches.
Mark: What was it like touring in
Big Japan?
Ruckus: Great. One of the best learning
experiences I've ever had. Really good.
Mark: How was the locker room?
Ruckus: Locker room was great. All
those competitors over there are good. Men's Teioh is fantastic.
The shows are unbelievable. Unbelievable.
Mark: Do you plan on going back
there soon?
Ruckus: I'm not sure.
Mark: What did you think of the
Japanese fans as compared to the American fans?
Ruckus: Japanese fans are more respectful.
They want to be quiet and let you do your stuff. They'll pop for
your big stuff. They'll pop for your spots. But fans back home,
you can't beat the fans back home, you know? They're into it.
They're hungry. They want to see something new every time, and
I try to give them that.
Mark: Do you think you'd ever do
deathmatches, or do you plan on just sticking to technical wrestling?
Ruckus: I mean whatever, you know?
I'll do whatever matches come my way. I'm not scared to do deathmatches;
I'm not scared to do hardcore. Whatever, you know?
Mark: Have you taken any bookings
outside of CZW and Big Japan?
Ruckus: Oh yeah. I'm about to head
to California for EPIC of course. Me and Trent Acid. So, that
should be really good.
Mark: Is this going to be your first
trip to SoCal?
Ruckus: Oh yeah, it's my first trip.
But, anywhere else, I wrestle all around the East Coast.
Mark: What are your thoughts on
EPIC?
Ruckus: It looks like one hell of
a card from what I saw. I mean, me and Trent Acid will go down
there and get it on one more time.
Mark: What are your thoughts on
the EPIC locker room?
Ruckus: Sabu, Messiah, all those
guys are awesome. I've always been a Sabu fan. I mean, this show
has a ton of talent on it and a lot of really good matches, so
it should be one hell of a show.
Mark: Are you familiar with the
SoCal wrestling scene?
Ruckus: It's going to be all new
to me.
Mark: Any sightseeing when you go
to LA?
Ruckus: I'm going to try to.
Mark: So what kind of wrestling
do you watch now?
Ruckus: Now I watch a lot of Japanese
wrestling, a lot of Indy. I'm not too keen on the Monday night
stuff, but I watch it anyway.
Mark: Who is your favorite wrestler?
Ruckus: That's a hard one. Like
Rob Van Dam is my favorite wrestler. Shawn Michaels was always
good. Right now at this time I'd say Rob Van Dam. Eddy Guerrero.
Chris Benoit, how can I forget him? Chris Benoit is the man.
Mark: What feds and styles are you
a fan of now?
Ruckus: My favorite fed to watch
right now, other than CZW, would have to be All Japan. All Japan
and I like AAA.
Mark: What are your thoughts on
Rob Black and XPW?
Ruckus: I don't know. They contacted
me and tried to get me to come over. I'm not really feeling that
scene. I mean I don't know Rob Black so I can't say anything.
Messiah's from XPW. So obviously, I have heard some things. But
I haven't seen some of their stuff as of late. They're trying
to do what they're trying to do, you know?
Mark: Would you ever be willing
to work with them?
Ruckus: No. My loyalty is with CZW
so that's where I'll stay. I don't see myself working for XPW
at any time.
Mark: If you could pick anyone right
now, whom would you want to wrestle?
Ruckus: If I could pick anybody,
I would want to do a match with Randy Savage in his prime. Randy
Savage is the greatest. I want to wrestle him in his prime. Or
Masahiro Chono. Or RVD, if I had the chance.
Mark: Who is your favorite guy to
work with?
Ruckus: Trent Acid. I love working
with him.
Mark: Did you choose him as an opponent
for EPIC?
Ruckus: No, they contacted me and
told me that's what the match was going to be.
Mark: What's your take on backyard
wrestling, considering you mentioned doing it?
Ruckus: Backyard wrestling, if you
wrestle and you do it right, I don't see any problem with it.
When I backyard wrestled we didn't do anything too dangerous.
We had a real ring and everything. I mean I see some backyard
wrestling now where kids are like breaking light bulbs over each
others heads and cutting each other up. I mean that's not wrestling.
Wrestling is where you go in there with another person and you
guys are trying to make it look good and you're not trying to
kill each other. I agree with some, but I have mixed feelings
on it.
Mark: What do you think about kids
renting arenas or a ring and trying to say they are a legit promotion?
Ruckus: I mean, to any backyard
wrestler I say, if you stay in the backyard, that's where you
are going to stay. Get the money, get trained, and start to make
a career out of it. That's what I did, so I encourage any other
backyard wrestler to do the same. There's a lot of talent out
there.
Mark: What's your take on the WWE?
Ruckus: I don't like the fact that
they are called WWE now. Takes all the tradition out of it. They
are too dramatic now, too much entertainment. They focus more
on angles than wrestling, and I don't agree with that.
Mark: What about the current state
of wrestling as a whole?
Ruckus: Wrestling is a funny business,
you know? It goes up and goes down. Right now, I like the way
wrestling is going, the direction my career is going. So in a
whole, I still like the way wrestling is going.
Mark: What kind of role do you think
the Internet plays?
Ruckus: Oh, a huge role. I mean
the Internet has an advantage and a disadvantage. Advantage wise
it's getting a lot of people's names out there faster. It's putting
over a lot of the good talent out there. But, then you look at
the disadvantages, when they give away finishes and you got the
people who want to trash you. I mean people trash what we do,
but the people who trash what we do can't get in there and do
what we do. Know what I mean? If people can't fill our shoes,
then people shouldn't comment saying how we are bad if they can't
do what we do.
Mark: What do you think about the
fans who take apart a match and critique it?
Ruckus: The fans that do that, they're
fans. I'd like to see any fan take apart a match, then go in there
and do better. It just doesn't work that way. Anybody can sit
at home and watch it, and bitch and complain, but it takes a certain
something to be able to get in there and get it done.
Mark: What do you think the importance
of psychology plays in wrestling?
Ruckus: Psychology plays a huge
role. If you look at some of my earlier matches you don't see
hardly any psychology. Now that I've been learning more, I learn
every day. I've been putting more psychology into my matches.
Like me and [Tony] Mamaluke. We put a ton of psychology into it.
Me and Trent use a lot of psychology now. Psychology plays a huge
part. You can't just powerbomb a guy then pick him right up and
give him something else. You got know where to put things. You
got to know what to do. I'd say it is fifty-fifty with the athleticism.
Mark: So what does the future hold
for Ruckus?
Ruckus: Hopefully one day I'll make
it to the big show. Until then I'm going to keep doing what I'm
doing and get better.
Mark: Any last words for the SoCal
fans before your match with Trent Acid at EPIC?
Ruckus: Get ready for something
unbelievable. That's all I can say. Get ready for something you
wont see anywhere else on that card. Something crazy.
Mark: Thanks a lot for your time.
Ruckus: No problem, anytime.