Inside The Ropes sent out the following:
Shawn Daivari joined Inside The Ropes radio on Thursday night.
Here are some highlights of what he had to say:
His WrestleMania moment with Hulk Hogan: We were in the dark about that. Hulk was a surprise. We only found out at 3pm that day that it was happening. We just showed up and we were told we’d be doing something but we didn’t know what. Pat Patterson pulled us aside and said “you’re working with Hulk” we were like “What the f**k?!”
Why he left the WWE in 2007: My contract was coming up and they offered me a new 3 year deal and I kind of thought if 2007 was any indication of how the years 2008,9 and 10 are gonna be, I don’t know if that’s something I’d be interested in. Once they knew I was leaving they started jobbing me out. Kurt Angle put in a word to Terry Taylor that I wasn’t resigning and thats how I ended up in TNA.
Why he asked for his release from TNA: It was Russo. it was a couple of things. TNA are structured very different to WWE. The tv and live events stuff are like two different beasts. When i re-signed, Terry Taylor, Jeff Jarrett and Dixie Carter put together a great deal with similar money that I made in WWE. A lot of that hung on my being on TV and PPVs, which were written by creative, at the time by Jeff Jarrett. Once Jeff got pushed out the door and Russo came in and didn’t like my character and thought it was dated, I wasn’t on many TV or PPV events and now this contract was no longer a deal worth f**k all to me. Had I known that, I’d have maybe made an effort to go back to WWE instead of re-signing with them. I harassed Russo night and day, he hates my guts. Russo is one of these writers that doesn’t like other input on ideas. Every idea he has whether it’s good, bad or indifferent is his baby. Anytime you present Russo with an idea that isn’t his, he doesn’t like it.
On going back to WWE or TNA and why perception is so important on the indy scene: Oh yeah I think so. I’d be surprised if this last TV run was my last one. But when I go back I can’t be misused. I have to be booked correctly because I can’t jeopardise my career on the independents. If you looked at my calendar April through mid June i haven’t had more than 3 days off in a row and when you think about it my last prominent TV run was in 2008 with WWE, if you don’t count TNA, whereas I know guys that have been on TV more recently, won more belts than I have that can’t buy a booking now. That’s something I’m really aware of. Tyler Reks is an example. Next year he’ll have been there one more year than I had. I was there 4 years, he’ll have been there 5 and when they let him go, nobody’s gonna give him a substantial booking of a plane ticket, a hotel room, food expenses and promote him, they’d rather get a Hacksaw Jim Duggan or Chris Masters. If you hang on for too long when your wheels are spinning, you might make a bit more money in WWE, but when you leave you won’t get another booking in this business. When you become s**t on TV, that’s what you’re perceived as. Drew McIntyre is getting dangerously close to that point. If he hangs on another year and doesn’t do anything worth a f**k, I’m gonna see a hard time for a promoter to call him and offer him a $1000 dollar booking, $400 plane ticket, $100 hotel room, advertising. You’re talking almost a $2000 investment hoping that say 200 people at $10 are gonna come out to see Drew and thats not including the cost of the building, paying the other talent. When you render yourself invaluable, its hard. Whereas if he’d seen the writing on the wall after the stuff with Vince McMahon on TV, and quit then, he could go places and people would remember him as the Scottish guy on SmackDown that did all the good s**t, Vince’s chosen one or whatever.
To hear the full interview where Daivari also talks about working in The Garden with Shawn Michaels, the controversial angle with Undertaker on SmackDown, his run in TNA, A fun TNA Wrestler’s Court story, His thoughts on Dixie Carter, What he thinks of WWE’s product these days and much more head over to http://www.facebook.com/theinsidenetwork.