Daniel Donnelly sent along the following:
I just completed an interview with Dave ‘Fit’ Finlay. We talked to promote his appearance at the upcoming Wrestlereunion event in Los Angeles this coming weekend, and touched on the older days of wrestling, why he enjoys meeting the fans, and also how he feels about WWE fans today constantly belittling and insulting the Divas that he helped to train.
It can be found at IMetAWrestler.com and here is a direct link: http://www.imetawrestler.com/2012/01/interview-fit-finlay.html.
Here are some highlights:
On Wrestlereunion: “It’s just a great atmosphere. It’s almost like a family reunion, you know, there’s all this memorabilia stuff and stuff that comes out of the archives and you go ‘Wow!’. You remember it from your childhood. It’s an amazing thing to come to, you’ll see all your favorite old timers, and some new guys, and it’s just a great thing.”
Interacting with wrestling fans: “It really was strange for me at the beginning. I mean, I’ve not always been a babyface, let’s put it that way. I was brought up in the old school way where you don’t mix. But I know that it’s moved on and it’s changed, and it’s good to see. I mean, I’ve seen loads of little kids, and last night this little kid came up to me and he was shaking and he had one of those wrestling figures of me, and he’s shaking. These people are seeing TV stars really, when you think about it. It’s a great thing to see that we can, as athletes, professional wrestlers, performers, superstars..whatever you want to tag us as…that you can have a relationship with the fans who come to watch you, and you can actually pat them on the back and say ‘thank you’ as well. The fans do as much for me, as I do for them.”
Has social media damaged the mystique of the wrestler: “To a degree, I think it has. I think it’s got too close and too mixed between the wrestlers and the fans, everyone getting to know each other too much. All this Facebook and all that stuff. It has taken away, sort ofe like the magician revealing the secrets type of thing, and the magic isn’t as magic as it was.”
Violent fans back in the old days: “I was Irish wrestling in England during that time, so you can imagine what that was like. I’ve been hit over the head with beer mugs, I’ve been stabbed, I’ve had cigarettes and cigars stubbed out on my back, things dropped on my car, I’ve had three or four people at a time jumping in the ring to try and fight me..it was wild. Particularly in England, it happened in Germany too, but England was the worst place for me, you know, being Irish. They didn’t like the Irish back then. Which was good for me, and I made the most of it.”
Memories of “World of Sport”: “It really was something that every family did. At 4 O’Clock in the afternoons on Saturdays, everybody sat around the television and watched World of Sport wrestling. It was on for, I think, an hour. There was a lot of characters, a lot of great wrestling talent around at that time, and it was a place to learn for other wrestlers too. You know, Japanese wrestlers would come through, American wrestlers…it was a training ground for so many wrestlers and big stars around the world.”
Working as an amateur teacher at his local high school: “I grew up around wrestling, I’m third generation and my father runs amateur wrestling in Ireland, so I was always around amateur wrestling and I’ve done it all my life. I was national champion, multi-time Irish amateur champion, and the guys I wrestled with were sort of proud to be around me and always followed my career afterwards and stuff. So I never had that. Once you know the guys, you’re friends for life.”
His son entering the business: “He’s a senior and this is his last year, and he’s hoping to win State Title this year before he leaves school. I intend to send him to Japan, hopefully if I can make a deal with NJPW, then I’m going to send him out there for six months to a year. I’m going to get him to travel the world like I did, and I’ll send him over to my dad as well, send him over to Ireland for a bit. My dad’s 75 now but he can still drag him around the place.”
Fans criticism of WWE Divas: “I do think it’s unfair. I’ve had a great relationship with all the girls, we’ve trusted each other and I taught them quite a bit, and it was a real privilege for me to work with those girls and see them grow. But they’re under a microscope, you know, and it’s easy for anyone to sit at home and criticize. You can’t look back at Moolah and all those other people and compare them. Wrestling has changed, it’s different and it’s just moved on.”
WWE hiring models and turning them into wrestlers: “Those girls are so beautiful, and most of them are models, but every single one of them that I’ve worked with has got a passion to be in the ring. If they didn’t – they wouldn’t be there. I know nothing about football, absolutely nothing. And I can sit and watch and pull it apart, but I can’t go in and do it. Opinions are like backsides, everybody’s got one. I think the girls are very unfortunate that people try to pull them apart. They’re not as good as this, not as good as that. Hey, here’s my opinion: shut your mouth unless you try it.”
Fans underestimating the girls toughness: “I’ve seen them all get busted open, you know. Trish dislocated her shoulder, or her elbow I think it was. Victoria slapped Beth in the face and broke her jaw, I’ve seen all sorts. And for someone to sit at home and pull the girls apart, especially girls doing this as a profession, as their job, they need to just sit back and enjoy it. As I said before, if you’ve never done it, shut your mouth.”
Warning to online fans: “Just for the record, I don’t have a Facebook. I know it’s out there and people pretend to be me. I’m not personally on any websites or any of that stuff.”