Scott Steiner Interview 1.5.2010
Posted by David Damage on Saturday, April 30, 2011
Under: Archive Interviews
A pissed off Scott Steiner speaks out
Scott
Steiner at the TNA Bound For Glory pay-per-view on October 18, 2009 in
Irvine, California. Photo by R.P. Strickland, strickspix@yahoo.com
Scott Steiner may be gone from TNA.
But he's not forgotten. And he's got an axe or two to grind with the big boys.
Main-eventing
on the indy scene, Steiner will tangle with Kevin Nash at a huge show
in Thunder Bay, at the Fort William Gardens, on May 15.
And
while he's got the normal bumps and bruises you could expect from a
47-year-old wrestler who's been at the top along the way, Big Poppa Pump
says he's feeling OK.
While he's got a small construction
company on the side and maintains homes in Michigan and Georgia, Steiner
looks forward to appearing in Thunder Bay.
"My match
preparation is the same, whether it's 70,000 people (the number of fans
he says saw a show he did in North Korea) or 1,000," says Steiner. "Fans
are paying money to see me, so it's up to me to perform."
While
not too long ago, he had a deal with TNA, he's not exactly sure what
went wrong. And he doesn't really want to talk about it.
What he doesn't like is the robotic mannerisms of many of wrestling's top performers.
"It
pisses me off, the guys that they push to the forefront," he says.
"They're basically puppets. It's an agent on a headset controlling
everything."
While Steiner has enjoyed success as a singles
competitor, it was as a tag team with brother Rick, that he really
cemented his status. The team was innovative before its time. Feuds
against teams like the Road Warriors and The Nasty Boys were ring
classics.
Rick and Scott Steiner as WWF tag team champions.
"I
was doing the Frankensteiner at 260 lbs., then," he says. "You see a
bunch of lightweights doing it now, but it was innovative when I started
doing it. We were doing a lot of moves off the top rope. Very different
at the time.
"If there is a better tag team out there, I'd like to know who it was."
Steiner also bristles at suggestions that he was using steroids during his WWE heyday.
"I
told (WWE) to have Triple H pick me up in a limo, then we could go test
together," he says with a laugh. "They never asked again. I've never
failed a drug test in my life.
"Their Wellness Policy is a
political issue. A lot of people have addictions. And if they don't hve
the willpower to control it, that's when it becomes a problem."
He looks back at his first time in WWE with some regrets.
"The
timing was bad," he says. "Vince [McMahon] was going through a lawsuit
and all his money was going to defend himself. I should have stayed in
WCW. It was a huge mistake."
In 2007, Steiner was kicked in the throat by Apolo in Puerto Rico. The kick nearly ended his life.
"When
I went to the hospital, they told me I had five hours to live," he
says. "The doctors there don't make any money unless they perform
surgery so I was skeptical. I looked in the mirror and said, 'I look
OK.' I tried to leave the hospital.
"I found out from some
doctors back home that I needed the operation. Yeah, they saved my life.
It was a bad time for me. I had lost one of my my best friends a month
earlier."
Looking back, he says the Big Poppa Pump creation was his own.
"I
was a babyface for so long, it didn't make sense for me to look the
same," he says. "So I changed my look and my interview style -- to be
arrogant. People really got with it."
In : Archive Interviews