Stone Cold Steve Austin Interview
Posted by David Damage on Friday, December 2, 2011
Under: Interviews
Speaking
to WWE Magazine, Steve Austin responds to Brock Lesnar telling ESPN.com
during a recent interview promoting WWE '12 that he was "downright
scared" to face him on the June 10, 2002 RAW (Austin balked facing
Lesnar, feeling the marquee bout lacked proper buildup. Ultimately, he
declined to attend RAW, briefly leaving WWE).
Austin responds, "It wasn't a Brock issue at all. It was a stupid business
decision, and I flew off the handle. I was wound up pretty tight at the
time. I thought they [WWE] were poking me with a stick, and I
admittedly handled that in the worst possible way. It never had anything
to do with Brock Lesnar—it was just a stupid business decision, and
although I handled it wrong, there wasn't anyone in that company who can
tell me it was a smart move to me in that match with no build and blow a
total marquee pay-per-view or rivalry that could have lasted God knows
how long!
"I don't have any problems with anything Brock said.
He's got his take on things. And anytime you can flap your gums and
stir things up—well, I'm always about that."
CM Punk's rant on
the June 27, 2011 edition of RAW emboldened a vocal audience looking to
return to the edgier tone of "The Attitude Era." That, coupled with The
Rock's return to the ring, has created a division between people longing
for the days of yesteryear and supporters of the current product.
Austin comments on what "attitude" means to him.
"It's funny to
me that "The Attitude Era" was named that way. Guys and gals in this
business have always had attitude. But for some reason, I started
cutting off-the-hook promos, and someone wanted to label it 'The
Attitude Era.' It's an interesting way to reference that time, but WWE
has always had over-the-top, extreme attitudes. I don't think the answer
is creating something different, or bringing back the The Attitude Era.
I think you need to let these cats fly. Kick them out of the nest to
see if they can survive. The cream will rise to the top and the weak is
going to fall by the wayside because this is a competitive environment.
That's the only way to bring any edge back into the product. It's about
letting guys fly, talking from their hearts, and their guts, and their
brains. That's what makes for exciting TV. It ain't about 'attitude.'
End of story."
In : Interviews