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Dr. Darin Davis

Minnesota independent pro wrestler discusses past experiences and the current state of pro wrestling

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Archive for February, 2008

EyeglassesThose of you who have been watching TNA wrestling over the last few months have seen a female “fan” from the crowd replace Miss Brooks as Robert Roode‘s valet. From the first time they showed this “fan” in the audience I could tell it was a work. Partly because they never show someone at ringside for more that a couple of seconds as the handheld sweeps by them, and partly because something about her looked strangely familiar. Usually when I get a feeling like that, it means that it’s someone from the wrestling business that I just haven’t placed yet.

In her case, everything that she had a pair of looked familiar. At first, it was the legs. It seemed like I had seen those before. I couldn’t place anyone at the national level, so I thought about the local. Any of the blondes working the scene at the time I was active didn’t seem to fit.

In the next week or two it was the arms, while she was wearing a sleeveless top. Looks familiar- can’t place her.

Then the low-cut top exposing the overflowing- Whoah! Definitely ringing a big bell now. And they look real, which shortens the list of possible wrestling blondes quite a bit.

Before I thought about the possibility of her looking like someone who wasn’t blonde, her glasses slipped slightly down her nose. “Hey, I recognize those eyes…” and the legs, arms, and other parts match.

Kind of like one of those kid’s games where you have combinations of feet, a body, and a head you have to match up. Usually it’s a clown or a fireman. Normally pretty easy for an adult. I had the body, didn’t notice the feet, and I was searching my mind for the right head to go with them.

On TNA, she was announced as Payton Banks, but in the Upper Midwest she wrestled as “Rain“. She wrestled both in singles matches and with Lacey as a tag team called the “Minnesota Homewrecking Crew” (a take-off on a more famous tag team called the “Minnesota Wrecking Crew“).

Now I know how Superman could stay disguised as Clark Kent for so long. The use of the glasses seemed like some kind of comic book shortcut, but it really worked on me. The combination of the glasses and the blonde hair led me down a dead end.

Rain worked quite a few of the shows I was on. She wasn’t trained by Sharkey, but she also worked out at the Sharkey/Fox wrestling camp a few times while I was still active.

One thing that many people don’t realize is that the female wrestlers go through the exact same training as the men. I don’t mean that they just have the same curriculum, I mean they are thrown in the mix and work with the guys. If we’re going through drills learning armdrags, biel throws, hiptosses, etc., they get in line with everyone else.

Typically we would form a line and one person would perform a particular move on each person in the line. That person would then go back to the end of the line, and the next person would take their place as the “giver” and go through everyone in line again. When the camp was at its largest, we had up to 17 people there on any given day. That meant that you were taking 17 bodyslams in a fairly short period, followed by 17 armdrags, 17 hiptosses, 17 clotheslines, 17 biels, 17 shoulder tackles, and around 3 Advil.

While it seems like the mixing of the sexes in a situation like this might cause some problems, it wasn’t really the case. Everyone remained very professional whenever they were in the ring- more like a brother/sister relationship (I’m talking about the midwest brother/sister, not the Alabama version). Outside the ring may be a different story, but inside was all business.

Wrestling a new female for the first time would take me maybe a couple of minutes before my mind got into the “sister/coworker” zone (and out of the gutter ;) . It’s kind of like when you see the lions at the circus. They sit perched up on a little stool staring at the lion tamer and the people in the crowd. They learned to suppress their natural instincts because they know if they don’t they’re gonna get smacked.

After those first few minutes though it’s out of my system. Then just stepping through the ropes with them was enough to switch my brain into “professional” mode for that particular girl. When someone new came into the camp, I’d have to repeat the same process.

Another part of the regular training camp activities was pairing people up and having them wrestle a match. Work through it like you’re in front of an actual crowd- no stopping, no time outs, if you screw up cover for it.

Sometimes the guys had to fill in if there were an odd number of women there. This happened one of the times that Rain was at the camp. She wanted to tag with Lacey against Crystal and another girl that I can’t remember right now [sorry]. The “problem” was that Crystal hadn’t shown up yet. That’s where I came in.

In the past, my lack of hair could have killed a womens match. Some female wrestlers have 80% of their arsenal based on hair pulling. That wasn’t an issue with these women though, as they had the talent to work around that fairly easily. It reminds me of my 9th grade basketball coach who made us play with a partially deflated ball so that we could get better at moving it down the court though passing instead of just driving it down solo. If you tried to dribble, the ball wasn’t going to bounce back. In this case, learning to work a match without always going for the hair was probably a good training drill. I’m going to go out on a limb and recommend this to any female in the business… Wrestle a Bald Guy (sounds like a good T-shirt idea to me).

After Lacey had been working me over, she tagged in Rain. I was a mere 10 seconds away from a possible side headlock, leg scissors, hurricarana, or any number of pinning combinations.

Just then, the door opened and Crystal came walking in. Damn!

If only there had been some road construction, or she had gotten stopped by one more traffic light, or needed some gas. Then I would have gotten my two minutes in with Rain and gotten it out of my system.

But instead, more than 6 years later I’m sitting on all fours up on my couch like the King of the Jungle, watching Robert Roode’s new valet on the TNA broadcast.

If you do not contribute to a web site, or are not interested in web design and usability, you can skip this one. Go ahead, I won’t feel bad. Remember, we talked about this in my previous entry? I’m giving you an out- go ahead and take it.

On one of my previous posts, I found myself spending a lot of time putting in hyperlinks to things I was referring to, which made me wonder if I was putting in too many [part way through I switched from hyperlinks to just using bold text- things were getting out of control!]. I’m sure you’ve seen sites where practically every other word is linked. The author might think they are being helpful, but it can seem like it takes you a half hour to read one sentence.

I ran across an article on a software development site called Coding Horror. I’d recommend reading the full article, but below are a few of his points that stuck with me the most:

#2. The first link is the most important one. The first link will garner most of the reader’s attention, and the highest clickthrough rates. Choose your first link appropriately. Start with the important stuff. Don’t squander your first link on a triviality.

Makes sense. Leads into #3 as well…

#3. Don’t link everything. Using too many links will turn your text into noise. This works in two dimensions: excessive linking makes text difficult to read, and excessive linking causes deflation in the value of all your existing links. Link in moderation. Only link things important enough to warrant a link.

Because there are readers that have varying levels of knowledge and viewership of professional wrestling (including none), I sometimes feel like I need to provide a lot of links. If I mention Hall & Nash (didn’t link this time), they may not know who they are or the significance of their appearance in WCW, for example. It’s really easy to go overboard though.

#5. Don’t title your link “Click Here”. Don’t even use the words “Click” or “Here” anywhere in your link text. Describe what the link will do for the user when they click on it.

That is so Web 1.0 ;-)

#8. Don’t make your content depend on links to work. Not everyone will click on your hyperlinks. Either they’re too busy to click every single link you put in front of them, or maybe they’re reading your article in another format where they can’t click on the links: print, offline, or mobile. Either way, it’s important to provide the context necessary to make your content understandable without the need to visit whatever is behind those hyperlinks.

This is another good one that I struggle with. A reader should be able to understand what you are writing from context. Visiting the links should just provide them with more information, rather than being necessary to figure out what you are talking about.

A bit off topic, but hopefully it was useful to somebody.

I’m struggling a bit with what types of topics to talk about on this site (or actually, what not to talk about). Of the people I’m aware of that read this, some are fans of pro wrestling, some are not (co-workers, relatives, friends). A few have actually been involved in wrestling, most have not. A few have their own blogs or sites, most do not.

This blog is primarily for posting my experiences as an independent professional wrestler in the Minneapolis area, and secondarily to share some of my opinions of the wrestling promotions and telecasts of today.

There are other things I am interested in that some of the readers might share, but I won’t be discussing them in detail here. To help myself figure out what would be considered “off-topic”, I came up with a list of topics I will not be covering on this blog. There are countless other web sites that do a much better job in these areas than I ever could. I thought the list might be worth sharing.

Things That You Won’t See In-Depth Coverage On:

  • My personal diary (a.k.a. What I had for breakfast)
  • Software development
  • Personal finance
  • Video games
  • Computers, electronics
  • Home remodeling
  • Web site design/development

While each of these topics may be of interest to a few of you, I think including a lot of information on any of those topics ends up diluting the main purpose stated above.

While I believe it’s a good idea to define a central purpose, I think an occasional post about a topic like the ones above, if it seems relevant, is okay. For example, I ran across a decent post on another blog about effectively using hyperlinks in a posting that I was thinking of sharing. When I was working on a previous post, I was putting in what felt like too many hyperlinks, which can sometimes make articles hard to read. Reading some of the suggestions will change the way I post in the future. The information may also be useful to those that have their own sites. While that it may be a minority of the readers I know about, the trend seems to be that a larger percentage of internet users will have their own blogs.

If I do decide to post something slightly off-topic, I’ll set it to a category other than wrestling so those that don’t care about it can filter it out using the category choices that I’ll put on the right-hand side of the page. I also recognize that some of the blogs I read for a specific purpose are more enjoyable when they have something interesting that is seemingly random, which I may decide to do from time-to-time (e.g. comments about facial hair) and categorize appropriately.

It’s starting to sound like I’m contradicting myself already. I guess what I’m saying is don’t expect to see the topics above on a regular basis, but don’t be surprised if they pop up once in awhile.