Post by Deleted on Aug 4, 2013 18:27:48 GMT -5
Johnny Moxie. Cid White. Chris Madison.
Three Men, three different approaches.
See, as our meeting in Halifax approaches, each of these three men has taken a different path. While it's true that each of us has a contractual obligation to Canadian X pro-wrestling to get up in front of a camera and do out part to promote this upcoming match, each of my opponents has decided to do so in a different way, if at all.
Johnny Moxie? Maybe he's the smart one, as he's decided to say nothing, at least here at the closing of the hours. Perhaps Mr. Moxie has seen through the fog of war and realized that there can be no victory for him in Nova Scotia. On the other hand, given some of the tactics that Moxie has used previously in his career, it's likely that he is simply waiting for the opportunity to get the last word, simply waiting behind because the idea of researching his opponents beyond anything that they might come out and say about him is totally alien to him. Fair enough, Mr. Moxie... but know this: No matter what I say about you right here, right now, it doesn't matter. Because I'm not coming to Halifax to beat you in a debate, I'm coming to beat you with my superior skill and training. I'm coming to Halifax fully scouted, having watched and analyzed every match you've had during your impressive indy career. Every injury, every defeat... I know how it happened. I've seen every flaw in your game. You, Johnny Moxie, have gone silently into my web.
Cid White? Well, he has decided to talk, but he did not see fit to even mention any of his opponents by name. Why? Because like Johnny Moxie, he has done no research other than read the contract put in front of him by Canadian X. He knows the names of his three opponents, but nothing else, if even that. He, like me, is a recent graduate of some wrestling academy, but again, one whose name he doesn't even mention. Why? Obviously, because it's a school not worth mentioning. He's from Toronto, but yet not a graduate of The Fear Factory, not a student of Kyle Cross and Chris Legion like I am. For two years I studied my craft under and alongside some of the best in this industry, and Cid White? Well, who knows. Better than me, Cid? Oh, hell no, and I do plan on proving it. You just aren't even in my league. You're fate is already sealed.
Chris Madison. The one and only of my opponents who has made any effort to actually come out and promote the exact match he's booked in by addressing his opponents rather than simply posting some generic promo that didn't mention any of the three of us, like White, or not saying anything at all, like Moxie. The Madman is the only one of my opponents who knows where it is that I come from, and while he claims to not be intimidated by it, he is the sole opponent in this match who at least appreciates the significance of my pedigree, the sole opponent not completely selling me short and underestimating my abilities. Ans Madison was completely right when he said that there's nothing I can do to him in that ring that he hasn't been through before. He's right. Because I'm coming to that ring to cost him this match, something other wrestlers have done to Chris Madison in the past. Because I'm coming to that ring to make him tap out, something that other wrestlers have done before me. I'm coming to Halifax to BEAT Chris Madison, and when that happens, as he himself has told you, I won't me the first professional wrestler to do it.
I am The Dark Spyder IV. You can call me The Spyder. After two years of intensive training, I'm here to take this industry for my own. It all starts right here, in the very country I've called home for the last two years. It all starts in Halifax. I've researched my opponents, I know their strengths and weaknesses. I didn't come here to rack up some impressive win-loss record, I didn't come here to stack up title belt reigns. I came to this industry with the exact same goal as the two men most responsible for my training, that being this: Every night, when those fans are walking out of the arena and back to their cars, regardless of if I was wrestling in the opening match or the Main Event, it is going to be my match that they're talking about. That's the goal, and I'm willing to go to any lengths, spill anyone's blood, or go to any extreme to make sure that it happens. This isn't about glory, it's about legacy. It's about the things, the moments, that the fans will remember forever. I'm here to create those memories, and in doing so, to create my legacy that will be everlasting in the annals of pro-wrestling.
Halifax. My debut is going to be one of the most explosive things ever seen in this industry, and the single most destructive event to occur in Halifax since Thursday, December 6th, 1917. This time, the death toll will be limited to just 3, but like that blast in 1917, the impact and the shockwave will be felt and experienced by thousands.
Pro-Wrestling is about to change forever.
Because The Spyder has arrived.