Pat helped out the promoter by putting up posters then told him he was training with his son. However, Pat would bring the kid to a gym and train. A classmate’s dad was a promoter in Montreal so Pat became friends with him and also said the kid’s dad forbid his son from being a wrestler. Pat then broke into wrestling when he was just 15 years old. Pat recalls seeing wrestling as a kid in Montreal and started off really hating the heels. Guess what you are doing in a limousine going on your way to an airplane? You work! When you get on the plane you pull out your notes and you pull out your books and guess what you do on the airplane? You work! When you land, you get in the limousine to go to the venue that night for that 15-20 minutes, however long it is, you work! When you get to the venue, you work! At the end of the night you have a meeting and you talk about what you just did before you get back in a limousine to drive to the airport, and three guesses: what do you do in the limousine at the end of the night from the venue to the jet? You work! You get on to the jet and you fly to the next town and you get in a limousine and you work on your way to the hotel where hopefully you can get 4-5 hours of sleep before you repeat that same exact scenario the very next day.The interview starts off with the two joking around then Pat saying he was begging for Bruce to come back when he was let go the first time because he was stuck with all of his work.īruce first asks Pat about his beginnings in wrestling. It’s kind of like when they say that I traveled in limousines to get on private planes and go from place to place let me explain what happens in those: you get picked up by the crack of dawn, and you get in a limousine. So, the romanticism of being out by the pool, which is, in my opinion highly overrated by people who want to think whatever the hell they want to think. On Saturday and Sunday, they were usually with their families doing things that normal people do. While the folks in the office were 9 to 5, they weren’t there an hour earlier or stayed that 6 hours later in the evening. We usually didn’t end until 10 o’clock at night, every day Saturday and Sunday. “That is the part that always gets me, ‘Oh, they’re sitting out in the pool.’ What they fail to realize is that we started either out by the pool or in the dining room at 8 o’clock in the morning. I can tell you the date of when I got married, but the year was during WrestleMania 12, that is how I equate it.” I couldn’t tell you the date of any major pay per view. We had spent more time with each other than our families and it was during those times and in those recalls how those decisions had affected me personally in making those decisions. “We kind of lived in a cocoon - we were the only people that we had seen. If I wasn’t privy to those meetings I couldn’t say yay or nay, however, for so long, it was three guys: myself, Pat Patterson and Vince McMahon who had made a lot of the decisions with the majority of the decisions for many years. “While there are people who say that it wasn’t how that happened, or this is what Vince McMahon said to me. “The thing about it is that my memory and my recall is what is important to me and how it affected me at the time,” Prichard said. Bruce Prichard recently spoke with CBS’ In This Corner (via Wrestling Inc) about various topics.
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