- 03/03/2016 (3:33:31 pm)
- Bob Mulrenin
…
Recap of Pete Gas on In Your Head Wrestling Radio, 01/19/2016
by Vic
Schiavone
Hosts Jack E. Jones and One Inch Biceps recently welcomed
former WWE wrestler Pete Gas to IYH Wrestling Radio. Pete is best known
as being part of Shane McMahon’s “Mean Street Posse”.
Highlights
included the following:
Was the entire Mean Street Posse angle Shane’s
idea?
“You know, it’s funny. I believe he did want to initially, and no
one knew it was going to go to the extent that it went. The thing was
we were only supposed to be on it for a couple of weeks, and I think
because of the crowd reaction and them loving to hate us and how it was
something new and different…it was real guys just being thrown into the
ring. I think that just caught on and people just loved to hate us. Vince
(McMahon) would always give the public what they want, and that’s when
he had us go on the road for a little while. We were only supposed to
be on the road for about a month, and then after we were on the road for
about a month we lost a loser-leave-town match with (Gerald) Brisco and
(Pat) Patterson, and we thought we were done. The next thing you know
they brought us back into The Corporation and gave us three one-year
contracts, and it was the best three years of my life.”
His memories of
wrestling the Acolytes Protection Agency (APA).
“Brutal; fistfights and
basically we got our butts kicked. The wrestling business is all about
respect, and…you pay your dues like a normal wrestler - you know, you go, you
sign up for a school, you learn how to wrestle, you learn the psychology
of a match,
you start doing Independents, you get so good at
Independents you catch a break, someone sees you, and gives you a tryout
with WWE. We didn’t go through that, so we had to pay our dues. That’s
why we didn’t have respect from the boys. Maybe face to face they would
be nice to us, but we paid our dues in different
ways…Bradshaw and
Faarooq (JBL and Ron Simmons) were always pretty badass when they were
in the ring. They seemed to hit us a little extra harder, give it to us;
there was a Monday Night RAW where he folded a chair around my
head…After that match we went backstage, and when you go backstage after
a match everyone shakes everyone’s hand and says thank you; basically
thank you because you’re putting your life in his hands and vice versa,
and no one got hurt. So I went backstage, and he said he was waiting
for me to either hit him or bitch and moan or whatever, and I stuck my
hand out and said thank you very much. He said after that I actually
earned his respect because he laid into me pretty good. Their
characters were badass fighters, so when you’re fighting three preppy
guys from Greenwich you’ve got to make it look really stiff, and they
did; they laid it in.”
A funny story involving Hulk
Hogan.
“Vince had a rule. We were allowed to drink at the house when we
were in high school but we weren’t allowed to leave; we had to give up
our keys. We were… swimming and having a couple of beers and Vince went
out to go buy us some more beer. We heard a motorcycle coming up the
driveway, and it turned out it was (Hulk)
Hogan, and Hogan was carrying
our beer up to the pool. So I met him years later and I introduced
myself, and he said ‘No, I remember you.’ I said, ‘You may not remember,
but when I first met you…Vince went to go get us beer and you carried
the beer up to us.’ So he paused and he says, ‘Wait a minute; I carried
your beer?’ And I thought about it and (said), ‘Yeah, I guess so.’
Then he goes, ‘You owe me one; go get me a beer.’ I actually went into
the crowd and got him a beer.”
Do you ever foresee Shane ever being
back in the WWE?
“I sure in the hell hope so. I would love it. I think
the crowd would go crazy; I think the roof would come off of the place.
There is always a little piece of me hoping that he’d come back; whether
or not he does, I don’t know. I know he’s busy with his new company
that he’s been working on; I know he’s working hard at it. But, you always
wonder if he came back, if it was a good storyline opportunity, if he
came out to save WrestleMania or something, that place would just
erupt. Because everyone loved him because he’s always been crazy ever
since we were kids and it’s never changed. He always knew how to steal
the spotlight. We may have been in the middle of the card at some of
those pay-per-views, but it’s his matches that people seem to remember the
most…because he’s fearless.”
Other topics discussed
included:
Was he really friends with Shane when they were
younger?
What was his biggest accomplishment in the WWE?
Whose
idea was the type of clothes the Mean Street Posse wore?
Is it true
that Shane McMahon was a legendary drinker?
How did he end up leaving
the company?
This interview is available for listening at
http://www.iyhwrestling.com/viewnews.php?autoid=27794
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Caf3ZULbM4



