The UFC announced two new entrants into the 2026 UFC Hall of Fame class in former middleweight champion Chris Weidman and former UFC editorial director and combat sports writer Tom Gerbasi who passed away in 2025.
Weidman, a New Jersey native, rose to prominence in July 2013 for his upset win over then-champion Anderson Silva at UFC 162. In their rematch in December 2013, Silva famously snapped his leg on a low kick, giving Weidman another win. He defended the title two more times before losing it to Luke Rockhold at UFC 194 in December 2015.
After a rematch with Rockhold was canceled, Weidman never got a shot at the title again, losing four of his next five with finishes in all of the defeats. After picking up a win in August 2020, he lost three of his last four. In one of those defeats, he notably broke his leg in similar fashion to the Silva fight.
Weidman retired from MMA in January 2025, but will compete against Colby Covington for Real American Freestlyle wrestling later this month. He currently does broadcast work for UFC.
Gerbasi passed away in September 2025 at 56 years old after suffering a massive heart attack. He spent decades writing about boxing, MMA, and even pro wrestling which he did for this website. He contributed to UFC publications, UFC.com, and other areas for the promotion, and was a member of the International Women’s Boxing Hall of Fame as a writer. He will enter the UFC Hall of Fame as a contributor.
Our Dave Meltzer said about Gerbasi, “Everyone in the MMA world on the inside had nothing but great things to say about him. He was one of the hardest working reporters you would find.”
The ceremony will take place on Thursday, July 9 as part of International Fight Week.
Mik Drake is like any other independent pro wrestler. Until he isn’t anymore.
Sure, one dose of a typical weekend schedule puts him right in line with all the other wrestlers chasing a dream and doing whatever it takes to get there, and as he recites it, it’s clear that he’s had more than a few of those weekends over the last 11-plus years.
Drake recalls a recent trip that saw him taking a bus from New York to Philadelphia, getting picked up and brought to someone’s house in order to drive four hours to a show, driving three hours after the show, then two more to his parents’ house, before taking the bus back to NYC in time for another show on Sunday.
“It’s nuts that anybody would willingly put themselves through something like that,” he laughs. “But there’s value long-term in getting to the ring. To me, that’s part of the process.”
So he does it. Anywhere at any time. And as any wrestler will tell you, the degree of difficulty is high, but Drake amps that up with his day job as a lawyer.
“The reality is, you find a way to pull it off,” he said. “And there are times where I feel like I’m gonna fall flat on my face because I’m exhausted, and I just keep chugging along. I’ve been at this for 12 years in August and I said when I do this, there’s no half-assing it, there’s no halfway. It’s all or nothing.
“So for me, it’s always been, hey, I’ve got to put in 10-11 hours in the office today,” Drake continues. “That means I’ve got to get up at four in the morning if I want to hit the gym. I’ve got to have my meals packed, I’ve got to get to the office, I’ve got to do my work at the office, slip out before I go to court, hit the cardio, get back to the office, then cryotherapy or whatever other painful thing I’ve gotta do to keep my body going. Because at the end of the day, if you want to do this, you find a way. It’s not so different from people who become doctors. Anybody who has something they really, really want to do, they find a way to do it and they get it done. Excuses be damned.”
Years of schooling will make you a doctor, though. In independent pro wrestling, there are no guarantees and no straight path to the big show, whether that’s WWE, NJPW, or whatever promotion someone sets their sights on. It’s a mixture of talent, looks, charisma, timing, and luck, and if you don’t have all of those attributes firing at once, it could be all for naught. But Drake and his peers keep chugging along, because they all believe they will be that one. And that takes a special kind of determination.
“There are a lot of people who want to be wrestlers, but there are very few who really want to be wrestlers, who are obsessed with it,” he said. “If someone told Michael Jordan he was obsessed with being the best basketball player on Earth, he’d say, ‘You’re damn right I am.’ And that’s how I’m wired. I don’t want to be good; I want to be great, like all-time great. People think I’m crazy, but if you want to be the top one percent in anything, whatever it is, you’ve got to be a little nuts.”
At 6-foot-3, Drake could have been a ballplayer, and he loves his hoops, but at 18, it was wrestling that got him.
“I had to go for a tryout,” he said of his ring origins. “Actually, I had to pay them to go for a tryout. (Laughs) And the guy there said, ‘You know pal, I think I can make a wrestler out of you.’ I was an 18-year-old kid, I didn’t know any better.”
But that was the spark and the start. And since then, Drake has been learning and honing his craft. He estimates that he’s been in over a thousand matches, and he’s had a couple WWE tryouts, leaving good impressions with the promotion. But the work is still the thing, which means plenty of nights with little sleep following matches in high school gyms.
“There’s still a ton of value in that,” he said. “Eight minutes is eight minutes is eight minutes, whether it’s in front of six people or six hundred. You’re trying to get those reps in, learning your positioning in the ring and learning the awareness of where you are at all times in the ring. That all comes with reps. (Former basketball star and current ESPN analyst) Jalen Rose said, ‘To be successful in THE league, sometimes you gotta be successful in A league first. To me, that applies to indie wrestling too.”
Drake knows it’s an uphill climb, but that’s part of the allure of the whole process. And in those high school gyms, he’s not trying to outdo his opponent; he’s shooting higher than that when he steps between the ropes.
“I’m very competitive, and in my head, I’m not just competing with the other guys in the indies,” he said. “I’m competing with John Cena, Roman Reigns, Dean Ambrose, and all those guys. Because I want to be better than them.”
Is he there yet? Drake admits that he’s still a work in progress
“I’ll be the first to tell you I’ve got a million things to improve on, but I’m confident in what I do well and what I’ve prepared to do well, and I’ll put that up against anybody,” he said. “Every time I wrestle, to this day, I will wrestle, I will finish, I may be satisfied with the match for all of 30 seconds, and then I say I could have done X better, and I will watch the tape every single night and pick it apart. All those little things add up and when you can bring it all together, then people are going to take notice.”
Twelve years is a long time to do anything, especially something as taxing on your body, mind, and finances as pro wrestling. And Drake knows this.
“The light at the end of the tunnel is very hard to see until you’re right at the exit of the tunnel,” he laughs.
But he’s not about to stop now, and the dream is as strong as it was when he was 18. But what if it doesn’t happen for him? What if all this work and sacrifice doesn’t give him what he’s wanted? That’s the worst case scenario, and one he knows is a possibility.
“A lot of athletes and entrepreneurs will say this: you do everything you can to put yourself in a position to win,” he said. “And if you don’t at that point, it’s not on you. My mindset when I started this was that if I do everything humanly possible, there will be no regrets, and if after 15-20 years it never works out, I’ll be able to look myself in the mirror, and I’ll live my life and be fine with that.”
Mik Drake isn’t like any other independent pro wrestler. He refuses to be.
“Little kids have dreams,” he smiles. “I’ve got goals and I’ve got work to do.”
The wrestler formerly known as Pentagon Jr. is happy again.
Now wrestling under the moniker Penta El Zero M, the Lucha Underground star has pulled off a rare double play since announcing that he was leaving the AAA promotion and going out on his own. He’s looking firmly at the future while returning to his roots at the same time.
“I feel good, I feel calm,” he said through translator Javier Clorio. “I’m the owner of my own time and of my own decisions, and I’m doing what I love, which is lucha.”
For a long time, that wasn’t the case, and as his career became more successful, he was also becoming more disillusioned with the business. Last month, he made his move.
“It was just the right moment in my career,” he said of his departure from AAA, which he announced at a show in Tijuana last month. “There’s a lot of stuff I wanted to do but wasn’t able to do, and I felt like I was being held back by the company. It became work and I wasn’t very happy or very comfortable with any of the decisions that they were making. Now I’m going back to doing lucha and wrestling with whoever I want wherever I want.”
The move was a shocker to the lucha libre world, but Penta’s friends, family, and fans have been nothing but supportive to the man who made “Cero Miedo” a buzz phrase in rings around the world.
“I’m happy with the support I’m getting from the fans, the promoters, and my lucha family,” he said. “They know I wasn’t very happy and I wasn’t accomplishing what I wanted. Now, they see me and they know that I’m doing better with the decision I made.”
This Sunday, February 19th, he will be in Queens, New York, making his third appearance for Tier1 Lucha Libre. It’s an appearance that comes with some drama, given his departure from AAA. But general manager Clorio is making sure that the show goes on.
“This has been a show that has had a few bumps,” Clorio said, noting a broken leg that scrapped Matt Cross (“Son of Havoc”) from the card, as well as the ongoing dispute between Penta and his former promoter.
“It is a business, it’s about money, and we understand that. But we support him (Penta) because he has done right for us in the past events. We know we’re taking a risk and we’re going against AAA, but it’s not personal. We have a deal with them and we did everything possible to work with them. They simply did not want Penta in the show and they didn’t even notify us a week after he was gone. We had to get in touch with them. So we did everything to do things the right way and we have a contract with them. And he (Penta) took full responsibility. He said, ‘I’m going to come in and do the match.’ The person is very valuable. The guy behind the mask is valuable to us, and supporting the indie events is crucial.”
Penta’s first two bouts in the Big Apple were rousing successes as he wrestled his brother Rey Fenix in matches that resulted in fans throwing money into the ring at their conclusion. You can’t buy that kind of response.
“I love the New York fans,” Penta said. “Every time, they ask me when I’m coming and every time I’m gone, they always ask when I’m coming back. (Laughs) I’m happy about the fans’ reaction and they’re always really good to me here.”
He returns that respect to the fans, not just with meet and greets and matches featuring his usual punishing style, but with a brand of in-ring storytelling that isn’t easy to pull off without the benefit of TV spots and high production values.
“Thank God it’s something that comes natural to me,” he said. “I don’t study or over think what I’m doing in the ring — my movements, the way I react, the cheers of the crowd or how I look at my opponents. Fortunately, it comes natural for me. And when I come out for the match, the audience decides what I do in the ring. I always dreamed that I was gonna be a bad guy and was going to be liked as a heel, and now it’s just what I do.”
It’s paid off too, as Penta’s star has risen in the last couple years, largely in part to his stint on the El Rey Network’s Lucha Underground. But the Tijuana product insists that he’s remained true to himself as his profile gets bigger.
“Lucha Underground is something that pushed me and made me become more popular, but as a person, I haven’t changed,” he said. “I have grown, and I want to keep growing and accomplish more goals.”
The future looks bright. But for the moment, all that matters is hearing that crowd roar on Sunday.
“When that happens,” he said, “I feel my effort in the ring was worth it and it motivates me to push myself and to give them more so they keep cheering ‘Cero Miedo’ during and after the matches.”
The Twitter bio of Aristidis Marousas, aka Andros the Greek, says it all.
“Corporate Analyst by day. Professional wrestler, aspiring actor/filmmaker/entrepreneur, blogger, bookworm, and overall renaissance man by night.”
That’s a lot to fit into 24 hours a day, but Andros, who returns to the ring this Saturday for the Warriors of Wrestling show in Staten Island, New York, makes it happen. It’s a tribute to parents who instilled in him the value of hard work, even if having a son pursuing a professional wrestling career wasn’t exactly top on their priority list.
In fact, it wasn’t on the list at all.
“Both of my parents are immigrants,” Marousas said. “My dad’s from Greece, my mom’s from Wales, and they never grew up with wrestling, football or any of that stuff. My dad was kind of strict when we were younger, where we could only watch educational programming. So things like wrestling weren’t really allowed.”
Fate had a way of making it all come together though, with the young Marousas accidentally finding a SmackDown event while flipping through channels.
“I still remember it,” he laughs. “It was a fatal four-way on SmackDown. We didn’t have cable, so all I had was UPN and it was Booker T, Undertaker, Eddie Guerrero, and I think JBL. It was the first time I had seen anything like it. I didn’t even know what it was but I was instantly hooked to it.”
From there, Marousas would MacGyver his way around an old television to find any wrestling he could at night, while days in biology class were often spent thinking about storylines and walking down the WWE ramp himself. That hasn’t happened yet, but the rest began taking form years later when, as a college student, he met Will Ferrara through a mutual friend on Facebook, with the Ring of Honor vet recommending the aspiring wrestler look up the Warriors of Wrestling training center.
It was 2012, and Marousas was on his way to fulfilling his dream, even if his parents didn’t know what he was up to.
“The first couple months, I didn’t tell anyone,” he said. “I told my mom first because she’s the most understanding. I don’t even remember how long it took me to finally break it to my dad what I was doing.”
And when he did?
“I think he was shocked,” Marousas said. “It wasn’t something that even registered on his mind. He didn’t even know I liked wrestling. (Laughs) He still isn’t a huge fan of the idea of me doing this, but at the same time, the few times he’s been able to come to the show, he’s always been one of the loudest ones. He gets sucked into it really quickly.”
It’s hard not to, whether you’re eight or 80. And despite school and his other interests, Marousas was determined to ride this until the wheels came off.
“I was the only student for a while and it was me and James (Rudeboy) Riley,” he said. “He really taught me the basics, taught me everything before I had to take a year and a half off (due to work and summer classes). When I came back, Jake (‘Logan Black’ Gomez) had more control of the school. J. George was teaching classes on Wednesday, Jake was teaching on Thursday, Riley was doing Tuesday. Jake has put so much time and effort into making Warriors the school it is today. We have so many students coming in to train now and Jake, (WOW founder) Joey (Bellini), and everybody involved really do a great job. For a school our size, we have such a great education program. It’s really a great environment.”
Yet while most who fall in love with wrestling are content to keep it to a level where they watch all the televised shows, go to matches and read whatever they can about it, there is that segment of the fan base that want to take it further like Marousas did. Why?
“Someone else said this, but I think anyone in this business, and not to get too deep, is broken on some level,” he said. “There’s something wrong with a person who wants to do what we’re doing, whatever it might be.”
“For me, I love storytelling and I always wanted to be a storyteller/entertainer, but it was always suppressed in the house because my parents didn’t come from that background. They came here with $150 between them, and they worked really hard. They had the whole immigrant mentality of you work hard, you go to school, you become a doctor, lawyer or businessman and you do what you can to make enough money that your children can do even better. So the arts were never really fully supported in the house, and I think there was a lot of suppression in myself because of that, but I was always drawn to it. So finally, when I had little glimpses of it, I would try my best to follow it as much as I could, and this avenue really opened for me once my family left down to Virginia.”
With his parents and brother in Virginia while Marousas stayed in New Jersey while attending Rutgers, it was the opportunity he needed to learn the ropes and pay his dues. Today, he’s a rising star in the WOW promotion, with much of his work coming in his tag team with Marcus Marquee, The Perfect Strangers. This avenue has allowed Marousas to stretch out his creative muscles in order to pull off that toughest of tasks — building a connection and creating storylines while not having weekly television spots to do so.
“We decided to make Facebook skits to try to get our characters over,” he said. “We’re serious in the ring but a bit comedic outside, just because of the way our characters interact. We do these sketches so that the Warriors fans and even beyond can get a glimpse of what we’re doing. Plus, you don’t really see that many guys taking advantage of social media in this way. I try to present content that fans will want to watch. And it’s slowly starting to work.”
So now, he’s that guy he wanted to be when he first saw SmackDown. Not bad, Mr. Marousas, not bad at all.
“When that music hits and we pop out of that curtain, it’s hard to believe sometimes,” he said. “I feel like all of us as wrestlers, we get to a point where we sort of take it for granted. But if 12-year-old me would see me right now, he’d slap the crap out of me. It’s a great feeling.”
In combat sports like boxing and mixed martial arts, Saturday night is the big one for a fighter, the moment he or she has been waiting for weeks or months to see. For a professional wrestler, especially one working multiple times a month on the indie circuit, the trips to the ring can often blend into one another, making it just Saturday.
That’s not the case for Nikki Addams, whose Saturday night this week is booked for a match against former WWE/TNA star Lisa Marie Varon that doubles as the first women’s main event ever presented by New York promotion Warriors of Wrestling.
So yeah, it’s not just Saturday.
“Actually, none of my matches are just a Saturday, Friday or whatever day they land on,” Addams said. “They’re always a big deal to me, no matter who I’m working with, because it’s another opportunity for me to get out there, show people your talent, what you’re made of, and earn their respect.”
This one does have a little extra on it though, considering that one of the Long Islander’s wrestling heroes was Varon, best known to WWE fans as Victoria during her long stint with the promotion.
“It obviously has a special place in my heart,” Addams said of this week’s match. “One, to earn the main event spot as a woman, and not only that, but to work with Lisa Marie, who I’ve been watching and following for her entire career. She’s definitely one of my inspirations, and in some ways I’ve patterned myself after her, so this is a very, very big deal to me.”
In a perfect world, this will be a turning point in Addams’ career, one she’s been diligently pursuing for seven years she says, “Went by in a blur.”
That’s usually the case in the wrestling business, with the shows, road trips, matches, and training sessions adding up and before you know it, seven years are gone. Addams is no less enthusiastic about this gig than she was when she began. In fact, as she’s making her name outside of the local scene, she’s starting to see some light at the end of the tunnel. So she’s not stopping now.
“To do this and to stick with it, you have to be in love with wrestling,” she said. “Wrestling has to almost be the love of your life. I’m not saying you can’t love a person or something else, but it has to be your passion. It’s not for everybody. But if you truly love it and want to succeed and make yourself better, even though there are negatives, you kind of view it as paying your dues and getting to the next step. You’re doing it because you really want to be there. And you hope that another opportunity comes your way.”
For Addams, that means wrestling as much as she can, getting in as many training sessions as possible, staying active on social media, and networking when the chance comes up.
“I’ve always looked for whatever I could do to challenge myself and move to the next step,” Addams said. “I learn new techniques, I go to the gym regularly, and I try to do the best I can do for myself, so that way when opportunities to meet people or to do a seminar or a class or have matches presented to me, I am ready to go. That could be the only shot you have, you don’t know.”
Unfortunately, there is no blueprint to success in this game, and making it to a big show is often a product of being at the right place at the right time. For a woman, it may be even tougher, with fewer spots available at the elite level. Addams doesn’t necessarily agree, as she believes it’s tough all over, male or female.
“There are going to be different opinions on this, but my personal opinion is that it’s equally difficult, just because there are some perks and there are some setbacks as well,” she said of being a woman in the pro wrestling biz.
“I know guys have their setbacks. For every ten male wrestlers, there’s one female, so an opportunity might present itself more readily for a female, but it’s very hard for a female to get respect and to build her credibility. You want people to say, ‘She’s really good, and it’s not because she’s a female; she’s just a good wrestler.’ No labels, male or female. That is a tough thing for a female to achieve, where she’s one of them, just like the rest, male or female, it doesn’t matter.”
Addams has earned that respect among her east coast peers, now it’s time to take it to the rest of the country and beyond. Luckily, women’s wrestling is seemingly entering a golden age at the moment, with WWE putting their muscle behind wrestlers like Charlotte Flair, Sasha Banks, Bayley, and Asuka, among others, on the main roster and through NXT.
“It’s on the rise and it’s taking off,” Addams said of women’s wrestling. “Look at what WWE has been doing in NXT and on the main roster. It’s incredible. I think overall, this is a great time for women, and even if it wasn’t, I was going to make it a good time. I definitely have the heart and passion, and when you want something bad enough, the only thing that’s gonna stop you is yourself.”
And Addams has no intentions of doing that.
“This is gonna be the year of Nikki Addams,” she said. “I’m gonna be in your face and if you don’t like it, you’re gonna learn to like it. I’m gonna earn your respect, whether you like me or not. You can’t knock me for not trying, for not putting in the effort. I work hard, I’m not gonna go out there and half-ass it and think I’m entitled to something. Anything I do get, I earn. I love wrestling so much. Even with the negatives, they are so miniscule on the scale for me. I look forward to it and there’s not much time in the day when it’s not on my mind.”
“I know that I’m not sitting on my couch right now saying, ‘Man, what if I tried?’”
It may be the biggest spoiler alert in all of professional wrestling. If Logan Black wears a hat on Monday morning, he probably had a rough weekend in the ring.
Then again, the folks that see Black with that hat on know him as Mr. Jake or Jake Gomez, middle school teacher, so they have the back of “The American Nightmare.” And thankfully for the Brooklyn teacher, it’s been that way from the start.
“When I first started out, it’s like anybody starting out with any job,” he said. “It can get scary and everybody’s walking on eggshells to make sure everything’s all right. So I played it real cool. But when I first started, I was doing a lot of hardcore matches, a lot of huge blow offs where everybody was getting color. And this was six or so years ago, before they really calmed a lot of that stuff down, especially in the independents. So I’d come in and I’d have a couple scars on my forehead, but to the credit of the people I work with and the principals, they’re actually pretty lax on dress code, so whenever I would come in with that, I’d have a hat on. So there are little ways to skirt around it or be less noticeable when it comes to that stuff.”
He can’t hide the limping that comes along with the back and knee injuries that are par for the course in the wrestling world, but his students, colleagues and school administrators don’t shy away from the realities of his “other” job. In fact, they embrace it.
“A bunch of the teachers at the school have known me a long time and they’ve come to shows that I’ve done that are local and they’ve worn my t-shirts around the school,” he said. “The dean at the school, whenever we have new kids come in, he’ll tell them I’m a wrestler, so they can’t be messing around. And then during their free time, they (the students) watch my matches and I’ll get hazed by them a little bit afterwards. So they’re very aware of it and they get a kick out of it too.”
Monday morning will likely be a limp around the school day for Black, as he will be wrestling both Friday and Saturday for the New York-based Warriors of Wrestling promotion. On Friday in Brooklyn, it’s a singles match against the Brooklyn Brawler, then on Saturday, it’s off to Staten Island for another night in the ring on a card that will feature former WWE stars Mr. Hughes, Adam Rose and El Torito.
It’s easy enough to describe it as a Jekyll and Hyde existence, and he would agree to an extent, but he also sees some similarities between teaching and wrestling.
“As a teacher, you have to be able to read a classroom, just like as a wrestler you have to be able to read a crowd,” he said. “So understanding how to manage things and also having the ability to switch gears so quickly in terms of a character, and my character specifically, is something any teacher is gonna need to use. But other than that, it’s a complete 180 from sitting down with kids and doing math problems to trying to gouge eyes out.”
He laughs, and it’s clear that when it comes to the squared circle, he’s a lifer. At 29, he’s been doing this for a decade, and since he began training at 19, the goal is the same as it is for anyone who puts on the boots — to make it to the big show. So any time he gets the chance to talk with the stars who come through the WOW promotion, he takes it, and he advises his ring students — who he works with at WOW’s training facility — to do the same.
“That’s the thing I personally make sure I do, and I encourage the younger guys to do it as well,” he said. “If you’re in there with a name, or even a name is there, ask him, ‘Hey, can you watch my match and give me any pointers?’ I wrestled Rhyno earlier this year, and he was so good in terms of every little aspect. He was excellent in terms of just understanding not only how to explain things, but to show me a better way to do things. And whenever I hear any kind of feedback, it’s one of the things I’m going to continue to drill that week in practice and even more weeks further, and I push it along to everybody else so that I’m teaching them that same thing so it’s reinforced in me. And I’ll do the same myself while watching students’ matches.”
And when Black is not in the ring, practicing or grading school work and preparing for the next day of classes, he’s watching wrestling.
“I’m watching everything — old, new — and I like to say that you need to be a sponge in order to anywhere in professional wrestling,” he said. “And there is no correct way to do anything in pro wrestling because what works for one guy doesn’t work for another. The wrong way is when somebody gets hurt, but there is no right way, so I don’t go in there saying, ‘No, this is the only way to do things; you have to do it this way.’ My only way is, protect yourself, protect your opponent and develop what you’re developing. Everybody learns differently and that’s something I use in the classroom as well. You need to work towards the strengths of everybody that you’re in the ring or in a classroom with. You have to be able to modify what you’re doing so that it’s effective for everybody. If you don’t do that, then you end up with people who aren’t going to get it as well as everybody else.”
Given everything going on in his professional life, Black has found that he has little time for a personal one. It’s the sacrifice one makes in this business, and he’s come to accept that to chase after the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, he can’t live what some would call a “normal” life.
“Where could I begin,” he says with a chuckle when asked the sacrifices he’s made to compete in pro wrestling. “Beyond the general health stuff — my knees are a mess, my back is kind of a mess, but that’s the way it’s going to be with any athlete. But girlfriends, friends, I lost a fiancée, everything like that. I’ve missed all types of family functions. I actually missed a wedding this past weekend and I’m kind of out of the loop with the general world and it’s one of those things where only other wrestlers can understand. And I guess it’s why I understand why so many wrestlers will date within the business because it’s people who understand that lifestyle, that nomadic lifestyle of finding out two days in advance that I need to be four states over this weekend, so it’s time to pack up and go. It’s really hard to have anything traditional with anybody in your life — friends, family, spouses — when it comes to independent wrestling, and professional wrestling in general, because it thrives on chaos. You need to be able to get up and go at any point.”
He isn’t complaining though. He knows it’s part of the gig, and when the last school bell rings for the weeks, he’s not Jake Gomez anymore. He’s “The American Nightmare,” Logan Black.
“That’s how I’ve modeled my life,” he said. “I’m living minute to minute. I’m waiting on other people to give me a heads up on what day this booking is or where I’m going for this or where there’s a seminar where I can up my game and make some contacts. I’ve modeled my life around it. And that’s where teaching really comes in handy, because I’m out of work at three o’clock on Friday. Anywhere I need to go, I can make that work. I’m very lucky and very privileged with every opportunity I’ve had and it only makes me want more opportunities to still make the most of everything that I’ve got.”
And bottom line, when his music hits and the curtain opens for him to make that walk, it’s all worth it.
“I think that’s what keeps a lot of guys in wrestling way longer than they physically should be — it’s that feeling,” Black said. “And if anybody can explain it to you, I would love for them to explain it to me as well. (Laughs) It’s a level of euphoria that you really can’t explain. I can only speak for myself when I say that when it comes to being that kid in the crowd, I never forget that. I never forget paying money to go to the Elk’s Lodge in Queens to go see ECW shows and getting beer spilled on me at 10 years old and the guys in front of me and in back of me are swinging at each other over me, my brother and my mother. I never forget that and these are fond memories and they only made me love wrestling that much more. I wrote essays in elementary school about doing this, so the dream certainly isn’t over for me.”
So it’s cool for his students to write the same essays?
He laughs.
“I’m okay with it as long as they’re not trying moves on each other.”