Wrestling Observer Radio: Tristen Nash, RAW, ratings, AEW and NXT previews, Stardom, more

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with Dave’s VIDEO DEBUT!, and we’ve got a lot to talk about including Tristen Nash, Dave’s birthday, ratings, RAW from Monday night, AEW and NXT previews, questions from the live chat and mailbag, Stardom and more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:

Start: It’s Dave’s birthday

1:43: Kevin Nash talks death of son

4:44: Laredo King hospitalized

7:09: Ratings

12:22: AEW & NXT lineups

27:50: Finals set for IWGP Women’s Championship

30:00: Raw

53:02: Mailbag

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Wrestling Observer Live: Tristen Nash, Halloween Havoc, Dave to video, TV reviews, news, more

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Mike Sempervive is back with tons to talk about including the death of Tristen Nash, Dave Meltzer moving to video tonight LIVE and what that will entail, NXT Halloween Havoc, Rampage, Smackdown, RAW tonight, tons of news and more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Kevin Nash opens up about his son Tristen’s passing

Kevin Nash has opened up about the death of his son, Tristen. 

Tristen Nash passed away on October 19 at the age of 26. On an episode of Kliq This released on Monday, Kevin Nash spoke about the days leading up to his passing. 

“This Wednesday morning my son passed,” Nash said on the show.

Nash revealed that his son suffered cardiac arrest due to a seizure. 

“The seizure caused a cardiac arrest. He was basically dead in his room on the floor with an EMT working on him and they got him back, got him in the ambulance, and tried to save his life. So, to the people at Halifax Hospital, doctors and nurses, I thank you.”

“We both had decided that we were going to stop drinking. So, it was a situation where we both went cold turkey. I don’t think either of us felt great because you stop drinking coffee for a day and you get a headache. I think that we were both dealing with it but also because we’re so close to the cruise lines here, that norovirus s**t is always relevant.” 

Nash was asked what precipitated him and his son to decide to quit drinking. 

“He had had a couple of incidents and we actually sat up here last Wednesday and during the course of the show, he drank four or five beers, unbeknownst to me.”

Nash continued to say he “got pissed” at his son for drinking the beers because Tristen had issues with alcohol. 

“He’d had this situation at the beginning of the year where he was hospitalized for almost 60 days. This is my cross to bear, it’s alcoholism.”

He would continue to say that alcoholism had taken a friend of his last year, contributed to the death of his friend, Scott Hall, and has now taken Tristen. 

“It took Scott, and now it’s taken my son,” Nash continued.

“Alcohol is such a nasty drug, and it’s a drug. Anybody out there, if you haven’t drank, you’ve probably done yourself an incredible service,” Nash would say later in the show. 

“I have spent half my life glamorizing the rock n roll, hard-charging, hard-drinking, drug-partying, wrestling world that I grew up in and lived in and I really need to take a step back from that and go, ‘you’re part of the problem, Nash, you glamorize a lifestyle that kills people and you’ve got to stop doing that.” 

Nash would continue to talk about Tristen having a high IQ as well as Asperger’s syndrome. 

“My son was autistic. My son was Asperger’s, my son was very highly educated, very high IQ but my son was autistic on top of all those things.”

“My wife and I learned so much from him because he was always exploring and investigating.”

Nash later commented on people who have reached out to him during this time including Vince Russo, Ric Flair, and Vince McMahon. 

“Vince [Russo] and I talked on Twitter direct message. He was very, very kind,” Nash said.

“I got a message, it was a Connecticut number, and it wasn’t in my phone. I said it was probably somebody from the office and I started to read it and it was Vince (McMahon). He said, ‘This is my new number, you need me, I’m here.'” 

Ric Flair lost his son Reid in 2013 at the age of 25 and also reached out to Nash. 

“Ric [Flair] reached out to me and I reached out, I said, ‘Can you talk?’ and he said, ‘Sure’ so I went out by the pool and said, ‘how did you do it with Reid?’ And we went over it and that’s what makes this s**t work, not some therapist that is going to look at me and not be able to look past my tattooed arm or the fact that I was a mediocre wrestler.” 

“Ric gave me some really good advice,” he continued. 

Nash would also say that his son helped him get through the recording of this episode. 

“I’ve wanted to break down this whole show, he won’t let me,” Nash continued. “He’s just like, ‘Dad, this is what we got to do.'”

“I was really looking forward to spending my golden years with my boy. I’ll find ways to try and stay connected,” Nash would say near the end of the show. 

Tristen Nash, son of Kevin Nash, passes away at 26

Tristen Nash, the son of WWE Hall-of-Famer Kevin Nash, has passed away. 

The family released a statement to Fightful on Thursday confirming the news. 

“On behalf of Kevin and Tamara Nash, I have to unfortunately report that their son Tristen Nash has tragically passed away at the age of 26. Tristen recently started working on Kevin’s new podcast and the two enjoyed their time together. The Nash family asks if you could please respect their privacy during this time.” 

No cause of death has been revealed. 

“My heart is in a million pieces thinking about what 1 of my best friends in life is going through. IU 4-Life Kev,” wrote Sean Waltman on Twitter. 

“The entire AdFreeShows.com family and Podcast Heat network are shocked and saddened to learn of the passing of Tristen Nash. Our hearts are with Kevin and his wife Tamara during this most difficult time,” reads a statement from AdFreeShows,