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Post by The Dark Order Inferno on May 13, 2013 5:05:39 GMT -5
Let me clarify the butter here because I am feel a bit of condensation coming my way. It is not the amount of injuries, but the types of injuries that the person gets that tell a lot about the kind of worker they are. General wear and tear is expected in this business, but something like a broken nose show that the participant lacked ring awareness and pay little attention to what was going on. For example, I work in a kitchen and get several cuts often when I use a mandalin or when somebody leaves a piece of broken plate yet I have never had a severe cut. This shows I am skilled at what I do because I avoid the major knife accidents and only get minor slits. A person training as long as him should be covering up from shots and making sirens is paying attention to his coworker when they call out a spot. If your hand slips in a kitchen, it's no-one's fault but your own but in wrestling, it takes two to tango. Most wrestlers have had a period where they suffer a series of injuries in a short period of time through no fault of their own, it's only when they start being the cause of injuries to others that their skill as a worker should be called into question. Let's not forget that Bray Wyatt is still in developmental because he isn't ready for the big time, and is surrounded by people in the same boat, the odds of getting injured there by accident are pretty high.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on May 13, 2013 14:56:26 GMT -5
I recently saw him at a house show where he had the mask and some kind of leather apron. It seriously made him look like a horror movie monster.
He should keep the mask for good.
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Post by bootytea on May 13, 2013 22:33:35 GMT -5
Let me clarify the butter here because I am feel a bit of condensation coming my way. It is not the amount of injuries, but the types of injuries that the person gets that tell a lot about the kind of worker they are. General wear and tear is expected in this business, but something like a broken nose show that the participant lacked ring awareness and pay little attention to what was going on. For example, I work in a kitchen and get several cuts often when I use a mandalin or when somebody leaves a piece of broken plate yet I have never had a severe cut. This shows I am skilled at what I do because I avoid the major knife accidents and only get minor slits. A person training as long as him should be covering up from shots and making sirens is paying attention to his coworker when they call out a spot. If your hand slips in a kitchen, it's no-one's fault but your own but in wrestling, it takes two to tango. Most wrestlers have had a period where they suffer a series of injuries in a short period of time through no fault of their own, it's only when they start being the cause of injuries to others that their skill as a worker should be called into question. Let's not forget that Bray Wyatt is still in developmental because he isn't ready for the big time, and is surrounded by people in the same boat, the odds of getting injured there by accident are pretty high. I hardly hear stories about people getting injuries and even if that were true, it is not really relevant to Bray Wyatt the individual. He was sloppy when in the New Nexus and they had to put him back in developmental. At some point the company has to make it a little less obvious that they keep the wrong people on the roster based on the accomplishments of their dad.
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