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Home Wrestling News CM PUNK TALKS ABOUT WWE WRESTLEMANIA XXV
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CM PUNK TALKS ABOUT WWE WRESTLEMANIA XXV |
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Written by Matthew Cooper (wrestlingnewsdesk@gmail.com)
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Sunday, 05 April 2009 |
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4:02 PM EST
As an extra in John Cena's Wrestlemania 22 entrance for his
main-event match against Triple H, Phil Brooks dressed as one of the
Untouchables, carrying a faux Tommy Gun to the ring at Allstate Arena.
At the time, Brooks, known in the wrestling world as CM Punk, was in
Ohio Valley Wrestling, a developmental territory comparable to baseball's minor
leagues. Some OVW wrestlers never make it to World Wrestling Entertainment
television.
Punk knew he would. Before returning backstage April 2, 2006,
the Lockport native stared at Triple H and thought about how the WWE star would
be waiting for him to come down to the ring one day.
Two and half years
later, Punk returned to Allstate Arena as the WWE champion.
Wrestling
an early passionBrooks comes from a family with five children. His father
was an engineer, his mother a stay-at-home mom.
Brooks sported a blue
mohawk and 6-inch spikes at Lockport High School. He got his eyebrow pierced and
had an album cover of ska punk band Operation Ivy tattooed on his left calf
shortly thereafter.
Although he loved punk rock and skateboarding, his
dream was to be a professional wrestler.
"I never wanted to be an
astronaut," said Brooks, 30, who will compete in an eight-man ladder match at
Wrestlemania 25 Sunday in Houston. "I can't remember ever wanting to be a
fireman.
"I always wanted to wrestle."
He began in 1997 at 19 but
wouldn't receive formal training until he attended the Steel Domain wrestling
school on Irving Park Road in 1999.
"They kept beating me up, expecting
me not to come back, but I just kept coming back," Brooks said of the
school.
Wrestling meant traveling around the Midwest, taking any booking
he could find. He was missing work, friends and birthdays, graduations and
weddings.
"It's virtually impossible," Brooks said. "It's a hard
lifestyle to explain to somebody who hasn't experienced it."
Wrestling
became a full-time job in 2002 with Ring of Honor, an independent wrestling
company.
In 2005, Brooks was given a tryout with WWE.
WWE liked
what it saw, and Brooks made his television debut in August 2006 against Justin
Credible. It was one of the few matches to make him nervous.
Afterward,
he held his emotions until he made it past the curtain.
"I'd been
wrestling for eight or nine years," Brooks said. "Everybody my entire life said
I would never make WWE. It was an emotional moment.
"I cried like a
baby."
Seeks to be role modelBrooks says he doesn't drink or take
drugs. He has "STRAIGHT EDGE" tattooed on his stomach and has "drug free" on his
knuckles.
"I saw a lot of stupid [stuff growing up]," Brooks said. "I
never saw the point."
As for pain-killers, he stays away from
them.
"If I'm hurt, I'll take a nap," Brooks said. "Or I'll take a
weekend off. … Unfortunately, not a lot of guys do it because they're afraid
someone will take their spot."
How real were the performances in the
critically acclaimed "The Wrestler"?
"I love the movie. I thought it
showed a lot of the sacrifice that wrestlers go through to attain a certain
level of stardom," Brooks said. "Unfortunately, a couple of guys should have
saved their money and shouldn't have done drugs. That's not part of my life, but
I live in that world."
Brooks says parents thank him for being a role
model.
"In this day and age, [athletes] need to realize little kids
watch them," he said.
Life on roadBrooks' straight-edge image and
punk-rock style made him popular in WWE immediately. Last June 30, he learned he
would be rewarded with the WWE heavyweight championship belt.
"I had my
career flash before my eyes," Brooks said. "It made all sacrifice and every
single [thing] I missed worth it."
Later that night, he went back to his
hotel room with the belt.
"It was kind of a lonely thing," Brooks said.
"My night always ends in a hotel room by myself. I turned my phone off, no TV
on, and just sat there for a long 15 minutes staring at it."
Brooks, who
lives in Wicker Park, said he is home anywhere from eight hours to eight days a
month.
He lost the belt last September but remains one of WWE's most
popular wrestlers. He hopes to gain the title again to "cement my legacy." To do
that, wrestling will remain his priority.
"To be successful in this
business, you have to put wrestling first," Brooks said. "I don't know how guys
can be married and have kids.
"Right now I'm like a pirate. I'm married
to the sea."
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To read about TNA Live Impact's rating bombing terribly, CLICK
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Liddell, CLICK HERE
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