Timing is everything, and WWE star Santino Marella has been in the
right place at the right time, even if it didn't appear that way.
Marella, a Canadian wrestler of Italian descent, already has enough
material to formulate a book. He won the Intercontinental title in his first WWE
match, worked with Stone Cold Steve Austin, kissed Diva Maria and was slapped
''for real'' by Jim Cornette.
Through the highs and lows, he enjoys his newfound success,
especially wrestling.
''You don't wrestle much on TV -- three minute matches, six minute
matches,'' he said. ``House shows I wrestle. I love wrestling. I look forward to
having pay-per-view matches where I can go 20 minutes and really tell a story
and leave it all in the ring.
``There's more than just the comedy. I love wrestling. I love
grappling. I love submissions and smashing people. Ultimately, that's going to
come out because that's part of me. So there's a part of me in Santino, but
there's also a part of me that's a grappler. I think as time goes that will
permeate through.
``I don't want one [comedy or wrestling] to overshadow the other. I
just want them to be happily married together. I can wrestle and still be
Santino.''
With a little help from former WWE star Bobby Lashley, Marella beat
Umaga for the IC belt in his WWE TV debut during Raw on April 16, 2007 in Milan,
Italy.
''The way I was brought in, I was thrust in. Here I am. Boom,'' said
Marella, a judo competitor trained in mixed martial arts in Japan.
``Traditionally, they can come in and work hard and lose some matches and keep
fighting and not give up, and that's how babyfaces get over.
``You think this guy just won't quit, and you get behind him.
Everyone loves the underdogs, the Bad News Bears. I didn't have the opportunity
to do that but maybe in the future.''
Marella is developing his persona and style.
''Anybody, you have to be in condition,'' he said. ``You have moves
and stuff. For example, if I just get there and I'm wrestling Umaga, I don't
have any patented moves. It just has to be generic until you establish those
things. They can't be established on day one. It's a little tougher that
way.''
Marella became established over a period of time on WWE's biggest
weekly TV stage. A bad guy turn introduced fans to Marella's comedic
side.
''I enjoy working as a heel more,'' he said. ``You have the
opportunity to put out so much more personality.''
His humorous side helped land him a spot working with WWE great Stone
Cold Steve Austin.
''That was really cool,'' Marella said. ``When I got there, Stone
Cold hadn't been on for a while. When he came backstage and saw me, he thought I
was a shoot from Italy and I was an Italian. He told me, `I love the character.
I love everything you're doing.'''
Marella's character on television constantly berated and criticized
Austin for his starring role in the WWE Films release The
Condemned.
In a Miami Herald article in December 2007, Austin said: ``I knew who
he was, but I really didn't take notice of him until then. He's a great talker.
He got better in the six or seven weeks [in the storyline], and I think he's
very entertaining. I enjoy doing business with him. I think he has a really
bright future ahead of him.''
Marella breathed a sigh of relief.
'I was like, `Whew.' I was really relieved because I was ripping on
him hard for six weeks,'' Marella said. ``He was awesome. That whole day in L.A.
was surreal.
``The one in Philly, the week before, when I dressed up as him, that
was pretty funny. The reaction of the crowd when that glass broke was actually
probably a little more than L.A., but I came out instead of him.
'In L.A., it was just as good, but L.A. people were like, `Hold on,
hold on. It may be a rib again.' So they kind of held back a little bit, until
they saw it was really him.
``There's a lot of things that happened that night, personally and
professionally. It was unbelievable. It was almost like putting a stamp on it or
a coronation to the next level for me. There were so many things going on. To
see the company trust me and put me in the ring with Stone Cold Steve Austin, it
was unbelievable.''
Marella also had the pleasure of working with WWE Diva
Maria.
''Anytime you get to kiss Maria, it's a good day on the job,'' he
said. ``We're really good friends. When you come up and have a storyline as long
as we did together on TV, it's something we'll share forever. We had history
together on TV, and it will never be erased.''
Marella left mixed martial arts in Japan and ventured to the United
States in 2005. He began training at Ohio Valley Wrestling, a feeder group to
WWE in Louisville, Ky.
OVW booker and part-owner Jim Cornette yelled and allegedly slapped
Marella backstage because Marella was not scared of the Boogeyman during an OVW
television taping.
In a Miami Herald article in July 2006, Cornette said: ``We had a
moron [Marella] in our [OVW] wrestling school, sitting in an area by ringside
during a show. The Boogeyman was scaring the Be-Jesus out of everyone in sight.
People were running and screaming in fear.
``This one guy thought he was tough. He was not going to get up. He
wasn't going to run. He was going to laugh. I took exception to it especially
with it on TV. I called him in. He said nobody told him anything about
it.''
Cornette said he made some remarks and presented some scenarios for
Marella of knowing what to do and what not to do in situations.
Cornette added: ``The angry Boogeyman was probably going to break him
in half.''
Internet reports said Cornette slapped him. Cornette and WWE
eventually parted ways.
Cornette said WWE vice president of talent relations John Laurinaitis
``is a liar. That was the excuse they used because they were looking for a
reason to get rid of me because I wouldn't swallow their crap. I agreed to step
aside, and I refused to do business with WWE.''
A few weeks ago, Marella recalled the incident: ``I just got there to
OVW. I was there for about a month. I didn't know anything about wrestling. I
was sitting there, and my daughter was sitting in front of me, and the emergency
doors were behind us.
``The Boogeyman turned toward us, and I thought he was going to scare
my daughter for me. So I started smiling, thinking, `This is going to be good.
He's going to scare my daughter.'
``I guess Jim Cornette thought I was laughing at the Boogeyman. He
got all freaked out, brought me backstage and history happened. It didn't deter
me for one second. If anything, it motivated me, and I have no hard feelings
with him.
``I can look back and laugh at it now. At the time, I was just afraid
of being kicked out and not having the chance to train. Maybe we can have a cage
match one day and then shake hands.
``It worked out.''
It sure did.