have you heard of this guy?
-
- Posts: 17020
- Joined: Fri Dec 01, 2000 8:00 am
Sorry to see the guy signed with the wwe.
I was watching ESPN yesterday and they had a commentary on the Benoit murders/sucide. Basically, the guy was saying that, because wrestlers have to absorb most of the impact of their moves (like Benoit jumping off the ropes--he absorbed most of the impact, not the guy he was landing on), it causes alot of trauma to the head. Repeated, long term head trauma can lead to depression, psychosis and other psychiatric problems.
The feeling is that Benoit's problem was not "roid rage" per se, but a combination of issues and possible psychiatric problems brought on, or made worse, by repeated head trauma. The steriods and other medications he was taking just made it worse.
I was watching ESPN yesterday and they had a commentary on the Benoit murders/sucide. Basically, the guy was saying that, because wrestlers have to absorb most of the impact of their moves (like Benoit jumping off the ropes--he absorbed most of the impact, not the guy he was landing on), it causes alot of trauma to the head. Repeated, long term head trauma can lead to depression, psychosis and other psychiatric problems.
The feeling is that Benoit's problem was not "roid rage" per se, but a combination of issues and possible psychiatric problems brought on, or made worse, by repeated head trauma. The steriods and other medications he was taking just made it worse.
Wabbit wrote:Sorry to see the guy signed with the wwe.
I was watching ESPN yesterday and they had a commentary on the Benoit murders/sucide. Basically, the guy was saying that, because wrestlers have to absorb most of the impact of their moves (like Benoit jumping off the ropes--he absorbed most of the impact, not the guy he was landing on), it causes alot of trauma to the head. Repeated, long term head trauma can lead to depression, psychosis and other psychiatric problems.
The feeling is that Benoit's problem was not "roid rage" per se, but a combination of issues and possible psychiatric problems brought on, or made worse, by repeated head trauma. The steriods and other medications he was taking just made it worse.
Why are you sorry he signed with them? So he can make more money than he would in most any other profession someone in his position can go for?
There have been more deaths than average, obviously, most likely as a result of the long term impacts of drug use. But Benoit's flipping out and going balls out nuts isn't the norm in any way, shape, or form.
Would you be sorry if he signed on to play professional football?
Funny that you mention professional football. I don't remember the ESPN comentator's name, I'm sorry--but he mentioned that football has been/is notorious for injury/drug use and lack of testing.
I think the entire point was, there's alot of deaths, injuries and long term damage done to these "professionals" that the public never hears about. These athletes just quietly pass away.
When something like the Benoit thing happens, it gets quickly passed off to "roid rage" or something like it, so it can be blamed entirely on the individual, and not seen as a possible by-product of the game itself.
I wonder if there are any hard statics relating to psychiatric problems in terms of head injuries. I haven't been able to find any, but the comentator intimated that there was a direct correlation between the two.
It's seems a terrible price to pay--no matter what the sport.
I think the entire point was, there's alot of deaths, injuries and long term damage done to these "professionals" that the public never hears about. These athletes just quietly pass away.
When something like the Benoit thing happens, it gets quickly passed off to "roid rage" or something like it, so it can be blamed entirely on the individual, and not seen as a possible by-product of the game itself.
I wonder if there are any hard statics relating to psychiatric problems in terms of head injuries. I haven't been able to find any, but the comentator intimated that there was a direct correlation between the two.
It's seems a terrible price to pay--no matter what the sport.
They get well paid and choose to do it. Cry me a fucking river, at least they're not left too obese to leave their room like the sumo wrestlers....Wabbit wrote:I think the entire point was, there's alot of deaths, injuries and long term damage done to these "professionals" that the public never hears about. These athletes just quietly pass away.
Exactly. CHOICE. And they can choose not to drug. There are several that don't. And some that do. To be honest, I'd guess this big guy has a growth irregularity that would make him less likely to need to juice (but he may still). And guys that big traditionally take much less in the way of hard bumps as the smaller guys, since nobody will be throwing them around nor will they be jumping off of the top of a steel cage down to a table outside of the ring 25 feet below a la Mick Foley.Geebs wrote:They get well paid and choose to do it. Cry me a fucking river, at least they're not left too obese to leave their room like the sumo wrestlers....Wabbit wrote:I think the entire point was, there's alot of deaths, injuries and long term damage done to these "professionals" that the public never hears about. These athletes just quietly pass away.
Anyone remember that cage match against the undertaker? Some insane falls there.
I think there is a chance that one day some freak might have the right combination of odd genetics and a heavy enough drug regime to pull it off.LawL wrote:No, they'd have to come on stage at about 350 pounds to achieve the same look of muscularity as someone who is around the optimum bodybuilding height of around 5'10.tnf wrote:Think we'll ever have a 6'6"+ Mr.O?
But it will be tough to have the symmetry and everything else.
Remember that guy Greg Kovacs? The Muscletech posterboy during their early years. I recall them going on about how he would hit the stage at almost 400 pounds or some shit. He ended up being a big flop on stage. I'd rather have Shawn Ray's physique than a 6'6" guy without the symmetry.
-
- Posts: 17020
- Joined: Fri Dec 01, 2000 8:00 am
When I think of big guys trying to take bumps, I think of the giant (paul wight?) when kevin Nash tried to powerbomb him and didn't quite get him flipped onto his back, dropping him on his neck in a real awkward way. No big time injury, but unless guys of that size are going to be having people throw those types of moves on them they just don't run many of the risks that most everyone else does. Fake or not, some of that shit is fucking crazy to try and can't feel good. Maybe the big guys need to worry about the chair shots.LawL wrote:You're right, Khali pretty much takes no bumps at all.
-
- Posts: 17020
- Joined: Fri Dec 01, 2000 8:00 am
Yeah I remember that, it was also done at the time where Giant/Big Show was at his lightest. He's retired now because his back has almost crippled him.tnf wrote:When I think of big guys trying to take bumps, I think of the giant (paul wight?) when kevin Nash tried to powerbomb him and didn't quite get him flipped onto his back, dropping him on his neck in a real awkward way. No big time injury, but unless guys of that size are going to be having people throw those types of moves on them they just don't run many of the risks that most everyone else does. Fake or not, some of that shit is fucking crazy to try and can't feel good. Maybe the big guys need to worry about the chair shots.LawL wrote:You're right, Khali pretty much takes no bumps at all.
I wondered how long that guy would make it for. I saw him in person a couple times, and the guy did not look healthy.
The most impressive strength move I watched him pull off was to press a guy overhead and then throw him back into the ring over the top rope from the outside floor. I don't care how much help you get from the guy you are lifting, that is a fucking feat of strength.
Speaking of freakish strength, LawL do you remember any of Davy Boy Smiths power moves?
The most impressive strength move I watched him pull off was to press a guy overhead and then throw him back into the ring over the top rope from the outside floor. I don't care how much help you get from the guy you are lifting, that is a fucking feat of strength.
Speaking of freakish strength, LawL do you remember any of Davy Boy Smiths power moves?
-
- Posts: 6216
- Joined: Fri Dec 10, 1999 8:00 am
while we're on the subject of male beauty, check this one out:tnf wrote:
But it will be tough to have the symmetry and everything else.
Remember that guy Greg Kovacs? The Muscletech posterboy during their early years. I recall them going on about how he would hit the stage at almost 400 pounds or some shit. He ended up being a big flop on stage. I'd rather have Shawn Ray's physique than a 6'6" guy without the symmetry.

-
- Posts: 17020
- Joined: Fri Dec 01, 2000 8:00 am
-
- Posts: 6216
- Joined: Fri Dec 10, 1999 8:00 am
-
- Posts: 17020
- Joined: Fri Dec 01, 2000 8:00 am