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Enzo Amore On Why WWE Broke Up His Tag Team With Big Cass

Enzo Amore

• OLD SCHOOL HISTORY (June 6, 1992) – WCW Saturday Night

On this day in 1992, Ted Turner’s World Championship Wrestling aired an episode of their weekly TV show ‘WCW Saturday Night’.

It featured pre-taped matches, interviews & storyline segments on the road to the ‘WCW Beach Blast 1992’ PPV.

The card of the show can be found here:

– Johnny B. Badd vs. Mike Thor

– DDP & Ricky Morton vs. Ricky Steamboat & Nikita Koloff

– Super Invader vs. Jason Knight

– WCW Magazine: Beach Blast

– Dustin Rhodes vs. Rip Rogers

– Arn Anderson vs. Barry Windham

• Enzo Amore On Why WWE Broke Up His Tag Team With Big Cass

During a recent appearance on Keeping it 100 with Konnan podcast, former WWE wrestler Enzo Amore talked about why WWE broke up his tag team with Big Cass, John Cena’s gimmick & more.

Below are the highlights:

On WWE breaking up his tag team with Big Cass:

“If you think about it, me and Big Cass at one point were the #1 merchandise selling people in the company. In the height of our run we were split up in the #1 ratings draw in the company.

If you had kept me and Cass together, or given us the tag titles, or given one of us a push towards the title and the other one pushed towards the title, there was some major super-star potential there, which was a scary thought to those in the higher-ups, or they creatively had a different take.

When I debuted in an arena on television and everyone in the arena introduced me and Cass, from there on up I never went down. I peaked and went out with a title on my waist. So, from the NXT days I was charismatic and over the top with a character, but was very approachable at a mall, or in a store; I never said no to a picture, and the love for me was different than with some other people. So, when I did things, I embraced all of that and I never let, as I make light on a character phrase, I never let a cup of haters dictate my life because I never had to politic.”

On John Cena’s gimmick:

“The first day I was in WWE with Big Cass I debuted in a television segment that I was meant to lose to Mason Ryan and get him over on the microphone. John Cena was backstage by chance, just by chance, and I went with my phrase ‘Realest Guy in the Room, How You Doin?’ Cena invited me in a dark segment with him because at the time the NXT brand was being birthed; we needed John Cena to keep the fans in attendance until the dark segment of the show to keep Cena out.

I think if you look back to John Cena, this was my outlook when I got into the business. I don’t think you can sit here and tell me that hip hop, which is the No. 1 trending music in the world and is the cultural shock and wave of all social media, it is all those things and John Cena encompassed that and got it over.

Then he transcended that gimmick into becoming the face of a company and encouraging people to never give up, but without that he wouldn’t have gotten where he was at. I encompassed those things because I saw that from a distance.”


        
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