4 new chapters from former Barbaric Wrestling Radio host Brett
Buchanan’s The Genesis of TNA free e-book have been released on
BarbaricWrestling.com and TNAbook.net. The new chapters are about
Christian Cage's TNA run, Samoa Joe, Scott D'Amore booking committee
(which includes a story about a TNA employee leaking news), and TNA’s
scramble to find a TV deal in the summer of 2005.
You can read
all 18 chapters that have been released thus far simply by entering ‘The
Genesis of TNA’ section on BarbaricWrestling.com.
New chapters
are released every Monday. Below is an excerpt from The Genesis of TNA
‘Chapter 18: Christian Cage’ about Christian’s TNA run and the reason he
left:
LARRY ZBYSZKO: I liked Christian, but again here’s the
deal with guys like Christian. Christian I think is a great talent in
terms of working and watching him on TV but he’s not a big money draw.
What TNA was doing is they would get guys that every wrestling fan knows
is a mid card guy and they try to put him off like a superstar. So all
they’re basically doing is saying hey we’re TNA and we’ve got all of
Vince’s left over guys that you don’t care about anymore. They really
should have made their own stars and forget bringing in Christian,
bringing in other guys maybe outside of a couple. Or if you do it do it
right bring Christian in and have the TNA guys beat him and then get
Christian out of there, so it looks like the TNA guys are great.
In
November 2008 Christian decided to leave TNA and return to WWE when his
contract expired. Many rumors spread that he was frustrated with Jeff
Jarrett’s creative vision of TNA and that he was upset with the way he
was being used, stories spread regarding this as far back as 2007.
Despite this, the main reason Christian left TNA was because WWE were
simply offering him more money.
RUDY CHARLES: I was really
disappointed when he left, I think I’m not sure what the whole situation
was, probably came down to money is my opinion. He probably wanted X
amount, and there was a bidding war between TNA and WWE and WWE won. He
was a professional, even when he knew he was going out the last thing
you saw of Christian Cage on TNA was getting beat down by the Main Event
Mafia but he was a pro to the end. He went out and did his job and
helped get those guys over, I think he’s a true professional.
PETEY
WILLIAMS: I remember when he left [in 2008], at that point it was a
whole different locker room morale than when we first got down to
Orlando, what was that 2004 or something. It was just totally different,
I don’t know if you could just see the change because I’m one of the
few guys who had been there from 2004 to that point. It was like a whole
different company, it didn’t seem like everybody was on the same page.
It almost felt like everybody was out for themselves. I think they were,
I think Christian did the right thing he was looking out for himself.
He’s probably like this isn’t for me I’m going to go back. Honestly I
know he took a big pay cut to come to TNA, he was making way more in
WWE. I think he just wanted to have a change really, see if he could
elevate this company. He had a lot of great matches and stuff like that
did a lot of great things for TNA, that’s what I’m thinking now that he
decided that he did as much as he could with TNA and I’m going back. I’m
going where the money is.
SONJAY DUTT: I heard it was over pay,
but if you put yourself in this guys shoes if he’s got an opportunity to
go back to Vince [McMahon] and make the money that he was making
compared to what he’s doing in TNA. Also man a lot of the time for guys
it’s not just about the money but it’s about being presented in a bigger
light, and he wanted to do other stuff I think he wants to do acting
and stuff and maybe WWE is the ticket to jumpstart himself into other
ventures and stuff. Guys that have been there and done that and then
come to TNA they sometimes at a point, I think you kind of realize the
ventures I want to do, maybe this isn’t the catapult that I need to get
into those other things and he went back. I think it’s pretty much cut
and dry.
BILL BEHRENS: Christian honestly was pretty happy. One
of the primary reasons Christian didn’t renew with TNA had very little
to do with him being unhappy with how well he was being used and all
that kind of stuff, it had a lot to do with the financial crisis and the
fact that Christian has a really nice expensive house and even though
he had been wise and invested his money, he invested his money. All of
the sudden the nest egg didn’t become as big a nest, and another run
with WWE where you can make real money became a better idea. TNA wasn’t
going to belly up to the bar and give Christian the same kind of money
that he has as an upside in a WWE deal. The reality of the WWE deal is
not your downside, but what you can make on the upside. I was talking,
for example, to a recently released talent who just got his commission
check from a video game and the commission check was for $20,000. There
is no one at TNA right now on an entire commission check from all
merchandise that makes that much, on a quarterly basis it just doesn’t
happen. That’s the dramatic difference between the two. Jeff Hardy had
as little as $150,000 downside at WWE, when he left had made well over 1
million dollars in the previous year, which is one of the reasons Jeff
Hardy can sign with TNA and make considerably less money, dramatically
less.
You can also check out some free shoot interviews with many
wrestlers and MMA fighters including Rob Van Dam, Samoa Joe, Rampage
Jackson, Jay Lethal, and many more to come on Barbaric Wrestling Radio’s
YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/user/BWRofficial.