there is no such thing as a push in WWE(wrestling)!?

Written by admin Nov 25

on the weekend when I went to maryland cause my dad had a business trip my bro and I bought the vince reveals everything wwe magazine and i’ve heard this before, vincee said "The word push is thrown around a lot, but the truth is there are no pushes, there’s oppurtunities." You see with Matthew Korklan(bourne/sydal), i follow the him on twitter and facebook, he loves wwe, he’s been training for wwe since he was a kid, he did track, gymnastics and he’s done highschool wrestling, While he was a senior in high school, Korklan began training with the St. Louis, Missouri-based Gateway Championship Wrestling (GCW) promotion. After three months of training, Korklan began wrestling for GCW on October 20, 2000, becoming the first person under the age of 18 to receive a wrestler’s license in Missouri. Prior to this, Korklan had briefly performed under the ring name Lance Sydal in the Saint Peters Wrestling Organization
2003, Korklan (now using the ring name Matt and forgoing a surname) formed a stable in GCW, known as Operation: Shamrock. In addition, Sydal and fellow stable member Billy McNeil formed a tag team. Operation: Shamrock maintained a feud with the villainous Ministry of Hate faction, lead by Nikki Strychnine. Korklan debuted in Independent Wrestling Association Mid-South in November 2003, combining two of his old ring names into a new one, Matt Sydal.[2] He won his first title, the IWA Mid-South Light Heavyweight Championship, on January 17, 2004, defeating J.C. Bailey.[6] Sydal lost the title to rival Delirious, on June 26, 2004.[6] Sydal joined National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) Midwest that same year ,on July 30, he defeated Justin Kage for the NWA Midwest X Division Championship, which he also lost to Delirious after holding the belt for nearly a year.[7] Korklan won the title back when he teamed with Daizee Haze in an intergender tag team match against Delirious and MsChif. A unique rule of the match was that the male wrestler on the winning team would be champion at the match’s end. Haze pinned MsChif to win Delirious’s title for Sydal.[7] Sydal lost the title to Jayson Strife roughly four months later[7] before leaving the promotion.

Sydal wrestled several top independent stars during his time as a regular in IWA. He lost three matches to A.J. Styles during a short-lived feud. He also faced men such as CM Punk, Chris Sabin and Nate Webb.[4] On September 24, 2005, Sydal won the fifth Ted Petty Invitational tournament. During the tournament, he defeated El Generico, Tyler Black, and Sabin to secure himself a place in the finals. He met Kevin Steen and Arik Cannon in the final match and came out victorious.Since then, Sydal has only appeared in IWA on a few occasions, the last being in August 2007. Sydal was featured on Total Nonstop Action Wrestling’s (TNA) first three-hour pay-per-view event, Victory Road as a participant of a twenty-man X Division Gauntlet for the Gold match, a match where two wrestlers begin the match, and are replaced whenever one is eliminated, with the last person standing being named the winner.[9] Sydal also was part of an online poll for the Sacrifice event. The winner of the poll would meet Christopher Daniels for the TNA X Division Championship. Sydal, along with Jay Lethal and Roderick Strong, lost the poll to Austin Aries.During his tenure with TNA, Sydal was mainly utilized as a jobber:
proof he was in tna non believers!( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=spn5QtHoMcI
Sydal, along with valet Daizee Haze, debuted in Ring of Honor at Reborn: Stage One on April 23, 2004, defeating his recurring nemesis, Delirious Following a brief feud with Trent Acid, Sydal teamed with Fast Eddie Vegas as the "Air Devils" (a name voted on by the ROH fans). They only teamed once, after which Eddie turned on him on at the Third Anniversary Celebration: Part 2 on February 25, 2005, joining the villainous stable The Embassy. On August 12, 2005, Sydal and Haze joined Austin Aries, Roderick Strong and Jack Evans as the fourth member of Generation Next, a group who was in the midst of a feud with The Embassy.[12] In late 2005, Daizee Haze turned on Sydal, leaving him and Generation Next to join The Embassy. Generation Next fought The Embassy in numerous multi-man tag matches, culminating in a Steel Cage Warfare match on December 3, 2005, with Generation Next emerging victorious, After wrestling A.J. Styles at Hell Freezes Over, the two teamed up to challenge his Generation Next stable mates Austin Aries and Roderick Strong for ROH World Tag Team Championship. Sydal would also team with Samoa Joe and Jack Evans to try and win the titles. Sydal went to the finals of the 2006 Survival of the Fittest event, before losing to Delirious. Sydal and Delirious brought their rivalry back to ROH as they engaged in several matches during the summer and fall of 2006
After several matches against each other through out the year, Sydal teamed up with Christopher Daniels in another attempt to win the ROH W

Well these opportunities are referred to as pushes. How come every wrestler refers to them as a push?

3 Responses to “there is no such thing as a push in WWE(wrestling)!?”

  1. Comment by Nick on November 25, 2009 2:44 pm

    mmm k…
    good to know

    2 points!!!
    References :

  2. Comment by NY METS 2010 on November 25, 2009 3:32 pm

    you actually think anyone is going to read that?
    References :

  3. Comment by Reclaimer67 on November 25, 2009 3:42 pm

    Well these opportunities are referred to as pushes. How come every wrestler refers to them as a push?
    References :

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