Ouelett wants back in spotlight
By GREG OLIVER -- SLAM!
Wrestling
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Ouelett works over Akira Taue in Japan on July 23. Courtesy Masanori Horie.
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Ouellet's record
All Japan Pro-Wrestling
July 4 to July 23
He had 14 matches : 5 single matches (3-2), 3 Six-man tag team matches
(0-3), and 6 tag team matches (2-4).
7/4/99 (Sun) Korakuen Hall, Tokyo
Johnny Ace, Bart Gunn, Johnny Smith beat Gary Albright, Pierre, Maunukea
Mossman (15:01 Gunn beat Mossman) Att: 2,100/sellout
7/6 (Tue) Toyohashi, Aichi
Toshiaki Kawada & Akira Taue beat Vader & Pierre (11:17 Taue beat Pierre)
7/7 (Wed) Toyama City, Toyama
Jun Akiyama beat Pierre (8:52)
A VERY BIG DEAL! AKIYAMA IS ALL JAPAN'S CHRIS JERICHO: A YOUNG WORKER WHOSE HAD GREAT MATCHES AND WHO THEY'RE GROOMING FOR THE TOP SPOT IN THE VERY NEAR FUTURE.
7/9 (Fri) Nakatsugawa, Gifu
Pierre beat Jun Izumida (14:06)
7/10 (Sat) Ueno, Mie
Toshiaki Kawada, Akira Taue, Jinsei Shinzaki beat Vader, Johnny Smith,
Pierre (17:20 Kawada beat Pierre)
BIG DEAL, ESPECIALLY IF HE'S DOING SINGLES WITH KAWADA
7/11 (Sun) Kadoma, Osaka
Takao Omori & Yoshihiro Takayama beat Vader & Pierre (12:58 Omori beat Pierre)
7/13 (Tue) Kochi City, Kochi
Jinsei Shinzaki & Maunukea Mossman beat Gary Albright & Pierre (13:40 Shinzaki beat Pierre)
7/14 (Wed) Kurashiki, Okayama (1,900/sellout)
Pierre beat Takeshi Morishima (6:39)
7/16 (Fri) Matsudo, Chiba (2,650/sellout)
Pierre beat Masao Inoue (10:02)
7/17 (Sat) Korakuen Hall, Tokyo (2,100/sellout)
Johnny Smith & Pierre beat Akira Taue & Takeshi Morishima (14:10 Pierre beat Morishima)
7/18 (Sun) Akishima, Tokyo (2,200/sellout)
Kenta Kobashi & Jun Akiyama beat Vader & Pierre (14:39 Kobashi beat Pierre)
REALLY BID DEAL. KOBASHI IS THE #2 OR #3 GUY.
7/19 (Mon) Nagano City (2,400)
Pierre & Maunukea Mossman beat Jun Izumida & Takeshi Morishima (15:41 Mossman beat Morishima)
7/20 (Tue) Gosen, Niigata (1,700/sellout)
Mitsuharu Misawa, Yoshinari Ogawa, Masahito Kakihara beat Vader, Pierre,
Maunukea Mossman (15:50 Ogawa beat Mossman)
OGAWA IS NO BIG DEAL, SAME FOR MOSSMAN AND YOSHINARI. MISAWA IS THE TRIPLE CORWN CHAMP AND BOOKER. REGARDED AS THE BEST WRESTLER OF THIS DECADE BY MANY HARDCORE FANS (MYSELF AND DAVE MELTZER INCLUDED) BIG DEAL THERE.
7/23 (Fri) Nippon Budokan, Tokyo (16,300/sellout)
Akira Taue beat Pierre (7:53)
BIG DEAL, ESPECIALLY A SINGLES MATCH WITH TAUE, A FORMER TRIPLE CROWN CHAMP.
- results courtesy Masanori Horie, comments in UPPERCASE by John Molinaro
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Pierre Carl Ouellet wants to be in the spotlight again. He's had enough of
sitting at home and believes that he next year will be a make-or-break one
for him.
For the last two years, he's been getting paid by the WWF to do what they
tell him. But that hasn't meant being on their TV shows. Instead, Ouellet
has been a regular in Memphis -- as Kris Kannonball -- and recently returned
from a tour with All-Japan.
"This is a major year for me, turning 31," Ouellet told SLAM! Wrestling
from his home outside Montreal. "If WWF's not doing something with me,
hopefully I'm going to do something else, like maybe WCW or ECW. So, where I
want to get back in the kind of spot that I had before as (the pirate
Jean-Pierre) Lafitte. That's my goal, to go back as in major spot."
"I've got to provoke something. I'm not going to sit back and shut up. Not
that I want to be a headache or anything. I just feel like I've been getting
paid by the WWF -- which you can't complain about -- for the last two years,
but that's not what you really want. You want to be part of the team. You
want to be on the first-or-second line, you don't want to be on the fourth
line or be sitting on the bench. Especially when you've been there."
Back in mid-April, he thought it was all going to happen again. Ouellet
got the call, and was told to be at Sunday Night Heat in two weeks with a
Quebec flag, white boots and blue trunks. When the whole plan was scrapped
two days before, he was somewhat relieved.
"I was kind of happy about [the cancellation] because I don't want to be, I
don't want to be known as just being a Quebecer. I'd like to have an
international gimmick, something like Edge or Val Venis," he said.
Like maybe being a pirate again? "I would love to, but I guess they don't
want to do it. But to me, that was the best time of my career, being a
pirate." In today's WWF, he could probably carry a huge drum of rum to the
ring, drink from it, and get over with the crowd.
Ouellet believes that he has matured since his last big singles push, and
has learned from his mistakes.
"I was young and made some stupid mistakes," he said, explaining that he
refused to go along with management's plans for his pirate character. It's
was an ego thing, something spawned out of the brashness of youth. And he
believes that it is something that will continue to happen. "All the roster
is pretty young right now and those guys will make the same mistakes that I
made when I was 25, 27."
Having had many runs as WWF tag team champions with Jacques Rougeau in The
Quebecers, and a big singles push as the pirate Jean Pierre Lafitte,
Ouellet is definitely qualified to comment on fame in the WWF.
"I know what it is to have a great push, and how you feel and how you want
to react," he explained. "Most of the time, you think that it's you that is
over, but in a way, that's Vince that gave you the push, so it's kind of a
confusing thing."
Ouellet takes himself more seriously these days. He lives with his
girlfriend and her two children, and they are expecting their first child
together in March. And he's whipped himself into better shape.
"I changed my shape dramatically," he said, explaining that he's at about
270 pounds now, down from a high of 320 during his days in WCW. "Some of the
guys in Japan would say because of my hair and everything that I look like
Jimmy Snuka or kind of
Davey Boy Smith. Not as good as them, but very
similar."
He gives total credit for the transformation to his personal trainer, who
spends five days a week with him, and watching his diet. "I really watch
what I eat. If I gain two pounds, [I go] right back on the diet."
The tour of All-Japan was set up for him by the WWF and it was his first
visit to The Land of the Rising Sun since a tour with WINGS in 1993. He
worked with some of the other foreigners, like Mike Burton (formerly Bart
Gunn), Vader, Johnny Ace and Gary Albright.
"The highlight of the trip was the last show, the last Friday night, it was
at the Budokan Hall, so it was one of three or four main events. I was one
of the main events, working against (former Triple Crown champ Akira) Taue,"
he said.
Down in Memphis for Power Pro Wrestling, Ouellet has been working as Kris
Kannonball, a name which he came up with based on the name of his Lafitte
finishing move, The Cannonball (which he said was a creation of Jim Ross).
He's a "100% babyface" and had been working an angle with Fatu / Sultan /
Headshrinker, who is wrestling there as J.R. Smoot before leaving for Japan.
"My finish now is called the Kannon-Elbow-Ball," he explained. "I signal
it. Like, cannon, I make a sign, I call it before I do it. Actually, when I
go cannon, then I tap my elbow for elbow, then I point at my balls for ball!
So the crowd likes that, so it's pretty cool. So that's why I came up with
the Kannon-Elbow-Ball, just to make a twist, to make it fun, to make it ...
a trademark."
The Memphis schedule usually means shows Thursday and Friday night, and
then a double shot on Saturday, including the TV taping in the morning.
According to Ouellet, the Memphis promotion doesn't pay much more than
expenses for the wrestlers on WWF contract.
During his time there, he has also seen the promotion get more popular too.
"When I got there it wasn't that great, but by the time I left to go to
Japan, the TV studio was almost packed every weekend. So it was pretty good.
When I left, it was pretty hot, pretty fun to work there."
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Ouelett prepares to drop Akira Taue to the canvas in Japan on July 23. Courtesy Masanori Horie.
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Ouellet also knows that returning to the WWF will likely mean wrestling in
Montreal again, something that he misses very much. The last time he had a
match in town was 1996, when he was working for WCW. He beat The Giant by DQ
in the semi-main event. (On top, Jacques Rougeau pinned Hulk Hogan.)
He's still pretty well known around town, and recently filmed a TV
commercial for Bell Express Vu, a new satellite service for Quebec. After
launching into the sales spiel for Express Vu, Ouellet said that in the
commercial two wrestlers talking about sports on TV (the other
wrestler/actor is Stephane Terrien under a mask) before roughing each other
up.
"My name's still pretty good here in Montreal, so that commerical will kind
of give me that exposure to keep me alive at least," Ouellet said.
At least until a return to TV with the WWF.