Kulka enjoying 'AAA' Memphis
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Glenn Kulka in July 1988 at SkyDome for a taping of TSN's Off The Record. -- Stan Behal, Toronto Sun
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By GREG OLIVER -- SLAM! Wrestling
At 35 years of age, Glenn Kulka finds himself duking it out on a regular
basis with kids ten years his junior, but more years in the ring than he
has.
The 11-year CFL defensive end currently calls Memphis Power Pro Wrestling
home, and is able to easily talk about his "Triple A" experiences with SLAM!
Wrestling.
For one, he freely admits that he has "to wear a couple more icebags than
everyone else once in a while" because of the beating his body has already
taken.
Besides the years in the CFL, Kulka was also a scrapper in the played in
the ECHL for the Hampton Road Admirals and the WHL for the Spokane Flyers.
But it was during a Saskatchewan Roughriders promotion with the WWF in 1995
that the first inklings of 'Kulkamania' were planted. That night at the
Regina Agridome, he helped Bret 'Hitman' Hart gain a win over Psycho Sid,
who was managed by Ted DiBiase. Hart thought Kulka had what it took to
be a wrestler, and two years later, Kulka was being trained by The Hitman
and
Leo Burke
at Hart's Calgary home.
After a summer on
Emile Dupre's Maritime Grand Prix Wrestling circuit,
Kulka signed on with the WWF.
Unfortunately, he broke his leg in a match against The Jackyl (Don Callis)
a short time later, and his new career was side-tracked.
Kulka said that his leg is as good as ever. "I can pretty well do
everything I could before I had surgery, so that's not a problem any more.
Not a hindrance at all."
He's enjoying his time in Memphis, but chooses his words carefully went
describing it.
"It's a different style of wrestling, different mentality towards it. It's
something that takes a little bit of getting used to. It can be like
anything -- once you figure it out, you've just got to do what it takes to
get over."
The Memphis circuit runs house shows Thursday, Friday and Saturday night,
along with the live TV show Saturday mornings.
It's being a real learning experience for Kulka -- out of the protected
environment of the WWF training dojo into the world.
"It's kind of a self-teaching process. There are people trying to help you
out. Everyone's got their opinion. But how it's applicable to what you're
trying to do, what you're trying to achieve is another thing," he said.
"Everyone has their own agendas as far as what they want to see done. So to
me, to be honest with you, it's been more of a feeling out process and
evaluating the situation myself, and just adapting it to what I want to do."
The Edmonton native is wrestling under his own name, and is a heel. He has
no other gimmicks however, and from the sounds of it, Kulka has mixed
feelings about that situation.
"It was almost like I didn't really want to, or make a big effort to try
and get a gimmick, so to speak, or a name because, as you very well know, if
they want to use you up top, half the time you end up with something
different anyway," he said before continuing.
"In hindsight, looking back I think that I should have put some sort of
handle on myself -- of any kind. Just for people to be able to recognize and
remember you a little bit clearer."
His roommate in Memphis was until recently Matt Bloom, now graduated to the
WWF as Prince Albert, second to Droz.
Kulka is happy for his friend, but recognizes that Memphis is a testing
ground as much as a training ground.
"A lot of the time you're ripping it up down here, or ripping it up
somewhere else, and if they [the WWF] don't have a slot for you, or if you
don't fit into their scheme of things as far as what they're doing at that
moment, you don't get a chance," he said. "If you don't do well here, they
might look at this as a last hurrah type of thing."
There has been talk on the Internet that Kulka has been released from his
WWF contract, but it isn't true, he said.
Instead, he will be sticking it out for a while longer, even on the smaller
circuit.
"As long as I see myself learning things, and I am getting better, then I
will definitely stick it out," Kulka said. "If you run into a point where
you're really stagnant, you're not learning anything and you're actually
forming bad habits because of it, well, then you've got something to think
about, evaluate."