Rhino more than meets the eye
By JOHN M. MILNER --
For SLAM! Wrestling
In talking to Terry "Rhino" Richards, you soon realize that the
age-old
stereotype of the "big, dumb wrestler" doesn't apply here. While
Richards
is certainly big, weighing in at 285 lbs, the Detroit, Michigan native
is
anything but dumb.
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Terry "Rhino" Richards. Courtesy ECW.
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Ask him his opinion about American and Canadian relations and
his
knowledge becomes instantly apparent. Richards admits to be
disappointing
in the declining morals of his country. "To be honest with you, I
respect
the people who go into the armed forces, but I would never go because I
don't think what America today is, I don't think its worth dying for.
You've got the President who wouldn't go to the Vietnam War. How can he,
or
how can any President, send troops to war? I know it's in the best
interests, but today I think it's more a business."
He is deeply disappointed in President Clinton, especially. "I
mean, I don't care who you are, if you don't love your wife, you
shouldn't be with
her. If you love her, you shouldn't do stuff like (having an affair). I
think it just shot the morals in America today."
In 1997, he joined a wrestling group in Detroit called "Thug
Life" that included
Joe E. Legend, Christian Cage (The Brood's
Christian), Sexton
Hardcastle (The Brood's
Edge) and
Bill Skullion. Their anti-American
stance
mirrored that of
Bret Hart in the WWF. "We didn't steal it from them;
I'm
sure they had something like that in mind for a while. It just happened
to
come out at the same time."
The group met while wrestling out in Winnipeg and on Indian
Reserves out west. The other members of "Thug Life" made Richards an
honoury Canadian.
"I really do like Canada."
One of the group's anti-American actions included Joe E. Legend
and Hardcastle burning an American flag during a card, to upset the
American fans. Richards was not at ringside for the incident, but is
quick to defend
his former teammates. "It's not against the law anymore to publicly burn
a flag."
Richards took no offence to the action. "As far as that goes, I
don't
disagree with it and I didn't get mad at them." Looking back on the
incident, he adds "If we went back in time, I would have been mad, but
now
I wouldn't."
He is equally conversant in the topic of his trade pro
wrestling. "Fake is a hardcore word for it, because there's so many
injuries. Wrestlers don't have a season; it's all year round."
While the WWF may claim wrestling is sports entertainment,
Richards disagrees with them somewhat. "It's a sport, because you have
to be an
athlete. You have to be well-tuned in cardio-vascular. (You have to be
in)
very good shape. It's very tough."
After a match, Richards can attest to how tough it is. "I'm
sore, my
body's beat up. I don't think it's fake."
He maintains that parents need to "step back" and instruct their
children: "Don't do this stuff."
Richards knows first hand the dangers of children
trying to emulate the wrestlers they see on TV and in the arenas. "I
know a
fourteen-year-old kid... he's eighteen now... and he broke his neck.
It's sad
because he's paralyzed from the chest down. Let the kids know 'Don't try
this stuff'."
"It's really not acting," Richards maintains, saying that the
wrestler's in-ring image and mood is based more on reality than some
might think. "A lot of people just dig deep and bring their personality
out," Rhino
explains, adding that "Before I go out and wrestle, I just think of a
lot
things that (anger me) and take it out on the fans and they just react."
"It's easy to be yourself, hard to be something you're not."
"It's really a rough business, you gotta be dedicated, "
Richards says about his sport. "That's more or less (like) anything, any
type of
occupation."
Richards can see the link between American politics and morals
and pro wrestling. "Whatever happens outside the ring ends up falling
inside the
ring. Look at Hulk Hogan, a couple of things he did with Monica Lewinsky
look-a-likes, and the cigar and stuff like that, which draws the money.
"As far as the role the WWF took, as far as more hardcore, more
women, (it's) not good morals, as opposed to what it was in the
eighties. Good vs. Evil, good always won." Today, Richards notes that
"Well, good still
overcomes evil, but in a more sluttier way."
Richards caught the wrestling bug in high school. In addition to
playing football for eight years, he also excelled in amateur wrestling,
"went to State (championship), sophomore, junior, senior years." The
younger Richards might not have been recognizable next to the huge
wrestler we see today. "I was only 5'8" when I was graduating from high
school. I had a little growth spurt and started training in the gym."
His training and exposure to area independent wrestling got
Richards to thinking about a pro career of his own. He then contacted
Scott D'Amore of
Windsor to train him. He was soon wrestling for Border City Wrestling, a
Windsor-based promotion that D'Amore was affiliated with.
Wrestling has taken Richards all over the world, including
working in
Austria and Germany for promoters Otto Wanz and Pierre Williams, in the
1997-1998 seasons.
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Rhino Richards and Joe E. Legend. Courtesy UCW.
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Wrestling in Europe has been very good to Richards. He won
several CWA (Catch Wrestling Alliance) World Tagteam titles, with
Jean-Pierre Lafite and Joe E. Legend. He and Legend still hold those
titles. He also wrestled what he considers to be his greatest match
against Hans Shueman in Germany. "It went nine rounds, nine three-minute
rounds. I didn't win, but it's probably one of the best matches I've
had. Big crowd. It was my first time overseas. It went back and forth.
He went all out; I went all out. From what I've heard from other
wrestlers, it was probably the best championship match
that year."
But the happiness that Richards found in Germany was not limited
to his in-ring success. He also met his future bride there.
In comparing wrestling in Europe to North America, Richards says
that
"over here, there's more entertainment thrown in for the big bucks. Over
there, it's still a competitive sport. When the houses were down over
here
in the early nineties as far as attendance, they were up over there.
Their
economy was better than ours, and that has a lot to do with it."
In terms of the nature of the sport between the two continents,
Europe "has rounds. It's more of a competitive sport, it's more like
amateur
wrestling. It's still professional wrestling, but it's a lot harder."
Since his return from Europe, Richards has made his way to the
Philadelphia-based ECW, which he credits to "knowing a couple of
people."
After a tryout match, Richards caught the eye of promoter Paul Heyman,
aka Paul E. Dangerously. He worked with Heyman for a while longer and
"one thing leads to another."
While appearing at a UCW card in London, Richards got a phone call
telling
him that Heyman wanted him to come to Philadelphia the next day.
"I'm just trying to get my foot in the door right now." Richards
notes.
Richards has high praise for the Philadelphia-based hardcore
promotion. "ECW, I think, set the way for the WWF
because right at the time they made the switch (between their old and
new
styles), they worked together for a little bit and I think the WWF used
ECW
to make that switch."
"As far as ECW goes, I feel strongly that it's a really good
company to work for. It's smaller, it's more a closer team. I feel it's
up and coming. It's not swinging chairs and breaking tables, it's
wrestling. I mean, they do throw tables in there. You know, you got a
couple people in there who
are chair-swinging, table-breaking freaks...barbed wire baseball bats,
that's their reputation but they do wrestling too. I feel it's got a
cult-like following. People are wanting something different, wanting
something like underground. They don't want the big-media, big glamour,
glitz. I think they're going to make a big mark on the wrestling world,
they already have." Richards says about his next endeavour. "I'm looking
forward to it."
But don't look for him to billed as Terry Richards however. The
nickname of Rhino was given to him by D-Lo Brown and Scott D'Amore at a
show in Detroit a few years ago. He has since dropped his last name of
"Richards"
in the last couple of months, to avoid confusion with former ECW
mainstay Stevie Richards.
Rhino has already wrestled ECW Heavyweight Champion Taz, facing
him on June 17th in Chicago and June 18th in South Bend, Indiana. "Hell
of
wrestler," is how Richards describes Taz, "very dedicated."
Richards is
equally impressed with fellow ECW star, Sabu, describing him as "crazy,
he's been through a lot. His uncle, The Sheik, has put him through hell,
in
training. He had heart, he just kept on. It's like being beat down and
getting up and being beat down and getting up and never quit. To be
honest
with you, I'm suprised the human body can take what he's taken as far as
his matches, crazy matches. I've seen tapes of him and you know what,
he's
a hell of a wrestler too. He'd do anything, you name it, from wrestling,
high-flying and I've really gained a lot of respect for him, watching
him
wrestling.
Richards has also appeared in the WWF, wrestling a "dark match"
against Briar Wellington on the undercard of a Raw taping in Cleveland
in June, 1998. "It was really good, Richards remembers. "They really
liked me, and I went to their (training) camp. Nothing would come of it,
as I had
agreements to go back to Europe." In working with the WWF, however,
Richards made sure not to "burn a bridge" with ECW. He maintains that "I
really believe strongly in the company (ECW). It's a helluva company
(with)
a lot of hungry, hungry guys."
In looking to the future, Richards says "I see...nothing but
good. You need a strong heart, sometimes you hit a plateau, you just
gotta change up some things, be creative. When you get beat down, just
get back up and come back fighting."
Rhino will continue to travel into southern Ontario for shows. He's booked for the
CWA show at Medieval Times in Toronto on August 10 and is expected to be a part of
the next UCW show in London.
Related stories
Rhino bio and story archive
July 20, 2005: Head to horn with Rhyno
Apr. 11, 2005: Rhyno and Matt Hardy released
Aug. 3, 2003: Rhyno recovered
Jan. 21, 2001: Rhyno gears up for King Of The Ring
Sep. 6, 2000: In conversation with Jerry Lynn & Rhino