The Game ready to play at WM 17
By JOHN POWELL -- SLAM! Wrestling
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Hunter Hearst-Helmsley
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Though he is slated to duke it out in what promises to be a grueling match
at WrestleMania with The Undertaker, that wasn't the WWF's original plan
for Hunter Hearst-Helmsley. Bookers initially thought about having The Game
work an angle with someone outside of the wrestling industry like an actor
or major sports star. Most wrestlers would have found such a proposal hard
to accept as the potential for an embarrassing performance is great. Not
Triple H. He jumped at the chance to prove himself capable of
carrying such a match.
"When that talk came up they asked me if I would be interested and I was
like...Yeah. I'd love the challenge. That's like working with the
proverbial broom-stick, right? So, I love that challenge. If you can go out
there and rock and roll the crowd with someone who doesn't even know what
they are doing, how much better could that be?," said Triple H during a
WrestleMania media conference call.
Helmsley's willingness to take on any task presented to him can be traced
to his childhood admiration of wrestling icon, "Nature Boy" Ric Flair. At
an early age Helmsley was impressed by Flair's adaptability in the
wrestling ring. From the powerhouse Road Warriors to Arn Anderson and other
technical virtuosos, Flair more than held his own in any environment and
made whoever he was working with look good in the process. That valuable
lesson wasn't lost on Triple H.
"That was always my goal in this business. To be in that vein. To be the
guy who could go out there and street fight with Cactus Jack. To be the guy
who could go out there and go an hour with The Rock, to wrestle in matches
with Benoit, to have fine matches -- and not necessarily on my part because
I am a ground soldier -- with the high-fliers like a Jericho or guys like
that. I love to be able to have that versatility and it is more fun for me
because I love the challenge of being able to work with all these different
guys," he said.
As it turns out, the "outsider" plan was scuttled and Triple H was scripted
into a feud with The Undertaker, a man who claims that Triple H may have
defeated some of the WWF top superstars but he never beat him in the ring.
The ongoing battle of wills came to a bloody climax on last week's
Smackdown! broadcast when Triple H assaulted The Undertaker with a
sledgehammer to soften him up before their clash at WrestleMania.
Hampered by chronic hip and knee problems due to his time in the mat wars,
there are those who think that The Undertaker's best years are behind him
and that his role should now be to elevate the mid-card wrestlers to main
event status. Don't count Triple H as being one of those people. Coming to
his defence, Triple H said Mark Callaway (The Undertaker) is still a
hard-working performer who has the skills and experience to headline any
card. He has seen a remarkable change in Callaway since his return to
full-time duty and that even though his new biker gimmick has been met with
mixed reviews, he thinks it will grow on fans over time. Triple H is approaching
their WrestleMania match as a way of solidifying them both as serious
challengers to whomever walks out of the Houston Astrodome with the WWF
World Heavyweight Title.
"I want to put The Undertaker where The Undertaker should be and I want to
put Triple H where I feel Triple H should be and that's at the top. The
Undertaker should be at the top," said Helmsley firmly. "Mark Callaway is
one of the hardest working men and one of the smartest working men in this
business and he should be in that position. I think his intensity has
increased just through this angle with me over the last few weeks and I
think that when we go to WrestleMania I greatly intend to go out there and
shock a lot of people and have a lot of people go...'Damn! Undertaker and
Triple H. They really put on a hell of a performance!'...and maybe it would
be something they weren't expecting. I am hoping we can give that to them."
As the pre-WrestleMania hype began months ago, many thought that it was a
given that Triple H would be in the main event making it a triple threat
bout. Whenever that idea was brought up to Helmsley, he says he
respectfully declined the opportunity. His decision was based partly on how
last year's jumbled WrestleMania main event played out and partly on the
respect he has for The Rock and Steve Austin. Looking back, Triple H wishes
that he and The Rock had gone one-on-one at WrestleMania 16 but the
decision wasn't in his hands. After giving it some thought, the WWF bookers
determined that the timing just wasn't right.
Comfortable and confident with his position on the year's WrestleMania
card, Helmsley confesses that in the back of his mind he still wishes he
was in the main event. Triple H chalks that up to human nature and his
desire to be the best. The fact that his main event wish will be
unfulfilled this time around hasn't softened Helmsley's resolve at all as
the clock ticks down to Sunday's show.
"I am going to WrestleMania with all intents and purposes of having the best
match on that show and stealing it. Anybody who is NOT going to
WrestleMania with the intent of stealing the show...I can't believe they
work for the WWF," said a determined Triple H who characterizes himself as
"just a big kid who gets to live his dream every day".
In this day and age, WrestleMania is not what it once was. Under
self-imposed pressure to put out two flagship wrestling shows each week and
a pay-per-view every month, the WWF doesn't have the lead-up time nor the
energy to build up WrestleMania as they once did. Consequently,
WrestleMania has lost some of its luster. While wrestling fans and media
types debate the significance of WrestleMania in the "sports entertainment"
era, Triple H maintains that nothing has changed in WWF locker room. It is
treated as it always has been, a special stage for everyone to perform at their highest level.
"This is where it all goes down and if you don't think we're all jazzed
about it, you're nuts. We are going to go to Houston and there's going to
be 65,000 people in the arena and we are going to do this huge pay-per-view
event. It is the Super Bowl to us and whether the hype feels the same to
the fans or not, I just think to us it still does. To us, it is still this
incredible event," he said.
RELATED LINKS
Triple H bio and story archive
More coverage of WrestleMania XVII