The Piledriver Report 07.15.09: The Greatest Heel Performer of Them All
Posted by Ronny Sarnecky on 07.15.2009
This week’s “Piledriver Report” takes a look at the greatest heel performer in the world today. You may be surprised when you see who this man is. At the same time, this competitor is compared to one of the most controversial figures of the late 20th century: Mike Tyson.
THEGREATEST
"The Greatest!" It's a term used extremely loosely in the sports world today. Whenever there is a Super Bowl that comes down to the last minute, the media and fans are quick to call the game the "greatest Super Bowl ever" as soon as the game clock hits zero. When the New England Patriots were 18-0 a couple of seasons ago, many ESPNites were quick to call them the greatest NFL team ever. Of course, that was until the NY Giants, to quote Michaels Strahan, "Stomped them out!"
Professional wrestling tends to fall into this trend as well. How many times have you heard, "that was the greatest match ever?" Granted, most times it was Jim Ross or Michael Cole saying this to hype up pay per view replay buys. However, the fans fall into this trap as well. Whether it be talking about the greatest match, event, wrestler, or tag team, we are too quick to use the word "greatest" without first examining what it is that we are giving the "greatest" label to.
That being said, I am going to throw that "greatest" term out for all to see. I ask you the following question, "who is the greatest heel performer today?" There are many deserving candidates to choose from. Edge, Randy Orton, Chris Jericho, CM Punk, and Kurt Angle could all take the title. However, all these men would go down in defeat at the hands of one man. The greatest heel performer in the world today is…………….
BROCK LESNAR!!!! OK, so it was a trick question. Brock Lesnar hasn't wrestled in the WWE since 2004. However, I said the best heel performer, not heel wrestler.
THENEXTBIGTHING
After watching the UFC 100 event from New York's Radio City Music Hall on an 80x70 foot television screen, I have no doubt in my mind that Brock Lesnar is the heel that all heel performers should look up to. There had to be around 1,500 people inside the music hall. Out of those people, a good 85-90% were anti-Lesnar, and that was just during the UFC 100 Countdown special that they broadcast before the show. During the show, boos overpowered Lesnar cheers. Due to the huge sound system in the hall, the crowd noise against Lesnar at the Mandalay Bay seemed equally as one sided.
When I got home from the event, I immediately went on the internet to check out some of the coverage of UFC 100 from articles and message board. A smile ran across my face when I read blog after blog proclaiming Brock Lesnar to be the anti-Christ of MMA. "He's doesn't show sportsmanship." "Everything that is wrong with MMA can be pointed at towards Brock Lesnar." One genius had the nerve to proclaim that MMA would never be mainstream because of Brock Lesnar. They pointed out that the anti-MMA politicians and media have all the ammunition they need about why they should hate MMA, because of Brock Lesnar. Are you kidding me?
These people who claim that Brock Lesnar is bad for the mixed martial arts industry just don't get it. Don't you realize that Brock is working you? He's working us all. Brock was bred in an industry where you need to talk to help put asses in the seats. That is exactly what Brock is doing. Professional wrestling fans, who have an interest in MMA, would watch Brock Lesnar fight in the octagon out of curiosity to see how well he represents the world of professional wrestling. Brock knows professional wrestling fans are loyal. They will follow him. The trick was getting to the hardcore MMA crowd. It was made no secret that Brock was not welcome in the land of the shoot fighters by these fans. It was made even more evident by the reception Brock Lesnar received in his first match in UFC against Frank Mir.
LEARNINGFROMMR.MCMAHON
Did Brock ignore jeers of these MMA fans? No, he embraced it, and used his inner-heel from his days in the WWE to get over as the most hated man in the UFC. Sure, his hometown cheered him during his fight against Heath Herring at UFC87: Seek and Destroy. However, he knew that the diehards were seething at the dominating victory by Brock that night. After his victory, he taunted Herring by "lassoing him" with an invisible rope. While the Target Center crowd ate it up, the hardcore fans were irate at the lack of sportsmanship that Brock Lesnar showed.
Brock is smart enough to know that if you are going to be hated by the fans, you might as well enjoy it. In the UFC, Brock has gone back to his WWE roots. If the fans are going to treat him as a heel, he might as well act like one. After the fight on Saturday, Brock gave the double middle finger to the booing masses around him, while displaying a villainous smirk on his face. He relished in the moment as he egged fans on to bring on more.
After the fight, Lesnar haters were talking as much about Brock ignoring Mir's handshake, and his in your face rant geared towards Mir, as they did his victory. What these fans fail to realize in that Brock got them just where he wants them. He learned a valuable lesson in the WWE. Sure, the fans will buy the faces merchandise, but it's the thought of seeing the heel get his ass that gets the fans into the building.
Brock Lesnar's heel tactics in UFC is drawing the fans into the building, and into purchasing his fights. Brock will continue to do just that. The fans that hate the "fake" wrestler will continue to pay to see Brock Lesnar get his ass kicked. I have bad news for them. At this point in time, aside from Fedor Emelianenko, there are going to be a lot of disappointed hardcore fans.
Brock Lesnar discussed his heel persona in his post fight press conference. "I went into the entertainment business for a little while. You guys always ask me all of the time is there anything I can drag over from the WWE. I guess you've seen a little bit tonight. I'm used to selling pay per view tickets. I come from a business that is purely entertainment. The guy that, my coach, and the guy, he's the best in the business."
Eventually, Brock's cocky style will catch on with the hardcore fans, as long as he continues to win. Brock will go from the dastardly heel to the cool heel. Sort of like today's top professional wrestlers. They start out being booed, and eventually, the fans embrace his rebellious, badass attitude.
THEBADDESTMANONTHEPLANET
"There is something very familiar about this." That's the thought that pops into my mind whenever I see Brock Lesnar fight in the octagon. I was having trouble pinpointing what exactly it was about Brock's fighting style that gave me a feeling of deja vu. This Saturday night, it hit me. Brock Lesnar reminds me of a young Mike Tyson. Both men were imposing, physical specimens. At the time, there was no heavyweight boxer who was able to compare with Mike Tyson's granite-like physique. Today, there is nobody in the mixed martial arts industry that comes close to matching the freakish size that Brock Lesnar possesses. Power is each man's biggest asset. Tyson was feared because of his power. Like an RKO from out of nowhere, Tyson was able to knock guys out within a blink of an eye. Twenty-three of his fifty-eight fights ended before the second round. While Brock Lesnar has an amateur wrestling background, what most fighters fear is Brock's strength. Brock hasn't disappointed. In every UFC fight Brock has competed in, he has pounded the hell out of his opponents. Even in his fight against Heath Herring, Brock used his powerful punch to drop Herring to the mat before he decided to use his ground game to beat Herring by decision.
Both men captured the World Heavyweight championship early in their careers. Mike Tyson was the youngest boxer to ever win a World Heavyweight championship after he won the WBC title at the age of 20. Shortly after turning 21 years old, Mike Tyson became the first heavyweight to own all three major belts — WBA, WBC, and IBF — at the same time. While Brock Lesnar didn't enter the MMA game until just before his 30th birthday, his rise to the top was as impressive as Tyson's. In only his fourth professional mixed martial arts contest, Brock Lesnar captured the Ultimate Fighting Championship's World Heavyweight title. Brock became the only wrestler to win an NCAA national championship in wrestling, the WWE World championship, and the UFC World title.
CONTROVERSYISKING
Neither Mike Tyson, nor Brock Lesnar shy away from controversy. In fact, they welcome it. Mike Tyson was the poster child of controversy. His first marriage was to actress Robin Givens from February 7, 1988 to February 14, 1989. Givens was known for her work on the sitcom Head of the Class. Tyson's marriage to Givens was especially tumultuous with allegations of violence, spousal abuse and mental instability on Tyson's part and allegations of gold digging against Givens. Matters came to a head when Tyson and Givens gave a joint interview with Barbara Walters on the ABC TV newsmagazine show 20/20 in September 1988, in which Givens described life with Tyson as "torture, pure hell, worse than anything I could possibly imagine." Givens also described Tyson as "manic depressive" on national television while Tyson looked on with an intent and calm expression. However, once it aired on television, and Tyson saw how Robin made him look, a big fight broke out that weekend between the two. A month later, Givens announced that she was seeking a divorce from the allegedly abusive Tyson. They had no children but she claims to have had a miscarriage while Tyson claims she was never pregnant and only used that to get him to marry her. In July 1991, Mike Tyson was arrested for allegedly raping Miss Black Rhode Island Desiree Washington. After being found guilty, he would go on to serve three years in prison. Following his release, Tyson went back into the ring where he fought Peter McNeeley. This bout caused controversy after McNeeley's manager entered the ring to throw in the towel after a mere 89 seconds into the fight. Following Tyson's first couple of fights back ended quickly, the media started to accuse Tyson of handpicking stiffs to fight.
Tyson would finally fight real competition as he won the heavyweight championship from Frank Bruno. Tyson would finally fight Evander Holyfield on November 9th, 1996. Despite this being a dream match, it would be their second encounter on June 28th, 1997. Controversy would follow Tyson again, as he bite Holyfield's ear, not once, but twice. The first time he bit him the match was stopped, but then it resumed. However after the match resumed Tyson did it again; this time Tyson was disqualified and Holyfield won the match. One bite was severe enough to remove a piece of Holyfield's right ear, which was found on the ring floor after the fight. Tyson later stated that it was retaliation for Holyfield repeatedly head butting him without penalty. In the confusion that followed the ending of the bout and announcement of the decision, a near riot erupted in the arena and several people were injured in the ensuing melee.
During his time away from boxing, Mike Tyson was signed by the World Wrestling Federation to take part in WrestleMania XIV. It was during his WWF stint that Mike Tyson found out, inadvertently by Shane McMahon of all people, that Don King was stealing from him. Tyson fired Don King after punching him.
In 2002, Tyson would fight Lennox Lewis in a dream World title bout. As had become the usual for "Iron Mike." Controversy was his running mate. Two years prior to the bout, in a post-fight interview following another fight, Tyson had made several inflammatory remarks to Lewis. He spouted such memorable lines as, "I want your heart, I want to eat his children." What was comical about the quote was that Lewis had no children. On January 22, 2002, a brawl involving the two boxers and their entourages occurred at a press conference held in New York to publicize the fight. The melee put to rest any chance of a Nevada fight and alternative arrangements had to be made, with the fight eventually occurring on June 8 at the Pyramid Arena in Memphis, Tennessee.
Brock Lesnar left the WWE for a shot at the NFL. Lesnar played for the Minnesota Vikings, where he created controversy in some games by starting minor fights and got heat from the Kansas City Chiefs for a sack on quarterback Damon Huard, which drew a big response from the crowd. Huard was hit hard and had to go to the sidelines and sit out a few plays
From his first day with the UFC, Brock was the center of controversy. In Mir-Lesnar I, Brock lost a very controversial decision. Lesnar secured an early takedown, and was pounding on Mir. It looked like Brock was about to secure his first UFC victory. However, the referee made both fighters stand back up, and deducted a point from Brock for hitting Mir on the back of the head. The controversy in this was that Brock hit the back of Mir's head because Mir turned his own head. Plus, the referee never issued Brock a warning before deducting him a point for the blow. In Brock's next fight, he was blasted for what many deemed being a sore winner. Following Brock's victory over Heath Herring, Lesnar threw an imaginary rope at Herring, and "lassoed" him like a steer. Controversary stayed away from Brock Lesnar during his UFC World title victory over Randy Couture. This past Saturday, Brock was back to being his controversial self. During his post-match celebration, Lesnar flipped off an aggresive crowd which had been booing the decision, buried the PPV's primary sponsor Bud Light, promoting Coors Light instead, and implied he would have sex with his wife after the show.
Hopefully, Brock Lesnar will keep his controversies inside the octagon. Unlike Mike Tyson, I can't see Brock embroiled in the controversies that engulfed Tyson's career. What I can see is Brock Lesnar continuing in his role as the greatest heel performer in the world today. Is that a bad thing? Absolutely not, being a heel is going to help turn Lesnar into what Mike Tyson once was, the top draw on pay per view. Not bad for the next big thing, or should I say the "21st Century's Baddest Man on the Planet."
Posted By: Paul Roma (Guest) on July 14, 2009 at 10:47 PM
Nice article, and if I may start a trend for the comment section, I will rate these three in their 'heel-awesomeness'.
1.Vince
2.Brock
3.Tyson
Posted By: JUSTINW (Guest) on July 14, 2009 at 10:56 PM
Only these things remain constant...
Heel Lesnar, Heel Joe and Heel Punk...all FTW!
Posted By: James E (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 08:54 AM
No way! I am the baddest mofo on the planet! and im BACK!
Posted By: Rob Van Dam (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 09:15 AM
Very good article. However, I wish that you had included some heel wrestlers in the discussion. How were they able to get the crowds turned on them, how they ran into trouble separating their in-ring persona from their real lives.
Still - an enjoyable read. And I am a Brock fan moreso now than before the fight.
Posted By: BobbyC (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 10:15 AM
best heel in wrestling...Kevin Sullivan, in Florida. dude was scary good at it
Posted By: doug (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 10:16 AM
I am the baddest Mofo on the planet
Posted By: Paul Roma (Guest) on July 14, 2009 at 10:47 PM
More like the lamest SMART MARK
Posted By: son of pillman (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 10:17 AM
I've heard a lot about this whole "Brock is an MMA heel" idea over the past few days, but here's the thing that keeps me from buying it.
The whole goodguy/badguy thing works so well in wrestling because since it's all plotted out, there can be resolution. Eventually (though not always immediately) the bad guy will get his ass kicked. That's a guarantee. Assuming that MMA is still completely shoot (and certain entities haven't gotten it's meathooks into it yet, though it's only a matter of time), there is no such guarantee for Brock Lesnar. As it stands right now, he's beaten the only person that had a win over him in his MMA career, and now that Lesnar has more of a feel for the sport, it doesn't look like there's anyone else with either the raw power, or dramatic overmatch in skill, to take him out anytime soon.
So, based purely on the face/heel dynamic that everyone says Lesnar is using, what's the draw?
I know some people love to cheer for the villian, but how long can that last? How long would you cheer for an unlikable asshole who can't even come close to being beaten?
If you follow the Mike Tyson comparison, sure, it happened with him eventually (and through one hell of an improbable fluke), but it's still not guaranteed. In the meantime, Dana White's profits may go up for a while, but can it last?
So I see one of a few things happening here.
One, Lesnar goes undefeated as champion, and he may or may not hold fans' interest as time goes on.
Two. Lesnar gets beaten at some point. That's great for a buyrate, even better for a replay buyrate, and good for at least one rematch. But someone will eventually have to come out on top. If it's Lesnar, we start scenario 1 all over again. If it's the opponent, Lesnar's stock goes down a bit, and suddenly the heel persona isn't as effective as is used to be.
Three. At some point, somewhere, someone is going to ask Lesnar to take a dive.
At that point, just sell UFC to Vince McMahon, and get it over with.
Posted By: BJC (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 10:53 AM
Nope, I'd have to rate Tyson the baddest..but that isn't always a good thing.. I would only watch the fights I thought his apponent stood a chance of winning... I wanted to see his ass beat sooo damn bad (still can't stand him }:(
Posted By: Nicole (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 10:57 AM
Rob, I miss you. When am I going to see you again?
Posted By: Paul Heyman's Cock (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 11:48 AM
I am the baddest Mofo on the planet
Posted By: Paul Roma (Guest) on July 14, 2009 at 10:47 PM
More like the lamest SMART MARK
Posted By: son of pillman (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 10:17 AM
Ever wondered how your daddy is doing? No problemo, I can help you with that.
That's how BAD I am.
Posted By: Paul Roma (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 12:18 PM
Is anybody going to mention Muhammad Ali?
Posted By: The Logical One (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 01:14 PM
Brock is indeed a great heel. In the wrestling world the other standouts in my mind are Jake Roberts, Ric Flair, nWo Hogan, Bobby Heenan, Iron Sheik, and Rick Rude.
Posted By: Chico Whoretiz (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 02:26 PM
Ali and Johnson would've killed Tyson. He came up through an anemic division and fought a lot of tomato cans. He was a media creation with no real menace or substance.
Posted By: Iron Knee (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 03:08 PM
"best heel in wrestling...Kevin Sullivan, in Florida. dude was scary good at it"
The best heel in wrestling is a dwarf who cuts silly "Satanic" promos? Uh, no.
Posted By: Guest#9318 (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 04:59 PM
Heyman's article was a great promo for Lesnar too. Get the two of them together an MMA fans will never know what hit them. They'll be foaming at their mouths for each PPV.
Posted By: Guest#3486 (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 05:21 PM
Ironically nobody mentions how Mir acted on the UFC 100 countdown. He totally disregarded Lesnar as a serious athlete and thought he was a complete joke, even his training partners got in making fun of Lesnar's WWE days. Mir's condescending tone and attitude only made Brock more mad.
The real reason Brock gets no respect is he's only 5 fights in and already champion. It pisses off MMA purists that some meathead from pro-wrestling came, saw and conquered.
Posted By: Guest#5498 (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 05:25 PM
I am the best heel ever. End discussion.
Posted By: Classy Freddy Blassie. (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 06:20 PM
"The real reason Brock gets no respect is he's only 5 fights in and already champion. It pisses off MMA purists that some meathead from pro-wrestling came, saw and conquered."
Posted By: Guest#5498 (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 05:25 PM
I'm not a purist but I do think Brock got favorable treatment. I was excited to see a former wrestler in mma but think about it like this. Stay with me here, although they've gotten better at this, in the past EVERYONE would get mad at tna for signing someone then immediately putting them in the title picture. This is the same case, they give Brock all the hype only for him to lose his first match. He wins his next then bam he gets a title shot. Lesnar never deserved to get the shot at Couture for the title that early. If anything, Frank Mir should've gotten the shot first seeing as he owned a victory over Brock, then should've met him in a re-match had he beat Couture and if Brock had proven himself.
But anyways, as for the best heel Naitch is the best for me.
Posted By: cj (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 08:41 PM
I am the baddest Mofo on the planet
Posted By: Paul Roma (Guest) on July 14, 2009 at 10:47 PM
More like the lamest SMART MARK
Posted By: son of pillman (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 10:17 AM
Ever wondered how your daddy is doing? No problemo, I can help you with that.
That's how BAD I am.
Posted By: Paul Roma (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 12:18 PM
You couldnt even break wind properly SMART MARK
Posted By: son of pillman (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 08:42 PM
Shawn Michaels circa 1997-1998
Posted By: gwpbrian (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 08:56 PM
When HHH was holding the belt in evolution I wanted someone to destroy him, he was a very annoying heel at the time.
Posted By: Haha. (Guest) on July 15, 2009 at 09:27 PM
Great column. I had a feeling before I clicked it that Lesnar would be your subject. I mostly agree although, at some point, "purists" or not, ppl will have to start giving the devil his due. I watched the PPV at a local bar and while there were a few Mir fans, there were many others who were cheering Lesnar (as well as some ppl who were neutral until the post fight interview where Brock won them over). Ever since the Herring fight I felt that Brock was slowly parlaying some of those "monster heel" traits that he used in WWE.
Also, I guess I understand some of the envy and scepticism some have for a relavive "rookie" like Brock being "given" so much so fast. To that I say-why the FUCK not?!? The man is a beast and obviously Dana White knew that the man represents the most important thing to any business: MONEY! No promoter/owner in their right mind would pass up an opportunity to have a goldmine at the top. In actuality, he's just repeating what Vince already did. Brock tore thru the WWE ranks as the Next Big Thing, capturing the top title in the promotion in his first year, and he's simply doing the same thing in UFC. And honestly, is it his fault if he's in a division that's clearly not that stacked at the top? Don't get me wrong, Big Nog, Mir, and Couture are great fighters. And there's a few others in the "midcard" like Carwin and Velasquez who may be champion someday. Maybe it's timing, maybe talent, maybe both. But the fact remains that Brock Lesnar is the UNDISPUTED UFC Heavyweight Champ (until they sign Fedor, which I would love to see), and you cant fault a guy for doing what he's supposed to do-win and bring in the fans. I dont think Brock's going anywhere anytime soon so we might as well get used to it.
One more thing that was bugging me. How did Shane McMahon help Tyson find out King was stealing from him?
Posted By: amusing comments (Guest) on July 16, 2009 at 12:30 AM
Hey bjc, Brock's not a draw because people cheer him because he's cool, but because they'll pay for ANYONE to beat him, the cockier he is, and while he keeps not even winning, dominating, the madder and madder the hardcore UFC fans get, and they already seem to be foaming at the mouth with anger at every single move he makes. Watch how in every fight they talk about how 'this guy's the one who'll get him', the fact he lost his first fight and still got this reaction, instead of being laughed away, shows how seriously they take him.
Posted By: Robin (Guest) on July 16, 2009 at 11:46 AM
The Mountie
Posted By: Guest#2306 (Guest) on July 16, 2009 at 05:54 PM
To: amusing comments
When Tyson was working with the WWF pre-WrestleMania XIV, Shane McMahon was asking Mike Tyson about his royalties for a Tyson action figure. He had no clue what Shane was talking about. When McMahon filled him in, that's when he realized that Don King had been stealing from him. He had no idea he would be getting royalty money, and King never told him.
Posted By: RSarnecky (Registered) on July 16, 2009 at 07:35 PM
@r. sarnecky
Hey thanks for responding man. I had never heard of that and honestly that's not surprising that a slimeball promoter would take advantage of someone like Iron Mike. I kinda feel sorry for the guy as he had a rough childhood and obviously was not that bright but he seemed like a nice enough person who was influenced by all the crazy shit around him. Not condoning some of his actions just sayin. Thx for the response and keep 'em comin~
Posted By: amusing comments (Guest) on July 17, 2009 at 11:40 PM