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 411mania » Wrestling » Columns
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Shining a Spotlight 6.19.08: Benoit One Year Later
Posted by Michael Weyer on 06.19.2008



I know that my topic this week may seem like jumping the gun a bit. But I figure there's going to be a few other columns on this same topic so I might as well get mine out now. Plus, a recent purchase pushed this one along and so here we go.

It's hard to believe it's been a year. A year since that horrifying weekend. A year since that Monday night that changed the business forever. We'd had tragedy, of course. We'd had deaths, we'd had scandals but this…This was something else entirely. This was a man who was one of the most respected, most admired, most seemingly honorable in a dirty business committing an act so horrific, it still boggles the mind. It still makes no sense a year later but we've had to deal with it.

It seemed wrong from the start, when Chris Benoit no-showed a PPV where he was due to become ECW champion. It was very out of character for him but some hoped there was a logical reason. Then came that horrifying news as the RAW that was to be the "tribute" to the "late" Mr. McMahon opened with a very much alive Vince in an empty arena saying Chris Benoit, Nancy Benoit and their son had been found dead in their Atlanta home. Once again, we were filled with shock. Once again, we watched tributes by wrestlers and classic Benoit moments as we tried to deal with the grief over the terrible loss and wrestling sites crashed under the weight of shocked fans offering their memories and tributes to this man.

And then the facts came in and it got far, far worse.

It's still hard to accept, despite how so many people now say it was inevitable. This wasn't someone like Austin or Randy Orton or someone else who had a history of trouble. Scott Hall, we'd have accepted with no problem. But this was Benoit. This was a man hailed so much for his terrific drive, his great attitude and his professionalism. You never heard of him getting in trouble on the road or anything, no word of drug use, nothing that would indicate anything like this was coming. But as we all know, it did and things have never been the same.

What's brought this up isn't just the one-year anniversary coming up. It's also that I just purchased the first major book detailing the events and how they pertain to the business. I know, there was that one book, simply titled Benoit that contained some short essays but only one major book so far: Ring of Hell: The story of Chris Benoit & the Fall of the Pro Wrestling Industry (Phoenix Books, $25.95) by Matthew Randazzo V. As you can tell from that title, the book is a bit inflammatory at parts but then again, it is telling a powerful story. But the book does far more than just discuss Benoit and what happened; instead it uses Benoit as an example of how horrible the industry has become.

I should warn you off the bat that the 344 page book is written more for the non-wrestling fan. Indeed, my local Barnes & Noble had it in the True Crime section instead of sports, which is a warning sign. It also paints an interesting contrast of portraying Benoit as both victim and monster while raking Vince McMahon across the coals in a way so savage even Shane Douglas would be saying "whoa, dude, settle down." It's a bit troubling to see such an outside view of the business but sadly, sensationalism was to be expected given what happened. Randazzo's opinion of wrestling is given from the start with his assertion how it was begun by carnival conmen and mobsters to fool unknowing gamblers and that anyone who takes part in the business is automatically not a rational person. Benoit, in fact, is described as the ultimate mark (Benoit himself admitting to it in an interview) and the road that led to his destruction can be traced to the man Benoit idolized: The Dynamite Kid.

Randazzo gives the brutal but sadly accurate report of how Tommy Billington, while incredibly talented in the ring, was also one of the most horrible bastards wrestling has ever known, a man whose backstage antics make Randy Orton look like a candidate for sainthood. Why Benoit would pick Dynamite of all people to emulate remains a mystery but in Randazzo's mind, that was the key to everything. It was hardly helped by Stampede, as he dissects everything from the brutal Dungeon to the even more brutal road trips and the wild pranks that bordered downright dangerous. There's a nice bit of Randazzo listing twenty rules Stu had all the wrestlers learn in order to work in the business and also does a nice job covering how Stampede fell apart due to both Vince's rise to power and Bruce Hart's erratic booking. He also relates, as fact, the long-standing rumor that Jacques Rougeau had the Montreal Mafia put out a contract on Dynamite's life to drive him out of the WWF and to a disastrous last run in Stampede.

This leads to a discussion of Japan. I've long believed that a book detailing the history of pro wrestling in Japan for American audiences is a story waiting to happen and Randazzo does a good job on how it blossomed in the post-WWII years with its more real style, detailing the dojos and the "Young Boys" systems. However, I'm sure some Japanese wrestling fans will be more than slightly upset at his stating as absolute fact that the business "always was and always would be dominated by the Yakuza." To hear Randazzo tell it, the Japanese mafia runs every damn thing involving the business, which sounds more speculative than absolute fact. He also paints legendary Antonio Inoki as a complete lunatic who, seriously, is actually compared to Sadaam and Kim Jong Ill. It details Benoit's training in Japan and a nice bio on Keiichi Yamada, better known as Jushin Liger. This leads to talk of the classic Liger/Pegasus Kid battles that won respect for both men and light heavyweights in general. While Benoit had talked of this time in glowing terms, Randazzo relates it was much harder for him then that and Benoit acted out with some brutal pranks of his own on fellow workers.

The Mexican wrestling scene gets off better as even Randazzo has to acknowledge the honor and tradition that dominate that scene. Again, there's a great examination of how the various promotions grew, the luchadors and masked wrestlers becoming true heroes and Benoit fitting in well among the scene, meeting future best friend Victor "Black Cat" Mar and returning to Japan for another great run and the Super J Cup tournament, winning him the massive IWC fan base he'd maintain until the end.

We then move to WCW and boy, does Randazzo go to town on them. The first sentence kicks it all off: "Of the billions of dollars Ted Turner has given to charity, no cause was more unworthy than World Championship Wrestling." From the start, Randazzo nails the key problem of WCW: that the people in charge had no idea how to run a wrestling company and completely ignored the millions Vince was making with WWF and instead treated WCW as not worthy of their attention. It was here Benoit first entered WCW, working under Bill Watts. Unfortunately, Watts' hard-nosed style alienated the wrestlers against him although Randazzo makes the great point that after Stampede and Japan, Watts was downright easy for Benoit. He does note that it was here that Benoit's major problem, his seeming blandness and failure to connect to the crowds with charisma, came to the fore. He wouldn't get the chance as Watts was pushed out in favor of Ole Anderson who Randazzo says "made Watts look like Barack Obama." (seriously, did anyone ever like the guy?) Hating smaller, younger wrestlers, Ole naturally hated Benoit, which pushed him out of the company and to ECW.

As you might guess, Randazzo doesn't have a high opinion of ECW or Paul Heyman. He compares Heyman to a high school kid using his wit to attach himself to the popular crowd and says it was Heyman who procured most of the drugs for the ECW roster and that he "backstabbed" Eddie Gilbert to take over booking, which isn't quite the case. Randazzo does give Heyman credit for doing what WCW and WWF weren't doing at the time, which was showing a willingness to replaces old stars with new ones. Randazzo naturally details the infamous match with Sabu and the dark comedy of his hospital trip where, despite his broken neck, Sabu still refused to break the act and speak English to the doctors. Of course, Heyman saw this as the ultimate break for Benoit, conceiving the Crippler name and Randazzo paints it that Benoit never forgave Heyman for such a callous attitude for Sabu, especially after Benoit had been found in a closet backstage crying over the incident. On the other hand, Heyman didn't seem to understand how Benoit could be so rough with rookies and sad over a guy who had already suffered so many injuries.

Randazzo's intriguing look of ECW continues as he notes that many of the workers didn't fit in with WWF or WCW because they weren't expert politicians which ironically meant a locker room mostly free of strife. Drugs and loose women, on the other hand, were prevalent though Benoit did his best to resist it so he wouldn't mess up his in-ring performance. There's another nice bit on how Heyman wooed the wrestling newsletters the Big Two would ignore which led to the attention for Benoit, Guerrero and Malenko and their simultaneous leaving for WCW.

Once again, Randazzo has a field day on the politics of WCW at the time, talking about how Bischoff and Hogan were sending things into a tailspin. There's a couple of versions of the birth of "Nitro" I've never heard of like a prankster making up a fake fax from Linda McMahon turning Bischoff down for a job, making him want to strike back at WWF and the idea that Bischoff was sent to suggest "Nitro" with the hopes he'd be fired. So "Nitro" begins and Benoit is brought in with his intro coming out of the limo and the announcers "praising him for at least managing to make it to the arena without hurting himself." Whatever else, Randazzo is capable of turning a phrase like describing Flair as "the cockroach scurrying over the ruins wrought by Hiroshima Hogan's ego." This leads to Benoit chosen for the Horsemen as Kevin Sullivan wanted to be sure no one in the group would overshadow Flair. This leads to a discussion on the whole "Loose Cannon" angle which ended up ruining Brian Pillman's life which should have been a warning sign for Benoit.

Of course, the entire Kevin Sullivan-Nancy-Benoit situation gets some detailing. Randazzo does give Sullivan credit for breaking out despite his less than athletic physique and being ahead of his time with sexy valet the Fallen Angel aka Nancy Toffoloni. No bimbo, Nancy, when allowed to speak, showed an amazing understanding of the business and quite astute, not surprising given Sullivan living his gimmick 24/7. As a man who loved kayfabe, Sullivan insisted the whole "Benoit stealing my wife" bit look authentic by having them spend time together which made no sense to anyone given the fact they were both cheating on each other (with the infamous "Heavy Metal" story included). As everyone knows, it blew up in Sullivan's face, trapping him in a "carny who cried work" situation that would cause him to lose his wife although Benoit also seemed stalled in his career.

Moving on to Hall and Nash's arrival, Randazzo covers familiar territory but still does well with it, talking about how Hall and Nash came in like the Rat Pack cool and, after a strong leader like Vince, had no patience for the chaos of WCW. It brings up Nash's old quote that "rock stars never partied as hard as wrestlers" and the wild atmosphere of the time. Randazzo makes a very interesting point here: That Hall and Nash were right for treating wrestling like a business and out for the money while Benoit and Bret Hart were "deranged marks" for actually caring about putting on good matches. Benoit is portrayed as feeling betrayed when Flair and Arn Anderson refused to help cut through the chaos and look out for the younger guys (not to mention Flair's wild partying ways). Benoit is shown as changing, becoming colder and more paranoid as things got more chaotic, with his concussions perhaps playing a part in the behavior. It was hardly helped by the Montreal screwjob (Randazzo openly says Bret was "more famous than anyone else for forgetting that the business itself is a work," that Bret honestly seemed to think he'd "won" the WWF title and that led to the Screwjob). Owen's death was also a major factor and Randazzo rakes Vince for the tribute show on RAW, something that seems a bit off to me. It is fun to hear the tale of how, at the funeral, Jericho talked about leaving for WWF and Hogan asking "can you take me with?"

Along with talk of how Benoit had to be a lookout for a recovering Eddie Guerrero after the latter's car accident, Randazzo nicely highlights the duo's friendship with referee Brian Hildebrand and how his death from cancer also affected Benoit. He notes the tribute match to Owen along with Bobby Heenan's less-than nice comments about Stu during it. This leads to more talk of the chaos of WCW and Vince Russo's arrival as everyone cheered him bringing detailed notes on characters and angles…until they read them. This soon gets to the moment in January of 2000 as Benoit, Malenko, Guerrero and Saturn do their walk-out with Randazzo accusing the four of double-crossing Shane Douglas by going to secret meetings with WWF without him.

It's probably no surprise that Vince doesn't come off well under Randazzo who basically says the true Vince is a bigger bastard than "Mister McMahon." He's ruthless, callous, uncaring about anyone that won't make him money and surrounds himself with ass-kissers. Ironically, some of his comments show the strengths of Vince, his drive and charisma and alpha dog status holding tight reign over a company made of some incredible egos. It is refreshing that Randazzo puts a positive spin on Benoit losing one of his first matches to HHH, as Hunter and Vince were both impressed by his drive and skill, making him the star of the four. He showed good charisma and interview skills and the ability to "dumb down" his repertoire for WWF. They even enhanced his gap-toothed look to emphasize his tough demeanor as the Wolverine and the birth of Daniel added to the happiness.

Of course, the good times wouldn't last long as Benoit would soon stagnate under the power of HHH and Stephanie as Randazzo makes it quite clear his opinion that HHH doesn't love Stephanie at all but just using the boss' daughter to get ahead which I personally think is way off. Benoit was pushed aside and soon found his way to the injury list after his wild cage match with Kurt Angle. It's here, in this year spent at home without the business he loved so much, that Benoit's life, according to Randazzo, began to disintegrate. The fights with Nancy became more regular and they separated for a time before coming back together. When he returned to WWE, it was a sadder man, less enthused which wasn't helped by the wild politics that had taken over the company. Indeed, Randazzo moves away from Benoit to portray Vince as a man who's totally lost it, going nuts with wild schemes and ideas and refusing to listen to others while employing people (Michael Hayes, Bruce Pritchard) who regularly engage in racist banter and practices while his talentless daughter runs things her own way. A lot of quotes from guys like Dave Madigan are used, all in a negative light which is a bit of a turn-off. Yeah, Vince has had problems and he's no saint by any means but this is really piling on the venom for non-wrestling fans.

After noting Benoit's world title run in 2004, Randazzo moves to Eddie's death and how it basically rocked Benoit, covering his tribute match on Smackdown with HHH and Scott Hall slamming it as too contrived (yeah, he's one to talk). Randazzo also seems way too snide about everyone paying tribute to the passion for wresting by "a man who died thanks to his career-necessitated abuse of steroids and illicit drugs." He slams Vince for not doing such obvious things as give wrestlers breaks and such but basically ignores how Benoit was given several months off to recover from injuries and when he came back in 2006, was given the US title right off.

So we move to the murders themselves and how the death of people like Victor Mar, Biff Wellington and Bad News Allen was pretty much the straw that broke the camel's back. Randazzo accuses WWE of making up the story that Daniel suffered from a learning disability to absolve themselves of responsibility. I do have problems with Randazzo imagining Benoit's thoughts and feelings during the crimes as no one can truly know what he was thinking at that time. It's painful to read the reenactment as it's still hard to imagine Benoit capable of such an act. But Randazzo saves his venom for Vince and the "death of Mr. McMahon" angle which made true wrestling deaths seem a joke. Randazzo does take a shot at Internet fans for only now realizing how crass wrestling could be, making us all sound like dumb marks. Randazzo also joins the growing voices that Vince knew full well that Benoit was probably responsible for the murders/suicide but went ahead with the tribute show to "the baby-murdering junkie" to give himself some deniability. In Randazzo's mind, "Vince McMahon has never killed anyone but he has unapologetically tempted hundreds who don't know any better to pursue their own destruction and death for his financial profit."

And that's where the book ends. Yes, right there. No talk of the media blitz, no discussion of the aftereffects on WWE, the new wellness policy, the CNN program, the basic erasing of Benoit from WWE history. After making such a big deal of the way wrestling contributed to Benoit's end, the book completely ignores the fallout afterward and how it affected things. Randazzo just ends the thing cold, making his case for the cold business and Benoit stand there, ignoring the fact that, as much as some will deny it, things have changed since. Oh, I know many will say they haven't but if nothing else, the wellness policy has now been given teeth and a willingness to be used no matter what.

Jeff Hardy, Randy Orton, Ken Kennedy, William Regal, Bobby Lashley and many more. All top stars, all involved in major angles and programs, all of whom broke the policy and have been suspended for it, regardless of how it shakes up things. It's sad that it took this tragedy to open his eyes but Vince McMahon may be realizing that ignoring the problems of workers aren't going to make them go away and he's taken steps to give them the chance to recover while also punishing them for breaking those rules in the first place. Also, while there's no plan for any health insurance program or such, WWE is making strides with their checkups. Indeed, MVP would probably say the new exams are a good thing as it was thanks to them his heart condition was discovered in time to treat it with only minor surgery. Yes, it'd be wonderful if this had been set up before but at least WWE is trying (Which is more than can be said for TNA or even ROH, not to mention most actual pro sports organizations).

The key thing that's been around since Benoit's death has been WWE basically acting like he never existed. Like many, I was a bit annoyed by that. I understood it at the beginning as a knee-jerk reaction and all but felt they went too far with it. But as time has gone by, I've come to realize they have a point. Whenever I pop in a DVD featuring him, I'll be hit by a twinge of pain, watching this man and wondering how he could possibly do what he did, ignoring the match to focus just on his horrible actions. Even the casual mention of him by HHH on his new DVD led to that feeling of anger and makes me realize WWE may be making the right move by ignoring him. Perhaps, in time, he'll be put back in some of the histories but not with the honor he would have once had.

I said it last year but the fact is, Vince remains in a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" situation with Benoit. Mention him too much with matches and such and he comes off as paying tribute to a monster while ignoring him too much makes him sound cold. It's true that since then, Vince has done a lot of "throw whatever you've got and see what sticks" but while we've had garbage like the "son angle" (which was ruined by Kennedy's suspension), we've also had good stuff like Orton's nice long title reign and some improvement to matches on the regular shows. Yeah, the "Million Dollar Mania" thing is a mess but the idea of Vince McMahon giving away money is intriguing enough to notice by some fans. Let's not forget, the man has shown surprising heart at times like paying for the funerals of workers like Bam Bam Bigelow and such so I don't think he's the complete and total bastard Randazzo portrays him as. Ruthless and egotistical, often but not a fool by any means and I also think blaming him totally for what happened is unfair (don't get me started on the idea of Vince putting out fake stories when you consider how wild the media was at the time with false allegations and theories).

The media blitz on Benoit has mostly died down although you can be sure these new books will highlight it more. Irv Muchnick is working on one and I must admit to being interested in Scott Keith's upcoming Dungeon of Death and how it'll examine the man Keith once admired so greatly. As for myself, my opinion of a year ago mostly stands. I was never as huge a Benoit mark as others although I respected his ring work and attitude a lot. However, despite how I've tried, I've just been unable to separate the worker from the man. Indeed, for all the faults he makes in his book, Randazzo does make the intriguing observation that Benoit was far more real than other wrestlers but sadly that led to the problems of his downfall. He hits it on the head, that Benoit took it all far, far too seriously and that intensity was a key factor in what happened as well. It's great he took it with pride but we all know that pride goeth before the fall and that was sadly the case here.

As for the fans, I know a lot of guys at the time said "I'm done with wrestling now" and ratings have dropped but we still have a lot of fans following it. It's in the blood, really and hard to totally give up on, which may make us fools in the eyes of Randazzo but good for the business as a whole. I know some have said that we fans share the burden for Benoit's actions, pushing him to do such stunts but I find that incredibly offensive a statement. No matter how much we may have liked or respected him, in no way did we contribute to the death of his wife or his son. That was his own decision, however troubled it was and blaming the fans for making him perform the stunts that led to the injuries is just denying Benoit the responsibility for his actions, which does no one any favors.

I still can't forgive him. I'm sorry, I just can't. He killed his wife. He killed his son. Whatever he felt, whatever his problems, there is no defending this, no justifying those actions. What I said last year holds: Chris Benoit is the OJ Simpson of pro wrestling and that is a stigma that will haunt his name forever. I just don't see him ever getting into any Hall of Fame because it doesn't seem right, no matter his in-ring accolades, to honor a man who committed such a heinous act. His ultimate forgiveness is in the hands of a higher authority of course, so I can't say with complete certainty he's in Hell. But it's hard to imagine his soul at rest after what he did, despite how rough his life was.

Time heals all wounds and maybe with the passage of more years, this one can be salved. But for now, on the first anniversary, it still feels painfully raw to remember that night when one of the most respected man in our business ripped the heart out of wrestling, destroying his name, the faith in his fans and giving the business a black eye that still hasn't faded. It's sad that the image of Chris Benoit many will remember is the one Matthew Randazzo shows: A man foolish to get into such a dangerous business, refusing to see it for the joke it was and letting his commitment ruin his life. But that's the fate of Chris Benoit now and it may be many a year before that changes, if ever.



Also around 411mania:

Truth B Told looks at when Indy wrestlers should jump to the big leagues.

The Fink has fans create their own stables.

Mike Chin discusses the Importance of big men.

The Wrestling Doctor rexamines women in WWE and TNA.

Julian counts down the Top 10 Rock matches.

We kick off our new "Best of 411 Era" look with an examination of tag teams of the time.

The Shimmy continues its look at the WWECW title.

Piledriver Report continues the debate on the greatest rivalry.

Speaking of which, Hubbard gives another idea for a final Bret/Owen match.

Thoughts From the Top Rope is the latest to preview the draft lottery.

Don't forget Column of Honor, Triple Threat, 3 R's, Fact or Fiction, Ask 411 and all the rest.


For this week, the spotlight is off.





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Comments (45)

 
Chris Benoit is still one of my all-time favs. It was sad to hear about him on June 25th last year because June 25th is also my wedding anniversary. What was supposed to be a happiness was met equally with sadness. And my soon to be ex-wife (no tears please) just didn't understand.

Posted By: Exar Kun (Registered)  on June 19, 2008 at 10:40 AM

 
 
I should probably know this, but what is the infamous "Heavy Metal" story???

Posted By: Doakes (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 10:40 AM

 
 
This book sounds like bullshit in it's purest form.

Hard to believe it's been a year since that weekend. Oh well we can't really do anything about it accept continue to watch the program or not.

I just hope the media ends this whole "pro-wrestling is evil" and "benoit is hitler" bull sometime this year.


Posted By: Mattitude (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 10:42 AM

 
 
Before the morons start running their mouths just to hear themselves talk, I gotta say this was a damn good column. While I don't share some of your views, as I can still watch DVDs of his matches, and the Horsemen DVD, and Eddy's, it still hurts to remember what happened to a man I respected so much. He was the guy I pointed to when my non wrestling fan friends would go on about how it was all fake, and how only big guys were good wrestlers. I would say Chris Benoit was one of the top ten all time great in ring performers. I think his one World Title reign failed because the World Champ is supposed to be able to talk. Chris was never that good a mic man. He never had to be, he did his talking in the ring. He got crazy over by bein a bad motherfucker. I respected him for his ability and because I never saw his name attached to any scandal's until this. I never heard of him molesting stewardesses, or trashing hotel rooms, or getting pulled over with a DUI, or throwing his food in a hotel employees face because he was woken up too early, or getting caught with illegal drugs or any of the other bullshit that the media will jump on to to make wrestling and wrestlers out to be evil. I won't buy this guy Razzano's book, because I'm not spending $30 to have him tell me I'm a moron because I like wrestling. Regadless of any good points he might make. Maybe Chris's intensity and love for the business caused him to see things a certain way, and it messed him up. Maybe the combination of that, the pain killers, the concussions, Eddy's death and a host of other things drove him over the edge. And BECAUSE it was Chris Benoit, nobody was there to catch him when he fell, because nobody thought that HE would ever fall. In a way I guess him keeping his nose so clean all the time contributed partly to what happened. I want to make CLEAR right now, that I am NOT defending, condoning, justifying, rationalizing, or excusing what he did. It was unforgivable. I'm simply trying to offer reasons why it may have happened, and what could be done to avoid anything like it happening again. For now, I can still respect Chris for his accomplishments and how he lived his life. Up till that weekend. I can't forgive that. None of us can, it's between Chirs and God now, and I'm not getting in the middle of that one. The one thing Bischoff ever said that I agree with, "May God bless Nacy and Daniel, and may God forgive Chris Benoit." Because only God can. Now let's see if I get any intelligent responses or arguments, or the usual hate spewing bullshit calling me everything under the sun, but not addressing my point at all. That being that I think Chris was a good man who slowly lost his mind, and in the end, it was those closest to him that paid the price. And that is a real tragedy.

Posted By: the Mad Redneck (Registered)  on June 19, 2008 at 10:58 AM

 
 
Books like these prove the general laziness and ignorance of most of humanity towards the wrestling business. To suggest that all wrestling fans are such idiots for having passion for our hobby is ridiculous and asinine on a level I can't conceive. I hope Mr. Randazzo has a great payday off of this tragedy so he can continue to proclaim himself higher than all who ever gave a damn about wrestling. Maybe next he can write a book about how Tim Russert died because of the common man.

Posted By: Kevin (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 11:12 AM

 
 
I dont like what he did, but erasing history only kills kayfabe that much more. They even had Flair sound like in idiot on the Hall of Fame dvd release because they cut out him saying Chris Benoit and replaced it with him repeating Dean Malenko's name twice.

If a pro athelete did something like this, the superbowls or the world series or the stanley cups they won would not instantly be forgotten....

Sad times


Posted By: A.G. Awesome (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 11:27 AM

 
 
Great article. I agree with you and feel pretty much the exact same way you do about the situation. However, something at the beginning really, really bothered me:

"This wasn't someone like Austin or Randy Orton or someone else who had a history of trouble. Scott Hall, we'd have accepted with no problem."

You cannot slander these men like that. That's just wrong. You can't say "oh I'd expect Scott Hall to murder his family" just because he has substance abuse problems. Again, I enjoyed the article but this really bothered me.


Posted By: MP (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 11:29 AM

 
 
Amen Mad Redneck. That was one of the smartest and most sincere comments I have ever read.

Posted By: The 778 (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 12:05 PM

 
 
Mr. Mad Redneck, sir, I want to thank you. Your posting summed up my feelings. I loved to watch Chris Benoit work in the ring. I have watched his matches with Kurt Angle from the Roal Rumble and his match against the Rock at Vengeance, where he should have won the title the first time. I lok at the man in the ring and watch a tremondous performer, who screwed up in real life. I agre with what Eric Bischoff said as well, "May God Bless Daniel and Nacny, and may God forgive Chris Benoit."

Posted By: AWDNUNZ (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 12:12 PM

 
 
the most surprising aspect of benoit's death was my reaction. when i first found out, i wasnt shocked at all. then when i heard about the murder-suicide, i still wasnt bothered.
it is a sad state of affairs as a wrestling fan that the deaths of my favorite stars dont bother me anymore.
i have grown numb to it. these guys fall off ladders, take multiple chair shots to the head, get kicked in the head and then show up on tv the very next night looking fine.


Posted By: rey (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 12:28 PM

 
 
"but at least WWE is trying (Which is more than can be said for TNA or even ROH, not to mention most actual pro sports organizations)." - Micheal Weyer.


Now, how do you know whether or not TNA has a drug testing policy or not? What proof do you have. Are you saying that they don't about their wrestlers.

Wow, what a surprise, according to Mr. Weyer Vince is not that bad and this Randazzo guy is being to mean to vince...wow a pro WWE defense.


Posted By: elvylanda28 (Registered)  on June 19, 2008 at 12:38 PM

 
 
One more question: Who the heck is this Tom Randazzo guy???

I've never heard of him.

It's amazing how these guys who hate wrestling but try to make a buck out of the wrestling fans and try to cash in. You think this Randazzo guy cared about Benoit? I think this guy just wants to make a buck out of us, the gullible wrestling fans. This guy isn't getting my money.

Another thin Tom Randazzo, WCW was 7 years ago, 2008 is calling and is time to move on. NOBODY cares about how you dislike WCW!


Posted By: elvylanda28 (Registered)  on June 19, 2008 at 12:43 PM

 
 
Nobody is asking you to forgive him. Frankly, it's none of our damn business.

Posted By: T.G. Corke (Registered)  on June 19, 2008 at 12:46 PM

 
 
hey redneck, (BLAH BLAH BLAH INSERT RANDOM BLABBERING OF NONSENSICAL HATE HERE)

your points are valid opinions, not ones i share casue i cant even here his theme song anymore, and i liked that song by our lady peace, ah well.

ill jsut say Benoit=bad coward, cause he couldnt even stick around to face the music and offd himself


Posted By: flairforthegold (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 01:01 PM

 
 
I've been curious about that book for awhile but was worried of how it would portray things. Thanks for jumping on the grenade for all of us and then providing an exceptionally well written column about it.

Good job!


Posted By: divine comedy (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 01:10 PM

 
 
Eh. Call me heartless, but I have no real issues watching old Benoit matches. I sort of cringe when he does the flying headbutt, but aside from that, watching the matches are fine and dandy because I CAN seperate the man Christopher Michael Benoit from the Wrestler "The Rabid Wolverine" Chris Benoit.

Posted By: m8 (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 01:35 PM

 
 
Nice column, man. I can still watch Benoit matches, probably because I can separate the art from the artist, but seeing him get clobbered with a chair by Jericho during Royal Rumble 2001 makes me cringe with a chair now.

Hopefully, the one good thing that CAN come of this would be to see how multiple concussions can affect the brain of a human being and how and why it can lead to psychosis and delirium. I do not buy the whole argument that he did what he did because he was a cold, monstrous human being. I do believe that there was some sort of mental problem that made him kill his family and then himself.

I think that McMahon may have thought that Benoit was responsible for everything, simply because he cancelled the live event. I guess he was hoping his worst fears would not be true, but he wanted to avoid a backlash/riot from the audience in case it was true.


Posted By: IcedNeonFlames (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 03:21 PM

 
 
Great article.

I will always respect Chris Benoit for being a straight up guy, admire his commitment and his talent.

His problems took his life and sadly the lives of his family. but that was in a fit of insanity to the point where he basically wasn't the Chris benoit I respected. I'll forever hate the action, and pray that the man's soul rest in peace.

changing gears: that book sounds like crap! Written by some guy who doesn't respect the art or the buisness of Wrestling. These guys act so high and mighty about how wrestlers are out of touch politicians and partyiers, but he won't think twice about listening to Britney Spears and Jennifer Lopez, or watching a Tom Cruise movie.


Posted By: Davis (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 03:33 PM

 
 
Good column, but there was an amazing column on Benoit and Eddie a few months back, the best thing i've evr read on 411 (and any other website for that matter)> It would be nice to re-read that this week.

Posted By: Pure dynamite (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 05:08 PM

 
 
I have got to get this book.

Sounds pretty factual to me without pulling punches. Thanks for the thorough review.


Posted By: thegunisgood (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 05:13 PM

 
 
I want to know why this only gets 20 comments, while the stupid Michael Hayes blurb gets 50+. Most of which read something like "well Hayes is a good guy, he can say the n-word, everyone is too politically correct, Mark Henry is fat blah blah." Sad state of affairs. Maybe I'll blame it on gas prices.

Posted By: MP (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 05:18 PM

 
 
See, with everyone saying "this guy doesn't respect pro-wrestling, f him", I'm taking the opposite stance; it's a good thing that someone from outside the business, who doesn't claim to be a fan, looks into the crazy world of pro-wrestling and what it can do to a man. Are some of his comments obviously off-base and ill-informed? Sure. But at the same time, it sounds like he did a LOT of research and talked to a lot of people to get a feel for everything that happened and, key word here, why.

It sounds like a very interesting read, and a book I'll pick up to see just how well researched it is. Being a pro-wrestling fan, I can ignore the hatred of pro-wrestling if the details contained within are credible. And let's be honest, if anyone thinks things have drastically changed from when Benoit was around until now, they're looking at things with rose-colored glasses. Sure, the Wellness Policy is in place, but just how "random" is the testing? Until one of Vince's "boys" gets busted in the act (Triple H, I'm looking at you), I'll believe that the Wellness Policy is as "fair and just" as other drug programs tried in the past by the WWE.

Good article, and good review. I might have found myself a new column to read every week if the quality is this good, Mr. Weyer. Thanks.


Posted By: blottieb (Registered)  on June 19, 2008 at 07:43 PM

 
 
Chris Benoit, say what you will, one of the best i've ever seen.

Posted By: 1247 (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 08:17 PM

 
 
Sure Exar Kun. I wont shed any tears for the divorce of two people I dont even know

Posted By: natedoggcata (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 09:08 PM

 
 
Thank you, as a schizophrenic and huge Benoit fan his death and the murders have been hard.Your article brought some healing.Thanx

Posted By: Still Mourning Chris (Guest)  on June 19, 2008 at 10:49 PM

 
 
"as a schizophrenic and huge Benoit fan his death and the
murders have been hard."

This wins comment of the year, 2008. Go ahead schizos, keep separating the man from the in-ring persona. IT'S THE SAME FUCKING CHRIS BENOIT.


Posted By: Guest#1046 (Guest)  on June 20, 2008 at 12:50 AM

 
 
Hey, Guest#1046

No,we are trying to seperate the man from the illness.I know you probally have no understanding what it is like to be suffering from a condition that distorts the way that you perceive reality.Be thankful.I am not going to sit back and let folks protray Benoit as a monster when he was just as much a victim as his family.I hate what he did,but as someone who understands the altered state of reality that I believe Benoit was in when he snapped I cannot just lable him as a monster.

By the way to anyone who cares,schizophrenia has everything to do with an altered sense of reality caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain(similar to what severe brain trauma can cause) and nothing to do with multiple personalities.


Posted By: Schizo Wrestling fan (Guest)  on June 20, 2008 at 07:17 AM

 
 
Really good job on the article. They seem to have softened their stance on the "Benoit on DVD" issue. The Walmart's, at least around here (Syracuse, NY) have recently re-released several PPV's from 2003 in discount 2-packs called "Tagged Classics" and not only are Benoit matches intact, he is also advertised on the back of the box.

Posted By: Guest#0987 (Guest)  on June 20, 2008 at 10:59 AM

 
 
Benoit's a murderer, plain and simple, and I have no need to watch any of his matches again..

Posted By: Charles (Guest)  on June 20, 2008 at 04:50 PM

 
 
Great write up. Thanks. Still hard to believe.

Posted By: Crowtista (Guest)  on June 20, 2008 at 06:25 PM

 
 
"Now, how do you know whether or not TNA has a drug testing policy or
not? What proof do you have. Are you saying that they don't about
their wrestlers."

Very simple they have the vicodin addicted Kurt Angle, who was released by the WWE in an effort to help him get his life straightened out and pothead Booker T, who left the WWE because marijuana was now included as an offense towards the wellness policy, on their rosters, plus Scotty Steiner and the recently pumped Petey Williams. There's nothing wrong with being a fan of TNA, but why are most of you so fucking dense that you can't even realize that in no way does TNA have a drug policy. I mean Angle broke his neck for like the fourth time and magically recovered in a month. Same thing goes with ROH. I wouldn't be surprised to learn that The Briscoes aren't on some sort of pain killers.


Posted By: Guest#0584 (Guest)  on June 20, 2008 at 11:33 PM

 
 
Everyone knows Chris Benoit was a truly talented in ring performer, most likely in the top five of all time, he was well respected and admired by so many fans and other wrestlers before last June,and he was also my favorite wrestler....and its still so hard to believe what happened a year ago, his actions most importantly destroyed his family and at the same time ruined his legacy but also damaged the business he and we all love so much...although i understand why the wwe is tryin to erase him from history i just dont think it has to be done that way, he spent is entire life in the wrestling industry and left a huge impact in the histroy of pro wrestling....sadly he will be remembered for his last moments on earth and (that was his horrific choice) other than his wonderful career, and thats just how it is, i hate what Benoit did i just think if theres any hope in healing over the years his CAREER needs to be acknowledged, but his families terrible demise will never be forgotten...RIP Daniel, Nancy and Chris Benoit

Posted By: Ripstamps (Guest)  on June 20, 2008 at 11:59 PM

 
 
I'm seconding MP. That was fucked up.

Posted By: Vallejo (Guest)  on June 21, 2008 at 02:12 AM

 
 
mad redneck, spitting nothing but pure truth. im never not gunna love benoit, despite the horrible things that happened

Posted By: shaydee (Guest)  on June 21, 2008 at 06:20 AM

 
 
what a great article, and a great review of the book. i'm looking forward to picking up a copy, because i like being challenged by things that i'm reading. i also want to congratulate the 411 posters on rational discussion with the hysteria of 12 months ago.

hard to believe its almost a year... i still remember the day. i still remember the initial details and thinking 'no, theres another explanation.' i remember being happy that wwe ran the tribute show because it seemed to suggest that they knew something that the rest of us didn't that would absolve benoit. i remember watching ecw the night after and being horrified by the realisation that a) wrestling will never be the same again, and b) benoit will never be mentioned by wwe again.

i'd like to be ok with it. i can separate the man from the illness. i hate what he did, i'm horified that one of my heroes did what he did... but i also know enough about mental illness to know that he was not 100% responsible for his actions.

i say i'd like to be ok... i still can't bring myself to watch a benoit match. i haven't been able to watch some of my favourite dvds including eddie's and monday night war because its just too hard. i bought a benoit wrestling figure in the days after his death, but have still never displayed it.

they say time heals all wounds... i hope it does. but what happened 12 months ago changed wrestling forever, and as such it changed a lot of our worlds forever...


Posted By: Andy (Guest)  on June 21, 2008 at 07:54 AM

 
 
Ugh. Can all these self-important smarks please just STOP discussing Benoit please? It happened, yes it was tragic & awful, but life goes on, let his wife & child rest in peace rather than digging it all up and going through it all in this stupid, over-the-top melodramatic way OVER & OVER AGAIN. I'm so fucking sick of all these pathetic smark wannabees and their bullshit opinions.

Posted By: The Truth (Guest)  on June 21, 2008 at 11:05 AM

 
 
For those that begin to mention the "rot in hell" portions, if you knew anything about the way life works from that perspective, there is something called a Judgment Day where the condemned are to be judged for their actions.

As a man, Benoit had a huge impact on my life. I watched his DVD countless times, and did everything possible to prove myself as a fan of his. Hell, one house show in September of 06 announced him for it, then when we got there and he was not there, I was entirely disappointed with the show.

No one will ever truly know the reason, but it is obviously not something like a Scott Peterson crime here. I am not here to cause a debate, but I am here to put the questions to rest.

Continuing on, you did a great write-up. I myself will always remember him for the great impact he had on my life prior to this infamous weekend. Does that mean I am OK with what happened that weekend? No, it does not. But however, I am OK with the fact that a great man did everything in his power to prove to the world what he loved to do and excelled in doing it, and unfortunately, his end came far too soon, as did the case in Nancy and Daniel.

I can only hope and pray that when the time finally comes, that he will be saved.


Posted By: JP (Guest)  on June 21, 2008 at 04:12 PM

 
 
TLDR

Posted By: Guest#4355 (Guest)  on June 21, 2008 at 07:59 PM

 
 
Sorry, but not the worst day in wrestling. Not after what he did to his family.
The worst day in wrestling was finding out about the death of Eddie Guerrero, a true man, and a true champion.


Posted By: Guest#3793 (Guest)  on June 21, 2008 at 11:49 PM

 
 
"Sorry, but not the worst day in wrestling. Not after what he did to
his family.
The worst day in wrestling was finding out about the death of Eddie
Guerrero, a true man, and a true champion."

You're a fucking idiot with no sense of perspective. We're STILL feeling the effects of Benoit's death, and we probably will be for the next ten or so years. At least as far all the wellness bullshit goes.

Incidentally, I always read about how all these people can't watch their Benoit dvd's anymore or whatever and I don't really get it. I can enjoy a Benoit match just as much as I can enjoy a Guerrero or Owen match. Did he kill his wife and kid? Probably. But I don't give a shit. If I had been there, the whole thing would have scarred me for life and I could never look at the man or his works in the same way again, but I wasn't. I only read about it in the paper.


Posted By: Vallejo (Guest)  on June 22, 2008 at 09:50 AM

 
 
"If I had been there, the whole thing would have scarred me
for life and I could never look at the man or his works in the same
way again, but I wasn't. I only read about it in the paper."

So you are only affected by things you personally experience and not things you read or hear about? You're going to a pretty miserable and wasteful existence if so.


Posted By: Guest#2064 (Guest)  on June 22, 2008 at 03:15 PM

 
 
Ugh. Can all these self-important smarks please just STOP discussing
Benoit please? It happened, yes it was tragic & awful, but life
goes on, let his wife & child rest in peace rather than digging
it all up and going through it all in this stupid, over-the-top
melodramatic way OVER & OVER AGAIN. I'm so fucking sick of all
these pathetic smark wannabees and their bullshit opinions.

Posted By: The Truth (Guest) on June 21, 2008 at 11:05 AM
-------------

This is by far the best comment on this page. Lets just leave Benoit to rot in the past and move on.


Posted By: The Big Dawg (Guest)  on June 22, 2008 at 09:27 PM

 
 
What is the heavy metal story?

Posted By: Pat (Guest)  on June 24, 2008 at 01:19 PM

 
 
look at everyone saying he wasn't a bad guy until that weekend. He was known to be rough on the younger guys he had marital problems years before the murders due to Nancy wanting out for several reasons. Using his brain problem as an excuse is just a way out. I'm sorry but Vince was right no way Benoit could have had a brain problem that bad and be able to function as well as he did.

Some of you are just people I'm sorry trying to justify your hero doing a terrible crime. OJ is in the same light because of what he did and Benoit took the cowardly way out and killed himself before facing justice but he still had to face God for his sins. I doubt half of you are saying how you still look at the performer when I doubt you do the same for OJ or any of the other famous people who have committed such horrible crimes.


Posted By: oh brother (Guest)  on June 24, 2008 at 02:36 PM

 
 
"It's still hard to accept, despite how so many people now say it was inevitable. This wasn't someone like Austin or Randy Orton or someone else who had a history of trouble. Scott Hall, we'd have accepted with no problem. But this was Benoit."

That is a disgraceful comment about Orton and Austin, a killer is a killer, peiod. What ever happened to the ones you least suspect?


Posted By: Brad (Guest)  on June 24, 2008 at 11:14 PM

 


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