In an interview with In The Room, former
ECW announcer Bob Artese spoke about the promotion’s history, including its
beginning and its problems over the years.
On ECW’s Huge Defections in the Mid-to-Late
1990s: “Some of us saw that it was going to be a financial problem as
we got bigger, and we weren’t really going to be able to grow any more. And some
of these guys started looking [at] other places. Or other promotions went after
them. It wasn’t us always looking somewhere else. Some other people saw the
talent in these guys and they started coming after them and they’d have a choice
to make. Do you want to stay with ECW and not really know about your future? Or
do you want to come with us and hopefully some things would be
better?”
On ECW’s Famed Money Problems:
Paul [Heyman] had some tremendous ideas, and a lot of them really worked. I
still believe that if we would have had some kind of a backer, like a Ted Turner
or somebody like that, ECW would still be [around]. In fact ECW would be
battling Vince [McMahon] right now. But we never had that real money guy.
Everything we did was kind of like on like a shoestring budget. We could never
do it at 100 percent because we didn’t had that kind of money …. Obviously
there was some frustration because of it … We just kept going ahead and we
figured we’d find the money somewhere.
On Tod Gordon as a WCW “Mole”:
From what I heard and the feeling I could get, I thought there was some credence
to that. I think Tod and The Sandman – who obviously were really good friends –
I think they were certainly involved. And there may have been some others. And I
thought it was with WCW at the time. But it was kept so quiet that everything
was really rumors, and I don’t know if anybody really knew for sure. But from
what I could gather, I definitely think that there was something going on, but I
don’t know exactly what it was.
On ECW’s Shaky Beginning: We had
no clue. When we started it was Tod Gordon, myself, and a couple other people.
And I remember some of our shows if we drew 50 people it was a lot. We’d have to
put everybody in one section to make it look like it was a full house, if it was
being televised. We were at that point just running month to month. Basically
having a good time and hoping it would take off, just a little bit. It’s
incredible the way it exploded. And I remember as it started to grow, you got
that feeling that we might be on to something big. And it really drew us all
together. We were all working for the same thing. I’ve never been in a locker
room that had so much closeness and so much camaraderie.