During a recent appearance on the “Under The Ring” podcast, WWE NXT Superstar Je’Von Evans commented on his time training at the Performance Center in Orlando, FL under Matt Bloom and Johnny Moss. He said,
“For me, I have the opportunity to learn from the best wrestlers ever. A lot of, the majority of the people there are the best, that’s why they work there and that’s why they coach. My goal is to the best, so it doesn’t matter what advice I get if it seems like it isn’t resonating with me right now, imma need it in the future. I’ll take everybody’s advice, usually my go-to is Matt Bloom or Johnny Moss. Johnny Moss, he’s so blunt, Coach Bloom too, they’re so blunt. They’ll be completely honest with you, they won’t sugarcoat it or nothing. You most definitely need that feedback to be the best and I love criticism, especially if it’s something where I can take it and prove to you why this works for me. Eventually, I’m gonna get to the reason why you should like what I do. Those are most definitely my go-tos, they’re always honest with me. Even like some of the wrestlers like Josh Briggs, I go up to him too. He’s been wrestling for a long time too, he’ll look out for me and everything else.”
During a recent edition of “The Angle” podcast, Jonathan Coachman commented on his time working in WWE alongside John Cena and the latter winding down his career.
You can check out some highlights from the podcast below:
On Ric Flair paying a $70,000 bar tab: “I don’t want this to come off as disrespectful, because at some point I’m going to run into Ric Flair again and he takes this stuff very personally. At the end of the day, I could be a seventeen-time world champion if they so chose to give it to me. So to me, that record means nothing. The kind of person he is, the way he went about it, the way he trained every single day in the gym. We had a trip overseas, it was ten shows in ten days. Ric Flair talked John Cena into drinking alcohol, because that’s what world champs have got to do. He literally drank every single night, closed the bar down, paid the bar tab. I asked him on day nine how much he spent, he said $35,000. I said, ‘Dollars?’ He said, ‘Pounds.’ It’s two to one, so it was $70,000 he spent on alcohol just because he’s the world champion. Now, don’t feel sorry for him, he was making 50 to 100 grand every night in the main event. But the last night, Dean Malkeno walks up to him, beer in hand, whispers something in his ear. He puts the beer down, heads straight for the elevator, says nothing to nobody and disappears. Dean Malkeno had just told him, ‘Tomorrow night, you’re going sixty minutes with Shawn Michaels on Monday Night Raw.’ Out of respect for the effort of what he was doing, I stood at the gorilla position for him to walk back down. He walked towards me, you could smell the alcohol coming out his pours, but he gave sixty minutes absolute banger. So, I really don’t care if he gets to 17. If it means something to him, then I do care. If that’s a record or number he wants, awesome.”
On when Cena wrestled Shawn Michaels for an hour: “He’s doing what everyone should do. I was ringside for Ric Flair’s retirement against Shawn Michaels. One of the great lines of all time, I’m sorry, I love you. That should’ve been the end, but then he had another one and another one. It’s very hard for people to leave the business. I’ll go back two or three times, but I’m not Ric Flair or John Cena. I think John Cena realizes that his body is beat up and that you can only look that good for so long and you don’t wanna go out there and have wrinkles on the muscles when you were in that kind of shape for twenty years. So, I think his movie career is good enough, his voiceover career is good enough, I think he’s in a new relationship or fairly new. I just think he’s ready to move on.”
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