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King Mo: Martial Artist / MMA and Pro
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King
Mo thinks he may be leading way for more MMA fighters
to do pro wrestling, by Dave Meltzer - 3rd October
2012
(Credit:
Wrestling Observer)

Former
Strikeforce champion "King" Mo Lawal thinks
his debut on Thursday night on a pro wrestling television
show may pave the way for others to follow, as well
as lead to promotional opportunities for each side.
.King
Mo Lawal may become the first person in the U.S. to
regularly appear on both MMA and pro wrestling programming
at the same time, but he doesn't think he'll be the
last.
He
joked on Wednesday, one day before he makes his debut
as a character on TNA Impact Wrestling, Spike TV's
wrestling franchise, that ever since word got out
about his deal to be a major player with two companies
in altogether different worlds at the same time, he's
been getting calls from fighters asking how they can
get a similar deal to break into pro wrestling.
"Just
about every number (on his phone) from MMA has been,
'Man, you're lucky. How can I do it too?,"' said
Lawal, who will debut with Bellator in their light
heavyweight tournament starting in January. "They
ask, 'What should I do?' I've had some big names,
real big names, contact me. Don't be surprised if
you don't see some very big names joining me in the
future in TNA."
He
even talked about the possibility of a Bellator faction
in TNA. Because Spike TV is the home of TNA, and parent
company Viacom owns Bellator, which starts on Spike
in 2013, both companies have been ratcheting up the
cross-promotion, feeling there is a significant crossover
fan base. The reality was that the original fan base
when UFC exploded in 2005 on Spike TV, consisted mostly
of pro wrestling fans between the ages of 18-34 who
were watching Raw, which was on Spike at that point,
and served as the lead-in for the first season of
The Ultimate Fighter reality show. The entire Japanese
MMA economy was built at first on crossing over both
pro wrestlers and pro wrestling fans.
For
the past year plus, even before Viacom purchased Bellator,
it was a fairly regular deal to see the announcers
for each company plug the others' television show.
Of late, the cross-promotion has gotten stronger.
Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney, announcer Sean Wheelock,
and fighters Joe Warren and Eddie Alvarez have all
appeared in the past on TNA television. TNA has also
used MMA fighters Frank Trigg, Ken Shamrock and Tito
Ortiz (during the period he was out of UFC) over the
years. On Friday night's Bellator season opener, they
openly pushed Lawal's first appearance on Impact,
to the point they aired an interview by Hulk Hogan
from the Impact show the night before.
Lawal
talked about expanding the co-promotional ideas, such
as having TNA wrestlers work his corner or be at ringside
during his Bellator fights next year, and more Bellator
personalities appearing on Impact.
"I
want to do an angle where we do a Bellator takeover,
like Brett Rogers, Ben Askren, the Pitbull Brothers,
and Michael Chandler come over and help me out when
I need help. I may need help from Aces and 8s (a new
masked villainous group on the wrestling show)."
The
idea of people doing both pro wrestling and MMA at
the same time was a regular part of both industries
in Japan almost from the inception. But there, lines
were blurred greatly. There were legitimate, real
matches at times on pro wrestling shows. And while
they were never advertised as such, there were, particularly
in the 90s, often things billed as real matches on
MMA shows that were just pro wrestling matches. There
were several organizations in that time period that
were almost a missing link between the two, which
regularly featured both competitive and entertainment
matches and some of the guys, notably Japanese MMA
stars like Kiyoshi Tamura and Kazushi Sakuraba, were
so good at making pro wrestling matches look real,
that it was at times hard to tell what was what. There
are a not a few, but a multitude of pro wrestling
matches listed on some big names' MMA records in current
databases.
In
the U.S., it's completely different. There is no confusion
over what is what. What there may be confusion about
is what is easier.
"A
lot of people in MMA don't realize how hard this is,"
said Lawal, who has just started training at a camp
in Louisville under the auspices of Allan Sarven,
a former pro wrestler best known as Al Snow. In a
weird trivia note, Sarven was in Dan Severn's corner
during the early days of Severn's MMA career. "I
definitely feel MMA is easier than pro wrestling."
"It's
different, I'm used to knocking people out,"
said Lawal, a former Strikeforce light heavyweight
champion who has an 8-1 record with one no contest
in MMA. "Now I have to be a lot smarter how I'm
hitting people."
Lawal
hasn't had a lot of time to work on his wrestling
training. He's been studying a lot of videotapes,
mostly of wrestlers from the 80s, looking at their
mechanics in the ring. He's been doing a lot of media
this week, but he's going to Holland in November to
work on his kickboxing skills, and back to the AKA
Gym in San Jose in December, to prepare for his January
fight. But he noted that even when he has fights upcoming,
he'd like to keep his face on the wrestling show,
noting that they tape in Orlando, Fla., and he can
train with the Blackzillians camp in Boca Raton, Fla.
on those days.
Pro
wrestling is nothing new to him, as he started watching
it at a young age. He talks about how much he loved
Mid South Wrestling, a promotion that was big in Louisiana,
Texas and Oklahoma, but actually folded when he was
only six years old. At his press call, he talked about
the details of a famous match between two of his favorites,
Ric Flair and Sting, on television at the first Clash
of Champions.
He
was only seven when that bout took place in early
1988.
He
noted he was more of a fan of the other brands than
the World Wrestling Federation in those days, so his
favorites were more Sting, The Great Muta, Flair,
Arn Anderson, Tully Blanchard and others. While he
noted he had recently met Hulk Hogan, the aging star
of the TNA promotion, it was meeting Sting that was
the bigger thrill.
"To
me it was an honor just to shake Sting's hand,"
he said. "When I see him, I start sweating, I
get nervous."
Later,
when growing up, his goals in life were to first win
a gold medal as an amateur, a goal he didn't reach,
then win a world championship in MMA, which did happen,
and cap it off by winning a world championship as
a pro wrestler. His goal was always to wind up in
pro wrestling, and his King Mo MMA character was taken
from seeing the wrestler Jerry Lawler as a kid.
When
the joint offer came from Bellator, TNA and Spike,
he said he didn't even think about the money. He said
he also didn't think much about staying with Strikeforce.
Lawal was expected to face Gegard Mousasi, who he
had beaten before, for the vacant Strikeforce light
heavyweight title when his world started collapsing.
First, he tested positive for an anabolic steroid
in a win over Lorenz Larkin, which was then overturned.
Then he was fired by Zuffa when, after his hearing,
he went on twitter and called female commissioner
Pat Ludvall of the Nevada State Athletic Commission
a "racist b----."
Then
he battled a staph infection that resulted in countless
operations, which got so bad it was life threatening
and he's only recently fully recovered from.
"When
I got the contract, I was ready to sign it,"
he said. "I didn't even hear the numbers. It
was a deal to fight in Bellator and do pro wrestling,
I thought, `I'm going to do it.' I was thinking about
Sting, Hogan, I'm going to sign this. This is going
to go down. As far as the lines being blurred (between
wrestling and MMA by doing both), in Bellator, we
fight in the cage. In TNA, we wrestle in the ring.
If people can't realize the difference, that's their
problem."
But
it wasn't until this past Thursday when it really
hit him.
"I
was watching TNA with my boys and Hulk Hogan went
to the ring, and we're talking. Then I heard Hogan
say, 'King Mo.' I rewinded it. I heard Hulk Hogan
say we're going to bring in King Mo. I almost fainted.
That's when it hit me. I'm going to make an appearance.
I almost fainted. I'm still scared, armpits sweating,
can't sleep, it's something I've been dreaming of
my entire life. When I fight, I'm not nervous. I know
I'm going to knock somebody out. Here, I'm just going
to do what I'm going to do."
There
are no plans as far as when he's going to have his
first pro wrestling match, saying it won't be until
Snow says he's ready, and he knows that is a ways
away. His current role will be to build for a role
as a guest enforcer in a match on a TNA pay-per-view
show on Oct. 14 from Phoenix. A guest enforcer is
essentially a role for a tough guy positioned at ringside
to make sure nobody interferes in the match, and to
be the backup referee when the original referee gets
knocked out, which is almost guaranteed to happen
when an enforcer is there. The role was first created
in the 90s for Chuck Norris when he did a WWF appearance.
News
Former
WWE champion Dave Bautista gets new opponent

Dave
Bautista
Former
WWE champion Dave Bautista has a new opponent heading
into Saturdays CESMMA event in Providence.
The
promotion announced tonight at Vince Lucero (20-22)
has stepped in on short notice after Rashid Evans
pulled out of the fight last week. The 40-year-old
Lucero is 0-9-1 in his last 10 fights, though he has
fought multiple UFC veterans including Tim Slyvia,
Roy Nelson, Eddie Sanchez, Lavar Johnson, Brad Imes,
Tim Hague.
The
43-year-old makes his MMA debut on Saturday at the
Dunkin Donuts Center follwing in the footsteps of
other former pro wrestlers like Brock Lesnar and Bobby
Lashley.
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