'A SUPERHERO' - BUT WITH PAIN.Byline: Kevin Modesti kevin.modesti@dailynews.com 818-713-3616 Staff Writer Ric Drasin watched "The Wrestler," the Oscar-nominated movie about an old grappler taking the most real of risks for the most unreal of sports, and knew the scarred body on the screen could have been his. A couple of weeks later, sitting in his Van Nuys backyard next to the ring where he trains young wrestlers with Hulk Hogan-size dreams, Drasin rolled up the right leg of his black warm-up suit to show off the eight-inch surgical scar that wraps his thigh, knee and shin in a sleeper hold. In the movie, viewers are left up in the air about how the Mickey Rourke character's story turns out. But in real life, Drasin will tell you exactly how his competitive career as "the Equalizer" ended - painfully, in a Huntington Beach high school Huntington Beach High School (HBHS) is a California Distinguished high school[1] located in Huntington Beach, California which first began operating in its respective city in 1906. gym, in one of the small professional wrestling shows that entertain diehard fans all over Southern California. "I was wrestling Cincinnati Red," Drasin said of that night in 2001, when he was 57 and a veteran of 5,000 matches across the United States and Canada. "He fell on me, my leg got bent, and I thought my (right) knee popped out of joint." The crowd of 400 was loud enough that fans couldn't hear Drasin ask his opponent to pull on his foot to try to yank the leg back in line. But the midmatch ringside ring·side n. 1. The area or seats immediately outside an arena or ring, as at a prizefight. 2. A place providing a close view of a spectacle. therapy brought no relief. And the bout had seven minutes to go. The two huge men tumbled out of the ring, where they engaged in a brutal brand of time-wasting, Cincinnati Red making a good show of bashing the fallen Equalizer with a chair and a baseball bat. "The crowd thought I was hurt," Drasin said, the twist being: "I was." As their allotted time was running out, they climbed back through the ropes and the Equalizer pinned Cincinnati Red for a dramatic victory. Drasin's injury turned out to be a complete tear of his right quadriceps muscle, and after he ripped the other quad in a tumble at home and needed operations to rewire re·wire v. re·wired, re·wir·ing, re·wires v.tr. To provide with new wiring: rewired the old house. v.intr. To install new wiring. both legs, the former bodybuilder and sometimes-actor admitted to his wife that it was time to hang up the wrestling tights. Randi Drasin, Ric's wife of 19 years, watched "The Wrestler" with him and said: "That was his life up there." If so, he's not alone. It seems as if every pro, ex-pro and would-be pro wrestler - brute or diva, babyface or heel, from L.A. or from parts unknown - identifies with something about the film's Randy "The Ram" Robinson, the fictional former main-eventer from New Jersey who craves the adrenaline of the arena and daydreams about a return to the big time. Overshadowed by the dazzling World Wrestling Entertainment World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. (WWE) is a publicly traded, privately controlled integrated media (focusing in television, Internet, and live events), and sports entertainment company dealing primarily in the professional wrestling industry, with major revenue sources events on national television, unknown to all but a circle of fans connected by word of mouth and the Internet, these theatrical athletes toil in the sport's minor leagues for little or no money in shows staged in rented gyms, community centers and American Legion halls. Saturday, starting at 8 p.m. at American Legion Post 308 in Reseda, the promotion group Pro Wrestling Guerrilla Pro Wrestling Guerrilla (PWG) is a professional wrestling promotion that is run by wrestlers themselves as it was created and is operated by Southern California wrestlers Disco Machine, Excalibur, Joey Ryan, Scott Lost, Super Dragon, and Top Gun Talwar. will put on a card for which the big draws are former WWE WWE World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. (formerly World Wrestling Federation) WWE Witwe (German: Widow) WWE William Webb Ellis (inventor of rugby) WWE World Wide Education WWE Well Woman Exam tag-team champion Paul London, Japanese-based Karl "Machine Gun" Anderson, and the Necro Butcher (who played The Ram's foe in the staple-gun match in "The Wrestler"). Marc Letzman, a former masked wrestler who is a PWG PWG Pro Wrestling Guerrilla (Los Angeles, California, USA) PWG Permanent Working Group PWG Project Working Group PWG Peoples War Group (India) PWG Post Weaning Gain PWG Pedalwertgeber co-founder and carries the tongue-in-cheek title of "commissioner of food and beverage F&B is a common abbreviation in the United States and Commonwealth countries, including Hong Kong. F&B is typically the widely accepted abbreviation for "Food and Beverage," which is the sector/industry that specializes in the conceptualization, the making of, and delivery of foods. ," said he expects about 400 fans to pay $20 apiece for a seat Saturday and 200 to buy $15 copies of the DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc. DVD in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology. online. Local shows are called the "independent circuit" to distinguish them from the WWE spectacles, although "independent" can be a misnomer misnomer n. the wrong name. MISNOMER. The act of using a wrong name. 2. Misnomers, may be considered with regard to contracts, to devises and bequests, and to suits or actions. 3.-1. since many smaller promotions fall under the banner of the National Wrestling Alliance The National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) is the largest governing body for a group of independent professional wrestling promotions and sanctions various NWA championships. The NWA has been in operation since 1948. . Some fans prefer the indie circuit because they can get closer to the action, and the wrestlers - unrestricted by the short time slots between commercials at major WWE events - are able to develop story lines with their larger-than-life actions in the ring. And the local characters, real and concocted, can be just as colorful. Drasin's students at his backyard school (AmericanWrestlingFederation.com) include Fernando Barrera, a chunky 25-year-old from Northridge who works at a movie post-production house and is training to make his pro-wrestling debut in March. Barrera was born without most of a right ear, a negative he is turning positive by developing a ring backstory back·sto·ry n. 1. The experiences of a character or the circumstances of an event that occur before the action or narrative of a literary, cinematic, or dramatic work: to explain it. "I'm an outcast, 'The Rogue,' and I travel all over, fighting for acceptance," Barrera said of his mat persona. "In one of my matches, my ear got torn off. Ever since, I (try to get revenge against) the rest of the world." Another Drasin student, Nikki Tsugranes, 28, of Van Nuys, is a middle-school biology teacher who moved from Brooklyn to train, and now performs in small events such as the "New York Knockout." "Once, I said to my trainer, "I'm going to quit,' " Tsugranes said. "He said , 'No, you aren't.' I was back in a week. It's just the adrenaline. You feel like a superhero su·per·he·ro n. pl. su·per·he·roes A figure, especially in a comic strip or cartoon, endowed with superhuman powers and usually portrayed as fighting evil or crime. ." Small promoters in Southern California battle higher costs for advertising (most rely on fliers), building rentals and wrestlers' travel. Jesse Hernandez, who, like Drasin, used to wrestle at Los Angeles' Olympic Auditorium, said he spent only about $1,800 to put on a six-match show with a paid attendance of 110 on Sunday in Covina. He owns his own ring, and most of the performers have been students from his San Bernardino-based School of Hard Knocks The School of Hard Knocks is an idiomatic phrase meaning the (sometimes painful) education one gets from life, often contrasted with formal education. It is a phrase which is most typically used by a person to claim a level of wisdom imparted by life experience, which they consider (EmpireWrestlingFederation.com/Empire.htm). "I make enough (profit) to have a meal at Denny's," said Hernandez, 58, who wants to pass his knowledge to new generations. "I do these shows mostly to let my students learn to work a crowd, so they get better and move up to bigger promotions." The Knights of Columbus Knights of Columbus, American Roman Catholic society for men, founded (1882) at New Haven, Conn. (where its headquarters are still located), by Father Michael J. McGivney. hall is big enough for a ring and about 250 folding chairs - none of which, amazingly, was used as a weapon Sunday. Even if much of it is choreographed mayhem, the holds, throws and acrobatics acrobatics Art of jumping, tumbling, and balancing. The art is of ancient origin; acrobats performed leaps, somersaults, and vaults at Egyptian and Greek events. Acrobatic feats were featured in the commedia dell'arte theatre in Europe and in jingxi (“Peking of pro wrestling can leave real bruises or worse. In Sunday's lone women's match, a popular ski-bunny type named SnowCal Chloe was pinned by "Queen of Scream" Aiden Riley after SnowCal Chloe was slammed to the mat by Riley's manager while Riley distracted the ref with a fake injury. Outside the dressing room, SnowCal Chloe - the ring alter-ego of bodybuilder Jennifer Thomas - dabbed very real blood from a scrape on her forehead while Riley limped past on what looked like a legitimately gimpy gimp 1 n. A narrow flat braid or rounded cord of fabric used for trimming. Also called guimpe, guipure. [Perhaps from French guimpe; see guimpe. ankle. "Wrestling is too hard to be just a hobby," said Thomas, who aspires to the WWE. Wrestlers, trainers and promoters disagree about whether the success of "The Wrestler" could draw new fans to the region's indy promotions. Some hate the film's emphasis on the sport's dark side. But most say they love its stark portrayal of their shared commitment. Said Hernandez: "You find a little bit of ('The Wrestler') in all of us." |
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