Paul Wight is one of the most legendary “giants” in the history of pro wrestling.
With that in mind, the former “Big Show” in WWE and “The Giant” in WCW has plenty of experience and veteran wisdom to pass down to today’s generation of wrestling talent.
Particularly the big boys.
During a recent interview with The Tempest of Wrestle Talk for Fightful.com, the AEW personality and WWE legend offered some veteran advice to the current crop of “big-man” wrestlers in the industry.
Featured below are some of the highlights from the interview.
On how the loudest part to any match should be the finish: “I try to. I think sometimes when the kids come over and talk to me, I think theyโre like, โOh, my God, I didnโt know I was gonna be here this long.โ I tend to over-explain things. My advice is not about what moves to do. Iโm not gonna tell them what move to do. My thing that I try to preach upon is making a connection with the audience, telling a story in the ring, making what you do in the ring mean something. Donโt do something just to do it. Make it lead to something. Make it count. If it doesnโt count, then why the hell are you doing it? I tease them all the time,โ he continued. โTheyโll say, โWhat did you think of my match? What did you think of this?โ I say, โWas the biggest reaction of your match the finish? Win, lose, as long as itโs always the biggest reaction.โ โOh, no, it was this one thing.โ โThen youโre not doing it right,โ โcause if you do it right, the biggest reaction is the finish. Because thatโs when the people are the loudest, thatโs when you took them on a journey through the entire match and when that 1-2-3 happens, whether youโre the bad guy getting pinned or the good guy winning, if theyโre not the loudest there, then somewhere you made a mistake.”
On how he thinks big men/giants should focus less on match quality and more on psychology: “Giant wrestlers are a little bit different. Because weโre not five-star guys. Weโre not guys whoโre gonna go out and have outstanding matches. I donโt think so. Thatโs not what you see from giants. Giants are spectacles. Giants are attractions. Giants should be doing things that people are in awe of. If youโre a bad guy giant, or heel, you should try to tap into peopleโs fears of โWhat if I ran into that guy in a dark alley and he was that aggressive toward me.โ You want to instill a little bit of fear. If youโre a face giant, you want to try to make them feel like, โOh, heโd be a fun guy to hang out with.โ The main thing about being a giant is just presence.”
On how big men should be safer when working with smaller talents: “Of course, like anything, everything you do should mean something, and you shouldnโt be in a hurry. Itโs kind of the same thing. Sometimes, when you get the right opponent as a giant, and I tell themโsome the big guys that Iโm working withโyou gotta be safe. Because if youโre safe and a smaller guy trusts you, smaller guys will come up with crazier ideas than you ever will because they trust you. Then itโs your job to make them earn it. If you go out and you do stuff and oversell and donโt make them earn it, then theyโre not really David slaying Goliath. Theyโre not chopping down that giant tree. Part of the drama that helps with fans is a smaller person thatโs aggressive that stays after it, stays after it, stays after it and then you pay it off. Thatโs why giant matches are different. Itโs the same philosophy, but theyโre executed on a different level โcause, in my opinion, you want to start tapping into psychology that people understand. Everybody understands, at some point, what itโs like to be bullied or be intimidated. Itโs part of our human evolutionโfamine, disease, warโall these things that weโve had to overcome to survive the elements. It sets in when you have this big imposing figure that people have to overcome. Itโs a unique addition to the show. Itโs an attraction and makes it fun. Thatโs our role. As far as giants at this stage of the game running three year world championship reigns? I donโt think weโre there yet. I think letโs go out there, do the best you can to make the talent youโre working with. Thatโs the role for giants.”
Check out the complete interview with Paul Wight via the YouTube player embedded below. H/T to Fightful.com for transcribing the above quotes.