Mick Foley On If Barbwire Or Thumbtacks Were Worse To Take In A Match

Mick Foley
Mick Foley | WWE

WWE Hall of Famer Mick Foley recently took to an episode of his Foley is Pod podcast, where he talked about a number of topics including if barbwire or thumbtacks were to take in a match.

Foley said, โ€œOh, thatโ€™s an easy one because some tacks, rate very highly on the risk-reward ratio analysis because the reward is very high. The risk is, I donโ€™t want to say itโ€™s very low, but when your biggest concerns are making sure youโ€™re closing, if youโ€™re dumb enough to take it face first, which I was on a couple of occasions and then you also want the clean tacks, right? For years I thought I had a skin rash that wouldnโ€™t go away no matter what kind of creams I was putting on it. Then I realized it wasnโ€™t a rash. It was hundreds of tiny hole puncture scars that made up something that looked like a rash. So they donโ€™t leave. Too bad of a mark and barbed wire around a bat is not bad, but barbed wire when itโ€™s in place of the ring ropes, not in addition to, but in place. They can catch and tear you and change your life in a major way. And I think the best example of that is when Sabu got something like what would have been 100 stitches if he didnโ€™t superglue it himself. And that to me, was one of the gutsiest moments in wrestling where, in any other sport a guy gets the equivalent of 100 stitch wounds, and bam, they take a little time out. And instead, he got Bill Afonso to run to the back, came out with a roll of tape, and he wrapped his leg while the match was going on. And thatโ€™s among the most badass moments in any athletic endeavor. I think. So Barbed wire was much, much, much more dangerous because he could catch and tear.โ€

Foley also talked about whether he has ever used rubber-tipped barbwire during a match.

Foley said, โ€œOnly a couple of times. And Iโ€™ll leave that up to people to figure out where it is. I always liked the idea. I liked the realism of it. But I think Iโ€™ve told this story when I had boiler room matches. So the first was in 96, the second against the Undertaker. The second was in 99. I think with the big show in May of 99, I think. And Richie Posner was known as the Magic Man. And he came up to me a week or two before that match with Undertaker and asked me if I needed any props. And I said, Listen, I donโ€™t want to seem out of line. I know Iโ€™m fairly new here, but I donโ€™t use props. Like, if Iโ€™m going to use something, itโ€™s going to be real. And that was the way I felt in 1996. And then in 1999, I went up to Richie a week before my match with Big Show and said, I need as much stuff as you can give me. So that was the only time I ever used fake blood. And it worked. It was great. Nobody knew. Again, itโ€™s just a matter of getting over the finish line. And I would encourage people if youโ€™re going to get 99% of the reaction with 5%, Iโ€™m not a mathematician, but according to the instantaneous Foley risk-reward ratio analysis, Iโ€™m going to say rubber-tipped poses 5%. And I do know for a fact that I would much rather sign like a belt thatโ€™s wrapped in rubber tip barbed wire than real barbed wire. And itโ€™s a miracle that people can even get these things through airports and metal detectors at conventions. So there is a difference. I used it a few times and I was okay with it.โ€

โ€œAnd I would encourage if people to want to play with that unless itโ€™s the hardcore stuff. If youโ€™re in an organization that prides itself on being hardcore or being like, if you find out that there was a fake barbed wire used in a deathmatch tournament, well, itโ€™s not going to fare well with those fans. With Nick Gage, ever use rubber tip barbed wire? So Iโ€™ve just been verified by Tara Zepp that Nick Gage would not. I will tell you this. I got a cameo for my kids two Christmases ago from Nick Gage, and I sent a message to him and I said, Nick, just because I donโ€™t curse doesnโ€™t mean I donโ€™t want you to curse. Donโ€™t give him, like the G-rated Nick Gage, give him the full force thing. And so in the course of about a minute and 10s Nick used more swear words than Iโ€™ve used in the last decade. So, Iโ€™m just verifying his hardcore credentials. So yeah, use the rubber tip. Unless youโ€™re working for an organization that prides itself on the deathmatch or hardcore moniker.โ€

You can check out Foleyโ€™s complete podcast in the video below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FVU76aYJ8U