Damian Priest On Who He Looked Up To Growing Up As A Wrestling Fan

(Photo Credit: WWE)

WWE star Damian Priest appeared on Insight With Chris Van Vliet, where he talked about a number of topics including almost giving up trying to get into the company.

Priest said, โ€œI gave up on the idea of working for WWE. I tried multiple times to get in and in 2017 when I got an email saying โ€˜Nothing for you hereโ€™, I gave up and I was just focused on let me just live a happy life and figure it out. Then they called me, which is crazy how that worked. When I gave up, thatโ€™s when they wanted me. It wasnโ€™t like I gave up the dream of wrestling. I was still wrestling. I was like, I guess Iโ€™ll just stay in Ring of Honor. I get to wrestle and thatโ€™s what I wanted to do anyway and itโ€™s cool. It was small at the time, but it was still a television program. So I was like, Hey, Iโ€™m on TV. Iโ€™m doing what I wanted to do when I was a kid. Itโ€™s okay. Then here we are in the WWE.โ€

โ€œEven in WWE, there were many times I looked around and saw everybody and how some of them are progressing faster than others. Although it happened fast for me, there were still times that I wasnโ€™t sure if it was going to be like that. Maybe itโ€™s cool that I made it, but this is it. It was one of those things like I donโ€™t know if I belong. I donโ€™t know what the future is going to be, and not that I gave up, but that I did doubt and I was like, I donโ€™t think this is going to happen. I never thought I was gonna be world champ.โ€

On who he looked up to growing up as a wrestling fan:

โ€œThereโ€™s a lot, but the main one was The Undertaker. Iโ€™ve never been shy about that one. That was my idol watching him. It wasnโ€™t even so much the wrestling. It was just the aura, the presentation, everything. I remember how I felt and then thatโ€™s when I knew I needed to make people feel this way. Because I was big into comics, I wanted to be a comic book superhero or supervillain where people are emotionally invested in me. Even as a little kid I knew that. Maybe I couldnโ€™t articulate it that way, but I knew that.โ€

โ€œThen obviously I saw Razor Ramon, who I legit thought was a Latino. As a little kid, you donโ€™t know the difference. Iโ€™m sure my dad knew this guy had a fake accent, but I didnโ€™t know. I sort of was like, yo, heโ€™s one of us. Then as you get older, you learn of other wrestlers. Sting was another one. I loved Sting. Still do. Just the character, especially when it became The Crow. I thought it was the coolest thing. Then the Attitude Era obviously happened and I was in high school, so Austin and Rock were my favorites. Obviously, Taker was always there, then DX. I was a Bret fan but then the NWO took over and then that was it for me, you know, NWO all the way. I would watch WCW just for the NWO and some of the Cruiserweights and then I would switch back.โ€

On wrestling Bad Bunny in Puerto Rico:

โ€œWhat a lot of people donโ€™t know is that there was back and forth and it almost didnโ€™t happen in Puerto Rico. Plain and simple, I donโ€™t think we would have done the match if it wasnโ€™t in Puerto Rico. We were only going to do the match if it was in Puerto Rico. So when they announced Backlash in Puerto Rico, I was like, Okay, this is real. This is happening. The island is getting a little shout-out. We get to represent. For me, it was always, of course, Iโ€™m a very proud Puerto Rican, but it was just representing the Latin community, all Hispanics. That to me was opening the doors for a lot of stuff. Iโ€™m not saying that Puerto Rico did, but look at how many PLEs weโ€™re doing outside the immediate country. I feel like the crowd reaction there got the company excited for, man, letโ€™s see what else they can do. So we were excited and thrilled for that representation. Obviously, I was nervous that the idea of this has got to be really good. Itโ€™s me versus Bad Bunny one on one in a high-profile match. This isnโ€™t just a typical celebrity match where they do two or three moves and itโ€™s hi and bye. Weโ€™re gonna go 20-plus minutes, have to get everybody emotionally invested into this and itโ€™s more than just people clapping hands for a celebrity. People need to feel sympathy, excitement, fear, you know, all of it. Thatโ€™s what you want. So there were nerves in that sense. I knew that the work was going to be put in on Bunnyโ€™s side, like I did not worry about him not being ready, but you never know how things are going to play out.โ€

On his nerves heading into the match:

โ€œYes, thereโ€™s confidence in me, but at the same time, they have to have been like, โ€˜Ah, we made the wrong decision here.โ€™ There was talk of changing it to a tag match, but at the same time, Bad Bunny and I were very adamant, we were like, โ€˜We donโ€™t want to do a tag match,โ€™ and I was proud of that one. Hands down, my favorite match, just because of what it represented, it was bigger than any win or loss.โ€

On the NXT match he had with Finn Bรกlor where everything clicked for him:

โ€œI think the first big jump was after my match with Finn Balor at In Your House at the Performance Center, just during the COVID era. I donโ€™t know, I canโ€™t even explain what happened that day, it was just something clicked and I just let loose, and I remember getting to the back and Shawn and Hunter were waiting for me and he was like, โ€˜Thatโ€™s the guy I need to see from now on. Thereโ€™s no going back, that guy that was out there, that guyโ€™s money, like, you have to be that guy always.โ€™ He said, โ€˜Stop pretending.โ€™ The match with Finn Balor, he just brought something else out of me, and then Finn and I became โ€˜boys.’โ€

You can check out Priestโ€™s comments in the video below.