Chris Brown #6 Page 2
After having that
happen one or two times, I became known as the “after show” drinker. Many of
the guys could drink all the beer they wanted to and still remember every move,
every detail, but me, well, I had to limit my drinking to after the show and
then I could remember all my spots.
[Insert a shameless disclaimer to the boys I’m
currently working with in Florida and Georgia: “Big Business” has gotten
much better at this now, so no worries.]
OK, let me tell
you about the ice fields. Tennessee and Kentucky can be near unbearable when
some of those winter storms come through, and I have to tell you that in all my
years of road travel with wrestling and my day job, I’ve NEVER, EVER seen ice
storms as bad as I’ve seen in Tennessee and Kentucky. I’m not talking about
a little ice frosting on the trees that you might see in some cute Christmas
card, I’m talking about everything in sight that is frozen solid.
It was either the
winter of ‘94 or ’95, but I distinctively remember driving down the
interstate from Nashville to Memphis and being a nervous wreck because all of
the trees were bowed over due to the weight of the ice, and it was like driving
down a huge hallway with this ceiling of trees overhead. You could literally
look down the interstate and see falling projectiles of ice that would break
away from the trees and crash on the road.
Not good! It’s
amazing that I never got the car hit by one of those. Every three or four miles
you’d come to a dead stop because a tree would have fallen in the road.
All the boys knew
that “Big Business” was from Florida and didn’t drive so well in snow and
ice. I’ve gotten better at it now but it’s still a bit intimidating.
It was typical
that the run from Nashville to Memphis took about 3.5 – 4 hours, and due to
the weather we knew that if we didn’t leave Sunday we wouldn’t make it for
the Monday night show at the Mid-South Coliseum. So I had Eddie Gilbert sitting
up front with me, he was on the passenger side. Doug Gilbert and Tommy Rich were
sitting in the back seat.
It took us seven
hours to make half the trip and around 3:00 or 4:00 p.m., Sunday afternoon we
finally had to get off the interstate and head for a hotel; all the roads were
backed up and Eddie just couldn’t take it anymore. Every time I would stop the
car, it would slide about two or three feet. I think that Nissan Altima still
has his nail prints embedded in the dashboard. He would keep saying,
“Business,” damn, will you please let me drive!” Doug and Tommy
just laughed because they knew he was scared to death.
I was getting just
as scared. I didn’t like that little two or three foot sliding gimmick at
every stop, so we all stopped about 20 miles outside of Jackson, TN and checked
into a Days Inn. Now here is where you know it’s bad. Around 7:00 p.m., the
cable at the hotel goes off - not a good sign. Around 9:00 p.m., the electricity
goes off - and you know what: it NEVER came back on, not during the night, not
even the next morning. In fact, I think we might have gotten our hotel rooms for
free because there was no way to check out. I think that is the coldest shower I
ever took - in the dark too!
I remember meeting
the boys down in the parking lot around 11:00 a.m., Monday, and there was a
solid layer of ice about three inches thick in the parking lot and ice had
totally covered the car. Well, we hopped right back in the car and made it into
Memphis around 6:00 p.m., just in time to get to the locker room, get dressed
and do the show.
And that is just
one story, there are many more like them. It wasn’t uncommon to have shows
cancelled because the ring couldn’t make it due to weather conditions. Even
when some of the shows did go, some of the guys didn’t make it.
Oooooh, here is
another good little story. I’m driving a Cadillac rental car and was right
behind Brian Christopher. We were leaving a hotel near Evansville on another
cold and blustery day. He thought he’d pull a little rib on me my stopping his
car, getting out and motioning like he was going to throw a styrofoam cup full
of tomato juice at the car. Well, he wasn’t planning on it, but the styrofoam
slipped from his hand and landed right on my windshield. He just kept saying
over and over, “Biz,” I’m so sorry, damn, I’m sorry.” Well, the cup
exploded when it hit the windshield but the tomato juice froze on contact, and
it’s pretty embarrassing to be driving a nice new Cadillac with the windshield
looking like red frozen ice, but that’s what we did that day. Ahhhhhhhhh,
those fond memories of life on the road.
Well, I can see I wrote WAY too much this month. I think I’m 1.5 pages over my
limit, so we’ll save some stories for next month. I want to tell you about the
dome lights while driving at night, and exactly how do you stay awake during
nighttime drives when you have six or seven hours in the car and everyone is
asleep but you?
In February, I
have to tell you about some of my breaks and bruises, which ultimately required
surgery to fix. Alas, at least “Big Biz” knows what NOT to do in the future
and now I try to be a little safer in anything I do by ringside.
Until next month,
I hope you have a great Holiday Season, and I wish a hearty Merry Christmas to
all.