WWE Hall of Famer and professional wrestling Legend Brutus Beefcake recently spoke on his experience on working with The Ultimate Warrior. Both wrestlers are notable for being lovable babyfaces in WWE during the late 80s and early 90s. The event teamed up in the1990s. The duo has a famous match against Rick Rude and Paul Orndorff.
But how was the experience of the two individuals of working with each other? We cannot get to know the experience of The Ultimate Warrior since he passed away, but Brutus Beefcake recently gave his view on his experience on working with The Ultimate Warrior.
Brutus Beefcake Shoots On The Ultimate Warrior – “He Wasn’t A Very Good Wrestler”
“The Barber” Brutus Beefcake criticized The Ultimate Warrior a lot in his recent interview with WINCLY. He claimed that he was scheduled to get the WWE Intercontinental Championship at SummerSlam 1988 but The Ultimate Warrior missed it up so bad that WWE had to change the booking. And he lost his opportunity to win the prestigious WWE Intercontinental championship.
Brutus “The Barber” Beefcake in his recent interview with WINCLY revealed his experience of working with The Ultimate Warrior. He said;
“Warrior made a big mess of things there, threw a tantrum. I don’t know what happened. The plan was I was getting the belt, period. Then Warrior went blah blah blah so they had it changed at the pay-per-view, and then I did the thing with Ron Bass and tried to salvage it. It wasn’t good for me, and Honky was really upset because promises were made. When I was going to beat Honky, Honky and I were going to wrestle all around in main events trying to get the belt back for six months.
“You’re talking about a lot of money. He dropped the belt to Warrior, then that was it. He didn’t wrestle Warrior again. That took a lot of money out of his pocket, and he was not happy. I wasn’t happy. It is what it is. Sometimes you just make the best of it. You put your head down, you keep on pushing and keep on walking into the wind.
“didn’t have to wrestle him, thank God. We were partners at Survivor Series in ’88. He wasn’t a very good wrestler, per se. I mean, he had his character, and he did his thing and people liked it, muscled guy, well-built guy, worked out like crazy. I was just happy I didn’t have to wrestle him.”