THE
WORLD ACCORDING TO BRUNO
July
5, 2007
Michael
Smerconish
HE remains the Living
Legend.
The distinctive voice of
Bruno Sammartino, a native of Abruzzo, Italy, sounded just fine when I caught
up with him this week at his home outside Pittsburgh, recovering from back
surgery.
"I had two [operations]
before this one, and I came back strong. I will be back in training within a
matter of a few weeks, and I'll be good as new, I hope," he said. He
sounded like he has plenty of fight left in him, particularly when the subject
is the current state of his old profession.
"I finally got
disgusted and walked away because it seems like nobody cares. People keep
dying, keep dying, keep dying. But nobody cares."
Like many across the
country, and in this area in particular, I grew up watching the man tangling on
Saturday mornings with the baddest the World Wide Wrestling Federation had to
offer. He had no equal.
Sammartino's career spanned
four decades. He was the longest-reigning champion in WWF history. He headlined
at Madison Square Garden on 211 cards, and 187 were sellouts!
I wondered what Sammartino
was thinking as he watched the Chris Benoit tragedy play out. Investigators in
Atlanta believe Benoit strangled his wife, Nancy, and their 7-year-old son, Daniel
(who suffered from fragile X syndrome, an inherited mental disability).
Their bodies were discovered
with Bibles beside them, which authorities believe Benoit put there before
hanging himself with a weight machine pulley. The Canadian Crippler was just
40.
Sammartino told me that
steroids have ravaged the sport he loves. Citing data from Irvin Muchnick's
book, "Wrestling Babylon: Piledriving Tales of Drugs, Sex, Death and
Scandal," Sammartino said there have been about 90 premature deaths in
professional wrestling over the last generation.
"And it blows my mind
that there are all these investigations in baseball, football and what have you
where there have been no reported deaths, and yet when it comes to wrestling,
it just goes on like it doesn't matter, it's not important, it doesn't
exist."
I asked the man I still
admire about the steroid culture in his era. He said that he first heard of
steroids while training at a gym in the early- to mid-1960s when he was
impressed by a bodybuilder. When he asked about the guy's regimen, Bruno was
told he was using steroids. Sammartino had no idea what that meant.
"I was 275 pounds at
the time, and I got there by training my guts out," Bruno said. By the
1980s, things had changed. Sammartino said the mindset of today's wrestlers has
been tragically refocused: "The mentality of any wrestler today is that to
make it, you have to be juiced up. Now, who's discouraging of that?"
He was quick to point at the
ringleader overseeing wrestling's devolution. He says Vince McMahon deserves
"great blame" for failing to discourage the steroid culture rampant
in his business.
Sammartino believes McMahon
doesn't explicitly encourage steroid use, but protects its destructive culture
by keeping the sport's drug testing in-house. And he remembers when McMahon
admitted to using steroids himself during a 1994 trial.
"If the head of the
organization is known to be a steroid user like that, can anyone believe the
inside drug testing that the organization does?" he asked. "I find it
extremely difficult for anybody to take that seriously."
There used to be more to pro
wrestling than the size of the competitors. It was all about Chief Jay
Strongbow's determination, Victor Rivera's athleticism and George "the
Animal" Steele's . . . animalism. I loved it, but when the latest
incarnation comes on the TV and I'm with my sons (who are at the age when I
first got hooked), I change the channel.
Sammartino understands it.
"I'm glad to hear that," he said. "Because today there's so much
vulgarity, profanity, nudity. That puzzles me more than anything else." He
also worries about kids emulating the steroid use they see rewarded.
"Today, young kids are
very knowledgeable, and they hear about so-and-so and how strong they got and
how they can improve by using these chemicals. And they're not thinking of the
serious dangers that go along with that," he said.
"Anybody who knew Bruno
Sammartino, they would know better than to ever suggest that I should ever take
anything, or anything like that."
A living legend, indeed. Pro
wrestling has long been a ghost of its former self. I hope the sport will soon
take the ultimate good guy's concerns to heart. *
Listen to Michael Smerconish weekdays 5:30-9 a.m. on the Big
Talker, 1210/AM. Read him Sundays in the Inquirer. Contact him via the Web at www.mastalk.com.