Mike: Columbo Wrestling
Columbo stubs out his cigarette. "That kid is gonna fly," he says quietly. "And I’m gonna catch him. With my fist."
If you look up "journeyman" in a wrestling dictionary, you might see a picture of a chiseled Adonis in neon tights. You would be wrong. You would actually see a grainy photo of a man with knuckles like busted bricks, a chest covered in a thick mat of dark hair, and the thousand-yard stare of a guy who just worked a 10-hour shift at the loading dock before driving 200 miles to wrestle in a VFW hall. mike columbo wrestling
"I’m not here for the fans," he growled into a hot mic last month after a brutal loss in Atlantic City. "I’m here because my knees are shot, my wife left me for a chiropractor, and this ring is the only place where hurting people pays better than a punch clock." Columbo stubs out his cigarette
His gimmick was simple: he wasn’t playing a tough guy. He was one. For a decade, Columbo was the king of the "Terminal Territory" indies—Promotions like Proving Ground , East Coast Chaos , and Heavy Hitter Wrestling . He held regional titles that have since been defunct longer than they existed. But ask any fan who saw him wrestle in a high school gymnasium, and they will tell you the same story: The "Overtime" match. With my fist
His promos are not written. They are confessions.
As we wrap up our interview outside a greasy spoon in South Philly, Columbo looks at the poster for his next match—a "Deathmatch" against a 22-year-old high-flier who has already announced he plans to "expose Columbo as a dinosaur."