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Browsing: Brutal
Ridge Holland has opened up in a heartfelt video following his Lisfranc surgery after breaking his foot during his September 27 match with Moose at the TNA tapings in Edmonton, Alberta.
Speaking from his hospital bed in Birmingham, Alabama, Holland gave fans a clear picture of his mindset—and itâ€s all about resilience and moving forward. Lying in recovery, Ridge revealed how he was managing the pain and the reality of yet another setback in his wrestling career.
“So just laying here, just taking my painkillers to give me some lovely hydrocodone, which takes the edge off slightly. Oh, man, itâ€s always weird.â€
He reflected on how the last seven years have been a rollercoaster of ups and downs, with injuries constantly halting his momentum just as things started to click.
“I was saying to my wife that I must be able to handle all this because for the past seven years itâ€s been a bit of a bumpy ride with the wrestling business. You know, just as Iâ€m starting to get rolling, something happens. Same again this time, you know, TNA, a couple of good matches and then, you know, this happens.â€
Despite the frustration, Ridge said heâ€s using this experience as a teaching moment for his kids—and for anyone else who might be watching.
“But again, we heal, we recover, we march forward, and Iâ€m looking forward to coming back and, you know, getting the best shape of my life. And I guess Iâ€m using this as like all these injuries and all these ups and downs. Iâ€m using it as like lessons for my kids. I guess, than anyone else that wants to, you know, that wants to take notice that no matter what happens to you, really, thereâ€s always a way back if you, if we just believe, you donâ€t even have to have a plan. Everyone always wants a plan, but weâ€re all winging it.â€
He encouraged others to keep moving forward even when thereâ€s no perfect plan in place.
“I think that you just gotta want something and take the first step and then you just pivot and adjust on certain situations, but keep moving forward.â€
Holland also thanked the medical team who performed his surgery and helped him through the process.
“A lot of support, a lot, a lot of get well messages. So I think thanks for them and great, great, you know, service of care from the Andrews Orthopedic Team here in Birmingham, Alabama. They do a lot of work with the WWE, so they truly are the best in the field. So I want to thank Dr. Waldrop and his team for taking really good care of me.â€
He closed his message by talking about his immediate plans.
“And now I just want to get home, see my kids and yeah, Iâ€ve had a couple of days off, like a bit more relaxed with a diet, which has been quite nice actually. Um, so, yeah, not looking forward to this flight home, but needs must. Hopefully this pain will die down in the next couple of days. Yeah, speak soon.â€
Ridge Holland may be sidelined for months, but his words show heâ€s determined to recover and come back stronger.
Do you think WWE and TNA should position him for a major storyline when he returns, or give him a slower rebuild? Drop your thoughts in the comments below.
When David Otunga stormed the ring with the Nexus in one of the most chaotic and memorable WWE moments of the PG era, fans thought it was just an edgy storyline. But according to Otunga, the entire angle was real, and so were the stakes—because Vince McMahon flat-out told them theyâ€d be fired if it didnâ€t look violent enough.
During his appearance on TMZâ€s Inside The Ring, Otunga gave an unfiltered look at what really went down behind the scenes before the Nexus invasion of Monday Night RAW in June 2010. As Otunga recalled, all eight NXT rookies were summoned to the show the week after the NXT finale with no idea what was going on. Nobody talked to them all day. Then, moments before the live broadcast, they were called into Vince McMahonâ€s office. Otunga said Vince McMahon and Michael Hayes laid out the shocking directive:
“Look, this is whatâ€s going to happen. We want you to go down, storm the main event. We want you to wreak havoc and tear everything up. Beat up John Cena, beat up CM Punk, everybody. The announcer, the timekeeper, tear the ring up. Weâ€re going to give you box cutters and stuff. Tear the place apart. And if it doesnâ€t look vicious enough—youâ€re fired.â€
Otunga admitted that as a relatively new talent with barely a handful of matches under his belt, he was terrified—and things got real quickly. He was given the responsibility to throw the very first punch of the ambush, and it had to be on referee Chad Patton. It wasnâ€t just a worked punch either.
“I had to throw the first punch on Chad Patton, the referee, and it had to look good,†Otunga said. “Vince said, ‘Hey, if it doesnâ€t look good, youâ€re fired.†I was like, ‘Well, we gotta really start.†Chad Patton, sorry buddy, but youâ€re going to have to eat one.â€
The angle looked so real that even the live crowd believed it had spiraled out of control.
“After we beat up everybody at the announce table, a fan reached over the railing and started ringing the ring bell—to get help,†he revealed.
Even WWE talent backstage didnâ€t know it was a work. Some were apparently ready to jump the Nexus in the locker room after the segment because they thought it was a real shoot.
Otunga also addressed the controversial firing of Daniel Bryan, who was released by WWE shortly after the segment aired for choking announcer Justin Roberts with his tie—an image that reportedly violated PG-era guidelines.
“They told us to go hard or we were fired. They never told us what the line was. In fact, they told us, ‘Go too hard and weâ€ll pull you back,â€â€ Otunga explained. “Daniel Bryan got fired for choking Justin Roberts… and I didnâ€t necessarily agree with it. He was doing what they told him to do.â€
Looking back, Otunga said that the Nexus invasion was successful because it felt authentic—because it was. The group didnâ€t know if they were still employed and were literally fighting for their careers on live television. That sense of desperation, combined with Vinceâ€s cutthroat instruction, turned the segment into something unforgettable.
It wasnâ€t just a storyline. It was a career-defining moment where failure meant getting fired on the spot.
Do you think Vince McMahon went too far with his demands during the Nexus invasion? Should Daniel Bryan have been fired for simply following orders? Drop your thoughts in the comments—we want to hear from you.
Please credit Ringside News if you use the above transcript in your publication.
September 26, 2025 6:51 am
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