Browsing: health

Former two-time NXT Tag Team Champion Bobby Fish has opened up about some recent personal and health issues heâ€s facing.

Current MLW wrestler Bobby Fish, who is known for his time in WWE NXT for being part of The Undisputed Era, has shared a heartbreaking update in a video posted on his Instagram account. He revealed that he pulled his hamstring while wrestling a few days ago and stated that he has to take care of it himself since he doesnâ€t have health insurance. He also said that he has been going through some personal stuff over the last few years.

“If I can be completely transparent here, I wanna open up with that life has thrown a few curveballs my way. Most recently, Iâ€m pretty sure I pulled my hamstring, at the very least, couple nights ago wrestling. Got some personal stuff going on over the last few years, that hasnâ€t been fun. To top it off, I donâ€t have health insurance, so this hamstringâ€s gonna have to take care of itself.â€

Bobby Fish asked for the fans†support, but stated that he was not asking for handouts, but that he wanted them to subscribe to his new YouTube channel.

“But Iâ€m not here for your sympathy. I am here to let you know that Iâ€m starting a YouTube channel, and with that YouTube channel what I wanna do is, I wanna earn your support, and the only way I know how to do that is by entertaining you. So itâ€s gonna be stories, itâ€s gonna be training, behind-the-scenes. What Iâ€m asking you to do now is click that subscribe button.â€

“If you are watching this right now, click that subscribe button, tune in. If you have cheered me, if you have booed me, if you have told me I was a piece of f*****g s**t, thank you! Letâ€s do what we can do to write this next chapter, take this journey with me letâ€s go for a ride, and letâ€s make it the best chapter yet.

Read More: Former NXT Womenâ€s Champion Has A Punjabi Prison Match On Her Bucket List

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Tom Cleverley has spoken candidly about the anxiety issues that affected his playing career.

Manchester United academy graduate Cleverley rose through the ranks into the first team at Old Trafford and ended up winning 13 senior caps for England in a career that also saw him win the Premier League title in 2012-13.

But the following season was especially difficult for Cleverley, who admits to shortcomings in his form but was negatively affected by deeply unjustified by widespread public scapegoating as he should have been approaching his playing peak.

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Tom Cleverley opens up about mental health challenges

Tom Cleverley

Tom Cleverley ended his playing career with Watford

Now in his second managerial role at Plymouth Argyle, the 36-year-old gave his club’s in-house media a revealing and heartfelt interview on matters of mental health.

“Stress is poor form. Stress is receiving abuse. And then anxiety is when that is a chronic problem, when that’s a problem that doesn’t go away and that’s what [2013-14] became,” revealed Cleverley.

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - MAY 12: Danny Welbeck, Jonny Evans and Tom Cleverley of Manchester United celebrate with the Barclays Premier League trophy in the dressing room after the Barclays Premier League match between Manchester United and Swansea at Old Trafford on May 12, 2013 in Manchester, England. (Photo by John Peters/Manchester United via Getty Images)

Tom Cleverley (R) with Man United teammates Danny Welbeck and Jonny Evans in 2013 (Image credit: Getty Images)

“There was a petition to take me out of the England squad [and] that fed into it. Another thing that happened the following year… I got burgled at home and when my home then became not a place of escape it became very suffocating.”

Cleverley was indeed taken out of the England squad and found himself back on the loan market, spending the 2014-15 season on loan at Aston Villa. He joined Everton in 2015 and, after another initial loan, finished his career with six years at Watford.

“[I dealt with it] very poorly in the beginning,” says Cleverley of his early experiences with anxiety.

“It was home from training, dark rooms, sort of Netflix and, yeah, not wanting to leave the house before the next day’s training. [It was] a very unhealthy way of coping – a really uneducated way to deal with it.”

Tom Cleverley celebrates scoring for Aston Villa

Cleverley spent a difficult season on loan at Aston Villa

Cleverley eventually sought help and credits education about breathing exercises and maintaining healthy sleep patterns with improving his ability to deal with anxiety, however it presents itself.

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“As a footballer I was always someone who judged how life was going by those 90 minutes a week,” says the former Man United midfielder. “I think a lot of people in professional football are guilty of that.

“We have to understand that there are times as a footballer you need to be strong, you need to be durable, you need to grit your teeth.

“But there are also times that it’s absolutely okay that those qualities can take a back seat and you can talk to someone.”

The Argyle manager’s account was part of the club’s support of World Mental Health Day and Mind, the mental health charity.

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Former WWE performer Bobby Horne is struggling with several health issues that have left him residing in an Intensive Care Unit. On Facebook, fellow WWE alum Leilani Kai shared that Horne is currently battling a blood infection and pneumonia at this time.

Iâ€ve known Bobby for many years — all the way back to our WWF days in the mid-â€90s. Weâ€ve worked a lot of shows together since then, and heâ€s always been the same kind-hearted, funny, and dependable person wherever we were — locker rooms, conventions, or long drives on the road.

Heâ€s going through a really tough time right now, battling a blood infection and pneumonia, and remains in the ICU. His wife Denise has been by his side every step of the way and has been sharing updates as he continues to fight and show small signs of improvement.

Please keep Bobby and Denise in your prayers tonight. Heâ€s a good man and a true friend to so many of us in wrestling.

Horne is best known for his time as ‘Mo’ of Men on a Mission, a rapping babyface group that arrived in the early 1990s. In 1994, Mo and Mabel captured the WWF Tag Team Championships during a tour of the UK, though lost the titles days later. In 1995, Mo became ‘Sir Mo’ after Mabel won that year’s King of the Ring tournament.

This current stint in the ICU is sadly not Horne’s first medical issue. In 2018, Horne required a kidney transplant and was told he’d need anti-rejection medication for the rest of his life. 2022 saw Horne struggle with a liver transplant and battle COVID, the latter of which led to him spending time in the ICU.

We here at SEScoops would like to wish Horne the very best at this difficult time.

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SPOTLIGHTED PODCAST ALERT (YOUR ARTICLE BEGINS A FEW INCHES DOWN)…

SHOW SUMMARY:Today we jump back 15 years to two back-to-back episodes of the PWTorch Livecast from Oct. 1 and 4, 2010.

On the Oct. 1, 2010 episode, PWTorch assistant editor James Caldwell and PWTorch columnist Greg Parks includes discussion with live callers the previous night’s TNA Impact – the good signs and the bad final 30 minute signs, Smackdown premiere tonight, Mick Foley and Ric Flair’s verbal exchange and the sad reality of the promo in the big picture, potential WWE PPV changes including going back to brand exclusivity, plus PPV discussion of which matches could be added to Hell in a Cell on Sunday, which young stars could be main-eventing WrestleMania in six months, and how TNA works around Hulk Hogan’s health issues for the Bound for Glory PPV six-man tag, concussion comparisons in WWE & NFL & MMA, and much more.

In the Aftershow, they break down the Hell in a Cell PPV and look at potential twists. In the VIP Aftershow, Caldwell is joined by Pat McNeill for the pre-recorded McNeill Mailbag with listener questions, plus discussion of the Mick Foley book mention on WWE’s website, and more.

On the Oct. 4, 2010 episode, PWTorch editor Wade Keller and PWTorch columnist Bruce Mitchell take live phone calls leading up to WWE Raw, including instant reaction to Linda McMahon’s televised Senate debate on Monday night, the Hell in a Cell PPV on Sunday, expected fall-out on Monday’s Raw, how WWE can spark interest in Raw going forward, and more.

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Kevin Nash is out of his latest heart procedure and already back to cracking jokes.

The WWE Hall of Famer recently revealed he was dealing with an irregular heartbeat and was scheduled for a cardioversion procedure to get things under control. Now, in an update shared to social media, Nash confirmed everything went well—complete with his trademark humor. Nash wrote on X that his heart rhythm was corrected, but not before dropping this gem:

“Procedure went fantastic. Penis reduction was a success. Actually the strain of no longer pushing blood in the entire hog brought my heart rhythm back to normal. Thanks to everyone concerned about my well being.â€

Behind the humor, Nashâ€s recent medical update is no joke. He shared on his Kliq This podcast that doctors found 3% scar tissue on the back of his heart and suggested he may have already suffered a heart attack years ago without realizing it. That revelation came as a shock, especially given his family history. Nash explained what his cardiologist told him:

“My cardiologist said that I could have had a stent put in my heart like 20 years ago. He said I might have had a minor heart attack without even realizing it. Iâ€m not kidding you. And he explained that you can measure it as a percentage—he said the scar tissue on my heart was about 3%. He said that could be genetic, or it could have happened during the procedure of putting the stent in. But itâ€s in the back of my heart, which, if youâ€re going to have something wrong with your heart, you donâ€t want anything around your arteries. So it was in the back of my heart.â€

Despite the seriousness of the condition, Nash reassured fans that his current health was otherwise strong, aside from the arrhythmia. Doctors told him theyâ€d use a controlled electric shock to restore his heartbeat:

“But like he said, everything else about me is fine. The only problem I have right now is an irregular heartbeat. He said theyâ€re going to zap me and put me back in rhythm. So thatâ€s my next thing.â€

The situation hit closer to home for Nash due to his fatherâ€s sudden death at just 36 years old. That tragic event revealed a deeper issue during the autopsy.

“When they gave my dad his autopsy, they found heâ€d had like four before the fifth one killed him. So he just kept working through them. Iâ€m thinking, wow, I hope I donâ€t have that gene in me.â€

With the successful procedure now behind him, Nash is staying positive, poking fun at himself, and thanking fans for their support.

Kevin Nashâ€s health scare is a serious reminder that even the strongest legends in wrestling arenâ€t invincible—but itâ€s good to see Big Daddy Cool still standing tall.

Do you think WWE should do more to raise awareness about heart health for its legends and current talent? Let us know in the comments.

September 24, 2025 7:51 pm

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