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THE RING MASTER
Untitled Document
The Ring Master
BY JOE WUEBBEN
WWE founder Vince McMahon has walked the bodybuilding and fitness walk virtually
all his
life — now, at 60, this baby boomer is shooting a cover for U.S. M&F
and having a blast!
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Mr. McMahon's pants are down. All we did was ask him what kind of shape
his legs were in and if he might want to train lower body today for the shoot.
And now his pants are at his ankles and he's shrugging his arms as if to
say, Well? "My legs aren't my best bodypart — not that I have
a best bodypart." Mr. McMahon is improvising. The words coming out of his
mouth are unscripted. The photo shoot he's so enthusiastically taking part
in is not staged — well, sort of not. See, there's the photographer.
And there are the photographer's three assistants helping him set up lights
and flashbulbs and black flags to block any extra light from creeping into the
shot. The chest-press machine and preacher curl bench are being so blatantly
plopped down in the middle of all the lights and fanfare that Mr. McMahon is
undoubtedly the centre of attention. There's the make-up artist, seeing
to it that the lights don't reflect too harshly off his skin. That other
guy holding the camera with assistants of his own? That's the World Wrestling
Entertainment (WWE) film crew shooting the shoot. And, of course, there's
the WWE producer, here to make sure the shooting of the shoot runs smoothly.
But if this is staged, then why is Mr. McMahon actually working out? Why is he
sweating like a pig and grunting with each rep of five plates on T-bar rows?
Nobody told him he had to use five plates. And why can't he stop bursting
out laughing when someone tells him to be serious? And why is he being told what
to do by five people at once in the building he owns and the gym he built? And
why did he just say that he's intimidated? Mr. McMahon, giddy and taking
orders? Mr. McMahon, intimidated?
Vince McMahon is out of character. Of course, he's still a billionaire,
the owner of WWE, the phenomenon that is professional wrestling. But today it's
not about the money or even the wrestling. For once, it's about the body.
The body he has trained just about all his life is receiving the supreme accolade
of being the focus of an American muscle & fitness cover. His son-in-law
and WWE superstar Hunter Hearst-Helmsley (Triple H) would get a call at 11:30
at night: "I just got done training," Vince would tell him. "I
had to lift, and then I had to do cardio." Next day he's in the office
at 8. "He shouldn't have the time to train like he does," says
Hunter. "He works more hours than probably anyone in this company. But
he makes time for it." See, working out and being in shape is important
to Mr. McMahon. It defines not only his physique but also who he is.
It's a Saturday in early January, so normally Vince would be on a conference
call with WWE writers going over the script for the next day's pay-per-view
show in Albany, New York, not here, in the gym downstairs from his office at
WWE headquarters in Stamford, Connecticut, half naked and lifting weights for
multiple cameras. But today Stephanie McMahon, Vince's daughter and Triple
H's wife, is taking her father's place. Because his window is closing.
Seriously, how many opportunities does a 60-year-old get to pose for a magazine
cover — for American muscle & fitness no less, with his shirt off?
You can't script this stuff. Mr. McMahon firing someone in front of millions
of viewers from the dozens of cities the WWE will visit this year for RAW (on
the USA Network), SmackDown (on UPN) and live pay-per-view broadcasts? That you
can script. But not Vince growing up with a father and grandfather involved in
professional wrestling, exposing him to some of the world's greatest physiques,
then passing the business on to him. Or Vince picking up a weight at a very young
age and never setting it down, not even when he reached 60 and very easily could
have, what with travelling every other week and tearing the occasional quad or
two (more on that in a moment).
By the time Vince was 16 and being shipped off to military school in Virginia,
he had already earned the nickname "Flex" for his physical prowess.
He played baseball, American football and basketball, and wrestled, so he was
always engaged in some type of training. With a select few role models to emulate,
he latched onto the likes of Steve Reeves and whatever pro wrestlers possessed
the type of physique he strived for. "Back in my day [the '50s],
there was no Arnold [Schwarzenegger]," says Vince. "We had not one
guy to look up to unless it was a strongman at a circus or a professional wrestler.
Today it's easier for someone to emulate Ronnie Coleman or someone like
him. But I didn't really have that growing up."
AGE IS BUT A NUMBER
As the photo shoot proceeds, it's clear he's "Vince" today,
not "Mr. McMahon". And he's not your typical 60-year-old man,
either. How many 60-year-olds are 6'2", 240 pounds and ripped? How many
can weight-train with Triple H and actually keep up, even out-lift him on back
day, using 200-pound dumbbells on the one-arm row? ("He doesn't like
to admit that I'm stronger than him on certain lifts," Vince laughs.)
How many can use 1,200 pounds on the leg press — for reps?
Vince is far from looking, or acting, his age (he'll be 61 in August).
Last year, he and Triple H trained together three or four days a week. And when
he trains, he trains hard and heavy: no gimmicks, very few machines, like his
mentors of yesteryear. Heavy benching, bent-over rows and squats are his staples. "Vince
is old-school," says his training partner Steve Stone, a former competitive
bodybuilder and current NPC vice chairman of bodybuilding under Steve Weinberger
in New York. "He doesn't look for any short-cuts. It upsets him when
people give 80%. If you don't add up to something but you're giving
110%, that's admirable to him. But if you're great at 80% and he
knows you could do more, he wants you to because that's what he would do.
He doesn't expect anything out of his wrestlers that he wouldn't
do himself."
"When you're younger, it's tough to appreciate your health
and to
appreciate physical culture," explains Vince. "I always did, but
not to the extent that I do now. The older you get, the more you appreciate the
training and the results you get. I can do anything at 60 that I could do at
30. I just can't do it as often."
Talk about a model baby boomer. While many men his age will give you a list of
reasons why they can't go to the gym — family, work, chronic laziness — Vince's
schedule is as jam-packed as anyone's, but that's no excuse. "I
love training with Vince because he works his ass off," says Triple H.
Vince just wishes others would follow his lead. "What's disconcerting
to me is that while we're smarter as a species in every respect — from
an intellectual standpoint and all that — it doesn't seem that the
populace as a whole today is any more physically fit than it was yesteryear," he
says. "I just don't understand. Because, think about it — everything's
better when you're in shape. Food tastes better. Sex is better. Even breathing
is easier."
So is he a bodybuilder? His son-in-law says yes. But Vince? "I've
been building my body all my life, but I don't consider myself a bodybuilder.
Bodybuilders go onstage and pose. I have the utmost respect for anyone who can
do that, but that's not me [laughs]. I have a different stage. In our business,
you have to be larger than life, but not just physically — it's the
psychology of it, too."
The music's too loud in the gym. You can't even make out what AC/DC
is screaming. You can hardly hear what orders the photographer is barking at
Vince or what area of his form Triple H is coaching him on. A bystander goes
to turn it down. Too loud? Says who? "If it's too loud, you're
too old!" Vince shouts across the gym.
DIVING IN
Vince McMahon doesn't know how to jog. It never occurred to him sitting
backstage at the Royal Rumble in January '05. For 21⁄2 hours, he
was just sitting there, not expecting to have to go in the ring and certainly
not warmed up. Then something — presumably an unexpected plot twist — forced
him into the ring, quickly. How else was he going to get there? "I just
started sprinting as fast as I could and I dove into the ring," says Vince.
He also severed both quadriceps tendons in the process.
He was out of action for months. He and Stone were forced to work his legs back
into lifting gradually. Before you knew it, Vince was back to leg-pressing 800
pounds for reps and doing free-weight squats with a safety squat bar. It drove
his physiotherapist nuts; PTs tend to treat every patient more or less the same. "But
you can't handle Vince like an average person," says Stone. "Because
he wants to be thrown into the same ring as Triple H, and he wants to be in the
same gym as Ronnie Coleman. As far as intensity, he'll match anybody."
But when has Vince ever jogged into anything? Sprinting as fast as he possibly
can is how he got to be where he is — and how he stays there.
Vince's quads are fine now. And his knees are better than ever. Since they
had to sew his quadriceps tendons back through his kneecaps anyway, doctors figured
they'd clean out all the crap in his knees while they were at it. "They're
stronger now than even Mother Nature had intended," boasts Vince. "You
always have to turn negatives into positives."
TERMINATOR 4?
How about doing that one pose that Arnold did back in the day, Vince? That would
open up the story nicely. Just lean over this barbell and look tough. Vince is
incredulous: "I'm supposed to do something that Arnold did? Holy
shit! That's really intimidating!"
That's Vince, out of the ring, being humble. So humble that this photo
shoot almost didn't happen. Triple H shot with flex four years ago, at
which time the magazine expressed interest in Vince. "They don't
want me," Vince responded. But every time Triple H would see the US flex
Editor in Chief Peter McGough, McGough would inquire about Vince's availability.
Then when Hunter ran into McGough at last year's Olympia, again they discussed
it, and again Hunter went back to Vince. "This is the time to do it," Hunter
told him. "You're 60 years old. To show the world how good you look
at 60 — you gotta do it." Vince finally caved in.
Now Vince can't stop laughing. "Give me a serious look now," says
the photographer. "I can do serious," Vince says. He immediately
cracks up. "I have to get in the mood to do serious." Who is this
guy? Anyone who watches the WWE wouldn't recognise him. Did he just act
like he was biting that barbell with his eyes crossed? Was that the Mr. McMahon
we see on TV who just held up two miniskirts, worn in previous shoots by his
WWE divas, and asked which one we'd prefer him in?
"This is my first photo shoot," says Vince. "I don't
have a
clue."
Since when does Vince McMahon not have a clue? Since when do people tell him
what to do? Like the photographer, the photographer's assistants, his son-in-law? "Drop
your shoulders… chin up, Vince…turn towards me!"
"The one thing that will shock people about Vince is that he's actually
very shy," says Triple H. "If you see him on TV, you would never
guess. If you did business with him, you would never guess. He's not big
into showing off how big he is or anything like that. And he doesn't take
himself too seriously. Vince comes from a very humble background. After Steph
and I got married, the more I got to know him, the more I started to realise
that he's just a regular guy. He has very simple means in his life: he
needs a car to get him to where he needs to go. He needs to work hard. He needs
to train in the gym and eat good food."
Back to the Arnold pose: since when is Vince intimidated? "I don't
think you're ever really as good as you want to be to do these shoots," he
says. "So if I appear to be humble, it's not really that I'm
humble; it's that I'm realistic. But maybe intimidated isn't
the right word. I'm not afraid of anybody or anything — never have
been. It's more a matter of respect. I've always had a deep and abiding
respect for bodybuilding and the people in it, and here I am. I'm a little
kid in a sweet shop right now. For me, this is Christmas and there's a
big present under the tree."
Who says Santa doesn't exist? M&F
Check out WrestleMania 22 at www.wwe.com
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