8 Wrestling Megastars That Started As Backyarders

Those that DID try that at home

By Michael Hamflett /

WWE's PSA's over the years haven't really had much need to change in tone. Most remember the ones the company rolled out from the Attitude Era and beyond, with various wrestlers describing their extremely painful injuries over shots of them suffering them - or at very least other times where they were in utter agony.

Advertisement

The audio-visual assault should have really been enough - it takes a particularly driven (and arguably damaged) person to want to drop themselves hard onto the floor every night in pursuit of a glory dictated by so few at the top of the profession. There's a sub-divide of those that may have all the aspiration but not enough of the talent, dedication or aesthetic possibility to make it out of their own back yard. So they don't.

Backyard wrestling has never been promoted by WWE as a thing to do to get a foot in the door. Outside of rare and accidental exceptions (some of which feature in this list), it's not even been glorified. Much in the same way MTV's Jackass refused to accept submissions of fans aping the stupidity on show, the company have professed to never entertaining backyard footage during talent assessment or acquisition.

That's not to say those that started at the bottom of the garden haven't made it to the top of the wrestling world. Once only famous in front of locals in lawn chairs, these later became familiar to millions...

8. Josh Matthews

One of the few original WWE Tough Enough competitors to actually carve out a career in the industry, Josh Matthews also actually admitted to being a fan of the product when he entered the training/reality vehicle unlike some of the others terrified of being labelled as marks.

Advertisement

Much of his backyard work is available to view on YouTube, and - unlike some of the competition on there - sort of stands up to scrutiny. The brawlers are at least wrestling in a ring, have assembled a small number of local fans, and are trying to ape their favourites rather than bludgeon one another with the nearest (household) implement of destruction. Not all that different then to some of the matches he called during Impact Wrestling's darkest days.

Advertisement