Cody Rhodes believes fans often misunderstand what wrestlers are actually doing when they appear to no-sell.
While speaking on What Do You Wanna Talk About?, Rhodes explained that the old-school babyface comeback was not always about pretending a move did not hurt. Instead, it was about showing toughness by refusing to let the opponent see the pain.
“I wish more people knew this, but today, if you and I are wrestling in the ring, and you hit me, and I decide not, no more, and I start hulking up, right, and I start moving, and you hit me again, nope, not again, and I start, I wish people knew today, that was very common amongst territory, 80s, babyface, the idea that, nah, it’s not a not sell, it’s a, I’m pretending not to be hurting. Right, it hurts, actually, but I’m not letting you feel it. But I’m not letting you know that.”
The American Nightmare said Hulk Hogan turned that idea into the famous “Hulk-Up,” but it existed long before him with many top babyfaces, including Chief Jay Strongbow and Dusty Rhodes.
“When, as much as Hogan absolutely took over it all, but when he created it as the Hulk-Up, it’s now made it so that this thing is a Hulk-Up, which is amazing, a credit to him for creating it, but I wish people knew, that used to be every top babyface, at a certain point, whether it was Chief Jay, with the war dance. Chief Jay, when he used to, of course, the war dance, of course. Or my old man, when it’s, nope, we’re done, that was your way, and it’s different.”
Cody also brought up Japanese wrestling psychology, saying fans sometimes misread that style too. He explained that wrestlers are not ignoring pain, they are selling the idea that they are trying to hide it.
“In Japanese wrestling, a lot of people talk about how there’s not selling, and they don’t realize, no, they’re selling that they’re not hurt. That’s what they’re selling, I’m good, I’m good, and then you find out they’re not.”
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