Triedntrue Pro Wrestling art of War Iii Wilma Rudolph Event Center Wrec March 10

Anthony Mayweather sits at his home in Clarksville. The former 101st soldier turned professional wrestler will be the main event in next month's Tried-N-True Pro Wrestling event at the Wilma Rudolph Event Center.
  • What: Tried-N-True Pro Wrestling outcome
  • Where: Wilma Rudolph Issue Center
  • When: vi:thirty p.thousand. Sept. 6
  • Price: $15 general admission. $10 with military ID. VIP available.

CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. – When Anthony Mayweather wasn't combing through villages seeking out enemy troops, he was browsing the Web.

No, not Facebook or looking for the latest viral sensation.

Mayweather was on Amazon and eBay. He wanted Wrestlemania DVDs, TNA flicks and anything else he could accept shipped to Republic of iraq.

What he didn't know at the fourth dimension was that one mean solar day, some of those DVDs would characteristic him. Mayweather, ameliorate known by his stage name "Cerise," bounces from one terminate of the band to the other, executing a number of wrestling moves, including his signature "Ruby Sky" and "Red Alert."

Next weekend, Clarksville residents volition get a hazard to run across those moves upwards shut. Mayweather, alongside a number of other wrestlers will kick off the get-go Tried-N-True Pro Wrestling event in Clarksville on Sept. 6 at the Wilma Rudolph Event Center. The event is put on by Land Line Promotions, which has also produced many of the MMA events in boondocks.

Mayweather, a former soldier with the 1st Brigade Combat Team, said it's a take a chance to bring some high-quality entertainment to a market starved for activity.

"It's a good quality wrestling effect with a Tv proper noun," Mayweather said.

The prove is too something Mayweather has been working toward since he began his transition out of the Regular army in 2009.

A new career

Later graduating high school, Maywether, a Cleveland native, wasn't ready to go right into college. The armed services seemed like a viable option.

Mayweather was stationed at Fort Campbell from 2004 to 2009 where he served as a military police officeholder. But the gainsay patrols in Iraq began wearing on Mayweather.

"There was a menses of 73 days in a row where we received some kind of contact," he said.

Seeing fellow MPs being injured, also equally other soldiers of the 1st Battalion, 327th Infantry Regiment, took its toll.

Combat included dodging sniper fire, rocket propelled grenades and other types of potentially lethal contact.

Equally a distraction from the grind, Mayweather began thinking about what he'd do next. His friends had a proffer — wrestling.

"The other guys said, 'You know, you should actually do this,'" he said.

In 2009, after beingness honorably discharged, Mayweather, with his half-dozen-foot-5 frame, strolled into the SSF Submission Academy in Clarksville. While primarily a mixed martial arts gym, Mayweather institute room to railroad train and got to know the staff at the gym. The gym's owner, Ron Dayley, and trainer Mike Merriman, soon became his friends.

Mayweather then started working his way upwardly through the wrestling leagues. He signed with Total Nonstop Action wrestling in 2010 and has been a mainstay in the circuit ever since.

When he signed with TNA, his original wrestling proper noun "Tommy Mercer" gave way to "Crimson," an homage to Mayweather's red hair. His Ground forces grooming and conditioning helped him quickly adjust to wrestling.

"It was definitely and easier transition," he said. "They (the Ground forces) will button you to the limits. … I'd get until my torso couldn't physically become any more."

That physical endurance helped Mayweather when he soon started dealing with injuries. Simply as soon equally he originally signed with TNA, he tore his ACL. He was likewise dealing with a torn meniscus at the time.

Despite the injuries, Mayweather was withal expected to enter the ring and perform.

"There is no offseason (in wrestling)," he said. "I'd be on the road traveling and fighting through injuries."

Mayweather would merely wrap his knee in tape, hoping it would concord up until he could get surgery. The TNA writers even worked his injury into the plan scripts. And the injuries didn't stop there.

Shortly after he had genu surgery, he tore a pectoral muscle. Mayweather stuck with it, and recently signed another contract with TNA in March.

He said non only does he enjoy the performing aspect of pro wrestling, he loves to entertain the kids.

Growing upward looking upwardly to wrestlers like Hulk Hogan and the Ultimate Warrior, Mayweather understands the influence wrestlers tin take.

"I brutal in beloved with information technology," he said. "Getting to perform in front of thousands of people, it can make their (the kids') year."

Mayweather sports a Screaming Eagle patch on his wrestling trunks as well as a tattoo on his arm. "The best characters are the ones that play themselves," he said.

And Ruddy has "been to state of war."

"It's a story that tells itself," he said. "He (Reddish) is a veteran that'southward likewise a (butt)-kicker."

Story continues below photo

Anthony Mayweather works out with the ropes at the YMCA as he trains for next month's wrestling event in Clarksville.

Starting his ain evidence

Mayweather has called Clarksville home since he reported to Fort Campbell in 2003. He said with his ties to TNA, he hopes to bring in consequent talent to Clarksville.

TNA films its shows in Orlando a few days at a time. The programs are afterwards broadcast on cablevision channel Destination America. So in their downtime, wrestlers such every bit Mayweather have fourth dimension to do other things and put on their own shows.

With the aid of Stateline Promotions, which is run by Merriman, the two program to produce five to 10 events a year. Merriman said that while he knows MMA all-time, he thought Mayweather's proposal to add together wrestling events to Stateline Promotions would offer cross-promotion opportunities.

"Man, it's going to be absurd," Merriman said about the upcoming testify. "I've never seen something more interactive."

Dayley, who isn't involved in the show'due south promotion simply has trained Mayweather, said the local pro wrestler's name in the leagues will help bring in good talent.

"He'll bring in a higher level of people," Dayley said. "These guys are actually athletic. It'due south very entertaining you know, it'south fun.

"Clarksville doesn't take a whole lot going on for entertainment, or sports teams. Just SSF has a ton of pro fighters that have been all over the world."

In addition to bringing in the wrestling talent, Mayweather's goal is to provide off-post entertainment alternatives for Fort Campbell soldiers. He remembers when he was active duty and looking for things to practice during down fourth dimension. He hopes he can help fill the void.

"I want them to feel like they accept something to grab on to," Mayweather said.

He as well has aspirations of creating his ain wrestling school in Clarksville. Starting time, though, is establishing the prove.

"I call back it's a good idea, and I hope it's successful," Dayley said.

Tickets for the 6:30 p.m. Sept. 6 show are $15 for general admission or $10 with a military ID. VIP packages are likewise available.

Achieve Ray Howze at 931-245-0750 or follow him on Twitter @rayhowze_leaf.

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Source: https://www.theleafchronicle.com/story/news/local/fort-campbell/2015/08/31/former-st-soldier-brings-wrestling-clarksville/32269893/

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