D-Von Dudley recently joined Busted Open Radio for an interview on the success of the Dudley Boyz, jumping from ECW to WWE and deserving respectÂ
âA lot of things we accomplished over the years seems like it wasnât recognized whether it was the promoters or the fans. I just felt like a lot of things we have done went unnoticed. Sometimes I feel like we werenât treated the way we should have been treated. We had to fight and scratch our way to the top. No matter what, no one was going to out perform us. Call it cockiness or whatever, but we were the greatest tag team of our time. I think going into the hall of fame will definitely prove that we were one of the greats and we should be in the same league as some of the wrestlers who came before us like the LOD.â
âIt was overwhelming to see a lot of younger talent come to us (when we came back to WWE in 2015) and tell us âHey, I remember when you guys put Mae Young through a tableâ, or âI wanted to be a wrestler because of youâ or âI remember your legendary matches with the Hardyâs and Edge & Christianâ and thanked us. New Day was definitely one of them. Weâve had great matches with New Day, but I remember several times Xavier Woods came to us and said we were the reason he wanted to be a Pro Wrestler. When you hear stuff like that from a younger generation because it says to me what we did make an impact. To see these guys show us the proper respect means a lot.â
âI donât think Bubba and I ever encountered any disrespect. I do hear about other veterans who are disrespected by younger talent, whether it is in the independents or one of the bigger federations. Itâs one of those things where every younger generation goes through it. You have that young hungry lion thatâs trying to make a name for themselves. Sometimes they go about it the wrong way. One of the reasons Bubba and I opened the Team 3D Academy is when we left the WWE in 2005, we went to several schools to get back into ring shape for an All-Japan tournament. We noticed how a lot of the younger guys were being trained right and when we noticed that, we said to ourselves the business gave us so much and we should give something back. One thing you will learn at Team 3D Academy is respect. Not only respect for yourself and the veterans, but the business in general. If you donât learn about respect for the business or the people who came before, chances are you wonât make it in this business. You have to be trained by someone who has been somewhere who knows what theyâre doing. Some Joe-Schmo who opens a random school in a barn or warehouse⌠If that gentleman never made it in the business, how can you learn from that person? Thatâs why there seems to be a lot of disrespect from young wrestlers.
âYou canât deny that ECW changed the face of pro wrestling. If there was no ECW, there would not have been an Attitude Era. No one pushed the envelope like Paul Heyman did. It was one of those things where the business had to change. We were against the establishment. We were the rebels and went out and did what we wanted.
âLeaving ECW and going to the WWE at first it seemed like we werenât going to be able to be the Dudley Boyz. It seemed like we werenât going to be able to do promos that started riots, be hardcore and be who were were in ECW, but then we had the match with the Hardyâs at Royal Rumble 2000. Thatâs when people in WWE said âwait a second, I think we have something hereâ. Now we werenât able to have the kind of promos we did in ECW, but we were able to do enough where we can say âthis is what the Dudleyâs are aboutâ.
âI remember they wanted us to put Terri Runnels though a table leading up to the Rumble. Bubba told Vince it wasnât going to work. Vince asked why, and Bubba said it was going to be in Philadelphia, people were going to cheer and it was going to be something no one saw in WWE before. When we did it, what Bubba said was going to happen, happened. We blew the roof off of the place. Even more when we did it with Mae Young. Who would ever have thought of putting an 80 year old woman though a table. Itâs one thing to do it to Terri, who at the time was young, very good looking and a sex symbol in WWE, but to do it to someoneâs grandmother? You just donât show any harm to old ladies. You can see in the clip when I put Mae on top of Bubbaâs shoulders, everybody stood up. Everybody was looking toward the runway to see who was coming out. When Bubba put Mae though the table, that place erupted. It was one of things that really put us on the map. That happened 15+ years ago and people still talk about it today.â
âIt will mean a lot for my family to see it. As a kid growing up in Brooklyn, I didnât have a Father figure in my life and my Grandmother was the one that kept everything going. Statistically, growing up in the projects with everything going wrong the way it did for me, statistically I should not have turned out the way I did. I didnât listen to any of those statistics. I wanted to make something of myself. I wanted my kids to be proud of me and to be able to look at me when Iâm gone and be able to say that my Father was someone who not only accomplished his dream, but did what he set out to do. I wanted my boys to see that. A lot of men are not good role models to their kids. I wanted to be that role model.
âFor the twins, they were there since day 1. They were there during the ECW days, the early WWE days, the Japan days, the TNA days and the return to WWE. For them, to be able to see what their Father went through to get to where he is today means so much to me. To me that means the world. That says to me no matter where you grow up, no matter what storms, no matter what hurdles and no matter what challenges are in front of you, thereâs always going to be light and sunshine. I believe Iâve done that. Iâve been through ups and downs and when most of those upâs and downs would have put you down and out for the count, I refused to stay down. For that, I want my children to be able to see that and know that no matter is in front of you, keep going. I cannot express enough hot grateful I am that when Bubba and I walk on that stage, my children will be right there and I might not be able to hold it together. Knowing what I went through to get to this level, to me that is a legacy that I am very happy and proud for to be able to leave. They will be honored and privileged to say âthat is my dadâ.â