Big shout out to Greg Gagne 🔥 Stream the Full Shoot Interview ➡ruclips.net/video/NU1ssyrf-_A/видео.html ➡titlematchnetwork.com/title/greg-gagne-shoot-interview/
When Apollo 13 was in trouble, Greg flew from Minneapolis to Houston, on his dime, to personally explain to mission control how to safely bring the astronauts back to Earth . He was never thanked for his work or reimbursed for his travel.
@@GameTime-yj6qvAnd somebody else took credit for it too. CBS had approached Greg about an exclusive interview but another guy got to NBC first and paid them $6 million dollars to interview that guy instead.
Considering how many times Greg has embellished or blatantly lied about things that happened with the AWA, I have a hard time even believing this and that’s sad.
Gagne was a good athlete (played Division I football at both U of Minnesota and U of Wyoming) and a good worker. Could not draw money by himself but did draw solid money with Jim Brunzell as the High Flyers.
AWA was still drawing very well with Verne as champion. Verne retired after one last title defense against Nick Bockwinkel then Nick was awarded the AWA Strap instead of having a tournament. Verne came back a few times out of retirement. Once against Adrian Adonis and a second time against Jerry Blackwell both in Chicago to sold out building. Verne had i believe one final match against Sheik Adnan in 86 @ Wrestlerock in Twin Cities.
@andrewmachado6988 There were some speed bumps in regards to putting the AWA strap on Hulkster during his time in the AWA. $$$$$ of course being the issue
Those of you commenting about Verne's real property issues need to educate yourselves. Under eminent domain, the government can't just simply take your property. They must provide compensation. Because such compensation is usually far less than what the free market would provide, it's normally worth it to fight the proceedings, even if you make a lawyer or lawyers exceedingly rich in the process. That land is now Lake Minnetonka Regional Park. That's in Minnetrista, which is northwest of Chanhassen. It's obviously not the same parcel as his farm. Greg said the Lake Minnetonka parcel would be slowly developed to provide Verne and his wife income for their autumn years. Perhaps Verne had to develop the farm or sell it to developers to replace that income.
It started going downhill in the early 90s for me when Vince was still pushing those silly gimmicks. Once he got away from that, and began moving towards the Attitude Era, it swung back up for me. Then again in the mid-2000s it t bottomed out for me and I haven’t really watched it since. I tried watching about 6 or 7 years ago when the Network was relatively new only to find out there was a 30 day delay on Raw due to their deal with Hulu. I gave up after that because I didn’t want to be watching something that was a month old and have to delay watching the PPVs by a month just to keep on track.
@@dr.floridamanphdI've been watching wrestling since 1983.. I totally agree..the start of the downfall was in the late 90s with all the goofy gimmicks..
It started going down hill in 1992 or so. The lack of a territory system made it painful as it forced everyone to watch guys trying to become stars, instead of guys coming in already made by working territories elsewhere. You started seeing goofy gimmicks. By the Attitude Era, the characters were way better, but by then there were too many PPV events and guys were wrestling each other every week on TV instead of building a story and building anticipation over several months. Gone were the days of buying WrestleMania to see two guys finally collide after a 6-12 month storyline, replaced by paying for a match you far too often saw 6 weeks ago. Gone were the days of TV being used to promote events you had to pay for, replaced by system where TV shows were basically free PPVs, oh but you still had to pay for PPVs that were no longer as special, oh and there was one every 4 weeks.
Greg should have wrestled in different territories so he could become his own man. Vern had him beat down so much that he still remains in Vern's shadow.
Difference between being a quitter and being a realist. Verne wasn't thinking like a smart business man. However, Hogan was never going to leave WWF for Verne's dying AWA lol, Greg's full of crap.
@@curthennig9448 BRother!!! In the later days of AWA on ESPN around the mid 80s, Sgt Slaughter returned to the promotion. Greg at that point had found minor sucess as tag team wrestler. Although everyone knew he was only around because he was Vernes kid. Greg had no body nor charisma and was an over pushed super dork. When SGT returned they tried repackaging Greg for a singles run. The promotion made hilariously corn ball vignettes of Greg training in the forest with Slaughter as an actual SGT. It was basically a boot camp. They called it "Camp Slaughter". Greg head to toe in camo, head band, amd face paint! The vignettes were pure cornball gold. Greg, post Camp Slaughter would come to the ring in the same camo outfit. Which was hilarious because everyone knew he was a super dweeb nepo-hire. Greg is a total joke. Just type in "Rambo Greg Gagne" in your browser and see the ridiculous pictures that come up.
@@yoholmes273 not sure? They bought the land and built the house in the early 90’s… I’d have to get more details. They obviously don’t have an entire farm worth of land. Maybe an acre or two on a corner lot of what now is pretty developed.
Separate properties. He had a lake estate in Minnetonka and farm property in Chanhassen, which is a different area. Verne made a nice living until hardheadedness took over. @@yoholmes273
It's amazing sometimes what having too much pride can do to your own best interests. Partner with Vince and be his buddy to his face at least, then plan your next move.
@@BigBadJerryRogers That is correct. And he was friendly as any buddy could be. And Vince still took the proverbial turd on the back of his head in return.
@@PulverizerA Bruce Hart may have ruined that situation by running cards in 1985 up in Canada. It might have been a violation of the deal between Stu and Vince.
Lmao,what a load of crap. A company with no money was going to sign someone to a 6 million dollar contract in 1983? Get help Greg you pathological liar.
Greg Gagne was loyal to Shame!! Which is a good son, but at some point his dad should’ve been the bigger man and let him be his own man. At least get some WWE exposure and make money for his own family especially with Bronzelle
Vince played a huge role in the demise of the AWA, but they also didn't help themselves either. Keeping the belt on Nick Bockwinkel for far too many years and sticking with the same old tired format didn't help.
To the day he retired Nick Bockwinkel was still one of the best. Nick did not want to stay at the dance any longer and got out when he was still on top. I wrestled Nick at least 3 times and what a tremendous talent and with Bobby Heenan it was even better. Nick became a Road Agent for WWF shortly after he retired in 1987 after an All Japan tour. Nick came back in 92 to wrestle Dory Funk Jr in a great match on The WCW Slamboree PPV. Nick Bockwinkel still had an athletic body, could bump, could sell, and cut 5 star promos. FTR during Bocks time as a WWF agent he was used as a Special Enforcer Referee in Hulk Hogan matches in many of the AWA towns. In 1988 when i was with Windy City Wrestling we honored Nick and Sailor Art Thomas at the International Amphitheater in Chicago to a huge crowd pop.
@@danburnette7674 Eric Bischoff later did the same pattern of AWA in WCW. The only difference: he gave the old guys (especially the number one boy, Hogan) creative control.
Not making Hogan their champion and top star hurt them double because not only did they not benefit from having Hogan but the WWF benefitted hugely from getting him. Plus they raided the AWA of a lot of talent including Heenan, Mean Gene, Jesse Ventura, and many others.
I think verne holding the title SOOOOOOOO LONG WAS THE BIGGEST MISTAKE AWA did but I know WHY he did it , protecting the championship and a LOT OF EGO !!!! And that led to their eventual SELF destruction !!!!
Year is major point, 6million in 1983 Hogan could have bought 2 or three wwf's since Mcmahon bought wwwwwwwwf with mythical million dollar loan similar time..
@@michaelpalermo354 By the late 80s, the AWA was in shambles, losing Tv slots right and left, losing the little talent they had left to NYC, and they were going to lure Hogan back from the haven the WWF had become for him? Sounds far fetched to me
@@Signalfromabove I think his ego got him…I mean if the allegations are true (time will tell) anyone can write up and allege anything…if that is the case, he has only himself to blame.
How WWE bought the AWA video library: "It was a business deal". SOOOOO insightful! Wow, never in a million years would I have believed that was the answer. Greg Gagne is such an amazing, detailed storyteller.
Since Greg almost never answers a direct question, instead veering off into getting sympathy every time, I'll ask you all: What year did WWE buy AWA video library and trademark? I can't find it googling.
@@THE_bchatI have to google wgn paper strike. No AWA show was noticeable on my cable service area in 2001-2003. TBS was on here, no WGN anymore. ESPN just constant sports centers all day. 6million for 60 years could have been funny.
Yep, plus they got a % from the AWA dvd and Verne got a HOF payday. Greg himself was even hired as a road agent for a few months, so overall Verne and Greg got a pretty good deal.
@@acefromspace2727 The Gagnes did not receive 2 million for the AWA library. Matter of fact they didn't even receive a million. Sources place it closer to $700,000 tops. The WWE received somewhere between 750 and 1000 hours of AWA footage. I'm not sure if the Bob Luce footage is included in that total or not.
Greg Gagne would have been great in WWF. He could have teamed up with Barry Horowtiz, Steve Lombardi, "Iron" Mike Sharpe, Mario Mancini, or even the Gladiator and lose a 2 minute squash match to all of the tag teams.
Nah, Gagne and Brunzell could've had a Killer B's type run in the tag team division. Then Vince would've given him a used car salesman gimmick in the 90s.
Sad that the Gagne wrestling got leveraged out. But, a CEO has to have vision and a solid, but adaptable business model. If they can't make it...sell high $$$
Vern was old enough to know you don't put all your eggs in one basket. He did and guess what happened. Plus there's no way they were giving Hogan 6 million. If they had 6 million they probably would still be in business.
I would agree that Verne/AWA wouldn't give Hogan 6 million bucks in the early or mid 80s but Greg said it was going through the Tribune Company. At the time they may have had pretty deep pockets.
Look at what the top paid baseball or football players were making the year he’s talking about. There’s no way they were paying that to pre-Hulkamania Hulk Hogan.
Greg is confusing the timeline of events, as usual. What he's talking about at 4:45 is USSB. Its eventual competitor was DirecTV, which bought USSB for $1.3 Billion...IN 1999. So, according to Greg, "just before they (Hubbard Broadcasting) sold it (USSB)" they started making shows for them? Does he mean this is supposed to be in the 1980's, 10 years before USSB was sold? 1990s?! The AWA only did 1 PPV in company history. That was in 1988. I fear logic isn't going to fly the more I think about this...
Greg is referring to the AWA PPVs they produced which consisted of old footage. The first one was shown in May 1999 on USSB. Did well and another one was shown in Nov. 1999. From there they did monthly AWA shows until about mid 2001. Sold the AWA library in early 2003.
Little known fact, Greg convinced the Minnesota timberwolves to draft point guard Johnny Flynn with the 7th pick in the 2009 nba draft just so the golden state warriors could draft a nobody and complete bum from a small school named Stephen curry next. True story. The Minnesota timberwolves screwed hometown awa out of money in 1989 so Greg knew by telling Minnesota management to take Flynn over curry, he would now finally get the ultimate revenge. Greg as usual wins in the end.
Bought the library but hardly any at the wwe network which is disappointing cause I want to see a lot of AWA stuff but only so little they have available
It would have been "Great" to have The AWA on ESPN & WGN & NWA/WCW on TBS & TNT, with BOTH organizations working together, while having World Class & Mid-Southern involved too. NO Cartoonish Wrestling, but alot of GCW/WCW/ICW/Mid-South & FCW feel. Hogan leaving AWA was "The Dagger", but that was the start of the downfall.
Eminent domain Gagne would have received compensation for the land that was taken either by the municipality, county, or State of Minnesota. Often eminent domain cases end up in court, where a judge and or jury will decide just compensation. Usually all of your property is not taken- talking about a road or access --56 acres on lake Minnetonka would have been valuable in the 80s. High end properties and mansions around the Lake. Gagne most likely received fair market value of the property regardless eminent domain or if he sold parcels off for residential development.
He got FMV for it. That’s the law. But he wanted to hold off on selling it until he could maximize his profits from it. That’s why he was only selling one or two lots here and there.
I don't know the exact year of this interview but Greg saying the property would have been worth 200-300 million at that point is ludicrous. Verne was also taking loans out against his land to keep the AWA running. What ESPN was giving them wasn't enough. This emminent domain case started by Hennipen County started in 1988 I believe. I've never heard what Verne received for this property. He had other business deals that were failing in the early 90s and he wound up filing for personal bankruptcy in 1993 which made many of the newspapers. He was trying to protect his assets by getting shady with annuities. According to court documents in 1994 Verne's net worth was surprisingly very low.
@@curthennig9448 the interview was in 2015 or 16. The property itself was a huge tract of land on the westernmost bank of Lake Minnetonka which is one of the wealthiest towns in Minnesota. Had Gagne been able to hold on to that land, and not face financial ruin (it was mortgaged to the hilt), it’s quite possible that the land would be worth a ridiculous amount today or even when this interview took place. 200 to 300 million might be a bit of a stretch but 100 million isn’t out of the question. Hennepin County, after taking it over, built a massive park on top of it and the old Gagne farmhouse sits on it as a visitor’s center.
@@dr.floridamanphd I totally agree that it would have had great value(not Greg's number obviously). So definitely in the long run this case wound up hurting Verne and family. Verne could have sold some of that land and paid back the mortgage against it. Has anyone ever heard what the county paid for Verne's property? Greg said it took 7 years for this case to settle. Do you know when the land was converted to a park?
@@curthennig9448 it was converted sometime in the late 90s after the case was settled. As for how much? I’m not sure how to look that up. I’m sure it’s in the public record but I don’t know the first thing about looking up property transactions with the government.
Verne just never understood that Vince was taking over the AWA territory one way or another. Greg always looking for sympathy but Vince just simply outsmarted and out hustled Verne.
It would have been cool to see Greg in a tag team in the WWF. I doubt he would have liked the grueling road schedule though, but, on the other hand, the AWA had a harder schedule than almost any territory, so who knows? The whole situation sucks because of VKM. In most areas of business you’re not supposed to cut out competition. I know that’s not always enforced, but it’s in law. The AWA got screwed in many ways, behind their backs. Same for the other territories. Vince played dirty tricks on them.
The AWA had one of the better work schedules of any territory. The upper tier guys worked on average 4 days per week and still made very good money. That's why Bockwinkel stayed for so many years. Vince did play dirty pool.
@@curthennig9448 Yeah, can’t agree more. I think guys who wanted to be “family men” stuck around. That’s good, and nothing against the other guys. Of course family life got hard. I believe a more territory system is better. Then you don’t have to travel so much and your kids aren’t left behind in the dust.
Sonny Rogers, 25 yr plus in the business. Greg Gagne was a very talented wrestler having been in the ring with him several times in single matches and tags when he was with Brunzell. I won't argue with you about George Gulas but Greg unfortunately often gets a bad rap. Greg was not the GOAT but a very good talent.
@gregbailey8253 Thank you Greg for the accolades. I have a book that will be coming out soon titled " Nutshells " Half of the book covers my time in the business while the second half of the book tells of corruption in the airline industry in which i worked nearly 17 years of my life for Southwest Airlines. The airline industry and especially Southwest is more corrupt then the Professional Wrestling - Sports Entertainment business. I'm certain that i'll be receiving a few death threats when the book is close to release or released. Now there is a series that Vice should dive into " The Dark Side of Airlines ".
Na, Greg was a pretty good wrestler, particularly tag team wrestler. Was he World champion material? Of course not, but he had a really good wrestling IQ and could really work with anybody. He was too small and wasn't the most entertaining, but he could have a good classic match with anyone, and had a pretty good mind for the business. Sadly he ruined his reputation with these silly shoot interviews that are full of lies and incredible claims, now he's mostly remembered for these rather than for his good matches.
@@jonathanturbide2232 Thank you for the accolades jonathan. Yeah i agree that the shoot interviews tarnished Greg's credibility but as a talent he was very good and very over.
I hope that congress would use the Sherman anti-trust act to break up the monopoly that is WWE. Before WWE there were dozens if not a hundred or more regional federations that were at least significant enough to command television air time. Now there are only a couple but really only one super international powerhouse. Competition was better for the worker and better for the consumer.
@@MortGoldbergTalent This situation with WGN was in 1990 and Hogan was definitely making more than a million a year at that point. WGN did have interest in bringing wrestling on their station which they accomplished a few months later when WCW went with them. As for WGN giving Hogan 6 million: Find it unlikely and unlikely that Hogan would return to the AWA which was running on fumes. Is it possible there was some communication with Hogan and in turn he was using it as leverage against Vince: a slight possibility.
Vince's greed killed wrestling..competition is good but he killed it by buying out the AWA , NWA and WCWs material...devilish business man..smh..Vince made wrestling real goofy with all the silly gimmicks in the late 90s..
@@LOGICAL-JAY Whoops, I misunderstood your statement. Yes the film footage indeed. Vince was a sneaky mo-fo when getting other people's TV shows kicked off and locking up other wrestling territory's arenas.
@curthennig9448 yes indeed.. I didn't like that..I never cared for Vince...I guess im bias because I was more of fan of the AWA, NWA and WCCW back then..WWF was way too goofy and gimmicky after 1989..lol
WGN was going to air AWA in major markets. Which would allow the AWA to become visible again. And by paying $6 million to get Hogan had it worked out it would have been very interesting to see how Verne would have booked once talent started to come back. It’s actually not far fetched at all
Yeah I mean I liked AWA when I was a kid but the problem was they had all old wrestlers past their prime. I knew it wasn’t as good as WWF, WCCW or the NWA as a 7 year old. But any young talent they did get got taken away because they couldn’t afford them once they got big.
@@curthennig9448 No. They were in 1983, when, you know, the AWA actually still had Hulk Hogan. Wow. There were no newspaper strikes that Gagne mentioned in 1990. This deal was supposed to happen in 1983.
@@jim-elliott The story is definitely 1990. I know it is confusing. Verne didn't need WGN in 1983. They were rolling at the time. They didn't make ESPN until August 1985. Greg is mixing this story up completely. Joe Ciupik who worked in the AWA in 1990 backs up that there was conversation with WGN as the AWA was on the verge of going out of business. WGN went with WCW later in 1990/1991.
@@curthennig9448 Well, well, well, it seems we've stumbled upon a wrestling historian extraordinaire! I must have missed the part where the AWA had a crystal ball in 1983, predicting they wouldn't need WGN until later. Perhaps Greg Gagne had a time-traveling tag team partner we're not aware of? As for Joe Ciupik, I suppose he was the Doc Brown of the AWA, making business-saving deals with WGN in the nick of time. Bravo, wrestling time-travelers! Maybe they should have borrowed the DeLorean to save the AWA from its eventual demise. After all, nothing says 'successful negotiation' like a flux capacitor and a well-timed clothesline. 🤷♂ #AWABacktotheFuture
@@jim-elliott I don't know why Greg is mixing about 3 stories together at the same time here. 1983 was when Vince, Verne, and Greg had a meeting about the purchase of the AWA. Supposedly Vince offered 2 million and at the time the AWA was doing great business wise so there was no chance of Verne selling. I believe by the summer of 1990 the AWA knew that ESPN wasn't going to renew their contract. It was set to expire in Feb. 1991. The last set of ESPN tapings were held in Rochester, Minn. in August of 1990. Hence at that point Verne pursued his WGN connection. Not sure why it didn't work out or why WGN went with WCW. Joe Ciupik mentioned that he had seen fax communications between the AWA and WGN. As for Hulk Hogan being involved in all of this and getting a 6 million dollar per year contract is probably a bunch of hogwash.
Big shout out to Greg Gagne 🔥
Stream the Full Shoot Interview
➡ruclips.net/video/NU1ssyrf-_A/видео.html
➡titlematchnetwork.com/title/greg-gagne-shoot-interview/
Little known fact...Greg was the guy who convinced the Chicago Bulls to pick Michael Jordan because he felt " the kid might have something here".
another little known fact is Greg explained E=MC2 to Einstein and Albert stole it from him
@@TheTruth-on5zx Greg did move as fast as the speed of light!
Yeah. X-pac can vouch for that, he was there at this exact moment.
When Apollo 13 was in trouble, Greg flew from Minneapolis to Houston, on his dime, to personally explain to mission control how to safely bring the astronauts back to Earth . He was never thanked for his work or reimbursed for his travel.
@@GameTime-yj6qvAnd somebody else took credit for it too. CBS had approached Greg about an exclusive interview but another guy got to NBC first and paid them $6 million dollars to interview that guy instead.
The problem with the AWA going out of business, is that it was one fewer place for WWF & WCW wrestlers to go, if their contracts weren’t extended.
The 80s were the best. Wwf. Nwa. Awa. Mid south. Wccw ( world class from texas) 👋
Considering how many times Greg has embellished or blatantly lied about things that happened with the AWA, I have a hard time even believing this and that’s sad.
There's no way Vern was giving Hogan six million dollars back in the early 80's.
I don't believe he would go back there, but if they made that deal with WGN could afford to do it over many years
This was early 90's Hogan was leaving for WCW already, but Hogan wasn't jumping lol 😅, Greg is a great story teller.
This was not the mid 90’s. AWA closed in 1991. Hogan was not coming back to AWA if that’s what he’s implying and Verne wasn’t giving him $6 Million.
@@bigcav925 No it wasn't the mid 90's be cause AWA officially went bust in 1991. Hogan wasn't leaving WWF for Verne's 1990/1991 AWA lol.
@@Jay_Cannon i believe it was 91-92 closer to mid 90s then mid 80s as implied
Gagne was a good athlete (played Division I football at both U of Minnesota and U of Wyoming) and a good worker. Could not draw money by himself but did draw solid money with Jim Brunzell as the High Flyers.
His old man still being champion in his 50s when he looked 70 was what brought them down
AWA was still drawing very well with Verne as champion. Verne retired after one last title defense against Nick Bockwinkel then Nick was awarded the AWA Strap instead of having a tournament.
Verne came back a few times out of retirement.
Once against Adrian Adonis and a second time against Jerry Blackwell both in Chicago to sold out building.
Verne had i believe one final match against Sheik Adnan in 86 @ Wrestlerock in Twin Cities.
Not putting the belt on Hulk Hogan when he was red hot in their company was also bad as well.
@andrewmachado6988 There were some speed bumps in regards to putting the AWA strap on Hulkster during his time in the AWA.
$$$$$ of course being the issue
Verne was God awful
And a champion, yeah wrestling isn't work
@@briankregg6329 Then you should get your share of this easy $$$$ Brian but in a 52 week year you'll be busy 53 of them. Right ?
Those of you commenting about Verne's real property issues need to educate yourselves. Under eminent domain, the government can't just simply take your property. They must provide compensation. Because such compensation is usually far less than what the free market would provide, it's normally worth it to fight the proceedings, even if you make a lawyer or lawyers exceedingly rich in the process. That land is now Lake Minnetonka Regional Park. That's in Minnetrista, which is northwest of Chanhassen. It's obviously not the same parcel as his farm. Greg said the Lake Minnetonka parcel would be slowly developed to provide Verne and his wife income for their autumn years. Perhaps Verne had to develop the farm or sell it to developers to replace that income.
I been watching wrestling since 87 , it was a fantastic time to be a fan , just seem around 2015 , it just went downhill and never came back up
It started going downhill in the early 90s for me when Vince was still pushing those silly gimmicks. Once he got away from that, and began moving towards the Attitude Era, it swung back up for me.
Then again in the mid-2000s it t bottomed out for me and I haven’t really watched it since. I tried watching about 6 or 7 years ago when the Network was relatively new only to find out there was a 30 day delay on Raw due to their deal with Hulu. I gave up after that because I didn’t want to be watching something that was a month old and have to delay watching the PPVs by a month just to keep on track.
@@dr.floridamanphdI've been watching wrestling since 1983.. I totally agree..the start of the downfall was in the late 90s with all the goofy gimmicks..
Its up and down,
2015 ?? After wcw went under it went to crap. 👋
It started going down hill in 1992 or so. The lack of a territory system made it painful as it forced everyone to watch guys trying to become stars, instead of guys coming in already made by working territories elsewhere. You started seeing goofy gimmicks. By the Attitude Era, the characters were way better, but by then there were too many PPV events and guys were wrestling each other every week on TV instead of building a story and building anticipation over several months. Gone were the days of buying WrestleMania to see two guys finally collide after a 6-12 month storyline, replaced by paying for a match you far too often saw 6 weeks ago. Gone were the days of TV being used to promote events you had to pay for, replaced by system where TV shows were basically free PPVs, oh but you still had to pay for PPVs that were no longer as special, oh and there was one every 4 weeks.
Greg should have wrestled in different territories so he could become his own man. Vern had him beat down so much that he still remains in Vern's shadow.
Difference between being a quitter and being a realist. Verne wasn't thinking like a smart business man. However, Hogan was never going to leave WWF for Verne's dying AWA lol, Greg's full of crap.
AWA was still going down no matter what.
If Greg had gone to WWF/E they would have buried him
They definitely would have. Plus he was too small at a time when size and muscles were emphasized in the WWF
@@GameTime-yj6qv Greg would have called Dr. Zahorian.
And rightly so
@@curthennig9448 lol probably
@@davidgraham8299 Yes
#Justiceforvince
Hey look, its RAMBO !!!!
Was Greg wearing camoflauge?
@@curthennig9448 BRother!!!
In the later days of AWA on ESPN around the mid 80s, Sgt Slaughter returned to the promotion.
Greg at that point had found minor sucess as tag team wrestler. Although everyone knew he was only around because he was Vernes kid.
Greg had no body nor charisma and was an over pushed super dork.
When SGT returned they tried repackaging Greg for a singles run.
The promotion made hilariously corn ball vignettes of Greg training in the forest with Slaughter as an actual SGT. It was basically a boot camp. They called it "Camp Slaughter".
Greg head to toe in camo, head band, amd face paint!
The vignettes were pure cornball gold.
Greg, post Camp Slaughter would come to the ring in the same camo outfit. Which was hilarious because everyone knew he was a super dweeb nepo-hire.
Greg is a total joke. Just type in "Rambo Greg Gagne" in your browser and see the ridiculous pictures that come up.
My Aunt and Uncles house is built on what was Vernes farm in Chanhassen Minnesota.
I thought the state took over the entire area and made it a park.
@@yoholmes273 not sure? They bought the land and built the house in the early 90’s…
I’d have to get more details.
They obviously don’t have an entire farm worth of land. Maybe an acre or two on a corner lot of what now is pretty developed.
@@yoholmes273 There is a park there but it wasn't spread out over the entire property.
Separate properties. He had a lake estate in Minnetonka and farm property in Chanhassen, which is a different area. Verne made a nice living until hardheadedness took over. @@yoholmes273
It's amazing sometimes what having too much pride can do to your own best interests. Partner with Vince and be his buddy to his face at least, then plan your next move.
Like Stu Hart did. And how did he do again???
Oh, that's right. He got the shaft...
@@PulverizerA I thought Stu Hart agreed to just stop promoting, not become partners with Vince?
@@BigBadJerryRogers That is correct. And he was friendly as any buddy could be. And Vince still took the proverbial turd on the back of his head in return.
@@PulverizerA Bruce Hart may have ruined that situation by running cards in 1985 up in Canada. It might have been a violation of the deal between Stu and Vince.
@@curthennig9448 Yeah. I'm aware of the reasons Vince used to 💩all over Stu.
Excuses, excuses...
Lmao,what a load of crap. A company with no money was going to sign someone to a 6 million dollar contract in 1983? Get help Greg you pathological liar.
1990. Plus he said WGN was going to fork out the money. Can't say I believe it though.
Greg Gagne was loyal to Shame!! Which is a good son, but at some point his dad should’ve been the bigger man and let him be his own man. At least get some WWE exposure and make money for his own family especially with Bronzelle
Vince played a huge role in the demise of the AWA, but they also didn't help themselves either. Keeping the belt on Nick Bockwinkel for far too many years and sticking with the same old tired format didn't help.
Verne Gagne held the belt for 9 years and booked himself as champion.
To the day he retired Nick Bockwinkel was still one of the best. Nick did not want to stay at the dance any longer and got out when he was still on top. I wrestled Nick at least 3 times and what a tremendous talent and with Bobby Heenan it was even better.
Nick became a Road Agent for WWF shortly after he retired in 1987 after an All Japan tour. Nick came back in 92 to wrestle Dory Funk Jr in a great match on The WCW Slamboree PPV.
Nick Bockwinkel still had an athletic body, could bump, could sell, and cut 5 star promos.
FTR during Bocks time as a WWF agent he was used as a Special Enforcer Referee in Hulk Hogan matches in many of the AWA towns.
In 1988 when i was with Windy City Wrestling we honored Nick and Sailor Art Thomas at the International Amphitheater in Chicago to a huge crowd pop.
@@josecarlosramolete6109 R.H.I.P. = Rank has its Privileges being the Boss.
@@danburnette7674
Eric Bischoff later did the same pattern of AWA in WCW. The only difference: he gave the old guys (especially the number one boy, Hogan) creative control.
Not making Hogan their champion and top star hurt them double because not only did they not benefit from having Hogan but the WWF benefitted hugely from getting him. Plus they raided the AWA of a lot of talent including Heenan, Mean Gene, Jesse Ventura, and many others.
The land grabs are crazy man.
He looks a little like Bill O'Reilly.
Greg lived in a perpetual spin zone
Yeah Greg, we totally buy your WGN-Hulk Hogan story lmao
I think verne holding the title SOOOOOOOO LONG WAS THE BIGGEST MISTAKE AWA did but I know WHY he did it , protecting the championship and a LOT OF EGO !!!! And that led to their eventual SELF destruction !!!!
Verne was so cheap he wouldn’t cut hogan in on tshirt sales and we’re supposed to believe Verne was going to pay hogan $6 million??? Riiiiiight
JR is nothing but a jobber. Ruined AWA all by himself!
Don’t believe what so ever that the AWA was going to give Hogan $6 Million in 1983.
Even if they were. Vince would've matched it and given Hogan more in merchandise revenue.
@bigc2626 the lie is even worse! He is not talking about 1983, but about 1990/91!!! The gall on this guy !!!
@@maturanitaWGN was paying the $6 million based on knowing they were going to get Hogan. Thats not far fetched.
Year is major point, 6million in 1983 Hogan could have bought 2 or three wwf's since Mcmahon bought wwwwwwwwf with mythical million dollar loan similar time..
@@michaelpalermo354 By the late 80s, the AWA was in shambles, losing Tv slots right and left, losing the little talent they had left to NYC, and they were going to lure Hogan back from the haven the WWF had become for him? Sounds far fetched to me
And then did pretty much absolutely nothing with it
Greg's stories are about as believable as Hogan's.
I doubt that McMahon would give Greg Gagne a wrestler’s contract
Greg would have met up with Dr. Zahorian and became the next Intercontinental champion.
i wish Verne Gagne was still alive to see the fall of McMahon now!
Why?
The only thing that can take Vince out is Vince
@@TheNYJets15 true that, I guess karma got him in the end
@@Signalfromabove I think his ego got him…I mean if the allegations are true (time will tell) anyone can write up and allege anything…if that is the case, he has only himself to blame.
Innocent until proven guilty
How WWE bought the AWA video library: "It was a business deal". SOOOOO insightful! Wow, never in a million years would I have believed that was the answer. Greg Gagne is such an amazing, detailed storyteller.
Since Greg almost never answers a direct question, instead veering off into getting sympathy every time, I'll ask you all:
What year did WWE buy AWA video library and trademark?
I can't find it googling.
2003 according to wikipedia.
On March 31, 2003, the trademark for "AWA" was acquired by WWE according to documents filed with the USPTO.
@@THE_bchatI have to google wgn paper strike. No AWA show was noticeable on my cable service area in 2001-2003. TBS was on here, no WGN anymore. ESPN just constant sports centers all day. 6million for 60 years could have been funny.
@@THE_bchat thank you. My search was done with Portland internet access.
Not as expansive as everywhere else.
Jk
@@BuddyRose-kt1nu Big Fish in a small pond has it's drawbacks Buddy!
@@THE_bchat did it say how much they got from WWE for it?
Even if Verne let Hogan win the AWA title, Hogan would still have gone to the WWF when asked to and he might have taken the AWA belt with him.
Always the woe is me story. Always the sad puppy face. Enough whining.
Verne personally told me that WWF paid him $2 million for the AWA video library.
Yep, plus they got a % from the AWA dvd and Verne got a HOF payday. Greg himself was even hired as a road agent for a few months, so overall Verne and Greg got a pretty good deal.
Collective wwe library is asset beast
That tape library wasn’t worth close to $2 million. If Vince paid that much, it was a gift to Verne.
@@acefromspace2727 The Gagnes did not receive 2 million for the AWA library. Matter of fact they didn't even receive a million. Sources place it closer to $700,000 tops. The WWE received somewhere between 750 and 1000 hours of AWA footage. I'm not sure if the Bob Luce footage is included in that total or not.
@@curthennig9448 Ok. That sounds more realistic. I wonder how much Verne lost by not selling to Vince when he first offered to buy the territory.
Greg Gagne would have been great in WWF. He could have teamed up with Barry Horowtiz, Steve Lombardi, "Iron" Mike Sharpe, Mario Mancini, or even the Gladiator and lose a 2 minute squash match to all of the tag teams.
He still probably would have made more money than he did in the AWA
At the time Greg was looking for an Agent position or TV production.
That's after SD Jones rag dolls him all day
Nah, Gagne and Brunzell could've had a Killer B's type run in the tag team division. Then Vince would've given him a used car salesman gimmick in the 90s.
Sad that the Gagne wrestling got leveraged out. But, a CEO has to have vision and a solid, but adaptable business model. If they can't make it...sell high $$$
The NWA, WCW, AWA. Mid-South will always be better than WWF/WWE. They were the Bomb back in their day. Never will be anything like them again.
He must purify his lies in Lake Minnetonka 😂😂😂
A carny to the end.
Still telling that Hogan coming back story, I see
Hogan was the AWA champion. Real sad that the title was taken away
Twice.
Vern was old enough to know you don't put all your eggs in one basket. He did and guess what happened. Plus there's no way they were giving Hogan 6 million. If they had 6 million they probably would still be in business.
Greg said WGN was paying Hogan the 6 mil. Meaning Hogans contract would be with WGN.
Such a wonderful free country america is. Until iminant domain kicks in. 😂 freedom is delusional ignorant bliss.
I would agree that Verne/AWA wouldn't give Hogan 6 million bucks in the early or mid 80s but Greg said it was going through the Tribune Company. At the time they may have had pretty deep pockets.
Look at what the top paid baseball or football players were making the year he’s talking about. There’s no way they were paying that to pre-Hulkamania Hulk Hogan.
LMAO! I guess Vince wanted Mike Graham too? Vince would’ve made you two a team and called you the NAD connection. Not A Dime connection 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Tip your bartenders & waiters. Try the French Toast.
@@danburnette7674 The French Connection was a great movie! Don't waitresses usually get a bigger Tip?
Greg is confusing the timeline of events, as usual. What he's talking about at 4:45 is USSB. Its eventual competitor was DirecTV, which bought USSB for $1.3 Billion...IN 1999. So, according to Greg, "just before they (Hubbard Broadcasting) sold it (USSB)" they started making shows for them? Does he mean this is supposed to be in the 1980's, 10 years before USSB was sold? 1990s?! The AWA only did 1 PPV in company history. That was in 1988. I fear logic isn't going to fly the more I think about this...
Greg is referring to the AWA PPVs they produced which consisted of old footage. The first one was shown in May 1999 on USSB. Did well and another one was shown in Nov. 1999. From there they did monthly AWA shows until about mid 2001. Sold the AWA library in early 2003.
@@curthennig9448 Thank you! Wish you were along side him during this interview for clarification
@@deputay I'm not sure there's enough time in the day to rectify Greg's numerous errors.(LOL).
What year greg told verne lets quit 😂 damn Verne gagne need a movie
Had more fun watching wrestling when verne ran the awa. McMahon is great but it was less plastic back in Verne's day 😮
Why does every thumbnail of Greg Gagne looks like he's about to say "Oh Yeah? Wannamakeabet?"😂
Little known fact, Greg convinced the Minnesota timberwolves to draft point guard Johnny Flynn with the 7th pick in the 2009 nba draft just so the golden state warriors could draft a nobody and complete bum from a small school named Stephen curry next.
True story. The Minnesota timberwolves screwed hometown awa out of money in 1989 so Greg knew by telling Minnesota management to take Flynn over curry, he would now finally get the ultimate revenge. Greg as usual wins in the end.
Greg Gagne would have been a jobber at best anywhere but the AWA. Maybe if he had gone to the gym.
Greg was always jealous of the brains of Vince McMahon. That why Greg personally hated Vince and wanted revenge for putting the AWA out of business
Bought the library but hardly any at the wwe network which is disappointing cause I want to see a lot of AWA stuff but only so little they have available
Wonder why that is? It was a really popular show.
It would have been "Great" to have The AWA on ESPN & WGN & NWA/WCW on TBS & TNT, with BOTH organizations working together, while having World Class & Mid-Southern involved too. NO Cartoonish Wrestling, but alot of GCW/WCW/ICW/Mid-South & FCW feel. Hogan leaving AWA was "The Dagger", but that was the start of the downfall.
Eminent domain Gagne would have received compensation for the land that was taken either by the municipality, county, or State of Minnesota. Often eminent domain cases end up in court, where a judge and or jury will decide just compensation. Usually all of your property is not taken- talking about a road or access --56 acres on lake Minnetonka would have been valuable in the 80s. High end properties and mansions around the Lake. Gagne most likely received fair market value of the property regardless eminent domain or if he sold parcels off for residential development.
He got FMV for it. That’s the law. But he wanted to hold off on selling it until he could maximize his profits from it. That’s why he was only selling one or two lots here and there.
I don't know the exact year of this interview but Greg saying the property would have been worth 200-300 million at that point is ludicrous. Verne was also taking loans out against his land to keep the AWA running. What ESPN was giving them wasn't enough. This emminent domain case started by Hennipen County started in 1988 I believe. I've never heard what Verne received for this property. He had other business deals that were failing in the early 90s and he wound up filing for personal bankruptcy in 1993 which made many of the newspapers. He was trying to protect his assets by getting shady with annuities. According to court documents in 1994 Verne's net worth was surprisingly very low.
@@curthennig9448 the interview was in 2015 or 16. The property itself was a huge tract of land on the westernmost bank of Lake Minnetonka which is one of the wealthiest towns in Minnesota.
Had Gagne been able to hold on to that land, and not face financial ruin (it was mortgaged to the hilt), it’s quite possible that the land would be worth a ridiculous amount today or even when this interview took place.
200 to 300 million might be a bit of a stretch but 100 million isn’t out of the question. Hennepin County, after taking it over, built a massive park on top of it and the old Gagne farmhouse sits on it as a visitor’s center.
@@dr.floridamanphd I totally agree that it would have had great value(not Greg's number obviously). So definitely in the long run this case wound up hurting Verne and family. Verne could have sold some of that land and paid back the mortgage against it. Has anyone ever heard what the county paid for Verne's property? Greg said it took 7 years for this case to settle. Do you know when the land was converted to a park?
@@curthennig9448 it was converted sometime in the late 90s after the case was settled. As for how much? I’m not sure how to look that up. I’m sure it’s in the public record but I don’t know the first thing about looking up property transactions with the government.
Hulk was not leaving WWF in 1991!
A lot of thing they did wrong
Hid Dad won the title at 54
Letting Hogan go
A lot
Verne just never understood that Vince was taking over the AWA territory one way or another. Greg always looking for sympathy but Vince just simply outsmarted and out hustled Verne.
Verne screwed Verne. Was embarrassing he was still champ and refusing to pass the torch
It would have been cool to see Greg in a tag team in the WWF. I doubt he would have liked the grueling road schedule though, but, on the other hand, the AWA had a harder schedule than almost any territory, so who knows? The whole situation sucks because of VKM. In most areas of business you’re not supposed to cut out competition. I know that’s not always enforced, but it’s in law. The AWA got screwed in many ways, behind their backs. Same for the other territories. Vince played dirty tricks on them.
The AWA had one of the better work schedules of any territory. The upper tier guys worked on average 4 days per week and still made very good money. That's why Bockwinkel stayed for so many years. Vince did play dirty pool.
@@curthennig9448 Yeah, can’t agree more. I think guys who wanted to be “family men” stuck around. That’s good, and nothing against the other guys. Of course family life got hard. I believe a more territory system is better. Then you don’t have to travel so much and your kids aren’t left behind in the dust.
I don't mind Greg, but he never would have made it in the WWF in the 80s. That was the land of the Giants.
Would Greg been over in the WWF or a jobber?
JOBBER.
Greg
He has the aura of a corrupt small town politician. He stunk in the ring too. Greg Gagne versus George Gulas for the worst wrestler of all time.
Sonny Rogers, 25 yr plus in the business. Greg Gagne was a very talented wrestler having been in the ring with him several times in single matches and tags when he was with Brunzell.
I won't argue with you about George Gulas but Greg unfortunately often gets a bad rap. Greg was not the GOAT but a very good talent.
Cannot believe a word he says.
@gregbailey8253 Thank you Greg for the accolades. I have a book that will be coming out soon titled " Nutshells " Half of the book covers my time in the business while the second half of the book tells of corruption in the airline industry in which i worked nearly 17 years of my life for Southwest Airlines.
The airline industry and especially Southwest is more corrupt then the Professional Wrestling - Sports Entertainment business. I'm certain that i'll be receiving a few death threats when the book is close to release or released. Now there is a series that Vice should dive into " The Dark Side of Airlines ".
Na, Greg was a pretty good wrestler, particularly tag team wrestler. Was he World champion material? Of course not, but he had a really good wrestling IQ and could really work with anybody. He was too small and wasn't the most entertaining, but he could have a good classic match with anyone, and had a pretty good mind for the business. Sadly he ruined his reputation with these silly shoot interviews that are full of lies and incredible claims, now he's mostly remembered for these rather than for his good matches.
@@jonathanturbide2232 Thank you for the accolades jonathan. Yeah i agree that the shoot interviews tarnished Greg's credibility but as a talent he was very good and very over.
I hope that congress would use the Sherman anti-trust act to break up the monopoly that is WWE. Before WWE there were dozens if not a hundred or more regional federations that were at least significant enough to command television air time. Now there are only a couple but really only one super international powerhouse. Competition was better for the worker and better for the consumer.
With money?
Who was the money behind vince during the takeover years?
Probably Trump! (LOL)
He. Himself. He got money from Inoki booking wwf guys
Greg Gagne found the cure for insomnia
I remember when they made greg an army guy under sgt slaughter which made greg look like an a**hole😂😂😂😂😂
Greg was chopping wood with the best of them in Camp Slaughter. It was even tougher than Verne's training camp back in 1972.
Why would they have given Hogan $6 million when they could have him for $1 million at that time?
Hogan was making more than a million with the WWF at the time.
@@curthennig9448 so was this '83 or '93?
@@MortGoldbergTalent This situation with WGN was in 1990 and Hogan was definitely making more than a million a year at that point. WGN did have interest in bringing wrestling on their station which they accomplished a few months later when WCW went with them. As for WGN giving Hogan 6 million: Find it unlikely and unlikely that Hogan would return to the AWA which was running on fumes. Is it possible there was some communication with Hogan and in turn he was using it as leverage against Vince: a slight possibility.
I expect that Vince had something to do with the eminent domain issues - through influence with friends in government.
Probably true. Vince and his dad had Jimmy Hoffa knocked off for taking cuts of their house show gates in the Northeast back in the early 70s.
him and george gulas only by daddy the promoter would they exist in wrestling
Greg was actually decent in the ring, especially tag teams.
Vince's greed killed wrestling..competition is good but he killed it by buying out the AWA , NWA and WCWs material...devilish business man..smh..Vince made wrestling real goofy with all the silly gimmicks in the late 90s..
Vince didn't buy out the AWA or WCW. Vince tried to buy out Verne in 1983 but he refused.
@curthennig9448 I'm talking about the films and footage..you know what I mean..lol
@@LOGICAL-JAY Whoops, I misunderstood your statement. Yes the film footage indeed. Vince was a sneaky mo-fo when getting other people's TV shows kicked off and locking up other wrestling territory's arenas.
@curthennig9448 yes indeed.. I didn't like that..I never cared for Vince...I guess im bias because I was more of fan of the AWA, NWA and WCCW back then..WWF was way too goofy and gimmicky after 1989..lol
@@LOGICAL-JAY He had all the top stars in the US but he had to implement that cartoon feel to it.
After espn would mean late 80’s early 90’s ……. don’t make no sense
I think Greg was confusing the question as acquiring the AWA library was long after the AWA was out of business sometime in the early 2000s.
WGN was going to air AWA in major markets. Which would allow the AWA to become visible again. And by paying $6 million to get Hogan had it worked out it would have been very interesting to see how Verne would have booked once talent started to come back. It’s actually not far fetched at all
How many fucking times is he going to ask the same question?
Greg Gagne is a decent and classy man!!!
Classy? He's a compulsive liar.
He’s a carney used car salesman slime ball.
Yeah I mean I liked AWA when I was a kid but the problem was they had all old wrestlers past their prime. I knew it wasn’t as good as WWF, WCCW or the NWA as a 7 year old. But any young talent they did get got taken away because they couldn’t afford them once they got big.
The Gagnes were never business oriented people at all !
You people want to bash Greg Gagne, well, what he is saying checks out. The Chicago newspaper strike occurred between October 12, 1983 and July 1984.
The WGN negotiations were supposedly in 1990.
@@curthennig9448 No. They were in 1983, when, you know, the AWA actually still had Hulk Hogan. Wow. There were no newspaper strikes that Gagne mentioned in 1990. This deal was supposed to happen in 1983.
@@jim-elliott The story is definitely 1990. I know it is confusing. Verne didn't need WGN in 1983. They were rolling at the time. They didn't make ESPN until August 1985. Greg is mixing this story up completely. Joe Ciupik who worked in the AWA in 1990 backs up that there was conversation with WGN as the AWA was on the verge of going out of business. WGN went with WCW later in 1990/1991.
@@curthennig9448 Well, well, well, it seems we've stumbled upon a wrestling historian extraordinaire! I must have missed the part where the AWA had a crystal ball in 1983, predicting they wouldn't need WGN until later. Perhaps Greg Gagne had a time-traveling tag team partner we're not aware of? As for Joe Ciupik, I suppose he was the Doc Brown of the AWA, making business-saving deals with WGN in the nick of time. Bravo, wrestling time-travelers! Maybe they should have borrowed the DeLorean to save the AWA from its eventual demise. After all, nothing says 'successful negotiation' like a flux capacitor and a well-timed clothesline. 🤷♂ #AWABacktotheFuture
@@jim-elliott I don't know why Greg is mixing about 3 stories together at the same time here. 1983 was when Vince, Verne, and Greg had a meeting about the purchase of the AWA. Supposedly Vince offered 2 million and at the time the AWA was doing great business wise so there was no chance of Verne selling. I believe by the summer of 1990 the AWA knew that ESPN wasn't going to renew their contract. It was set to expire in Feb. 1991. The last set of ESPN tapings were held in Rochester, Minn. in August of 1990. Hence at that point Verne pursued his WGN connection. Not sure why it didn't work out or why WGN went with WCW. Joe Ciupik mentioned that he had seen fax communications between the AWA and WGN. As for Hulk Hogan being involved in all of this and getting a 6 million dollar per year contract is probably a bunch of hogwash.