That's Bob's every day story. What I don't get is why he accpeted it. Wasn't there a contract that said you would serve a time as a jobber and then win? I guess people prefer hot guys in the knocked out than with his 2 arms up. And is Emory stupid? He saw Santana in the top of the ropes, about to fly towards him, and just stood there, almost with open arms to recieve him instead of moving aside. So fixed IMO. He deserved the career he got for selling himself.
How could a tall, handsome, chiseled, beautifully built athlete like Bob lose a match to a short, chunky, graceless dud like Santana? Ricky overwhelms young Bob early on, making it clear who was the dominant wrestler from the get-go. Bob is stunned at how a weaker and less agile punk could be getting the best of him, but is forced to submit to his dumpy opponent. That tiny blue bikini never brings Bob much luck: he even seems to help Santana by waiting there until he jumps on him for the pin!
That's Bob's every day story. What I don't get is why he accpeted it. Wasn't there a contract that said you would serve a time as a jobber and then win? I guess people prefer hot guys in the knocked out than with his 2 arms up. And is Emory stupid? He saw Santana in the top of the ropes, about to fly towards him, and just stood there, almost with open arms to recieve him instead of moving aside. So fixed IMO. He deserved the career he got for selling himself.
jabuzcool 2 years ago
How could a tall, handsome, chiseled, beautifully built athlete like Bob lose a match to a short, chunky, graceless dud like Santana? Ricky overwhelms young Bob early on, making it clear who was the dominant wrestler from the get-go. Bob is stunned at how a weaker and less agile punk could be getting the best of him, but is forced to submit to his dumpy opponent. That tiny blue bikini never brings Bob much luck: he even seems to help Santana by waiting there until he jumps on him for the pin!
RogerEmory 2 years ago 8