Kenny Omega Talks WWE Signing New Talent, Cody Rhodes in Bullet Club, Headlining Wrestle Kingdom 11

New Japan Pro Wrestling (NJPW) star Kenny Omega recently sat down for an interview with With Spandex. You can check out what he had to say here:

 


 

On WWE signing new talent:

“It seems as though we’re headed towards a monopoly, if I were to speak honestly. WWE is hiring people just to hire them. That’s fine, and I’m happy for whoever’s happy to collect a paycheck from them. A lot of my good friends are now receiving work and receiving money. But sadly, a lot of those people are signing with WWE just to ride the pine. You can’t put all these guys on TV. On one end, you have these mom-and-pop indy superstars getting TV time, and people all around the world are able to see the art of what they do. And in a lot of cases, they’re enjoying it, which is fantastic. I’m really happy about that,” he said. “But as everyone gets picked up, as all these independent promotions have to shut down and close their doors because of WWE scooping everyone up, everyone’s going to lose an option. And that guy you saw for that one tournament, you’re not going to see him anymore. You can’t put him on TV, there’s only so much time. So eventually, people are going to run out of options.”

On having Cody Rhodes in the Bullet Club:

“It’s strange, we’ve been communicating and we’ve been really friendly with each other, but we’ve never actually met before in person. It’s cool to go into this thing with the same ideas. “I don’t know you, you don’t know me, but I know what you’re about and I like the cut of your jib, so let’s make this thing work.” Even when you don’t know a person but you hear about their dedication, it gets you excited to work with them.”

On headlining a major NJPW show:

“No, I never did, and that’s just me being honest. I always had big dreams, sort of fantasy scenarios. ‘Wouldn’t it be nice if … ?’ But given the stance of the Bullet Club members last year, we had a very clear heavyweight leader in AJ Styles. We had a dominant tag team in the heavyweight division with Machine Gun [Karl Anderson] and [Luke] Gallows. Everyone had their specific roles, and I was the junior heavyweight guy. I’d sort of come to terms with forever being the Bullet Club junior guy, so what I wanted to do was make that the best run I could. I wanted to be the champ, but I wanted to be the best champ I could be, the best champ the company has seen. And you know, the junior heavyweight title match would probably never headline the Tokyo Dome main event, so if anything, I had just seen myself bringing respect back to that division so it could be seen on the same level as some of the heavyweight titles.”

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