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    HomeSportsExit Sandman: Inside the unhinged final ride of a hardcore wrestling legend

    Exit Sandman: Inside the unhinged final ride of a hardcore wrestling legend

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    The beer, the cigarette, the Metallica song, the Singapore cane — The Sandman had one of the most indelible presentations in modern pro-wrestling history. In the same way that Pedro Morales was the ethnic babyface hero to the New York Puerto Rican community, The Sandman represented the drunk Delco county guys who would throw batteries at Santa Claus.

    But for James “Hak” Fullington, the character everyone remembers came together in multiple phases.

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    “[Philadelphia wrestling promoter] Joel Goodhart comes in one day and he goes, ‘I just saw a billboard on [Interstate] 95: Mr. Sandman Box Spring and Mattress. So you are going to be Mr. Sandman,’” Fullington, now 62 years old and freshly retired, tells Uncrowned. “So that’s how I got my name.”

    His first big break in wrestling came after training with Goodhart in Philadelphia and wrestling locally a year into his career, when he went down to the Memphis territory in 1991-92 to do a run against Jerry “The King” Lawler. “They said they wanted more of a gimmick,” Fullington remembers, “so I thought, ‘Alright, well, let me get a wetsuit and a surfboard because I’m The Sandman.’ I bought the wetsuit, no problem.

    “But I didn’t have a surfboard, so I went to Gary [Wolfe], one of the Pitbulls, and I said, ‘Gary, where can I get a surfboard?’ We go down to this huge Rock Lobster bar on Delaware Avenue on the river in Philadelphia. He told the bouncer to go up and get a surfboard off the wall. They took it off the wall, he hands it to me, goes, ‘Alright, that’s what you’re taking to Memphis with you.”

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    After a six-week main-event run in Memphis, Sandman returned home to Philadelphia and an ECW promotion which had just been taken over by Paul Heyman. Amid an environment of pure carny chaos, he continued to evolve. “I came into the locker room, [Heyman] saw the surfboard,” Fullington says.

    “He looks at me and he goes, ‘We’re breaking that over your head tonight.’ I’m like, ‘Yes, thank you.’ Because I don’t want to have to carry the thing around anyway, you know what I mean? I didn’t want to be that surfing dude.

    “A couple months later, I forgot my wrestling shoes. I’m like, ‘Paul, dude, I’m sorry, I forgot my wrestling shoes.’ He looks at me, goes, ‘I don’t give a f*** what you wear to the ring, dude.’ And then like this big bell went off in my head. I’m like, ‘Alright, I’m not wearing no wetsuit. I’m not wearing wrestling shoes. I’m going to go to the ring as I go to the building. I can just go and be myself.’ And I’m like, this is the greatest thing ever. Boom, boom — big epiphany.

    “So then a couple of months later, the kid Michael Faye in Thailand, when he got the [four] lashes with a cane, that was big in the news,” Fullington continues, “and Paul goes, ‘You know the kid in Thailand, right? The kid that’s going to get caned.’ He goes, ‘You’re going to start carrying a cane to the ring.’

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    “So we’re outside, I’m smoking a cigarette when we’re talking. There’s like, you know, like a 15-foot tree next to us out in the parking lot. Paul walks up, he rips a branch off the tree, he pulls all the little twigs off. It’s about like a four-foot branch. He goes, ‘Here, put some tape around this and cut a promo with it.’ So that — that was the evolution right there in a nutshell of how I went from Surfer Boy to Sandman with the cane.”

    Sandman makes his entrance during an ECW event in June 2006 in Trenton, New Jersey.

    (WWE via Getty Images)

    The final piece of the puzzle came together in an unconventional — and very Sandman —way.

    “So it’s me and Missy Hyatt, we’re in Queens, and there was a strip club right within like 50 yards of the place in Queens,” Fullington recalls. “Me and her are in the strip club while they’re playing my music. Somebody like Guido [James Maritato] or somebody, comes running because they knew where the hell I was. They’re like, ‘Hak, your music’s playing!’ So I went right from the strip club, right up through the front entrance of the building, and then through the crowd. And then that turned into, I’m doing this every single time now.”

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    Once the package was complete, Sandman became a true wrestling icon, from the king of the bingo hall all the way to WrestleMania.

    This past April, at Joey Janela’s Spring Break ahead of WrestleMania 42, after nearly four decades in the business, The Sandman had his retirement match, a wild, run-in and shtick-filled match against “The Invisible Man” — an undeniably entertaining spectacle which was the demented brainchild of Fullington and Janela.

    “I hadn’t had a real match in over 10 years,” Fullington says, “and I just loved the ‘Invisible Man’ idea. And Joey said, ‘Let’s do a retirement match.’”

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    “We wanted to hype it as his final match, because Sandman, he’s obviously never going to wrestle again anyways. He only does run-outs,” Janela says. “So I said, ‘Let’s just make it say it’s a final match, and we can put out a video, like the Sabu video, and after the controversy last year, the fans are like, ‘Oh man, he’s wrestling The Sandman, of course.’ And I wanted to just swerve the fans and then announce him versus the Invisible Man. And it just — it worked.”

    “I had a strip club in Delaware, right? And in the back, I had a wrestling school,” Fullington adds. “And I used to tell guys, ‘Dude, you should be able to have a match with nobody. You don’t have to have a person out there to have a match. You should be able to do that.’ And then that’s when I found out about the Invisible Man, and I thought that was totally great. Joey found out about how much I liked it, and then that was his idea. It was easier to wrestle nobody because the crowd’s so into it. The crowd is the Invisible Man, kind of, so they will go along with anything that happens out there. You can’t really do wrong in that situation. That’s why it’s easier work than working with another human.”

    It was still a real physical obstacle for someone who hadn’t really taken in bump in more than a decade. Fullington knew he would be the sole focus of the match, like an actor who is in every scene of a movie.



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