In an interview for Vlad TV, Mark Henry went into a number of things about his career in wrestling and a few things about his Olympic run. One of the things he went into was match psychology and how he learned it. He even went as far as to say that he was a master of psychology. Did he actually achieve such levels of reading the crowd and telling a story in a match in his career?
Mark Henry and the Coveted 10-Year Contract
What is a fact is that Mark Henry loved wrestling since he was a kid. He was watching the stuff at a great time too as his home state of Texas would’ve had two large territories to catch action from: Fritz Von Erich’s WCCW and the Joe Blanchard’s Southwest Championship Wrestling.
After a powerlifting career that included several national and world championships, he would debut in WWE in 1996. First, it was in an interview segment but after the Olympic Games that year, he would join the promotion under a 10-year contract.
Now, these contracts then were excessive. Vince signed Mark skills unseen. Sure, he knew of the Olympian’s strength and the 24-year old powerhouse had something of a presence to him—which was nothing compared to how he shaped up towards the end of his in-ring career—but this was going to be an investment for WWE.
Mark debuted not long after he signed. The training period had to be extremely short and the company hadn’t established a concrete developmental agreement at this time. He was involved in several angles and showed some glimmers of potential during the Attitude Era but nothing that really made him standout from other super heavyweights.
Hell, years earlier, the company had the likes of Bam Bam Bigelow and John “Earthquake” Tenta—two great super heavyweights. When Mark Henry arrived, they still had Vader who is often included as a top three super heavyweight. But those guys had experience behind them. They weren’t exactly popping fresh out of the oven.
A Look Into the Future
Mark Henry was extremely green when he was added as a member of the Nation of Domination and his career would take a strange path over the following 20 years. Next time, we’re going to get into how WWE’s investment panned out during the big man’s active career.
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