By Jonathan Williams
Best known for his multiple Total Nonstop Action World Tag Team Title reigns with “The Cowboy” James Storm as Beer Money, Bobby Roode has proven himself as a capable singles wrestler after winning the Bound for Glory Series last month at No Surrender. As a result, he now finds himself just days away from the biggest singles match of his career as he challenges Kurt Angle for the TNA World Heavyweight Championship this Sunday at Bound for Glory. Having overcome Angle’s gauntlet on Impact Wrestling (pitting Roode against his Fortune stablemates in singles matches over the past few weeks), Roode appears to be in his prime heading into his first world title match. As he prepares for the main event at TNA’s biggest pay-per-view of the year, Roode talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about how ready he is for the match.
With all that’s going on in TNA with Hulk Hogan, Immortal and older wrestlers, including Kurt Angle, how do you plan on helping usher in a new era for TNA if you become the new World Heavyweight Champion?
If I become the champion, obviously just having a new face in the main event is something that a TNA original like myself, who has been with the company from day one and has never left and has been very loyal to the company, it gives a TNA original a chance to be a main eventer, to carry the company and to defend the title on a regular basis. It just opens new doors for new competitors to put on some fresh matches. So I think it’s just the beginning.
Your match is one of a few that could potentially have bigger consequences for the future of TNA. Where do you think it would leave Fortune and the other younger TNA talent if you aren’t able to defeat Kurt Angle for the title at Bound for Glory?
The way I look at it, failure really isn’t an option for me this Sunday. I honestly haven’t thought about the consequences if I didn’t win. This match is huge for me and it’s something I’ve been waiting for my entire life. If I don’t win the match, it just means the younger guys are going to have to pull up their socks and work that much harder. I think it’s going to be in the hands of myself, James [Storm], AJ Styles, even guys like Samoa Joe, the TNA originals, the guys that have built the company from scratch and have been here through thick and thin, the good times and the bad, to really step up and steal the show. Regardless of who’s going to be in the main event, they just have to prove to the world and to wrestling fans that really we’re the ones that are carrying the company.
You’ve obviously been a very accomplished tag team wrestler throughout your TNA career. This being your first singles title opportunity, how would you say your background as a tag team wrestler and being part of factions like Fortune and Team Canada may have prepared you for a match like this one?
Obviously people identify me as a tag team wrestler and the success I’ve had as a tag team wrestler has been documented with Team Canada and with James and Beer Money. But I got in this business 13-plus years ago to be a world champion and the only way to be world champion is to go out on your own and prove yourself. After almost nine years with this company, being in tag team situations pretty much my whole career, it’s time for me to step out and really prove to everyone what I’m about. Not just for me, but for James as well. I think our match last Thursday was just the tip of the iceberg of what we can do as singles guys. I think it’s just going to be a new start for this company, giving us an opportunity to step outside tag wrestling and improve ourselves. As far as preparing myself, I’ve been prepared for this my entire career. This title is something that I’ve dreamed about and aspired to for as long as I can remember.
I don’t recall you ever having a singles match against Kurt Angle. Will this be your first one-on-one encounter with him?
I actually faced Kurt a couple of years ago on Impact. It was a Thanksgiving day tournament with me and Kurt. It was a TV match, but this is probably the most important match I’ve ever had with anyone, let alone Kurt.
His tactics over the past few weeks, pitting you against your Fortune teammates each week, seems to have kind of backfired on him. Instead of causing dissension, it seems to have solidified Fortune as a unit. How do you think that will effect things going into your match on Sunday?
The matches I’ve had, I’ve obviously been successful in. Obviously my confidence level has risen being able to step in the ring against my friends and beat them at their best. The matches I’ve had with Kazarain, AJ and last week with James were some of my favorite matches to date. To be able to go out there and have great matches and be victorious in these matches has really boosted my confidence. By booking these matches over the last month, I think Kurt thought it would go in his favor. Obviously it hasn’t, so if anybody is worried about the outcome this Sunday, I think it might be Kurt, the way things are going.
Bound for Glory. $12-$153. 7:30 p.m. Oct. 16. (also on pay-per-view and in movie theaters at 8 p.m.). The Liacouras Center, 1776 N. Broad St., Philadelphia, Penn. 800-298-4200, www.impactwrestling.com.