GCW promoter addresses AEW star Ricky Starks being pulled from all upcoming appearances
On Tuesday night, it was officially announced that AEW star Ricky Starks has been pulled from all upcoming GCW appearances. While speaking on the GCW Weekly podcast, promoter Brett Lauderdale addressed the situation…
“It’s a weird situation because Ricky Starks is an independent contractor. This is a whole wrestling conversation that, one of these days, this is going to be tested and something is going to happen because theoretically an independent contractor is independent and they can go and work wherever they want. In wrestling, these independent contractors don’t seem to be very independent. They are at the whim of an employer, which makes it seem like they are an employee. It’s above our pay grade. I’m just an indie wrestling company and I don’t have people under contract. These guys reach out to me. I like working with talented people and I don’t really get into their contract situation. If they make it to the point where they can appear on my show, I am to assume that everything is cleared. People don’t traditionally breach contracts on this level of wrestling.”
“I found out about this the same time as everybody else did, for the most part. I’ve stated this many times before and it’s no secret. I don’t really have a line of communication with AEW. I’ve never talked to Tony Khan on the phone or via text in my entire life. They don’t talk to me. I’m not trying to say that in a negative context, but I guess we’ve never really had to talk. Anybody from AEW who has worked with us, that’s been between me and the talent to arrange it. If they need to get permission or something, they handle that on their own. In terms of this with Ricky Starks or anybody else from AEW, I don’t really know a lot. I haven’t heard about anybody else. I’m just hearing Ricky has been pulled. Period. I haven’t been on the phone with AEW where they’ve given me an explanation or asked me any questions or anything. I have no communication with AEW over this. I don’t know where it goes beyond Ricky Starks.”
“I don’t know what the deal is. Of course I’ve heard things. I’ve heard things in many different directions. Without me hearing it directly from AEW, it’s hard to tell what’s real, what’s not, and what people speculated or making shit up in many cases. If we were to go by internet reports about AEW-GCW relationship over the last few years, every report that’s come out has been wrong. It seems like the rules or guidelines don’t necessarily exist. It’s a kind of show-by-show, person-by-person deal or arrangement.”
“I’ve always considered GCW and AEW to be on the same team. Is this meant to punish Ricky Starks? Is this meant to punish GCW? Is it somewhere in between? I just don’t know because I don’t have that line of communication. It doesn’t feel great. I would love to know if there’s something to be done or something we can be doing. We got to the point where this stuff was agreed upon, announced, and fans were looking forward to this. To promote something and have to pull it back is not ideal. At the same time, and I’ve said this many times, when you do book television or contracted talent, you do it with the understanding this could happen at any time for any reason. It sucks, but it’s part of the deal.” (quotes courtesy of Jeremy Lambert)