October 15, 2007

NY SPORTS GEAR.com welcomes you to shop on our site now before the holiday rush. Look for our Early Bird specials and our clearance items! Do not wait, some items are ONE and DONE!


Hulk Hogan Hand Signed 16×20 Photo – Hogan vs. Andre the Giant

September 22, 2007

Hulk Hogan Hand Signed 16×20 Photo – Hogan vs. Andre the Giant

NYSPORTSGEAR.com is proud to present

This 16×20 Photograph hand signed by Hulk Hogan. The greatest, most popular and most charismatic wrestler of all time, Hulk Hogan is the man who helped parlay the world of professional wrestling from cult following into the forefront of American entertainment. Hogan won the WWF and WCW title numerous times, and was credited with dealing Andre the Giant his first loss in pro wrestling. Hogan was soon seen everywhere — television, cartoons, movies, records and lunch boxes. This item is authenticated by All About Autographs. All About Autographs is a leading source for authentic sports and celebrity memorabilia. A Certificate of Authenticity accompanies the item and a tamper resistent holofoil is placed on both the item and the COA. The unique serial number on the holofoil is then registered in the All About Autographs Online Database which will list a detailed history for the item signed.

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Steroids and The WWE

June 27, 2007

From SI.com

In November 2005, 38-year-old professional wrestler Eddie Guerrero died in a Minneapolis hotel room due to what a coroner later ruled as heart disease, complicated by an enlarged heart resulting from a history of anabolic steroid use.

In the aftermath of that tragedy, WWE chairman Vince McMahon announced a new drug policy, one that would give “no special consideration” to anyone and would involve frequent, random drug tests performed by an independent agency.

In the wake of this past weekend’s murder/suicide case, in which steroids were found in the home of pro wrestler Chris Benoit, one has to wonder just how well the WWE’s new policy is working.

If steroids are common in pro baseball and football, then the drugs are rampant in pro wrestling, which places an enormous emphasis on the size of its athletes. Former Minnesota governor Jesse Ventura admitted to using steroids when he was in the WWE and Hulk Hogan has admitted to taking steroids for 13 years. In 1993, McMahon was charged with conspiring to distribute steroids to his wrestlers, one of whom testified that McMahon had directed him to use steroids. McMahon was acquitted by a jury in U.S. District Court the following year.

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Moreover, Bruno Sammartino refused to be inducted into the wrestling hall of fame in 2005 because he believed wrestlers were pumping themselves with steroids. More recently, a story by SI.com reporters revealed that former WWE champion Kurt Angle and other wrestlers allegedly received a wide variety of anabolic steroids supplied by Applied, the Mobile, Ala., compounding pharmacy that was raided last fall by investigators.

Of course, in wrestling, steroids are just the tip of the iceberg. While telecasts of Monday Night Raw or Friday Night Smackdown might give the impression that these athletes only work one or two days per week, the reality is that most are out there for five or six days. They perform high risk maneuvers, sometimes crashing through tables and taking steel chairs to their foreheads.

In the 1999 documentary Beyond The Mat, the wrestler known as Triple H was seen walking up the ramp following a particularly brutal match. As soon as he disappeared behind the curtain, a chiropractor grabbed him, strapped him to a bed and pushed each of his vertebrae back into place. To do so the chiropractor had to push his feet against the wall to apply enough pressure to realign the wrestler’s back. Needless to say, there is some pain there.

And when Tylenol doesn’t do the trick for pain relief, some wrestlers switch to a stronger drug — and the results are often disastrous. In 1997, Brian Pillman was found dead amidst a sea of empty bottles of prescription painkillers. In 2003, Curt “Mr. Perfect” Hennig died of a cocaine overdose. Guerrero, who had a long history of drug abuse, was using narcotic painkillers. The list goes on and on.

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That’s why McMahon’s declarations of cleaning up the sport seem to be about as genuine as O.J.’s quest to find the real killer. Size sells, and until people tire of seeing 300-pound men being choked and slammed through tables, steroids will continue to be readily available to professional wrestlers. Unless, of course, McMahon is forced to take stiffer action.

His three-hour “tribute” to Benoit on Monday night was a travesty. I can’t speak to the man Chris Benoit was before last weekend, but the man he finished as was a murderer who took his wife away from her family and his 7-year-old son away from the world. If Congress — which has involved itself in the fight against steroid abuse before — is looking for something to do, there is a billion dollar industry with an enormous fan base that needs fixing.

Call professional wrestling sports or call it entertainment, but whatever you call it, realize that people are dying in it. They are dying because they believe bigger muscles lead to bigger paychecks. But no one is telling them that they can’t spend a nickel of it if they are dead.

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WWE Chris Benoit Murders His Family

June 26, 2007

The deaths of former WWE champion Chris Benoit, his wife Nancy and their son Daniel are being treated as an apparent murder-suicide, according to The Associated Press.

AP reported that a law enforcement official close to the investigation said Benoit strangled his wife and smothered his son over the weekend before hanging himself in his weight room on Monday at their home in Fayetteville, Georgia. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution quoted Fayette County District Attorney Scott Ballard as saying that details of the deaths “are going to prove a little bizarre” when released to the public.

Autopsies were scheduled Tuesday (June 26) by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, results of which are expected to be announced at a press conference on Tuesday afternoon.


Vince McMahon – Controversy personified

June 16, 2007

On June 11, 2007, WWE aired a segment at the end of RAW that featured Vince McMahon entering a limousine moments before it exploded. The show went off-air shortly after, and WWE.com reported the angle as though it were a legitimate occurrence, proclaiming that McMahon was “presumed dead”. Although this was the fate of the fictional Vince McMahon



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