Men\'s Health UK - 10.2019

(Greg DeLong) #1
MEN’S HEALTH 53

ll I see is a crowd of
jeering demon faces. There are horned
devils, court jesters, Street Fighter villains
and, in the corner of my eye, Bane himself.
What’s more, they’re all upside down. I’m
suspended in mid-air, mid-suplex, being
held aloft over the shoulders of a much
stronger man with far more tattoos than I
have. My feet touch the sky; my head fills
with blood. In a matter of seconds, gravity
will take over. I’ll hit the floor of the ring –
hard. I am, you see, a luchador.
A luchador is a Mexican wrestler – or, at
least, a Mexican-inspired wrestler. As far as
I can tell, there aren’t any actual Mexicans
in the London Lucha League. But the
people involved have embraced the ethos
of Latin America’s answer to the WWE in
all its sequined glory. The man holding
me aloft is Englishman Greg Burridge; he
was the top domestic wrestler in the UK in
the mid-2000s and has been throwing his
weight around the ring for two decades.
In short, he’s just the sort of guy you don’t
want slamming you to the ground.
Burridge runs the London School of
Lucha Libre alongside Garry Vanderhorne,

THERE’S NOTHING FAKE
ABOUT THE ENDURANCE YOU
CAN UNLOCK IN THE RING


BEHIND ALL THE
COSPLAY IS SOME
SERIOUS TRAINING

A

another wrestling legend. The school,
which sits in the Resistance Gallery, under
the railway arches of London’s Bethnal
Green, counts the renowned Rey Mysterio
as a fan, world-famous wrestler Will
Ospreay among its alumni, and ex-Olympic
boxer Anthony Ogogo as one of its current
trainees. They’re the perfect mentors for
my journey to the big time. The problem is
that I only have seven days to get there.
I arrive through a rusted metal door
and immediately trip over two topless
men grappling on the floor. Behind them,
there’s a bar replete with empty tequila
bottles and sparkling masks. The air is
thick with the smell of sweat. At first, I’m
sure the barman is barking, but it turns
out he’s just holding a pug. The clientele
come in all shapes and sizes, united only
by wide smiles and a desire to learn the
ways of the luchador. “When we set up
the school, I wanted to make it inviting
for people you wouldn’t assume were
welcome in wrestling,” Burridge explains.
“We’re an LGBT-friendly venue, and we’re
not prejudiced or biased against anyone.
If you’ve got a dream to become a pro
wrestler, we’ll help you make it happen.”
Wrestling isn’t “real”. I’m currently
being told how to fall over convincingly,
something I’m pretty sure they don’t do in
MMA. Yet I’m being taught this technique
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