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Bobby Steveson Recalls Working With Roderick Strong In NXT, Regrets Not Asking Him For More Advice

September 13, 2024 | Posted by Jeremy Thomas
Damon Kemp WWE NXT Bobby Steveson Image Credit: WWE

Bobby Steveson worked with Roderick Strong through the Diamond Mine in WWE NXT, and he recently spoke about that experience. Steveson was in WWE as Damon Kemp and spoke with Fightful for a new interview, in which he talked about working with Strong and wishing he’d taken the chance to learn more from him. You can see highlights below:

On regretting not picking Strong’s brain more: “Yeah so I think the one regret I have is not asking him a lot more questions about his work and learning what wrestling was. Because at the time, dude, I think I was five months in when I got to wrestle with Diamond Mine and I didn’t know the etiquette of pick the veteran’s brain and just like get to know their background and how they work, what you can work on, taking them aside and like getting in the ring with them. So I was still learning what the business was. So I didn’t know how to approach them, like asking, cause I didn’t want to seem like a bother. So that’s one thing that I do regret because, like I said, I didn’t come from a pro wrestling background. So I knew who the stars were growing up, but I wasn’t the guy that was watching it religiously. It wasn’t because I didn’t like wrestling. It was just wasn’t what I was into at the time growing up. But now that I look back and I seen, I obviously wasn’t watching NXT until like I started getting the hiring process and I watched every show and every Monday and Friday night show.

“So like you look back now you get to see what him, what he did and Undisputed Era and just like going back and watch some of his matches. I was like, ‘Man, I really wish I was able to like get in the ring with the guy and just pick his brain and just like learn more.’ I’m not saying I was being nonchalant in any way or shape or form. It was just more so just like showing up to work and then doing what we had to do for promo or do the match and then just be done with it. So I wish I was able to just pick his brain more. I think that just came with inexperience too, just like not knowing what pro wrestling was and just how to go about it. But teaming with him, it was great. Just so much experience ‘cause, like I mentioned, five months in, you tend to walk your matches through step by step. A guy like that who’s been doing it for so long with the pedigree he has, he’s not gonna wanna talk about everything step by step by step by step by step. So that was a big learning thing for me too, is just like, ‘Hey, when we go out there, you don’t necessarily have to call your shine in the back. You can call it out there,’ but obviously him, his experience was way different from mine.”

On teaming with Strong at the NXT Great American Bash: “Then we did the Great American Batch with the Creeds. No, he didn’t really call us, he just kind of went out there and just did it. I was still new, so I’m like, ‘Hey, wanna punch you here, do this, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.’ Then him doing it, he just went out there and did it. So I was like, ‘Oh crap, this is like, if I can just learn to go out there and just like do it and like be able to call a lot of things out there, it would probably take like so much stress off in the back.’ Having it be like, ‘Hey, cut off is this, I’m gonna punch you here, you’re gonna roll here, I’m gonna punch you here, kick you here’ versus just going out there and then just doing it so it feels a lot more organic and then plus just take so much stress off the back. It’s like the last thing for me was wanting my matches to look so choreographed. I did not want that. So I eventually got to the point, I’m sure a lot of people get a point too, you just comes with the learning of what wrestling is. You’re not gonna be calling your matches in the out there when you’re two months in, [when you’re] brand new. So eventually it helped me a lot with working with him just to make it a point to like, even on the house shows, just to like, ‘Hey, I’ll call my shine to you out there. I’ll call the heat to you out there. If we screw it up out there, it’s a house show, but it’s also a learning opportunity too.’ So being able to work with a guy like that, it really helped a lot. Even though he doesn’t know it, it helped a lot.”