Alex Marvez's Weekly Look At Professional Wrestling
By: Alex Marvez
Credit: ScrippsNews.com
March 6, 2008
This "Starr" is radiant once again.
Nine months after an ill-fated Total Nonstop Action Wrestling run as Austin
Starr, Austin Aries has returned to prominence for the Philadelphia-based
Ring of Honor promotion. Aries vs. ROH champion Nigel McGuiness headlines
Rising Above, which debuts Thursday night on select pay-per-view outlets.
"I would have been foolish not to bring him back after his TNA stint," ROH
matchmaker Gabe Sapolsky said. "He is a great talent. The more you utilize him,
the more he shines."
TNA never discovered how best to promote Aries, whose in-ring ROH work had
caught the promotion's eye. After bouncing around TNA's X division, he became
part of Kevin Nash's "Paparazzi Promotions." Aries was then involved in an
angle involving former World Wrestling Entertainment champion Bob Backlund.
Aries, though, was often lost in a large pack of talented light-heavyweight
wrestlers. He also butted heads with TNA management, being suspended twice
before leaving.
While having previously criticized the promotion, Austin said he no longer
holds a grudge and only wishes the best for TNA.
"There are a lot of talented guys there who are really ready and deserve
the opportunity (for stardom)," Aries said. "There are so many things that
factor into why things didn't work out for me. Maybe the timing was not
right. I've analyzed it 100 times in my head. It's time to move on."
Aries has done that in ROH, where he first rose to prominence starting in
April 2004.
"Its always nice to come back to a place where you feel comfortable and
appreciated," said Aries, whose real name is Dan Solwold. "Everyone is on
the same page and working to build something together."
Austin did his part against McGuiness, drawing praise from Sapolsky as
having "the best match we've ever put on pay-per-view." That's high praise
considering the quality of ROH's offerings since shows began airing last year.
"Austin is the kind of guy that wants you to put the company on his back," said
Sapolsky, who is considered one of wrestling's brightest "bookers." "When you
do, he more than carries it."
A college baseball player at Winona State University, Aries grew up a pro
wrestling fan but had no intentions of performing until hearing from a
childhood chum who had entered a Minneapolis training school. Aries enrolled
in the same camp, began sleeping on his friend's couch and ultimately became
a wrestler.
"I never really imagined this or having any impact," said Aries, 29. "I hope
someday when fans go back 20 years from now, there might be a sentence in the
Ring of Honor history books talking about me and the things happening here."
"But so far, I don't think I've had one defining highlight. I keep trying to
make them every time I'm out there."