Photo Credit: Impact Wrestling

Trevor Lee Says His Best Work Has Never Been Seen On TV, Talks About Relationship With His Father

Trevor Lee recently spoke with Justin Barrasso for Sports Illustrated Extra Mustard‘s Week In Wrestling; you can read a few highlights below:

Lee says he’d like to show people the real Trevor that hasn’t been on TV yet: 

“I would love to go to WWE or New Japan. I’ve done a lot in the United States in terms of big independent companies, I’ve wrestled in Mexico, Canada, England, and India, but I’d love to go to Japan.”

“The best work that I’ve ever done in my life has never been on TV. My TV work has been to help the product, but outside of that is where you see the real Trevor Lee.”

Lee comments on his relationship with his father, who passed away earlier this year: 

“My father started OMEGA with Matt Hardy in 1997. My fondest memories are having a wrestling ring in our yard. Matt and Jeff Hardy, Shannon Moore, and guys from all over the Cameron area were training in that ring. At school, kids would say, ‘Why do you have a wrestling ring in your yard? That’s not normal.’ They would have a basketball goal in their yard, but to me, wrestling was just a normal way of life.”

“Me and my father always stuck together. He was married three times, and we lost a couple things through those divorces. When I was in the sixth grade, we had to move out of our house after a bad divorce. We ended up living with my grandmother, and me and my father actually shared the same room until I graduated high school.”

Lee added: 

“In ninth grade, my father put on a show and I saw this match between Kamikaze Kid and Ultra Dragon. They had a high-spot type of match, and I fell back in love with wrestling.

“I’d been getting in trouble a lot in school, but I just needed an outlet. My father started a new promotion, so I had a wrestling ring with regular availability and I started training again. I always knew how to take bumps. I’ve been practicing suicide dives with Jeff Hardy since I was four. My father helped me find that avenue back into wrestling. He made me believe that I was really good at wrestling, and that everything we went through was for a reason. I was extremely close with him and it was difficult to lose him. But that’s made me stronger, as well.”

Lee says he’d be interested in heading to WWE, saying it’s something his father, the late Tracy Caddell, wanted for him: 

“I’m willing to try anything. I wouldn’t mind wrestling in the 205 Live scene. It’s a good spot with great talent, I like those matches. I feel like I can compete in the top guy scene, too. Guys like Rollins and Balor aren’t that big, and I feel like I could be right there with them.

“I used to live on the same street as the Hardy Boyz and see them come home after being on the road. Ultimately, I’d love to follow in their footsteps.”

Barrasso’s article noted Lee is set to enter free agency in January after being with IMPACT Wrestling since 2015. PWInsider.com reported this week that Lee had finished up his commitments with IMPACT following last week’s TV tapings.

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