Mick Foley On The Significance Of An Early Barbed Wire Death Match Against Terry Funk

After being reminded of a match with Terry Funk, Mick Foley took to his Facebook account to talk about the match he's most proudest of, which you can see below:

"22 YEARS AGO TODAY: the match I'm proudest of

Of all my matches, I am proudest of this one because of the lengths that Terry Funk and I went to during the course of this no-rope, barbed-wire bloodbath to put our little promotion, #IWAJapan on the map. There may have only been 150 people in that cold little gym, but after the graphic and gory photos were released in full color in the Japanese magazines, people started taking note of our promotion. Only six months later, we drew 30,000 fans a Kawasaki stadium for the fabled #KingOfTheDeathmatch tournament. I don't think it would've been possible without the sacrifices Terry Funk and I made 22 years ago today.

I wrote about this match in 1999's 'Have a Nice Day', and also extensively in 2010's 'Countdown to Lockdown' – which just might be worth tracking down at the dollar store just for that chapter!

I don't claim to be a tough guy, but my answer to veteran grappler Tracy Smother's very reasonable request to 'not do anything crazy out there, Cactus', is pretty badass – if I do say so myself. I just looked at Smothers like it was the most absurd request of all time and before stepping through the door on my way to face Funk – a match I would return from in far worse shape and than I entered – simply said, "you know I can't do that."

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