Fair
67°
Crystal Lake, IL
Fair
Forecast »

McHenry's Thomas combines wrestling, sewing

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

He traces an outline around a tank top, shaping one of the custom costumes a fellow wrestler will wear for tonight’s show. Thomas points to a piece of notebook paper – a work list he’ll tackle over the next four nights, working as late as 11:30 p.m. He’ll stay up all night before the match to complete the work if necessary.

Like that moment behind the curtain, sewing provides Thomas with serenity, interrupted only by the low hum from a 51-inch flatscreen TV. His costume creation comes after Thomas has completed a 12-hour shift at Aptar, a plastic pipe and pipe-fitting manufacturer, where he works as a material handler.

Thomas was 18 when he first stepped into the pro wrestling ring two days shy of his high school graduation. He was learning the ins and outs, and was scheduled to only be part of a Battle Royal for that night’s event in Oak Park. But when another wrestler’s injury created an opening for someone to be part of a new storyline, Thomas stepped in.

Almost 10 years later, Thomas remembers how nervous and unprepared he felt. Despite going over what seemed like a thousand details for his match in which he would send a former champion spiraling downward toward insanity, Thomas can’t shake the memory of that first match.

“It was breathtaking and amazing, “ Thomas said. “All of my friends were out partying, and I was wrestling my first professional match.”

On a PCW card that involved The Road Warriors and “Superfly” Jimmy Snuka – the first wrestlers he ever watched on TV – Thomas won his debut match in front of 1,100 fans for a $10 check.

He was hooked.

“It was like I was doing something real here,” Thomas said.

-----

Learning professional wrestling in independent federations isn’t easy. Thomas was installing swimming pools when he graduated high school. He had every intention of becoming a plumber before planning to study to become an art teacher.

He drove a gravel truck for six years to make a living, spending his extra time traveling with his brother Vito and his “wrestling brother” Sal Tavakoli, who teamed with Brandon and Vito to form The Thomaselli Brothers. The three spent weekends driving from Chicago to Philadelphia, St. Louis or other destinations as far away as Canada. They’d pile into a car, wrestling anywhere from eight to 10 times a month, making just enough money to pay their bills before returning to their normal lives a few days later.


Reader Poll

What's your favorite campfire food?

s'mores
hot dogs
marshmallows
other