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Shinsuke Nakamura Reveals Why He Cried After Losing To Brock Lesnar In Japan, Why Brock Is ‘Heel To The Core’

Reddit user u/nivvd posted a translated excerpt from Shinsuke Nakamura’s upcoming biography, King of Strong Style: 1980-2014, and it reveals why Nakamura cried after losing to Brock Lesnar in 2006. Nakamura commented about Lesnar’s run with New Japan Pro Wrestling:

You had no choice but to do what the company wanted. But then Kazuyuki Fujita refused to accept a match with Brock Lesnar for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship which was scheduled to be the main event. Given your previous track record, you were selected to take his place and be the challenger.

“Part of that was luck. But that match was seriously rough. First, Lesnar was saying all this stuff about how he respected New Japan, but it felt to me like that was just for show, that he didn’t really respect the promotion. Like, somewhere, he was looking down on Japanese people. I lost the match, and that was the first time I cried at pro wrestling after a match.”

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Nakamura went on to explain why he was left to tears:

“It was the main event at Tokyo Dome. This was a pretty hallowed stage, and I knew I hadn’t fought the way I imagined I would. And there was, like, this temperature difference between me and Lesnar. I didn’t get the sense he had any love for pro wrestling. It felt like he was just doing his job.”

Nakamura also talked about Lesnar being stripped of the title due to contractual issues, and spoke about his personality:

“I felt like this was too much; he was seriously scoffing at us. Lesnar won the championship and took the belt home, I told Simon if the company didn’t get it’s shit in order, that belt was definitely going to get nicked. I didn’t honestly believe that when we fought. But it ended up just like I feared. He has the physical stuff, plus a straightforward strength and a certain amount of flexibility, so there was a bit of the monster to him. But I didn’t like his personality, you know? He might have made a real mark in UFC, but he didn’t even seem to notice the audience booing. I was like, “Oh, this guy’s a heel to the core.””

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