Wrestling

Shane Taylor: I Was Told To Not Sign With ROH Because I Wouldn’t Be Given A Chance; I Wanted To Change That

Shane Taylor became one of the top names in ROH as the promotion came to a hiatus with Final Battle, but, according to him, many weren’t sure he would ever rise up the ranks due to the stigma in ROH. 

Taylor made his ROH debut in 2014 and eventually made his way to television before winning the ROH Television Title in 2019 and the ROH Six-Man Tag Team Titles in 2021. 

Speaking on Turnbuckle Tavern, Taylor explained his mindset when he signed with ROH and how many doubted he would make it as far as he did. 

“When I got to ROH, there was a lot of black talent there, but the stigma was black talent couldn’t be elevated there, they would just be there. There was no way that anybody was going to be able to reach the top of the mountain other than Jay Lethal. This is what the stigma was. I had been told numerous times, ‘don’t sign there. You’re never going to get a chance.’ People who wanted to sign there didn’t because they felt the same way. People left believing the same thing. My question to everybody when we had these talks was, ‘if nobody is here, how do you change it?’ If no one is here to fight this and fight for this change, it never changes. I made that my mission and my goal. To be the change that I wanted to see in ROH and try my best to erase that stigma,” said Taylor.

Throughout his time in ROH, Taylor helped spotlight black talent both on television and off TV. 

“I believe I made progress in changing the culture a bit with not only seeing the Black History Month stuff, but the roundtable discussion about social issues and police brutality to trying to educate fans, bosses, COOs, whoever, about what the culture is and how we can progress and market and include every fan in professional wrestling. A lot of times, I feel we only market to a select group of people and others get left out. That includes not only having people who look like them on TV, but having characters they can relate to and telling stories they can relate to and dealing with those things that everyday people go through. I believe with the creation of STP, we were able to do that. I know people love to lump us in as this new Nation of Domination because it’s easy. In my opinion, it’s a lazy route. I would more closely refer to us as the wrestling version of Rage Against The Machine,” he said.

Taylor continued, discussing the impact of STP in ROH by saying, “We wanted to change not only the way things were done in Ring of Honor, but to change the way things are done in all of professional wrestling, to be able to change the stereotypes and show that black men, and not just the quiet subdued, head down, reaching out, ‘thank you ever so much for your benevolence,’ but proud, strong, black men and women can be the faces of companies and still be just as marketable, just as impressive, just as much character depth, just as creative and run the whole spectrum that our counterparts can run. I believe we were able to achieve that, bring back tris wrestling in the states, and make that something of interest. Hats off to myself, my guys, Kaun, Moses, O’Shay Edwards, Ron Hunt for really sticking through it and fighting through the BS because there was a lot of it.”

Taylor shared a moment with STP and other black wrestlers in ROH at Final Battle as they all stood tall in the ring after Taylor’s bout with Kenny King, celebrating their accomplishments in ROH. 

Caprice Coleman spoke about the moment and what it meant to him. You can find his full comments by clicking here. 

If you use any of the quotes above, please credit the original source with a h/t and link back to Fightful for the transcription. 
 

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