The following was issued the following to us: 

WWE, Ring of Honor, and Impact Wrestling star Brian Kendrick recently appeared on the IN THE ROOM internet radio program with Brady Hicks. In this interview, he discussed training under Shawn Michaels, his biggest regrets, WWE de-emphasizing cruiserweights, and more. For the full audio interview, check out this episode here, or by searching for "VOC Nation Wrestling Network" on all major podcast apps.

Since 2010, VOC Nation has represented the greatest in wrestling, sports, and entertainment journalism. The network's roster has included Bill Apter, Ken Resnick (AWA and WWE), Stro Maestro (WCW), Brady Hicks (Pro Wrestling Illustrated), Shelly Martinez (WWE and Impact), Wes Brisco (WWE and Impact), Bruce Wirt (WNJC Philadelphia), and more.

Training Under Shawn Michaels:

He's the best, you know, as far as American style of modern pro wrestling, I think he's the perfect template. So it's amazing. And on top of that, I was a fan of his work. If I could have picked anybody to train it would have been Shawn Michaels and I was lucky enough for that to happen.

Why WWE Can’t Sustain a Cruiserweight Division:

Cruiserweights aren't physically larger than life. I'm assuming that a lot of the reason that the general audience doesn't like cruiserweight wrestling or doesn't hunger for it the most and the reason that Vince hasn't pushed it in the past is because the average male audience member thinks that they can beat up a cruiserweight. What's the point of watching somebody compete when I think I can beat them up? I think that's the reason for the lack of appeal of cruiserweight wrestling. It's not a fight. It's a fantastic performance.

How His Size Impacted His WWE Career:

It was [a factor]. It certainly wasn't the deciding factor. The deciding factor was my attitude, my lack of hard work, opportunities that I screwed up. It's a TV show, so they want people to whatever. I mean, they don't know what it is they're looking for until they get it, whether it comes in the form of The Rock or John Cena or Stone Cold or Hulk Hogan or Kofi Kingston. They don't know what form it's going to come in. I guess I can ever be mad or think that the opportunity was taken away from me because it was never there. It's not my company, it's their company. It's their show. I don't ever get upset about that.

On Regrets:

Well, just been more grateful. You know, this is certainly my time prior to the cruiserweight run when I was late 20s, early 30s before being let go. Years ago I acted really foolish and hopefully matured since then. It's not the reason I didn't become a superstar. It has nothing to do with my height. It has to do with my lack of having what it takes.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Pressure mounts on Nuggets as Nikola Jokic wins third MVP Award
Jalen Brunson shakes off injury to lift Knicks to Game 2 win
Panthers dominate Bruins to even series
LSU HC pins transfer portal struggles on reluctance to 'buy players'
Pirates announce date for 2023 No. 1 overall pick's MLB debut
Shohei Ohtani showing what would happen if he only focused on hitting
Joe Burrow shares 'support' for Bengals who requested trades
Canucks erase three-goal deficit to stun Oilers in Game 1
Watch: Pacers star ties playoff high in threes in one half
Former NFL player has major warning for Steelers QB Justin Fields: 'You can't fall into this'
Watch: Brad Marchand hurdle Panthers player on Charlie Coyle goal
LeBron James rues 'missed opportunities' against Nuggets
Cardinals star gives update on timeline for injury rehab
Police investigating Patrick Beverley incident
J.J. Watt addresses possibly ending retirement to play for Texans
Inter Miami's Lionel Messi could surpass two major MLS records
Reporter weighs in on potential Giants quarterback controversy
Cowboys to release veteran WR
Lakers want Anthony Davis' opinion in search for next head coach
Patriots exec explains why team drafted two QBs in 2024 NFL Draft

Want more Wrestling news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.