Paul Wight hoping to return to the ring, says Tony Khan paid him ‘sh*t ton of money’ to wrestle

Photo Courtesy: Ricky Havlik

There are plans for Wight to go on a run as Captain Insano. 

The next stadium show for AEW is taking place in February. The company is heading over to Suncorp Stadium in Milton, Australia for their Grand Slam event.

Paul Wight was in Australia promoting the forthcoming special and he guest appeared on Downunder The Ring. He said he’s hoping to return to in-ring competition. Wight added that Tony Khan paid him a ‘sh*t ton of money’ to wrestle and he has not been able to do much of anything.

God, I hope so (I can get back in the ring) because Tony Khan paid me a sh*t ton of money to get in the ring and so far, I haven’t done sh*t so… I did, I did (take a bump onto a car). Then right after that, I went and got my knee replaced. Thanks Will Hobbs (he laughed).

Khan acquired the intellectual property for Captain Insano so that Wight could use it in AEW. Wight is hoping to bring the character to Grand Slam in Australia. 

He revealed that him and Tony have been waiting to pull the trigger on a Captain Insano run and the wait is his own fault. Wight has not done much in AEW lately because Khan is giving him time to get ready. Wight wants to end his career how Sting did.

I have heard from him (Captain Insano). I heard his fat-ass had a knee surgery a couple of months ago but is hoping he’ll be back real soon and definitely I hope he’s gonna compete in February here in Brisbane. So, yeah, a lot of that was intellectual property and Tony Khan actually — because I lost The Big Show. That’s WWE intellectual property, which is tough when you build a brand for 20 years but it’s business. I understand. It is what it is. But, building yourself a new identity is like starting all over. People always gonna identify you as one thing. Yeah! I’m not that guy anymore. I’m this other guy. Captain Insano is a pretty cool gift. Tony Khan worked it out, got the intellectual property rights for me. So, we’ve been waiting to pull the trigger on that and I’ll be honest, a lot of it’s been my fault. Having surgeries and stuff like that so, it’s about me getting in the gym, training, getting ready where I feel comfortable because it’s basically a one-shot run. I can’t pull the trigger on this half-assed and go out and fail. When I pull the trigger on Captain Insano, it’s gonna be 100 percent. We run that till the wheels fall off and then we ride off into the sunset… I just wanna make sure that when I bring that character out, whatever Tony asks me to do, I can do. Whether it’s tag, singles, working twice a week, three times a week. Whatever it is, I’m able to do it so, that’s why I really haven’t been doing a lot of things on AEW because being the awesome boss that Tony Khan and he’s giving me the time to basically get my sh*t straight and get ready for it. I mean, believe me, there’s an unbelievable amount of pressure on myself to get this done and get this in a way where the fans are appreciative of seeing me compete again and not like a, ‘Oh, that sucks. Shoot him. Put him out of his misery.’ Like old yeller. Take me out back and put me down. I don’t wanna get put down yet. I kind of wanna go out like Sting did. Have a nice little run. Have some great matches, work with some of this amazing, young talent we have in AEW and then, slide out. That goal accomplished and then, I’ll move to New York and become a world-famous playwright. It’s a joke, because I can’t spell… Grand Slam: Australia and hopefully Captain Insano will have a match and we’re actually gonna see a 400-pound guy in spandex… So let me correct that. A sexy, good-looking, bald, 400-pound guy in spandex. I mean, that’s my opinion, but you know…

The last time the 52-year-old Wight wrestled was on the Jericho Cruise in January. His last televised match took place in November 2023 when he was involved in an eight-person Street Fight.

If the quotes in this article are used, please credit Downunder The Ring with an H/T to POST Wrestling for the transcriptions.

About Andrew Thompson 9727 Articles
A Washington D.C. native and graduate of Norfolk State University, Andrew Thompson has been covering wrestling since 2017.