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Shane Haste (Slapjack) Says T-BAR Encouraged His Brief ‘Crocodile Dundee’ Character Idea

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Shane Haste talks T-BAR wanting him to go full Australian in WWE.

Shane Haste was briefly known as Slapjack in WWE when he was a part of the RETRIBUTION faction. Prior to that, he was known as Shane Thorne as a member of TM-61.

Very briefly, following RETRIBUTION ending and prior to his WWE release, Shane Thorne appeared before episodes of Friday Night SmackDown testing out a new gimmick that was comparable to Crocodile Dundee.

Now, in a new interview with Andrew Thompson of POST Wrestling, Shane talks about how it was T-BAR, Dominik Dijakovic, who suggested that he should really lean into Australian stereotypes.

“Yeah, I was trying more character-based stuff [with the Crocodile Dundee character]. A lot of my career, pretty much all of it, I’ve just wrestled as myself. So, when I first went to SmackDown, I had singles gear and stuff like that and I’m like, ‘All right. I’m just gonna be this guy who’s been in NXT before’ and now — I really wanted to do like a moment on Raw Talk or Talking Smack straight after we left RETRIBUTION and I wanted to be like, ‘You don’t realize you’ve hit the bottom and the way Ali treated us, showed me that I was at the bottom so I’m done with that darkness and I’m ready to be a more positive person.’ I just wanted to be more positive about every situation that I was in and yeah, being in RETRIBUTION got pretty rough by the end of it and so I’m like, I wanna leave that behind and that’s kind of the real-life — character reflecting real life and I’m like, ‘I didn’t realize I was at the bottom and looking at Ali and how mad and angry he was-was like looking into a mirror and I didn’t like what I saw so, you know, being away from him now on SmackDown is a fresh start for me and I’m ready to show the world.’”

“Just put me on Raw Talk where I can just freeform say this and if you don’t like it, it’s only on YouTube, no one really cares, and then there were a lot of wrestler wrestlers out there like [Bryan] Danielson and Cesaro on SmackDown so I’m like, I’ll just be a babyface who’s a good wrestler and we just put over I’m a good wrestler,” he continued. “I’ll go out there, have great matches then go have some f*cking fun backstage but that stuff just kept getting — not happening so then I was looking at more, just any way to get on TV man. Just any way to get my face on TV and Nikki [A.S.H.] started doing her superhero thing and I know that was her idea and it was just to be more marketable and be more herself. A huge — I think one of the biggest markets in WWE is kids. Everyone always goes like, ‘Oh, when — it was better back in my day when I was younger.’ I’m like yeah, that’s because you were younger.”

RELATED: Shane Thorne Using ‘New’ Crocodile Dundee Gimmick At WWE SmackDown Tapings; Thorne Comments

Shane also thought it would be fun to lean into character work as you thought it would be more marketable and perhaps more memorable in the minds of younger fans.

“So there’s kids who are that age now who probably think now’s product is the best and they’re gonna go, ‘Back in my day…’ So, that was my thought; just being something more marketable. I’ve gone through a lot of different looks in WWE at the time by that point and I’d never gotten an action figure not being marketable in that way so, and there was so many guys who just wore wrestling gear. So I was like, ‘All right, I gotta take a different direction with this. What’s something no one’s doing?’ And that was like the authentic, outback Australian look and so that’s where I got the look from was Dijak [T-BAR] giving me sh*t about, ‘Just go be Crocodile Dundee’ and I’m like, ‘I’m not gonna f*cking –’ no, he’s like, ‘Be the crocodile hunter. Go be Steve Irwin.’ I’m like, ‘I’m not gonna f*cking go be Steve Irwin, I don’t wanna be Steve Irwin’ and I was like, ‘Fine. I’m gonna be f*cking Steve Irwin.’ If that’s what you Americans want, I’m gonna stop being an Australian that Australians want to see because Australians, I don’t think they want to be seen as a joke and I’m like screw it. I’m not wrestling for Australians here. I’m wrestling for an American, my bosses are all American. So I’ll be the Australian Americans want to see.”

Most recently, Shane appeared in NJPW STRONG, reuniting with JONAH, the former Bronson Reed in WWE.

SEE MORE: Big Damo, Shane Haste And More Set For NJPW Strong Style Evolved

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