- November 27, 2024
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Ocoee is getting ready to rumble.
The city is welcoming local pro-wrestling fighters for its Summer Heat event Friday, July 22, at the Jim Beech Recreation Center.
Former pro-wrestler and promoter Les Allier and a friend, Eric Holingsworth, came up with the name of the event in 2019.
“We do a family-friendly show where everyone can come out for two hours,” Allier said. “Once you walk into the building, for those two hours or so, everything outside that building doesn’t matter. Everyone is escaping the reality that they need to get away from. They get lost into a live event.”
The idea of hosting the event came after Allier — who fought under the name Bonez The Cutthroat from 1999 to 2007 — realized he wanted to start running shows again after taking a 15-year sabbatical after the birth of his daughter.
Summer Heat will start with a Battle Royal, where about 20 contestants will fight with everything they’ve got to become the last two men standing. The two will face each other to determine who will be crowned the first local pro-wrestler champion.
According to Allier, wrestling provides “an outlet to get energy out, to be boisterous. … If I’m not 100% me, wrestling gives me the ability to be me 150%. … It’s about (controlling) the environment that you are in, being the center point and, I guess, having all eyes on you, to be able to express myself freely as a wrestler.”
The show has been three years in the making. First, it was hosted in Clermont, where it attracted about 150 people. Then, it was moved to Groveland, but that event was canceled because of COVID-19.
“I was itching to put out a show,” Allier said.
After things began to open up, he spoke to staff at Stormy Hill Harvey-Davidson to host a free event on Halloween.
“The way I was thinking was, the kids weren’t going to have a Halloween,” he said. “So we ended up putting an event 100% free with food trucks, vendors, and then we did a wrestling show as well.”
That event attracted around 1,000 people.
After that, Allier hosted a fundraising event to support veterans that raised more than $5,000. This year, he decided to move the event to a bigger venue, and the Jim Beech Recreation Center was chosen.