Across the Delaware River at Catchpoint in Kensington, safety is paramount, along with proper physical conditioning in the ring. Wrestlers essentially land on what amounts to plywood sitting on a metal frame. Nate Wallace is one of the trainers at Catchpoint, and with more than a decade of experience, he’s gotten used to what a ring can do to someone.
“Once you hit the mat the first time and then you feel that pain and then you’ll go, ‘Okay, I might still want to do this,’” Wallace said. “Then you go home and after a few more times, you hit those ropes and you felt that mat, you’ll realize it for yourself like, ‘Okay, this is for me,’ or, ‘This is not for me.’”
Catchpoint was created by Philly native and WWE superstar Drew Gulak, who says he got bit by the wrestling bug at an early age.
“My family wasn’t into wrestling, but I had a friend of the family named Wayne Stokes,” Gulak said. “His family would watch every pay-per-view. Wrestling was like a holiday at his house and I was invited over and I got to watch those. Those are memories that stuck with me for a lifetime.”
Those memories led him to start training in Philadelphia, including some sessions at the 2300 Arena. The work paid off, resulting in multiple WWE titles and even his own action figure. Gulak said it’s not the success that continues to motivate him but his love for wrestling, which inspired him to pay it forward by creating the city’s only wrestling school.
“We didn’t wrestle because we wanted to make it somewhere. We wanted to wrestle because we loved it,” he said. “That is where I learned, and it just means so much to me that I can kind of have my little place here in Philly.”