Justin Credible

image

ThatsJustinCredible.com

Report Last Updated - 11/02 (Fall) Real Name - Peter Polaco
Birthdate - 10/16/73
6' 225 lbs. - Waterbury, CT

Aliases - P.J. Walker, Aldo Montoya, PG-187

Athletic background - n/a

Teachers - Bruce Hart, Lance Storm (Hart Brothers' Camp)

Professional background - New England Indies(`92-`93), WWF(`93-`97), USWA(`97), ECW(`97-`01), WWF/WWE(`01-), IWA(`01)

Groups - X-Factor, The Alliance

Career Highlights -
- Is put over by the Great Sasuke, not once, but twice
- Is put over by Jerry Lynn in the feud that really makes his career
- Teams with Lance Storm to win the ECW tag titles
- Wins the ECW World title from Tommy Dreamer
- Makes his WWF debut, aligning himself with X-Pac and later Albert

Finisher(s) -
- Superkick
x That's Incredible (Spinning Tombstone)
x Jumping Spinning DDT

Favorites -
- Sunset Flip Bomb
- Slingshot Liger Bomb
- Chin Crusher
- Punch

Ringwork Rating -
move set - 4
science - 2
aerial - 0
power - 5
strikes - 5

Intangible Rating -
entertainment - 4
selling - 5
bumping - 4
heat - 3
carrying - 4
push - 3
potential - 2

Outlook - Hoovering around 30, Pete Polaco's once reasonably bright future seems extremely dim. Because of his size and limited mic skills, Pete seemed that he'd never be any bigger than a top mid-carder, if that. Once he got five years in him and Paul Heyman behind him, Justin Credible became a strong character in ECW. Put over strongly by some exceptional workers, he was able to look so good that many considered Justin Credible to be at that level. Once the carpet was pulled out in the WWF, he was banished to being a low-level guy again in the company he so wanted to escape years ago. Though younger than one might think, Pete Polaco's career seems to be well past its best years and in fact may be winding down. The WWE does not have the confidence in him to get behind him like Heyman did and he's not anything special, so he seems like just another Stevie Richards, D'Lo Brown or Val Venis - just another non-pushed wrestler.