[2.0] "Just a garbge wrestler nothing more. Its man like him that made parts of ecw shiws must skip. The thing is im pretty sure having seen some of his work that there was somthing there with both him and rocco rock, but he, like his partner was fine with just sakting bay having brawls with the ood fun spot. A real shame"
[1.0] "You know that part in "El Scorcho" where it goes "Watching Grunge Leg drop New Jack through a press table". If you go back and watch that moment, it's like the shittiest leg drop ever, dude broke a table with his taint. Anyways Johnny Grunge is basically at the same skill level as his partner, they were super over but they were super boring when it came to brawling. hardcore wrestling is an art and the worst thing you can do is being boring at it."
[4.0] "Not an interesting in-ring worker, but got a pop while in the Public Enemy tag team in the ECW days. Main selling points were that he could take a beating and sell well."
[5.0] "The heavyweight of the Public Enemy tag team, Grunge had a much more brawl-based style than his lightweight partner, which created a nice dynamic within the team. He could deal and receive punishment, with or without weapons, and that suited him to the ECW scene just fine, as well as helping the team stand out when they made their way to WCW. Grunge and Rock always seemed to be having fun, and that made them a popular and memorable presence in the '90s tag team ranks."
[3.0] "Johnny Grunge really wasn't that good in the ring, his limitations camouflaged by Paul Heyman so successfully that a lot of people considered he and Ted Petty to both be far better than they actually were. Once he and Petty went to WCW, though, the truth was made painfully clear."
[5.0] "He was a perfect compliment to Flyboy Rocco Rock as the heavy member of Public Enemy. Great in a brawl but never seemed to do great in a normal match."