talk each and every fan of his and stop for every
single selfie. He made his way to all the camps at
night to spend time with every team he would be
playing with or against that coming weekend.
For those of you that may not know Wolf, he is a
DYE sponsored woodsball player. Wolf got into
paintball just like any other person. In 1995-96 he
got invited to a corporate event at Paintball City
in Toronto. He started with rentals, like any other
person, and fell in love with the sport from there.
He played a lot, and then decided it was time to
get some of his own equipment. He went out to
a pawnshop and bought a Piranha pump marker
with a tank and everything included. “The marker
leaked. A lot. So I had to play fast!” said Wolf.
He then started to upgrade his equipment and
went for a Spyder. He modified his gun by duct
taping laser pointers to his marker, and things got
real. It wasn’t until the late 90s that he got his first
Tippmann, the A5.
Wolf has always been approached for sponsorships;
he has never sought them out. He got popular
writing for magazines and his YouTube channel,
and then began being approached by companies
like Tippmann. His first official sponsorship was
through Full Clip. It wasn’t until 3 years ago that
he got a call from DYE. They had never sponsored
a woodsball player before, so this was a new thing
for everyone. DYE had a marker called the Matrix
and they thought that Wolf would be a good
person to promote it.
When Wolf got his sponsorship from DYE, some
people got mad and thought that he was selling
out. Wolf however had no intentions of selling out,
he decided whatever product he reviewed or was
given he would speak the truth about. He could
not be bought. No one else had a contract like his;
it was more like a mutual partnership. Wolf prides
himself on honesty and integrity. During the fist
year of his sponsorship however, he hurt his knee
and was out most of the year. That didn’t stop
him from attending events though; it only slowed
him down a little. He had to have his buddy drive
him from Toronto all the way to Living Legends
in Illinois because he could not bend his knee