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there are a lot of things that I've done in my career that have made me uncomfortable. "But looking back, it will always be something that was a little. Talking about the brevity of the particular feud, with Mysterio involved, the 41-year-old wrestler acknowledged that although Eddie's death "was a horrible tragedy" and they all lost a dear friend, the heel persona helped him along the way in his career and many others who came after, "as a bad guy talking about that." Randy termed it as legitimate "heat" which worked and it helped with the angle between Rey and himself. Eddie would have wanted to help you guys in this manner if he could have used his death in some way to help the business as morbid as that sounds, he would have wanted us to do it," Orton confessed, via Sportskeeda Wrestling. Rey assured me that it's something Eddie would have wanted and even still, Rey and myself went to Vickie and Vickie gave us her blessing. Using real-life deaths as a story arc has always been WWE's forte (Eg: CM Punk dumping Paul Bearer's 'ashes' onto The Undertaker during Wrestlemania 29 storyline!), but Randy's words cut deep wounds not just amid fans but Orton himself.ĭuring an appearance on The Kurt Angle Show, Randy confided his honest thoughts to Kurt Angle about his infamous No Way Out 2006 feud with Rey, who was Eddie's best friend, and how he wasn't comfortable with using Guerrero's death as a storyline.
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Eddie's down there, in hell!" - was amongst the most controversial WWE promos of all time, especially as it happened quite soon after the legendary Eddie Guerrero's untimely death in 2005. Randy Orton's insensitive words (along with several more jabs!) to Rey Mysterio back in 2006 - "Eddie ain't in heaven.