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Eddie Guerrero Tribute
Real Name: Eduardo Guerrero
Nickname: Eddie Guerrero
Birthday: 10/09/67
Wrestling Debut: 1988
Height: 5'8"
Weight: 220lbs
Signature Move: Frog Splash
Career Highlights:
WWE World Heavyweight Title (defeated Brock Lesnar at No Way Out on February
15, 2004)
WWE Tag Team Titles (3 times)
WWE Intercontinental title (2 times)
WWE United States Title (defeated Chris Benoit in tournament final at Vengeance
2003)
WWE European Title (2 times)
WCW United States Title
WCW Cruiserweight Title
ECW Television Title (2 times)
--Tribute Video--
There is little doubt that Eddie Guerrero was destined to be
a wrestler almost before he was born. His father, Gory Guerrero was a founding
father of Lucha Libre (Mexican pro wrestling), a legendary wrestling
trainer, a pioneer figure in Mexico, and perhaps, pound for pound, the best pro
wrestler in Mexican history over the course of his 30-year career.
But Gory was also the patriarch of arguably the premier family in wrestling
history. Eddie's older brothers Chavo, Mando and Hector gained worldwide
reputations as excellent wrestlers, plying their trade in rings in Mexico and
Japan, as well as several big territories across the U.S. It only made sense
that Eddie would someday follow in his family's legendary footsteps.
Eddie wrestled at the University of New Mexico on an athletic scholarship.
Wanting to turn pro, Eddie was trained by his father in a ring he had set up in
his backyard in El Paso, Texas. It was there that the foundation of Eddie's
superior working style was first laid.
Guerrero debuted in 1987 in Mexico's EMLL promotion. He competed primarily in
six man tag matches with his brothers for the first few years. The trio of
Eddie, Chavo and Mando teamed to win the World Wrestling Association's World
Trios Title in Tijuana, Mexico on July 28th, 1989.
By 1992, Eddie was wrestling under a mask as Mascara Magica (Magic Mask). It was
in this guise that Eddie won his first singles title, the WWA Welterweight
Championship.
Later that year, Eddie jumped to the newly formed AAA promotion, dropping the
mask and returned to wrestling under his real name. He began to split his time
between Mexico and New Japan Pro Wrestling in 1993, becoming one of the top
foreign stars in Japan. A year later he competed in the prestigious Top of the
Super Junior Heavyweights tournament, having classic matches with the likes of
Dean Malenko, Chris Benoit, Jushin "Thunder" Liger and 2 Cold Scorpio.
In 1994, promoters in Japan saddled him with the Black Tiger gimmick, a foreign
heel Tiger Mask-style character. In October, Eddie teamed with the Great Susake
to win the Junior Heavyweight Super Grand Tag League for New Japan Pro
Wrestling.
Back in Mexico, Eddie teamed with El Hijo del Santo as La Pareja Atomica
(The Atomic Pair), reviving the tag team their fathers (El Santo and Gory
Guerrero) made famous in the 50s and 60s. Eddie formed a friendship with "Love
Machine" Art Barr and the two approached promoter Antonio Pena about turning
heel and teaming up together.
The idea worked to perfection as Guerrero and Barr turned on El Hijo del Santo
and formed the most hated team in Lucha Libre history: La Pareja del terror
(The Pair of Terror).
Turning his back on his Mexican heritage, Guerrero donned tights with the stars
and stripes, waved the American flag and recruited the likes of Konnan, Louie
Spicoli and others to form Los Gringos Locos, a Mexican version of the
Four Horsemen.
Los Gringos Locos set Mexico on fire in 1994 as the heel clique feuded
with every top Mexican star in AAA. Guerrero and Barr won the AAA World tag team
titles in Chicago during the summer, defeating El Hijo del Santo and Octagon.
Santo and Octagon would garner their revenge in November at When Worlds Collide
from Los Angeles (AAA's only foray into pay-per-view), defeating Guerrero and
Barr in a double mask vs. double hair match, forcing Eddie and Barr to have
their heads shaved bald.
The match, a ****1/2 star effort, had put Guerrero and Barr in the spotlight,
clearly establishing as the best tag team in the world at the time. They were
seemingly unstoppable. Tragedy, however, struck three weeks later as Art Barr
was found dead in his bedroom in Springfield, Oregon.
With Barr out of his life, the value of the Mexican peso at an all time low and
AAA complaining about the cost of his contract, Guerrero left Mexico and
resurfaced in Extreme Championship Wrestling. On his first night in he defeated
2 Cold Scorpio for the TV title. A week later he had what is widely considered
the best match in the history of the promotion, going to a 30-minute draw with
Dean Malenko.
Eddie added the frog splash to his vast repertoire, made famous first by Barr,
paying tribute to his fallen partner. He and Malenko feuded the entire summer,
exchanging the title between them in a series of matches noted for the
scientific wizardry, drawing comparisons to the epic Ric Flair-Rick Steamboat
feud of 1989.
A short time after battling Malenko to a draw in an epic best-of-three-fall
match, Eddie left ECW in September of 1995 for the greener pastures of WCW.
Eddie found himself competing against many of his former ECW contemporaries
including Dean Malenko, Chris Benoit, and Jerry Lynn (competing as Mr. JL) as
well as Konnan and Ric Flair.
In June of 1996 Guerrero, competing as Black Tiger, defeated Jushin "Thunder"
Liger in the finals of the Top of the Super Juniors in Japan, becoming only the
second foreigner (Chris Benoit being the first) to win the prestigious
tournament.
At Starrcade '96 Guerrero won his first title in WCW, defeating Diamond Dallas
Page to win the vacant U.S. Heavyweight title. Eddie would lose it three months
later to Malenko but rebounded by upending Chris Jericho at SuperBrawl to
capture his first of two WCW Cruiserweight titles.
Between his matches with Malenko, Benoit, Chris Jericho, Ultimo Dragon and
Psychosis, his best effort in the promotion came at Halloween Havoc '97 where he
dropped the Cruiserweight title to Rey Mysterio Jr in mask vs. title match. The
****/3/4 match will long be remembered for its high flying spots and the amazing
chemistry between the two luchadores.
After several months of feuding with nephew Chavo Guerrero Jr. and being lost in
the shuffle, Eddie formed the Latino World Order, a shoot-like gimmick where
Guerrero addressed frustrations he and the other Mexican talent had over their
shameless misuse by management.
The angle was starting to get over when Eddie was involved in a terrible car
crash on New Year's Eve 1998, sidelining him for several months. Although he
would later return, Eddie was not happy, and he wasn't alone.
On January 20, 2000, Eddie, along with Dean Malenko, Chris Benoit and Perry
Saturn were given their release from WCW and appeared on WWE Monday Night Raw
six days later. The foursome were dubbed "the Radicals" and appeared to be on
the verge of becoming another great heel stable. Unfortunately for Eddie, the
day after the Radicals arrival, he dislocated his elbow performing a frog splash
at the Smackdown tapings in Detroit, Michigan.
Having returned to the WWE in April, Guerrero won the European Championship from
Chris Jericho when Chyna turned on Y2J. The move led to a romantic union between
Guerrero and Chyna that lasted through the summer of 2000. However, shortly
after Eddie accidentally beat Chyna for the Intercontinental title, a segment of
GTV caught Eddie in the shower with two women, crushing Chyna and ending their
relationship.
Eddie's inner demons began to get the better of him. In June 2001, Eddie was
sent to rehab after showing up "unable to perform." In November, Eddie was
arrested for drunk driving and was released from the WWE.
In February 2002, Eddie came back to the spotlight, competing on a WWA
pay-per-view "Revolution" where he defeated Psychosis and Juventud Guerrera for
the WWA International Cruiserweight title. In March, he competed for New Japan
Pro Wrestling.
In April 2002, he returned to WWE television, attacking Rob Van Dam on an
edition of Raw, and defeating RVD three weeks later for the Intercontinental
title at the Backlash pay-per-view.
Eddie would lose the title back to RVD in a ladder match, but seemed to be on
the verge of a feud with "Stone Cold" Steve Austin before Austin left the WWE.
Instead, Eddie teamed with Chris Benoit in a mini-reformation of the Radicals
and soon after, the pair jumped from Raw to Smackdown.
While feuding with Edge over the summer of 2002, Eddie began teaming with his
nephew Chavo Guerrero, Jr. to form Los Guerreros. The pair won a Triple Threat
tag team match at the Survivor Series 2002 to win the WWE tag team titles,
edging Benoit/Kurt Angle and Edge/Mysterio.
After a feud with John Cena, Eddie would team with Tajiri (subbing for Chavo) to
become one-half of the Smackdown brand's tag team champions at Judgment Day in
May 2003. After a month and a half of "cheating to win" (and retain the tag team
titles), Eddie and Tajiri would lose the tag team titles to the World's Greatest
tag team (Charlie Haas and Shelton Benjamin) on July 3rd. After the match, Eddie
turned on his partner, blaming Tajiri for the loss.
A week later, the tournament for the vacant United States Heavyweight
Championship began and Eddie defeated the Ultimo Dragon, Billy Gunn and (at the
Vengeance pay-per-view) Chris Benoit to win the tournament and the title.
On September 16, 2003, Eddie and Chavo defeated the World's Greatest Tag Team to
regain the WWE tag team titles. Eddie was, at once, both the United States
Champion and one-half of the WWE tag team Champions.
The Big Show ended Eddie's dual run as champion by defeating Eddie for the U.S.
title at No Mercy in October 2003. Four days later, Chavo and Eddie would lose
the tag titles to the Basham Brothers. As Los Guerreros attempted to regain the
tag team titles, things began to go downhill between Chavo and Eddie and the two
battled each other at the 2004 Royal Rumble.
After winning a mini-Royal Rumble, Eddie found himself the #1 contender to Brock
Lesnar's WWE Championship. At No Way Out 2004, Eddie, with some help from Bill
Goldberg, unseated Lesnar to become the new champion.
After defeating Kurt Angle at WrestleMania XX and getting by the Big Show, Eddie
was next targeted by JBL. After retaining the title at the Judgment Day
pay-per-view (despite a disqualification loss) Guerrero seemed to have defeated
Layfield in a bullrope match at the Great American Bash on June 27th but
Smackdown GM Kurt Angle reversed the decision and JBL was crowned the new
champion.
With Angle reinstated as a wrestler, the classic feud between he and Guerrero
raged on. A masked Angle interfered in a cage match between Layfield and
Guerrero, helping JBL retain the title, and Angle defeated Eddie at SummerSlam.
The Angle-Guerrero feud continued throughout the fall of 2004, later teaming
with Rob Van Dam and the Big Show to take on Angle allies Luther Reigns and Mark
Jindrak.
However, as the end of 2004 approached, Eddie was once again in the hunt for the
WWE Championship, but neither he, nor The Undertaker nor Booker T were unable to
unseat JBL in a Fatal Fourway match at Armageddon.
At No Way Out in February, Eddie teamed with Rey Mysterio Jr. to defeat the
Basham Brothers to win the WWE tag team titles. However due to some
miscommunication and with Chavo Guerrero fanning the flames of controversy, the
team of Guerrero/Mysterio seemed doomed from the start.
Rey and Eddie battled at Wrestlemania XXI, with Mysterio
coming out victorious. Although they shook hands after the bout, the problems
between Rey and Eddie continued in the weeks after. Things certainly did not
improve when Mysterio/Guerrero lost the tag team titles to MNM and during a
rematch in England, Eddie walked out on Rey.
Attacking Mysterio a week later, Eddie turned heel and turned
his back on his former partner. After Rey got a victory over Eddie, albeit by
disqualification, at Judgment Day and then again on the June 23rd edition of
Smackdown, Eddie became even angrier and more obsessed with getting revenge for
the losses.
Soon the vendetta between Eddie and Rey became personal.
Eddie approached Rey's son, Dominic, threatening to reveal a "secret" that would
destroy Rey Mysterio. Eddie began to hold that secret over Rey's head, even when
his own family begged him to let it go.
Eddie faced Rey at the Great American Bash saying that he
would forget about the secret if Rey could defeat him one more time. Rey came
out victorious, only to have Eddie reveal the secret (that he was Dominic's
father) anyways. After social workers became involved, Rey met and defeated
Eddie at SummerSlam in a ladder match for custody of Dominic. Undaunted Eddie
would finally defeat Rey in a cage match on Smackdown in September.
Undaunted Eddie would finally defeat Rey in a cage match on
Smackdown in September and was named the number one contender to Batista's World
Championship. Rather than feud with Batista, Eddie decided to befriend the
champion and even teamed with him on occassion.
Batista got the better of Eddie at No Mercy but Eddie
remained close to Batista, perhaps all the better to get into position to once
again meet (and this time defeat) Batista.
Whether or not Guerrero would have defeated Batista will
never be known.
- You Are One Of A Kind & Will Never Be Forgotten -
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