Powered by LiquidWeb Search all of OO for news, columnists, and articles about your favorites!
 
News  -/-  Recaps  -/-  Columns  -/-  Features  -/-  Reference  -/-  Archives  -/-  Interact  -/-  Site Info
 

Donate to Online Onslaught!
CLICK HERE TO HELP KEEP OO ALIVE!
MAIN PAGE
NEWS
     Daily Onslaught
RECAPS
     RAW
     SmackDown!
     PPV
     NWA-TNA
     Heat
     Velocity
     Other 
COLUMNS
     Obtuse Angle
     RAW Satire
     The Broad
         Perspective

     Inside the Ropes
     OOld Tyme
         Rasslin' Revue
    
Circa/Dungeon 
     Title Wave
    
Crashing the
         Boards

     Deconstruction
     Smarky Awards
     Big in Japan
     Guest Columnists
     2 Out of 3 Falls
     Devil's Due
     The Ring
     The Little Things
     Timeline
    
SK Rants
    
The Mac Files
     Sq'd Circle Jerk
     TWiFW
FEATURES
     RAW vs. SD!:
         Brand Battle
 
     Cheap Heat 
     Year in Review
     Monday Wars
     Road to WM 

     Interviews
REFERENCE
     Title Histories
     Real Names
     PPV Results
     Smart Glossary
     Birthdays 
ARCHIVES 
INTERACT
     Message Boards
     Live Chat 
SITE INFO
     Contact
     OO History

If you attend a live show, or have any other news for us, just send an e-mail to this address!  We'd also love to hear from you if you've got suggestions or complaints about the site...  let us have it!

 
DENNY'S DUNGEON
The Redemption of Eddie Guerrero
May 28, 2004

by Denny Burkholder
Courtesy of WrestleLine.com

 

As I sat and watched the Eddie Guerrero documentary "Cheating Death, Stealing Life" that aired on UPN Wednesday night, one revelation kept repeating in my head. I'd never stopped and thought about it until I saw Eddie weeping on camera, describing his near-death experiences with drugs, alcohol, and automobiles - or until I watched Dean Malenko explain how he, Chris Benoit, and Perry Saturn ratted Eddie out to Jim Ross because they feared if they didn't, they'd find Guerrero dead in his hotel room before long.

What kept running through my head the entire time was that Eddie Guerrero is Brian Pillman with a second chance. He's Pillman with a guardian angel. And if it weren't for the help of those around him - and his own will to live - Eddie would probably be where Brian Pillman is today.

The two men shared strikingly similar propensities for self-destruction. Listening to the current WWE Champion describe getting wasted on all the usual poisons - and then wrecking his car doing 130 mph into a curve while high - I couldn't help but think how much that sounded like Pillman's accident.

Eddie got a second chance. And really, calling it a second chance is very generous, since the accounts given by his family, friends, and co-workers on the documentary seem to indicate that Eddie got more like 10 or 12 "second chances."

What Guerrero repeatedly explained, with good reason, is that he had no control over his addiction. Guerrero will never, ever kill his addiction to drugs and alcohol. It is with him for the rest of his life. It is with him ever time he steps into the ring on Smackdown. He's not a recovered alcoholic. He's a recovering alcoholic. It might sound like a subtle difference, but given the example Eddie gave of his post-rehab relapse - where one glass of wine turned into a binging excursion and a trip to jail - the difference is huge.

Eddie went into that relapse thinking he was recovered. But there is no such thing. Eddie was merely recovering, and he'll be recovering forever, because addiction is impossible to completely remove. It's always there. The trick is stomping it out, one day at a time. Guerrero will concentrate on going the rest of the day without a drink or a pill. Then tomorrow, he'll focus on finishing that day. And so on.

When a wrestler like Brian Pillman dies, fans wonder aloud how such a vibrant guy could have perished. Pillman had so many friends; how did nobody see that he needed help? He was with the WWF every day; couldn't the McMahons have put their foot down? Why didn't anyone stop Brian Pillman? Why didn't anyone HELP Brian Pillman?

Lord knows I certainly don't have those answers, and I'd bet that if anyone does, they're the people closest to the situation and they don't want to talk about it. But I'll say this: God bless Dean Malenko for going behind his friend's back.

If you missed the documentary, Malenko described how Eddie Guerrero began showing up for work so visibly wrecked that one day, the fear of seeing Eddie die grew so big that he did something about it. Malenko, Benoit, and Saturn confronted Jim Ross as a group, and secretly informed him that Eddie needed help. Eddie had no idea they did it. But Ross and the WWF took it to heart, and sent Eddie to rehab.

That was one "second chance." Then Eddie gave in to his addiction one more time, and they fired him. Eventually, Eddie wound up losing his wife, his job, and people's respect. About the only thing he hadn't lost was his life. And as he said in the documentary, he was beginning to care less whether he lost that, too.

Fast forward to 2004. Eddie Guerrero has his wife back. He's got the respect of his family, friends and fans back. He was given yet another chance with WWE, and this time, he made the absolute best of it. He looks great in the ring. He is the WWE Champion. He's where he wants to be. He is successfully fending off his addictions.

He's everything, unfortunately, that Brian Pillman didn't become.

Our WWE Champion is a rare bright spot in an industry rife with tragic statistics. Bravo, Mr. Guerrero. And here's hoping more of your contemporaries will follow your lead.

E-MAIL DENNY
BROWSE THE CIRCA ARCHIVES


  
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Bonding Exercises
 
RAW RECAP: The New Guy Blows It
 
PPV RECAP: WWE Night of Champions 2012
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: 18 Seconds? NO! NO! NO!
 
RAW RECAP: The Show Must Go On
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: The Boot Gets the Boot
 
RAW RECAP: Heyman Lands an Expansion Franchise
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Losing is the new Winning
 
RAW RECAP: Say My Name
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Deja Vu All Over Again
 
RAW RECAP: Dignity Before Gold?
 
PPV RECAP: SummerSlam 2012
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Backfired!
 
RAW RECAP: Bigger IS Better
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Hitting with Two Strikes
 
RAW RECAP: Heel, or Tweener?
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Destiny Do-Over
 
RAW RECAP: CM Punk is Not a Fan of Dwayne
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: The Returnening
 
RAW RECAP: Countdown to 1000
 
PPV RECAP: WWE Money in the Bank 2012
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Friday Night ZackDown
 
RAW RECAP: Closure's a Bitch
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: In-BRO-pendence Day
 
RAW RECAP: Crazy Gets What Crazy Wants
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Five Surprising MitB Deposits
 
RAW RECAP: Weeeellll, It's a Big MitB
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: #striketwo
 
RAW RECAP: Johnny B. Gone
 
PPV RECAP: WWE No Way Out 2012
 
RAW RECAP: Crazy Go Nuts
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: You're Welcome
 
RAW RECAP: Be a Star, My Ass
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Needs More Kane?
 
RAW RECAP: You Can't See Him
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Lady Power
 
RAW RECAP: Big Johnny Still in Charge
 
PPV RECAP: WWE Over the Limit 2012
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: One Gullible Fella
 
RAW RECAP: Anvil, or Red Herring?
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Everybody Hates Berto
 
RAW RECAP: Look Who's Back
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Care to go Best of Five?
 
RAW RECAP: An Ace Up His Sleeve
 
PPV RECAP: WWE Extreme Rules 2012
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Sh-Sh-Sheamus and the nOObs
 
RAW RECAP: Edge, the Motivational Speaker?
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: AJ is Angry, Jilted
 
RAW RECAP: Maybe Cena DOES Suck?
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: No! No! No!
 
RAW RECAP: Brock's a Jerk
 
SMACKDOWN RECAP: Back with a Bang
 
RAW RECAP: Yes! Yes! Yes!
 
PPV RECAP: WWE WrestleMania 28

 

 

 


All contents are Copyright 1995-2014 by OOWrestling.com.  All rights reserved.
This website is not affiliated with WWE or any other professional wrestling organization.  Privacy Statement.