Eric Bischoff On Roddy Piper's WCW Run, Real-Life Tension With Hulk Hogan

November 21, 2020 0 By HearthstoneYarns


Former WCW executive Eric Bischoff spoke at length about bringing late WWE Hall Of Famer “Rowdy” Roddy Piper to WCW during the 1990s on a recent episode of his 83 Weeks podcast. Featured below are some of the highlights from the show.

On Roddy Piper not being all about the money like other top stars who came to WCW: “You know what… Roddy Piper wasn’t all about the money. Roddy was way more interested in the creative. When I say that I say it in a general sense, like a macro sense. I think what Roddy was really interested in from what I remember at that meeting because I do remember that meeting quite well, Roddy got so animated when we started talking about pro wrestling. His passion for it became really evident.

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“In the first part of the meeting it was a regular greeting, but once we started talking about what was different about WCW Nitro and why it was working. There were several things that he loved. He loved the nWo,” Bischoff continued. “He loved the fact that we were breaking the mold and disrupting the formula because that was how Roddy Piper was. In many ways he was a traditionalist in pro wrestling. He was a ‘throwback’ as far as someone who believed in the product and gave a lot to it, but he was also a progressive-thinking guy, which I believe he was because of his experience in television and in movies and his interest in it, and with discussions that he had with people outside of pro wrestling that all content had to evolve. Pro wrestling was no different, and Roddy Piper saw what a lot of others saw, which was, holy s**t, this is hot. What are you guys thinking? What was the psychology behind this? Where was the nWo going? We did discuss those things with the kind of big ideas were between WCW and the nWo and where it was headed, which were things that he did like.”

On Piper being excited to reignite his rivalry with Hulk Hogan during that time: “Of course we also talked about the possibilities of matches against Hulk Hogan, because Piper hadn’t talked to Hulk at that point because, yes, there may have been some professional tension between them as who the top guys were, and who didn’t want to do a job to the other, which is really childish, but when you think about how much money was involved it really wasn’t that childish, but they had both more or less gotten all over that. There was still a little residual of comments that were made towards one another, including me, but Roddy was really looking forward for the opportunity to work with Hulk, with Randy [Savage] and certainly with Ric Flair. I mean, Roddy loved Ric Flair. Ric and Roddy were tighter than that.”

On the reaction from the WCW roster at the time to Piper coming into the company: “There may have been people who felt–like, some of the mid-card guys who maybe thought they were on the verge of breaking into the top-tier with the semi-main event status of storylines, which is a better way of saying it may have thought that here is one more guy who has now become one more rung to the ladder I have to climb now. You can’t deny that, but nobody really expressed it to me. Of the people that I dealt with more regularly at the time, more creatively like Scott Hall and Kevin Nash, who didn’t have a problem with it, as long as they got their checks on time. Hulk Hogan was actually excited about it. Randy Savage was supportive of it and Ric Flair couldn’t wait so unless somebody had feelings that weren’t articulated to me, it pretty much was everybody was pretty supportive of it.”

On the Piper debut at Halloween Havoc and his real-life issues with Hogan being used in their storyline being a perfect fit for the real-life style in WCW storylines at the time: “Probably more than anything it was a coincidence. It would be easy for me to make it sound like it was a master plan. Oftentimes it was just coincidence of good timing. Roddy was available and we had worked on his deal. We were obviously excited to have Roddy Piper on the roster because it opened up a lot of creative opportunities with Randy Savage and Hulk Hogan because of their history and the legacy they had previously. Everyone was aware of the heat between Hulk Hogan and Bret Hart. We had heard about it a million times, and Hulk Hogan and Roddy Piper had their share of tension that the core, the hardcore, not the passive audience or the mainstream audience was aware of, but your hardcore audience, who knew the ins and outs and followed it closely with the dirt sheets where they were well aware of that. To me, it was like okay, now we have something to work with. In this period of time from 1996, 1997 & 1998 I tried to capture real relationship, real life heat, whatever was real to some degree that the audience knew about I tried to capture those moments or relationships and turn the volume up on them, and Roddy brought that up to the table, so there really wasn’t a master plan other than the fact that Roddy was excited. He was probably excited because we had a lot of momentum. It was a two way street–we were excited about him but he was also excited to be there. He saw all of those same opportunities that we did. WCW Nitro was on a roll and it was the talk of the town where we were outperforming everybody and Roddy wanted to be a part of it as much as we wanted him to be part of us.”

Check out the complete episode of the 83 Weeks podcast with Eric Bischoff at Player.fm.