Chavo Guerrero Sr. discusses his run as “Chavo-Classic”, still wrestling at 67‏, more

Aug 10, 2016 - by Steve Gerweck

Filed to GERWECK.NET:

Today The Two Man Power Trip of Wrestling is honored to be joined by one of the members of the illustrious Guerrero Family, the one and only “Chavo Classic” Chavo Guerrero Sr. Our journey begins with Chavo’s absolutely phenomenal history growing up learning how to be a professional wrestler alongside his brothers (Mando, Hector and Eddie) under the tutelage of his father “Gory” Guerrero to his epic three year blood feud and battles with Roddy Piper and continuing all the way into his “Chavo Classic” tenure with the WWE, this episode with the original Chavo Guerrero is a must listen and a very rare look inside the career of a true legend. Download the episode at this link.

Who is your favorite all-time Two Man Power Trip of Wrestling guest? Enter to win a SpartaCon 2 “Ultimate Fan Package” by emailing bookings@tmptofwrestling.com or telling us on Twitter @TwoManPowerTrip. The winner will be announced on August 12th as part of our milestone Episode #200

Full Episode Download Link

Chavo Guerrero Sr. On The Intensity Of His Feud w/ Rowdy Roddy Piper:

Growing up around the wrestling business and being trained by and alongside his family:

“The Guerrero Family started with my father Gory Guerrero but we also had a school run by my Uncle (Enrique Llanes) and he was a pro wrestler and was also my mother’s brother. That is actually how my father and my mother met. My father and my Uncle were wrestling against each other and at that time things were pretty much so kayfabe and they respected the way they talked to each other outside the ring so my Uncle invited my father over to his house and that is how he met my mother. So later he had a judo school and we there for about two years in Mexico and we would go back and fourth when my father was a wrestler so we would go from state to state every six months and then head back to Mexico here and there so we did some schooling at the Judo school. We just grew up with it all of our lives and that is all we ever wanted to be. My Dad never forced us but he did say if you are going to do it, you are going to be trained by me.”

Emulating his father Gory while practicing and playing with his brothers:

“Mando and I are a year and a half apart and at one time when it was just my sister Mary (the eldest of us all) and Mando we would practice and make rings out of whatever we could. We were already wrestling but we were only playing around. We would do the entrances because we would always go around with my Dad to the matches and he was our hero, our Superman, our idol and our everything. So, in our minds that is what we were going to be. The way he trained us, he didn’t say lets learn to drop kick, he taught us the basics and the amateur (which we loved) and the judo-karate and jiu-jitsu.”

The home-video footage WWE has used of the Guerrero family wrestling:

“My father shot that footage with an 8MM camera and Vince (McMahon) kind of edited where most of those people wrestling were from my wrestling team but yeah my Dad would take film of us whenever he was around because he was always wrestling. That footage was shot in North Carolina, El Paso, some of it in Amarillo, Texas, St. Louis, Missouri and some of it was in Mexico and this footage is like a world-wide situation. When Eddie asked me if he can we use it and my Dad had already passed and I think it was Mando is who had the 8MM’s at that point and I sent them to Eddie and said do what you want but remember where it came from. He gave it to Vince for editing and I think he did a good job and helped Eddie out. They returned the tapes and they returned them on DVDs but I never got paid for it but I guess Eddie did. “

“But we really never did think about it because it was just an everyday thing. With my father wrestling it was apart of everyday life and it was normal. I would shine my father’s wrestling shoes and trust me they had to be shiny and would pack his gear with a list because if he got to the arena with missing one shoe or had two different shoes, then you better watch out because you would have been busted for about a week. He was very strict but a perfectionist at that.”

Still continuing to work and going to Japan for an upcoming tour:

“I’m still doing it and I’ll be going to Japan in two weeks at 67 years old and still rolling. I praise God that he still gives me the ability and I still work out and the main thing about it is that I still have fun. It is always fun to get up there and give a good show, not just sit there and use the name. You’ve got to respect your age but you give the people their money’s worth and they will know it and you give them a good match. Who knows maybe another tour here and there, because I am ready for anything.”

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