WWE Hall of Famer and former WCW President Eric Bischoff took to an episode of his 83 Weeks podcast, where he talked about a number of topics including his decision to bring Eddie Guerrero into WCW after seeing Guerrero compete in NJPW.
Bischoff said, โDo I think โ look, when Eddie came in, I was aware of Eddie, but not close. I wasnโt watching them closely. Eddie was working as El Gato in New Japan. I think it was El Gato, was his gimmick in Japan. And I was working closely with New Japan. And I know Masa Saito really appreciated Eddie and liked him a lot. And Eddie became a conversation between myself and Masa Saito was because they wanted to keep Eddie booked as often as they could, but they couldnโt put him on a full time or werenโt willing, I guess, to put him under contract. So when I talked to Masa about what I wanted to do with the cruiserweight division โ well before I had my first conversation with Eddie or Chris Benoit or any of those โ I had the idea for the cruiserweight division. I was talking to Masa about it because a lot of the talent that I saw would really help make up that division, that talent would have come from New Japan Pro Wrestling, right? So it was Masa Saito that said, โNo man, hire Eddie. If you can put Eddie under contract, I guarantee I will book him X number of days a year.โ
โWell, the reason that that was important, and it was a good financial plan on my part. Because as Iโm adding talent to the roster, Iโve got to figure out, โOkay, as best I can, how do I justify this? How does this make sense financially? So if I hire a guy,โ whatever I hired Eddie at, I think I brought him in at 175[000] or whatever it was, whatever the number was. I had Masa Saito sitting across from me at the table, saying, โWell, Iโll cover half.โ And that was the nature of the relationship that went beyond occasional booking opportunities and things we did on TV. The real opportunity for me to help me manage โ because again, at this time, we werenโt profitable, right? We were getting close. So these decisions, despite the fact that Meltzer and Vince McMahon were laying the groundwork for this bull***t narrative of, โHe just has to write a check. He doesnโt have to justify it.โ Bull***t. At that time, I had to justify everything. But when Iโm sitting across and I got Masa Saito and Brad Ring saying, โNo, Eddie Guerreroโs awesome. And if you hire him and put him under contract and we have this deal, weโll eat half his contract.โ So now Iโm getting a guy for 80 or 90 grand a year. Pretty good deal.โ
Bischoff also talked about if he saw Guerrero as a potential top star in WCW at the time.
Bischoff said, โNow, did you see him as potentially being in that top spot in WCW at the time? Of course not, and nobody else would have that was in their right mind, right? Eddie made it to where he made it in WWE as a result of how well he built himself, how well he did for himself, how well he performed, how well he created his own character. I didnโt do that for Eddie. Eddie did that for Eddie. I gave Eddie the opportunity, and I said, โWow, this is good.โ But that was all on Eddie. It wasnโt on me, it wasnโt on anybody else.
โBut had Eddie not gone through everything he went through at WCW, he would not have been in WWE. End of conversation. It wasnโt like WWE would have seen the handwriting on the wall with Eddie Guerrero in 1995, โ96, โ97, โ98, or โ99 for that matter, or 2000. Had it not been for the success that Eddie created for himself in WCW. But while he was creating that success, did I ever see him as a potential? No. And in reality, even in 2020 hindsight, sitting here being really honest about it, I just donโt think because of the time and the context of timingโฆ To be able to sit here and honestly say, โI could see how Eddie could have done it.โ That would be pandering to this audience. And I wonโt do it. I just wonโt do it.โ
You can check out the complete podcast in the video below.
(H/T to 411Mania for transcribing the above quotes)