Eric Bischoff Says He Will Be Surprised If Steve Austin Wrestles Again

Steve Austin in WWE
Steve Austin | WWE

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 how he will be surprised if fellow WWE Hall of Famer Stone Cold Steve Austin wrestles again.

Bischoff said, โ€œI will [be surprised if he wrestles again]. Iโ€™d be happy to see it. Iโ€™d be excited to see it. But I would definitely be surprised if next yearโ€™s WrestleMania is a long way off, and itโ€™s hard to predict. But it all comes down to how Steveโ€™s feeling. I was probably in Steveโ€™s last quote-unquote match, but it really wasnโ€™t much of a match. But in terms of being promoted with a story behind it, an arc leading to a pay-per-view and all that, when I wrestled Steve and Montreal, I didnโ€™t want to say wrestled when I was in the ring was Steve at Montreal. And at that point in time, when I donโ€™t remember when that was, that was 2005, maybe, or almost 20 years ago, and there was no in a world I could have ever imagined at that point in time that Steve would ever step into the ring in an actual match with an actual opponent. Just physically, it wasnโ€™t in the cards. Now, is Steve recovered? If he is in rehab, does he overcome the issues that you had? Whenever I worked with him, No Way Out. If he has that, I could see it because he looks like heโ€™s in great shape. As far as how he knows his body. He knows what he can do and what he canโ€™t do. Iโ€™d love to see it. But I would be surprised.โ€

He also talked about Stone Cold and CM Punk possibly facing each other in a one-on-one match.

โ€œAnd you know, weโ€™re talking about Steve and his injuries. Letโ€™s be honest. And talk about Punk. Yeah, Punk has been very susceptible to serious injuries over the last couple of outings. Yeah. So itโ€™s not only Steve, thatโ€™s got to, you know, would have to work hard at being physically ready and enabled to bump around and do the things that Steve would want to do. I would imagine, you know, when youโ€™re a guy like Steve Austin, you donโ€™t want to come out there and be half of what the audience remembers, right? Thatโ€™s, thatโ€™s always the danger, right? When guys who have been so successful for so long get out of the business and decide to make a comeback. And just less than what people remember; part of that is because people remember you, and their memory of you, and their memory of that time. Itโ€™s kind of hyper-inflated over time. Absolutely. You remember it much differently and more favorably in some respects than it really was at the time. And then on top of that, youโ€™ve got time, and the fact that you know, in this case, that Boston hasnโ€™t been in the ring and an actual match and wants to be yours. You know, itโ€™s hard to go out there and meet the audienceโ€™s expectation when that expectation is kind of based on a memory that wasnโ€™t actually true, at least to the magnitude that you recall it. So itโ€™s hard to live up to the audienceโ€™s expectations for talent like that. And especially someone like Steve Austin, whoโ€™s very proud, but heโ€™s got his head on straight and doesnโ€™t have an overinflated view of himself or value. But at the same time, he wonโ€™t want to disappoint the audience. He wonโ€™t want to go out there knowing heโ€™s not going to be able to live up to his expectations. So youโ€™ve got that youโ€™ve got the same situation with CM Punk is gotta be able to put together three or four or five, six-month runs, run without injuries, to really start feeling his momentum. Itโ€™s gonna hold it. Punk is like 44-45 somewhere in that area. Heโ€™s not going to heal up real fast. His rehab is going to be tough. And then youโ€™ve got to get back in the ring and get in ring shape again; itโ€™s gonna be interesting to see how punk comes out of this with a series of injuries that he sustained over the last year.โ€

You can check out the complete podcast below.