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    • Hilo. Guerrero moves to the ring apron closest to an opponent knocked down on his back. Usually followed by some theatrics, Guerrero clasps the top rope with both hands and launches himself back over the rope, landing on the victim with a senton.
    • Gory Special. A move adopted from his father, Gory Guerrero, the Gory Special is a back-to-back submission hold. Guerrero hooks both his arms onto his opponents whilst facing the opposite direction.
    • Lasso From El Paso. A modified version of a Texas Cloverleaf. Guerrero approaches his downed opponent at the legs, lifting them up. He bends one of the legs behind the knee of the straight leg, and places the ankle into his armpit.
    • Three Amigos. Often used towards the climax of the match, Guerrero places the opponent in a suplex position, when their arm is draped over the performer's neck during a front facelock.
  1. Oct 7, 2020 · The ref called for the bell, and an irate Anderson went on to smack Guerrero in the head with a vicious chair shot. Anderson revealed that he actually connected with the chair shot harder than ...

  2. www.wwe.com › superstars › eddieguerreroEddie Guerrero - WWE

    • Quotes
    • Style
    • Professional wrestling career

    When Eddie Guerrero flashed that trademark grin, you knew he was already plotting his next move. The big question is what tricks he had in store for his opponent next. Lying, cheating, stealing it was all fair play in the ring for the unpredictable WWE Hall of Famer.

    Beyond his mind games though, Eddie was a performer of remarkable versatility. He could make you hate him, then love him, then wonder where the heck you stand and that's all in one night. Regardless of whether the context was serious or lighthearted, Guerrero commanded attention from every spectator.

    Eddie discovered his unbridled passion for sports-entertainment as a child through his father, longtime wrestling promoter Gory Guerrero. As Gory plied his trade in El Paso, Texas, Eddie was busy scrapping with his nephew, Chavo Guerrero Jr., during the show intermissions. Eddie would later move on to wrestle collegiately at New Mexico Highlands Un...

  3. The big question is what tricks he had in store for his opponent next. Lying, cheating, stealing – it was all fair play in the ring for the unpredictable WWE Hall of Famer. Beyond his mind...

    • Athlete
    • 5'8", 220 lbs
    • El Paso, TX
  4. Feb 15, 2024 · When Lesnar went to put his opponent away with a second F5, Guerrero produced one of the greatest counters ever seen in professional wrestling when he reversed the maneuver into a DDT onto...

    • Josh Lawless
  5. The way Eddie did it was funny and in clever ways we hadn't seen a lot yet, or it was to overcome the heel cheating with his own cheating. The other part of the problem is anytime someone does something like that, for example the "give the chair to your opponent and hit the mat" spot, it always breaks out in "Eddie!"

  6. People also ask

  7. So if this was just before Survivor series, could that mean that the Smackdown vs Raw match might have happened way differently had Eddie not died. I always thought it was strange how the SS match of '03 and '05 ended the same way: Shawn Michaels vs 2 guys and Randy Orton, with RKO winning.