Its been years since i stopped watching WWE.I remember being this die hard fan of WWE in school,collecting all those cards even trump cards,posters heck i even had a writing pad for my exams with HULK HOGAN on it ,this is what WWE was for me .As soon as i entered college i stopped watching WWE for a year ,a school friend of mine is still a fan of WWE he still watches WWE with the same intrest we had in school so this guy instilled in me the intrest in watching WWE again and back was i all my study schedules properly adjusted so that i wouldnt miss WWE on tv.Days went by and i finally gave up on WWE well the reason me giving up WWE wasnt that i lost intrest in it but the channel that aired WWE here in india stopped airing it (thier license to air WWE in india expired and they had no intention is renewing it again) .Another channel started airing WWE recently but after so many years ive lost intrest and have no time to start watching WEE again besides that new channel is crap it has no specific time of airing the show same channel made me quit watching GAMER TV as well .

Anyways this news about Eddie’s death certainly saddened me today i remember last time i saw WWE he was a newbie in WWE.At the end all i can say is R.I.P mr Eddie . :-(

Sun Nov 13, 6:24 PM ET

MINNEAPOLIS – Eduardo Gory Guerrero, a World Wrestling Entertainment superstar was found dead in his hotel room Sunday in Minneapolis, where he was scheduled to appear that evening in a WWE Supershow. He was 38.

When he didn’t respond to a wake-up call, hotel security at Minneapolis Marriott City Center and Guerrero’s nephew and fellow WWE wrestler, Chavo Guerrero, forced their way into the room, police said.

There were no apparent signs of foul play or suicide, police said. An autopsy was planned at the Hennepin County medical examiner’s office.

He was a featured star on the UPN series “WWE Smackdown!” and son of Mexican wrestler Gory Guerrero.

Chavo Guerrero and McMahon said Guerrero was open about his past drug and alcohol abuse but they said he’d been sober for four years.

In February 2004, Guerrero became the second wrestler of Hispanic heritage to be WWE champion when he defeated Brock Lesnar, a former University of Minnesota wrestling standout. Guerrero lost the title four months later.

In May 2004, UPN aired the special “Cheating Death, Stealing Life: The Eddie Guerrero Story.” The one-hour program chronicled his childhood and his struggle with drug addiction that almost cost him his job, family and life before his recovery and eventual capture of the WWE championship.

News Source:Yahoo News
Image Source:WWE.com