They were gonna let me go do some other stuff on the outside, but, I hate to say this, Vince sometimes -- He and I have a great relationship. I love him, I do. Sometimes he's overprotective of me. I want to be able to push my limits. That's one of the things that I love about this, is like the physicality of what we do out there and being able to push my limits and being able to do that here in a safe manner is one of the things that really drew me here.
You see the crowd. I mean I think you all see it, probably were all out there and you felt it. Then, getting trained by Killer Kowalski who was a great, old-school guy. So, I think he's probably the heir apparent. She does a lot of charity work. And she's great at that. And you've got to have that in that world. I don't know where his role's gonna be going forward or what he wants it to be. Jump directly to the content. Sign in.
But there is one thing you can never take away from the man who revolutionized wrestling: the man was an entertainer, and when the cameras came on, that man gave his customers everything he had each and every night. His abrupt farewell on Monday Night Raw took a minute to sink it.
And for the first time since stepping behind a microphone, the man who could never be silenced had nothing to say. Vince McMahon, in what could be his final appearance in the ring, stood center stage for the whole world to see and cried.
Not a word uttered, not a dramatic gesture made.
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