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Hulk Hogan Talks About Why He Never “Passed The Torch” In The 1990’s

(Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

WWE Hall of Famer Hulk Hogan was on the receiving end of the “torch passing” tradition at WrestleMania III when he defeated Andre The Giant. However, Hogan never returned the favor in the 90’s when it was his turn to do the same.

Hogan recently spoke to WWE UK, and talked about why he never passed the torch to anyone in the 1990’s. Hogan stated that it didn’t happen because there wasn’t enough guys ready to lead, so they skipped a generation.

“I think it’s [passing the torch] the most important thing in this business, to maintain the artform, and to make sure that the next generation, the next decade of wrestlers, is ready. There was a time I was red hot in the 80s and all of a sudden the ’90s came and it was time to pass the torch but, it didn’t happen that way. I mean they didn’t have enough guys ready to lead at that time so, you know, we skipped a generation.

It took time to pass that torch, which should have been passed at the end of the ’80s. I mean we tried with a couple of guys, putting the belts on them and stuff, but they weren’t ready to run. They weren’t ready like John Cena, they weren’t ready like The Rock, they weren’t ready like Stone Cold.

So it’s very, very important that the torch is passed in the correct way and the guys that have all this experience don’t just walk away. They stay there long enough to build the storylines, build the talent, and then pass the torch in the correct way. It’s very, very important.”

(h/t to Inside The Ropes for the quote.)

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