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Personal Data
Birthday:
17.04.1954
Birthplace:
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Day of death:
31.07.2015 (at the age of 61)
Cause of death:
Herzinfarkt
Gender:
male
Height:
6' 0" (183 cm)
Weight:
229 lbs (104 kg)
Background in sports:
Boxen, Ringen

Career Data
Roles:
Singles Wrestler (1972 - 2011)
Tag Team Wrestler (1976 - 2011)
Booker
Manager
Interviewer (1984 - 1987)
Color Commentator
On-Air Official (1996, 1997, 2001 - 2002)
Beginning of in-ring career:
1972
End of in-ring career:
2011
In-ring experience:
39 years
Wrestling style:
Brawler
Nicknames:
"Hot Rod"
"Rowdy"
Signature moves:
Sleeper Hold
Inverted Atomic Drop
Straight Punch
Knee Lift
Bulldog

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8.56
Current Total Rating (?)
Valid votes: 443
Number of comments: 137
10.0 154x
9.0 83x
8.0 126x
7.0 42x
6.0 28x
5.0 2x
4.0 4x
3.0 3x
2.0 1x
1.0 0x
0.0 0x
Average rating: 8.56  [443]
Average rating in 2026: 10.00  [3]
Average rating in 2025: 8.77  [31]
Average rating in 2024: 8.84  [31]
Average rating in 2023: 8.91  [32]
Average rating in 2022: 8.67  [27]
Average rating in 2021: 8.81  [27]
Average rating in 2020: 8.83  [18]
Average rating in 2019: 8.91  [11]
Average rating in 2018: 8.71  [14]
Average rating in 2017: 9.00  [16]
Average rating in 2016: 8.83  [23]
Average rating in 2015: 8.96  [26]
Average rating in 2014: 8.20  [15]
Average rating in 2013: 8.33  [12]
Average rating in 2012: 9.60  [5]
Average rating in 2011: 8.86  [7]
Average rating in 2010: 7.92  [12]
Average rating in 2009: 8.10  [21]
Average rating in 2008: 8.29  [41]
Average rating in 2007: 7.94  [71]
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Other:
Slikkrikk wrote on 03.01.2026:
[10.0] "Sometimes, a wrestler has a personality that takes over the room, and nothing else matters. Roddy Piper took over arenas as both a face and a heel. I'm not sure we've seen anything like "Piper in Portland". And his early work in WWF was underrated, honestly. Piper was the guy that everyone could love to hate, and he was the guy that we felt good rooting for. His promos are absolutely legendary. I don't think that's a learned ability - he was born to do this. Absolute legend. Very few wrestlers could have accomplished what he did without the title around their waist."
K4T wrote on 25.12.2025:
[7.0] "Despite not being the best in the ring, his mic skills undoubtedly catapulted him to stardom during the federation's golden era. It's a shame he lacks title reigns, but that didn't stop him from becoming a wrestling legend, R.I.P. Hot Rod"
ewcraleigh wrote on 24.07.2025:
[10.0] "A pivotal figure who revolutionized wrestling entertainment. He popularized the Dog Collar Match with Valentine. While it may not have been the first, it was one of the first and arguably the most famous. Piper's Pit was an innovation in how the wrestlers would tell their stories and was also novel in that a Heel was the host. As expected from a Heel, Piper would press the interviewee's buttons and have multiple combative confrontations. He never had high flying moves but that was part of his brand as a "rowdy" brawler. He helped launch Starrcade. He was arguably the spark that ignited the fire that was Wrestlemania. Without Piper's antagonism of the Huckster, Hulk may never have gotten as big when he did. His WCW years weren't as stellar but the 80s period, particularly 84-87, were so stellar that it warrants a 10 rating regardless. Personally, my favorite of all time."
Mark4Lyfe wrote on 19.06.2025:
[9.0] "Roddy Piper wasn't just a great wrestler--he was a force of personality that helped define an era. While he never needed a world title to stay relevant, his promo work alone made him one of the most memorable and influential characters in wrestling history. "Piper's Pit" revolutionized the talk-show segment, and his feud with Hulk Hogan laid the groundwork for the WWF's mainstream explosion in the '80s. In-ring, he was a tough brawler with underrated psychology, and he always made his opponents look better. He could be funny, intense, unhinged, and real--all in one promo. Simply put, he was one of the best heels to ever do it. An icon who didn't play by the rules--Hot Rod was wrestling's original agent of chaos."
bherbert1980 wrote on 19.05.2025:
[3.0] "Roddy Piper was a character a lot of people grew up admiring. He stood out in an era where personalities drove business, and Piper's chaotic energy made him a standout. But the deeper you dig into his career, the more the legend starts to crumble. Let's start with the obvious. Piper was never great in the ring. He was a punch-and-kick brawler with very little depth to his in-ring work. His matches were messy, repetitive, and often relied on stalling and crowd noise to feel alive. Most of his big moments came from Piper's Pit or backstage segments, not bell-to-bell action, sans Orndorff and Bret Hart carrying him at WrestleMania. He built his legacy around not losing and protecting his character, even when it made no sense. Taking the leg drop from Hogan was too much for his ego, so he skipped the pin and left a lot of money and credibility on the table. That may have protected his mystique in the short term, but it also kept him from ever having a signature run. He was famous, but his actual match catalog is paper thin. The nostalgia is strong, but nostalgia doesn't make a body slam any better. Physically, he was juiced up at points but never had a great physique. He had charisma, sure. He could work a crowd and sell well when he wanted to. But his promos, while legendary in energy, often amounted to rants and nonsense. He talked in circles. He screamed. He raved. He got over through volume and unpredictability, not substance. If you look back at the actual content of what he said, it rarely made much sense. Then there's the ugly part that too many fans ignore. On his podcast making racist jokes, including references to lynching African American wrestlers, that went unchecked by many but said a lot about who Piper may have really been. For someone that many view as a folk hero, hearing that was stomach-turning. The idea that he "joked" about that and still got a pass from large portions of the fanbase is a stain on his legacy. And then there's the late-career era. Sting wrestled into his 60s. Edge/ Cope, is over 50 and still going hard. Piper stuck around long past his expiration date and not because he had something left to prove. He just wanted attention and a paycheck. He would stumble into segments, barely move in matches, and added nothing but empty nostalgia. Jericho's takedown of him -- calling him selfish and out of touch for taking TV time from younger talent -- was one of the most satisfying reality checks in wrestling history. Piper had his role in the early Hogan era. He was the cartoon villain. He sang "For Everybody" on the first WWF album. He was a fixture on the Rock n Wrestling cartoon. But after WrestleMania 1, he stopped bumping, stopped evolving, and started repeating himself. Brother Love and Bobby Heenan took more bumps on TV than he did post-1985. When he did return, it was usually around projects like Hell Comes to Frogtown or a failed TV pilot. The passion wasn't there. The work rate never was. He was a pioneer in terms of character and personality. He helped define the talk show segment in wrestling. He made chaos into a tool. But if you strip away the nostalgia, you're left with a guy who couldn't touch Randy Savage in charisma or ring work. He was loud and he got over -- but once the volume goes down, there isn't much left worth replaying."
JediSaiyanMaster1203 wrote on 29.04.2025:
[10.0] ""Rowdy" Roddy Piper is one of my all time favorite wrestlers for so many reasons. The man was a promo wizard, often making his promos feel like shoots that come from the heart (even if he will go off topic and try to tie it back to the point he was, previously, making), Piper's Pit is still the best talk show in wrestling no matter how many great shows have came after, while he wasn't a great wrestler in the traditional sense, he was a good brawler and it worked for his character, either way, he was still able to tell stories in the ring and work the crowd like no other, look at his match with Bret Hart at WrestleMania VIII along with his dog collar match with Greg Valentine, true classics that withstand the test of time. This might be off topic, "They Live" is the best movie to star a professional wrestling and I will die on that hill. Overall, Hot Rod was a great heel, talker and worker who will forever be remembered as one of wrestling's greatest professional wrestlers to ever step foot inside a ring and grab a mic. R.I.P. Roddy Piper."
TripleCrown wrote on 18.04.2025:
[10.0] "Piper was revolutionary and incredibly important to the wrestling business being where it is today. Fantastic brawler in-ring and his mic skills are up there with the very best. Still gets talked about to this day, despite passing almost 10 years ago. Just goes to show how highly regarded he is. Will never be another Roddy Piper."
Rassle Fan wrote on 02.04.2025:
[7.0] "Amazing talker, decent brawler, below average wrestler. Especially when it came to taking bumps. He was really uncoordinated, even in his prime. However, he more than made up for it with his unending charisma and near perfect mic skills. Towards the very end of his career, 1999 and later, you could tell his heart wasn't into it and his work suffered. He's still one of the all time greats."
wrestlingswiftie wrote on 24.09.2024:
[10.0] "His matches are typically messy brawls, (which is how his character is supposed to fight), and his promos were heat-seeking gold. Sometimes, you could barely understand what he was saying, but that's because he was more focused on making you believe he was crazy rather than getting his point across. But then, he went to the WWF and had to make his style a bit more cartoonish, toning it down a bit. Even with those restrictions though, he was still a master at what he did."
Hippykillerz wrote on 04.06.2024:
[9.0] "For every great face, you need a great heel. For Hulk Hogan, that was Roddy Piper. My god, this man had incredible charisma, able to generate heat just his grin. One of the best promo guys ever, came across as a threat and believable. Without a doubt, one of the best heels in history. He then became a great babyface for the rest of his career but for me, the edge was gone. Regardless, he is one of the most iconic wrestlers of all time and deserves all the praise he gets."
rodzor wrote on 24.04.2024:
"Roddy Piper, the man that had it all. Gone all too soon, RIP. You don't have to be the greatest technician of all time to be considered the GOAT, so if we're talking heels? RP the GOAT."
benny5bellys wrote on 20.02.2024:
[7.0] "A career of two halves. The first half is brilliant with Roddy being one of the most watchable guys on earth, the second half went from diminishing returns to outright dire to the point you want to turn the TV off but his star power kept him over. The prolonged period where he was pretty much shit means I won't go higher."
edgyfr wrote on 13.02.2024:
[8.0] "Roddy Piper is full of charisma while beeing absolutely incredible wrestling wise, he has not gotten as many opportunities as he deserves, but he could have been one of the biggest of all time."
crs285 wrote on 11.02.2024:
[9.0] "Piper was one of the best in the business in terms of his charisma and his mic skills. In the ring his matches were normally good with his brawling abilities, ability to work the crowd and selling being his best assets. Crowd bought whatever he was selling whether face or heel. Can't believe he never got a world title run."
TheKeyboardWarrior wrote on 09.01.2024:
"In a world of copied gimmicks, Piper was 1 of 1. No other wrestler was like the Rowdy one, in or out of the ring. Definitely high on the list of most influential performers ever."
danzitorock wrote on 06.01.2024:
[10.0] "Easily one of my all-time favorites, "Rowdy" Roddy Piper is one of the best and most important talkers and entertainers in wrestling history, nobody could do it like him... the man just exhales charisma. Piper is the true definition of a perfect heel, and every person that tries to be a villainous character on television should look up to him. He clearly wasn't the best or most gifted athlete ever in terms of ring-skill, but at that time the most important thing was the character work, and he was simply the best. Piper absolutely has to be ranked in every list of the best heels and mic workers ever, the Piper's Pit was phenomenal."
nothingleftinside wrote on 21.11.2023:
[10.0] "If there ever was a wrestler deserving of a 10 out of 10, it's Roddy Piper. The guy was a master storyteller in and out of the ring, I really don't think there has ever been anyone better. Some of his stuff might look dated, but in the 80s this was the most "real" guy you were ever going to see in wrestling. He also was in so many significant places, in so many different time periods, and his runs are fantastic in about all of them (until 96 maybe and that's mostly due to age). *And* he had time for acting. They Live is easily the best movie featuring a wrestler and I can't imagine anything beating it out. Piper definitely had weak points (some of his stomps and strikes aren't great, he utilized old-fashioned spots well into the 90s) but he's potentially the best promo of all time and was rarely *truly* bad between the ropes. A+ talker, A gimmick/look, and a hard B for in-ring. His influence is still felt today, and his historical significance is second to only guys like Hogan, Bruno, and Austin. A definite top 10 all time guy who is often forgotten these days when it comes to GOAT discussions."
andytuga86 wrote on 03.10.2023:
[7.0] "Promo master, his Piper's Pit interviews were memorable and iconic, because he often made it look like a shoot, as the infamous Frankie Williams episode. His in-ring work was overrated for me, not a great moveset. Despite that, he was an entertaining brawler, very intense, with lot of stamina, who could work a crowd like no one, because was great in ring psychology. One of the best heels in the Golden Era of WWE."
MattHall wrote on 13.08.2023:
[10.0] "One of the best talkers in wrestling history. Piper had a good look and a great gimmick. Piper's pit is one of the best wrestling segments in wrestling history. Although he wasn't the greatest in the ring, however, his mic skills certainly make it up. Plus he didn't need a technician wrestling style, he is better as a brawler."
juiceisloose wrote on 04.08.2023:
[10.0] "Probably the greatest talker in the history of wrestling. He is sometimes criticized regarding his lack of in ring skills. But in Roddy's case, since he was a brawler and he could play his character so well it did not have a negative effect on his overall performance at all. He didn't wrestle but rather fought his opponents and is one of few people who told the story perfectly through his in ring stuff. There have been many past and present wrestlers who got inspired by his mic skills and story telling abilities. Truly an inspirational man, and from the stories about him, was a lovely human too. May he rest in peace."
GeneBlastKyodai wrote on 18.07.2023:
[10.0] "One of if not the greatest promos to ever walk the earth. A legend in the ring and on the stick. Its a shame he never got a world title push because it wouldve been deserved."
texasyosh wrote on 18.06.2023:
[10.0] "Piper was pretty much excellent at all facets of wrestling. It sucks that he isn't around anymore, it really is a testament to someone who was so giving to wrestling, but the life of being a pro wrestler wasn't giving back to him. Career peaks pre-WWF, with excellent work in Portland, and NWA + Mid-Atlantic. A wrestling icon who had 10+ years of prime work, going into his time in the WWF."
Mister Cute Face wrote on 20.05.2023:
[8.0] "Vital to the boom period and one of the best talkers. One of the reasons for that is that he would never stop talking, so the good stuff carried the weird stuff. Not the best worker ever but had two of my favorite matches (vs Hart at WM8 and vs Valentine at Starrcade 83)."
Giantfan1980 wrote on 09.04.2023:
[7.0] "Possibly the greatest heel of the 80's or at the very least in the top 3. I loved his returning baby face run in the late 80's but when he came to WCW in 96, he was looking noticeably old and his matches with Hogan were pretty terrible. I prefer to remember Piper form 1983-1992."
Lcrossin wrote on 04.04.2023:
[10.0] "Roddy is by far one of the best promos in the history of wrestling and one of the best in ring as well. He is certainly the best to never win a world title."
Conquistador37 wrote on 02.05.2022:
[7.0] "Not much a wrestler, a total character though... Now that the dust has settled he comes off as more of an element of American pop culture than an in ring competitor, even down to his territory work. Often infectiously entertaining; but at his worst, the casual racism is too casual and some of his stuff is tragically BAD and difficult to watch (a massive heaping helping of his promos make NO SENSE). The good Hot Rod is legendary, the bad is very verrrry poor. After debating a point rating for some time, I decided to go the math route: A potential 10, with enough casual racism and "off the rails" stuff that makes me fast forward, scramble for mute or just get pissed off to the point where it's a 5.75 rounded up. HOWEVER! While "They Live" is not wrestling, it IS enough to boost his rating a whole point. Proceed with caution. 6.75 rounded up."
Mikeymikeddd1 wrote on 30.03.2022:
[9.0] "If in ring work was the only criteria he'd get a 7 and be lucky to get that. This guy was an over achiever and the fact that he might've got some consideration for being the top guy in a promotion is a testament to his skill on the mic and his politics backstage. It's surprising that he's rated ahead of Hogan on this site. Probably he was more influential on the next generation of wrestlers than Hogan. He can't be a 10 because while he made the most of his talent, he was just a little too small and lacked the athletic skill of a Micheals or a Bret Hart, smaller guys who did take that next step."
WhatIsLooveee wrote on 28.01.2022:
[10.0] "The man without whom there would be no rock'n'wrestling era and who was the best heel of the 80s and a pretty good face in the 90s when he was going to left the company. Roddy had a lot of really bad matches in his career both in his best years and an endless bunch of thrash in WCW and upon his return to the WWE, when he was already worn out by injuries, but still his memorable character, skills on the microphone and charisma outshine all bad. However he's had quite a few good matches nonetheless, like the match with Bret Hart when he passed the torch, as well as the legendary feuds with Hulk Hogan, Jimmy Snuka and the Guerrero dynasty. A very talented person who was able to connect with an audience. In his early years, he could cause the heat and put his life in danger more than once when fans literally rioted. At the same time, at WrestleMania 3, fans supported him almost more than the main star of the show, Hulk Hogan. Roddy made an invaluable contribution to the development of the industry, becoming an example for many future generations of wrestlers."
TigerDiver wrote on 02.12.2021:
[9.0] "One of the 80s very finest. Extremely charismatic in every aspect, and possessed an incredible showmanship skill. In the ring, he was not a Flair or a Bret, but he could hang in there with the best of them. Unfortunately, longevity doesn't prove to be his strength, and some of his work in the late 90s wasn't so good in all honesty."
OnlyHalfTheEffinShow wrote on 19.10.2021:
[10.0] "Roddy is one of the GOATs of all pro wrestling. Whether as a heel, or a face you paid money to see him. People who criticize him as a worker are the kind who expect to see 30 different flips, super-kicks and false finishes while no-selling everything to move from one contrived planned spot to another. Roddy told stories in his matches, and he told them well. He was a brawler, a scrappy, half-insane, loud-mouthed fighter who could talk a mile a minute. He possessed the innate skill that any pro wrestler or entertainer in general wants and that is the ability to connect with an audience."
Pete Gallows wrote on 05.09.2021:
[8.0] "All things considered, it s an 8 from me. I really, really like Roddy, I ve enjoyed most of his movies too. Very charismatic, good look - very different from everyone else, mic skills - 10, but his in ring skills weren t all that great. His selling was comical at times, which I am not a fan of, his thumb to the eye, back rake, working punches, etc - his moveset was lacking. But he compensated for it by being the personality he was. What I ve always found strange was, that he was supposed to be Scottish (Glasgow, if I remember correctly ) and he never even tried to sound even remotely Scottish. It probably would have been hard to pull off, since he talked so much and so fast, plus most people probably didn? t even know what Scottish accent sounded like, so it didn? t matter to anyone."
JamesWackenhut wrote on 10.06.2021:
[5.0] "The nostalgia is strong with this one. A punch kick guy and not much of a worker. Was on the juice but not a great physique. Famous for promos but basically spoke nonsense. Decent seller. Charismatic. Knew how to work crowd and more importantly protect character. Felt taking the leg drop would kill his mystique so he never got a signature run. Left a lot of money on table. Had very few televised matches of any quality until he returned after Hell Comes to Frog Town and his TV pilot. Associated with early Hogan Era due to war to settle the score but rarely appeared on TV outside Piper? s Pit. Orndorf did all the working in his Wrestlemania main event. Villian on Hulk Hogan? s Rock n Wrestling cartoon. Sang? For Everybody? on first wrestling album. Heenan and brother love probably took more bumps than Piper after WM1 on TV. Innovative announcer and personality in Portland. Even without personality quirks and departures would never have been able to compete with the far more compelling and talented Randy Savage or even Ted DiBase. Was wise to make himself scarce, because his hackneyed and boring matches exposed his huge limitations in ring. Should get a 4 for ring skill and clownish selling. 8 for personality. 6 for actual content of what he said."
AnB wrote on 12.05.2021:
[10.0] "My god was it fun to watch anything the Hot Rod was involved in in the 80s, even in the early 90s. I wish I had a way to easily watch more of his NWA action. Might not have been the most technical or most intriguing in the ring, but he was a wildman and hella over."
Ma Stump Puller wrote on 04.05.2021:
[9.0] "A sensational draw in his heyday, probably one of the biggest stars then in terms of crowd investment: Piper was a master in getting your attention if it was him either being in the actual match or just operating around it, and could at ease play with their emotions just fine from blinding rage to heavy cheers. Sure, he was never that well put together in the ring and wasn't a technical masterclass but he DREW so much in every generation of wrestling he was in (well apart from the New Gen but that wasn't quite his fault) and knew how to adapt to who he was playing up to and who he was facing. He's more of a entertainer than a pure wrestler if that makes sense, focusing less on workrate and more on intense storytelling and a more scrappy style. Make no mistake about it, he's definitely got a whole barrel of pretty solid matches under his belt. His rapid fall in terms of wrestling quality in the mid 90's due to a mix of age and wear and tear was rough, even if he was still over. Less said about his bizarre WWE 2003 run, the better. He's a legend of the ring and a hallmark of character wrestlers in a age where nearly everyone had a colourful gimmick: the difference between them and him was that he lived his gimmick to the full, to the point where I'd argue there wasn't a difference at all between the two."
Brett1980 wrote on 23.01.2021:
[9.0] "Was not the best between the ropes but one of the best of all time with a microphone in his hand. In Mid Atlantic became so hated that it got to the point where fans couldn't boo him anymore and started cheering. The same happened in WWF, he was a big reason for the WWFs success in 1984-85 and he was one the best heels of all time. Later work in WCW was not so great but was already cemented as a Legend by then."
Rick wrote on 09.09.2020:
[10.0] "The greatest vilain of all time. In 1985 he was an integral part of creating Hulkamania and Wrestlemania. The innovator of the interview show. He mastered the art of the heel promo and drawing heat."
KyleEnjoysWrestling wrote on 25.07.2019:
[9.0] "An absolute star. A gem on the mic & as a heel. A loose cannon which Hogan played off of very well. Later in the business he was always fun to see pop up from time-to-time."
zephyr wrote on 08.01.2019:
[6.0] "Talk about overrated. Okay in the ring and good promos but nothing more. Absolute refusal to lose clean to anyone for ages. At least he knew when to leave and make mediocre movies."
RatingsMachine wrote on 04.11.2018:
[8.0] "Roddy Piper got over based on his charisma and interviews, which is quite remarkable considering his interviews, if you actually listen to the words, rarely made sense . But Piper had such great delivery that he made them work."
Cameron621129 wrote on 17.07.2018:
[10.0] "One of the best heels of all time. Best promo at the time. Innovator of the wrestler promo segment with his Piper's Pit. Underrated in ring. He was the standout star of his Era."
Gauntlet84 wrote on 14.04.2018:
[10.0] "One of the greatest heels of all time and I actually loved Piper even more when he became a face in the late 1980s. His promos were intense and when he hams it up I enjoy it even more. There are two ways to really rate a wrestler and that's through their promo/character work and the other is through their in-ring ability. This guy is near the top of both of those lists."
Villano VI wrote on 18.08.2017:
[6.0] "Although Roddy Piper had a wonderful peak as a heat-seeking heel and host of his own talk show, I think his refusal to ever show vulnerability (read: eat a pin) really hurt him. Whereas his body type and appearance should have led to him being booked as a Batman type, he always wanted to play the Superman role. And his fast-talking, stream of consciousness style of promo never worked for me, much in the same way I never got Robin Williams's style of comedy."
flashback wrote on 06.06.2017:
[10.0] "The greatest wrestling heel ever (Heenan being the greatest heel manager). SO entertaining on the mic, and in the ring too. I could say more, but just watching anything he ever did will pretty much portray it better than my words can. Truly one in a million - the wrestling world is definitely not the same without him. RIP"
wkupharm wrote on 19.05.2017:
[9.0] ""Just when you think you have all the answers, I go and change the question. " Wish VKM & Crew would have made the Piper/Flair feud in 91/92 much more mainstream. They had some great matches, and two of the best talkers in the business. Very Entertaining----plus we all know, "Piper Scares Flair. ""
Owen wrote on 02.03.2017:
[9.0] "A legendary heel, he helped me get through the dark times of Hulkamania. Plus ya gotta love Pipers Pit. When he smashed Jimmy Snuka with a coconut, I almost died laughing."
jokiller2 wrote on 20.10.2016:
[10.0] "I want to give him a 9 but I can't. The respect I have for him does not allow me to give him less than 10. I really wish Hulk Hogan was not the D*ck he was and let other way more talented people than him win the wwf title. RIP Piper, you will be missed"
Devitciiu wrote on 03.10.2016:
[6.0] "Roddy stuck around too long. Had he left in the mid 90's it might have been different but his later WCW days tainted his legacy and then those final years showing up in the WWE were horrible."
Luv all wrestling wrote on 17.08.2016:
[10.0] "Roddy Piper is a legend, he is charismatic, good look, could have great matches and above all else knew how to make it so that he always made his opponent look good, may the hotrod have bubble gum in heaven"
The Chosen One wrote on 29.05.2016:
[10.0] "Roddy Piper was just great. He was very good in the ring and has had some of the most memorable moments like Piper's Pit with Jimmy Snuka and the street fight with Goldust at WrestleMania 12. He was a very nice guy in real life. He was very humble and did not even charge me for autographs unlike most legends. He left way to early. R. I. P Hot Rod."
Mean Smark Callous wrote on 15.04.2016:
[9.0] "One of my all time favorites. I was a kid during the rise of Hulkamania. While most of my friends were of course all about The Hulkster, I was a Piper guy. I've always rooted for the bad guys, from Darth Vader, to Megatron, to Magneto, a great villain makes the a great hero even better. and Piper made a great counter to Hogan's Superman-Boy Scout-Goody two Shoes persona. The man was just so damn good on the mic. So good that WWE gave him a recurring segment just to talk. Also owned a pair of sunglasses that revealed secret aliens."