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Sept. 19, 2023 - The Joe Rogan Experience
02:34:29
Joe Rogan Experience #2036 - Kurt Angle
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j
joe rogan
01:11:23
k
kurt angle
01:02:43
t
tony hinchcliffe
16:19
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b
b-real
00:02
j
jamie vernon
00:12
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unidentified
Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out!
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
joe rogan
We're up with the greatest pro wrestling fan in the history of the world, Tony Hinchcliffe, and the great and powerful Kurt Angle.
It's an honor, sir.
Thank you for being here, man.
kurt angle
Thanks for having me on, Joe.
joe rogan
Dude, I've been a fan of yours for a long time.
What you did in the Olympics with a broken neck is just nothing short of insane.
How did you do that?
kurt angle
I didn't have a choice.
I mean, what happened was I got thrown in my head in the first round of the Olympic trials.
joe rogan
Close to you.
There you go.
kurt angle
What happened was I got thrown on my head the first round of the Olympic trials and I broke my neck and I didn't know it so I kept wrestling.
My arms were numb and my neck was in excruciating pain and I wrestled through the semis and won and then I had to go on to the finals and wrestle and I won there.
So I won the first round of the Olympic trials with my neck broken.
I went home the next day and I went to my doctor and he took an MRI on my neck.
He said, you have four discs or four broken vertebrae and two discs sticking directly in your spinal cord.
He said, you can't wrestle anymore.
You're done.
I was devastated, man.
I didn't know what to do.
I figured I better get a second opinion.
So I went to another doctor and he said basically the same thing, but he said, when is the next round of the trials?
I said, six weeks.
He said, you know what?
I might be able to get you ready by then.
I said, what's your plan?
He said, well, you're not going to be able to train much.
You're going to have to let your neck rest and heal for the next six weeks.
And it won't be completely healed.
But it'll be healed enough that you can still go.
And what I'm going to do is I'm going to have a doctor travel with you.
And this doctor's going to stick you with 12 shots of Novocain in your neck five minutes before each one of your matches.
He said, therefore you won't feel the pain, you'll forget your neck is broken, and you'll wrestle more freely.
But he said, I'm warning you, an hour after your matches are over, you're going to be in excruciating pain from the abuse your neck takes during those matches.
And he said, are you okay with this?
And I said, yes, and it worked.
Wow!
joe rogan
What a decision to make.
kurt angle
Yeah, I didn't have a choice.
I mean, there was no guarantee I was going to make the Olympic team in 2000 or 2004. This is my one time.
This is my one shot.
joe rogan
Imagine those guys you beat, realizing a guy with a fucking broken neck just kicked my ass.
kurt angle
I never thought about that.
unidentified
Not only did he beat me, not only did he win, he won with a broken neck.
joe rogan
Amazing.
kurt angle
Yeah.
So I went to the Olympics and we did the same thing there.
Wow.
And I was able to get through it and that's when I retired and I retired for a few years and that was that.
joe rogan
Did it heal up a hundred percent or has it always been fucking with you since then?
kurt angle
I always had problems with it, you know, especially my motor skills and my hands.
I broke my neck four more times in the WWE and it got worse and worse.
I mean, I have nerve damage in my neck.
I don't have I lost three inches in both arms.
They atrophied because my neck was just so messed up.
And I've had five surgeries and none of them have really worked.
I'm going to end up having to have fusion, which will be down the line.
joe rogan
Have you done stem cells?
kurt angle
I tried.
It didn't work.
joe rogan
It didn't do it?
Where'd you go?
kurt angle
I went to South America.
I forget which...
Which country?
I can't remember.
Columbia.
joe rogan
Yeah.
kurt angle
Columbia, yeah.
joe rogan
Did you go to BioAccelerator?
kurt angle
Did you go to that place?
Yes, I did.
Yes, I did.
joe rogan
A lot of athletes, a lot of fighters go down there.
kurt angle
Yeah, it didn't work for me, unfortunately.
joe rogan
Really?
Just so much damage, huh?
kurt angle
Yeah, yeah, just too much.
joe rogan
I wonder if you just kept going.
So what's the extent of it now?
kurt angle
You know what?
I can't feel my pinky fingers.
You know, I have a lot of atrophy in my arms.
I don't have a lot of strength.
I can curl for like 20-pound dumbbells.
When I do triceps, I can only push the weights about 60 pounds forward.
It's just I don't have a lot of strength in my upper body.
And so the thing is, if you look at my chest right here, you'll see there's a dip here.
joe rogan
Yeah.
kurt angle
Okay, that's from my neck.
That's a nerve that died and no longer have this muscle in my chest.
I have a complete ripple through my chest.
It'll never come back.
And I'm afraid it's going to happen again, so I'm going to have to have fusion sooner than later, because if I don't, the damage is going to get worse and worse.
My arms are going to end up just shrinking to nothing.
joe rogan
Have you looked into replacement discs?
kurt angle
No, but you know what?
I just got an email from a doctor in New York and he told me he was doing it.
And so I'm going to call him in this next couple of weeks to see if we can set up an appointment.
joe rogan
Aljamain Sterling, the former UFC bantamweight champion, he injured his neck really badly and then got fouled in a title fight.
Actually, it was very controversial because Pyotr Jan, the Russian cat who hit him with a knee to the head while he was down, lost his title that way.
So he lost his title because even though Aljamain's a sensational fighter, Everybody was giving him shit because he won the title because of that.
So then he goes and gets a disc replaced in his neck, defends the title, and dominates Piotr Jan in the rematch.
Beats him in the rematch.
And then goes on to defend the title a couple more times, and then just lost it to Sugar Sean O'Malley.
He's got an artificial disc in his neck.
kurt angle
It worked extremely well for him.
joe rogan
It worked.
And he's good.
He's good to go now.
kurt angle
I need to look into that.
joe rogan
Titanium.
It's a titanium articulating disc.
So instead of fusing the disc, this titanium...
See if you can find it online, Jamie.
Articulating titanium disc replacement for spinal vertebrae.
Cervical, I think.
So Eddie Bravo has one in his lower back, too.
kurt angle
So they do lower backs, too.
joe rogan
Yeah, they do lower backs.
And what they do is, this is what it looks like.
So instead of fusing your discs, which the problem with fusing your vertebrae is you no longer have any movement.
With discs, it allows you to have movement.
And I think it lasts for a long fucking time.
kurt angle
You know, it's crazy.
I had a doctor when I broke my neck the second time.
He wanted me to do fusion.
And he told me that he's going to have to do three levels and that I'd have to retire.
And I was like, oh, that might not be an option.
It was the same doctor that Stone Cold Steve Austin had.
And Steve still has problems to this day with the fusion.
joe rogan
Everybody I know that had fusion has real problems.
kurt angle
Yeah, see, that's why I'm nervous about getting it.
And that's why I'm glad I found this doctor in New York City that can do it.
I didn't know there was a doctor out there that could do that kind of stuff.
joe rogan
I'll connect you to Al Jermaine.
We'll find out who he used, but his results are excellent.
He went on to defend the title.
He's a wrestler, so he got caught in neck cranks, guillotines, fought his way out of stuff with this artificial disc.
kurt angle
It's crazy that he's fighting with an artificial disc.
joe rogan
Fighting and winning against the best in the world.
kurt angle
That's ridiculous, man.
joe rogan
Incredible.
tony hinchcliffe
And it seems like that was a pretty quick turnover because that rematch, there wasn't too much space in between.
joe rogan
Yeah, it was pretty quick.
I mean, I think he was back fighting within eight months.
kurt angle
You know what?
I was told that when you have that done, you literally...
Or out of the hospital and you're working out like three days later.
unidentified
Yeah.
kurt angle
It doesn't really rehabilitate you that much.
joe rogan
Yeah.
kurt angle
You're back to your normal life pretty quickly.
joe rogan
I think it might.
I mean, I don't want to say.
I'm obviously not a doctor.
I don't know if you knew that.
No.
I didn't.
I don't know what the best options are, but it's an option.
And I think it's probably a better option in some cases than fusion.
kurt angle
Oh, definitely.
Who wants metal in their neck?
You lose your mobility in your neck, yes.
joe rogan
Have you ever seen Yoel Romero run?
Yoel Romero got his neck fucked up in Cuba and they just fused the whole thing.
So his neck is like...
So when he runs...
See if you can find a video of Yoel Romero running.
kurt angle
His shoulders are up, huh?
joe rogan
He's, watch, watch, see, watch, look at him run.
kurt angle
Oh my gosh!
joe rogan
Yeah, so his neck doesn't move.
kurt angle
No mobility at all.
joe rogan
Zero mobility.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
And one of the best athletes that's ever competed in the UFC with a fused neck.
kurt angle
Oh, wow.
He, like, there's no flexibility there.
joe rogan
Yeah, there's no movement.
There's no movement.
So the movement is all absorbed in the lower spine and, you know, obviously has giant traps and, you know, huge muscles.
kurt angle
Would that give him spinal damage down the road?
joe rogan
I mean, who knows?
I don't know, you know?
But, you know, he had this done quite a while ago.
This was when he was competing as an amateur wrestler.
kurt angle
Wow, that's incredible.
joe rogan
Yeah, and went on and was one, I mean, fought for the title a couple times, was one of the best middleweights in the history of the UFC. He was an animal and just couldn't move his neck.
That's crazy.
kurt angle
You're fighting and you can't even turn your head.
joe rogan
Yeah.
The crazy thing is he could take a hell of a shot.
And I've always wondered if one of the reasons why he takes a hell of a shot is that his neck doesn't move.
kurt angle
It doesn't snap.
joe rogan
Like, it doesn't whip when he gets hit.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
You know, we've talked about this on the podcast so many times, but just the physical abuse that wrestlers take, both amateur wrestlers and then maybe even more so in the pro wrestling game.
It's crazy.
kurt angle
You know what?
I've been injured a lot in amateur wrestling.
A lot.
But nothing compares to pro wrestling.
I have been so beaten up there.
I barely was ever 100% healthy.
I would tear a hamstring or a groin or whatever.
That'd be something small.
And, you know, it would rehabilitate me a little bit, but I was still able to work around it.
You learn as a pro wrestler how to work around injuries.
I actually wrestled Brock Lesnar in WrestleMania 19, the main event, with my neck broken.
I had to have surgery the following day.
Wow.
Yeah, so it's crazy.
The pro wrestling is just ridiculous.
You wrestle, you're on plywood.
There's a cloth above it, but it's literally hard like plywood.
You know, there's no spring under the ring or it's not a box spring or a bed.
It's plywood.
That's what you bump on.
That's crazy.
joe rogan
Why do they do it that way?
kurt angle
I don't know because it makes the sound.
It makes a loud sound.
That's why they don't care about the health of people.
They just care about the sound it makes.
tony hinchcliffe
When you're at one live, it doesn't really translate to TV as cool as it is live.
You hear that pop and they probably, I think they have microphones underneath and stuff that accelerate it through the speakers and like, boom, boom.
It's very, very exciting.
It's one of those things that's a thousand times better live.
joe rogan
Isn't there a way they can put a layer of wood and a layer of wood and then the foam so the wood slams into the wood but you feel the foam?
tony hinchcliffe
Well, if you do that, then they see your little feet pushing into the foam.
unidentified
Oh, yeah.
kurt angle
How do you get a run on it?
joe rogan
Yeah, I guess.
tony hinchcliffe
They're like, that's a bed.
joe rogan
I mean, not a foam like a bed.
I mean, a foam like a wrestling mat.
Like something.
kurt angle
That might work.
It's not a bad idea.
joe rogan
Better for the athletes.
kurt angle
Definitely.
joe rogan
You know, like a tumble track or something.
Like something that has some give to it.
kurt angle
Well, hopefully WWE's listening.
joe rogan
Well, the UFC and the WWE are together now.
kurt angle
Yes, they are.
joe rogan
Which is very interesting.
Very interesting.
That's a gigantic corporation.
kurt angle
You think they're going to cross the road?
joe rogan
I don't know.
I think they're definitely going to cross-promote.
What I'm interested to see is obviously Brock was the most successful pro wrestler to ever compete in MMA. And CM Punk tried it.
I'm going to be interested to see how many other guys.
Bobby Lashley did it.
How many other guys are going to try it?
kurt angle
When I look at that partnership, I see a lot of fighters crossing over to wrestling, but I don't see many wrestlers crossing over to fighting.
I mean, that's a completely different beast.
I don't think there are many wrestlers that could go in there and mix it up with those guys.
joe rogan
Well, that's what's so sensational about Brock.
kurt angle
It is.
You know what?
He's adapted to everything in his life.
The kid is unbelievable.
For his size, he's 310 pounds, he's the best athlete I've ever been in a ring with.
I mean, he's explosive, he's quick, he's fast, he's strong as hell.
I actually did wrestle him one time for real.
The thing was, what happened was, when he came up from training from OVW, someone went up to him and asked him how he'd do against Kurt Angle.
He said, I kick his ass.
So, okay, they're stirring the pie, you know, they're getting shit rolling.
So the guy comes to me and says, hey, Brock said he could beat you in a wrestle match.
So I went up to Brock and I said, hey, let's get in the ring right now.
And he said, no, no, I have sandals on.
I said, let's take our shoes off.
I said, we'll go barefoot.
He said, no.
So I let it go for the week.
The following week, he was in the ring with Big Show, and they were wrestling for real, and Big Show was about 530 pounds at the time.
Brock was double-legging him, picking him up and slamming him.
I'm like, holy shit.
I don't know if I could beat this guy, right?
So Big Show was facing me.
He was on the other side of Brock, and Brock's back was to me, and I said, Big Show, get out.
He gets out and I sneak up behind Brock and I tap him on his shoulder and I go, it's time to go.
So we went.
And we went for about 15 minutes.
And, you know, the wrestlers tell you that I kicked his ass, that I dominated him.
That's not true.
I beat him, but I didn't beat him.
I took him down twice.
He didn't take me down at all.
I mean, it wasn't like a dominating performance.
I did beat him, but, you know, he's the real deal.
unidentified
Oh, he's the real deal?
kurt angle
He really is, yeah.
You know what?
I'm surprised he didn't train for the Olympics.
I really am.
joe rogan
I wonder how he would have done.
kurt angle
I think he would have medaled.
joe rogan
That would have been amazing.
kurt angle
The athlete he is?
joe rogan
Yeah.
Oh, he's an insane athlete.
I'm sure you've seen his combine scores.
kurt angle
Oh yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
Crazy.
kurt angle
You know what?
He was the final cut for the Minnesota Vikings.
And they wanted him to go to NFL Europe for a year because they had it back then.
And Brock said, I don't want to travel.
And he said, I'll just do UFC. Like, you know, he's switching sport after sport.
Doesn't matter to him.
He knows he's going to be good at anything he does.
joe rogan
That's incredible.
You know, the video we've talked about this so many times, video of him doing that front flip and landing on his head.
kurt angle
Oh God, that was with me.
joe rogan
Yeah, WrestleMania 19. That's right, that was with you.
That video, that would have probably killed most people on earth.
kurt angle
I thought he broke his neck.
My neck was broken.
My neck was broken and Brock was supposed to win the title for me.
When he did this, I was like, oh shit, I'm going to have to pin him.
joe rogan
I mean, that is insane.
Right on his head.
On plywood.
kurt angle
So I go and cover him, and I'm like, please kick out.
Don't let me hold this title for another month.
And he kicks out.
And then I'm going to start talking to him here, and I'm going to say, Brock, are you okay?
And he's like, I don't know.
And I was like, Brock, are you okay?
He said, I think so.
And so I said, I'm going to pick you up.
I want you to give me the F5. Can you do it?
He said, I think so.
Right here.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
And you're grabbing his neck.
That's what's so crazy.
kurt angle
I know.
joe rogan
You're grabbing his neck, and he just landed on it.
kurt angle
You know what?
He didn't hurt his neck at all.
He got a concussion.
He got a concussion.
joe rogan
He didn't hurt his neck?
kurt angle
No.
No.
He doesn't have a neck.
joe rogan
That's so crazy!
It's so crazy that he came back from that.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
So crazy that he came back from that.
kurt angle
And that was it.
I was relieved.
I got to drop the title and get my surgery the next day.
Wow.
I was supposed to win.
That wasn't supposed to happen.
They wanted me to have a nice long title reign, but I broke my neck.
Brock broke my neck the month before in a wrestling match.
And so I went to the doctor, and he said, you have to have surgery.
So I told Vince, I'm not going to wrestle WrestleMania.
And I wasn't going to do it, and I was going to have surgery right away.
And I went to my next-door neighbors, and this kid, he has Down syndrome, a really nice kid.
His name's Johnny.
And he said, Kurt, I heard you're not wrestling at WrestleMania.
And he gives me this magazine, it's DirecTV, and I'm on the cover with Brock.
He said, I really wish you would be able to wrestle.
And I thought, you know what?
I'm going to wrestle to lose a title to Brock on SmackDown.
That's what Vince wanted me to do.
He wanted Brock just to kick me in the gut, give me an F5, and beat me.
I said, I might as well just go to WrestleMania and tough it out.
Go ahead and do it with a broken neck.
Is it going to make it worse?
If it does, it does.
But back then, there were no liabilities.
Now you can't do that stuff.
There's no way the WWE is going to clear you to go out there with a broken neck and perform.
tony hinchcliffe
How did Brock break your neck the month before that?
kurt angle
I was on his back.
I had him in a chokehold.
I had him in a chokehold, and I was on his back, and he was on the other side of the ring.
He's really strong, and he could run really fast.
So I'm on his back, and he starts running to the other side of the ring, and he goes to turn, so I hit the turnbuckle.
Well, we only turned sideways, and my head whiplash really fast, and it snapped.
I heard it snap, and I couldn't feel my arm.
I couldn't raise my arm.
You could tell on the mats when you watch it.
My arm's down.
I couldn't raise it.
My neck was in pain.
I knew something was wrong.
The next day I went to the doctor and got the MRI and I broke my neck again.
So I decided that I was going to have the surgery and then I actually put it off until after Wrestlemania.
But what's crazy is, I broke my neck again.
Brock broke my neck again six months later.
He hit me over the head with a chair like this, straight over top.
You're supposed to bring it sideways so you don't have the pressure of your neck, you know, your head going down your neck.
So he hit me straight over and broke my neck again.
Five vertebrae I cracked.
And so I was out again for about—I had surgery again.
I was out for about three months.
I came back for WrestleMania, and I broke my neck again.
joe rogan
Oh, my God.
kurt angle
Okay, so I was rushing back before my neck was completely healed.
That's what happened.
I broke my neck four times in two and a half years in WWE. And what kind of surgery did they do?
A quick fix surgery.
It's called a lapindectomy.
They go in, they let the vertebrae heal.
That's why you wait a couple months, let it heal.
But they go in and they cut the disc.
Whatever's blocking the nerves or whatever's sticking in your spinal cord, they cut out part of the disc.
And they leave the rest in there.
So right now I have like a little bit of disc in like three different levels of my neck.
And they're fusing together right now because I don't have enough disc.
And that's why I need to get this rubber disc doctor.
joe rogan
Yeah.
kurt angle
I really do.
joe rogan
Well, I'll connect you to Aljamain.
kurt angle
Please do, man.
joe rogan
As quick as I can, as soon as we're done here.
I wish I'd known about it before.
It's such a dangerous area of your body to be injured.
kurt angle
It is.
It is.
It controls everything.
It controls your legs, too.
joe rogan
So right now, is it pushing against something right now?
Is that why you're getting the atrophy?
kurt angle
I have nerves that are being pinched.
And they're not being able to flow down my arms.
So, my fingers are freezing cold.
They're always cold.
I don't have any circulation.
My arms, I've lost, look, this shows you how much weight, how much mess I lost.
This is all extra skin because of where the size of my arms used to be.
And I'm just, I'm barely making it right now.
I literally, you know, my arms are 15 inches now.
They used to be 18, 19 inches.
unidentified
Wow.
kurt angle
So, it's, you know, I'm struggling right now.
joe rogan
The sheer volume that you guys have to do in terms of the amount of shows, it's just such an insane workload on your body.
The punishment that you guys take, the fact that you do it.
How many nights a year were you wrestling?
kurt angle
Well, we were probably going 260, 270. I mean, there was a time in WWE where they were going 320. It was ridiculous.
They were going seven days a week and doing nine shows.
So they would do five Monday through Friday, and then they would do four in the weekend.
They'd do a double shot on the weekends.
That's how it was back in the 80s and 90s.
But then around 2000s when they changed it, they started having five shows a week.
So you had two days off.
Usually one day was a travel day, so you really had one day off.
Where you were home.
tony hinchcliffe
And on top of all that, at your level, those are longer matches.
You know, it's not even a normal thing.
You were doing that main event.
kurt angle
No, being on the main event level, yeah.
You're gonna have a lot longer matches, yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
Like those are 35 minutes or an hour or 50 minutes or 40 minutes of putting on the biggest show.
joe rogan
I know there was a time where people were talking to you about competing in MMA. Yes.
kurt angle
You know what?
I've got this story wrong so many times.
Dana and I have been on the opposite ends of the spectrum with this thing, but now I think I got it right.
There were things I would leave out, but Dana treated me really well.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
He offered me a couple of deals.
The thing is, the second time, the first time I won't even talk about it.
The second time, he wanted me to go on the show Ultimate Fighter with Kimbo Slice.
And I said, Dana, those guys don't get paid.
They're on that show for free.
I said, I need to get paid.
He said, well, I'll give you a substantial amount of money.
So he was going to pay me to be on the show.
But he said, if you win, you're going to get a six-fight deal.
And if you lose, I'll probably still give you a six-fight deal because I think you're going to be really good.
And he said, but I need you to take a physical.
I said, okay, let's take the physical.
Well, I took the physical and I didn't pass it.
So I'm glad I didn't because my neck and all this stuff...
I broke my neck five times up until this point when I went to see Dana.
And I couldn't do five push-ups.
And here I am, I want to fight with these world-class fighters...
And my neck is so messed up.
My arms, I can't do push-ups.
I can't do anything.
And I would have got my butt handed to me.
I might have ended up getting paralyzed, to be honest with you.
I was in no shape or condition to be able to compete with those guys.
And I was full on myself, and I'm glad I failed the physical.
Because I probably would have went through with it.
joe rogan
That's a different mentality.
That is a different mentality.
I mean, you want to talk about toughness?
The toughness of pro wrestlers, the mentality that you have to have to be able to do 260 plus nights a year, that's insane.
kurt angle
Yeah, you know what?
I wouldn't say you're a badass.
Well, you're a glutton for punishment.
You're abusing yourself.
That's what it is.
You're not beating up people.
You're beating yourself up.
That's what it is.
joe rogan
But you can do it over and over.
Just the fact that you knew you had a broken neck going into that match with Brock, who the fuck does that?
kurt angle
I don't know.
joe rogan
When you look back on it now, is there anything you would have changed?
kurt angle
Well...
Throughout my career, was there anything that I would change?
Well, we'll get into this topic, I guess.
After I broke my neck the second time, the first time in WWE, I was introduced to painkillers.
And when I started taking them, I really liked it.
I mean, it masked the pain.
I couldn't feel the pain.
It kind of gave me an energetic feel.
It didn't make me feel nauseous like it does a lot of people.
And I started taking them.
I was taking one every four to six hours, like I was told.
But after a while, you build a tolerance and one doesn't work anymore.
Then you have to take two, then two lead to four, four lead to eight.
Was this Oxycontins?
This was extra strength Vicodin.
Oxycontins are a lot more powerful than Vicodin.
But I was taking 65 extra strength Vicodin a day.
unidentified
Whoa!
kurt angle
That's how out of control I got.
And I was hiding it from the company.
And, I mean, I was in serious trouble.
joe rogan
And does that even make you high at that point?
Does it just keep you from going into withdrawals?
kurt angle
It kept me from going through withdrawals, but there were times where I passed out.
I mean, the company knew.
Some of my friends knew.
You know, I'll give you an example.
I... There was one point.
This is how bad it got.
There was one point in my career where my brother called me.
I was at a house show, an un-televised show for WWE. It was the night before I was going to have the biggest match of my career with Brock Lesnar the next day.
It was an Iron Man match on SmackDown.
And my brother calls me and says, hey, your sister just out of a heroin overdose.
And it crushed me.
I mean, I was crying.
I was in such pain thinking about my sister, who was only 40 years old, dying from a heroin overdose.
And the thing is, I wasn't able to talk to her because I told her eight months prior, if she doesn't get clean, I'm not going to talk to you.
So I didn't talk to her for 8 months.
And then this happens.
So here I am, I'm in the hotel room, and I look at my pills.
I said, fuck it.
I took 20 of them, threw them in my mouth, chewed them up, and swallowed them.
I didn't wake up until 5 o'clock in the afternoon the next day.
And I had the biggest match of my career.
unidentified
Oh my god.
tony hinchcliffe
That night.
So what time did you have to be to the arena and did you do it?
kurt angle
Well, we had to be there at 1, but I didn't get there until 5.30.
tony hinchcliffe
Right.
kurt angle
Yeah.
But, yeah, I ended up doing it.
The WLB was trying to call me the whole time.
They wanted to tell me that, hey, you can go home, plan a funeral for your sister, you don't have to do this match.
But I kept thinking, I know my sister will want me to.
And I knew that I wouldn't have to feel that pain of losing my sister, at least for that hour.
unidentified
Yeah.
kurt angle
So I went ahead and did it.
And it was actually one of my best performances of my career, which is kind of crazy.
But that was a really rough time.
The painkillers are the one thing that I do regret I did in the company.
I wish I was never introduced to them.
joe rogan
But do you think you had to take them?
I mean, it sounds like you were in such excruciating pain all the time.
kurt angle
There were times I needed to take them and there were times I didn't.
But I was so far deep into it that I had to.
I mean, I'm not going to lie to you.
I would go to sleep at night.
I would have 15 pills sitting on the desk next to me for when I wake up because I knew I was going to have withdrawal when I got up.
I'd wake up sweating, shaking, and I'd grab those, throw them in my mouth, chew them up, and swallow them.
joe rogan
Fifteen at a time.
kurt angle
Fifteen at a time.
joe rogan
Most people at 15 at a time will kill you.
kurt angle
Well, they killed me.
I took 20 at one time when my sister died.
I've been really lucky.
I've been blessed.
Honestly, I don't think I should be here today.
joe rogan
How'd you get off of them?
kurt angle
Okay.
Well, what happened was I left the WWE because they wanted me to go to rehab.
I didn't want to go.
So I ended up going to another company called Impact Wrestling.
And I got my painkiller problem under control there because I found a doctor that got me...
On MS-Contin, there are two morphine pills.
They're very tiny, but they'll keep you from going through withdrawal.
So I would take one in the morning, one at night, and no more painkillers.
They were painkillers because they were morphine, but they were high dose.
It was just two of them that I had to take.
Well, I started having anxiety about breaking my neck over and over again, so they put me on Xanax.
So now I'm taking Xanax.
And then I switched to TNA, Impact Wrestling, and everybody drank there, so I started drinking alcohol.
So I'm mixing and having these cocktails, and I'm so out of control that I'm driving from town to town, drinking a 12-pack of beer, and I got four DUIs in five years.
I lost my reputation, everything I worked for.
I was at the lowest point in my life.
And I remember calling my wife from jail after my fourth DUI and she said, listen, I can't do this anymore.
You either go to rehab or I'm taking the kids and I'm leaving.
So I went to rehab because I didn't want to lose my wife and my kids.
And I was scared in rehab.
I literally thought...
I was so nervous.
First of all, the withdrawal was the worst experience I ever had.
I'll never go through that again because I'm never going to take another painkiller.
That was the worst thing I've ever done.
Or drink another drop of alcohol.
That was the absolute worst thing I've ever been through.
And I forget what I was going to say, though.
joe rogan
So with the rehab, how do they get you off of it?
They don't do it cold turkey, right?
kurt angle
Do they?
Yes, they do.
I thought they were going to wee me off.
They put you in a room and let you sleep, and they check on you every couple hours.
How many days?
About six days for me to go through the withdrawal symptoms.
It seemed like forever.
joe rogan
Six days, you just in a room by yourself.
Just thinking.
kurt angle
And you know what?
You want to stay in there.
And they start forcing you out.
You've got to come move around.
You've got to come out and talk to people.
You've got to live your life.
And you're so exhausted.
For the first two and a half weeks, I didn't want to move.
I just wanted to stay in my bed.
But they were forcing me to get out of bed and conversating with people and trying to go and eat and go to meetings and do all that stuff you do in rehab.
So it was really tough.
joe rogan
How long did it take before you felt normal?
kurt angle
Well, I would say two weeks where I really felt normal.
But the thing is, the last two weeks, because I spent a month in rehab, the last two weeks I was so nervous that I was going to fuck up again.
I literally didn't want to leave rehab.
I was scared that I was going to go back to it right when I got out.
joe rogan
So many guys do.
kurt angle
It's so crazy.
That's why.
I hear all these stories and I'm like, oh, it's going to happen to you too, man.
But the one thing that I kept going across in my mind was going through a draw.
I don't want to do that again.
And I know if I start taking them, I'm going to have to experience that again, and I don't want to.
joe rogan
It was that bad?
kurt angle
It was that bad.
joe rogan
What is it like?
What is the withdrawal feeling?
kurt angle
Okay, you're sweating because you're hot and you're cold at the same time.
You're shitting your pants.
You're throwing up.
You can't think straight.
Your body's shaking.
You're getting hot sweats, cold sweats.
You feel like you don't have anything inside of you.
No insides, no organs, nothing.
You feel like you're hollow.
It's just the craziest thing.
It's the most painful thing I've ever gone through.
And, you know, I'm sure people have been in a lot more pain than that with certain things they've had done to themselves.
But for me, that was the worst.
joe rogan
What's crazy is when you think about how mentally strong you are, how difficult it is for you to go through that.
Now, think of the average person.
You know, have you seen that painkiller show on Netflix?
kurt angle
I watched some of it, yeah.
unidentified
Fucking what they did to this country is so crazy.
kurt angle
Oh, I know.
They're advertising it.
Hey, this is the best drug since whatever and, you know, this will keep you, you know, keep you moving every day and give you a healthy lifestyle.
Meanwhile, they didn't tell you that they're opiates and they're addictive and that they could kill you.
joe rogan
Yeah.
The one to start and the one to stay with.
What was the slogan that they used, Jamie?
Do you remember?
We talked to Peter Burke, who made that show, and he obviously had to do a lot of research on the Sackler family and what they did and how they engineered this and how they knew that People weren't just taking painkillers back then.
It wasn't a normal thing.
When I was a kid, for someone to take heroin was crazy.
When you found out someone was taking heroin, you're like, Jesus Christ, Mike's taking heroin?
But when those pills came around, because it was prescribed by a doctor, everybody's like, it's fine.
It's okay.
kurt angle
I thought it was too.
This is legal.
My doctor's giving it to me.
This is what I need.
But I knew after I started taking more than four and I was taking five, six, seven, eight, I knew I wasn't doing the right thing.
I knew that I was...
Going against what the doctors wanted.
You know what I would do?
I literally had 12 doctors that I was calling.
And I had 12 different pharmacies because you can't go to the same pharmacy twice in one month.
And I had a Mexican Contact where I got them illegally.
So I was getting about 2,700 pills a month.
Oh my God!
And you know what?
That's all you think about.
That's all you think about is how you're going to get your drug the next time.
So I have this calendar and every day it tells me which doctor to contact or contact your Mexican contact down in Mexico.
So I have all these things set up so that I can get what I need.
And it takes over your life.
You're no longer living your life.
Your marriage, you're not worried about your marriage, your kids, your job, nothing.
You're just worried about how you're gonna get the drugs.
unidentified
God.
So crazy.
joe rogan
And it's so crazy that this didn't exist.
This didn't exist in America until, what, a couple decades ago?
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
When it started?
kurt angle
Yeah.
Now, who's the people that...
joe rogan
The Sackler family.
kurt angle
Okay.
Are they affiliated with Purdue?
joe rogan
Yes.
Purdue Pharma.
Yeah.
unidentified
Okay.
joe rogan
Yeah, the story from the documentary is sensational.
The series on Netflix is sensational.
It just shows how fucking evil, evil those people were.
kurt angle
Well, I wonder if they actually knew the dangers that were involved when they first started.
joe rogan
It seems like they knew.
kurt angle
They did?
joe rogan
It seems like they knew a lot.
They absolutely knew it was addictive.
That's why the FDA wouldn't approve it.
And then they took this guy, there was one guy from the FDA that approved it.
And this guy would not approve it.
He was like, this is heroin.
Like, I'm not gonna approve this.
And then they took this guy and they took him to a fucking hotel and they had him in a hotel for two days.
I don't know what they did.
Like, no one knows what they did in this hotel for two days.
But after the two days, he came out and instead of saying it's non-addictive, For the first time ever, they said, it is believed to not be addictive.
kurt angle
Wow, they said the opposite.
joe rogan
Somebody said it.
Somebody believes it.
Do you believe it?
Yeah, I don't think it's addictive.
Okay, it's believed to not be addictive.
I mean, to use that sort of terminology, you just need one person or someone.
kurt angle
Yeah, just approval for one person.
joe rogan
For one of the most dangerous drugs that this country's ever experienced.
kurt angle
It is the most dangerous drug, yeah.
joe rogan
Look at the amount of people that have died from it.
The opiate overdoses in America are somewhere in the neighborhood of 100,000 a year.
kurt angle
That's ridiculous.
joe rogan
Which is so crazy.
So in 10 years, a million people die from this stuff.
And who knows how many people committed suicide, how many people died from car accidents, how many lives and families were wrecked.
kurt angle
Yeah, the PECO is being affiliated with that, too.
joe rogan
Yeah, so many.
And it's just insane.
It's insane how much power money has.
And that a pharmaceutical company could influence people in that way.
And in this documentary they show, in the docu-series, they show how they did it.
tony hinchcliffe
And it's scary because a lot of those doctors, you know, when they're younger or whatever, they're like, I want to help people.
I want to make people feel better.
I want to help humans.
And then they're in the business a little bit and they realize, well, if you want a vacation or if you want a yacht, if you want this, you got to play the game.
joe rogan
Yep.
Also, you have liability insurance.
You also have medical school bills.
You have, you know, the cost of running your business.
It becomes like the stock market.
It becomes like anything else where you're just thinking about numbers.
You're not thinking about people.
It's not your responsibility.
And the crazy thing is then they would shame the people when there was a strategy they had to say, oh, you're a drug addict.
It's not the pills are the problem.
You're a drug addict.
You're an addict.
And the people are like, oh, I'm a drug addict.
No, they turn you into one.
Everybody's a drug addict if you give them 20 fucking pills a day.
unidentified
Right.
joe rogan
They all become drugs.
Every human being.
Every human being, if you give them OxyContin all day, they will become that.
kurt angle
Everybody has the ability to be addicted.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, yeah.
unidentified
I believe that.
joe rogan
Everyone.
I think everyone.
tony hinchcliffe
I had a wisdom tooth taken out like a decade ago.
And this doctor was so nice.
He was like a cool, smart guy.
And he's like, I'm going to send you home with these 12 Vicodin or whatever they were.
And if you feel pain, take one or two of them.
You'll be great.
And I started to feel pain like four, six hours after.
I remember it was the day that the WWE Network came out.
Because I got it.
I'm like, this will be fun to watch.
Catch up on old stuff.
Which it was.
It was amazing when that debuted.
But anyway.
So I have that on.
Pain starts kicking in.
And I take a half of one.
Just a half.
And 20 minutes later, I just start sweating and smiling like a super villain.
I mean, I could not take the smile off of my face.
I was just in glory.
And immediately, I'm like, this is bad.
And even though I had never been happier, like my body was just, it was like just an overall orgasm for the entire life.
You see your fingertips are sweating with excitement and I went and I flushed those other whatever nine and a half or eleven and a half pills down the toilet.
I knew immediately.
I'm like this is trouble.
joe rogan
Good for you.
tony hinchcliffe
I mean, even if I would have taken the whole one, I probably would have been...
I could have changed my fucking entire life right then and there.
unidentified
Easy.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
joe rogan
Well, they weren't around when I got my first knee surgery, but when I got my first knee surgery when I was in the hospital, they had me on a morphine drip, and I remember lying in that hospital bed feeling so good.
I was like, this is amazing.
And I had an ACL reconstruction where they did the patella tendon graph, right?
So, you know, they cut your knee open, they take a slice of your patella tendon, and then they screw it in where your ACL used to be.
And then they have you on this constant motion machine while you're in the hospital bed.
So this thing is extending your knee and closing it out.
And then you had a button, and you hit the button and the morphine drips.
And I'm just lying in bed.
I should have been in agony.
And I'm like, wee!
kurt angle
But wait a minute.
There had to be a limitation to what you could do.
joe rogan
Yeah, imagine.
I don't know.
I mean, we're talking 1993. I don't know.
kurt angle
Oh, there might not have been.
joe rogan
That was my first one.
And my second one, my second knee surgery I got was in 2000, my second ACL reconstruction I got was in 2003, I think.
Maybe four.
And that time, I didn't take anything.
I was like, I'm not taking shit.
Because I don't like the way those things make me feel.
I don't like it, and I'm scared.
kurt angle
I like it too much.
joe rogan
I had friends in high school that were addicted to drugs.
Before I was 30 years old, all I did was drink.
I would occasionally have...
I'd smoked pot maybe like six times until I was like 30 years old.
And then when I had surgery, I was like, I just associated pain pills and that stuff with your life falling apart.
Luckily.
Because I know how good it was.
Peter Berg was talking about that.
He took one recreationally and he's like, this is amazing.
unidentified
Amazing.
joe rogan
He's like, oh my god, I can never do that again.
Because it's fucking, because it's just too good.
It's too good.
And that's the problem.
Too many people that get hooked on that stuff, the problem is their life is shit because they've been a drug addict.
And then they get off of it, and so they're super depressed because their life is terrible because they wrecked their life.
And the only thing that makes them feel good is the drugs.
kurt angle
You're absolutely right.
joe rogan
And no one can tell you any different.
No one can fix you.
You gotta kinda do it yourself.
Your family can tell you.
You gotta stop doing drugs.
You're like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then you go buy some and...
kurt angle
It's all you.
Yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
And it's wild.
It only takes one charismatic, smart, sounding, seeming doctor.
Because I've always avoided drugs as well.
And, uh...
And it was just one orthodontist that's like, yeah, no problem whatsoever.
Just take one of these.
You have no worries.
No problems.
joe rogan
They'll give them to you even if you're not in pain.
That's what's crazy.
I had a nose operation.
I had a deviated septum fix, and my doctor prescribed me two different kinds of painkillers.
And I was like, I'm not in pain.
And he's like, but you might be.
I'm like, Jesus Christ.
I'm like, I'm not feeling this.
kurt angle
He's pushing them on you.
joe rogan
Yeah, he was pushing them on me.
He was telling me to take them.
tony hinchcliffe
These guys want to be one of the 12 doctors on a list to get their kickbacks.
joe rogan
If you're supposed to, like, those numbers, you've got to keep those numbers coming in.
They'll come to you.
Hey, buddy, what's going on?
kurt angle
So they actually do get paid?
joe rogan
Oh, yes.
kurt angle
Wow.
joe rogan
Yeah, there's some sort of kickbacks.
And there's also bribes.
And the bribes are in the form of vacations and dinners.
And my wife's nurse, my wife's mother, rather, was a nurse.
And she would say that the pharmaceutical reps would come to the clinic, to the hospital, and they would, like, take everybody to dinner.
Come on.
We're going to take you to dinner.
They'd take them out to these nice steak dinners.
And everybody would eat whatever you want.
A nice bottle of wine.
And so, like, they were on the side of these pharmaceutical drug companies.
So when the patients would say, hey, what do you think about this stuff?
They were like, oh, you should take it.
It's very good.
It's very good.
It's a good company.
You know, so it's just you build loyalty with these people.
You know, Brigham, from ways to well.
Brigham started off his career.
He's a good buddy of ours who now owns a stem cell clinic.
And, you know, now he's into wellness and prescribes peptides.
kurt angle
Is he in the United States?
joe rogan
Yes.
He's in Austin.
kurt angle
Okay.
joe rogan
And, you know, back then, when he was a pharmaceutical drug rep, it was all about relationships with the people.
Like, you would go to the kids' games, you would know all these people, you would know all the doctors and nurses, you had to be on a first name, but you were their friend!
And so the more they liked you, the more likely they were to prescribe your drugs, the more they would give it out to people.
kurt angle
They were building trust.
joe rogan
Building trust.
And in Painkiller, in the documentary, the Netflix series, they hire these really hot young girls that were the representatives that would go to the doctors and sell this stuff and bring the brochures and they had a little spiel that they would sell.
It's crazy.
It's crazy what they did.
I mean, they followed the law.
Look, if you want to be an evil sociopath, it's really that the way they did it was that's the way to do it.
And it's the most effective way to make a lot of money.
They made billions.
kurt angle
And you know what?
They didn't break the law, I guess.
joe rogan
Sort of, kind of.
But what's interesting now is because of the Netflix series, they were going to sign some sort of a deal where they give $6 billion and they were going to have immunity to prosecution.
And a judge looked at it after the series and went, hold on.
We're not signing off on this.
We need to find out what the fuck is going on.
What did you guys do?
What did you do to the world?
What did you do to the country?
kurt angle
So are they looking for more?
More money?
joe rogan
Well, they're not just looking for more money.
They're now talking about criminal prosecution.
I don't know what's going to happen.
I mean, it's like you would like people to be held responsible for it, but...
tony hinchcliffe
Unfortunately, they have so much money they can pay the lawmakers, they can pay the Congress, they can do anything.
joe rogan
It's very weird.
It's very weird that they allowed them to...
I mean, it's evil.
It's really evil.
They ruined the lives of untold millions of people.
kurt angle
I don't know if I could ever do something like that.
joe rogan
Of course you couldn't.
kurt angle
Come up with something that I know people are going to get addicted to and lie to them.
joe rogan
I think it's one of those things where you become accustomed to it because everyone like you is doing it and it becomes part of what you do.
You know, I think it's just people adapt to whatever environment they're in.
And if your environment is in getting pills to people, that's your job.
Your job is to get pills to people.
The pharmaceutical drug reps, they come to you.
kurt angle
That's all they're thinking of is how I get my pills to these people.
joe rogan
That's what your job is.
Your job is to do that.
Your job is not to help these people.
There was one doctor in the series that was an ethical doctor that kicked the lady out of his clinic.
He's like, get the fuck out of here.
You're selling heroin.
It's an interesting scene because that's rare.
Because most doctors are rule followers.
You've got to think, most doctors, they go to college, they get their medical degree, they go to medical school, they do the residency.
Everything is by the book.
You've got to do what they say to do.
And then you're working for a hospital, which...
This is how naive I was.
I didn't even know that most hospitals are privately owned.
Like, I didn't know that there were for-profit businesses to try to push medicine on people.
I thought, they're just here to help you.
Like, wouldn't that be the best thing?
Like, if hospitals were just places where the doctors get paid well because they're really good at their job, but what they're trying to do is make you better.
No, those hospitals are trying to make as much money as possible.
They want to keep you in as much as possible, prescribe as much medication as possible.
kurt angle
You know what?
I'll give you an example of that.
It's not really drug-related, but I went to a hospital.
I had pneumonia, and they accidentally gave me the hospital bill of everything that they used on me.
Like, if I had ginger ale, diet ginger ale, It was a little six ounce, those little ones.
I had like 20 of them while I was there.
They were charging $12 for each one of those.
They had on the bill like the linen, what the linen costs and this and that.
Linen was $200, just the bed sheets.
I saw all this stuff on this bill.
The bill ended up being for five days, it was $165,000.
How could you spend $165,000 just laying in a hospital bed?
You know, they're serving three meals a day.
Yeah.
I mean, $167,000.
It's ridiculous.
joe rogan
It's business.
That's what's crazy about business, right?
Businesses, people just want to make the most money possible.
It's fucking crazy when it's involving pills and people's health.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
God.
So how many years have you been clean now?
unidentified
Twelve.
kurt angle
Twelve years.
unidentified
That's awesome.
joe rogan
Congratulations.
That must be very nice.
kurt angle
Yeah, it's nice.
You know, I don't have a lot of, thank God, I don't have a lot of triggers anymore.
I used to when I had, because I was going through a lot of pain, and I had my knees replaced, I had my back surgery, so I'm actually on the med now.
When did you have your knees replaced?
I had the shoulder replaced, too.
I had them replaced a year ago.
How'd that go?
Really good, really good.
My doctor was really progressive.
He got me out of bed the day of surgery, had me walking around.
It was ridiculous.
joe rogan
Did you do one at a time or both at the same time?
kurt angle
Both at the same time.
joe rogan
Oh my god.
So you're walking around with two new knees?
kurt angle
I left the hospital without using anything.
I walked out of the hospital the next day.
Yeah, and he wanted me to walk up the steps and down the steps.
joe rogan
Wow!
kurt angle
It was crazy.
I mean, it didn't take me long to recover, though.
Probably four or five months.
It usually takes a year, but I did in probably four or five months.
joe rogan
Wow.
kurt angle
Yeah.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
And with no painkillers?
kurt angle
No painkillers.
joe rogan
Do you take CBD or anything like that?
kurt angle
I tried CBD. It doesn't really work on me.
joe rogan
I think the volume of pain you're dealing with is probably outside of CBD's pay scale.
unidentified
Is there a way to OD on CBD? No, I don't believe so.
joe rogan
It might be.
I mean, it might be bad for you as I look at a kill cliff with CBD in it.
This is 25 milligrams.
This is nothing.
Yeah, CBD is for people that have mild arthritis and general discomfort and inflammation.
It's not for what you were dealing with.
Shoulder replacements, knee replacements, disc replacements.
kurt angle
I can't wait to get my neck done.
I mean, I need that number of that doctor, man.
That's all I'm thinking about right now, Joe.
joe rogan
Yeah, well, as soon as we get out of here, I'll contact Al Joe and try to get that hooked up and find out, because his is amazing.
I mean, the fact that he was able to get that surgery, I believe Chris Weidman got the same surgery.
I don't know if it's from the same doctor, but several guys in the UFC have gotten that surgery.
kurt angle
You know what?
John Cena had it, too.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah?
kurt angle
I believe, but his was a rubber disc.
joe rogan
Interesting.
How long ago was this?
kurt angle
Probably seven or eight years ago.
He had neck surgery.
I believe he had a rubber disc put in his neck.
I'm not so sure that's going to last as long as the other one, the doctor that does yours.
joe rogan
That's the scary things they'll tell you, like we'll replace something, whether it's a hip or whatever, but in 20 years you're going to need a new one.
kurt angle
I know, I know.
They told me to take care of your knees because they won't last forever.
joe rogan
What did they give you, like a timeline?
kurt angle
15, 20. But I told them, can I run on them?
They said, no, but I run on them.
tony hinchcliffe
Jesus!
You do a lot of cardio to make up for all the stuff that you can't do?
kurt angle
I only run two miles two or three days a week because of my knees.
I don't want to overdo it because I know they'll probably go to shit in a year or two if I abuse them too much.
So I do very little.
I run a couple miles three days a week.
Not a lot.
joe rogan
You know, as bad as the pharmaceutical drug companies are in pushing painkillers, thank God the medical, like the technological side of it, of the medical community, is developing these incredible replacements.
kurt angle
That's crazy, huh?
joe rogan
Yeah.
kurt angle
Getting new knees, new shoulders, yeah.
joe rogan
Like Matt Serra, who's the UFC welterweight champion, he just got his knee replaced.
He's back to jiu-jitsu, training again hard.
He's gonna get his other one done.
I mean, it's kind of incredible.
kurt angle
Now will he compete again?
joe rogan
No, he's not competing anymore.
But he's 50, you know, close to it at least.
You know, what he's doing is just training and doing normal stuff.
kurt angle
At least he can do what he was doing before.
joe rogan
Yeah, at least he can do what he was doing before.
I mean, there's a lot of guys that they do some pretty high-level athletics with knee replacements, which is pretty crazy.
Does it hurt?
What do the knees feel like?
kurt angle
No, but you know what?
They only bend.
You can't go sideways with them.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
kurt angle
It's almost like it's done like this.
It's like a hinge.
joe rogan
So it doesn't twist.
kurt angle
You can't cut left and right.
Not real well.
It's kind of like this.
tony hinchcliffe
It's insane because all the wrestlers that we've had on All unbelievable athletes, right?
But The Undertaker, Ric Flair, Hulk Hogan especially, mostly known for their big characters, the entertainment side of things.
And Kurt's also known for that.
But really, Kurt is considered, I mean, Triple H, John Cena, they've all said that he is the best athlete in the history of the sport.
So compared to the people that we've had on, you've done more.
He was throwing people more and landing on his head more and doing longer matches at the peak of it all.
So it's wild to hear.
A lot of them have had replacements and this and that, but it's almost a miracle that that's all that you've had.
kurt angle
Yeah, you know what, especially with everything that I've gone through, it is really brutal.
I wrestled pro wrestling, I think it was 19 years, and I did amateur for about 22. So, I mean, both of them have affected me.
I'm not going to lie to you.
I had probably eight knee injuries and four surgeries in college and high school.
joe rogan
Mostly meniscus stuff?
kurt angle
Yeah, I had one was ACL, but most of it was meniscus.
I also blew out my PCL and I never had it replaced.
joe rogan
Oh, Jesus.
kurt angle
Still like it.
Well, now that they gave me a knee replacement, it doesn't really matter.
joe rogan
Right.
kurt angle
Yeah, but I had my knee, I could shift my leg.
Three inches back and forth.
unidentified
Wow!
kurt angle
It was really loose because my PCL wasn't there anymore.
joe rogan
That's insane.
And you were wrestling with that.
kurt angle
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
See, everyone wants to complain.
Forty hours a week is such a long week.
unidentified
I'm so tired.
joe rogan
This levels to what people have to tolerate in this life.
What they have to endure.
But I guess going through all that, you could probably go through basically anything.
kurt angle
I don't know, man.
Bring it on.
I've gone through a lot of shit, man.
I have.
joe rogan
What are you doing these days to keep yourself occupied?
kurt angle
Well, I just finished a movie called Thy Will Be Done.
It's a really good independent movie.
And I have a movie that I'm going to be doing at the beginning of next year with Michael Tadros Jr. Brandy Couture is going to be in it.
joe rogan
Oh, that's awesome.
kurt angle
Yeah.
So I'm looking forward to that.
So I've been doing some of that stuff.
I run a podcast, The Kurt Angle Show.
joe rogan
Oh, nice.
kurt angle
Yeah.
And I also own a supplement company.
I have...
A company called Physically Fit, and we have a product called Smart Snacks.
They're little crispy protein bites.
They're a bunch of flavors, 11 different flavors.
They're really good, high-protein, low-carbohydrate.
They're doing pretty well.
Right now, we're going into Walmart.
We're in the quick...
Quick fill stores, a bunch of grocery stores, a bunch of convenience stores.
So they're doing okay.
joe rogan
Do you got a website that people can go to to get that?
kurt angle
Yeah, physicallyfit.com.
unidentified
How'd you get that?
joe rogan
That's incredible.
unidentified
Yep.
joe rogan
How'd you get that?
That's a fucking incredible URL. It is.
kurt angle
You know what?
That's what people, when they look, when they want to get in shape, the first thing they type up is, how do I get physically fit?
joe rogan
Yeah.
kurt angle
And we're the first thing that pops up.
It was clever on my co-owner's part to do that.
joe rogan
That's very clever.
So what are those chicks in...
What is that?
How do you say that?
kurt angle
Chicken snacks.
joe rogan
Chicken snacks.
kurt angle
Yeah.
Those are chicken protein.
joe rogan
Oh.
kurt angle
They're made with chicken.
The ones, whey protein at the top, those are whey protein.
And I believe, I think they're whey protein.
They might be the organic plant protein, but I can't.
joe rogan
Crispy protein bites.
So you sell all kinds of stuff.
kurt angle
Yeah, well, we just sell the protein bites.
unidentified
Oh, okay.
kurt angle
They're all different.
One's chicken, one's plant, one's whey.
joe rogan
Oh, okay.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
Well, that's a great URL. Okay, so go to physicallyfit.com, folks.
Go ahead and get some of that.
So, that's great that you're doing movies, too.
Randy Couture is probably the best example of a UFC fighter that went from, you know, fighting to, I mean, he was in Expendables.
I mean, wrestling and fighting.
kurt angle
Fighting into movies.
joe rogan
Yeah, I mean, he's done a great job.
kurt angle
He has.
He's done a great job.
I know he's been doing...
He's what?
He's done two Expendable movies?
joe rogan
How many of them are there?
kurt angle
Gosh, there's like...
11 or 12?
joe rogan
There's four of them?
kurt angle
I said 11 or 12. It's hilarious.
joe rogan
You're watching these really old guys just kicking the shit out of everybody.
kurt angle
I know, I know.
I'm one of them now.
If they ever pick me to do it, I'm going to be 55. So it's just funny that they're all over 50, over 60, mostly, yeah.
joe rogan
Well, Stallone.
Stallone's pushing 80, right?
kurt angle
He looks great.
joe rogan
He does look great.
He's a canary in the coal mine.
Yes, he is.
Keep it going as long as that guy has.
He broke his neck on one of those.
I think he got his neck fused.
kurt angle
I heard about that.
Yeah, he got fusion and everything.
joe rogan
He was doing a stunt because he was doing his own stunts and he got thrown into a wall or something.
Snapped his neck.
kurt angle
I guess he was getting a little too old and he stuck with it a little bit too long.
joe rogan
Well, he's hardcore.
You know, imagine wanting to do your own stunts when you're 70. Like, yo, throw me through the wall!
Let's go!
It's like a fucking psycho.
kurt angle
I'm a big Stallone fan.
I love the guy.
joe rogan
How can you not be?
I mean, the guy can act, too.
That's what's crazy about Stone.
Like, that movie Copland.
You ever see that movie Copland?
kurt angle
Good movie.
joe rogan
Very good movie, man.
It was like one of his first movies where, you know, he gained weight.
He actually got fat for that movie on purpose.
Like, just to show, like, it's not just all about being.
kurt angle
God, he probably gained 40 or 50 pounds.
joe rogan
Yeah.
And had a tremendous performance, like, as an actor.
Just as an actor, like...
kurt angle
And he's always used to dieting down for his movies.
joe rogan
Looking ripped, taking his shirt off.
He's done a lot of those movies, too, obviously.
But, you know, that was a very impressive movie.
The fact that he...
I mean, it's got to be hard for a guy like that, too.
Your whole career, you're looking great, shredded, rocky.
unidentified
Oh, yeah.
kurt angle
And then I'm sure it set him into a little bit of a depression, to be honest with you.
joe rogan
Probably.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
But then he probably also enjoyed the accolades from the movie because a lot of people really respected him after that.
For a lot of those, like, action guys, they don't, you know, that's, like, the thing they don't get respect for is their actual acting ability.
tony hinchcliffe
The agility is incredible.
I watched this Gary Oldman.
I don't know if I told you about this.
I found this.
Gary Oldman, like, there's, like, a nine-minute video on YouTube of him and all of his different characters that he's done, and you can't You can't even tell it's him, 80% of them.
The guy is such a freak.
joe rogan
Remember True Romance?
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, God.
And that's just one of them.
joe rogan
Just one of them.
How about Dracula?
kurt angle
Yeah, yeah.
He was really good.
joe rogan
He was fucking incredible.
tony hinchcliffe
Unbelievable.
joe rogan
And he played old Dracula and young Dracula in the same movie.
kurt angle
He's so versatile.
joe rogan
I think he's kind of...
Is he retired from acting?
He might be one of those guys like...
There's a lot of those guys that just get so tired of being other people, like, who am I? Right.
kurt angle
Yeah, man, I mean, but his character, he really went way out there.
joe rogan
Yeah, way out there.
tony hinchcliffe
No two are anywhere near the same.
This thing that you're watching, because it just switches every 20 or 30 seconds to a different thing.
joe rogan
Yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
And so many people get kind of typecasted, like Christoph Waltz from Inglourious Bastards.
That character that he played was so cool that it almost seems like in every movie they're trying to get him to do that again.
unidentified
Yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
Alright, you're going to be a villain in this, you're going to be smooth-talking and over-enunciating.
They try to get it again.
And it's so interesting, the guys that test themselves and push themselves like that.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
It's got to be hard when your whole identity is wrapped up in pro wrestling to just stop.
How difficult was it for you to just stop wrestling?
kurt angle
It was hard.
I mean, when you leave, you get depressed.
You miss the action.
You miss the fans' responses.
I understand why...
You know, a lot of wrestlers have fell into depression, that started taking drugs, ended their lives a lot quicker than other professions.
But it is.
It's a very addictive form of entertainment.
I mean, once you're in it, you love it, and you never want to leave it.
And the problem is, everybody gets to an age where they can't do it anymore.
So you have to come to grips with it.
If you don't, You're probably not going to survive much longer.
joe rogan
But look at Ric Flair.
kurt angle
You know what?
He's living the dream.
He's still Ric Flair.
Every day.
joe rogan
He's still Ric Flair.
kurt angle
He's just not wrestling in the ring.
He's just doing it in the streets everywhere.
tony hinchcliffe
It is unbelievable.
joe rogan
Tell the story about how you were partying with him the other day.
tony hinchcliffe
Dude, so...
So he's in town, and he hits me up on a Sunday at, like, noon.
He's like, let's hit the streets tonight, show me the city.
Let's have some drinks and pick up some babes.
I'm like, okay.
He goes, I'm done with this comic book signing at 5pm.
I'm like, sweet, I'll meet you at 5. About a half hour later, he goes, I'm gonna be done with the comic book signing at 1.30.
kurt angle
That's Rick!
He shafted the fence three and a half hours.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, man.
I go, okay, I'll meet you.
Where do you want me to meet you?
He's like at this hotel bar.
I go to this hotel.
I find the first security guy I know.
I go, where's the bar?
And he points like that.
It was just right over his shoulder.
And I just see that white flanking hair.
And there are, on each side of him, three and three just flanking.
Flight attendants, fucking nurses.
I mean, just a gaggle of geese.
And I'm walking up and I'm like, this is like what I've heard about forever.
I'm like walking up to like a music video or the story or the cartoon of Ric Flair.
And sure enough, he introduces, these ladies work at Southwest Airlines, this one's a this, this is that.
And he goes, let's hit the streets, I'll get us a car.
And he gets a car, he gives the guy a stack of hundreds, he goes, you're gonna be our driver for the day.
This random Uber driver's like, okay.
kurt angle
He's like, you're gonna be our driver.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, it's unbelievable.
And he is just the man.
I mean, he was already pounding vodka cranberries.
He's like, what do you want to drink?
I'm like, I'll have what he's having.
I haven't had a vodka cranberry since I was like 17 years old.
And I swear to God, we went all day.
We went from 1.30 to...
He didn't leave me until like 8 p.m.
He like knew his limit.
He's like, I'm gonna get back.
He didn't seem drunk at all.
He must have had 17 vodka cranberries.
kurt angle
I think it's because he's drunk all the time.
That's what I think.
tony hinchcliffe
And he's so nice to everybody.
There's a part of me when you're, you know, I've been around so many big people for so long where I'm like kind of, if they're with me, I'm like kind of protective.
Like, come on, give them some air, this and that.
But he was just embracing everybody.
He was so cool.
So nice.
And everyone gravitates towards him.
Waka Flock Aflame, rappers.
kurt angle
Who talk to anybody.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
Waka Flock Aflame, one of the great rappers, shows up.
He goes, yeah, Rick, I heard you were here.
What's up?
Let's hang out.
People find out where he is and gravitate towards him.
It's everything you hear about.
It's like being inside of a story.
It's hard to describe.
kurt angle
He's a lot of fun.
tony hinchcliffe
He is a living legend.
joe rogan
He's a real living legend.
kurt angle
He lives a gimmick 24-7.
joe rogan
And he says he's making more money now with his cannabis company than he ever made in pro wrestling.
kurt angle
You know what?
He told me when he was in WCW, he was only making...
$600,000 a year.
$600,000 a year.
And it's because when WCW bought out Crockett, the promotion down in the South, when they bought it out, they bought out Rick's contract.
His contract was $600,000.
So the WCW kept it at that for the rest of Rick's career.
Which was bullshit.
Rick should have been getting paid four or five times that.
So, you know, he always had money, but he was running out because he wasn't making as much as people thought he was.
joe rogan
Right, and he was living that life.
kurt angle
He lives a life, he does.
joe rogan
Whatever came in, came out.
kurt angle
He lives a life, yeah.
joe rogan
Well, he and a lot of these guys, they did the small circuit, and then they came up, and then they eventually got to the WWE or the WWF back then.
You went from the Olympics.
unidentified
Mm-hmm.
joe rogan
Right into the big time.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
Did you do any small shows to prepare?
kurt angle
No.
Nothing.
Okay, the crazy thing was I didn't even watch pro wrestling.
Wow.
So I was relatively new.
When I called the WWE in 1998, they offered me a contract in 1996, right after the Olympics.
I went up and met with Vince, and he gave me a multi-million dollar deal and threw it on the desk, and he said, hey, 10-year deal, let's do it.
I said, can I go home and think about it?
So I went home and went to my agent, and he grabbed the contract he threw in the trash.
He was a former amateur wrestler, also an NFL football player, former NFL player.
His name's Ralph Sindrich.
So he said, you're not going to do that crap.
You're the real deal.
I'll get you a better job.
So he gets me a job as a sportscaster in Pittsburgh for Fox.
And it was the worst experience of my life.
I mean, I was really bad.
And the thing is, it was a startup station, so I didn't get to rehearse.
So the first night on the air, here I am, I'm anchoring the sports, and my teleprompter goes out.
And my scripts, when I went into the studio, I ran to the producer and they all went up in the air and fell out of order.
So when I put them down, they were out of order.
So I'm looking at the teleprompter, the producer says, just look at the teleprompter, don't look at anything else, just read it.
And I go to read it and it goes black.
It goes out.
And I'm just sitting there for like a minute.
And the producer says, Kurt, say something, say anything.
So I remembered like the first story was Duquesne basketball.
They played tonight.
Let's go to the highlights because I didn't know what else to say.
And so the next sport, I had to guess what it was.
And I guess it was baseball and it was actually football.
So the whole segment turned out to be a disaster.
That was my first night on the air.
unidentified
You had a guess!
kurt angle
And it didn't get any better.
So anyway, so I spent a year there.
So at the end of 1997, I started watching WWE, and I fell in love with a character named Stone Cold Steve Austin.
He was just...
Kicking ass.
I mean, he was, you know, he's flipping off his boss.
I thought he was the coolest thing in the world.
And so I decided to call the WLB in early 1998. And I said, does that contract still stand from 1996?
They said, no, but you can come up and try out.
So I went up and tried out.
After the first day, I picked up on it pretty quickly.
So they gave me a contract and I trained for about seven months.
And they literally, they had me training.
The first three months was a week a month where I just went up to WWE. I went into their studio and I would train with a couple of wrestlers.
And so I'd only do that one week a month for three months.
Then the following four months, they sent me to Memphis, to a smaller territory down in Memphis.
And I worked there for four months where I did one TV a week for four months.
And then Vince brought me up on the TV. I was only work training for seven months.
I wasn't ready to be on TV. And he wanted me to go on TV at that point in time.
So I was like, Vince, I... You want me to cut a promo tonight?
I don't even know how to cut a promo.
I didn't learn that down in Memphis.
I did one or two promos in Memphis, and they were horrible.
And now Vince wants me to cut a promo for five minutes.
And he's going to tell me it.
He's not even going to write it down.
He's going to tell me what it is, and he wants me to go out there and do it.
I'm like, holy shit, there's no way.
So I said, okay, go tell me the promo.
So he starts talking, and the whole time I'm just thinking, this is fucking long.
This is really fucking long.
I'm not going to remember any of this.
So when he gets done, I said, Vince, I'm sorry, but I didn't hear a word you said.
You're going to have to repeat it again.
He said, I'm going to tell you one more time, and you got to go out there and do it.
You either sink or swim.
unidentified
Wow.
kurt angle
So I went out and I did about 80% right, and he was like...
I think I have somebody here.
I think it's a guy I can work with.
So I was learning on the job and I was getting better and better every week.
And Vince continued to push me.
I mean, within three months I was at the main event level.
It was like, whoa, like what's going on here?
Why am I getting, you know, why am I getting pushed so hard?
And he just wanted to create another star and he thought I had the ability to do it.
And I was able to follow up on it.
I did all the promos the right way, did all the pre-tapes, my matches were great.
joe rogan
Did you get like a coach on how to do the promos?
Like how'd you learn how to do them?
kurt angle
No, I learned on the job.
They were giving me promos.
I had a great writer that wrote for me and I had a lot of funny shit I did in WWE. Yeah you did.
tony hinchcliffe
Was a lot of that you?
You and your writer laughing with each other?
Like does this come from Vince?
kurt angle
It was my writer writing it for me.
tony hinchcliffe
So like the milk?
kurt angle
Yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
That's him?
kurt angle
That was my writer, Brian Gwartz.
tony hinchcliffe
He sprayed people with milk.
kurt angle
I did a lot of stuff.
I did a battle rap with John Cena.
What else did I do?
I did the Sexy Kurt when I imitated Shawn Michaels.
I'll give you something that I did, for example.
I was such an idiot.
I always fucked up.
There was one night where I was supposed to wrestle Rey Mysterio.
I was like, Rey Mysterio, you're a boy in a man's world, and I'm a man who loves to play with boys.
And I'd go, no, no, that's not what I meant to say.
And then I would say something else and that would fuck me up too.
I'd be like, no, not that either.
So fans got to make fun of me and laugh with me.
It was a really cool relationship I had with them.
I was the bad guy, but they kind of loved me.
joe rogan
At one point in time, Tony was going to get hired by the WWE, but he didn't want to move to Connecticut.
He was going to be one of the writers.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
Like, tell that story.
Because it's kind of a crazy story.
We almost lost you.
kurt angle
You have to move there.
You have to.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah, you have to move there.
kurt angle
Now, some of them don't live there anymore, but they have to go up there, like, right after TV and stay up there for the whole week.
tony hinchcliffe
Right.
kurt angle
And they only go home for one day.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
So...
Connecticut, which is absolute hell.
kurt angle
And expensive as shit.
tony hinchcliffe
Middle of nowhere.
And yeah, somehow I can't even remember.
It was so long ago, but I got this meeting with them.
Somebody wanted to talk with me.
They heard that I was a pro wrestling fan.
And I just destroyed at this meeting and I gave them a bunch of crazy ideas that I just had in the back of my head forever.
Stuff for The Undertaker to do, stuff for this, stuff for that.
And I killed it at this meeting and they offered me a full-time job.
But at the time, I was already three, four, five years into stand-up comedy and working at the store.
I devoted everything to stand-up comedy.
So there's no way I could go backwards, especially for like a job with a boss and bosses and word on the street.
Like Patrice O'Neill, a great comedian, would Took the job.
And famously, anybody who takes the job, they're like, it's hell.
unidentified
It's fun.
joe rogan
I didn't know Patrice took that job.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, he was doing it.
Really?
He was in it.
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
He went to Connecticut the whole deal?
tony hinchcliffe
Well, they pay you so good.
It's like hundreds and hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Because they make so much money.
And the writers are so important because they're putting out so much content.
Two, three shows a week.
Pay-per-views.
All of these big, long, drawn-out storylines, like week after week.
kurt angle
Yeah, they write six months ahead of time.
tony hinchcliffe
And they rewrite the day of.
So it's a nightmare.
Vince will go, I hate it, change everything.
The day of, famously.
An hour before.
And as a real fan...
kurt angle
That's happened many times.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
Yeah.
And you hear these things and it's like, God, I, you know, it would have been cool if it would have been cool.
What I mean by that is like, if I could do it during the day and then take a train to New York City and do stand up, that would have been fine.
But it's not that kind of job.
It's we need you in the office right now.
Where are you?
That type of thing.
joe rogan
So you could have had a gig.
You would have had to cancel your gig.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
unidentified
Yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
But yeah, McMahon fired him six times.
Yeah.
joe rogan
According to this article I'm reading about it right now.
unidentified
That's what they do.
tony hinchcliffe
They fire you.
kurt angle
Who not fired six times?
jamie vernon
Patrice, because he had stand-up gays conflicting with his WWE stuff.
kurt angle
And they hired him back.
jamie vernon
Yeah, it says Stephanie incredulously fired him six times.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's hilarious.
I had no idea Patrice did that.
I never heard that story.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
I can't believe I haven't mentioned it before.
joe rogan
I can't believe I didn't know.
unidentified
Yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
The money, especially then, I mean I was so broke it was crazy for me to turn down the job.
I mean I was fucking starving.
This is like right before I start writing on the roasts and on television.
Right before.
And I'm not headlining yet.
Couldn't sell a ticket to my name.
Just some Comedy Store door guy.
So, like, I should have.
On paper, I am a moron for not taking the job, but it was a huge gamble that, thank God, paid off.
joe rogan
Yeah, well, you believed in yourself.
tony hinchcliffe
But yeah, I mean, it also would have been fun.
It'd be fun to have a clone of me and live that life for a bit, because I think I would have done some really crazy stuff.
I think I would have worked my way up really fast and probably been...
joe rogan
Oh, you would have been a mastermind at that stuff, because you're such a fan.
And you're so good at writing shit for other people, too.
kurt angle
You know, Brian Gewurz, that's what he was.
He was a huge fan.
I don't know if you know who Brian is.
Well, he's the one that he wrote for The Rock, for me, for Chris Jericho, Edge and Christian.
He would write for guys he had certain chemistry with.
And he actually wrote a book this past year and he's had a lot of success.
Actually, you know who hired him?
Stole him from WWE, The Rock.
The Rock, he works for his production company now.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, nice.
kurt angle
Yeah, Seven Bucks Productions.
That's where Brian is now.
tony hinchcliffe
And that's what you were part of.
This guy was part of peak entertainment.
You look at Cena, The Rock, Kurt Angle.
This was all every Monday, every Sunday, every Thursday, every Friday.
I mean, everybody's a star.
They stayed stars.
Hogan's movie career, well, you know, he was in some stuff.
It was always like, you know, kind of low budget.
Tonight on the USA Network, a Hulk Hogan movie.
Whereas, you know, The Rock is fucking, he's number one, right?
kurt angle
Yes, yes.
And Cena and Batista are kicking ass.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah, Batista, exactly.
And this is all his class.
These are his people.
joe rogan
Batista's doing some real movies, man.
kurt angle
He is.
He's challenging himself.
joe rogan
That Glass Onion movie?
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's a great fucking movie, man.
He was great in that.
kurt angle
Yeah, he's talented.
joe rogan
Very talented.
kurt angle
You know, it's crazy, man.
He was like a...
I guess he was a doorman for a bar in D.C. And, you know, he was always a big, jacked-up dude.
And someone came up to him and said, Hey, you should be a pro wrestler.
joe rogan
Look at him.
It worked out.
kurt angle
Yeah, it worked out.
He's doing all these movies and just having a lot of success.
joe rogan
And he seems to be okay physically.
Like, he's gotten through it physically.
kurt angle
I'm really surprised at how well he moves around, considering his age and what he's been able to go through.
But it's crazy.
I mean, he actually...
He actually is, like, working out like he's 30 years old.
joe rogan
That's crazy.
kurt angle
Yeah, and he's probably, what, 55, 57 years old?
joe rogan
Probably, and he looks great.
It's just amazing that he's been able to do it without any of the real big injuries.
kurt angle
Yeah, you're absolutely right.
joe rogan
Because he wrestled for a long time, right?
How long did he wrestle for?
kurt angle
20 years.
joe rogan
Wow, that's incredible.
That's really incredible.
unidentified
Thank you.
joe rogan
What is it like working for Vince?
That guy's got to be fucking...
I mean, we need to get him in here.
unidentified
Yeah.
kurt angle
You know what?
That's a good idea.
joe rogan
I would love to get him in here.
Especially now that he's got this relationship with the UFC. Now that they're...
Is that thing working?
unidentified
Nope.
Yeah.
kurt angle
You know what?
Vince is very, very talented.
He's a workaholic, though.
Very, very, very much a workaholic.
joe rogan
Oh, clearly.
kurt angle
Yeah, he works seven days a week.
Even when he's on vacation, he makes his riders go down to the vacation with them.
Really?
They're sitting in a hotel room or on the beach talking about work.
unidentified
Wow.
kurt angle
He's working 24-7.
joe rogan
And he's in his 70s.
kurt angle
Yeah, yeah.
And you know what's crazy?
When he's done, he goes to work out when he gets home, which, like, when he's on the road traveling, TVs are over at midnight.
He'll go to the gym at 1 o'clock, train till 3. He'll go to sleep from 4 to 6. Then he'll wake up and he just repeats the cycle.
unidentified
How?
kurt angle
He only sleeps two hours a day.
I don't know.
It's real.
joe rogan
How?
tony hinchcliffe
He's the real deal.
kurt angle
He's a workaholic, man.
He's a machine.
tony hinchcliffe
And he's created an entire universe that people, generations and generations, grandfathers, their sons, and their sons all have their favorite people and favorite things that have happened.
kurt angle
I love the guy.
I love the guy.
He's always treated me right.
I never had a problem with Vince.
I'm just glad he got the money he got because I never thought he was going to sell the company.
I thought you would have to take it from his cold dead hands, pry it from his cold dead hands when he died.
I really thought he was going to keep the company forever.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah, I saw the meme the other day.
He bought it.
I can't remember the exact numbers, but for $1 million in whatever, 1982, from his father, he bought it.
kurt angle
$1 million, yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
To $9 billion.
Yep, $9 billion at the valuation last week.
unidentified
Wow.
tony hinchcliffe
$1 million to $9 billion.
unidentified
Wow.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
kurt angle
He put his heart and soul into it, though, man.
joe rogan
Obviously.
It just goes to show you, nobody becomes that successful unless they're fucking driven.
Insane work ethic.
There's no other way.
There's no other way.
kurt angle
You're absolutely right.
joe rogan
That's crazy.
kurt angle
No one works hard, and he does.
joe rogan
Two hours sleep in your 70s?
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
kurt angle
I know.
joe rogan
I mean...
kurt angle
I need eight now.
joe rogan
I need eight.
I just don't...
I don't get it.
I mean, it's incredible.
I don't know how you can function like that.
tony hinchcliffe
He works out continuously.
joe rogan
He's fucking jacked!
unidentified
He's jacked and he's in his 70s.
kurt angle
Yeah.
Actually, he might be...
joe rogan
How old is he, Jamie?
kurt angle
He's got to be closer to 80, right?
tony hinchcliffe
He's pushing it.
joe rogan
Let me see a picture of him now.
That's fucking bananas.
That's the real canary in the coal mine.
kurt angle
Yes, he is.
joe rogan
He just turned 78. 78!
kurt angle
Yeah, yeah.
You know what he told me when I came back to WWE? He said, listen, I'm going to have this company for a lot longer than you think, Mr. Angle.
I'm 73 right now.
My mom lived to be 101. I plan on living till I'm 120. He said, so...
And he said, I'm never letting the company go.
I'm always going to be working here.
And they're going to have to pull it from my cold, dead hands.
He really, Vince, that's what keeps him going.
This is why I'm a little, not nervous, but what's he going to do now?
What's he going to do now?
Because his whole life was wrestling, wrestling, wrestling.
joe rogan
Isn't he still involved in the company, though?
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah, I'm pretty sure he's still going to be there.
kurt angle
Okay, I heard he stepped back from the creative position.
tony hinchcliffe
Kind of, but that's what he says, right?
kurt angle
Okay, okay, so it's not true.
joe rogan
You've got to wonder with him how much of it is a storyline.
I'm back!
tony hinchcliffe
Goddammit!
If I want it done right, I have to do it myself!
joe rogan
Yeah, just see him fucking walking in there.
kurt angle
Power walk.
joe rogan
Yeah, I mean, he's just a fucking maniac.
tony hinchcliffe
I mean, the head of creative on paper is Triple H, who is his son-in-law, who, I mean, that's the most, like, dominant.
I mean, that's his former employee.
kurt angle
Like, he's got Triple H. No, no, I guess if Triple H is head of creative, then Bench is.
joe rogan
Look at him!
tony hinchcliffe
The head of creative.
joe rogan
Look at that picture of him.
In his 70s.
kurt angle
That's his personal trainer that travels with him everywhere.
At 3 a.m.
Yep.
tony hinchcliffe
Worked out at 3 a.m.
joe rogan
Wow.
3 a.m.
After Raw.
Wow.
And seeing 3 a.m.
workouts despite being 76. Oh, I wasn't wrong.
kurt angle
It was 3 a.m.
unidentified
Yes, that was only two years ago.
joe rogan
So there was 76 there with a fucking big motorcycle chain around his neck.
He's jacked!
kurt angle
He is, man.
joe rogan
That guy's something special.
That's incredible.
It's just incredible that you could keep doing that.
But I guess if you don't stop, you know, you eat the right foods, take the right supplements, wink, wink, and just keep...
Make some chips to Mexico.
Keep that fucking train a-rolling.
Like that fucking Aerosmith song.
Train kept a-rolling all night long.
Look at him there.
Squatting almost 1,000 pounds.
Belt squat 1,000 pounds in 76. I mean, that's fucking bonkers.
That's bonkers.
Good for him.
Fuck yeah.
There's very few humans like that out there.
They just have that kind of drive.
kurt angle
There's only one Vince.
I can tell you that.
There's only one Vince.
I've seen him at his best and his worst, and that guy, he's unbelievable.
I mean, he is...
He's the hardest working and most dedicated person I've ever been around.
He really is.
He sticks to his diet.
He works all day.
He makes sure he gets his workout in.
Everything is like a line for him.
Everything has to go a certain way for Vince.
Everything lined up just perfectly.
He's an animal.
He really is.
He's an animal.
joe rogan
Clearly.
I mean, that's what he looks like.
You don't look like that when you're 76 unless you're a fucking complete psycho.
tony hinchcliffe
And again, the creativity, like it never ends.
He puts out two, three hours of content every Monday for 30, what is it, 35 years now or something crazy?
kurt angle
30 something years, yeah.
joe rogan
Here's something to think about.
He's two years younger than Biden.
kurt angle
Wow, man.
That's a big difference.
joe rogan
Jeez Louise.
kurt angle
With everything.
Not just his body, but the mental sharpness.
joe rogan
The mental sharpness.
I mean, that's just incredible.
kurt angle
He's still sharp as a rock.
He really is.
joe rogan
Crazy.
Alan, rocks are sharp.
kurt angle
A jaded rock.
joe rogan
I know what you're saying, though.
Like a flint stone that they used to cut mammoth meat with.
tony hinchcliffe
Diamond, perhaps.
joe rogan
Yeah, something sharp.
kurt angle
Are diamonds really that sharp?
joe rogan
I guess they can be.
Diamond drills.
Diamond drill bits.
Yeah, well, they're just hard, really.
But yeah, I know what you're saying.
It's just extraordinary when you see someone who's such an outlier.
I mean, if you've got all the 78-year-old guys on Earth, that's number one.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, 100%.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
Like, if you had to ask me, like, who's the fittest, most driven, on top of it, 78-year-old guy?
Vince McMahon.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
100%.
Who's competing with him?
Who the fuck else?
Who's out there?
You would have heard of him.
If there's another guy like that out there, you would have heard of him.
kurt angle
No, you're right.
There's only one Vince.
I know that for sure.
Yeah.
joe rogan
What a maniac.
kurt angle
Yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
And with this new union, man, I mean, this is something that I've been talking about for a while, is like the power of and how close the UFC and the WWE can be.
But yeah, it's mostly going to be, I picture it being a transfer, almost like a retirement transfer.
Party to go to the WWE. I mean imagine what a, you know, Diaz brothers or something like that could do in pro wrestling, slapping people around.
kurt angle
Conor McGregor, yeah, these guys.
But, you know, I just don't see...
Well, I guess there are guys...
I'm just wondering if...
I know that Dana and Vince...
Their contracts have specifically that you can't go to WWE or you can't go to UFC. They're like...
Going against each other when they shouldn't be.
They should be worried about AEW. WWE should be worried about them and not the UFC. This merger, that's a part of the contract?
Or Bellator, you know.
No, before the merger.
I don't know what's going on now.
But in their contracts, you couldn't cross over to UFC. Interesting.
UFC couldn't cross over to WWE. Interesting.
That's what's crazy.
One's MMA and one's wrestling, you know?
joe rogan
Yeah, I think Derek Lewis.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Derrick Lewis.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
He's the number one heavyweight that I would say could transfer over to WWE and be a fucking huge star.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
He's so funny.
kurt angle
He's entertaining.
joe rogan
Oh, my God.
He's entertaining.
And he's legit.
You know, everybody would know.
He's had the most heavyweight knockouts in the history of the sport.
And he's funny.
He's funny.
He's giant.
tony hinchcliffe
Funny is a big part of it, man.
joe rogan
It's a big part of it.
kurt angle
I'll tell you what, I think Conor McGregor could have done really well in it, too.
joe rogan
He might still, but he's got so much money, it'll be hard.
When a guy's got a half a billion in the bank, it's very hard to get a guy like that to fucking...
Get slammed.
kurt angle
You're not getting him out of bed.
joe rogan
Yeah, I mean, that's what's really impressive about some of these guys that go over and do things in the WWE, like Floyd Mayweather went over there, and the Paul brothers.
These guys are willing...
kurt angle
They're making money hand over fist, and they're going over there.
joe rogan
Yeah, they're still willing to get out there and put it all on the line.
tony hinchcliffe
Well, the thing for the Pauls and...
For Logan Paul and for...
joe rogan
It's really just Logan, right?
unidentified
Does Jake done WWE? Bad Bunny?
tony hinchcliffe
Well, yeah, but they can promote their own things as well.
So Logan Paul goes out there drinking a prime energy drink.
So a Conor could conceivably go out there with a bottle of...
joe rogan
Yeah, Proper 12. Yeah.
I think he sold that too, though.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, okay.
joe rogan
But I mean, he's probably still a part of the company, probably in stock or something.
kurt angle
He sold it.
joe rogan
I think so.
I'm pretty sure.
Something like that.
See if we can find that.
unidentified
I think he got paid.
joe rogan
I think he got fucking paid.
tony hinchcliffe
It's everywhere.
I see it everywhere.
They got it in there.
joe rogan
I've never even tried it.
Have you tried it?
I don't think so.
unidentified
Here it goes.
joe rogan
How much did Conor McGregor sell at Proper 12?
kurt angle
600 million.
joe rogan
600 million.
Cha-ching!
Made $100 million from the Mayweather fight and just started rolling.
kurt angle
Wow.
joe rogan
It's worth a half a billion dollars.
And he's, you know...
35?
kurt angle
Is that it?
joe rogan
That's it.
Yeah.
I mean, if it wasn't for his leg snap, he's still in the prime of his career.
But that leg snap's a real problem.
That's a real problem.
kurt angle
Yeah, he's not coming back from that, huh?
joe rogan
I don't know.
I mean, if he does, he'll be the first.
And if anybody does, maybe he can do it.
If anybody can do it, maybe it's him.
Because he snapped his leg in the prime of his career.
Anderson was a little older, I believe.
He was 36 or 37 when he snapped his leg.
Chris Weidman was a little older.
It's a hard one to come back from.
Nobody really comes back from that one.
kurt angle
Is it because you have to have metal put in there?
joe rogan
You do.
You have to have plates, and then it's also, you've got to think the difference is you're kicking, you know, and you're taking kicks.
Like guys are going to kick you in that shin for sure.
They're going to kick you in your calf.
kurt angle
Sprite tissue and everything, yeah.
joe rogan
Nerve damage, all the above.
And you gotta think, when that leg snaps, it snaps like that, right?
And then you got all that broken bone that's damaging all that tissue inside of it, and I don't know the extent of, you know, how much damage was done, but it's been two years.
Right?
Is it about two years now?
Since he last competed?
I believe it's about two years.
And, you know, there's all this talk about him and Michael Chandler fighting from the Ultimate Fight.
I know he's sparring.
I've seen footage of him sparring and he looks good.
He looks real good.
But he also looks saucer.
You know, so there's that.
So, like, you gotta get off that.
And then there's a six-month period where USADA has to test him randomly, which I think is a mistake.
I really think they should do all that in-house.
Because USADA does stuff like, well, they don't do it anymore, but they were doing stuff like waking guys up at 6.30 in the morning, like the day of the weigh-ins, and testing them.
It was fucking insane.
Fucking insane.
For world title fights.
Fucking insane.
I just think that if anybody can do it, it's going to be Conor.
If anybody is going to come back from that and fight again, it's going to be Conor.
But, you know, it's that famous Marvin Hagler quote.
It's, you know, it's hard to get out of bed and run in the cold when you're sleeping in silk sheets.
You know, when you're the champ and you're rich as fuck like he is, and he doesn't have to do nothing forever.
He's got generational wealth.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
And yet, here we are in a situation where he's still in the prime of his athletic career.
He lost that fight to Dustin Poirier, but it was a great fight up until the moment his leg snaps.
Well, you know what?
kurt angle
He is a different breed, man.
joe rogan
He's a fucking savage.
He's a real savage.
I hope he comes back.
I mean, it would be an amazing story and I would love to see someone actually come back from that injury because so far Weidman, you know, came back and not taking anything away from Brad Tavares because Brad Tavares is a fucking beast.
He looked great in that fight.
He looked so good.
But Weidman looked a step behind.
But you've got to think Weidman took two years off as well.
It's hard.
Taking two years off and then jumping right in the heap with a top 15 guy.
And a guy like Tavares is a real veteran, is real talented, and real driven too.
Super disciplined, always in great shape, always fights well, and is a real good striker.
And he was just chewing Weidman up.
Weidman just couldn't get off.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
It's a bummer.
kurt angle
Yeah, it is a bummer.
joe rogan
It's a bummer because that fucking injuries, man, it's like all these other, I mean, so many other injuries guys can come back from.
Soft tissue tears, you get them fixed, you come back.
That one is, that's a motherfucker, man.
kurt angle
I mean, think about it.
You break your leg right in half.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Frank Mir came back from that.
Frank Mir got a motorcycle accident where he got T-boned by a guy who ran a red light.
And got sent flying.
I think they said he flew like 30 feet through the air.
And snapped his femur.
So his upper leg.
And it took a long time before Frank was like back again.
And arguably never really reached the same form that he had.
He still beat really good guys though after that.
He still beat really good guys.
Frank was still a real world class heavyweight after that break.
And he might be the only guy now that I think about that's ever come back like that.
kurt angle
Right.
joe rogan
But everybody, that was, you know, I don't know the extent of that injury.
I do know that he had, like, real problems with that leg, though, and there was a real touch-and-go moment where they didn't know if he was going to make it.
I mean, you snap a femur, that's that big bone, and there's some blood flow.
kurt angle
It's so thick, you know, to snap that thing, you know how hard it is to snap that?
joe rogan
Yeah, it's just, when you get in a car, you know, it's a different situation.
But it's just...
That lower leg snap, apparently it's just very difficult for it to fully heal.
It's not like an arm.
Like, you break your arm, they put a pin in it, you're good to go.
I know a lot of guys who broke their forearms, and they went back, and Paul Felder, a lot of guys, they get their forearms snapped like blocking a kick, and they get back in there, and they're okay.
kurt angle
There's a difference.
You know, you walk on your legs.
joe rogan
Big difference.
Big difference.
kurt angle
You don't walk on your hands.
Right.
joe rogan
Yeah.
And, I mean, that's the argument also for him not being in the USADA pool.
Of course.
I mean, if anybody shouldn't be in the U.S. Auto Bowl, like, yeah, get him out of that.
Like, let him do everything he can to come back, especially in the prime of his athletic career.
I mean, that's...
And also, there's a real problem where they're stopping guys from taking things like BPC-157.
All that stuff does is let you heal.
kurt angle
Right, right.
joe rogan
It's like, you know, it's just letting you heal.
You need things to let you heal.
kurt angle
So that's on the ban list.
joe rogan
It is now.
I think they're trying to bring it back.
tony hinchcliffe
You ever use that?
kurt angle
No.
joe rogan
I use it.
It's great.
It's fantastic.
It's very good.
Very good when you get injured.
tony hinchcliffe
You'd probably love it.
kurt angle
I need to hear more about this.
tony hinchcliffe
They call it the Wolverine drug?
Is that what it's called?
joe rogan
Yeah, it's a peptide, essentially.
It's called Body Protection Peptide 157. Body Protection Peptide Calm Town.
It's a really good peptide for healing injuries.
A lot of people have very good success with it.
kurt angle
So a lot of people recover from injuries.
joe rogan
I can connect you with someone who can take care of that for you, too.
You know, I don't know.
I think athletes should be able to use everything they can, especially in a sport like MMA. I agree.
Everything they can.
But, you know, the problem was it used to be they used to be able to do testosterone.
kurt angle
Well, I think they should still do it.
joe rogan
I do too.
I think it's a good...
Well, the thing is, like...
With testosterone, you can take a guy who's an older athlete, who has an older mind, who thinks like a veteran.
They really understand the game.
Because a lot of those guys, by the time they get to that certain age, they think real well.
They understand the game better.
They're more mature.
But their body just doesn't work the same anymore.
They're a step behind.
kurt angle
They don't have testosterone in their bodies anymore.
joe rogan
Exactly.
And also, especially fighting.
With fighting, with football, with a lot of things, those knocks to the head There's a guy named Dr. Mark Gordon who's a friend of mine who specializes in traumatic brain injuries.
And he says one of the real problems is you get damage to your pituitary gland.
So the damage to the pituitary gland from getting knocked in the head a bunch of times is your body's just not producing testosterone anymore or other hormones.
And your body's just like very deficient in hormones, which makes those guys depressed too.
So they're dealing with all that.
They're dealing with depression.
They're dealing with...
You know, fatigue all the time, and it's just like...
But the problem is with fighters, you tell them they can take testosterone, some of them, they go VTored out.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Like, when VTor was in his prime, I still, to this day, think that the TRT VTor was one of the greatest fighters of all time.
When he was juiced to the tits, he would come out there like a fucking alien and just attack.
He was so confident, too, because he was just so juicy.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
kurt angle
He was juiced up.
joe rogan
And so skilled.
It was a combination of those things.
So he's an older athlete.
So he had been fighting.
I mean, I was at the first UFC that Vitor fought at in UFC 12. I was actually training at the same gym as him.
I was at Carlson Gracie.
Carlson Gracie's gym in Hollywood.
Vitor was 19 years old when he went over and he fought John Hess in Hawaii.
And everybody was like, holy shit, look at this guy.
We knew.
Like, all the guys in the gym knew, like, Vitor was the future.
And then, you know, when he gets older, you know, it's like your body's slowing down.
And also, he did a lot of stuff when he was younger, too, and that limits your natural production of testosterone.
So as soon as they start telling you, you know, like, you've got to fight on the natch, everything's just slower.
kurt angle
You know what?
When you get older, you lose testosterone.
Now, I'm on a program right now, my wellness doctor, that I'm on the level of testosterone that I was when I was 30 years old.
So he only gives me a certain amount.
I take a half a cc of testosterone a week to keep my testosterone at the level that it should be.
I'm not going above and beyond and trying to abuse it.
So I take a half a shot of test a week just to keep my testosterone at the right level.
Between 600 and 800, I think is what it is.
joe rogan
That's a good level.
I do the same.
Yeah, and that allows you to function.
Your body functions like a young man.
Like, I'm 56 years old.
I don't have any problems in terms of, like, my body working well.
kurt angle
Yeah, me neither.
I mean, except for my injuries.
joe rogan
Yeah, except for your injuries.
But other than that, it keeps your energy level.
It also helps your immune system.
A lot of people have it in their head that it's cheating, right?
They think about Mark McGuire and Sammy Sosa and all that shit and getting busted.
You know, they think it's got a negative connotation in a lot of people's minds that testosterone placement is, oh, you're doing steroids, you're cheating.
But if you're intelligent about it and if you do it with a good doctor and you get your blood work done and you don't abuse it, it's very good for you.
kurt angle
It is.
It is.
And that's why I do it.
joe rogan
Yeah, me as well.
kurt angle
And I condone anybody.
Out there that's in their 40s or 50s that's, you know, doesn't have a lot of energy and was wondering what's going on, go get tested.
joe rogan
It would be good if they did it with fighters if, like, the UFC administered it.
Like, you can't administer it on your own.
They have to randomly test you to make sure you're not fucking off and doing something crazy.
But, like, this is the amount you get.
Let's make sure that your blood work stays within this very normal line.
kurt angle
In that parameter.
Yeah.
joe rogan
Right, so you're not cheating.
You're just maintaining.
tony hinchcliffe
Exactly.
joe rogan
That would be a good call.
But it's just hard to regulate, especially you got guys who are, you know, they're in Russia, they're in Thailand, they're trained, you know, you gotta send people over there to test them.
You see them over in Thailand, they look like a human pit bull.
But the thing is, if you're on that stuff like that, my god, you could train fucking three times a day.
If you really go crazy with the test, like Alistair Overeem in his prime, like that guy, he's my favorite example.
Alistair Overeem when he fought Brock.
Jesus Christ.
kurt angle
Oh my God.
joe rogan
Jesus Christ.
He was so juicy.
But he was so good, too.
He's so skilled.
It wasn't just a guy on juice.
It's a guy on juice who was a K-1 Grand Prix champion who has also won the Abu Dhabi.
Have you seen him now?
Alistair now is a vegan.
He lost 60 pounds of muscle.
Yeah, he looks like fucking Kurt Metzger.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh my god.
unidentified
See if you can find Alistair over him now.
joe rogan
He's lost so much weight.
It's crazy.
And he only eats vegetables now.
kurt angle
No, no meat.
joe rogan
He's like, meat is bad for you.
I'm like, no, it's not.
Who are you talking to?
unidentified
Oh, man.
joe rogan
Let me get you some really good scientists that fucking actually understand nutrition.
He's talking to some fucking kook in Holland who's got wooden beads around his neck.
Look at him now.
kurt angle
Oh, my gosh.
That's not the same person.
joe rogan
It's not the same person.
I mean, I think he's probably natural now.
I mean, also, maybe, look at Phineas.
I think you just kind of get tired of being a fucking assassin.
You just want to be a nice guy.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
You're like, I'm done!
I'm tired of braining people.
I mean, you know, Alistair was fucking kicking people in the face and knocking their teeth out for 30 fucking years.
kurt angle
He was a vicious fighter.
joe rogan
You've got to think, he's still competing up until recently.
He fought Chuck Liddell in Pride in, like, 2004 or something like that?
kurt angle
I know, almost 20 years ago.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Is this him now?
jamie vernon
This is 16 weeks ago.
It was around his birthday, so...
joe rogan
Well, he looks good there.
jamie vernon
Yeah, he's just not gigantic.
joe rogan
Yeah, he looks lighter.
I mean, he's a lot lighter.
Now, go to Aleister Overeem weighing in for the Brock Lesnar fight.
Because that's crazy.
That's him right there.
kurt angle
Look at that!
joe rogan
Look at that!
Jesus Christ!
Jesus!
I'm in awe.
Look at me behind him.
I'm like, Jesus!
That's Uberim.
That's when he was at his prime.
He was a fucking destroyer.
I swear to God, if they never outlawed testosterone, here's what you're smashing people.
This is when he was in K1. Bro, he was a fucking monster.
He was a monster.
Because he was huge, he was powerful and fast, but he was also supremely skilled.
He was a real elite striker.
kurt angle
I'm just surprised anybody could beat him.
joe rogan
Well, you know, he put it on the line.
He fought everybody.
He fought Badr Hari when Badr Hari was in his prime, knocked Badr Hari out, and then Badr Hari knocked him out in the rematch.
Those guys got knocked out a lot, and that's part of the problem.
If you look through Alistair's career, I don't know how many times Chuck knocked him out.
I don't know how many times he got knocked out.
tony hinchcliffe
Francis Ngannou knocked him into veganism.
joe rogan
Bro, he sent him to the Darklands.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, we were there for that one.
And it's different, you know, sometimes it's different not on TV. Yeah.
When you're there and you physically watch somebody's head go backwards like that.
joe rogan
And their soul leave their body.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh my, that's one of the all-time fucking ones.
unidentified
Did you see that knockout?
kurt angle
No, I did.
joe rogan
Okay, fine.
Francis Ngannou knocks out Alistair Overeem.
And by the way, this is Alistair Overeem post-USADA, right?
So this is a different Alistair.
This is Alistair natural.
kurt angle
Gotcha.
joe rogan
And also natural after taking supplements for who knows how long.
He was still a big guy, but look how small he is in comparison.
And Francis is a natural 265+.
Francis has to cut weight to make 265. Francis is fucking huge and also the absolute scariest fucking guy to ever compete in the heavyweight division.
Francis fucking scared everybody.
kurt angle
He is a badass.
joe rogan
Oh, he's so good and his fucking knockout power is so ridiculous.
He's such a heavy striker.
Here it is.
Boom!
Boom!
kurt angle
Now, did he ever fight Jon Jones?
joe rogan
No, he didn't.
But he might still.
They've left that door open.
Francis is actually coming in soon.
And I'm going to talk to him about this.
Because I think, watch this.
Look at this left hook.
kurt angle
Boom!
joe rogan
I mean, insane.
His head snaps back to where he's looking at his heels.
Look how far his head snaps back.
kurt angle
Oh, God.
You ever been knocked out?
joe rogan
Not out cold.
I got TKO'd in my last kickboxing fight, but I've never been knocked out like that.
I've seen a lot of people.
kurt angle
It's got to be a scary situation when you wake up and come to.
There's one where I got knocked out.
joe rogan
Is this one right here?
kurt angle
Yeah, the table gave too early and my head hit the concrete floor.
joe rogan
Oh, God!
unidentified
Oh, God!
kurt angle
My hands were behind my back.
I was on Loopy Street.
Look, I start trying to get up and Hunter's gonna pull me back down.
Like, he wanted me to stay there.
tony hinchcliffe
He was snoring.
kurt angle
Yeah, and so what happened was...
Okay, this has been fast-forwarded, but what happened was I was supposed to pretend to get knocked out.
That's why we did the thing on the table.
So it was supposed to be a pretend spot, so I'd get taken to the back, and then I was supposed to come back to finish the match.
joe rogan
You know what's crazy?
Is that you guys use regular tables.
Don't you think you should use a fucking wrestling table?
Shouldn't someone design a table that can take...
Yeah, yeah.
The kind of fucking weight that you guys catch?
unidentified
No, no, you're right.
joe rogan
You guys have regular conference tables from Costco.
They're just rolling at fucking regular tables.
kurt angle
Hey, that's wrestling, man.
Yeah.
They don't spare any expense.
They just use what they have.
joe rogan
So did you wake up and realize what was happening?
kurt angle
All right.
I don't remember any of it.
What happened was they wheeled me back, and Rock and Triple H were out there still wrestling because it was a triple threat match.
I was part of it.
And they wheeled me back, and I'm back there.
And they're getting ready to do a live shot of me.
They're getting ready to do a live shot of me where I was gonna tell them, Stephanie was gonna say, Kurt, I want you to go out and help Triple H. Do it for me.
And I was gonna say, all right, I'll do it for you, Steph.
So they told me to say it, and I forgot.
So I said, what am I saying again?
And Stephanie said, just say, I'll do it for you.
I said, what am I saying again?
I did this like eight times.
And Vince is in the background.
He's like, goddammit, get him some smelling salts and get him out there.
So I end up going back out.
And I don't remember.
I don't remember any of it.
They carried me through the match.
And there were spots where I had to duck.
And they actually pulled my head down and would hit somebody else when I was supposed to duck.
I wasn't able to do it.
So I was out there just...
You know, being a dead human being, you know?
And they're like pulling me around and they're...
In pro wrestling, you can still have a match even if one person is incoherent.
So the other person carries that person and tells them to do whatever.
So they were telling me what to do during that match.
But I don't remember anything.
I ended up in the hospital that night and I came to and said, what happened?
They said, oh God, you don't remember anything?
Then I said, no, I don't remember anything.
joe rogan
They should have probably taken you to the hospital immediately, which is what's crazy about pro wrestling.
unidentified
I'm like, no, no, no, the show must go on.
kurt angle
Well, listen, that wouldn't happen now.
This was in the 2000s.
tony hinchcliffe
It was a different time.
joe rogan
That's what's crazy is that they really didn't understand head trauma until, I mean really that movie, Concussion, when that movie came around then people started looking at like what's going on with football players and what's going on with boxers and they really started looking at it more differently.
kurt angle
You know what, I'm wondering if, you know, they're starting to like, like pro wrestling has this, what's it called, a concussion roll, okay?
So if you had concussions, they'll take care of it.
So what I'm saying is, don't you think UFC... That a lot of their fighters are going to end up with some kind of brain damage?
joe rogan
100%.
kurt angle
And that there's going to be some liability that comes out?
joe rogan
Well, I don't know if there's going to be some...
kurt angle
I'm just wondering if something like that is going to happen because these guys don't use gloves.
unidentified
They...
kurt angle
You know, they got the small ones.
joe rogan
Well, not only that, you're getting kicked.
kurt angle
Yeah, kicked in the head, yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, you're getting kicked, kneed, you're getting slammed in your head.
kurt angle
You see all the damage that's done in boxing.
joe rogan
Yes.
kurt angle
And, I mean, UFC is, MMA is probably worse.
joe rogan
Think about when Leon Edwards knocked out Kamaru Usman.
Think about that kind of a strike.
You're getting head kicked by one of the greatest strikers to ever do in sport.
tony hinchcliffe
Might as well get hit in the head with a baseball bat.
joe rogan
Might as well.
tony hinchcliffe
A leg of an athlete like that is...
Just as hard as a wooden bat.
unidentified
It's just bone.
joe rogan
You're getting bone, shin bone, right to your neck.
You know, it's crazy.
And, you know, who knows?
I mean, they do their best to mitigate some of that in training, but some guys don't.
Some guys spar real hard in training.
And it's part of the sport.
And they know it coming in, and there's no denying it.
You're literally in the brain damage business.
Here it is.
Boom!
kurt angle
Oh, jeez.
joe rogan
And when you know how good Camaro takes a shot, to see Camaro go out like that is just nuts.
kurt angle
Now, what kind of long-term damage do you think that just occurred to that guy?
joe rogan
It's a real good question.
And it varies with everyone.
There's some guys that got knocked out a bunch of times and they're fine.
There's a thing called, I think it's called APOE4. There's like a gene expression that if you have that, you're more susceptible to CTE than other people.
And it's different.
But it doesn't mean that you're immune to it if you don't have it.
I mean, you're getting kicked and punched.
Headbutts, guys clash heads all the time.
It's a very, very, very hard sport.
And without doubt, there's going to be guys who the rest of their lives are dealing with the consequences of that.
And we see it.
We see it with the older fighters.
Some of these guys are just in complete agony.
Like Don Frye.
Don the Predator Frye is a legend.
One of the greatest ever.
Don was in here.
I mean, he's hurt, man.
It's hard for him to walk.
It's like everything is in pain.
He can't hardly move that good.
kurt angle
You're talking about an old-school fighter.
That guy was a badass.
joe rogan
He's a bad motherfucker.
He's a real old-school man.
kurt angle
He's there at the beginning.
unidentified
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
b-real
The very, very, very early days.
joe rogan
Mark Coleman, too.
Mark Coleman's got a celebrity boxing match in October against Montel Griffin.
Montel Griffin fought Roy Jones Jr. Is that why Mark's been training?
kurt angle
Okay.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Hammer House for life!
Yeah, if you watch his Instagram, he's a maniac.
kurt angle
You know what?
He was one of my opponents to make the Olympics.
joe rogan
Was he really?
kurt angle
Yeah, him and Mark Kerr.
joe rogan
Oh, wow.
kurt angle
Yeah, they were badasses.
Those two gave me the worst problems in 1993 and 1994. Really?
They're the ones that were beating me, and then I ended up beating them in 95, 96, but...
I went through, if you saw my documentary, it's about my training and what I did.
What I was doing was exhaust training.
That's when you train until you're exhausted and that's when the training actually begins.
And it's almost a form of torture.
I learned it from the University of Iowa.
Head wrestling coach Dan Gable.
joe rogan
Dan Gable's a fucking man.
kurt angle
He taught us wrestlers this.
And it's about staying in someone's face and just keep going at it.
Just never back off.
Just stay in there and just keep hand fighting and keep attacking.
And that's what I was doing.
I was staying on my opponents and getting them tired.
Once they got tired, I was scoring.
And so I wasn't the biggest or the fastest or the strongest or the most technical.
But what I knew I could be is the most well conditioned.
joe rogan
Here it is.
kurt angle
This is Kerr.
This is Mark Kerr.
Wow.
joe rogan
This is Mark Kerr when he was a normal size.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
Mark Kerr went on to fight in the UFC and went on to fight in Pride.
Oh, my God.
kurt angle
Oh, the Smashing Machine.
joe rogan
When he was the Smashing Machine, yeah.
That documentary is insane.
Have you seen that?
kurt angle
Yeah, I did.
joe rogan
The documentary on Kerr?
kurt angle
I did.
joe rogan
Mark Kerr submitted Dan Bobish in the UFC. I was there for this fight.
He got on top of him and he stuck his chin in Bobish's eye socket.
Grabbed the back of his head and drove his fucking chin into his eye socket.
kurt angle
And he has his pointing chin too, man.
joe rogan
And he was just a giant of a man.
kurt angle
He is.
joe rogan
Show Mark Kerr in his prime.
I mean, his trap started at the top of his ears.
kurt angle
I know.
He was an animal.
joe rogan
He was so fucking huge.
kurt angle
He got, listen, by the time 96 came around, he didn't look like that anymore.
He was like 250. And he wasn't that big.
He wasn't that big.
joe rogan
Look at the size of him, bro.
kurt angle
He's got to be 300 pounds there.
joe rogan
He was a monster.
He was a monster.
And then he was a monster in pride.
He was such a machine.
But he's another guy who fell victim to pain pills.
And what's crazy about that documentary, The Smashing Machine, is they caught him in his prime and what they were documenting in that documentary was a guy who was like this unstoppable force.
They didn't know.
That he was at the verge of collapse.
They didn't know that he was in the middle of his pain addiction.
kurt angle
Oh, they were just doing the documentary because of how dominant he was.
unidentified
Yes.
Wow.
joe rogan
Yes.
The documentary originally was just about this guy who was this unstoppable force who was competing in Japan in the height of pride.
In the height of pride, they were doing this, like, Japan is so different.
When we have the UFC in Japan, they're so knowledgeable and so respectful.
It's such a part of the culture.
That, you know, the matches were huge.
They did the Saitama Super Arena.
It was 90,000 people.
And that was when Kerr was in his prime.
So what they were documenting was this guy from America, this insane wrestler, this gigantic man that they called a smashing machine, going over there and dominating.
And they caught him right when it was all falling apart.
kurt angle
Oh.
And that's where the story changed, right?
joe rogan
Yes, and that's the documentary.
And it is about pain pills.
It's about pain medication.
I think he was on a bunch of different things.
But it was just dealing with the constant injuries.
kurt angle
He was the most talented individual I've ever stepped on the mat with.
I mean, he was really good.
joe rogan
Really?
kurt angle
Really good, yeah.
Yeah, he won the NCAAs at 190 my senior year.
I wanted heavyweight.
And then he moved up to my weight class.
unidentified
Wow.
kurt angle
Yeah.
He just kept getting bigger and bigger.
I mean...
Kid's 6'4", so he had a lot of range.
Long arms.
You knew he could fill in.
I didn't know he was going to end up being 310 pounds.
joe rogan
Yeah, and then back then, you were either going to go into pro wrestling or you were going to go into MMA. And back then in MMA, Mark was competing in the early days, a bare knuckle.
You bare knuckle, wearing wrestling shoes, and Coleman as well, with headbutts.
That was the other thing back then.
kurt angle
Yeah, they were legal.
joe rogan
Yeah, headbutts were legal.
I wonder if you could still do that eye socket move.
I don't even know if that's illegal.
I've never seen anybody do that since.
See if you can find that.
Mark Kerr submits Dan Bobish.
kurt angle
Did he submit him with it?
joe rogan
Yes.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, he tapped him.
joe rogan
Yes.
Oh, yeah.
He tapped him with a fucking chin to the eye socket.
By the way, Bobish was fucking huge, too.
Bobish was a giant of a man.
So for him to do that to Bobish, but Bobish is just not that level of wrestler.
When you get that big, I mean, there's big, and then there's that big, but also talented.
And that was Mark Kerr.
That big...
tony hinchcliffe
He had like a head arm and drove his chin in?
joe rogan
I want to say he mounted him.
I think he mounted him.
So here he is.
No, side control.
So he got on top of him, shoved his chin in his eye socket and just fucking drove it in there and tapped him.
I mean, the guy's in fucking agony.
kurt angle
Wow.
joe rogan
And you look at the size of Bobish.
Bobish is fucking huge too.
kurt angle
He's selling his eye too.
joe rogan
Look at Kerr.
Jesus Christ.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, he does have a scary chin.
joe rogan
Yeah, he just shoved that thing right in his eye socket.
I don't think anyone's ever done that since.
tony hinchcliffe
A Leno choke.
kurt angle
It wasn't a choke man.
I lost a lot of sleep over this guy.
joe rogan
Look at this.
unidentified
Look at that.
joe rogan
Early days.
So I guess he was wearing gloves in this one.
But when he started, he definitely was in the no-glove stage.
kurt angle
Who started first, Kerr or Coleman?
joe rogan
Well, Coleman was the first ever UFC heavyweight champion.
kurt angle
Okay.
joe rogan
Coleman beat Dan Severn, and that was in 1997. That was the first UFC that I worked.
kurt angle
Is that when you made him tap out with a headlock?
That's how strong Coleman was.
joe rogan
Yes, he was very strong.
He got him in like a judo, like a head and arm.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
So it was a choke, but, you know, it was a power choke.
So what he did is he basically got head and arm inside control and got a hold of him.
See if you can find that.
Dan Severn, Mark Coleman.
kurt angle
To me, it looked like a headlock, and he was like, I know how strong he is.
joe rogan
Yeah.
kurt angle
So I was like, I would probably tap out to him.
joe rogan
Yeah, it was a headlock, but he had him completely trapped in there.
And that's Coleman in his fucking prime.
kurt angle
He had a stint with alcohol, too.
He's been sober for a while.
joe rogan
Yeah, and he talks about that.
That's another big thing about his...
That's bare knuckle, too.
You see, he's got no gloves on.
Both guys have no gloves on.
So he got him down.
And by the way, Dan Severin was a hell of a wrestler as well.
kurt angle
I wrestled Dan.
I wrestled Dan.
It was my freshman year in college.
He was about 28 at the time.
I was 10 years younger than him.
joe rogan
Yeah, there it is right there where you just had it, Jamie.
Well, you got it right there.
So he gets him this.
So he gets him in this, like, side control head choke.
That'll do it.
And it's really like a neck crank he got him in.
This was the first UFC that I worked at.
kurt angle
I never wrestled a guy as strong as Coleman.
He was such a...
He was so strong.
I knew he was going to tap out here.
I watched his fight the night it happened.
joe rogan
Yeah, look at him.
He's crushing him.
kurt angle
I know how strong Coleman is.
tony hinchcliffe
You can see Dan Severn's arm is almost like green.
There's just no blood getting there.
joe rogan
Well, this is a legit joke, too.
If you can get a guy's arm trapped like that in between your thigh and his hand and with the amount of weight that Mark had...
And he's just pressing down on him.
tony hinchcliffe
And that pressure.
The more he steps that way, the tighter it gets.
joe rogan
Yeah, Dan's fucked.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh.
joe rogan
I remember in Carlson Gracie's after this fight, look, he's poking him in the eyes.
tony hinchcliffe
God!
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
He tapped right there.
That was it.
And that was how Coleman became the first ever UFC heavyweight champion.
kurt angle
Wow.
joe rogan
That was, uh...
UFC 12. And I had to go and interview him afterwards.
He was like, who the fuck are you?
Just jacked out of his mind.
It was me interviewing him.
Mark, we can get a couple words of you.
Congratulations.
Unbelievable, impressive performance.
unidentified
Thank you.
joe rogan
He's the first guy I ever interviewed.
unidentified
...for you to win the first super fight where two wrestlers meet in the finals.
kurt angle
Very important, huh?
joe rogan
Look at the size of him, dude.
kurt angle
It's amazing that he wrestled at 220 pounds.
joe rogan
I think he was still competing in wrestling at the time, too, or wanted to compete in wrestling.
kurt angle
Wait a minute.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
What year was this?
97. This was a year after.
His last competition was 96. He was 32 at the time.
tony hinchcliffe
So you said you wrestled him when he was 28 and you were?
kurt angle
Seven.
I wrestled.
tony hinchcliffe
And what happened there?
kurt angle
He beat me 1-0.
It was a college match.
I was a freshman in high school.
I was 18. He was 28. He was already on the USA team.
So I'd say I did pretty good for a young upcoming kid.
tony hinchcliffe
He's 28, but he still has that full mustache probably.
kurt angle
Yeah, yeah, he did.
joe rogan
That mustache is amazing.
kurt angle
But I wrestled Coleman quite a bit, man.
We beat each other quite a few times, but...
We went at it for a while, but it was really cool to see these guys having success in UFC. I mean, this is when I won the Olympics, and I was kind of bragging rights, you know, I beat these guys to win the UFC title.
joe rogan
Well, people talked about that, too, because back then you were brought up a lot, like people were saying, because there was some talk, like, would Kurt Angle ever fight in the UFC? In the early days of the UFC, there was a lot of that, because there was quite a few guys that did Royce Alger, Yeah, Royce tried it out, I know that.
Quite a few real elite wrestlers that competed in the UFC, and that skill set is the best skill set for MMA. When you dictate where the fight takes place, because if that guy wanted to take you down, he's taking you down.
Back then, the guys just did not have the ability.
There were so many karate guys and so many jiu-jitsu guys, they just did not have the ability to stop that guy from taking him down.
tony hinchcliffe
I mean, you look at Khabib, how scary.
He gets you down.
He puts his legs underneath your legs.
Now you have nowhere to go.
There's no standing up.
There's no jujitsu where there's no option like that.
kurt angle
Like, jujitsu...
I did a competition called The Contenders.
Do you remember that?
joe rogan
Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
kurt angle
Okay, so it was jujitsu versus wrestling.
joe rogan
Yeah, I remember that.
kurt angle
Wrestling didn't do that well.
joe rogan
Well, because they didn't understand submissions.
kurt angle
Right.
joe rogan
You know, that was when, you know, Frank Shamrock was there.
I think he tapped...
unidentified
I think he tapped Dan Henderson.
joe rogan
I think he got him in an ankle lock.
kurt angle
I think so, yes.
joe rogan
They just didn't understand the positions.
And these guys were so good at submissions.
kevin jackson yeah kevin jackson monday that's right yeah kevin jackson fought um frank shamrock and he got armbarred they just didn't understand the positions but if they did but if they did if they had real training having that ability the wrestler's ability first of all wrestlers are the very best at controlling bodies they're very the very best at taking people down and then the next step is just understanding those submissions The hardest guys to deal with for sure in jiu-jitsu are guys who are great wrestlers who learn jiu
-jitsu.
Because they already know how to control bodies.
So then they understand these new positions and they just have this massive advantage in being able to control bodies.
It's still the cornerstone for MMA. If you can't wrestle, you can't fight.
Because guys just take you down.
kurt angle
No matter how good a striker.
They're stand-up fighters and they try to get in there and do it, they get crushed.
joe rogan
Yeah, there's not a lot of guys who can't wrestle, whoever wind up doing well in the sport.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah, I saw a funny thing, again, it's all on Instagram, these memes lately, or videos, but I saw a good one of Derek Lewis going, wrestling's not that big of a deal, all you have to do is stand up.
And then it shows this reel of wrestlers taking him down and he just rolls over and starts planting a foot.
joe rogan
Not with Daniel Cormier.
Daniel Cormier got him down and submitted him.
It's just who you're doing it to.
When you deal with a wrestler as elite as Cormier, here's Derek just standing up.
But Derek is just a giant of a man and has ferocious knockout power.
Look, he just pushes people off.
tony hinchcliffe
The ability to plant a foot and just stand up is incredible.
joe rogan
But that reach around move, that's a legit move, whether he knew it or not.
Craig Jones does that.
That reach from the position, you get into that spot.
He actually has, I think he calls it the octopus guard.
Or reach around.
Craig's really funny.
But Craig actually does that.
But he stands up with everybody.
And that's with Roy Nelson, who's a great grappler.
But, you know, when you've got Derek throwing punches at you, there's not a human alive.
I mean, that guy punches so fucking hard.
tony hinchcliffe
Scary.
joe rogan
He's so crazy powerful.
He just gets up.
unidentified
Jeez.
joe rogan
He just gets up.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
joe rogan
And if you're fucking Roy Nelson, you're like, aw, shit.
Like, someone's going to get him in Americana, he's like, yeah, I think I'll just stand up.
tony hinchcliffe
He'll get up, plants a foot, stands up, then turns around.
joe rogan
That's a guy Derek, I think, would shine in pro wrestling at the end of his career.
He just signed a new deal with the UFC. I think it's an eight-fight deal.
They're really giving him a lot of money, so I'm happy for him.
kurt angle
Do you think he'll go all eight fights?
joe rogan
I don't know.
Who knows?
It's so hard in that sport.
But the heavyweight division is so shallow.
All he needs is string together a few wins and he can fight for the title.
Because there's really only...
I mean, there's like fucking 15 or 20 elite heavyweights.
Whereas you go into lightweight, 155, there's a sea of them.
170, there's a sea of them.
185, there's so many guys.
kurt angle
So there's like five times as many.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Heavyweight is probably the shallowest division.
kurt angle
Hasn't it always been?
joe rogan
Yeah, I mean, it's just, there's not that many.
Those guys go into the NFL. You know, those guys go into the NFL, NBA, pro basketball.
kurt angle
But I also think that, you know, the average human being is right in the middle, you know, 165, 175. And I think that most of the people, like, I'll tell you this, in amateur wrestling, most of the wrestlers are in the middleweights.
And then as you go up and down, they become less and less and less and less.
And then when you're at the very lightest weight, there's very few.
And at the heaviest weight, there's very few.
So there's like an average weight of people, of human beings, and when you go higher and lower, it gets lighter.
joe rogan
There's another guy that everybody wanted to see compete in MMA, and that's Corellin.
Did you ever get a chance to see Corellin compete?
kurt angle
Yeah, yeah, man.
You know what?
These guys were so scared of him that when he would pick him up for the reverse gut wrench, they would pin themselves.
They'd roll over and pin themselves.
I went to the World Championships one year, and this guy's in the finals with Corellin.
And Corellin goes to lift him up and the guy turns over and pins himself.
I'm like, why'd you do that?
Like, you arrested Corellin and at least, you know, try to beat him.
joe rogan
They were worried about getting smashed.
kurt angle
Yeah, they didn't want to get hurt.
joe rogan
Because he would pick you up and hit you with the world.
He would basically, I mean, there's a photo that we have in the gym out here that I put up just to remind myself of what a pussy I am.
It's Corellin.
Show that photo.
It's this black and white photo of Corellin where he's about to pick this guy.
That photo right there.
Look at that fucking photo!
I mean, tell me that's not...
That dude was 300 fucking pounds and moved like a panther.
kurt angle
You know what's crazy?
That he got beat his last match.
joe rogan
Yeah, well, he got beat by a new rule, right?
kurt angle
A technicality.
joe rogan
Yeah, the technicality was when you broke the grip, it counted as one point.
And that was really at the end of his career.
But Rulon Gardner was also a tank, too.
kurt angle
He was, he was.
And Rulon went on to fight, and he did fairly good.
joe rogan
Yeah, he did well in pride.
kurt angle
Yeah.
But I just had Rulon on my podcast, and he said that, you know, wrestling Corellin, at that point in his career, he knew that Corellin wasn't in the best form of shape.
joe rogan
Right, he wasn't the same.
kurt angle
Yeah, yeah, but he was still Corellin.
He was still Corell.
Yeah, doesn't matter.
I mean, he's the baddest dude on the planet.
unidentified
He was so big.
kurt angle
And for Rulon to stay close with him and then end up beating him on a technicality, that's still pretty impressive.
joe rogan
Very impressive.
If you watched Corell in training, though, what was so fantastic about Corell was his mobility.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
Even though he was this enormous guy, his mobility was sensational.
See if you can find some of that footage of Corral and training.
Incredible athlete.
For a giant guy, he really emphasized his movement.
The Soviet training, what they were doing with those guys back then was so technical.
kurt angle
Well, you know the rumor about him, right?
They called him the experiment.
joe rogan
His parents were like small.
They were like my size.
And then, you know, all of a sudden they have this kid that just looks like some science project.
kurt angle
He does.
He does look like an experiment.
tony hinchcliffe
It's like who Ivan Drago was based off of her.
unidentified
Bro, he would have picked Ivan Drago up and spiked him to China.
joe rogan
His feet would have been poking out of the fucking top of the earth.
But if you watch his training, like a lot of his training was like box jumps and kettlebells and mobility.
A lot of it was like movement-based.
He was very, very flexible.
So you see that when you kind of fast-forwarded through that, but what they showed before when he was on the mats there, look at that.
Him wiggling around on the top of his shoulders.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
Look at that kind of agility.
kurt angle
That's called mobility.
joe rogan
Yeah, for a 300-pound guy.
I mean, and this is at the end of his career, too.
But he was all about athleticism and, you know, and also being fucking enormous and incredibly strong, but moved like a panther.
kurt angle
Now, why didn't he fight?
joe rogan
He had one kind of fake fight.
I think he had one, like, in Japan?
What was interesting about Japan, Japan had real fights mixed in with fake fights in the beginning.
They eventually became all real fights.
kurt angle
That was pride, right?
joe rogan
Yeah.
There were some fights that they had, and also in some other organizations, some smaller organizations.
So is this Karelin?
Yeah.
So this was kind of like a fake fight.
I think he gets tapped in here.
And this is at the end.
He wasn't wrestling anymore.
And I think they just probably gave him a lot of money.
I forget how he loses here, but it seemed suspicious.
kurt angle
You think he just threw it?
joe rogan
I think so.
I don't know.
kurt angle
I'll be honest with you.
Watching him compete, I always thought that if he ever fought, he would just dominate.
joe rogan
I think he would have too.
In his prime, I don't think a human being would have been able to stop him.
That was the end?
Okay, so he didn't lose.
I thought, I don't want to think.
Maybe he fought more than once.
I don't think it was a real MMA fight, though.
Because it just didn't...
I don't know.
It was weird over there, because Japan had such a history of pro wrestling that a lot of their early stars in MMA were also stars in pro wrestling, like Takata.
When Takata fought in the first UFC. But he fought Hicks and Gracie, and that was a real fight.
And Hickson was quite a bit smaller than him, but Hickson was the master of jiu-jitsu back then.
I mean, he was so...
kurt angle
Yeah, he was the man, huh?
joe rogan
He was the man.
And, you know, he was the guy that when Hoist Gracie won the UFC, everyone said, listen, Hoist is great, but his brother is literally a hundred times better than that.
kurt angle
That's what I heard.
joe rogan
Yeah, and then you'd see him roll.
What Hickson would do famously is he would teach a seminar with world champions in the crowd, black belts.
Teach a seminar, explain to him certain principles that he used, and then at the end of the seminar, he'd roll with everybody.
And he would roll with them one at a time.
So these guys would wait, and then these black belts, world champions, like the top of the food chain.
They would go in there and roll with Hickson, and Hickson would tap them all.
There's videos of it, of him just effortlessly tapping everybody.
kurt angle
Just rotating in and out, huh?
joe rogan
Rotating.
No breaks.
Bring in the next guy, my friend.
And they would come in and he would tap them too.
It's just his level of Jiu-Jitsu was so advanced.
His dad was Elio Gracie.
He started when he was a kid.
And the thing that separated him from some of those other guys was his physicality.
Because Hickson, his knowledge was better than anybody's.
But his movement and his physicality, he was jacked.
He was like one of the first jacked Gracies.
kurt angle
Well, let me ask you this.
Why was Hoist the one they pushed?
joe rogan
There's a lot of talk about that.
kurt angle
Is it because of Hickson's age?
joe rogan
No, no, no, no.
Because Hickson was still young.
One thing was that Horian Gracie, who started the UFC, he could control Hoist.
And you couldn't tell Hickson what to do.
And the thought was, if Hoist ever lost, then they bring in Hickson.
But Hoist didn't lose.
Hoist was tapping everybody.
And it was also, in some ways, a better advertisement for Gracie Jiu-Jitsu.
Because you had this guy in Hoist, who was 175 pounds, who was tapping guys like Dan Severn with a triangle choke from his back.
kurt angle
He was smaller, yeah.
joe rogan
He was smaller than everybody.
So it showed just that jiu-jitsu was superior.
kurt angle
Right.
joe rogan
Because the early days of the UFC was really an advertisement for Gracie jiu-jitsu.
kurt angle
Yes, it was.
joe rogan
Horian was a genius.
And his idea was like, look, he knew that jiu-jitsu was superior if you didn't know it.
kurt angle
Right.
joe rogan
So all these guys that didn't understand what those submissions were, they didn't understand those positions, and Hoist wore the gi.
So when he would grab ahold of guys, guys would instinctively grab his gi.
They didn't understand.
They didn't know how to push him off.
They didn't know how to leg kick him.
They didn't know how to do any of those things back then.
So they would wind up getting dragged to the ground, and Hoist was just so much better than everybody.
But still, his brother was so much better than him.
kurt angle
Hickson, yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, Hickson was the man.
And everybody said...
There's like...
There was no argument back then.
It was like, who's the best at jiu-jitsu?
Everyone said Hickson.
Everyone.
That doesn't happen.
There's always debate.
You know, like even in boxing, like when Terence Crawford fought Errol Spence, everybody was like, you know, maybe Spence is too big, maybe Spence, I don't know.
Back then, when it came to fighting, when it came to jiu-jitsu, everyone said it was Hickson.
But Hickson went over to Japan, and he competed in Vale Tudo, Japan in 1994. And that was, what was it, 96?
I forget.
It might have been 96. And that was when, you know, MMA was really just emerging.
And the first Pride, Pride 1, was with Hickson.
Hickson versus Toccata.
kurt angle
Oh, Toccata worked with Hickson, yeah.
joe rogan
See if you can find that.
Pride 1, Hickson versus Toccata.
But it's just like, once Hickson got you to the ground, man, you were just fucked.
You were fucked.
He was just too good.
He was too good and he was strong.
He was just a different guy.
He was just different.
kurt angle
He was bigger than Hoise, right?
joe rogan
Yes, he was bigger.
tony hinchcliffe
Didn't he have like a good Gracie documentary explaining how these guys basically invented jujitsu and stuff?
joe rogan
Yeah, Gracie in action is very good, but this is Hickson when he was young, when he was in his prime.
I mean, this is, that's Hoyler behind him.
And this is like, and Takata at the time was this pro wrestler.
And, you know, I don't know what he knew in terms of real martial arts.
And Hickson, I mean, this is a different world.
I mean, even if you just see how these guys are moving around, Hickson just stood straight up and walked towards him.
kurt angle
He doesn't look scared.
joe rogan
No, not at all.
He just knew all he has to do is get a hold of you.
But again, he's not fighting a guy who's like a real legit striker.
kurt angle
Right.
joe rogan
And when he did, he fought Funaki, and Funaki wound up fracturing his orbital bone, but Hickson choked him to sleep in one of the most dramatic finishes ever in MMA. He literally had him asleep out cold in a choke with blood all over the place.
It was pretty wild.
kurt angle
Was it his orbital bone or was it his opponent's?
joe rogan
Oh, he got hit by Funaki, and Funaki fractured his orbital.
So now Hickson, like, assumes mount.
And by the way, this is, you know, nobody was as good as Hickson back then.
His jiu-jitsu was so good.
And look, you see how different he is than Hoyce.
He was muscular.
So he was very physically strong, incredibly agile.
He could do yoga.
He was an incredible yogi.
So he had, like, the physicality, but also the incredible...
So right now, that right arm of Takata's fucked.
So as he's reaching with his arms right there, he doesn't understand.
Hicks is just kind of softening him up here.
kurt angle
He is kind of taking it easy on him, huh?
joe rogan
Well, he's just cooking them.
They would just take their time, and once he's got you in mount, you're not getting out, and he gets him in the arm bar here.
So he picks an arm, whichever arm he chose.
I think he chose the left arm.
And he's basically just pushing down on him, and yeah, see his right knee comes up, and that's it.
Whap!
And now you're fucked.
Now you're fucked.
And he tapped him.
Now see find Hickson vs.
Funaki.
That was Coliseum in the year 2000, I believe.
And that year was the year that, that was when Fedor was emerging and all these other guys were emerging.
And this was Hickson's final fight.
kurt angle
You didn't fight after this?
This is it?
joe rogan
No, this was it.
This was his last fight.
And they were talking about him fighting and competing against Fedor.
That was the big one.
And he wanted a very large sum of money that they probably should have paid him because that would have been insane.
kurt angle
How good was Fedor?
joe rogan
Fedor was amazing.
He was amazing.
He might have been the best heavyweight of all time.
He certainly was in that argument.
In his prime.
So he's beating him up here.
And then he eventually gets his back and strangles him.
And he puts him to sleep.
And it's so dramatic.
Because there's blood coming out of Funaki's face.
And he catches the choke here.
And Funaki doesn't tap either.
He just goes out.
kurt angle
He goes out.
joe rogan
Yeah, he just goes out cold, but he goes out with his eyes open.
So when you watch the choke, when they show up right here, like this is it.
It's a wrap right here.
unidentified
Oh, my God.
joe rogan
So look at his eyes.
kurt angle
Oh.
joe rogan
Yeah, he's out cold.
kurt angle
They're stuck open.
joe rogan
Yeah, he's just out cold.
kurt angle
Jeez.
joe rogan
The early days, Kurt Angle.
That was the early days.
kurt angle
It was barbaric.
joe rogan
It was wild.
It's wild.
And to see where it is now, and to see what's really crazy is this Francis Ngannou Tyson Fury fight that's going to happen.
tony hinchcliffe
It is?
joe rogan
It's happening.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
October.
Yeah, that's what Francis is coming in to talk about.
kurt angle
He's been training for it.
joe rogan
Yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
Is that in America?
joe rogan
No, Saudi Arabia.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, okay.
joe rogan
Yeah, those Saudi Arabians, man.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
They're throwing that money around.
tony hinchcliffe
Oh, yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
kurt angle
I don't know how Francis is going to do.
This is a boxy match, right?
joe rogan
Well, conventional wisdom says Tyson Fury, who's one of the greatest heavyweight boxers of all time, is going to box his face off.
I mean, that's conventional wisdom.
But there's also the possibility that he overestimates things, underestimates Francis, and gets clipped.
tony hinchcliffe
Who knows?
A few months, Tyson Fury could be a vegan.
unidentified
Ha!
Ha!
joe rogan
Yeah, I mean, look, I'm just happy Francis is getting a lot of money.
Dana White talked about this recently, that there is a possibility that if Francis fights Tyson Fury and after that comes back and fights Jon Jones, that would be the ultimate.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
kurt angle
Well, that could be two straight losses for it, too.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Yeah, probably.
That's the thing about Jon, too.
Jon could do everything.
kurt angle
Yeah, you know what?
He's my favorite.
Always has been ever since...
He came out, man.
He is the most overall talented fighter I've ever seen.
unidentified
So talented.
joe rogan
So intelligent, too.
Just knows what to do.
By the time he gets in the octagon with someone, he knows everything about them.
He knows all their tendencies.
He knows what they do with their right legs forward.
Oh, yeah.
He's meticulous about it.
It's not luck that makes John that good.
kurt angle
I thought it was talent.
joe rogan
It's talent, too.
It's talent, too.
But it's one of those things, right?
To be the best of the best, it can't just be talent.
There's got to be so many factors.
It's mindset.
It's that warrior mindset.
It's having an incredible skill set.
It's just knowing so much about the art of fighting.
And you've got to realize John has been fighting at a world championship level for, God, what year did he win the title?
I mean, he won the title when he was 22 years old when he fought Mauricio Shogun Hua.
And since then, every fight he has had since then, except for like one or two, has been a world title fight.
kurt angle
Wow.
joe rogan
Which is just nuts.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
Just nuts.
kurt angle
Talk about consistent.
joe rogan
Yeah.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
And again, that wrestling base.
He's got that wrestling base.
I mean, that wrestling base is, in my opinion, the best base ever to enter into MMA. And it's also what you were talking about with the training with Dan Gable.
It's the mental toughness.
There's no one more mentally tough.
kurt angle
Yeah, wrestlers do have a lot of mental toughness.
You know, it's a tough sport.
It really is, yeah.
joe rogan
It's as tough as it gets.
I mean, and there's no money in it, right?
So you have to be just tough.
You can't be tough because, you know, you're going to buy a house.
Tough because you want to drive a Bentley.
tony hinchcliffe
Even the weight cutting alone.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
Did you ever have trouble cutting weight?
kurt angle
I didn't cut weight.
unidentified
I wrestled up a weight class, always.
tony hinchcliffe
God, what a dream.
kurt angle
I actually weighed 199 at the Olympics, and the lower weight class was 198. Wow!
I could have made that.
I wrestled at 220. Smart.
And also I wrestled, I weighed 197 when I wrestled Sylvester Turquay in the NCAA Championship, Division I Championship my senior year.
He was 270, he was about 6'6", real big, big kid.
Looks like a Greek god.
unidentified
And you were 199?
kurt angle
I was 197. Wow!
joe rogan
What was the mindset behind that of not cutting that extra pound?
kurt angle
Why?
Why do I want to Now, I could have made it easily, but what I did is I tricked myself and said, you don't have to diet.
You just eat whatever you want.
You can stay where you are.
So I figured, you know, why?
Well, I'm sorry.
College is 190, not 198. That's Olympics.
That was the old weight classes in the Olympics.
College is 190. I would have had to lose seven pounds to make it.
So why starve myself when I don't have to?
I could win at heavyweight.
tony hinchcliffe
Wow.
kurt angle
That was my...
That was my reason.
joe rogan
Well, that's incredible because that's how good you were.
You actually did that.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah, nobody else has that problem.
joe rogan
Right, that's the whole mindset of weight cutting.
Like, I'd rather be the bigger guy.
kurt angle
I was a hand fighter and I had great positioning.
And that's why I won so many matches.
Nobody could score on me and I was always on them.
I was getting them tired.
I never let them breathe.
I was all over them.
Just hand fighting and attacking them and staying in their face, head butting them.
Anything I could do.
tony hinchcliffe
The time that you wrestled Brock, do you remember what you did?
Was it double leg takedowns?
Did you like...
kurt angle
Duck-unders.
tony hinchcliffe
Ah, yes.
kurt angle
Yeah, because Brock would come with these double legs.
He'd come up and I'd jack him up and duck under and get behind him.
It would be like in a flurry.
I wouldn't just do a move.
He'd do something, I'd counter and do it.
tony hinchcliffe
You'd be happy to know I beat up on our friend David Lucas, who weighs about 330 pounds with a duck under.
kurt angle
Who did?
tony hinchcliffe
I did.
kurt angle
You did?
tony hinchcliffe
At 145 pounds.
joe rogan
Well, David was tired in 13 seconds.
Yeah.
David's a little overweight.
tony hinchcliffe
All of his training is exhaust training.
unidentified
Yeah.
kurt angle
He starts out exhausted.
joe rogan
He's tying his shoes.
Yeah.
But there was a lot of shit talking before that.
They wrestled on the stage at the Vulcan Comedy Club.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
unidentified
It was hilarious.
tony hinchcliffe
He was talking shit for months.
There he is.
Oh, my God.
joe rogan
David was done.
tony hinchcliffe
See me counting the score?
Two points.
We had Chinese dumplings right before that.
Whiskey, tequila, Chinese dumplings, and blunts.
So it's not exactly a sanctioned wrestling match.
joe rogan
It definitely was not that.
It definitely was not that.
tony hinchcliffe
I had to take off my cowboy boots to do that.
I still have a bandana wrapped around my neck.
joe rogan
I think he was wearing socks too.
What's just incredible about your career was that you were able to accomplish that by violating that one cardinal rule.
You want to fight and be the biggest you can in your weight class.
And you were like, fuck it.
kurt angle
Yeah, yeah.
I didn't want to have to do that.
I didn't want to have to lose weight.
I was like, why?
You know, I just wrestled 220 for the Olympics and heavyweight for college wrestling.
joe rogan
How much do you think you weighed in the Olympics?
kurt angle
I weighed 199 when I wrestled 220. Wow.
And the weight class below was 198. Were you faster?
So I was a pound over.
tony hinchcliffe
Were you a little bit faster than the big guys?
This was Turkey.
kurt angle
This is a guy, 6'6".
He was 270. And I was 197 here.
Incredible.
joe rogan
That's incredible.
Look at the size difference.
kurt angle
This kid was a pinner.
He pinned everybody.
Actually, he pinned all five opponents before this match.
Wow.
Within a minute.
joe rogan
Did any of your coaches try to get you to go down to the next weight?
kurt angle
They...
They never fought me on it.
They knew my mind was made up.
They didn't care.
I was winning titles.
joe rogan
I guess as long as you're winning.
But it's so crazy that you violated that conventional wisdom.
kurt angle
You know what?
I would have won at 190, too.
Not that I'm bragging, but Mark Kerr won the NCAAs.
When Kerr started beating me, he got bigger, but I think I could have probably beaten Kerr in college.
It wasn't like I was trying to stay away from people.
I just didn't have to lose weight.
joe rogan
That's amazing.
You know, that's one of the biggest problems in MMA, is the weight cutting.
It's a real problem.
kurt angle
You know what, not only that, not only is it hard, it takes the fun out of it, and then you don't enjoy what you're doing anymore.
And not only do you have to worry about the fight, now you have to worry about your weight too, and it's just like, you just have so much shit, so much stress going on at one time.
The last thing you need to be worrying about is your weight.
Yeah, yeah.
tony hinchcliffe
And all you're worrying about, at least from my high school experience, all you're worrying about is your weight until the match.
And then you're like, okay, now I get to fight.
And then you're like, oh shit, I have to fight.
kurt angle
And I will also agree with you because when you're cutting weight, you're not training properly.
tony hinchcliffe
Right.
kurt angle
You're not able to have the energy to train right.
joe rogan
Right, right.
kurt angle
So now all you're doing is you're letting someone beat you up while you have plastics on.
You're rolled up in a ball and this person's just beating the shit out of you and trying to get you to sweat.
Yeah.
It really lowers your work ethic.
joe rogan
Yeah.
kurt angle
So you don't want to do that.
joe rogan
I've always said it about MMA. It's the one thing that I would cut out if I could.
I think there should be more weight classes, and I think they should make guys fight at whatever the weight they are.
I think it's sanctioned cheating.
I mean, I really do.
I really think that's what it is.
When you got guys like Alex Pajeda is probably the best example.
He weighed in at 185 when he fought Israel Adesanya and won the title.
When he got into the octagon, he was 226. He gained that much weight.
He gained 40 pounds.
kurt angle
You know what?
That is what I was scared of.
That's what happened to me for the Olympics.
Like Mark Kerr, Mark Coleman, they would cut down to 220 and get up to 245. Yeah.
And I was wrestling down at, you know, 200, 299 pounds.
I was like, holy shit, man.
Like, this is not right.
But, you know, I guess...
joe rogan
But they probably tired more.
kurt angle
Yeah, yeah, they did.
They did.
I mean, especially if you have a full belly and you're wrestling on a full belly.
joe rogan
Right, because they've been starving themselves forever.
So you know when they finally get a chance to eat, they're going to eat.
That's going to slow them down.
But then the mindset is, but at least I'm going to be bigger.
kurt angle
Yeah, yeah, you're right.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Well, that's the ultimate triumph of skill and mindset over everything else.
You know, it didn't matter what you weighed.
kurt angle
No.
joe rogan
It's pretty fucking impressive.
kurt angle
I didn't have to worry about it.
And you know what?
My training was better than anyone else's.
I had more intense training.
I was able to do whatever I wanted to do.
And I could eat whatever I wanted to eat.
joe rogan
And you could recover better.
kurt angle
Yeah, I was recovering a lot quicker than everybody else.
joe rogan
Yeah.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
Well, I really wish they would do something about that in MMA. I really do.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
I mean, I just think if they just had more weight classes, there's just only eight weight classes.
kurt angle
They should have more weight classes.
That's not enough.
joe rogan
No, I don't think so.
kurt angle
I'd say about 12. I think 12. 12 would be right, yeah.
joe rogan
I think every 10 pounds is the right way to go.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
I mean, in boxing, I mean, you've got, it's so much different.
You've got 135, then you've got 140, and then you've got 147, and then you've got 154, and then you've got 160, and then you've got 168, and then you've got 75. That, to me, makes more sense.
It makes a lot more sense.
But, just for whatever reason, this is just how people have been doing it for a long time in MMA. Like, when you stand...
Like, there's guys that weigh 185 pounds, and I stand next to them when I'm interviewing them.
I'm like, how the fuck did you ever weigh...
Like, Pajeda, how the fuck are you ever 185 pounds?
kurt angle
Right, what's he, 210?
joe rogan
He's giant!
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
And he's fucking dense like this table.
Like, when you put your hand on the guy, he feels like a table.
kurt angle
Right.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
It's just nuts.
And it takes a lot out of their body, too.
It's terrible for their kidneys, terrible for their overall body.
24 hours before an MMA fight, you're literally on death's door.
kurt angle
Almost dead.
You're exactly right.
There have been a lot of guys that cut weight that have been rushed to a hospital.
joe rogan
There's Pajeda before and after.
It's hard to tell.
See there?
99 kilograms.
So what is 99 kilograms?
220-something?
kurt angle
Holy shit.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's 220. And then he went up to light heavyweight and he just beat Jan Bohovic at light heavyweight, who was the former light heavyweight champion.
But he's a real freak.
He's the greatest example of weight cutting.
Like, no one cuts weight like that guy.
No one's that big at 185 pounds.
kurt angle
He has some tricks up his sleeve.
He's able to cut weight like that?
joe rogan
I don't know what he's doing.
It's a lot of mental toughness, too.
A lot of mental toughness.
Maybe genetics.
Maybe his body's just able to do it better.
Some guys just...
Their body breaks down.
They're trying to dehydrate themselves like that.
tony hinchcliffe
It's hard.
Brushing your teeth the morning of.
That's the thing I always remember.
The Saturday mornings.
Brushing your teeth.
Your mouth wants to drink the water.
Swallow the toothpaste.
Because it's in your mouth.
There's been nothing in your mouth for days.
kurt angle
Yeah, you want to swallow it.
tony hinchcliffe
Exactly.
joe rogan
What's crazy about wrestling is you have to compete the day of.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's what's nuts.
kurt angle
Yeah, you weigh in and then you compete.
joe rogan
That's what's nuts.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's really nuts, because with MMA, the stark contrast, they also now, they weigh in in the morning, and then what we do is we have an official weigh-in ceremony at 5 p.m.
So when I announce it, I'll say, you know, like, Robert Whitaker, official weight, 186. But he's not 186 when he's standing there.
He's really probably like 200 pounds.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
It's like 186 is like for a couple minutes.
He gets down there, sucks it up, and then they start rehydrating the electrolytes.
During the wake-up.
Yeah, so here's during the wake-up.
I mean, the guy's fucking dying.
Look at him.
He's just lying there.
They're covering him with plastics and thermal suits.
No, I mean, he's literally dying.
I mean, you can't do this very long.
And it takes a long fucking time for him to drain himself down to 185. And I think he's more suited at 205 anyway.
kurt angle
How tall is he?
joe rogan
He's big.
He's about 6'4".
kurt angle
Oh, gosh.
joe rogan
Yeah.
He's big.
And he's got giant mitts.
I mean, his fucking hands are huge.
unidentified
Guy's got just paws.
joe rogan
Massive knockout power and a huge size advantage, but also I think it affects your chin.
I think when you do cut that kind of weight, you can't take a shot as well.
unidentified
Right.
joe rogan
I think you take a shot better when your body's like healthy.
kurt angle
Yeah.
When you're eating right and you're mentally and physically strong.
joe rogan
So when Tyson Fury fights Francis Ngannou, Francis Ngannou used to cut weight to make 265, which is crazy.
Because the UFC has a weight limit.
kurt angle
Is he going to have to cut weight or not?
joe rogan
No.
kurt angle
Good.
joe rogan
The UFC had a weight limit, which is nuts.
tony hinchcliffe
On their heavyweights?
joe rogan
On their heavyweights, yeah.
unidentified
Interesting.
joe rogan
Yeah, because there's a super heavyweight division that we've never used.
kurt angle
Has anybody ever used it?
joe rogan
Pride, you know, but Pride has crazy rules.
Like Pride, they're allowed to do steroids.
Like when Ensign Inouye was on my podcast, he explained that in Pride they had in the contract, in all capital letters, we do not test for steroids.
kurt angle
No shit.
joe rogan
You know, I'm not telling you what to do, but I'm telling you what to do.
kurt angle
Right, right, take them.
joe rogan
They wanted you to look awesome.
You know, they wanted you to fight at your best and look huge.
kurt angle
That'll help.
joe rogan
That'll help, yeah.
Might mean for sure.
Yeah.
Crazy sport.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
Well, Kurt Angle, it's been an honor and a privilege having you in here, man.
I'm a giant fan.
You're a fucking stellar human being.
tony hinchcliffe
Can I ask one more question?
joe rogan
Yeah, please do.
tony hinchcliffe
I've always wanted to know, where does one keep a gold medal like yours?
Good question.
Is it in a sock?
Is it in a safe?
Is it right when you walk into your house in a glass case?
kurt angle
I'll tell you what happened.
I used to take it with me to all my events whenever I would speak or do appearances.
tony hinchcliffe
The actual one?
kurt angle
Yeah.
unidentified
Wow.
kurt angle
And so one time I took it to an appearance and this little kid grabbed it and he was holding it.
Then he kind of grabbed the ribbon.
Then he started flinging it.
joe rogan
Oh no.
kurt angle
And he let it go and it hit the wall.
So there was a big dent in my gold medal.
So I never took it to another event again.
It's been in my safe because my kids, they were playing Barbie one day and they had the gold medal around the Barbie and I was like, okay, they're just going to get makeup on this.
So I decided from now on I'm going to keep it in the safe.
So it's away from my kids and it's away from anybody that's going to do any damage to it.
Because I already had damage done to my metal and I'm not going to have it again.
joe rogan
There's a kid out there somewhere listening to this cringing.
How old do you think that kid is now?
kurt angle
Oh god, that was 10 years ago.
unidentified
He'd be about 18. He's probably listening going...
Fuck!
kurt angle
You know what?
I never even thought about that.
joe rogan
Oh, that poor kid.
You're just a little kid.
kurt angle
You don't know any better.
Yep, I did it.
unidentified
Yeah, whoops.
joe rogan
Sorry, kid.
Listen, thank you very much for being here, man.
I really appreciate it.
It was awesome having you.
kurt angle
I appreciate it.
And I just want everybody out there to watch my documentary.
It's called Angle.
It's on Peacock.
joe rogan
All right.
And one more time, the supplement is Physically Fit?
kurt angle
Physicallyfit.com.
Yeah.
unidentified
All right.
kurt angle
It's called Chicken Snacks and Smart Snacks.
joe rogan
All right.
kurt angle
Yeah.
joe rogan
Thank you very much.
Oh, and Kill Tony, you guys sold out the arena.
You have another one now.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
joe rogan
Second show.
tony hinchcliffe
December 30th.
joe rogan
Which is wild.
unidentified
Wild.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah, it's already halfway sold out.
joe rogan
That is wild.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah.
joe rogan
Podcast in an arena.
The HEB arena right here in Austin.
tony hinchcliffe
In Austin.
joe rogan
Unbelievable.
tony hinchcliffe
Yeah, and I'm on tour all over the country.
unidentified
TonyHinchClick.com.
joe rogan
All right.
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