While many fans will remember Tazz's WWE debut as a night to remember, for the superstar himself, it's bittersweet.

It is no surprise that every year during the Royal Rumble, the WWE brings in wrestlers that fans have not either seen in a while or even have a wrestler make their debut at the Royal Rumble. This is one of the reasons why the Royal Rumble is such a popular pay-per-view event. One wrestler who made his debut with the WWE via the Royal Rumble was Tazz back in 2000.

Tazz had his first match in the WWE with present Raw General Manager Kurt Angle. From the wrestling fan's perspective, the match was incredible as it pitted two wrestlers known for their outstanding variations of suplexes in the same ring. Many wrestling enthusiasts would believe that Tazz himself would have thought his debut would be as good as expected, but according to Wrestling Inc, Tazz revealed that his debut was the best and worst moment of his career because of him being misled on the direction of his ring persona.

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via prowrestlingsmackdown.blogspot.com

Tazz revealed that before he walked through the curtain, the sirens that occur at the beginning of his theme songs caused the fans to "pop." He thought that this would be a good sign and that all systems were a go. He reveals that when he was actually walking to the ring, that he felt like he was doomed because "the pop was not built by this place," meaning that his fan base came from ECW and not the WWE.

There were a few problems with the Tazz and Angle match according to Tazz. Tazz reveals that Kurt Angle did not have the experience of a veteran wrestler which lead to a botched belly-to-back suplex. Tazz said that Angle was supposed to land on his back, but instead, Angle turned a flip in the middle of being suplexed and landed on his stomach— a move that "freaked out the boss and those close to him." Tazz goes even further and reveals that Jim Ross and Jerry Lawler made a comment about his Tazzmission finisher, stating that the hold was an illegal chokehold. According to the former ECW star, this was an unscripted comment from them.

Sometimes a character change can be beneficial to a wrestler's persona, but in Tazz's case, as the old saying goes, if it ain't broke, don't fix it.

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