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6. Angle's Emotional WWE Exit

Kurt angle 2006

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The Kurt Angle Show continues to be (along with My World with Jeff Jarrett) one of the best wrestling podcasts out there. 

One of September's episodes dealt with the the events leading up to the Olympian's controversial WWE exit in the summer of 2006. 

Angle has told the story in bits in the past, but this was probably the most in-depth recalling yet. The part where he emotionally talked about the fateful meeting he had with Vince McMahon at Titan Tower was especially revealing. 

Kurt was completely worn down with injuries and struggling with addiction issues when he decided to demand the meeting and begged the company to release him. 

What happened after that is quite the tale, as the Hall of Famer tells it: 

 "When I went to TV the next day, I went to a production meeting and Vince is up front with some of the writers. The producers were all leaving. I walk in and look at Vince, and I pull my pants down to my knees. I said, this is what happened last night and my whole crotch is black – my hamstring, front of my leg, abdominal, everything was black. He's like, 'I guess you're not gonna wrestle in the triple threat ladder match tonight'. I said, 'No, Vince, we need to talk'. He said 'let's go talk right now and I said 'no, I need to come up to headquarters this week'. He set it up, not a problem. So, later on that week, I flew up to Stamford, and I've never told this story publicly – this is the first time ever. I went to Vince’s office, and I was with my manager. In the office were Shane McMahon, John Laurinaitis and Vince. They were sitting at a table.

I walk in and Vince tells us to sit down. I look in front of me, and there were seven pages of typed text messages and voicemails that I left Vince and people in the office. I was like, 'What the hell are these?'. I'm reading them, and they say 'Vince, I'm gonna kick your ass when I see you', 'Vince, if you don't call me back, I'm gonna beat the sh*t out of you', all these threats. I'm like, I don't remember doing this. Then I remembered the painkillers. I never wrestled high, not once, and I always took what I was supposed to. One painkiller every four to six hours. But when the show was over, that's when the addict Kurt Angle came in and I’d throw down 20 to 25 pills at a time. I wouldn't even know what I was doing. I was letting out my frustrations when I was texting Vince because Vince was distancing himself from me at this particular time. My behaviour was erratic, I was getting injured, I was pushing him to get the title, and I was pushing to get on pay-per-views to get paid. There were a lot of things going on.

I'm reading the text messages, and as I'm doing it, Vince says, 'You want to beat my ass?'. He stands up and takes his jacket off and says 'let's fight right now'. I'm like, holy sh*t, my boss, the man I look up to as a father figure, wants to beat my ass. I look around the room and Shane is halfway out of his seat because if I get up, Shane is gonna jump me. Vince is a badass and didn't need Shane to get involved. I'm like this isn't gonna turn out very well, and I didn't want to fight Vince. I was just angry at myself and angry at the company. I leave the room and go outside and start crying. I don't know what to do. The company wouldn't release me up to this point. They wanted to keep me and wanted me to go to rehab and take a break and come back. I come back in and said to Vince, 'I can't do this anymore'. I was crying.

I'm getting emotional right now… 

I said, if you don't release me, I think I'm gonna kill myself. I didn't mean I was gonna commit suicide, I meant I was accidentally gonna kill myself – OD on painkillers, wrestle myself to death, I didn't know. I had to get out. Vince looks at me and says, 'You're released. Take a break, go to rehab, come back, and we'll have a contract waiting for you. Just take your time'. I appreciated that and was very grateful. The thing is, I didn’t talk to him for 11 years. 

When I came back in 2017, the first thing he said to me was, 'Kurt, you were a real pain in the ass'. I really was. I was so hard to deal with and I couldn't do anything but apologize to him 100 times. I knew I was wrong. We made amends and the rest was history. I have a great relationship with him now. But this is the first time I've told that story, and it was really difficult to tell because I've never told anybody that before".

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Lewis Howse

Written by Lewis Howse

Features journalist for Cultaholic.com and script writer for the Cultaholic YouTube Channel.