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YMMV / Sid Eudy

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  • Draco in Leather Pants: Oh, so much. For all his laziness in the ring and his countless bad matches, he has an undeniable charisma that people respond to in spite of everything.
    • He got a huge cheer when he eliminated Hulk Hogan in the 1992 Royal Rumble, despite Hogan being the biggest wrestling face in the world at the time.
  • Fan Nickname: Despite using them in two separate companies, most people will combine his two most popular ring names together into "Sycho Sid Vicious" for the sake of clarity. It has the added benefit of helping to differentiate him from Sid Vicious of the Sex Pistols in things such as search engine algorithms.
  • Memetic Mutation: "Kevin Nash, you may be half the man that I am, and I may have half the brain that you do..."
    • 22!? OH MAN! WHY ME!? WHY ME!?note 
    • Sid's crossface being one of the most powerful submissions in wrestling history due to tapping out both Tank Abbott and Kevin Nash with it.
  • Misaimed Fandom: Even though he was a heel in his match with Goldberg at WCW Mayhem 1999, the Canadian fans (who are more fond of WWE) cheered him due to Sid's WWE past and the belief that Goldberg was a "Stone Cold" Steve Austin ripoff.note 
  • Mis-blamed: Sid often gets blamed for the downfall of WCW, as his return to the company and the mega push (at the expense of the entire undercard) helped create a lot of internal dissent within the undercard and led to many fan favorites who were shunned in favor of pushing Sid, to quit in 1999/early 2000. While Sid didn't make Nitro more watchable, longstanding internal issues ultimately led to WCW's downfall with Sid more or less being a symptom but not the cause of the rot that killed WCW.
  • The Scrappy: Though hugely popular in the late 80s and early 90s, changing taste in wrestling, especially the poularity of cruiserweight wrestling and more shades of grey type wrestlers with more realistic, relatable personalities, caused Sid's stock to plumit among fans. His return to WCW in 1999 as a foil for Goldberg and later, Hulk Hogan, were widely reviled and many felt that Sid's push should have gone to homegrown talent like Chris Jericho, Eddie Gurerro, or Chris Benoit instead. Especially since Sid's character never changed and his character highly protected at the expense of the entire undercard. Adding to this, thanks to the rise of the internet and Scott Keith's "History of WCW circa 1993" essay piece (which for years was one of the most detailed accounts of that period in the company's history), a lot of behind the scenes stuff about Sid became public knowledge (such as the squeegee incident and the "scissors" incident with Arn Anderson, which even got incorporated into an episode of Nitro, with Eric Bischoff referencing it to mock Sidnote ), along with Sid's passion for softball and his habit of no-showing companies to play softball.
  • Moment of Awesome: His return to Raw in 2012 to flatten Heath Slater. The guy was 51 years old. It was his first appearance in WWE in 15 years. And he still looked amazingly good for his age.
    • There was also a brief stretch of time during 1996 to 1997, in the middle of the New Generation Era, when everything clicked for Sid, giving his best effort and having surprisingly great matches (In particular, his title matches with Shawn Michaels at the 1996 Survivor Series and the 1997 Royal Rumble)
  • Narm: Despite being a muscular powerhouse with buckets of charisma, whenever Sid opened his mouth or tried to act out, it often ended in this, no thanks to his voice and mannerisms.
  • Never Live It Down:
    • Brian Pillman kicking his ass in a bar fight and Sid going out to look for a weapon and coming back with a squeegee.
    • The scissors debacle with Arn.note 
    • The "I have half the brain that you do" promo.
    • His leg injury.
    • Completely flubbing a promo and asking if they can start over, only to be told that they're going out live.
  • Squick: There's footage of him snapping his leg coming off of the middle rope at the Sin pay-per-view.note 
  • Took the Bad Film Seriously:
    • After The Shockmaster's infamous entrance, while everyone else was doubled up in laughter, Sid sold the threat like a pro, acting in rage, keeping in character.
    • The "I have half the brain that you do" promo qualifies as well, as it wasn't a flub at all, yet Sid still managed to deliver one of the worst lines in wrestling promo history with a completely straight face.

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