A Quote by Randy Orton

My schedule with WWE is all year unless there's an injury. — © Randy Orton
My schedule with WWE is all year unless there's an injury.
That's actually the main reason I decided to leave WWE: the brutal schedule that you have when you work for a company like WWE.
WCW and WWE were two totally different environments. A lot of guys in WCW were making a lot of money, and the work schedule wasn't that hard. You had to earn it in WWE.
It's not just professional athletes and soldiers who are at risk from traumatic brain injury. More than 1.7 million people a year sustain a traumatic brain injury, and about 50,000 of them die each year, according the Centers for Disease Control. There are both emotional and financial costs from these injuries.
I don't enjoy the road life or WWE's really hectic schedule.
I'm chomping at the bit for more movie roles as long as it doesn't interfere with my WWE schedule.
I'm interested in the way that terror is almost a psychosomatic state. You may have suffered a small injury for a few seconds, but the rest of the year you're constantly on the alert, your injury is constantly with you - and I mean this on a city-wide scale.
My academic schedule is lighter this year because it's an Olympic year.
He who hates anyone will endeavor to do him an injury, unless he fears that a greater injury will thereby accrue to himself; on the other hand, he who loves anyone will, by the same law, seek to benefit him.
The truth is, the WWE has changed incredibly since my wrestling days. The work schedule is not as demanding overall, and the compensation is much better.
One year with WWE seems like five years, because you're on the road 280 days a year.
I'm holding out a little hope personally because I want to be back, but this injury could take a year to fully recover. The last thing I want to do is feel like I'm OK, come out early and be vulnerable to further injury.
It's real easy to be in the WWE and let your passion or your pain or the schedule put you in a bad place.
One thing I've learned from years of working in WWE is that the road to WrestleMania always starts at the Royal Rumble. That's why it's so important to win the Rumble: because it's your chance to secure a championship match at WWE's biggest event of the year - WrestleMania.
Well every year I'm saying I'm going to put in a lighter schedule, but every year it's not really happening.
The downside isn't really injury, fear of injury or the process of fighting back from injury. The downside, the very worst thing in the world, is surgery.
The WWE also embraced more of a reality-based approach to wrestling a year or two after I established it. I knew, deep down inside, were it came from. The WWE did it better than I did, and they're still here, and I'm not, but nonetheless - I knew where it came from.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. More info...
Got it!