Vanilla Ice Eddie Guerrero
Photo Credit: Vanilla Ice / YouTube

Vanilla Ice Bought ‘Eddie Guerrero’s Lowrider’

Update: Chavo Guerrero has commented on the story and clarified that the car Vanilla Ice bought did not belong to Eddie. Chavo says Eddie only posed with the car Ice showed off for the magazine.

In addition, Chavo revealed that he actually owns the first lowrider that he and Eddie used on WWE TV. Chavo showed a picture of the 1963 SS Impala convertible that he did a “frame-off restoration” on after John Cena sold it to him.


Vanilla Ice says he bought a cool piece of pro wrestling history.

Eddie Guerrero was famous for introducing lowrider cars as part of his entrance in WWE. Rapper and noted car collector, Vanilla Ice just bought one of the most high-profile cars linked to the late WWE Superstar.

Vanilla Ice shared how he recently bought the lowrider that Eddie posed with on the cover of Lowrider magazine. Eddie Guerrero and the orange 1985 Cadillac Fleetwood were featured on the February 2004 cover of LowRider magazine.

Ice said he found a guy who restored cars, but the man didn’t know that the vehicle was owned by someone famous. He ended up buying the car for $15,000 — well below the estimated $30,000 the owner had put into restoring the vehicle.

Check out the full video below:

Vanilla Ice talks about buying WWE Champion Eddie Guerrero’s low rider

CM Punk on Eddie Guerrero

CM Punk recently appeared as a special guest on Elite Comics 11‘s charity stream. There, he spoke about the time he worked a triple-threat match with Eddie Guerrero and Rey Mysterio. It was during his early days as a wrestler. Punk noted how working with the two set a new bar for him, and it was up to him to reach it.

“Oh God, a match? A match where I kind of figured things out? I really don’t know. I’d really have to think about it and maybe working with Rey Mysterio and Eddie (Guerrero) for the first time. We famously did a three-way in like a — I don’t know. It was like a school gymnasium somewhere in Indianapolis or it was somewhere in Indiana or something like that for IWA (Mid-South). It was when Eddie was in between jobs.

“Rey, WCW had just kind of folded. Rey was one of the guys that was not signing with WWE right away and that one kind of put me on the map, but it also gave a lot of stuff that — I knew I wasn’t as good as I thought I was at that moment, you know? Working with pros like Rey and Eddie and so, it just kind of set me down the path of there’s a whole new bar for me after working with these guys and I have to try to reach to get to it, you know?” 

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