

"For the longest time, I had the Burning My Light or whatever the entrance music was that started with 'Hey, nothing you can say,' and I hated that shit for all four years. "I wish we could pick our theme music," he said. Orton also sounded off on his last entrance theme. "First I thought I wasn't good enough, because I couldn't lift the controller, but eventually it got to a point where that stuff's really helpful.' "Any movement I could do with my left arm for my collarbone was great," Orton said of playing Nintendo Wii. Randy Orton discussed video games and entrance music in an interview with. However, this never came to fruition he returned to "Burn In My Light" (and eventually to the theme he uses to this day, "Voices") while "This Fire Burns" became the theme of CM Punk.Randy Orton vents about his last entrance theme, says video games helped him rehab his collarbone injury, reveals which wrestler ended up with an entrance theme that was pegged for him Orton was apparently going to use "This Fire Burns" by Killswitch Engage in 2006, and even went out to the song on an episode of Smackdown.The triple threat was cancelled, the Rumble was rewritten for Rey Mysterio to win in tribute, and it'd be nearly two years before Orton won the title again, and didn't win the Rumble until 2009.

The stories are conflicting, but Randy was either going to win the title that November in a triple threat with Eddie and Batista, or win the Rumble before winning the title at Wrestlemania.

Then, the last Smackdown before the PPV saw a massive Battle Royal in which the winner took Randy Orton's spot in the chamber match. First off, WWE turned the legit injury into a storyline injury by having Daniel Bryan give Orton a vicious belt shot on the episode of RAW before the PPV.
#RANDY ORTON BURN IN MY LIGHT TITANTRON PLUS#
He had also added Olympic Slam and a Powerbomb to his set for while, but it appears like the those two plus the Twisting Backbreaker have all but disappeared. Garvin Stomp, Elevated DDT, Powerslam, Twisting Backbreaker, RKO. Randy has great wrestling psychology for a methodical heel, even though half the time he's a sociopathic face. The crazy part is that he basically wrestles as a heel from the mid eighties, with his melodramatic knee drops and stomps, combined with his incredibly heelish middle rope DDT. Orton wrestles a very simple but effective wrestling style. He probably realized he couldn't keep those traits if he wanted to get anywhere in WWE. This can be attributed to his time in Evolution with him getting violently thrown out of the group, and his later quest to become a WWE Champion no matter what. Contrast that to the modern day Orton and its like two different people. Even after he turned heel a few months later, he still had that wide-eyed enthusiastic personality. Orton was a clean-cut, respectful baby face when he first debuted in 2002.
