Summary

MVP took another shot at Paul "Triple H" Levesque while speaking on the *Marking Out* podcast, this time arguing that The Undertaker did far more to elevate other wrestlers over the course of his career.

The AEW star said fans can easily point to names that benefited from working with Undertaker, then questioned how many wrestlers truly came out of Triple H programs looking bigger than they did before. He named Randy Orton and Batista as examples, but suggested the list does not go much further.

Quote from MVP

"You can go down the list, and you can think of talents that Undertaker worked with that he elevated and got over."

MVP later went on to say:

"How many people do you remember 'The Nose' Triple H getting over in his career? How many people can you associate with him? And I'll give you two. I'll give you Randy Orton. I'll give you Batista. Take them away, who else can you remember under Triple Nose getting over?"

He also pointed to Triple H's past match with Jeff Hardy as part of his argument:

"And even when he put Jeff Hardy over, I remember the finish because, you know, it was a three-count, and he sat up smiling like, 'Gosh golly, he got me.' You know, like not, 'Boom, oh man, I'm hurt.' He wouldn't even give that to Jeff Hardy where it was, 'Oh man, he beat me.' He got up, sat up, and was like, 'He got me,' you know?"

MVP finished by tying that point back to his larger comparison:

"If The Undertaker made, let's just say for the sake of our conversation, 10 other guys through the course of his career, and 'The Nose' got two or three other guys over that he elevated them, in the big scheme of things, the big picture, who was more valuable for the company?"

What MVP's Triple H comparison puts back in focus

MVP's framing puts the spotlight back on a long-running fan debate about which top stars actually helped create new ones, and it does so by measuring Triple H directly against The Undertaker instead of just criticizing WWE creative in the present.

Because he specifically cited Randy Orton, Batista and Jeff Hardy, the conversation here is less about one comment and more about legacy. It also lands at an interesting moment, with Kevin Nash recently arguing that Triple H should be left alone creatively, which gives fans another sharply different view of Levesque's overall value to WWE.

Sources

MVP while speaking on the Marking Out podcast