5. Madman

Perro Aguayo Jr. started out as, essntially, a tribute act to his father. His run on top of AAA in the late 90s along with Heavy Metal, Latin Lover and Hector Gaza was more of the same. He had his own identity and was a talented wrestler, sure, but it would be a couple of years before he would truly come into his own as the leader of Los Perros Del Mal. Perro didn't have to do a whole lot during his matches to get a reaction. He has such a charisma and presence to him that the simplest move or action would cause an entire arena to bite. Speaking of biting, Perro was known for biting opponents (along with other things) during his matches, which often descended into brawls. He was a very, very believable madman. It's not hard to think that Perro was genuinely off his rocker during matches, such was his believability. Aguayo would chase cameramen (often trying to physically beat them up) and fans during matches and his teammates would inevitably have to restrain him. He really was full-on. One of his last matches, against Myzteziz (the former Sin Cara) from February 2015 was a great example of Perro's style. It was a bit like going back in time, to some wild Abdullah the Butcher style brawl from the 1980s (albeit a lot more athletic), because everyone bled. The referee even bled. Perro bled more so than anyone else. His juice job was quite incredible, an absolute gusher. More incredible still was his wiping his blood on the faces and t-shirts of fans. Perro also felt the need to bite and lick Myzteziz's head wound and blood, too. You certainly wouldn't see this in WWE, only in Mexico (and maybe Puerto Rico). There aren't many like Perro Aguayo Jr. anymore. The wrestling world will miss his wildman antics. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJ9Wwq-d34U