Myles Borne comments on WWE fans comparing him to Randy Orton
While speaking to Denise Salcedo, WWE NXT star Myles Borne commented on fans comparing him to Randy Orton…
“A lot of people think the comparison just started here [in WWE]. That’s actually not true. I remember growing up, people actually stopped me and my mother in public and would ask if I was related to Randy, and I would just laugh. I’d be like, ‘Why would you think that?’ And me and my mother would just look at each other. That was weird.
And I remember right before I had my tryout, me and my mother went to dinner at a place called Texas Roadhouse. And I remember this table with like four grown men just kept looking at me. She kept looking over, and at one point I thought they were looking at my mother, so I’m getting a little like, okay, hold on—that’s my mother, don’t do that.
As we left, it was late at night. We walked across the street to a place called Kohl’s, like a clothing store, and it’s late—it’s almost 10:00—and these four guys walk out of the restaurant and follow us across the street. So now, as I’m getting to the door, I let my mom walk in and I turn around. I said, ‘Okay, I think you guys are looking at my mother.’ My mother is a very beautiful lady, and when she came to watch me wrestle, people thought she was my sister—it’s insane. So I was very protective.
All of a sudden they said, ‘Hey, sorry, man, but are you Randy Orton’s kid?’ I just laughed, and my mother laughed. So that was always something that happened. And I got signed, and then one of my pictures got leaked about being signed, and that just took off—’Randy Orton’s son,’ baby Viper, whatever.
It’s cool to be compared to him because he’s such a legend. He’s someone I grew up watching. He inspired me, and he’s one of the reasons I’m here now. I wanted to do what he did. I was just in such awe of what he did, and he’s so good at what he does that at a young age, I had no idea about the in-depth concepts of the business, the characters, the wrestlers—I had no idea about that stuff.
All I knew at a young age was, ‘he is mean, he is bad.’ This guy is good—he’s a good guy. So at first I didn’t like Randy. I was like, ‘Oh, he’s mean. There’s just something about him—you don’t like him.’ But then as I got older, I was like, ‘That guy has it all. He’s got it all.’
So yeah, being compared to him was fun—it’s cool, I like it—but it’s also a lot of pressure because, in my mind, there’s only one Randy Orton, and in my mind, he’s the greatest of all time. He’s the greatest to ever do it.
But yeah, it’s cool to have that comparison, and I want to make my own name. I want people to know me as Myles Borne, you know? Yeah, we have some similarities, and the crazy part is the way I naturally move—even in the amateur world, when I was an amateur wrestler. If you watch any film, the way I move was similar to his mannerisms, and I didn’t notice that until I came here. I was like, ‘Oh crap—we have some similarities, but we also have the same body language sometimes. That’s very weird.’
I like the comparison. It’s funny to me, because me and Randy talk about it and we’ve joked about it before. It’s fun, but it’s something that, you know, I like for a little bit—but I also want to make sure that I do what I have to do to make my own path.”










