Former WWE performer Robbie McAllister says the controversial moment he was spotted in the crowd during a live TNA Impact broadcast continues to cast a long shadow over his wrestling legacy, nearly two decades after the fact.

In an exclusive conversation with Ian Aldous of Wrestling Headlines, McAllister — born Derek Couch — reflected on the 2008 incident. While still under contract with WWE, he attended a TNA television taping and was briefly shown on camera, identified by his legal name. The appearance effectively halted whatever momentum remained in his WWE run.

McAllister acknowledged the company’s reaction was understandable and admitted his own conduct at the time contributed to how management perceived him.

“That TNA incident has been talked about every week for the last eighteen years.

Because I partied and carried on, I was a liability.”

By spring 2008, McAllister had grown increasingly frustrated with his positioning in WWE after The Highlanders’ initial push dissipated.

“Until we started getting beat up all the time and losing to a midget (Hornswoggle), that’s when inside my head things started twisting and I’m not in a good place all of a sudden.”

With the benefit of hindsight, his outlook has shifted entirely. Where he once pointed fingers at others for the way his WWE tenure concluded, McAllister now owns his role in the outcome and has moved forward.

“When you look at it down the road as a lesson, it’s all good.”

Following his August 2008 release, McAllister built a successful career in sales before eventually returning to the independent wrestling circuit. He recently marked five years of sobriety and has expanded into television work, including appearances on The Curse of Oak Island and narration projects.

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