{{Gallery|name=14124332_850983095032546_480526349452038819_o.jpg|caption=Villanos 1, 3, 4 and 5}}
{{Gallery|name=14124332_850983095032546_480526349452038819_o.jpg|caption=Villanos 1, 3, 4 and 5}}
{{Gallery|name=14079481_285474561838086_4995410429473235027_n.jpg|caption=Villanos 1, 3, 4 and 5}}
{{Gallery|name=14079481_285474561838086_4995410429473235027_n.jpg|caption=Villanos 1, 3, 4 and 5}}
{{Gallery|name=24879732_1490392734411580_8642723097473646798_o.jpg|caption=Villanos 3, 4 and 5 with their sons, Villano III Jr., Hijo de Villano III, Rokambole Jr. and Villano V Jr.}}
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Revision as of 19:52, 26 August 2020
Los Villanos are a five brothers who've all worked under the Villano name. Each one was identified only by a Roman Numeral: I, II, III, IV, and V.
Their father is Ray Mendoza; despite being a succesful wrestler himself, he demanded his sons learn another profession/trade before becoming allowing them to start with wrestling. Some of the sons secretly wrestled before fufilling this request, but all earned degrees in their non-wrestling fields.
As the name suggests, the Villanos were known as villians for large stretches of their career. As a family, their most famous feud was and is with the Brazos, including a memorial trios match where all three Brazos lost their masks.
Villano III's career highlights include feuds with Pegasus Kid and Atlantis, the later who took his mask. Villano IV and V are probably the most famous in the United States due to their long underdcard stretch in WCW. Villano I was a trainer for the UWA in the 90s. Villano II was a freelance artist in his spare time.
Villano I, Villano II, and Ray Mendoza have passed. Villanos III, IV, and V were last in CMLL but are now independent wrestlers.