Wrestlemania 11

 

The SmarK Retro Re-Rant for Wrestlemania XI


- Live from Hartford, CT


- Your hosts are Vinnie Mac and Jerry Lawler


- Sure, this is one of the lesser Wrestlemanias, but of course the untimely death of Bam Bam Bigelow made it a natural tribute to him.



The Allied Powers (Lex Luger & British Bulldog) v. The Blu Twins



The Blu Twins are of course the Harris Brothers, back when they had hair. The Blus attack to start, but the forces of democracy clean house and then stop to invade Iraq. Bulldog starts proper with, I dunno, Jacob and gets a delayed suplex for two. Clothesline for both Blus clears the ring again and he grabs a headlock, but a cheapshot turns the tide. The Twins switch off with some uneventful double-teaming and a sideslam, which sets up a double boot to the Bulldog. The Twins do the switch and Eli gets two. Jacob goes up and misses whatever, and it’s hot tag Luger. Wow! A kneelift! Why didn’t they just put the World title on him right then? Powerslam and the STAINLESS STEEL FOREARM OF DOOM get two, and it’s a donnybrook. Luger might as well be calling in his half of things from a cell phone in the corner. Another switch and Jacob tries a piledriver in the babyface corner, but Bulldog comes in with a sunset flip to finish. You’ll note that once Luger jumped back to WCW in time for Nitro to begin, he became motivated again.


(The Allied Powers d. The Blu Twins, Bulldog sunset flip — pin Jacob, 6:37, *1/4) Not one of the more stellar openers in Wrestlemania history, for sure.



Intercontinental title match: Jeff Jarrett v. Razor Ramon


The presence of 1-2-3 Kid at ringside, in his pajamas, reminds me of a show about Hollywood marriages gone bad, which I guess came from the E! Network, and one of the segments focused on the happy life of Sean Waltman and Joanie Laurer, which actually resulted in Waltman being involved in a serious interview about life as a celebrity. What next, an interview with Joanie about life as a woman? Ramon and his bitch clear the ring to start, and Ramon slugs Jarrett down for two. That’s quite the punch. Another one gets two. Maybe it’s the smell of hooch on his breath? God knows that Hall and Waltman together in the same room is a recipe for disaster…


…allegedly.


Ramon blocks a sunset flip for two and sends Jarrett into the Roadie for two, but an attempt at the Razor’s Edge is stopped by the Roadie and they regroup on the floor. The Kid does his scary karate moves at Jarrett to chase him back in the ring, and Ramon gets two. I wonder if he did that before beating Joanie…


…allegedly.


Ramon clears the ring, but walks into a dropkick from Jarrett, who proceeds to take over. We hit the chinlock, but Ramon blocks a hiptoss with a backslide for two. Jarrett slugs away and grabs a sleeper, then takes him down by the hair for two. We hit the chinlock and Ramon escapes with a backdrop suplex, but it’s a double-KO. Although it could just be that only Jarrett was supposed to be out and Ramon partied too hard the night before. Kid rallies the crowd, but I’m sorry, I just can’t seriously get behind a guy wearing silk dragon pajamas. Ramon recovers first with a fallaway slam for two. Discus punch and Kid gets involved, but it backfires on him, like making a porno video with his girlfriend. Jarrett, now on a roll, takes out the knee and goes to a figure-four, but Ramon fights out of it, because I guess he got the really GOOD drugs that night…


…allegedly.


Ramon comes back with a backdrop superplex, but his knee is injured. Razor’s Edge, but the Roadie runs in for the DQ. Kid tries to save, but the forces of evil are too much, and Lawler notes that “The Kid just got hammered!” Truer words have never been spoken.


(Razor Ramon d. Jeff Jarrett, interference — DQ, 13:29, **1/2) Technically competent, but it did nothing for me and felt like they were repeating the script from Royal Rumble.



King Kong Bundy v. The Undertaker



Hey, remember that angle where a heel stole the urn and then Undertaker fought him to get it back? Well, this was one of them. The special referee is baseball umpire Larry Young, so at least the steroid use won’t shock him or anything. Taker goes old school right away and tries to clothesline Bundy down, but takes three times to get him down. Bundy responds with his own, and Taker bails and steals the urn back. He stops to worship the almighty flashlight contained within. Let us all pay homage to Eveready, provider of light and AA batteries! Kama runs out and steals the urn right back, but Undertaker is remarkably nonplussed by the situation and goes right back to beating on Bundy. Bundy comes back with a slam, which UT no-sells, and another clothesline puts him on the floor again. Back in, Bundy chokes away and they have an epic slugfest, which ends when Bundy drops a knee for two. We hit the chinlock, as apparently the drama of people stealing the urn and other people stealing it back has been exhausted and now we have to actually watch these guys wrestle…


…allegedly.


Taker fights up, but gets Avalanched, which he no-sells. He slams Bundy and gets the jumping clothesline for the pin. A clothesline? What is this, Survivor Series?


(Undertaker d. King Kong Bundy, clothesline — pin, 6:38, 1/4*) This was more one of those matches that sounded like a dream match on paper, rather than something anyone in their right mind would want to sit through.



WWF World tag team titles: The Smoking Gunns v. Owen Hart & Yokozuna



Owen and Jim Neidhart were eliminated from the tag title tournament under dubious circumstances, so now Owen gets a title shot with a partner of his choice. Billy Gunn slugs it out with Owen to start, and the Gunns work on his arm in the corner. Owen brings in Yokozuna, who quickly slams Bart, but misses an elbow. Owen comes in with a criss-cross, but Bart takes him down with an armbar and the Gunns double-team him with a double legsweep, then clear the ring. A nice double-team sees Billy hitting a neckbreaker on Owen out of a backdrop suplex position by Bart, and Bart sends Owen into the corner for two. A sideslam/legdrop combo gets two for Billy. Owen makes the blind tag to Yokozuna, and a legdrop kills Billy dead. Not even his gigantic mullet could protect him from that one. Owen rams him into the ringpost for good measure. Back in, we hit the chinlock. Owen tries to come in with a missile dropkick, but it hits Yoko instead and it’s hot tag Bart. Press slam for Owen, but Billy comes in and runs into a belly-to-belly from Yoko. Banzai drop and Billy is a pancake, so Owen takes the pin and the titles himself.


(Owen Hart & Yokozuna d. The Smoking Gunns, Owen pin Billy, 5:47, **1/4) This was an oddly structured tag match, with no real heat segment, and really just a sense of the inevitable title change to it.



“I Quit” match: Bret Hart v. Mr. Bob Backlund



This was the final blowoff of a rather underappreciated feud in the 90s — that of Bob Backlund taking on the forces of sanity and losing. Although Bob never really drew any money as champion, it still stands as testimony that someone, anyone, can reinvent himself into something of value given a chance. Except for Paul Roma, fuck him. Bret and Bob actually had very good chemistry together, as Bret was the kind of guy who could effortlessly work Bob’s ultra-old school style and make it look believable for the era in which he was competing.


Bret hammers away to start, and drops elbows, to no avail. He chokes away in the corner and Bob still won’t quit. I’m as shocked as you. Bret tries the Sharpshooter already, but Bob counters out, so it’s a figure-four instead. Bob reverses and then makes the ropes, but Bret stays on the leg. This part is not very exciting, so Piper clowns it up by asking both Bob and then Bret if they quit. Bob recovers and starts to work on the arm, but Bret avoids the chickenwing. Bob hammerlocks him on the mat and works on a weak Fujiwara armbar and then a standing armbar. This whole portion drags on so long that I have time to write a haiku about my feelings:


Montreal screwjob

Gave Shawn Michaels the title.

Fuck you, Vince McMahon.


Bret comes back with a backbreaker, but misses the blind charge and splats into the ringpost, which sets up the crossface chickenwing, Bob’s deadly and unbreakable submission hold. Bret, however, reverses the move into his own, and Bob quits.


(Bret Hart d. Bob Backlund, chickenwing — submission, 9:34, **) This was really much more boring than I remembered, basically coming down to Backlund working an armbar and then quitting from his own hold.



WWF World title: Diesel v. Shawn Michaels


This is one of those matches where it was the logical blowoff for the long-simmering feud between them, and makes perfect sense in hindsight (and mostly at the time as well), but it didn’t draw worth shit and they so completely overcompensated in trying to make Shawn look like a threat that it actually became sort of an assumption that Shawn would win the title here. The big swerve here is that Diesel has Pam Anderson in his corner, back when people gave a shit about her. Remember when she used to be considered classy? Homemade porno and Hep C is a bad combination for your public image, kids.


Shawn slugs away to start and gets a rollup, but Diesel escapes and clotheslines that crap out of him. Shawn, in his first shot at the bigtime, sells it like death before coming back to work on the arm. Diesel casually tosses him into the corner and follows with a backdrop, and then Shawn takes a nasty bump out of the ring and takes out an innocent photographer in the process. Back in, Shawn dodges an elbow and slugs away in the corner, but walks into the original elbow. Diesel follows with a suplex and big boot, and Shawn bumps out again. Back in, they both get crotched on the top rope and Shawn clotheslines him out and follows with a bodypress to the floor. He follows that with a baseball slide as they keep cutting a bored-looking Pamela at ringside.


Shawn goes to work on the injured ribs, splashing him from the apron, and distracting the ref long enough for Sid to sneak over…although not long enough for Sid to do anything. Back in, Shawn starts slugging him down, not really working on anything in particular. Top rope bulldog gets two. He slugs Diesel down again and springboards out of the corner with an elbow for two. He keeps pounding away and goes up with a flying elbow to the back, which gets two. Diesel keeps fighting off a facelock attempt, as this match has a really bizarre psychology about it, with the little guy dominating with speed instead of acting as an underdog. Their 1996 rematch told a much better story, with heel Diesel kicking the everloving shit out of babyface champion Shawn, but Shawn using that speed and brains to overcome the giant. This is just…weird.


Shawn grabs a sleeper, and Diesel miraculously recovers and chases him out of the ring, taking out the referee in process while making the comeback as they brawl outside. Back in, Shawn gets the superkick out of nowhere, but the ref is out of it. Sid undoes the turnbuckle, but once again irony proves ironic and Diesel counters with a backdrop suplex for the double KO. Shawn recovers first and gets two. Another bulldog attempt is countered into a sideslam by Diesel, and he catapults Shawn into the exposed turnbuckle. Sort of, as Shawn actually miscalculates and lands on the middle one instead, thus defeating the purpose of the spot. Diesel, oblivious to anal retentive wrestling fans snickering at the faux pas, powerbombs Shawn anyway and gets the pin.


(Diesel d. Shawn Michaels, powerbomb — pin, 20:40, ***1/2) Eh, it had a beat and I could dance to it, but it was pretty much 110% Shawn bumping his ass off to carry the match, and they had far better matches later on. Diesel and all the pathetic C-list celebrities from this show (The kid from Home Improvement! Some guy from NYPD Blue!) celebrate at the end as they desperately try to give Kevin Nash every rub possible.



Bam Bam Bigelow v. Lawrence Taylor


This of course was the apex of Bigelow’s career, as he main evented a Wrestlemania and fought a celebrity. LT attacks to start and Bigelow bumps around for him, including a clothesline that puts him on the floor. Back in, Taylor catches a bulldog for two. He throws forearms, which is smart for someone who can’t do worked punches, and Bigelow bails. After some trashtalk between the two entourages, Bigelow gives Taylor a cheapshot and starts working him over in the ring. He pounds away. Powerslam sets up a headbutt, which misses. Taylor tries to fight back with another forearm, but gets sent into the corner by Bam Bam and choked down. Bigelow slugs him down, into a Boston Crab, but LT can’t sell it properly and Bigelow turns it into a leglock instead. Taylor makes the ropes, so Bigelow reapplies and LT makes the ropes again. Taylor keeps throwing the forearms, and suddenly comes back with a backdrop suplex. Bigelow recovers first and pounds him down again, then follows with the moonsault. He suffers an apparent knee injury on the move and can’t cover right away, and thus only gets two. Nice bit of disbelief-suspension there. Taylor catches Bigelow with his head down and tries a powerbomb, but only gets kind of a half-one. They explain that Diesel trained him, so no wonder it was half-assed. That gets two. Bigelow comes back with an enzuigiri and goes up to finish, as the diving headbutt gets two. Taylor comes back again and works him over in the corner, then throws another forearm to take him down. To the top, and a flying forearm gets the upset pin.


(Lawrence Taylor d. Bam Bam Bigelow, forearm — pin, 11:42, ***) Actually quite a decent match, with LT throwing effective forearms and consistently going back to them because they worked. The selling was hit-or-miss, to say the least, but for a celebrity match it was quite worthwhile. The Horsemen v. Mongo/Greene match at Great American Bash 96 would easily top it, however, and Bigelow’s career revival ended up flaming out soon after this. Still, he got to have his moment, and didn’t disappoint when put in the spotlight, so that’s all you can ask of him.



The Pulse: Not the WORST Wrestlemania ever, but certainly one of the dullest, as they trumped it up with silly celebrities to disguise the total lack of direction that the promotion was suffering through at that point. Nitro really was the kick in the ass that Vince needed.


Recommendation to avoid.




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29 Comments »

Comment by einbebop
2007-01-25 03:28:20

Here’s what I remember about Hart-Backlund:

“Do you give up?”
yeeeaarrrgghhh
“Do you give up?”
yyeaaaaarrrgghh
“Do you give up?”
YYYEAAARRRGGHHH
“That’s it; he quits!”

Comment by fg76
2007-01-26 14:45:23

Well think about it. Roddy Piper did referee it and since he knows galeic and did most of his promos in the language after 1993; maybe he thought Backlund gave up. Although Backlund’s comments after he lost was funny.

“I’ve seen the light!”

fg76
 
 
Comment by johnny_k9
2007-01-25 03:46:18

I blamed Nash at the time for messing up the turnbuckle spot, and thought that Shawn did a great job of salvaging it, just like he did a great job of salvaging the entire match, to the point where I thought he should have won. In hindsight, of course, it wasn’t his time yet, and the face always won the World Title matches at that point.

Yeah, uneventful Wrestlemania, and they should have protected Bigelow more, rather than taking a clean pin against LT. Too bad they couldn’t have convinced Mongo to do a heel turn.

 
Comment by NT3
2007-01-25 03:58:57

In Shawn’s book he makes a big deal about the spot where Nash kicks out of the superkick at 1 instead of 2. According to Shawn this ruined his heel push and they had to turn him face. Vince pushed hard for the spot to be in the match despite Shawn and Nash being completely opposed to it, fearing it would turn the crowd the way it did…

…allegedly.

NT3
 
Comment by scaryice
2007-01-25 06:48:06

How I would book the WWE through Wrestlemania:

Royal Rumble:

Batista, Cena, and Lashley all retain their titles.

In the rumble match itself, Shawn Michaels gets an early number and dominates. Edge and Randy Orton enter in the middle, and eventually succeed in double teaming Michaels and tossing him. However, due to his cockiness Orton is shockingly tossed by Paul London, which leads to a cinderella run for him until the final 5, where he’s tossed by Edge. Final four: Edge, Benoit, RVD, and the Undertaker, who was the last entrant after winning a “Former World champions battle royal” on Smackdown earlier in the week. Taker dominated after entering the ring at 30, and eliminates Benoit to get it down to 3, one guy from each brand. In the end Taker eliminates Edge to win it.

Pre-No Way Out:

Matt Hardy wins the Cruiserweight title from Gregory Helms.

The Undertaker decides to face Batista at WM, and a tag match is set up on Smackdown where each man gets to pick his partner. Taker picks Kane, while Benoit convinces Batista to pick him because he wants revenge on Taker for eliminating him at the rumble. Batista/Benoit win the match.

The next week, Batista announces that he gets to pick a challenger for the title at No Way Out. He picks his friend, the returning Rey Mysterio, who comes out on crutches and announces that he’ll be fit in time for the PPV. Benoit comes out, upset that he was overlooked. He eventually says that the decision is ok with him, as long as he gets a shot in the future. Batista’s music comes on while he and Rey celebrate. But as Benoit leaves the ring, he grabs a chair and bashes Mysterio in the leg, as well as Batista. Due to this, Mysterio is unable to wrestle and the heel Benoit is awarded the title shot he wanted at NWO.

No Way Out:

Batista vs Benoit
Undertaker vs Kennedy
Booker T vs Fit Finlay

Undertaker wins easily, while Benoit wins the title. Booker and Finlay are put together to give both guys something to do and to have another “big” match.

Pre-Wrestlemania:

Edge/Orton lose the tag titles to Benjamin/Haas, after Michaels interferes. Michaels becomes the number one contender after winning a triple threat match against them.

Booker and Finlay decide to end their short feud and work together to go for the tag titles. Benoit starts forming a friendship with MVP.

Wrestlemania 23:

Results:

1. Booker/Finlay d. London/Kendrick (new champs)

Kendrick is “injured” causing the title change after an even match, thus giving them an excuse for losing and also for London’s singles feud (see below).

2. M.Hardy d. Chavo (Cruiserweight title)
3. Cryme Tyme d. Benjamin/Haas (DQ)

Sets up a hardcore title rematch.

4. Money in the Bank: J.Hardy, Carlito, MVP, Kennedy, Punk, Test

MVP wins the match. Post-match, there’s a video package of the hall of fame or something. When they come back, MVP is seen backstage talking to Vince about his victory. He asks if he can use the title shot at any time. Vince says yes, so he asks for it right now. Seeing as how he’s now friends with Benoit, he wants Cena and Vince allows it.

5. Cena d. MVP

Hard fought 10-15 minute match where Cena takes a beating.

6. RVD d. Lashley (new champ)
7. Batista/Kane/Mysterio d. Edge/Orton/Umaga (special interbrand match)
8. Women’s Title Match
9. Cena d. HBK

Puts over Cena huge winning twice in one night.

10. Benoit d. Taker

Benoit bloodies the Undertaker and eventually wins after throwing everything at him, including chairs, the ring bell, and every other illegal tactic you could think of.

Post-match, Benoit continues abusing Taker which leads Batista to come out. However, he’s soon followed by MVP who turns the tide in the heels’ favor. Cena comes out and helps Batista clear the ring. Batista though appears unhappy with the help, and pulls Cena off the turnbuckle where he was celebrating. Pushing occurs, then the two appear to make up. Cena goes to leave the ring, but before he does, holds the belt up. Batista takes this as an insult and decks him. The two brawl to the back, while the Undertaker is in the ring and plays to the fans who cheer him as the show ends, knowing that this was his last big main event.

Post WM:

This sets up a Cena-Batista Raw feud for the title, while Mysterio feuds with Benoit on Smackdown for that title. Orton is traded to Smackdown for Batista and feuds with London recalling the Royal Rumble elimation, while MVP wins Benoit’s forfeited US title.

Comment by Uncle Ruckus
2007-01-25 07:14:42

…allegedly

 
 
Comment by t-man
2007-01-25 07:52:20

I quite liked the unique psychology in the tag match where the faces dominated and Owen played a heel-in-peril before he made the hot tag. I think they should’ve kept that psychology in all of their matches since it’s realistic and feels like a real competition as opposed to the boring face-in-peril routine. Before Yoko & Owen were treated like another tag team, doing this psychology had 2 benefits.

1) It keeps Yoko strong as he would be known as the match-ender because you know once he tags in, it’s over.
2) Owen can could all the work for his team, leaving Yoko to rest and only come in at the end to dish out some 30 second offense.

See? Everyone wins!

t-man
 
Comment by flair4dagold
2007-01-25 14:38:36

I actually haven’t bothered with WMXI since I was a kid watching it live. What I do remember, for some reason, was LT gassed as hell. Was he really gassing or was it his way of “selling”?

flair4dagold
Comment by TheOriginalDonald
2007-01-25 16:05:17

more like Taylor was probably still snorting snow…..

The Original GIants Hater
……ALLEGEDLY!!!!

TheOriginalDonald
Comment by flair4dagold
2007-01-25 18:55:54

Nice! Although i think coke has the opposite effect, not that i would know from personal experience….

ALLEGEDLY!

flair4dagold
 
 
Comment by MRobert21
2007-01-26 04:20:03

I am the opposite, I never saw it live. I gave up on wrestling from 1994 to 1998 so I never saw this until I bought the Wrestlemania box set. I was just watching it again while reading the original Keith rant last weekend. Therefore, I have fresh thoughts on each match.

I do not give Taylor a hard time for being gassed. I have seen veteran professional wrestlers from stinkers like Warrior to legends like British Bulldog blow up while walking to the ring. There is a reason we have rest hold is wrestling (and not just to give Randy Orton 95% of his offense). Wrestling is way more physically intense than football and that is not counting the mental pressure of main eventing Wrestlemania.

Here is my main thought from each Wrestlemania 11 match.

Allied Powers Versus Blu Twins.

I do not blame Lex Luger for doing nothing in this match. Lex Luger is an ass, but he was more screwed in his career than Bret Hart. With Lex Luger at the height of his popularity in NWA and then WWF, neither Crockett nor McMahon would do what they should have and given him the World title when he was red hot. Luger was never going to be the greatest ever, but Flair and then Yokozuna should have put him over.

Jeff Jarrett versus Razor Ramon

As Keith said in his original rant, this match was just filler to set up for the In Your House tag team match that never took place. This match was right before Waltman vanished with the neck injury that would end his time as a good in ring worker. Therefore, this entire feud just ended up going no place. Not to mention that the Jarretts were on their way out the door at this time as McMahon was coming back after winning the steroid trial.

Undertaker versus King Kong Bundy

I am always shocked that Keith misses that the finish here was botched. It is clear to me that when Taker slams Bundy he was trying to Tombstone Bundy at the end of the match, but Bundy was too fat to hold up. Thus they finished with the boring ass clothesline. This match was part of the multi year run of Taker working every big, unathletic, slob (see Giant Gonzalez) until he threatened McMahon that he would retire if McMahon did not hire Mick Foley to bump for him.

Owen Hart And Yokozuna Versus Smoking Gunns

As Keith said in his original review, the Gunns had some great double team moves. This match is as good as you will get from a morbidly obese Yokozuna. Watching Owen carry these 3 turds is sickly entertaining. I find it fascinating that Billy Gunn is stinking up rings to this day.

Bret Hart Versus Bob Backlund.

The booking and stipulation on this match screwed Bret worse than Shawn ever did. The feud was built to an I Quit finish which relies on a long match (with the king of dull Backlund). However, hot shot booking put Nash over Backlund in 90 seconds. Therefore, if Hart takes long to beat Backlund he looks weak, but if Hart beats Backlund quick it looks fake and hurts Nash.

Diesel versus Shawn Michaels.

Shawn Michaels should have gone over here. This match was killed by the dumb ass decision of McMahon to allow photographers at ring side which killed half of Shawn’s offense. I love the story of Michaels using his speed to keep after Nash rather than extended selling, because Michaels was the heel in the match so he needs to be the aggressor. Good Friends, Better Enemies was a better match, but that had to do with McMahon loosening restrictions on the spots guys could do and a better story line (the tweener Nash stuff where he is worked shooting on McMahon could have made him bigger than Stone Cold if he had not gone to WCW).

Bam Bam Bigelow Versus Lawrence Taylor.

As Keith said once, this is the holy grail of celebrity matches. I do not see this match as the end of Bigelow because I do not think Bam Bam would have even been employed in wrestling past 1996 if not for the job he did here. This pay day along with subsequent solid work in ECW and WCW should have allowed Bam Bam a comfortable retirement if he did not waste the money. Give Bam Bam the Triple Threat / Taylor feud attitude when he could work in 1988 and he would have been insanely over.

Comment by fg76
2007-01-26 17:58:48

“I am always shocked that Keith misses that the finish here was botched. It is clear to me that when Taker slams Bundy he was trying to Tombstone Bundy at the end of the match, but Bundy was too fat to hold up.”

I’ve seen that match several times because I am a big Bundy mark; and I never saw anything botched. This is what I thought happened — Taker knew he couldn’t tombstone Bundy because of how hefty he was. Therefore a Hogan-like ending have to happen. Back in the day taker would win with a flying clothesline and then a tombstone. So we have a Andre/Hogan moment with Taker slamming Bundy and then finishing off with the flying clothesline. If the match had been booked in 1986 it would have been *****. I remember how good Hogan worked with Bundy in a match in Boston Gardens in (I guess) November 1985 when Hogan used the into the ropes powerslam as his finisher. Taker with with a more 1988 Hogan formula with Bundy where his flying clothesline was the leg drop.

The same problem happened with Mable vs. Diesel — as if Kevin Nash could have powerbomb Mable — the suckage that was that match would have at least has Nash powerlifting a 600 pound monster. Instead Diesel has to win with a flying top-rope spear and since this was years before Edge and Goldberg — that went over as well as you’d think it would have. Not to mention there was no redeaming value to that match. The Bundy match was typical popcorn match in MSG in the mid 1980’s.

fg76
Comment by MRobert21
2007-01-28 00:43:40

In my opinion the finish to Bundy and Undertaker was clearly botched. As Keith said in all his reviews of this show (and he is totally right), “who ends a Wrestlemania match with a clothesline.” The manner in which Undertaker lifted Bundy (arm position, et cetera) was clearly how he would lift a person for the Tombstone. Undertaker Tombstoning Bundy would have meant something, but Undertaker slamming Bundy meant nothing because everyone had done that (I think 1 of the midgets at Wrestlemania 3 even slammed Bundy).

Neither Bundy nor Undertaker seemed happy with the finish and the announcers were surprised by it. If you really remembered your Hogan / Bundy you would remember Hogan himself botched slamming Bundy at Wrestlemania 2 and that was 10 years before this match back when Bundy was a little more athletic and a little less morbidly obese. Bundy in his prime never had a match over 2 stars and this Taker match was a DUD in any era. Bundy was getting a pity run from McMahon in 1995 kind of like a Saba Simba so there was nothing Andre / Hogan to this match with Undertaker.

Kevin Nash could have power bombed Mabel, he power bombed Big Show. McMahon was trying disastrously to turn Mabel into a long term top heel so he was trying to protect Mabel. McMahon in 1995 did not care about protecting Bundy and Bundy was soon going to be gone from the Federation. If Undertaker was doing the Last Ride then, Bundy would have been power bombed, but since he was not doing the Last Ride then Bundy was to be Tombstoned if he had not been too fat lo hold up.

Comment by fg76
2007-01-28 19:18:25

You might be right about the tombstone botch, I found the ending of the match on youtube.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mec4HoWUe-8

However, I am not quite sure if the powerslam ending with Hogan/Bundy at Wm 2 was actually a mess up or not, due to Hogan pinning Bundy in the past with that same powerslam spot as he did in the Boston Garden and by the way he held bundy in the Boston Garden match, you knew they were going for a powerslam ending. Wm2 always looked botched, but I always assumed due to the running in the ropes part that it was supposed to be the throw in to the ropes/powerslam spot.

fg76
 
Comment by MRobert21
2007-01-28 23:14:16

I just watched the Wrestlemania 2 match on DVD while reading the Keith rant of it and I am sure that slam was a botch. Hogan was clearly stumbling while picking Bundy up in the cage. I can not comment on the Boston Garden match as I never saw it. I think it was Bundy’s wide shape more than his pure weight that made him hard for Hogan and Undertaker to hold up.

I do want to add that I was a big fan of Bundy’s heel work with Hogan and Andre, so I am not a Bundy hater.

 
 
 
 
 
Comment by fd2blk78
2007-01-25 20:35:02

I remember seeing an interview with LT after this where he basically put over wrestlers as the best athletes in the world. He mentioned that the match was the hardest thing he has ever competed in, period. Tougher even than the NFL.

fd2blk78
 
Comment by Rangel
2007-01-26 05:56:44

Good re-review of WM XI, Keith. Mr. Backlund was such an underrated heel, in my view; however, even Bret admitted this was his worst Wrestlemania match, probably, as someone else here said, due to the time restriction. They actually re-did this I Quit match two years later at Wrestlemania 13 with a better opponent (Steve Austin), a better guest referee (Ken Shamrock), and a better finish, and the results, needless to say, was better.

I haven’t seen the L.T. interview, but on an MTV special, Chyna did mention L.T. talking to everyone at the WWE his respect for wrestling and how it was the hardest thing he ever did. I recall L.T. getting great reviews at the time of the match and there was even mention that he might take up a career in the WWE, but nothing came of it.

 
Comment by fg76
2007-01-26 14:42:30

I am shocked you would steal one of Jim Rome’s gimmicks . . .

allegedly.

fg76
Comment by TheOriginalDonald
2007-01-26 22:38:25

HOW DARE YOU WALK THE FINE OF BLASPHEMY…..

allegedly.

The Original J-Stew
HEHE YOU ALWAYS SAY THAT!

TheOriginalDonald
 
Comment by Scott Keith
2007-01-27 05:27:47

Who is Jim Rome?

Comment by fg76
2007-01-28 19:59:29

No, Who is Jim Neidhart. Jim Rome is a famous sports radio talk show host. He actually has some national coverage, including Canada. For entertainment value some of his stuff is funny, but other times he just comes off as a jacka$$ when he wants to play “serious talk show host.” A fansite http://www.stucknut.com has some of his show’s greatest moments.

fg76
Comment by TheOriginalDonald
2007-01-28 20:53:42

Dustin in Tulsa, Joey in New Bedford, and Joe in Bugaha appreciate the plug.

The Original Donald
……no, not really.

TheOriginalDonald
 
 
Comment by TheOriginalDonald
2007-01-30 03:48:55

I certainly hope you signed out your vehicle PROPERLY!

The Original LDP
Murder at The Presidio-on USA (Characters like Jason Stewart welcome)

TheOriginalDonald
 
Comment by MRobert21
2007-02-11 02:11:42

Jim Rome is a no talent hack radio sports show host. He loathes wrestling, though I think he probably shares Rob Feinstein’s love of young boys. Rome is a Howard Stern rip off (as most of radio is), who just does Stern’s style in a half assed manner. The tiny runt Rome is best known for when his lame little ass told Rams quarterback Chrs Everette he was not tough because he suffered from devastating concussions such as the type Chris Nowinski had and unprofessionally kept calling Everette “Christina” during an interview on ESPN.

Everette rightly beat the crap out of the little punk Rome on the air and ESPN did the right thing and fired Rome’s no talent ass the next day (though ESPN did the wrong thing and eventually rehired Rome).

In case yo can not tell, I loathe Jim Rome.

 
 
 
Comment by jddunn
2007-01-27 15:59:10

Bet you don’t call me “Chris” again.

jddunn
Comment by fg76
2007-01-28 19:34:37

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOVxitMy47c

“I bet I do . . . Chris”

fg76
 
 
Comment by Alias Fakename
2007-01-27 21:37:22

Ha ha ha.

More candid comments from Kurt Angle (fhwrestling.com)

Kurt Angle gave yet another candid interview to Bubba The Love Sponge on Thursday. Highlights of the discussion, courtesy WrestlingObserver.com and PWInsider.com, follow:

_According to Angle, Dixie Carter is paying him more than Vince McMahon ever did. He called her a better businessperson than Vince McMahon and said that there’s a rumor going around that an NFL owner might begin backing TNA.

_Angle said that TNA has opened discussions with Hulk Hogan and Chris Jericho. He believes Jericho, Big Show and Hogan are the top free agent prospects. Angle did a great job putting over Big Show, claiming that he was one of WWE’s hardest workers and that, should he sign with TNA, Angle would push for him to have a long undefeated streak.

_He said that TNA’s ratings are now beating ECW and SmackDown.

_Angle claimed that a doctor once told him that Vince McMahon has blood vessels on his nose (which he masks with makeup on television) that signal high blood pressure; McMahon, according to this doctor, is at risk of a heart attack.

_He said that Shane McMahon, who has done a lot for WWE’s international business, is a better businessman than Vince. Angle took responsibility for helping WWE break into China.

_Angle put over Test (and Bobby Lashley); he had nothing positive to say about Triple H.

_He called his match with Hulk Hogan a “five-star” bout; he put over the Hulkster.

_He said that he hopes Christian gets a chance to headline as a long-term champion but that he needs to change his style to become a more effective heel.

_He criticized Shawn Michaels by mentioning his own track record as someone who has done more jobs than anyone yet not lost overness (but he did admit that HBK offered to put Angle over at WrestleMania). He also mentioned that HBK refused to move to SmackDown.

_He told Bubba to bring Tito Ortiz on the show next week so they can discuss fighting.

Alias Fakename
Comment by MRobert21
2007-01-28 00:58:03

Kurt Angle is full of more crap than the proverbial Christmas goose. I guess being addicted to all those pain drugs and being nearly crippled messes up Angle’s mind. It would be nice if Angle had a little gratitude to the man who made him because without Vince McMahon Angle would be sleeping on a street corner in Pittsburgh. I have no respect for Kurt Angle any more and him (Angle is a glorified mid carder) saying anything about a legend like Shawn Michaels (who has wrestled for over 20 years including single handedly keeping the WWF alive for almost 2 years) is a total joke.

 
 
Comment by Random Logic
2007-01-29 00:24:09

The first 10 Wrestlemanias were all unique and had a real “special” feel to them, even if the quality of wrestling wasn’t always brilliant. From Wrestlemania 11 through to about 15, they just sort of blended in to each other - a problem which still exists today because of the ridiculous amount of PPVs the WWE puts on each year.

 
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