Posts Tagged ‘Ultimate Warrior’

Summerslam Main Events (Summerslam 1991)

Friday, July 16th, 2010

The Princess Summerslam Main Event Rant (Summerslam 1991)

From Madison Square Garden in New York City on August 26, 1991

Hosted by Gorilla Monsoon, “Rowdy” Roddy Piper and Bobby “The Brain” Heenan

Unless you guys really want me to rant on a wedding we’re just going to ignore one half of the main event and pick a bonus match.

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New UT DVD

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

Figured I’d post this before I get a bunch of people e-mailing me.  New Undertaker DVD!  And holy cow does this look shitty!  Multiple matches against Big Show, TWO matches against King Daddy Viscera, the abomination with the Dudley Boyz, HEIDENREICH, Great Khali…I guess I have to review this one to satisfy you sadistic fuckers.

 

Here is the synopsis for WWE's upcoming DVD set on Undertaker, Undertaker's Deadliest. This title is scheduled for release on Tuesday, Jun. 8.

He’s the most ominous presence in the history of Sports Entertainment, known for his remarkable WrestleMania streak and taking the souls of scores of superstars. Now the Undertaker’s most dangerous conflicts are collected in one 3-disc DVD set, Undertaker’s Deadliest Matches. This set includes Casket Matches, Buried Alive Matches, Hell in a Cell, Last Ride Matches, Body Bag Matches, Boiler Room Brawls, Concrete Crypt Matches and numerous other brutal bouts.

Disc 1

“Two Decades of Destruction”

Body Bag Match
Undertaker vs Ultimate Warrior
Madison Square Garden – July 1, 1991

“Custom Made Coffin”

Coffin Match
Undertaker vs Kamala
Survivor Series – November 25, 1992

“Grim Reaper”

Casket Match
Undertaker vs Kama
SummerSlam – August 27, 1995

“Shadow of Death”

Casket Match
Undertaker vs King Mabel
In Your House – December 17, 1995

“Deranged and Sadistic”

Undertaker vs Mankind
King of the Ring – June 23, 1996

“No Boundaries”

Boiler Room Brawl
Undertaker vs Mankind
SummerSlam – August 18, 1996

“Chilling Numbers”

Buried Alive Match
Undertaker vs Stone Cold Steve Austin
Rock Bottom – December 13, 1998

“Internal Fires”

Inferno Match
Undertaker vs Kane
Raw – February 22, 1999

Disc 2

“An Imposing Force”

Undertaker vs Big Show
Raw – May 3, 1999

“What Lies Beneath”

WWE Championship Match
Undertaker vs Big Show
Raw – June 4, 1999

“A Long and Complex History”

Concrete Crypt Match
Undertaker vs The Dudley Boys
The Great American Bash – June 27, 2004

“Devils and Wicked Men”

Casket Match
Undertaker vs Heidenreich
Royal Rumble – January 30, 2005

“Like Father, like Son”

1st Ever Handicap Casket Match
Undertaker vs Randy Orton & Cowboy Bob Orton
No Mercy – October 9, 2005

“The Devil’s Playground”

Hell in a Cell
Undertaker vs Randy Orton
Armageddon – December 18, 2005

“Last Judgment”

Last Man Standing Match
Undertaker vs Great Khali
Smackdown – August 18, 2006

Disc 3

“First Blood”

First Blood Match
Undertaker vs Mr Kennedy
Survivor Series – November 26, 2006

“Last Ride”

Last Ride Match
Undertaker vs Mr Kennedy
Armageddon – December 17, 2006

“Powers Lie Within”

Last Man Standing Match for the World Heavyweight Championship
Undertaker vs Batista
Backlash – April 29, 2007

“Revenge”

Undertaker vs Big Daddy V
Smackdown – January 25, 2008

“Ring of Fire”

Hell in a Cell
Undertaker vs Edge
SummerSlam – August 17, 2008

“State of Mind”

Steel Cage Match
Undertaker vs Big Show
Smackdown – December 5, 2008

Legacy of the Phenom

Wrestling With Timeframes

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

 

Thought this was a well-thought post worthy of discussion, so I’ll just post it here via the inbox without adding much.  

I know this has been brought up for debate in numerous threads, but I'm not sure it's been a topic of it's own.

     Growing up as a wrestling fan in the late 1980s was a special time for me.  Maybe it's because time seems to pass very slowly as a child, but it seems that superstars who seemed to be around FOREVER while I was growing up, really weren't around that long.

     Just for clarification, I'm counting a superstar's first big in-ring run with the WWF beginning no earlier than 1985 (exceptions being Hulk Hogan and Roddy Piper).  Take a look at Ted DiBiase.  Even though he wrestled for the WWWF in 1979, I don't consider this run as part of my analysis.  Ted DiBiase debuted the "Million Dollar Man" character in late 1987 and his in-ring career was over by mid 1993--a mere 5-1/2 years.  I know he stuck around well into 1996 with his Million Dollar Corporation before jumping to WCW, but his in-ring career had long been over.

Other such superstars include:

Bret Hart 1985-1997 (12 years) - Took off 7 months from WrestleMania XII to Survivor Series 1996

Hulk Hogan 1983-1993 (9.5 years) - Took off 1 year from WrestleMania VII to WrestleMania IX

Shawn Michaels 1988-1998 (9.5 years) - Took several short stints off (knee surgery in 1990, 9 thugs in Syracuse, lost smile)

Roddy Piper 1984-1992 (8 years) - Took off 2 years from WrestleMania III to WrestleMania V

Randy Savage 1985-1992 (7.5 years) - Took off 8 months from WrestleMania VII to This Tuesday in Texas

Jake Roberts 1986-1992 (6 years)

Ultimate Warrior 1987-1992 (5 years) - Took off 8 months from SummerSlam '91 to WrestleMania VIII

Mr. Perfect 1988-1993 (5 years) - Took off 1.5 years from SummerSlam '91 to Survivor Series 1992

Big Boss Man 1988-1993 (4.5 years)

Earthquake 1989-1994 (4.5 years)

Ricky Steamboat 1985-1988 (3.5 years)

You get my point, ad nauseum.  With the exception of Hart, Hogan and Michaels, most of the biggest names in the company during the late 1980s and early 1990s didn't last more than 8 years in a single stint with WWF.  Also, most of the guys with over 5 years in had periods where they were gone for at least 6 months for one reason or another.

However, I look at contemporary WWE programming, WWE's current roster, and when each superstar debuted:

Undertaker - November 1990 (19.5 years) - Took 7 months off in 1994; currently works reduced schedule

Triple H - May 1995 (15 years) - Missed about 14 months due to 2 torn quads

Mark Henry - September 1996 (13.5 years)

Kane - October 1997 (12.5 years)

Edge - June 1998 (12 years) - Most recently missed 5 months during end of 2009 due to injury

Matt Hardy - September 1998 (11.5 years)

Big Show - February 1999 (11 years) - Took a little over a year off around 2007

Chris Jericho - August 1999 (10.5 years) - Took over 2 years off between SummerSlam 2005 and Survivor Series 2007

John Cena - June 2002 (8 years)

Randy Orton - April 2002 (8 years)

Batista - May 2002 (8 years)

Then they wonder why the product has gotten stale.  Hell, even Hornswoggle's been with WWE for about 5 years.  When you really break it down, it looks like the average of the current roster has spent about 5 more years in their initial big run with the company than their predecessors.  I feel this is due to about four major factors:  age, exposure, competition, and down time.

AGE:  John Cena just turned 33 a couple of days ago.  Hulk Hogan was 30.5 when he won his first WWF Championship in 1984.  Today's superstars are getting their biggest pushes at younger ages (SEE Swagger, Jack) so that by the time they reach John Cena's age, there is nothing left for them to do . . . even though they could theoretically go another 20+ years.  I don't know about you, but I'm not sure I could handle another 20 years of Cena!

EXPOSURE:  When I was growing up, it was a treat to see a Hulk Hogan interview, let alone watch him wrestle . . . a jobber.  There was less original programming every week and only a handful of PPVs per year.  John Cena gets at least 15 minutes of air time each week and is expected to sell over 12 PPVs a year.  So even though Hulk Hogan lasted from 1983-1993 and John Cena's only been around since June 2002, John Cena has actually been around for 16 "Hogan" years.

COMPETITION:  Although I'm not the biggest Jeff Hardy fan, I do have to give him credit as he never seems to overstay his welcome as this is now his second stint in TNA.  Back in the late 80s and early 90s, there were viable alternatives to the WWF, such as WCW, AWA, and ECW, among others.  Unless TNA stops bringing in WWE rejects that people don't want to see (Nasty Boys, Val Venis, Orlando Jordan, The Band, etc.), TNA will never be real competition.

DOWN TIME:  Wrestlers just don't seem to take that much time off anymore.  In the old days it wasn't uncommon for a guy to take a year off for one reason or another.  These days superstars rush back from injury (SEE Cena, John and Batista, Dave).  When Shawn Michaels injured his knee in 1990, Shane Douglas subbed for him in The Rockers, while Michaels recovered.  Now, even when a guy gets injured, he's still heavily featured on programming so fans don't FORGET him and he doesn't lose his SPOT.  This mentality is flawed.  Fans will never forget a good worker (SEE Steamboat, Ricky) and by heavily featuring an injured star, it never really feels like he's gone; so when said star comes back, it doesn't feel as fresh as it could.  I do have to take my hat off to Big Show, Chris Jericho, and Rob Van Dam for voluntarily taking extended leaves of absence.

npiwowar

P.S. - Speaking of Matt Hardy--who has been with WWE for about 12 years, excluding the stint when he was released for whining about Lita on the Internet--why hasn't this guy been PUSHED?  You could give a dozen reasons, such as Vince likes big guys, but just about any reason could be countered in comparison with Jeff who was given the keys to the company and jumped to TNA.  Matt is bigger than Jeff, has less personal demons, seems more reliable/dedicated, has about equal mic skills, and at times has been just as over, but has never risen above the mid-card.  Right now he seems stale, but I feel McMahon missed the boat with him on several occassions.  Matt seemed really over in 2003 with the whole Mattitude thing.  He also could have been risen to the main event with Edge over the whole Lita thing in 2005.  I also remember his feud with MVP in 2007 being really good.  The whole thing that got me thinking about this was that I was watching SmackDown this week and saw Drew McIntyre destroy Hardy the same way Edge did at SummerSlam 2005, killing all his heat in the process.  I wonder why Matt hasn't ever jumped to TNA because of this treatment.

Goldberg

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Hey Scott,
I'd love to hear what your opinion is about the story regarding Goldberg's potential return to wrestling. Obviously his initial WWE run was completely undermined by Triple H, but do you think Bill Goldberg still has anything to offer to Professional Wrestling in 2010? Personally I'd love to see him come back, even in just a limited capacity. I think there's some great potential in feuds with Jericho, Cena, Undertaker, and Batista. Goldberg may not have been a workhorse in the ring, but he certainly did seem to offer a unique level of charisma, and despite his last run in WWE, still has somewhat of an aura about him similar to Ultimate Warrior I think.

 

He’s not coming back to wrestle, he’s just coming back to get HOF’d and be in videogames.  He’s still got more money than God thanks to his WCW deal and smart investing, so now it’s just a matter of padding his bank account ala Bret Hart, I’m pretty sure.  That and WWE making sure TNA can’t do anything with him.

Jake Roberts: Pick Your Poison

Monday, March 1st, 2010

The SmarK DVD Rant for Jake Roberts: Pick Your Poison

- This was one that I skipped when it came out because it didn't really appeal to me for $25. But for $6, hey, why not?

We start with a poem, written by Jake Roberts, so I'm already getting a bad feeling going into this.

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Wrestlemania Main Events: Wrestlemania VIII (With Video!)

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Depending on how much you loved Hogan-Savage, I say this card probably had the best WWF title match until X-Seven or so. Although I have to watch the Ironman again this weekend and see how it stacked up.

This was a very historic card for a few reasons as Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels made their WM singles debuts and beat old mainstays Roddy Piper and Tito Santana respectively to start the movement of the stars to the next group. And The Undertaker began a his lengthy run as one of the top faces in the promotion while ending Jake Roberts' first WWF stint. I'm guessing Sid was also in that plan of new stars but some things don't work out like they are suppose to.

Enjoy

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Wrestlemania Main Events: Wrestlemania VI

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Hmmm, what to say about this one. One of those times when a one-match card works to perfection. This actually starts a mini-run of really good closing matches at Wrestlemania, especially if you think Hogan-Savage is better than I do.

I posted this a little early because I have a couple classes to teach this morning and I won't be in front of a computer until later this afternoon. Discuss freely.

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Wrestlemania Main Events: Wrestlemania IV

Monday, February 8th, 2010

It was someone's bright idea to schedule a 14-man tournament for the Heavyweight title. Unless that guy's name was "McMahon", I'm sure he doesn't work for the company anymore.

This was one of the perils of the old days and the two hours of WWF television (four if you were lucky enough to have the USA Network and a little more if you had USA and MSG), they couldn't par the 14-men down to 8 or better yet four because you just don't give that many good matches away on free TV.

In hindsight six would have worked perfect -- Andre, Hogan, Savage, DiBiase...who else, maybe keep Steamboat and Valentine. This way you had Steamboat-DiBiase and Savage-Valentine in the first round, still do the Andre-Hogan double DQ in Round two and have the same final.

Now there's room on the card for Rick Rude and Jake Roberts to have better match and probably boost up that Cheryl Roberts-centered feud. Could have still booked One Man Gang vs. Bam Bam Bigelow for some clash of big men. It wasn't that the tournament idea was bad, it was just boring because common booking made sure that the first round matches were wrestled conservatively because every guy wanted to preserve their energy.

Anyway, time to move on.

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Mr. Wrestlemania

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Scott,
A few weeks ago, I started a small project about trying to find a wrestler
to consider as "Mr. Wrestlemania". I wanted to see how wrestlers measured
up against each other over the 25 years. For instance, Hulk Hogan main
evented at 7 Wrestlemanias, but the Undertaker has appeared at more. I saw
that you posted someone's chart of Royal Rumble star power, and thought
that since Wrestlemania is coming up that I'd share my work with you and
the blog posters.
I created a point system and based everything off of Match Results and
they are as follows:

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Like shrubbery?

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Hi Scott,

A question that I don't think has been asked before: what do you think is the best use of a "plant" in the audience?

The one that stands out most for me is the time when Dino Bravo was feuding with Ultimate Warrior.  Bravo and Jimmy Hart came to the ring and bragged about Bravo being stronger than Warrior.  To prove his point, he says he can do pushups with anybody in the audience on his back, and asks for volunteers.  Without any additional prodding, everyone in the audience points to this huge shy guy sitting in the eighth row.  They confidently bring "John" to the ring, and Bravo bounces the big guy up and down with pushups.  Now Warrior has to come down to duplicate the feat or else appear as a wuss.  But when he tries, "John" jumps down on his back, and everyone proceeds to beat down the Warrior.  As a result, "John" got over even more than Bravo, and The (Canadian) Earthquake would go on to the main event of Summerslam less than a year later.

Did any other use of an audience plant ever work out so well?

I can hardly even think of any other than Tenta, so I’m thinking no.