1996 in WWE had some pretty bad wrestling. Tried watching the IYH: Beware of Dog PPV cuz Bruce Prichard did an entire podcast on it, and I couldn't make it past the 16 minute+ Marc Mero match. Just pure trash. If not for Austin/Bret and the Pillman gun angle, most of the year would have been a waste.
On this day in professional wrestling history...
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Re: On this day in professional wrestling history...
1996 in WWE had some pretty bad wrestling. Tried watching the IYH: Beware of Dog PPV cuz Bruce Prichard did an entire podcast on it, and I couldn't make it past the 16 minute+ Marc Mero match. Just pure trash. If not for Austin/Bret and the Pillman gun angle, most of the year would have been a waste.Last edited by dubcity; 05-23-2017, 01:07 AM. -
Re: On this day in professional wrestling history...
May 23:
-18 years ago today Owen Hart passed away. RIP
-The Undertaker defeated Stone Cold Steve Austin to win the WWF World Heavyweight Championship.
-Batista was defeated in an iQuit match against John Cena as Cena retained the WWE Championship ... Batista would quit the following night.Comment
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Re: On this day in professional wrestling history...
Happy Birthday Roman Reigns!Comment
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Re: On this day in professional wrestling history...
10 years already(technically the episode happened on the 25th,but he died on 24th, the night of the PPV he was supposed to be at,and they found him on 25th)
Still one of the craziest things ever in wrestling. I was never watching when the Owen stuff happened, and the Eddie stuff obviously was sad, but Benoits was just crazy. Finding out everyone died, going through that whole tribute show and everything, and then the details of what really happened slowly started coming out. He was one of my faves in WWE and I couldn't believe what happened not just the day he died, but then the day or so after when they revealed who was responsible.
I remember how much I hated his entrances. Those entrance lights were blinding. Nakamura since coming to SD is only other guy whose entrance can compete with that in terms of the blinding level.
For me, one of things I remember most about him were his knife edge chops. As much as Flair is the one most remembered for that, I always remembered Benoit delivering those chops harder than anyone. Every time he did them it seemed so vicious. And of course the crossface. One of my fave submissions ever, too bad it'll always be associated with him and nobody can really use it as a signature move. STF or modified versions are closest we usually get.Comment
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Re: On this day in professional wrestling history...
I always thought he was boring as ****.
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Re: On this day in professional wrestling history...
For whatever reason he was "better" in his early WWF career.
Sent from my SM-G950U using TapatalkOriginally posted by MoJust once I'd like to be the one they call a jerk off.Originally posted by MoYou underestimate my lazinessOriginally posted by Mo**** ya
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Re: On this day in professional wrestling history...
Curious what you mean by "better?" Quotes make it sound sarcastic, but I'm not sure what you're hinting at.
Watching through 2000 right now, I forgot how good he was in that short feud he had with Rock and the following program with Jericho was great. Forgot all about that stuff. Glad WWE decided NOT to erase him from the Network like they did with everything prior to the Network launch.
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Re: On this day in professional wrestling history...
Curious what you mean by "better?" Quotes make it sound sarcastic, but I'm not sure what you're hinting at.
Watching through 2000 right now, I forgot how good he was in that short feud he had with Rock and the following program with Jericho was great. Forgot all about that stuff. Glad WWE decided NOT to erase him from the Network like they did with everything prior to the Network launch.
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But same as you, I forgot how good he was early on with the Rock and Jericho stuff.
Sent from my SM-G950U using TapatalkOriginally posted by MoJust once I'd like to be the one they call a jerk off.Originally posted by MoYou underestimate my lazinessOriginally posted by Mo**** ya
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Re: On this day in professional wrestling history...
After 04 I don't remember a whole lot about him. Early days of ruthless aggression(or toothless aggression lol) era he was at his best.
But 05 after Eddie died you could tell that's where things went downhill for him. Just watch the Eddie tribute from him and realize how much he needed Eddie in his life. Chavo was apparently last guy I think who he called, but even that I'm sure isn't same as having Eddie around to help him through things.Comment
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Originally posted by MoJust once I'd like to be the one they call a jerk off.Originally posted by MoYou underestimate my lazinessOriginally posted by Mo**** ya
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Re: On this day in professional wrestling history...
Yep. I remember watching that live. **** was brutal. Shane had earned respect before this from some of the crazy **** he'd already done, but after this match there was no way you couldn't respect the hell out of Shane McMahon. I don't know how Vince didn't lose it backstage Shane was legit landing on his head on that concrete.
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Re: On this day in professional wrestling history...
Yep. I remember watching that live. **** was brutal. Shane had earned respect before this from some of the crazy **** he'd already done, but after this match there was no way you couldn't respect the hell out of Shane McMahon. I don't know how Vince didn't lose it backstage Shane was legit landing on his head on that concrete.
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"Vince almost came out about three times during that match. He was going to call it off. I had no idea. Chioda was the ref. Chioda was usually always my ref because we go back in the day, like I said. And it takes three, not just two. It takes three. In the IFB, I guess Vince is talking, saying something. Chioda's talking to me, but I think he's just saying gibberish because, again, I got whacked in the head a couple of times. So anyways, Vince thinks that I'm shooing him off, that I'm disobeying an order, that I'm ignoring the order from Chioda, but I never got the order because I would never disobey him. So [the] gorilla [position] was silent. Vince was going ballistic. I mean, throwing stuff."
McMahon recalled that his father was "fuming" because he thought Shane was disobeying him and everyone backstage knew.
"[Vince] was fuming and he said something very nice to me. He put the match over and that'll stay private. And he said, 'but don't you ever blanking do that ever again.' He was so hot. We were supposed to ride together, but he got his own car. I was like, 'wow, I had heat' because he was nervous, so it was two things: being a father and seeing your son go through a train wreck and waiving him off, which really made him hot, in front of everybody, because he was giving the order in front of everybody, so he thought I was disobeying on top of all that and everyone around knows I was disobeying."Last edited by jasontoddwhitt; 06-24-2017, 05:33 PM.Comment
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