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WWE – The Best of Saturday Night’s Main Event – Disc One
Posted by Matt
WWE – The Best of Saturday Night’s Main Event – Disc One
Released: 2/10/2009
Your host is Gene Okerlund.
Gene introduces the show by taking us back to 1985 – the origin of Saturday Night’s Main Event. This was the first wrestling program on broadcast television since the 1950s. The Rock N Wrestling Connection defined the era and Saturday Night’s Main Event became the must-see show of the time. On the main event of the very first show just weeks after the first WrestleMania, WWF champion Hulk Hogan took on Roddy Piper’s partner in crime “Cowboy” Bob Orton Jr. for the title.
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Posted in WWE
Tags: Andre the Giant, B. Brian Blair, Barry Windham, Billy Jack Haynes, Blackjack Mulligan, Bob Orton Jr., Bobby Heenan, Bret Hart, British Bulldogs, Butch Reed, Captain Lou Albano, Danny Davis, Davey Boy Smith, Demolition, Demolition Ax, Demolition Smash, Dynamite Kid, Elizabeth, Freddie Blassie, George "The Animal" Steele, Haku, Hart Foundation, Hercules Hernandez, Hillbilly Jim, Honky Tonk Man, Hulk Hogan, Iron Sheik, Islanders, Jake Roberts, Jim Brunzell, Jim Neidhart, Jimmy Hart, Junkyard Dog, Koko B. Ware, Lanny Poffo, Mega Powers, Mike Rotunda, Mr. T, Nikolai Volkoff, Paul Orndorff, Randy Savage, Ricky Steamboat, Roddy Piper, Ron Bass, Saturday Night's Main Event, Sika, Tama, Terry Funk, Tito Santana
Scott & Justin’s Wrestlemania III
Posted by bigelow34

Wrestlemania III
March 29, 1987
Pontiac Silverdome
Pontiac, Michigan
Attendance: Somewhere between 78,000 and 93,000
Closed Circuit Attendance: 441, 000
Buy Rate: 8.0
Announcers: Gorilla Monsoon and Jesse Ventura
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Posted in Justin Rozzero, Scott Criscuolo, WWE
Tags: Adrian Adonis, Andre the Giant, B. Brian Blair, Billy Jack Haynes, Bob Orton Jr., Bobby Heenan, Bret Hart, British Bulldogs, Brutus Beefcake, Butch Reed, Can-Am Connection, Danny Davis, Davey Boy Smith, Don Muraco, Dream Team, Dynamite Kid, George "The Animal" Steele, Greg Valentine, Haiti Kid, Harley Race, Hart Foundation, Hercules Hernandez, Hillbilly Jim, Honky Tonk Man, Hulk Hogan, Iron Sheik, Jacques Rougeau, Jake Roberts, Jim Brunzell, Jim Duggan, Jim Neidhart, Junkyard Dog, Killer Bees, King Kong Bundy, Koko B. Ware, Little Beaver, Little Tokyo, Lord Littlebrook, Nikolai Volkoff, Randy Savage, Raymond Rougeau, Rick Martel, Ricky Steamboat, Roddy Piper, Rougeau Brothers, Tito Santana, Tom Zenk, WrestleMania
Scott & Justin’s Wrestlemania II
Posted by bigelow34

Wrestlemania II: THREE TIMES THE FUN!
April 7, 1986
Buy Rate: 7.0
Closed Circuit Attendance: 320,000
Nassau Coliseum
Uniondale, New York
Attendance: 16,585
Announcers: Vince McMahon and Susan Saint James
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Posted in Justin Rozzero, Scott Criscuolo, WWE
Tags: Adrian Adonis, Andre the Giant, B. Brian Blair, Big John Studd, Bill Fralic, Bret Hart, British Bulldogs, Bruno Sammartino, Brutus Beefcake, Corporal Kirschner, Danny Spivey, Davey Boy Smith, Dick Butkus, Don Muraco, Dory Funk Jr., Dream Team, Dynamite Kid, Ed "Too Tall" Jones, Ernie Holmes, Fabulous Moolah, Freddie Blassie, George "The Animal" Steele, George Wells, Greg Valentine, Hart Foundation, Harvey Martin, Hercules Hernandez, Hillbilly Jim, Hulk Hogan, Iron Sheik, Jake Roberts, Jim Brunzell, Jim Covert, Jim Neidhart, Junkyard Dog, Killer Bees, King Kong Bundy, King Tonga, Mr. T, Nikolai Volkoff, Paul Orndorff, Pedro Morales, Randy Savage, Ricky Steamboat, Roddy Piper, Russ Francis, Ted Arcidi, Terry Funk, Tito Santana, Tony Atlas, Uncle Elmer, Velvet McIntyre, William Perry, WrestleMania
Scott and Justin’s Wrestlemania I
Posted by bigelow34
WrestleMania
March 31, 1985
Madison Square Garden
New York, New York
Attendance: 22, 000
PPV Buy Rate: 1.1
Closed-Circuit Attendance: 380, 000
Announcers: Gorilla Monsoon and Jesse Ventura
1) Tito Santana (Mercedes Solis) defeats The Executioner (Paul Perschmann) with a Figure Four at 4:49
Fun Fact: The first ever Wrestlemania match features a man who would go on to become a PPV Iron Man, Tito Santana. Tito will be featured in tons of PPV matches between now and his departure in 1993. He also will go to wrestle in the first 9 Wrestlemanias, something only he and Hulk Hogan would do. Buddy Rose, on the other hand, makes his one and only WWF PPV appearance. He would stick around on and off through 1990, but would be nothing more than an entertaining jobber to the stars.
Scott: The one that started it all begins with an elementary opener. Tito was on fire the previous year as Intercontinental Champion. He lost the title to Greg Valentine in September, and had just wrestled him in a big Lumberjack match just 2 weeks before in this same Garden ring. Here he defeats The Executioner, who is really “Playboy” Buddy Rose with a mask on. Not much more to say, except this is the last time you will see a wrestler called The Executioner on PPV until the 1996 Survivor Series, ironically in Madison Square Garden as well. Tito stays on fire, and will re-capture the IC Title from Valentine in July inside a steel cage in Baltimore. Grade: 2
Justin: A basic match to help get the crowd worked up and to put a very popular face over in the first match. Buddy Rose is looking quite svelte here, compared to the tub of lard he would transform into by 1990, and actually helps keep up a quick pace with Chico. This was some nice continuity here as well, as the Executioner promised to take apart Tito’s leg in his pre-match promo, and he does just that: work the leg. Tito is able to reverse the attack, however, and makes quick work of the future “Playboy.” As Scott said, Tito was in between I-C Title reigns here, but is still very over with the Garden crowd. A solid, well worked opener that served its purpose. Grade: 1.5
2) King Kong Bundy (Chris Pailles) defeats S.D. Jones (Roosevelt Jones) with an Avalanche Splash at :24
Fun Fact: The original Wrestlemania served one purpose: feature a bunch of wrestlers who will never see the light of day on another WWF PPV ever again. “Special Delivery” Jones is well known in the wrestling world, but never rose above jobber-to-the-stars status. SD had a decent run in Mid-Atlantic, teaming with Rufus R. Jones in a feud with the Andersons and also with Porkchop Cash for a brief NWA Americas Tag title run. He migrated to the WWF in the early 80s, and ended up playing a big role as a recognizable enhancement talent as Vince Jr. started to make his push towards national stardom. Jones would hang around as a jobber until December of 1988. Despite his lackluster career, “Special Delivery” gets to be a part of history here, on the first Wrestlemania.
Scott: Now, that is the realistic length of this match. Remember when everyone said it was :09? Yeah, whatever. This was a chance to begin the slow one-year burn of Bundy as a big main eventer. I don’t think he was groomed for Wrestlemania II just yet, but definitely for a main event run. SD Jones was just fodder for the “Condominium with Legs”. Bundy was managed by Jimmy Hart at that point, but in a year it would be Bobby Heenan. Grade: 1
Justin: Just a match to get Bundy over as a monster. SD Jones knew his role, and he plays it well, selling Bundy’s splashes like death and doing the job in less than 30 seconds. Jesse and Gorilla play up how dangerous Bundy is, and the mission is accomplished. A year later, and Bundy’s career would peak with a huge cage match. This was a quick and harmless match and nothing more. Grade: .5
3) Ricky Steamboat (Richard Blood) defeats Matt Borne (Matthew Osborne) with a High Cross Body at 4:36
Fun Fact: Matt Borne is a second generation star who is best known for some of the outrageous characters he has played throughout his career. After having some success in Mid-South Wrestling, where he formed the “Rat Pack” with Jim Duggan and Ted DiBiase, Borne arrived in the WWF just in time for the first Wrestlemania, as he made his first appearance at a house show in Boston on March 2, 1985, going to a draw with Rick McGraw. Borne would hang in the WWF until mid-1986. He would pop up in WCW in 1991, portraying bad-ass lumberjack, Big Josh. After mild success in the lower-mid-card, Borne would jump back to the WWF and take on the most well-known persona of his career: Doink the Clown.
Fun Fact II: Ricky Steamboat had built up quite the resume during his 6 years in NWA Mid-Atlantic, and be well known for his brutal feud with Ric Flair and his famed partnership with Jay Youngblood. The 1977 PWI Rookie of the Year won 9 championships during his years in Mid-Atlantic, but in late 1984, he decided a change of scenery was needed, and made the jump to Vince McMahon’s burgeoning WWF. Ricky Steamboat made his WWF debut on March 5, 1985 (3 days after Borne) on a Championship Wrestling TV Taping in Poughkeepsie, NY, defeating Steve Lombardi. Steamboat will hang around for the next 3 years, and will go on to provide tons of memorable matches and moments.
Scott: The man who would be part of some of the greatest matches over the next 10 years defeats a grizzled veteran in Matt Borne, who had been around for the block, but was new to the WWF, which was similar to Steamboat, who had just left NWA Mid-Atlantic. He actually still had his NWA white tights on. This would be Matt Borne’s last PPV appearance until Survivor Series 1992, when he would re-debut as Doink. Steamboat? He was just getting started. Grade: 2
Justin: A well worked match that serves the same purpose as the opener: put over the popular face in a quick, but solid bout. Borne was always a great worker, so it is no surprise that he and Steamboat put on a good match, despite the tight time restraints. Steamboat showcases his wide arsenal, and even busts out his world famous chops on Borne’s chest before finishing him with a graceful High Cross Body. The “Dragon” was on his way, and things would only get better for him as we move along. Grade: 2
4) Brutus Beefcake (Ed Leslie) and David Sammartino wrestle to a double countout at 11:42
Fun Fact: WWF mega-legend Bruno Sammartino used his pull with Vince McMahon to land his son David a gig. David never really caught a fair shake, and always had his last name held against him. Add in the fact that he sucked, and this thing had disaster written all over it. He would last a little over a year in the big leagues, before vanishing in July of 1986, with his last being a bout with Hercules on July 10th. After a brief stay in the AWA, Sammartino would bounce around the Indy world for the next 10 years, and eventually found himself on WCW Nitro on December 16th, 1996, where he faced Dean Malenko for the Cruiserweight Championship and lost.
Scott: This match was between Hulk Hogan’s buddy, and the Living Legend’s kid. It was way too long, and really pointless. This match should have been at the “War to Settle the Score” show in February, and this should have been a tag team match with the Sammartino’s against Beefcake and Luscious Johnny Valiant, Beefcake’s manager. Beefcake would move on from this, and by the end of the year, would attain tag team gold. Sammartino would get into a rift with his father, and vanish off the face of the wrestling earth. Grade: 2
Justin: A boring encounter here between two guys who just flat out sucked at this point. Beefcake is pre-barber here and is basically supposed to be a Chippendales-type stripper. By 1990, Beefcake would turn into a pretty good wrestler, but at this point in 1985 he is pretty damn bad, and sticking him in there with someone as green as Sammartino was a stupid, stupid idea. As Scott said, they should have done the tag deal, as Bruno and Johnny V at least know how to work a match. The match somewhat kills the crowd, despite Bruno being ringside, as these two battle to a boring double-countout. God, why give them nearly 12 MINUTES to do a lame double countout ending? Dumb decision here that just turned into a mess. Grade: 1
5) Junkyard Dog (Sylvester Ritter) defeats Greg Valentine (John Wisniski Jr.) by countout at 7:03; Valentine retains WWF Intercontinental Title
Fun Fact: Greg Valentine was a big time heel in NWA-Mid-Atlantic. His resume includes the US Heavyweight Championship, a tag team title with Ric Flair, and a legendary dog collar match with Roddy Piper at the first Starrcade. He jumped ship to the WWF and defeated Tito Santana for the Intercontinental Title on September 24, 1984 in London, Ontario. Tito had won the Intercontinental Title from Don Muraco on February 11th, ending Muraco’s 13 month reign.
Scott: The current Intercontinental champ detours from his vicious feud with Tito Santana, to take on Santana’s pal, the JYD. Dog was a big time babyface in Louisiana, and in Memphis. He arrived in the WWF in 1984, and immediately became a fan favorite. This stems from a Lumberjack match Santana and Valentine had 2 weeks prior at MSG. JYD was one of the lumberjacks and a skirmish broke out between the two. Here, Valentine apparently won with a roll-up that included his feet on the ropes. Tito Santana came out to dispute with the ref that Valentine’s feet were on the ropes. The ref agreed, and counted Valentine out as he was leaving the arena. This would be JYD’s only Wrestlemania win. Valentine and Santana would continue their feud for a few more months, and Santana would regain the IC Title in a classic cage match on July 7, 1985. Grade: 2
Justin: A boring match here, as not even Valentine could carry the deteriorating JYD to a decent showing. Despite being quite over still, Junkyard Dog’s in ring ability was swiftly moving downhill as he got older. During the early 80s, Junkyard Dog drew millions of dollars throughout the Mid-South territory, where he had a well known feud with Fabulous Freebirds that drew a huge gate to the big blowoff match. After making his name as a mega-star, he was quickly gobbled up by Vince to help in his worldwide expansion, but never quite reached the levels expected, mainly because Hulk Hogan OWNED the mid-80s and the best you could do was second place. Add the Hogan factor to his poor conditioning and bad workrate (not that it mattered too much at that time) and things just never panned out. He was still insanely over with the crowds, but he never became that huge name draw that he had been in Mid-South. Valentine tries his best here, but it just wasn’t happening, and the weird ending doesn’t help matters much, as it was just an attempt to continue the build the Tito-Valentine rematch. JYD probably deserved better here than to play second fiddle in this feud, but that’s the way the cookie crumbles. Grade: 1.5
6) Iron Sheik (Khosrow Vaziri) and Nikolai Volkoff (Josip Peruzovic) defeat US Express to win WWF Tag Team Titles when Volkoff pinned Barry Windham after Iron Sheik hit him with Freddie Blassie’s cane at 5:00
Fun Fact: The song “Real American” was originally for the US Express, not Hulk Hogan.
Fun Fact II: In early 1985, Barry Windham and Mike Rotundo were the fair haired golden boys of the WWF. On January 21st, they defeated Adrian Adonis and Dick Murdoch for the straps, but their reign would be short-lived, as Vince wanted to pull a shocker on PPV. They would regain the belts from Sheik and Volkoff on June 17th, but would quickly lose them again to the upstart Dream Team (Brutus Beefcake and Greg Valentine) on August 24th. Following the loss, Barry Windham got into an argument with Vince and decided to bail to the NWA. Rotundo, never one to burn bridges, decided to go with his partner, but he made sure to leave on amicable terms with Vince to ensure he would have a future with him. Rotundo’s foresight definitely paid off six years later, when he was looking for a job and Vince gave him one, along with a solid long-term push and a solid character: Irwin R. Shyster. Windham’s careless bailing stuck in Vince’s mind, and even though he rehired him a couple of times, he never gave him a good push again.
Scott: The first title change in WWF PPV history came as quite a shock. Barry Windham and Mike Rotundo had been on a roll since winning the titles a few months before. They were also quite popular with the fans. Their opponents had been put together only recently before this, but, since both Iran and the Soviet Union were on the country’s collective shit list, Vince figured why not. So, in what would be one of many heel screwjobs in PPV history, the Eastern Bloc heels gain a win thanks to Freddie Blassie’s cane. It’s a great example of the old school manager we don’t see in current day wrestling anymore. Sheik and Volkoff would hold the titles for a couple of months, and then the Express gets it back. Not a bad match. Grade: 2.5
Justin: A fun little tag match here that features a MAJOR upset. It was expected that the US Express would have a fairly easy time with the newly constructed foreign contingent, but Vince wanted a shocker, so Volkoff and the Sheik pick up the titles thanks to help from the Ayatollah Blassie. These four bust out the classic tag formula and it works quite well, as the crowd is pretty pumped and hot to see the Express take down the evil foreigners, and is quite shocked when they lose. Looking back, the change was a good decision, as it gave us a memorable title change on the first PPV in WWF history and it didn’t really hurt the Express in the long run since they got the belts back anyway. Grade: 2.5
7) Andre the Giant (Andre Rousimoff) defeats Big John Studd (John Minton) in a $15,000 Bodyslam match when he slams Studd at 5:49
Fun Fact: There were two huge stipulations in this match: if Andre the Giant wins he gets $15,000 of Studd’s money, but if Studd wins, Andre would be forced to retire.
Scott: Two of the biggest (literally) legends of the ring clash in a match that had been brewing for some time. This stems from a feud that started in late-1984 that saw Ken Patera and Studd shave off Andre’s famous afro. Many considered this match at main event level when the card was released. The match itself is not great, as Andre was already showing his age and the effects of his condition that made him as big as he was. The big pop comes as he slams Studd, takes the duffel bag with the cash, and tossed it into the crowd before Bobby Heenan swiped the bag and ran away. If Andre lost, he would have to retire, and you knew that wasn’t going to happen. A big win for the legend. Grade: 1.5
Justin: A horrible match that is only remembered for the big slam at the end and the fun visual of Andre handing out the money to the crowd. Andre was really falling apart here, and it is too bad that the national audience never got to see Andre in his prime. Due to the huge hullabaloo surrounding the Main Event, the fact that Andre’s career is on the line here is often overlooked. On any other card, a match like this would have been able to be a Main Event and draw thousands to see it, but on a Supercard like Wrestlemania, it’s just another match, which I guess was the point of having a Supercard. Despite the match sucking, it’s always nice to see Andre honored and allowed to have a moment in the sun, as he truly is one of the greatest legends of all time. Grade: 1
8) Wendi Richter defeats Leilani Kai (Patricia Karisma) to win WWF Women’s Title when Richter reversed a High Cross Body at 6:12
Fun Fact: Richter shocked the wrestling world when she defeated The Fabulous Moolah for the title on July 23, 1984 at MSG, after Moolah dominated the title since 1956, only losing for a few days here and there. Moolah then took on Lelani Kai as her charge, and Kai (with the help of Moolah) took the title from Richter on February 18, 1985 at “The War to Settle the Score”.
Scott: One of the highlights of the show has the very popular Texan defeating Moolah’s girl from Hawaii. The match is a little sloppy, and even the ending with Richter reversing the High Cross Body was not quite smooth. This match was all about Richter’s “manager” for the night, Cyndi Lauper. She was part of the big “War to Settle the Score” card in February. This also included heel manager Captain Lou Albano, but he was a face by now. The place went crazy when Richter won the belt, but she was on borrowed time. When a contract was offered to her, she balked about signing the guaranteed deal. Due to that, in a Montreal type incident, an uninformed Richter lost the title to The Spider Lady, who ended up being Moolah with a mask. A pissed and humiliated Richter was not seen on WWF TV again. However, she still gets WWF paychecks. Well, not really. Her husband is Spanish announcer Hugo Savinovich. Grade: 2.5
Justin: A far cry from Trish Stratus vs. Molly Holly this is, but the excitement of the Garden is off the charts. The main reason, you ask? Cyndi Lauper. The pop star was hot as ever at this point, and her albums were flying off the charts. Luckily, Vince McMahon ignored all the old school purists who told him his Rock ‘n’ Wrestling idea would never work. Vince had the vision and long term planning to hook up with MTV early on and jump on the music bandwagon. Thus, once Lauper hit it big, it was all worked out to have her and her manager, David Wolfe, get involved in storylines, including a classic moment where Roddy Piper kicked her in the head. The heat was out of control for the whole thing, and it spills over to the culmination at this show. The match itself is a clusterfuck of blown spots and sloppy wrestling, but it really didn’t matter. When Richter gets the three, the roof nearly blows off, and causes this to be the absolute peak of women’s wrestling during this era, as it was placed on an important part of the card and overshadowed everything before it. Just a fun moment that sees a lot of chaos and a hot ending. Grade (factoring in the heat and excitement): 3
9) Hulk Hogan (Terry Bollea) and Mr. T (Lawrence Trudeau) defeat Roddy Piper (Roderick Toombs) and Paul Orndorff when Hogan pins Orndorff after Bob Orton accidentally hit Orndorff with his cast at 13:22
Fun Fact: This also stemmed from the “War to Settle the Score” show at MSG on February 18, 1985. The show was televised on MTV, and it included a World Title match between Hogan and Piper. The match ends in a messy schmozz, including security and police officers, and we come to this. Over the coming weeks, lots of workout vignettes from both sides aired to pump up the match. Then, in the days leading up to this match, Mr. T began to get a little weird about the whole thing, and even ended up disappearing for a while the DAY of the show. Hogan and Vince were freaking out, but T finally surfaced and the match went off with out a hitch.
Scott: The first main event in Wrestlemania history is an entertaining affair between the 3 hottest wrestlers in the promotion at that time, and one of TV’s hottest stars. This match, just like the show in general, was reaching national mainstream attention. That was highlighted by Hogan and T hosting Saturday Night Live the night before. With all the celebrities, from Muhammad Ali, to Liberace, to Jimmy Snuka and Cowboy Bob Orton on the outside, MSG was at a fever pitch. In the climax, Orndorff has Hogan held, and Orton goes to the top rope, set to drop the cast. Hogan moves out of the way and Orton whacks Orndorff. Hogan gets the pin, and MSG explodes. This leads to a few things: 1) Orndorff turning face, 2) The Piper/Mr. T boxing match at Wrestlemania II, and 3) The beginning of many great Hulkamania moments in Wrestlemania history. Grade: 3
Justin: There isn’t much to bitch about here. Sure, the wrestling wasn’t great, but sometimes a match is about much more than workrate and star ratings, and this is a perfect example. The crowd was at a fever pitch and the mainstream media swarmed around the show for this one encounter. Celebrities surrounded the ring and the aura is unbeatable. Add to the mix the fact that Mr. T could lose it at any time, and the fact that Piper was out of control, and you had quite the explosive environment. For a guy who had never really wrestled, Mr. T does a pretty admirable job and definitely holds up his end of the bargain. Hogan picks up the pin, ending the first chapter of Paul Orndorff’s WWF career and sending the Garden crowd home happy. Grade: 3
FINAL ANALYSIS:
Scott: This is the first one, the one that started the greatest extravaganza in wrestling history. OK, as a card it was average. It was pretty much a glorified MSG house show. Who cares, this is Wrestlemania. The reason we’re all wrestling fans today. There’s urban legend that AWA promoter Verne Gagne offered Bruiser Brody $100,000 to jump from the crowd and break Mr. T’s leg. This wasn’t the first time Gagne, who despised Vince McMahon, threatened something like this. The Iron Sheik says in the Greatest Wrestling Stars of the 80’s DVD that Gagne offered him money to injure Hogan in the January 23, 1984 title match. Gagne’s fault was not realizing soon enough that wrestling was evolving, and he wasn’t. That’s why in 1990, the AWA went out of business. Alas, none of it happened, and history was made. There were some shocks (Sheik/Volkoff), some disappointments (Beefcake/Sammartino), and a great main event. As a show, there were better Wrestlemanias, heck better house shows. It was the first wrestling tape I ever rented, and even though I had been a fan for about a year and a half at that point, I was hooked forever. Final Grade: A+
Justin: Well, the grandfather of all future PPVs was in the books and Vince was a successful man. It has been stated many times that Vince invested so much in this show, that if it bombed or failed, he may have gone out of business. Everyone was nervous, right down to Jesse Ventura, who had to be held up from behind by Gorilla Monsoon at the beginning of the show. Thankfully, the show was a mega-hit and Wrestlemania is still the main force in wrestling today. In 1984, Vince McMahon had a vision, and many of his confidants followed his lead, and those are the men that helped revolutionize the sport. The men who thought Vince was stupid and didn’t jump on the bandwagon would quickly fall to the wayside. His long-term vision of what he wanted the WWF to be came to life with Wrestlemania. The show was a perfect blend of wrestling and pageantry and was a prime example of the newest fad in the sport: Rock ‘n’ Wrestling. Wrestlemania was a mega-hit, and because of it, Scott and I have plenty more PPVs to review. If this were just a regular PPV, it would warrant a C-, maybe a D+, but because of the historical significance, it escapes unscathed. Final Grade: A+
MVP: Vince McMahon (For realizing his dream)
Runner Up: The Main Event
Non MVP: David Sammartino (for tanking his chance)
Runner Up: Mr. T (For almost not showing up)
All Time PPV Active-Wrestler Roster
Tito Santana
Buddy Rose
“Special Delivery” Jones
King Kong Bundy
Ricky Steamboat
Matt Borne
Brutus Beefcake
David Sammartino
Greg Valentine
Junkyard Dog
Barry Windham
Mike Rotundo
Iron Sheik
Nikolai Volkoff
Andre the Giant
Big John Studd
Leilani Kai
Wendi Richter
Paul Orndorff
Roddy Piper
Mr. T
Hulk Hogan
PPV Rest in Peace List
“Playboy” Buddy Rose (Wrestlemania I)
“Special Delivery” Jones (Wrestlemania I)
Next Review: Wrestlemania II
Posted in WWE
Tags: Andre the Giant, Barry Windham, Big John Studd, Bob Orton Jr., Brutus Beefcake, David Sammartino, Freddie Blassie, Greg Valentine, Hulk Hogan, Iron Sheik, Jimmy Snuka, Junkyard Dog, King Kong Bundy, Lelani Kai, Matt Borne, Mike Rotunda, Mr. T, Nikolai Volkoff, Paul Orndorff, Ricky Steamboat, Roddy Piper, SD Jones, The Executioner, Tito Santana, US Express, Wendi Richter, WrestleMania
WWE: The History of the Intercontinental Championship – Disc One
Posted by Matt
WWE: The History of the Intercontinental Championship – Disc One
Released: 11/25/2008
Your host is Todd Grisham. He mentions how almost every major superstar in the WWE has won the Intercontinental title on their way to the top. Grisham then explains the origin of the IC belt where Pat Patterson won the North American championship and the South American championship down in Rio de Janeiro (the place where all fake title wins happen!) to make up the new title. Let me just say that as far as Todds go, Pettingell > Grisham. Read the rest of this entry →
Posted in WWE
Tags: Barry O, Big John Studd, Bobby Heenan, Buddy Rogers, Captain Lou Albano, Charlie Fulton, Don Muraco, Elizabeth, George "The Animal" Steele, Grand Wizard, Greg Valentine, Honky Tonk Man, Jimmy Hart, Jimmy Snuka, Junkyard Dog, Ken Patera, King Kong Bundy, Matt Borne, Pat Patterson, Pedro Morales, Randy Savage, Rick Rude, Ricky Steamboat, Rocky Johnson, Roddy Piper, Ted DiBiase, Terry Gibbs, Tito Santana, Ultimate Warrior
WCW World Television Title History
Posted by Matt
| Champion | Won From | Date | City/Event |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arn Anderson | Tom Zenk | 1/14/1991 | Main Event[1] |
| Bobby Eaton | Arn Anderson | 5/19/1991 | Superbrawl I |
| Steve Austin | Bobby Eaton | 6/29/1991 | Worldwide |
| Barry Windham | Steve Austin | 5/9/1992 | Saturday Night |
| Steve Austin (2) | Barry Windham | 6/13/1992 | Worldwide |
| Ricky Steamboat | Steve Austin | 9/2/1992 | Clash 20 |
| Scott Steiner | Ricky Steamboat | 9/29/1992 | Worldwide[2] |
| Paul Orndorff | Erik Watts | 3/2/1993 | Power Hour[3] |
| Ricky Steamboat (2) | Paul Orndorff | 8/18/1993 | Clash 24 |
| Lord Steven Regal | Ricky Steamboat | 9/19/1993 | Fall Brawl |
| Larry Zbyszko | Lord Steven Regal | 5/2/1994 | Saturday Night |
| Lord Steven Regal (2) | Larry Zbyszko | 6/23/1994 | Clash 27 |
| Johnny B. Badd | Lord Steven Regal | 9/18/1994 | Fall Brawl |
| Arn Anderson (2) | Johnny B. Badd | 1/8/1995 | Main Event |
| Renegade | Arn Anderson | 6/18/1995 | Great American Bash |
| Diamond Dallas Page | Renegade | 9/17/1995 | Fall Brawl |
| Johnny B. Badd (2) | Diamond Dallas Page | 10/29/1995 | Halloween Havoc |
| Lex Luger | Johnny B. Badd | 2/17/1996 | Baltimore, MD |
| Johnny B. Badd (3) | Lex Luger | 2/18/1996 | Norfolk, VA |
| Lex Luger (2) | Johnny B. Badd | 3/6/1996 | Saturday Night |
| Lord Steven Regal (3) | Lex Luger | 8/20/1996 | Saturday Night |
| Prince Iaukea | Lord Steven Regal | 2/17/1997 | Monday Nitro |
| Ultimo Dragon | Prince Iaukea | 4/7/1997 | Monday Nitro |
| Lord Steven Regal (4) | Ultimo Dragon | 5/18/1997 | Slamboree |
| Ultimo Dragon (2) | Lord Steven Regal | 7/21/1997 | Monday Nitro |
| Alex Wright | Ultimo Dragon | 8/21/1997 | Clash 35 |
| Disco Inferno | Alex Wright | 9/22/1997 | Monday Nitro |
| Perry Saturn | Disco Inferno | 11/3/1997 | Monday Nitro |
| Disco Inferno (2) | Perry Saturn | 12/8/1997 | Monday Nitro |
| Booker T | Disco Inferno | 12/29/1997 | Monday Nitro |
| Rick Martel | Booker T | 2/16/1998 | Monday Nitro |
| Booker T (2) | Rick Martel | 2/23/1998 | Superbrawl VIII |
| Chris Benoit | Booker T | 4/30/1998 | Thunder |
| Booker T (3) | Chris Benoit | 5/1/1998 | Greenville, SC |
| Chris Benoit (2) | Booker T | 5/2/1998 | Charleston, SC |
| Booker T (4) | Chris Benoit | 5/3/1998 | Savannah, GA |
| Fit Finley | Booker T | 5/4/1998 | Monday Nitro |
| Booker T (5) | Fit Finley | 6/14/1998 | Great American Bash |
| Chris Jericho | Stevie Ray | 8/12/1998 | Thunder |
| Konnan | Chris Jericho | 11/30/1998 | Monday Nitro |
| Scott Steiner (2) | Konnan | 12/31/1998 | Thunder |
| Booker T (6) | Scott Steiner | 3/14/1999 | UnCeNSoReD |
| Rick Steiner | Booker T | 5/9/1999 | Slamboree |
| Chris Benoit (3) | Rick Steiner | 9/13/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| Rick Steiner (2) | Chris Benoit | 10/24/1999 | Halloween Havoc |
| Scott Hall | Rick Steiner | 11/21/1999 | Mayhem[4] |
| Jim Duggan | – | 2/16/2000 | Thunder[5] |
Footnotes:
[1]: When WCW withdrew from the NWA in January 1991, Arn Anderson’s NWA World Television title reign carried over into the first WCW World Television title reign.
[2]: The title became vacant when Scott Steiner left WCW for the WWF.
[3]: This is a tournament final.
[4]: Hall wins the WCW WOrld TV belt by forfeit. Since he’s already the WCW U.S. champion, he throws the TV belt in the trashcan on the 11/29/99 edition of Nitro.
[5]: Duggan finds the TV belt in the dumpster and claims the title. During the Russo and Bischoff reset of WCW on 4/10/2000, the WCW World TV title was finally retired.
Credit goes to: PWI Almanac, wrestling-titles.com, and ProWrestlingHistory.com
Posted in WCW
Tags: Alex Wright, Arn Anderson, Barry Windham, Bobby Eaton, Booker T, Chris Benoit, Chris Jericho, Diamond Dallas Page, Disco Inferno, Erik Watts, Finlay, Jim Duggan, Johnny B. Badd, Konnan, Larry Zbyszko, Lex Luger, Lord Steven Regal, Paul Orndorff, Perry Saturn, Prince Iaukea, Renegade, Rick Martel, Ricky Steamboat, Scott Hall, Scott Steiner, Steve Austin, Tom Zenk, Ultimo Dragon
WCW World Tag Team Titles History
Posted by Matt
| Champion | Won From | Date | City/Event |
|---|---|---|---|
| Doom | – | 1/1/1991 | –[1] |
| The Freebirds | Doom | 2/24/1991 | WrestleWar |
| Rick & Scott Steiner | The Freebirds | 3/9/1991 | Power Hour[2] |
| The Enforcers | Rick Steiner & Bill Kazmaier | 9/5/1991 | Clash 16[3] |
| Ricky Steamboat & Dustin Rhodes | The Enforcers | 11/19/1991 | Clash 17 |
| Arn Anderson & Bobby Eaton | Ricky Steamboat & Dustin Rhodes | 1/16/1992 | Jacksonville, FL |
| Rick & Scott Steiner (2) | Arn Anderson & Bobby Eaton | 5/3/1992 | Chicago, IL |
| Steve Williams & Terry Gordy | Rick & Scott Steiner | 7/5/1992 | Atlanta, GA |
| Barry Windham & Dustin Rhodes | Steve Williams & Terry Gordy | 9/21/1992 | Saturday Night |
| Ricky Steamboat & Shane Douglas | Barry Windham & Dustin Rhodes | 11/18/1992 | Clash 21 |
| The Hollywood Blondes | Ricky Steamboat & Shane Douglas | 3/2/1993 | Power Hour |
| Arn Anderson & Paul Roma | The Hollywood Blondes | 8/18/1993 | Clash 24 |
| The Nasty Boys | Arn Anderson & Paul Roma | 9/19/1993 | Fall Brawl |
| Marcus Bagwell & Too Cold Scorpio | The Nasty Boys | 10/4/1993 | Saturday Night |
| The Nasty Boys (2) | Marcus Bagwell & Too Cold Scorpio | 10/24/1993 | Halloween Havoc |
| Cactus Jack & Kevin Sullivan | The Nasty Boys | 5/22/1994 | Slamboree |
| Pretty Wonderful | Cactus Jack & Kevin Sullivan | 7/17/1994 | Bash at the Beach |
| Stars N Stripes | Pretty Wonderful | 9/25/1994 | Saturday Night |
| Pretty Wonderful (2) | Stars N Stripes | 10/23/1994 | Halloween Havoc |
| Stars N Stripes (2) | Pretty Wonderful | 11/16/1994 | Clash 29 |
| Harlem Heat | Stars N Stripes | 12/8/1994 | Saturday Night |
| The Nasty Boys (3) | Harlem Heat | 5/21/1995 | Slamboree |
| Harlem Heat (2) | The Nasty Boys | 6/24/1995 | Worldwide |
| Bunkhouse Buck & Dick Slater | Harlem Heat | 7/22/1995 | Saturday Night |
| Harlem Heat (3) | Bunkhouse Buck & Dick Slater | 9/17/1995 | Fall Brawl |
| The American Males | Harlem Heat | 9/18/1995 | Monday Nitro |
| Harlem Heat (4) | The American Males | 10/28/1995 | Saturday Night |
| Sting & Lex Luger | Harlem Heat | 1/22/1996 | Monday Nitro |
| Harlem Heat (5) | Sting & Lex Luger | 6/24/1996 | Monday Nitro |
| Rick & Scott Steiner (3) | Harlem Heat | 7/24/1996 | Cincinnati, OH |
| Harlem Heat (6) | Rick & Scott Steiner | 7/27/1996 | Dayton, OH |
| Public Enemy | Harlem Heat | 9/23/1996 | Monday Nitro |
| Harlem Heat (7) | Public Enemy | 10/5/1996 | Saturday Night |
| The Outsiders | Harlem Heat | 10/27/1996 | Halloween Havoc |
| Rick & Scott Steiner (4) | Scott Hall & Syxx | 10/13/1997 | Monday Nitro[4] |
| The Outsiders (2) | Rick & Scott Steiner | 1/12/1998 | Monday Nitro |
| Rick & Scott Steiner (5) | The Outsiders | 2/9/1998 | Monday Nitro |
| The Outsiders (3) | Rick & Scott Steiner | 2/22/1998 | Superbrawl VIII |
| Sting & The Giant | The Outsiders | 5/17/1998 | Slamboree |
| Sting & Kevin Nash | – | 6/15/1998 | Monday Nitro[5] |
| The Giant & Scott Hall | Sting & Kevin Nash | 7/20/1998 | Monday Nitro |
| Rick Steiner | The Giant & Scott Steiner | 10/25/1998 | Halloween Havoc[6] |
| Barry Windham & Curt Hennig | Chris Benoit & Dean Malenko | 2/21/1999 | Superbrawl IX[7] |
| Chris Benoit & Dean Malenko | Barry Windham & Curt Hennig | 3/14/1999 | UnCeNSoReD |
| Rey Mysterio & Billy Kidman | Chris Benoit & Dean Malenko | 3/29/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| Raven & Perry Saturn | Rey Mysterio & Billy Kidman | 5/9/1999 | Slamboree |
| Jersey Triad | Raven & Perry Saturn | 5/31/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| Chris Benoit & Perry Saturn | Jersey Triad | 6/10/1999 | Thunder |
| Jersey Triad (2) | Chris Benoit & Perry Saturn | 6/13/1999 | Great American Bash |
| Harlem Heat (8) | Jersey Triad | 8/14/1999 | Road Wild |
| Barry & Kendall Windham | Harlem Heat | 8/23/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| Harlem Heat (9) | Barry & Kendall Windham | 9/12/1999 | Fall Brawl |
| Konnan & Rey Mysterio | Harlem Heat | 10/18/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| Harlem Heat (10) | Konnan & Rey Mysterio | 10/24/1999 | Halloween Havoc |
| Konnan & Billy Kidman | Harlem Heat | 10/25/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| Creative Control | Konnan & Billy Kidman | 11/22/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| Bret Hart & Bill Goldberg | Creative Control | 12/6/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| The Outsiders (4) | Bret Hart & Bill Goldberg | 12/13/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| David Flair & Crowbar | Kevin Nash & Scott Steiner | 1/3/2000 | Monday Nitro[8] |
| The Mamalukes | David Flair & Crowbar | 1/19/2000 | Monday Nitro |
| The Harris Brothers (2) | The Mamalukes | 2/12/2000 | Germany |
| The Mamalukes (2) | The Harris Brothers | 2/13/2000 | Germany |
| The Harris Brothers (3) | The Mamalukes | 3/19/2000 | UnCeNSoReD[9] |
| Shane Douglas & Buff Bagwell | Ric Flair & Lex Luger | 4/16/2000 | Spring Stampede[10] |
| KroniK | Shane Douglas & Buff Bagwell | 5/15/2000 | Monday Nitro |
| Perfect Event | KroniK | 5/31/2000 | Thunder |
| KroniK (2) | Perfect Event | 7/9/2000 | Bash at the Beach |
| Great Muta & Vampiro | KroniK | 8/13/2000 | New Blood Rising |
| Rey Mysterio & Juventud Guerrera | Great Muta & Vampiro | 8/14/2000 | Monday Nitro[11] |
| Sean O’Haire & Mark Jindrak | – | 9/25/2000 | Monday Nitro[12] |
| Misfits in Action | Sean O’Haire & Mark Jindrak | 10/9/2000 | Monday Nitro |
| Sean O’Haire & Mark Jindrak (2) | Misfits in Action | 10/9/2000 | Monday Nitro |
| Alex Wright & General Rection | Sean O’Haire & Mark Jindrak | 11/16/2000 | Monday Nitro |
| Perfect Event (2) | Alex Wright & General Rection | 11/20/2000 | Monday Nitro |
| The Insiders | Perfect Event | 11/26/2000 | Mayhem |
| Perfect Event (3) | The Insiders | 12/4/2000 | Monday Nitro |
| The Insiders (2) | Perfect Event | 12/17/2000 | Starrcade |
| Chuck Palumbo & Sean O’Haire | The Insiders | 1/14/2001 | Sin |
| In March 2001, WWE buys out WCW and the title becomes defended on WWE programming. | |||
| The Undertaker & Kane | Chuck Palumbo & Sean O’Haire | 8/9/2001 | Smackdown! |
| Booker T & Test | The Undertaker & Kane | 9/25/2001 | Smackdown! |
| The Hardy Boyz | Booker T & Test | 10/8/2001 | Raw |
| The Dudley Boyz | The Hardy Boyz | 10/25/2001 | Smackdown![13] |
Footnotes:
[1]: When WCW withdrew from the NWA in January 1991, Doom’s NWA world tag team title reign carried over to the first ever WCW world tag title reign.
[2]: The Steiners actually won the titles before WrestleWar in real time, giving the Freebirds a negative title reign.
[3]: After Scott Steiner suffered an injury in June 1991, the titles were vacated. This was a tournament final.
[4]: Syxx is subbing for an injured Kevin Nash.
[5]: When Sting and Giant couldn’t get along, they had a match to determine who would get the tag belts. Sting won the match and chose Kevin Nash as his new partner.
[6]: Rick Steiner won a handicap match against the Giant and Scott Steiner who was subbing for Scott Hall.
[7]: After Rick Steiner was suffered an injury in January 1999, he and partner Kenny Kaos were stripped of the titles. This was a tournament final.
[8]: On the December 27, 1999 Nitro, the Outsiders vacated the titles after Scott Hall sustained an injury. This was a tournament final.
[9]: On April 10, 2000 when Bischoff and Russo joined together to take control of WCW, all the titles were made vacant for the WCW reboot.
[10]: This was a tournament final.
[11]: The titles became vacant when WCW Commissioner Ernest Miller pinned Disco Inferno. Whatever.
[12]: O’Haire & Jindrak won the titles in a six-team battle royal.
[13]: At Survivor Series on 11/18/2001, the titles were retired after being unified with the WWF tag team championship.
Credit goes to: PWI Almanac, wrestling-titles.com, and ProWrestlingHistory.com
Posted in WCW
Tags: Alex Wright, American Males, Arn Anderson, Bam Bam Bigelow, Barry Windham, Big Vito, Bill Goldberg, Bill Kazmaier, Billy Kidman, Bobby Eaton, Booker T, Bret Hart, Brian Adams, Brian Knobbs, Brian Pillman, Bryan Clarke, Bubba Ray Dudley, Bunkhouse Buck, Butch Reed, Cactus Jack, Chavo Guerrero, Chris Benoit, Chuck Palumbo, Crowbar, Curt Hennig, D-Von Dudley, David Flair, Dean Malenko, Devon Storm, Diamond Dallas Page, Dick Slater, Doom, Dr. Death Steve Williams, Dudley Boyz, Dustin Rhodes, Enforcers, Fabulous Freebirds, General Rection, Great Muta, Hardy Boyz, Harlem Heat, Hollywood Blondes, Jeff Hardy, Jerry Sags, Jimmy Garvin, Johnny Grunge, Johnny the Bull, Juventud Guerrera, Kane, Kanyon, Kendall Windham, Kevin Nash, Kevin Sullivan, Konnan, KroniK, Larry Zbyszko, Lash Leroux, Lex Luger, Marcus Alexander Bagwell, Mark Jindrak, Matt Hardy, Michael Hayes, Miracle-Violence Connection, Paul Orndorff, Paul Roma, Perfect Event, Perry Saturn, Pretty Wonderful, Public Enemy, Raven, Rey Mysterio, Ricky Steamboat, Rocco Rock, Ron & Don Harris, Ron Simmons, Scott Hall, Scotty Riggs, Sean O'Haire, Shane Douglas, Shawn Stasiak, Stars N Stripes, Steiner Brothers, Steve Austin, Stevie Ray, Sting, Syxx, Terry Gordy, Test, The Giant, The Insiders, The Outsiders, The Patriot, Too Cold Scorpio, Undertaker, Vampiro
WCW U.S. Heavyweight Title History
Posted by Matt
| Champion | Won From | Date | City/Event |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lex Luger | – | 1/1/1991 | –[1] |
| Sting | Steve Austin | 8/25/1991 | Atlanta, GA[2] |
| Rick Rude | Sting | 11/19/1991 | Clash 17[3] |
| Dustin Rhodes | Ricky Steamboat | 1/16/1993 | Saturday Night[4] |
| Dustin Rhodes (2) | Rick Rude | 8/30/1993 | Atlanta, GA[5] |
| Steve Austin | Dustin Rhodes | 12/27/1993 | Starrcade |
| Ricky Steamboat | Steve Austin | 8/24/1994 | Clash 28 |
| Steve Austin (2) | Ricky Steamboat | 9/18/1994 | Fall Brawl[6] |
| Jim Duggan | Steve Austin | 9/18/1994 | Fall Brawl |
| Vader | Jim Duggan | 12/27/1994 | Starrcade |
| Sting (2) | Meng | 6/18/1995 | Great American Bash[7] |
| Kensuke Sasaki | Sting | 11/13/1995 | Japan |
| One Man Gang | Kensuke Sasaki | 12/27/1995 | Starrcade |
| Konnan | One Man Gang | 1/29/1996 | Monday Nitro |
| Ric Flair | Konnan | 7/7/1996 | Bash at the Beach[8] |
| Eddie Guerrero | Diamond Dallas Page | 12/29/1996 | Starrcade[9] |
| Dean Malenko | Eddie Guerrero | 3/16/1997 | UnCeNSoReD |
| Jeff Jarrett | Dean Malenko | 6/9/1997 | Monday Nitro |
| Steve McMichael | Jeff Jarrett | 8/21/1997 | Clash 35 |
| Curt Hennig | Steve McMichael | 9/15/1997 | Monday Nitro |
| Diamond Dallas Page | Curt Hennig | 12/28/1997 | Starrcade |
| Raven | Diamond Dallas Page | 4/19/1998 | Spring Stampede |
| Bill Goldberg | Raven | 4/20/1998 | Monday Nitro |
| Bret Hart | Diamond Dallas Page | 7/20/1998 | Monday Nitro[10] |
| Lex Luger (2) | Bret Hart | 8/10/1998 | Monday Nitro |
| Bret Hart (2) | Lex Luger | 8/13/1998 | Thunder |
| Diamond Dallas Page (2) | Bret Hart | 10/26/1998 | Monday Nitro |
| Bret Hart (3) | Diamond Dallas Page | 11/30/1998 | Monday Nitro |
| Roddy Piper | Bret Hart | 2/8/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| Scott Hall | Roddy Piper | 2/21/1999 | Superbrawl IX[11] |
| Scott Steiner | Booker T | 4/11/1999 | Spring Stampede[12] |
| David Flair | – | 7/5/1999 | Monday Nitro[13] |
| Chris Benoit | David Flair | 8/9/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| Sid Vicious | Chris Benoit | 9/12/1999 | Fall Brawl |
| Bill Goldberg (2) | Sid Vicious | 10/24/1999 | Halloween Havoc |
| Bret Hart (4) | Bill Goldberg | 10/25/1999 | Monday Nitro |
| Scott Hall (2) | Bret Hart | 11/8/1999 | Monday Nitro[14] |
| Chris Benoit (2) | Jeff Jarrett | 12/19/1999 | Starrcade |
| Jeff Jarrett (2) | Chris Benoit | 12/20/1999 | Monday Nitro[15] |
| Scott Steiner (2) | Sting | 4/16/2000 | Spring Stampede[16] |
| Lance Storm | Mike Awesome | 7/18/2000 | Monday Nitro[17] |
| Terry Funk | Lance Storm | 9/22/2000 | Amarillo, TX |
| Lance Storm (2) | Terry Funk | 9/23/2000 | Lubbock, TX |
| General Rection | Lance Storm | 10/29/2000 | Halloween Havoc[18] |
| Lance Storm (3) | General Rection | 11/13/2000 | Monday Nitro |
| General Rection (2) | Lance Storm | 11/26/2000 | Mayhem |
| Shane Douglas | General Rection | 1/14/2001 | Sin |
| Rick Steiner | Shane Douglas | 2/5/2001 | Monday Nitro |
| Booker T | Rick Steiner | 3/18/2001 | Greed |
| WWE buys out WCW and the title becomes defended on WWE programming. | |||
| Kanyon | – | 7/26/2001 | Smackdown![19] |
| Tajiri | Kanyon | 9/10/2001 | Raw is War |
| Rhyno | Tajiri | 9/23/2001 | Unforgiven |
| Kurt Angle | Rhyno | 10/22/2001 | Raw |
| Edge | Kurt Angle | 11/12/2001 | Raw[20] |
Footnotes:
[1]: When WCW withdrew from the NWA in January 1991, Lex Luger’s NWA U.S. title reign carried over to become the first ever WCW U.S. title reign. After winning the WCW world title, Lex Luger had to vacate the U.S. title.
[2]: This was a tournament final.
[3]: In December 1992, Rude had to vacate the title due to injury.
[4]: This was a tournament final. During a controversial finish in May 1993, the U.S. title became vacant.
[5]: Rhodes regained the U.S. title in a rematch on 8/30/1993.
[6]: Austin was awarded the title after Steamboat was forced to vacate the title due to injury.
[7]: Vader was stripped of the title by WCW Commissioner Nick Bockwinkel in April 1995. This was a tournament final.
[8]: Ric Flair had to vacate the title due to a shoulder injury in November 1996.
[9]: This was a tournament final.
[10]: Goldberg vacated the U.S. title once he won the WCW world title on 7/5/1998. Bret Hart and DDP were considered as the top two contendors to the U.S. title.
[11]: Scott Hall vacated the U.S. title after suffering an injury.
[12]: This was a tournament final.
[13]: WCW President Ric Flair stripped Scott Steiner of the title when he failed to defend it and awarded it to his son David.
[14]: This was a four-way ladder match which also included Sid Vicious and Goldberg. He would be stripped of the title due to an injury at Starrcade, setting up a ladder match between Benoit and Jarrett for the vacant title.
[15]: Once the Russo/Bischoff era started on 4/10/2000, all the titles were made vacant as they reset the company.
[16]: This was a tournament final. Steiner would be stripped of the title when he used the Steiner Recliner on Mike Awesome at Bash at the Beach which was a submission hold that had been banned from WCW.
[17]: This was a tournament final. During the Lance Storm title reigns, the U.S. title becomes unofficially known as the WCW Canadian Heavyweight title.
[18]: General Rection won the title in a handicap match by defeating both Lance Storm and Jim Duggan.
[19]: As the WCW world champion, Booker T awards the secondary WCW U.S. title to Kanyon.
[20]: At the Survivor Series PPV the following weekend, Edge defeated WWE Intercontinental champion Test to win the title and as the WCW U.S. champion, the WCW and WWE titles become unified for the first time ever.
Credit goes to: PWI Almanac, wrestling-titles.com, and ProWrestlingHistory.com
Posted in WCW
Tags: Big Van Vader, Bill Goldberg, Booker T, Bret Hart, Chris Benoit, Curt Hennig, David Flair, Dean Malenko, Diamond Dallas Page, Dustin Rhodes, Eddie Guerrero, Edge, General Rection, Jeff Jarrett, Jim Duggan, Kanyon, Kensuke Sasaki, Konnan, Kurt Angle, Lance Storm, Lex Luger, Meng, Mike Awesome, One Man Gang, Raven, Rhino, Ric Flair, Rick Rude, Ricky Steamboat, Roddy Piper, Scott Hall, Scott Steiner, Shane Douglas, Sid Vicious, Steve Austin, Steve McMichael, Sting, Tajiri, Terry Funk, Test
Fall Brawl 1994
Posted by Matt
WCW Fall Brawl 1994
September 18, 1994
Roanoke, VA
Roanoke Civic Center
The current WCW Champs were as follows:
WCW World Champion: Hulk Hogan (7/17/1994)
WCW U.S. Champion: Ricky Steamboat (8/24/1994)
WCW World Tag Team Champions: Pretty Wonderful (7/17/1994)
WCW World Television Champion: Lord Steven Regal (6/23/1994)
Your hosts are Tony Schiavone & Bobby Heenan. Read the rest of this entry →
Posted in WCW
Tags: Arn Anderson, Barry Darsow, Big Van Vader, Blacktop Bully, Bunkhouse Buck, Cactus Jack, Col. Robert Parker, Dave Sullivan, Dustin Rhodes, Dusty Rhodes, Fall Brawl, Harley Race, Hulk Hogan, Jim Duggan, Johnny B. Badd, Kevin Sullivan, Lord Steven Regal, Marcus Bagwell, Meng, Mick Foley, Nasty Boys, Nick Bockwinkel, Paul Orndorff, Paul Roma, Pretty Wonderful, Ric Flair, Ricky Steamboat, Sir William, Stars and Stripes, Steve Austin, Sting, Superstar Bill Dundee, Terry Funk, The Guardian Angel, The Patriot
Clash of the Champions #28 (08.94)
Posted by Matt
WCW Clash of the Champions 28
August 24, 1994
Cedar Rapids, IA
Five Seasons Center
The current WCW Champs were as follows:
WCW World Champion: Hulk Hogan (7/17/1994)
WCW U.S. Champion: Steve Austin (12/27/1993)
WCW World Tag Team Champions: Pretty Wonderful (7/17/1994)
WCW World Television Champion: Lord Steven Regal (6/23/1994)
Your hosts are Tony Schiavone & Bobby Heenan. Read the rest of this entry →
Posted in WCW
Tags: Antonio Inoki, Arn Anderson, Barry Darsow, Blacktop Bully, Brian Knobbs, Brutus Beefcake, Bunkhouse Buck, Clash of the Champions, Col. Robert Parker, Dustin Rhodes, Dusty Rhodes, Honky Tonk Man, Hulk Hogan, Jerry Sags, Jimmy Hart, Lord Steven Regal, Meng, Nasty Boys, Paul Orndorff, Paul Roma, Pretty Wonderful, Ric Flair, Ricky Steamboat, Sherri Martel, Sir William, Steve Austin, Superstar Bill Dundee, Terry Funk
