|
Post by royboy8 on Nov 28, 2007 0:32:11 GMT -5
Rhyno Sandman from Ecw was one that I really thought by the heal winning the feud(Rhyno), it made Rhyno very main event level...
|
|
|
Post by mysterydriver on Nov 28, 2007 0:33:23 GMT -5
Big Daddy V completely squashed the Boogeyman to end their feud.
|
|
|
Post by YouStayClassy on Nov 28, 2007 0:37:42 GMT -5
Jacobs/Whitmer and HBK/Jannetty are excellent choices, but man.... Triple H/Cactus Jack is the stuff legends are made of.
|
|
|
Post by hobo on Nov 28, 2007 1:41:20 GMT -5
The nWo in general.
|
|
Hiroshi Hase
Patti Mayonnaise
The Good Ol' Days
Posts: 30,755
|
Post by Hiroshi Hase on Nov 28, 2007 6:38:10 GMT -5
Flair VS Luger Starcade 88. Luger had been in the 4 horsemen and won a title shot. The Horsemen told him to give up the shot and he wouldn't, so at a Clash of the Champions they jumped him. Good booking kept it intresting for months, then Flair just beat him. They did the same exact angle w/Sting years later but Sting eventually beat Flair for the belt that I believe was his first Actually by that time Luger was already out of the Horsemen by the time December 88 rolled around.
|
|
|
Post by Can you afford to pay me, Gah on Nov 28, 2007 10:01:11 GMT -5
They weren't my favorites, but Triple H tended to win every feud he was involved in. Rock Undertaker Stone Cold Cena Hogan would disagree. Heh. Hummm HHH won against Austin. Look at there history and you can see that Austin never won against HHH. From what I remember once HHH became the top heel in 99. HHH always bettered against him. No Mercy 99 HHH retain the title. Austin goes out. End of 00 Austin and HHH wrestled Suriver Series. Match ends in No Contest. Armedeggon Hell in a Cell with 6 men. They beat the hell out of each other but neither won .Royal Rumble Austin won and HHH as in a WWE title match. Austin cost HHH the title. HHH later blooded Austin. Next PPV was the pay off match at NWO. HHH won the best of three. After that there was no other matches. they became partners. HHH got hurt. He comesback Austin goes into the NWO feud. Then walks.
|
|
|
Post by Styx Cover Band on Nov 28, 2007 12:14:20 GMT -5
Chuck Taylor over Low Ki in IWA-MS. In every match they had Chuck found some underhanded way to win. Granted Low Ki probably would have won the title from Chuck at this year's TPI if he wasn't pulled from the show because of Ian's financial issues
|
|
Brain Of F'n J
Hank Scorpio
Not that cool enough to have one of these....wait.
We Discodians must stick apart.
Posts: 6,890
|
Post by Brain Of F'n J on Nov 28, 2007 12:54:14 GMT -5
Maybe Sabu vs. Taz. At Barely Legal, Taz just demolishes him and that was the big blow off match. Except Taz and Sabu did a double turn after the match, and they had a rematch a few months later. Jed Shaffer ~Otherwise, spot on.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Nov 28, 2007 13:15:42 GMT -5
Jeff Jarrett vs. D'Lo Brown, WWF 1999. Jarrett as the heel, ended up the Euro-Continental Champion. Debra gave Mark Henry the European title as a reward for taking out D'Lo and thus a new feud was born.
|
|
Hiroshi Hase
Patti Mayonnaise
The Good Ol' Days
Posts: 30,755
|
Post by Hiroshi Hase on Nov 28, 2007 13:32:39 GMT -5
They weren't my favorites, but Triple H tended to win every feud he was involved in. Rock Undertaker Stone Cold Cena Hogan would disagree. Heh. Actually Trips beat Hogan in their last encounter on Smackdown, but it wasn't really a feud as it was a #1 contenders match. And also they were both faces.
|
|
|
Post by B'Cup x on Nov 28, 2007 13:51:02 GMT -5
CM Punk over Raven in ROH. He won the steel cage match and Raven was out of ROH. Come to think of it, did Raven even win a single match in that feud? Slightly offtopic, but did Raven ever manage to hit punk with the Raven effect?
|
|
|
Post by Adam Pacman Khan (akkilla) on Nov 28, 2007 17:20:56 GMT -5
I guess at SS 96 Bret kinda beat Taker and that was it for thier fued.
|
|
|
Post by simplydurhamcalling on Nov 28, 2007 17:46:02 GMT -5
Until Sting at the end of 97 didn't Hogan go over everyone during his nWo days before that? Not entirely sure so please correct me if I'm wrong
|
|
|
Post by plushtar on Nov 28, 2007 17:47:06 GMT -5
I guess at SS 96 Bret kinda beat Taker and that was it for thier fued. Actually, it was in 1997. How are we to consider double-turns? And places where people are not as popular? Steve Austin lost to Bret Hart as a heel, then came out as a face. I don't recall many other singles encounters between them after that. Also, in Austin's final match with a Hart Foundation member (for reasons frequently stated), he was booed heavily, despite being a face and pinned the popular Canadian hero Owen Hart (who was a heel only in America).
|
|
|
Post by hobo on Nov 28, 2007 18:11:46 GMT -5
Until Sting at the end of 97 didn't Hogan go over everyone during his nWo days before that? Not entirely sure so please correct me if I'm wrong You're pretty much right. He jobbed to Piper at Starrcade '96, but it was a nontitle match. And then he beat Piper again at their rematch. In the summer of 1997 he dropped the belt for all of one week to Luger as a build up to their PPV, which I think was Road Wild, where he won the title back. Then he jobbed to Sting in a screwy finish at Starrcade 97. The title was vacated the next week. 1998 is where my memory of WCW starts to get fuzzy, but I definately remember Hogan had the title back within a month or two, and kept it until the summer of 98 when he dropped it to Goldberg. That's about when I stopped watching, but unless I'm mistaken he got the belt back in the Fingerpoke incident. Russo wasn't kidding when he called the WCW World Title the Hogan memorial title, because the guy held it from pretty much from Hog Wild 96 to the summer of 98. What I can't remember is who he dropped it to after the Fingerpoke. Any help? And during this time the Outsiders held the tag titles for almost as long. I can remember the Steiners winning the belts for a few brief reigns, but that's about it. In my opinion, the nWo is the biggest case where the heels never really lost.
|
|
Hiroshi Hase
Patti Mayonnaise
The Good Ol' Days
Posts: 30,755
|
Post by Hiroshi Hase on Nov 28, 2007 18:15:46 GMT -5
Until Sting at the end of 97 didn't Hogan go over everyone during his nWo days before that? Not entirely sure so please correct me if I'm wrong You're pretty much right. He jobbed to Piper at Starrcade '96, but it was a nontitle match. And then he beat Piper again at their rematch. In the summer of 1997 he dropped the belt for all of one week to Luger as a build up to their PPV, which I think was Road Wild, where he won the title back. Then he jobbed to Sting in a screwy finish at Starrcade 97. The title was vacated the next week. 1998 is where my memory of WCW starts to get fuzzy, but I definately remember Hogan had the title back within a month or two, and kept it until the summer of 98 when he dropped it to Goldberg. That's about when I stopped watching, but unless I'm mistaken he got the belt back in the Fingerpoke incident. Russo wasn't kidding when he called the WCW World Title the Hogan memorial title, because the guy held it from pretty much from Hog Wild 96 to the summer of 98. What I can't remember is who he dropped it to after the Fingerpoke. Any help? And during this time the Outsiders held the tag titles for almost as long. I can remember the Steiners winning the belts for a few brief reigns, but that's about it. In my opinion, the nWo is the biggest case where the heels never really lost. To be fair, Hogan did have to get some wins as it'd be pretty useless if he's the top heel and he's jobbing to everyone under the sun and not doing anything about it. He did lose to Luger 3x before beating him at Road Wild, so I don't see anything wrong with that. Hogan lost the belt to Sting in December 97 and wouldn't get it back till mid-April, then lost it again in early-July to Goldberg. After the Fingerpoke of Doom, Hogan lost the title to Flair at Uncensored 99.
|
|
|
Post by Adam Pacman Khan (akkilla) on Nov 28, 2007 21:21:12 GMT -5
I guess at SS 96 Bret kinda beat Taker and that was it for thier fued. Actually, it was in 1997. How are we to consider double-turns? And places where people are not as popular? Steve Austin lost to Bret Hart as a heel, then came out as a face. I don't recall many other singles encounters between them after that. Also, in Austin's final match with a Hart Foundation member (for reasons frequently stated), he was booed heavily, despite being a face and pinned the popular Canadian hero Owen Hart (who was a heel only in America). interestingly enough at least 35% of the crowd was cheering bret that night.
|
|