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Friday, September 2, 2011

5 Greatest Pro-Wrestling Feuds of All Time

I am, and have always been, a pro-wrestling fan. Not many of my friends get it. They don’t understand when I say that it’s another form of a soap opera. These are the same people who ask me how I could like wrestling because it’s “fake”. Yet they don't seem to have any trouble liking movies or TV shows even though Wookies, ET and Superman are also “fake” (As well as the storyline for every Romantic comedy ever written). So it’s just become “one of those things”. When I see wrestling feuds today everything seems so rushed to me as compared to “the good old days” (did I just say that) when feuds built up and played out over time. With that said, I have listed my top 5 feuds of all time in the pro-Wrestling.

#5 Tommy "Wildfire" Rich vs. "Maddog" Buzz Sawyer

Many new fans may not recognize these names or possibly only know Tommy Rich as the guy from the Full Blooded Italians from ECW. But this was THE feud that got me into wrestling. I lived in NJ and got the superstation WTBS so I was able to watch Georgia Championship wrestling. These guys had a feud that lasted years and was as brutal and vicious as anything today in my opinion. This was also the time I thought that wrestling was “real”. I still remember seeing Sawyer hang Rich from the ropes with a rope and thinking OMG someone has to stop this. Yes, some of this may be nostalgic on my part, but from then on I was hooked on wrestling.

#4 The VonErichs vs. the Fabulous Freebirds

Before Michael Hayes became one of the creative guys behind Smackdown, he was a member of the Fabulous Freebirds. Hayes was part of a tag team which also included Buddy Roberts and Terry Gordy and was one of the first wrestlers to use entrance music on their way to the ring. Yes, wrestlers used to come to the ring with no music & no pyro. The Freebirds came into the Dallas area and were a much needed opponent for the popular Von Erich brothers (which is a tragic story that I won’t get into here – but Google it if you don’t know). The Von Erichs were so popular in Texas - think of John Cena (well if you’re a 15 year old girl) and then multiply it by 100. In Dallas it was the Von Erichs and then everyone else. Long story short, Hayes/Gordy turned on Kerry during a match with Ric Flair – and the next thing you know they were headlining and selling out arena after arena. It was an intense feud that finally introduced a worthy and believable opponent for the Von Erichs.

#3 The Four Horsemen vs. Dusty Rhodes

The Four Horsemen were IT! Without the Horsemen there would be no ‘nWo’, no “DX” no Fortune, no “Main Event Mafia” (OK I may be the only person who liked the Mafia). It was a band of stars (all champions) that came together to form the greatest stable in pro wrestling history. There were many iterations of the Horsemen (although I try to forget the Paul Roma era). My favorite is Flair, Arn, Tully & Luger (sorry Barry Windham you came a close second). Anyway, the horsemen feuded with all the good guys at the time - Sting, Nikita Koloff & most importantly a “pre polka dot” American Dream Dusty Rhodes. It was the common man vs. the jet flying, limousine riding…well you probably know the rest. My favorite matches were the “War Games” – although I always hated that the horsemen manager JJ Dillon was involved because you always knew he would be the guy who would submit.

#2 Austin vs. McMahon

You have to remember the context. The WWF was coming off cartoony characterizations and moving into the Attitude era. It lost two of its biggest stars to rival WCW (Hall & Nash) and was in desperate need of stars (and stars that wouldn’t leave). Enter the Ringmaster. Yes, Steve Austin, who was fired from WCW, entered the WWF as the Ringmaster managed by Ted Dibiase. Not only that, he was losing to Savio Vega - - -let me say that again, losing to Savio Vega. Coming off Austin’s King of the Ring win (and famous Austin 3:16 just kicked you’re a$$ speech) he started his climb to main event. It didn’t happen overnight, but once Austin got there, he needed a foil. Enter the evil Mr. McMahon. After the whole Brett Hart incident (Brett screwed Brett) McMahon embraced the villain within and was the perfect bad to Austin’s new version of good. What every day Joe didn’t want to flip off their boss? It was anti-authority and it was great. Austin vs. McMahon in my opinion (with a little bit of DX sprinkled in) was one of the main reasons that WWF finally overtook the sinking ship that was WCW.

#1 WWF vs. WCW (vs. NWA vs. AWA vs. WCCW vs...)

Newer viewers to wrestling may not understand how intense the “wars” between federations were. I am not talking about “fake” invasions or even the nWo vs. WCW intra company battles. The most talked about & publicized was the WCW vs. the WWF Monday night war. Eric Bischoff was giving away the results for Raw’s taped events on Nitro in advance. At one point, Tony Shiovanne told the audience that Mick Foley was going to win the WWF world title before it happened on TV (which ended up having the opposite than desired effect). Most importantly, this feud brought about the “pillaging of talent” where wrestlers would go the highest bidder and also brought about the guaranteed contracts and dreaded creative control. What amuses me is how much Vince McMahon complained about Ted Turner raiding his talent pool and how Vince (and WWF fans) forgot that they did the exact same thing during his national expansion (Hogan, Piper, JYD, basically everyone not named Tito Santana). However, what I miss is not only the Monday night War (I got tired of the constant bickering and don’t get me started on the “Nacho Man and Huckster) but really the existence of the territories. Multiple companies around the country offered fresh starts for talent and a way to re-invent themselves and not get stale within one company. It also provided the ability to learn different styles of wrestling and avoid “cookie cutter” looks and moves. I fear without this competition the biggest loser is the fans.

Honorable Mention:

Brett vs. Shawn (Montreal Screw Job), Hogan vs. Andre the Giant (Ripping the cross off during Pipers pit) & Sgt Slaughter vs. Iron Sheik

8 comments:

  1. Was it a bit silly? Yes. But I loved the angle where Taker was going to sacrifice Stephanie McMahon and Austin reluctantly helped.

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  2. Btw, to the people who say wrestling is fake, so are reality shows. Grahams rose appeared and dissappeared during a segment on bachelor pad. Meaning after he was already given a rose, they had to go back and either "act" like they were having the conversation again, or they were told to spice it up, or they were flat out acting.

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  3. You know what, I also liked that angle. When it was the brood and Taker it was awesome (I remember the brood rapelling down the cage in a match)...I thought that was kind of cool. I always wanted the "higher power" to be Jake Roberts or Kevin Sullivan...instead I thought they blew it when it became Vince and the corporate ministry.

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  4. Agreed! Reality TV is so "fake" - - from the casting of "characters" to the script writers (you heard that right) each show has. At least Brett and Shawn actually hated each other...

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  5. Macho vs Steamboat was another good one - intense but relatively short (compared to Steamboat vs Flair), it still produced one of the most compelling matches in wrestling history.

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  6. I still remember when Savage took the ring bell to Steamboats throut. And who could forget WM III?

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  7. one of my top 2:
    DX vs. NWO. It was great how both tried to out do the other. Nash showing up with a crow bar and DX going after anyone, classic scenes.
    Hart Foundation vs. Demolition, especially on their 2/3 match, that was one classic fight. When Bret put on the Hart Attack, that marked the beginning of his true stardom.

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  8. What was great about DX vs nWo it was that they werent actually fighting each other but trying to outdo each other as you said. nWo was innovative (for the US at least) and it was always interesting to see "who's next" - sorry Goldberg. DX was awesome how they invaded WCW. I thought the addition of the new age outlaws just made that group! While Hart foundation vs Demolition was cool, I would actually go with Hart Foundation vs British Bulldogs as the feud that put those guys on the WWF map!

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