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Post by Cap on Dec 9, 2017 17:35:09 GMT -5
Brock Lesnar vs Undertaker (HIAC - WWE World Championship - WWE - 10/20/2002)
This is actually my favorite HIAC match. I love it. It is brutal. The hand work is great. They don't climb around and go crazy like in other HIAC matches, but this feels like two bulls trapped in the cage till one can't go on. I think it is Brock at his best and it might really be my favorite version of Taker, not the American Badass thing, his style here. It isn't big epic Mania taker; it is fight for survival taker. Really good shot at making the back end of my list.
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Post by elliott on Dec 10, 2017 0:15:40 GMT -5
Seconded. Great match. I'm not as high on it as some folks, but it is fantastic and something I should make sure to revisit during the project.
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Post by smartmark15 on Jan 5, 2018 22:51:23 GMT -5
Probably my favorite HiaC match of them all. Taker comes in with the broken hand and the cast and they do just a simple babyface-trying-to-kill-a-monster brawl. Everyone blades including Heyman and it's glorious.
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Post by bossrock on Jan 5, 2018 23:14:07 GMT -5
Fourth.
I think it runs about five minutes longer than it needs to, but still arguably the second best Cell match in WWE history. Very violent and very bloody with a great story of Taker using his cast to brutalize Brock early only to have his hand exposed later on. Really an underrated and forgotten career match for both men.
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Post by twfi on Jan 6, 2018 3:18:36 GMT -5
Always rated this match and more so watching it again last year. It's a Hell in a Cell match with physicality and bloodshed, Taker bleeds buckets. Still the second best HIAC match behind the classic original.
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Post by brockobama on Jan 28, 2018 17:05:11 GMT -5
Watched this recently when I was planning to write about it for the 15th anniversary. Didn't end up doing that but man alive what a match this is. Agree with Cap that this is Lesnar at his best (not to mention Heyman) but the note about this being Taker at his best is something I'm going to have to think about. I'm not a huge Taker guy and while this is probably my favorite match of his by a wide margin, but this vulnerable, human Taker is something fairly unique to this situation and I'm not sure if I like it as much as his brooding stuff, or at the very least I'm not so sure he's as good at it as he is at being brooding. Gonna have to keep that in mind and how it relates to greatness when I revisit this, but right now I'm pretty sure this is going to make my list.
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Post by superstarsleeze on Jul 30, 2018 18:32:58 GMT -5
I love Brock! Very few, very few, have the innate wrestling IQ that Brock has and this is a tremendous exhibition of his athletic and psychological prowess.
WWE Champion Brock Lesnar vs Undertaker - No Mercy 2002 Hell In A Cell
If you described this finish of this match, most people would think you were describing a murder scene. Undertaker was drenched in his own blood and was spilling blood all over Lesnar. Brock was covered in Taker's blood by the end of it. 2002 was a pretty underwhelming year, but featured some of the all time best bladejobs in pro wrestling history. This match and the Nagata/Murakami match are the standout matches for 2002 to me. I don't yet, which I would place on the top of the heap. Violence is never been the strong suit of the WWF. Character-driven wrestling and Clash of the Titans is where Vince buttered his bread. Occasionally, he dipped into championship wrestling with Bret and out of control brawl with Austin. Austin's out of control barroom brawls are fun and entertaining, but they are not violent in the same way this is. This really feels like two men trying to maim each other very much in the vein of a southern blood feud brawl. It really is something different and something that Brock Lesnar excels at.
Brock has proven to be so versatile in his criminally short first run on the the WWE roster. In this match, he plays caged animal to perfection. At first, he is discombobulated and confused by the nature of the Hell In A Cell. He is young and inexperienced. Perhaps he has even bought into The Undertaker's mythos. This is Undertaker's boneyard. He tries to fight, but also tries to escape. There is a real sense of desperation. Taker is confident, but Taker is a veteran and knows how dangerous Brock is. Brock is stronger and quicker than him. He is virtually unbeatable. How many wrestlers could say they have that dual edge on Taker. Taker has his experience, his ability to withstand punishment and brutality on his side. Throughout the match, Taker almost never gained a fair advantage on Lesnar and was always using something to sustain that advantage.
I loved the duality of the cast. Undertaker's hand had been broken twice in the lead up to this match. The cast covered up a weakness for the Undertaker. Remove it and he is vulnerable. With it on, he had a weapon. It was this weapon that scored the first big blow in this war. Brock was sent reeling and was busted open. Paul E. was awesome with his shrieks of horror outside the cage. Taker laid down a savage beating on Brock using the cage, steps and cast at will. But Paul E. got to him. He just could not resist kicking Paul E.'s ass. One big boot into the cage sent Paul E. flying and he bladed. Then he got by the tie and pulled him into the cage repeatedly. I loved the spot where Brock went flying in trying to take advantage of the distraction only to eat the cage and send Paul E. flying. It was the perfect punctuation on the Taker shine. I loved that old school efficiency. You get the punctuation mark and you move on. It never lingers. Brock catapults Taker into the cage. He immediately pounces and throws Taker around. Nobody, but Brock could manhandle Taker this way. It is scary strength. My favorite spot of the match is Brock and Paul E. tying the belt around the cast hand and Brock going to town on the cast. It is so violent those swings ultimately snapping the belt. I loved the struggle over trying to rip off the cast. When he does Brock becomes cocky, he is swinging from the cell roof like Tarzan kicking Taker's ass. Without his cast, Taker pulls out another wily trick: the low blow.
Again, Undertaker needed an underhanded tactic to bring Lesnar to heel. Lesnar is so great at heel selling and the style that reeks of cowering and desperation. Being more afraid to lose than you want to win. Big bumping Brock came out here with a crazy bump off a big boot from the apron into the cage. Taker hit a suicide dive, but it backfired as it took a lot out of him. Brock BLASTED him with the steps twice. I mean he fucking smoked him. Taker came out bleeding an absolute gusher. Between this and cast, I thought this a perfect example of a caged animal becoming extraordinarily violent. Up until here, the match was perfect. It does lose some points because Undertaker is able to use the bad hand to hit some rights and gain an advantage, which kinda sucks. I did like the finish run of Brock teasing a big move and Undertaker countering with a big move only to have Brock kick out. I hated the ref not counting because Brock grabbed the rope, when it was established pinfalls counted on the floor. That is shoddy. Undertaker having to level up each time to finally the Tombstone, which had the crowd going crazy was great build. I loved the tombstone reversal into Brock hositing Taker into a F5 from a totally awkward spot. One F5 and it was over. Oh how I long for this efficiency!
Writing this review, I think there are enough details that marr this match to stop from being my choice for 2002 match of the year and I would have Takayama/Ogawa over it too. However, this is easily, the 2002 match of the year. It is crazy to think that Brock Lesnar in his rookie year as champion had a WWE Match of The Year where he was the dominant force in the match. What is there left to say other than BROCK ROCKS~! ****1/2
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