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Post by smartmark15 on Jan 5, 2018 22:40:09 GMT -5
One of the greatest templates for a WrestleMania main event out there. Probably the hottest match of the Attitude Era in terms of big money match ups--the two biggest stars in the company on the grandest stage of them all. Laid out simply and wonderfully with some fun callback spots to the pasts of the wrestlers involved. The big heel turn ends poorly in the bigger picture but it's a compelling finish for the match in itself. Well worth a nomination.
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Post by elliott on Jan 5, 2018 22:49:06 GMT -5
Seconded.
Yeah, I was going to nominate this in my next round of nominees if no one got to it. Classic match. It is very unlikely it will make my list, but i haven't watched it in probably a decade and I love both of these guys. So I'll make revisiting this a priority.
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Post by Kadaveri on Jan 6, 2018 7:19:34 GMT -5
One of the best executions of the WWE Epic Wrestlemania match. I can see some people being a bit down on it after all the subpar imitations that followed but I still maintain this was great at the time. The segment of the match where there's callbacks to a variety of classic matches going back years (the sharpshooter, Austin going for the Million Dollar chokehold only for Rock to attempt the Bret Hart Survivor Series counter). Made the match feel like this monumental clash that had built for years. The heel turn of course turned out to be a bad business idea, but the performance of it was stellar.
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Post by microstatistics on May 2, 2018 1:19:07 GMT -5
"I need to beat you Rock, I need it more than anything that you could ever imagine" Nothing sums up the story of the match better than this Anyways this is the perfect attitude era style match with excellent storytelling and great heat. Austin's facial expressions and his depiction of how his character degenerated over the course of the match were ridiculously great, without coming off as cartoonish.
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Post by superstarsleeze on Oct 5, 2018 23:49:16 GMT -5
Micro nailed it. Austin's character development throughout this match is amazing to watch. I would love to see more pro wrestling where character development during a match and/or the internal struggle they face is the focal point of the match. Definitely making my list.
I watched this match last night not expecting it hold up even though I have watched many times of the year. I thought I had just got caught up in all the hoopla and the spectacle, but nope this is a badass match and definitely one of the greatest matches to take place in pro wrestling history. The year 2001 was "Stone Cold" Steve Austin's reaffirmation that he was one of the greatest wrestlers to ever live. He burned out in a short amount of time, but by God did he burn bright. I am surprised in my previous reviews (I watched a lot of these matches two years ago) that I did use the term "Perpetual motion" because that to me sums up Stone Cold's 2001. He was perpetual motion. But it was not wasted motion or excessive motion. It was always motion with purpose and with urgency. The difference between urgency and desperation is a fine line and this match Stone Cold Steve Austin crossed the line into desperation. That in my mind is the difference between a babyface and a heel. To me, Austin's real value was always turning himself up to eleven. In 2001, I think this was something he was struggling with personally. Was he as good as he once was? Would he be as over? Did he take what he had to be The Man? Especially given how hot The Rock was. He was not coming back to a company that was hurtin'. He was not coming back to a company that desperately needed a top babyface they had The Rock. You bet your ass, Steve Austin the person had some doubts about himself. I think it was genius to turn this into a storyline because it was so believable. But do it in a way that is so pro wrestling. Take something thats a seven and dial it to an eleven by getting Mr. McMahon involved and that heinous attack at the end with a steel chair to really sell it. To me it was not just smart booking, it was smart in-ring storytelling. Thats what puts this match over the top. Every plot point in this match fuels Steve Austin's insecurities and self-doubt until it explodes into that fiery rage of the heinous steel chair attack on The Rock's prone, limp body. Honestly, no matter who is opponent was on this night would have taken a backseat to the drama of Stone Cold character, but I thought this was The Rock's best performance as a babyface and as a wrestler. I really enjoy the Rock. I dont think he is a great wrestler and I dont he is a bad wrestler. He is kind of strange because he feels so different and has become so successful at not being a wrestler, which is so odd. Here, Rock really shows that babyface fire. I love his reactions to Stone Cold's jaw jacking and flipping him off. He was matching Stone Cold's energy and thats what this match needed. I loved the jumpstart to the match. Austin jumps The Rock it is a borderline sneak attack because the Rock has barely taken off the championship belt. It is gamemanship. It is an unwritten rule that you sort of look your opponent in the eye and lock up. Austin is a desperate man and desperate men do desperate things. Austin proves that by picking up that championship belt and trying to nail The Rock. Austin is not a confident man. Also, I love the drama swirling around this match being changed to a No DQ match at the last second. Austin is perpetual motion in this match both on offense and bumping & selling. He wrestles this match huge remember this is at the Astrodome. The culmination of all his hard work. Taking WWF from almost going bankrupt to their first Dome show since 1992. Watch him go for that patented FU elbow. He is out of control but everyone wait at the top can see him throw his body around. I love those big Arena Rock motions. There is a part where he is taking Rock's offense and he is doing the best discombobulated selling you will ever see. Just flailing all over the place. Another moment that just dawned on me was he took a suplex he pops up to keep fighting because that's his nature, but then all the pain stuns him up against the ropes. I love that delayed register. More people need to use that. It makes sense when you first get hit, it is kinda rush and you wanna fight back. Then like a wave it crashes over you. Also, the transitions in this match are just money. They all happen because the wrestler in control takes their eye off the prize. Austin is fiddlefucking trying to get the turnbuckle pad off and Rock knocks his ass down. The Rock is jawjacking with the ref and Austin blasts him with the ring bell. They pull out all the stops here too. Double juice, lots of great throwbacks to Austin/Bret. I love the Sharpshooter sequence because they are both bleeding, but notice the little things. Austin needs to use the ropes to break the hold. Rock can break the hold with his strength. Thats the difference between a heel and babyface. People forget often that one of the main reasons a heel becomes a heel is becomes he realizes he is not good enough to best the babyface. Thats what is happening in this match. Austin was worried that he was not good enough but as the match progresses it is becoming more and more evident that this is not just a cause for concern, but actually the truth. Thus he has to resort low down, cheap tactics to win. Thats how you become a heel. The Rock hits the Stunner and this draws out Vince McMahon. It is clear that Austin at least wanted to try to win this fight on his own, but now the situation is getting too dire. McMahon who has a lot invested in Austin is out to insure that he wins. Austin is not too proud to beg. There are so many great moments in the finish stretch of this. McMahon's face after he pulled the Rock off Austin after Rock had Austin pinned from the People's Elbow and that famous McMahon gulp that leads to the chase scene that ends in a Austin steal of a Rock Bottom. The slow realization that Austin and McMahon have joined forces. Jim Ross was so crucial here because he is Steve's best friend. You can actually listen to him go through through five stages of grief as he is witnessing what is happening. You can see Austin become more and more unhinged with each kickout. The Stunner and kickout was especially good. The Rock is valiant here and comes close with a Rock Bottom, but the odds were too stacked against him. I think what makes this finish so good. It is one extra Stunner that does the Rock in or one extra chair shot. Austin goes ballistic in a way that you never see a wrestler go. Wrestlers usually one chair shot. If it is multiple, there is a pause in between swings. They need to line up make sure they hit the right spot, the opponent has to brace himself. There was none of that here. Austin was in a frenzy. He saw red. It is not singular climax we are so used to seeing wrestling. It is about the journey of the character, Stone Cold Steve Austin, as you can watch him lose all grip on his own sanity. So powerful. Then of course the moment none of us believe we would see, the anti-establishment asskicker shaking the hand of Corporate Satan. Desperate men do desperate things. *****
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Post by mvz on Mar 31, 2021 21:51:35 GMT -5
Can’t believe this is 20 years old. Rock was game but this is an Austin showcase. His performance is so purposeful and drove a compelling story. The chair shots at the end stick with you, that was a great finish then and still feels different today.
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Post by cactus on Nov 19, 2021 5:41:56 GMT -5
The pre-match video package is the 6/9/95 of video packages. Incredible stuff that makes Limp Bizkit listenable!
The match itself is all the best components of the Attitude Era coming together perfectly. You got brawling, big kickouts, weapon shots, blood, using a lot of finishers, using your opponent's finisher, Rock, Austin, and Vince McMahon. Austin having to use his old submission shows how desperate he is to win the title. They never go overboard with the finisher trading or the kickouts for me. They used exactly the right amount for a big stadium main event. The Austin turn might have bombed long-term, but as a standalone angle, it's shocking and executed perfectly. ★★★★½
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Post by lemming on Nov 6, 2023 6:11:01 GMT -5
I voted this match #91 this year.
One of the most famous wrestling matches, two of WWE's biggest ever stars colliding in a Wrestlemania main event at their peak in a match that both embodied and arguably ended the 'Attitude' era. The Rock puts in a strong babyface performance but this is Austin's match. In his review above Sleeze talks about Austin's perpetual motion and that's a great description as he is just a lightning rod full of energy here, frenzied when on the attack and bumping big for Rock's offense. The finish is great too, with Rock kicking out of a series of finishers only for Austin to simply beat him into the dust with a chair.
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Post by TheDutifulWebmaster on Feb 7, 2024 12:30:45 GMT -5
Those terrible and unconvincing sharpshooters did a lot of damage to this match for me. I also don't like the build up to this match, brawling in the ring and 'My way or the highway' and all.
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