Triple H |OT| February Wrasslin

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I think I tweeted something about that during Raw

Who would have thought that a feud that started between Punk and Cena would culminate in a match between Triple H and Undertaker at WrestleMania

It didn't even occur to me how much of an ego boost that was until u or someone else mentioned it lol.
 
Inserting himself into Punk's story and making it completely about himself and as a result he became the biggest face on the roster.

Also, making everyone on the roster and announce team seem like a bunch of giant asses when they voted 'no confidence' in HHH after the 'unsafe working conditions' that seemed no more abnormal or severe than any regular episode of Monday Night RAW from a few years back.

Seriously, what were they complaining about again? HHH himself said it best when asked "what the hell happened to this place?" and how wrestlers "used to fight to solve their problems, instead of whining like a bunch of little kids".
 
HHH not only stole Punk's feud, he's stole his character. He has literally the exact same voice, mannerisms, and feelings towards Big Johnny.
 
HHH not only stole Punk's feud, he's stole his character. He has literally the exact same voice, mannerisms, and feelings towards Big Johnny.

Damn he really did. At this point I would not be surprised to see him take the main event away from Rock V Cena and take the streak.
 
Seriously, what were they complaining about again? HHH himself said it best when asked "what the hell happened to this place?" and how wrestlers "used to fight to solve their problems, instead of whining like a bunch of little kids".

Miz and R-Truth attacked a couple of people soooooooo, THE SKY IS FALLING BAH GAWD NO CONFIDENCE

HUNNER
HUNNER

WE'RE GIRLS, HUNNER

SOMETHING COULD HAPPEN
 
I'd like to see HHH get another WWE title run.

He'd be the first ever WWE COO Raw GM WWE Champion.


Miz and R-Truth attacked a couple of people soooooooo, THE SKY IS FALLING BAH GAWD NO CONFIDENCE

HUNNER
HUNNER

WE'RE GIRLS, HUNNER

SOMETHING COULD HAPPEN
That whole angle was just so fucking awful. It was seriously painful to watch. Just horrendous. Treating their audience like idiots.
 
HHH_Alfredo_Chyna.jpg



Good night wrestlegaf!
 
I kind of hope a face wins MITB this year and sets a match up that plays to their strengths, RVD style.

Not that I hate heel 'dirty' cash ins, it's just that we've seen five of them in the past two years so I'm getting kind of tired of that story
I was kinda hoping they would have done this with Daniel Bryan, have him challenge for the belt at a PPV in New York or somewhere full of smart fans. Let him have an epic 30 min back and forth match, he tries everything he can to win, but just can't get whoever he is versing down for the count. He ends up just losing, kicking out a fraction of a second after the ref has counted 3. Then he comes out next night and hypes up whoever beat him, and then says he thought he was good enough to win the title, he thought he knew what it would take, but he was wrong and knowing all he does now just makes him want the title even more. Then just build him and the title up even more from there.
 
I still can't get over what John Laurinaitis did as Raw GM. I mean, using your power to make yourself a star? What a heinous act.
 
I was kinda hoping they would have done this with Daniel Bryan, have him challenge for the belt at a PPV in New York or somewhere full of smart fans. Let him have an epic 30 min back and forth match, he tries everything he can to win, but just can't get whoever he is versing down for the count. He ends up just losing, kicking out a fraction of a second after the ref has counted 3. Then he comes out next night and hypes up whoever beat him, and then says he thought he was good enough to win the title, he thought he knew what it would take, but he was wrong and knowing all he does now just makes him want the title even more. Then just build him and the title up even more from there.

They already kinda did this with Kaval's title shot from NXT vs Dolph Ziggler for the IC title.
 
Details are sketchy at the moment but there are media reports in Japan that New Japan was sold by Yuke’s, the video game company, to Bushiroad, a popular card game company and the new owners would take over on 2/1.
Takaaki Kidani, the chairman of Bushiroad Group Publishing announced they have purchased 100% ownership of New Japan from Yuke’s in a deal announced on 1/31 and were taking over the next day. Yuke’s had purchased 51.5% of the company from Antonio Inoki in late 2005 during a period when the company was losing significant money and it was something of a fire sale. The company was doing better financially of late but was not believed to be operating at a profit.
Reports on the purchase price vary by media source but the price was a shockingly low figure, reported at 500 million yen or $6,550,000 U.S. Bushiroad on its web site said there would be no change in company structure, but companies that buy other companies usually say that and it almost always ends up not being the case.
Kidani, when talking, said that they had approached Yuke’s over the summer after sponsoring the G-1 Climax tournament and expressed interest in buying. Bushiroad Group Publishing is a Tokyo based company that started in May 2007. The company has also promoted some New Japan house shows and was also a sponsor of Zero-One. They were also a sponsor of pro wrestler/fighter Yuichiro Nagashima and promoted a card in May called Bushiroad Pro Wrestling and Kidani appeared as a character on the show as Danshoku Kidani. He was a big pro wrestling fan growing up, particularly of Inoki. At a press conference on 1/31, he talked about international expansion, which previous owners tried without success as unlike American culture, Japanese culture doesn’t export into foreign markets well, particularly in wrestling hotbeds like Mexico, Australia, the U.S. and Europe. New Japan, which was super popular in Italy in the early 80s on television during a boom period, but also a period where the television featured some of the biggest worldwide stars on a regular basis, failed in an attempt in that market a few years back. They did a few shows this past year in the U.S. with Jersey All Pro Wrestling in the Northeast, but given the expense, it’s doubtful those shows were profitable and they were all on a small-time scale and didn’t draw anymore than they would draw in Japan for house shows. Kidani also talked about their goal being to overtake WWE as the No. 1 pro wrestling company in the world. Interestingly, Bushiroad, which lists anime, game cards, video games, social media and manga as its leading revenue streams, was the main sponsor for the Japanese television premiere of a one hour edited version of the top two matches from last year’s WrestleMania, that aired on 1/29 at 2:15 a.m. on TV Tokyo, which is a national network on the level of CW in the U.S. While the company has been successful in their own businesses, their complete company is not financially on the level of WWE.
Yuke’s didn’t decide for several more months that they were interested in selling and once they did, the negotiations went quickly and quietly. Yuke’s own financial situation had gone down in the last year and New Japan was not a profitable company on its own. Virtually all insiders in Japan were caught unaware when the deal was announced, and New Japan’s top stars, in specific Yuji Nagata, Hiroshi Tanahashi, Shinsuke Nakamura, Togi Makabe and Jushin Liger were all shocked when the news broke. The story broke in Tokyo Sports which was given the exclusive and they were told on 1/30.
This did explain why the usual January New Japan contract negotiations, that were always in the news, didn’t happen and no explanation had been given. The general feeling among those in New Japan at least after first hearing from the new owners is that this is a very good move, because Bushiroad officials said that they were looking at heavily merchandising the New Japan name and the top wrestlers. New Japan merchandise is only available at the arenas and through the web site and a few pro wrestling stores.
There is a feeling right now from the wrestlers after the news broke that this will open up doors to make bigger money since in Japan, the wrestling pay structure, once the highest in the world, is far behind the U.S. New Japan’s biggest star, Hiroshi Tanahashi, is believed to be making in the neighborhood of $260,000 per year. Minoru Suzuki faced Tanahashi on 1/4 at the Tokyo Dome in the company’s main event on its annual biggest show of the year. He’s not under a long-term deal, and is currently being paid about $13,000 per month. As a comparison, Masahiro Chono was earning $800,000 per year at a time when the yen was worth far less against the dollar (it would be equivalent to more than $1.3 million today) when the company business fell into its bad point. He took a significant cut when business got bad a few years back and left the company, where the presumption was he was a lifer, at the end of 2009.
During the late 70s and into the early 80s, Japan was the place to make money in pro wrestling, until the national expansion of the WWF. Even through the 90s boom period of American wrestling, the money in Japan was the highest in the business besides WWF and WCW and there were a number of full-time well playing jobs for foreigners, which is really not the case any longer.
The company, started by Antonio Inoki and NTV on March 6, 1972, grew to be the largest pro wrestling company in the world within a few years due to its prime time network contract and the mainstream popularity of Inoki, a position it held until 1984. The company was built around the concept of Inoki as a real fighter, and the idea that even if pro wrestling itself wasn’t real, New Japan had the best stable of real fighters in the world. That concept remained strong in the early days of real fighting, and New Japan often promoted shooters and mixed matches against fighters from other sports to maintain that aura. However, the boom of MMA in Japan hurt that concept, which was weakened even more when New Japan’s top shooters went into MMA competition and for the most part didn’t do well, and even if they did okay, their moves performed in pro wrestling weren’t the moves they used. A lot of questionable booking decisions followed, leading to a decline and the company losing prominence.
The company moved from prime time to Saturday afternoon, to late Saturday night (at in 2 a.m. or later) and down to 30 minutes, rendering the television almost completely ineffective in creating new fans. While they have a strong presence on satellite and do PPVs, satellite TV in Japan still doesn’t reach enough people and draw anywhere near the audience as compared to U.S. cable, and PPV isn’t anywhere near as lucrative.


Raw on 1/30 did a 3.55 rating and 5.21 million viewer. It was the most watched episode of the show since 5/23 (the show right after the death of Randy Savage). It was still only in 4th place for the night on cable behind two episodes of Pawn Stars and American Pickers. The audience was 67.1% male.
It is traditional for the show after the Royal Rumble to do a big number, as last year’s show did a 3.48 rating and 5.29 million viewers. This year’s show would have beaten last year handily in viewers except it had the big second hour decline, and this time it’s hard to blame that on show quality since it was one of the better Raws in a long time.
The show did a 2.4 in Males 12-17 (down 8%), a 3.3 in Males 18-49 (up 14% and actually slightly beating UFC on FOX, although not in total viewers since UFC was on network and not cable so UFC actually had 12% more viewers in the demo), 1.4 in Girls 12-17 (up 21%) and 1.5 in Women 18-49 (up 36%).
In the segment-by-segment, the Rumble interest must have been high and that’s what moved the rating since they opened at a 3.90 for the first quarter. Randy Orton vs. Dolph Ziggler lost 580,000 viewers. Brodus Clay vs. Tyler Reks lost 166,000 viewers. C.M. Punk vs. Daniel Bryan in the champion vs. champion match gained 219,000 viewers to a 3.54 which is a weak gain for that time slot. The Miz vs. Kofi Kingston lost 231,000 viewers. The Rock video lost 329,000 viewers. Beth Phoenix vs. Eve Torres and the John Cena vs. Kane brawl gained 325,000 viewers. The HHH with John Laurinaitis performance review and Undertaker showing up gained 753,000 viewers, which is not out of the ordinary and this segment went 17 minutes over, so they had a lot of time to pick up viewers. The main event saw Male teens go from 2.3 to 2.8, Males 18-49 go from 3.4 to 3.9, Girls teens from 1.1 to 1.2 and Women 18-49 from 1.4 to 1.7.


Impact on 1/26 did a 1.17 rating and 1.60 million viewers. The show did a 0.80 in Males 18-34 and 1.08 in Males 35-49.
The show started strong and faded, picking up for the main event. Tara vs. Velvet Sky vs. Mickie James lost 55,000 viewers. A Sting in-ring with James Storm, Jeff Hardy, Bobby Roode and Bully Ray plus Alex Shelley vs. Zema Ion lost 68,000 viewers. Eric and Garett Bischoff in the gym lost 109,000 viewers. ODB & Eric Young vs. Angelina Love & Winter gained 205,000 viewers to a 1.24 quarter. It was a tremendous success and the only thing on the show that spiked viewers. Samoa Joe vs. Matt Morgan lost 164,000 viewers. The in-ring angle with A.J. Styles, Christopher Daniels and Frankie Kazarian lost 55,000 viewers. And the tables match with Hardy & Storm vs. Ray & Roode was a success gaining 110,000 viewers to a 1.16 main event.


Besides the Dragon Gate show, there were two other major shows over the weekend in conjunction with the WrestleReunion convention in Los Angeles. Mike Tyson was there and apparently hit it off big with Superstar Billy Graham. Tyson was a big WWWF fan growing up and Bruno Sammartino was his hero, which led to a funny moment on Raw in 1998. Tyson was brought in and on a live mic asked who his favorite wrestler was, and he screamed like a fan “Bruno Sammartino,” at a time when that name wasn’t ever mentioned or probably allowed to be on broadcasts. Tyson also brought up being a fan of Sonny King, “The Colorful Valiants,” Stan Stasiak and Don Leo Jonathan, and talked about how he remembered Sonny King as tag team champion (with Jay Strongbow 1972-73). He kept telling Graham, “Be real with me, stop cutting promos with me, and talk to me brother.” Graham was so jazzed up meeting Tyson that he kept talking in promo mode. Tyson loved Graham but wanted to talk with him non-promo style like he did with some of the older wrestlers who asked him about the Super Bowl and today’s boxing. When Graham saw Lanny Poffo and hugged him Tyson finally said, “He’s now being real, he’s an emotional guy because his friend (Randy Savage) died.” He kept going off on how excited he was to meet Graham, but also talked with Greg Valentine and Brutus Beefcake and some of the other guys he grew up watching.


The WWE is well aware of what happened to the UFC web site but thinks it won’t happen to them even though WWE also supported SOPA and PIPA. Apparently they investigated the guy taking credit for hacking the UFC site (it’s not that they know his identity, but supposedly they looked at his twitter account) and found out he was a WWE fan so felt they were safe, and also claim their web site has great security measures that can’t easily be hacked.


Rumors regarding the 2013 WrestleMania include the New York market, which corresponds to the recent story, which is surprising since everyone expected New York for 2014 and MSG, but the idea is to do an outdoor stadium show. I don’t know about risking New York in April, but I do get the idea of wanting to do New York because they’ll get more pub coming from there than anywhere else. Other cities mentioned have been Indianapolis, New Orleans and St. Louis. Toronto was a strong contender this year and it’s been long enough that they are due back.


The Rock is now being advertised for the 2/27 show in Portland and 3/5 show in Boston, so that’s four Raws he’s appearing on so far. He’s booked for every Raw live from 2/27 on except the 3/19 show. All out Mania promotion starts 2/20, the day after the Elimination Chamber show, so I’d expect him if not live, on tape for almost all the shows from that point. It’s going to be his main project, not just Mania and TV but all the things that go with promotion and being the big star of a mega event.


Some updates on the WWE Network. Kevin Dunn has taken a lot of initiative and has hired a lot of mid-level management. A lot of the people hired had formerly worked for the company in the past and moved on, so they are loyal to him. Plus Dunn, as much if not more than anyone in the company, understands how to interface with Vince McMahon and work with him with his constant changing of directions.
WWE hired Eric Pankowski, who had worked for Reveille, as its new Senior Vice President of Creative and Development. He was a new hire of Stephanie McMahon and will report to her. It’s another member of the creative chain of command as part of his job will be to manage the creative team and being responsible for storylines. His role also includes creating both new reality TV shows and new kids programming. One person close to the situation described this hire and the above Dunn story as related. Dunn had been pushing new program ideas for the network to Vince that Vince has reacted favorably to since Dunn, more than anyone in the company, knows how to work with Vince. But Dunn is not part of the Stephanie team and she’s trying to create her own team. Pankowski is also to oversee the sale of new television programming to networks and studios. Pankowski was Senior Vice President of creative affairs with Reveille.


Someone from WWE texted someone from UFC during the FOX show saying the production was terrible. And they got a text back saying “At least we don’t have an imbecilic lead announcer ruining our show.”


The two people involved in this were not Punk and Chael Sonnen. Punk went to weigh-ins actually with Sonnen and went backstage. Punk also brought Ariel Helwani to his house and did a 35 minute interview with him. He said that he and Sonnen became friends through Gerald Brisco, who has at least broached the idea of pro wrestling with Sonnen after his fighting days are over. Punk noted the two have a lot in common. Punk met all of the main people in UFC, a lot of who are big wrestling fans, or at least were. He got the “We’ve been fans forever but wrestling sucks now, but your stuff is really good” treatment that no doubt he gets far too often. He didn’t fight back when hearing. The reaction from UFC is he was super cool. He did attend the show although kept away from being seen.


An idea being batted around for Mania is to have a Money in the Bank ladder match (which is this week planned in some form) to be one where all the people in the match are former world champions. The idea could include Swagger, Orton, Del Rio, Henry, Christian, Kane, Ziggler and/or others.
thanks. quote for new page.
 
I was kinda hoping they would have done this with Daniel Bryan, have him challenge for the belt at a PPV in New York or somewhere full of smart fans. Let him have an epic 30 min back and forth match, he tries everything he can to win, but just can't get whoever he is versing down for the count. He ends up just losing, kicking out a fraction of a second after the ref has counted 3. Then he comes out next night and hypes up whoever beat him, and then says he thought he was good enough to win the title, he thought he knew what it would take, but he was wrong and knowing all he does now just makes him want the title even more. Then just build him and the title up even more from there.

I think if Henry wasn't injured this would have built Bryan up as a big face. Have him lose MITB but then have him win the Rumble and have Henry clean house until Wrestlemania when Daniel Bryan finally makes him tap out to the Patti LaBelle lock. Bryan wins. WrassleGAF is happy. And we all praise the WWE until they screw it up the next night on Raw.
 
Someone from WWE texted someone from UFC during the FOX show saying the production was terrible. And they got a text back saying “At least we don’t have an imbecilic lead announcer ruining our show.”
lol
 
They already kinda did this with Kaval's title shot from NXT vs Dolph Ziggler for the IC title.
Not really, they didn't really follow up on it, gave him a title match and he lost and then nothing more. Maybe had he hung around they may have done something with it, but he didn't.
 
Ok this is probably an odd gif request.

A few years ago I had a gif of HHH laying in a ring corner and selling that he was knocked silly. Big Show is outside of the ring, but screaming in HHH's face. I think I remember a cage being around the outside of the ring (like a hell in the cell.) Anybody have that gif laying around by chance?

1221355761093.gif
 
http://www.wwe.com/inside/unforgettable-february-wwe-moments

Unforgettable February moments in WWE history

Feb. 20, 1978
Bob Backlund captures the WWE Championship

Backlund, a ginger-haired combatant with boyish charm, entered WWE in 1977, winning the adulation of the WWE Universe and almost immediately establishing himself as a top contender for “Superstar” Billy Graham’s WWE Championship. They were polar opposites, with the All-American, no-nonsense athlete facing off against the arrogant, bleach-blonde, muscle-bound powerhouse. In February 1978, the stars aligned for Backlund at Madison Square Garden. With a mighty running atomic drop, Backlund sent the massive Graham crashing to the mat for the three-count, capturing the WWE Title, which he would hold onto for more than five years.

Feb. 5, 1988
Million Dollar Man’s scheme helps Andre the Giant take the WWE Title from Hulk Hogan

The biggest rematch in WWE history was also the most controversial. Almost a year after their showdown in front of 93,173 fans at WrestleMania III, Andre the Giant and WWE Champion Hulk Hogan squared off again on NBC’s “The Main Event.” Andre emerged victorious after the original referee was knocked out and an identical twin official came into the ring. Secretly paid off by “Million Dollar Man” Ted DiBiase, the crooked twin counted the giant’s pin on Hogan, even though the champion had raised his shoulder off the mat by two. The Eighth Wonder of the World then surrendered the WWE Title to a gleeful DiBiase, setting off a whirlwind of controversy.

Feb. 13, 1997
The Rock wins his first championship in WWE

The Most Electrifying Man in Entertainment is currently on The Road to WrestleMania to challenge John Cena for supremacy. However, during his rookie year, The Rock’s path to The Show of Shows was paved in gold. Nearly three months after his debut, the rookie Superstar found himself challenging Hunter Hearst-Helmsley for the Intercontinental Title on Raw. The confident champion thought he was in for an easy night, taking a little extra time to taunt his downed opponent late in the match. When the future Cerebral Assassin went to hit The Rock with the Pedigree, The People’s Champion rolled him up for a three-count to capture his first of many championships and set off one of WWE's fiercest rivalries.

Feb. 14, 1999
Big Show debuts in surprising fashion

One would imagine it to be difficult for a 7-foot, 400-plus-pound Superstar to hide anywhere. But, Big Show managed to hide under a WWE ring until the moment was right to announce his arrival. That moment came at St. Valentine’s Day Massacre in 1999, when “Stone Cold” Steve Austin and Mr. McMahon attempted to settle their bitter rivalry in a Steel Cage Match. The two were in the midst of a vicious battle when a hole was torn through the canvas and Big Show emerged, shocking the WWE Universe. The World’s Largest Athlete came to the aid of Mr. McMahon, manhandling The Texas Rattlesnake. However, Show used a little too much of his massive strength that night. As he tossed Austin through the cage, he cost the WWE Chairman the match and ensured that their rivalry would last even longer.

Feb. 15, 2004
Eddie Guerrero wins the WWE Championship

Despite being one of WWE’s most popular Superstars, sports-entertainment’s top prize had eluded Eddie Guerrero for much of his career. Latino Heat was at the top of his game in 2004 and earned a title opportunity against the monstrous Brock Lesnar at No Way Out 2004. The future WWE Hall of Famer seemed to be outmatched by the powerful champion, but a king-sized spear from Goldberg to Lesnar opened the door for the crafty challenger. Guerrero took advantage of Lesnar introducing the championship into the match, reversing the champion’s F-5 into a DDT onto the title. Latino Heat took flight, crashing down on Lesnar with his trademark Frog Splash while the WWE Universe went into a frenzy, watching Guerrero capture his first and only WWE Title.
 
Feb. 15, 2004
Eddie Guerrero wins the WWE Championship

Despite being one of WWE’s most popular Superstars, sports-entertainment’s top prize had eluded Eddie Guerrero for much of his career. Latino Heat was at the top of his game in 2004 and earned a title opportunity against the monstrous Brock Lesnar at No Way Out 2004. The future WWE Hall of Famer seemed to be outmatched by the powerful champion, but a king-sized spear from Goldberg to Lesnar opened the door for the crafty challenger. Guerrero took advantage of Lesnar introducing the championship into the match, reversing the champion’s F-5 into a DDT onto the title. Latino Heat took flight, crashing down on Lesnar with his trademark Frog Splash while the WWE Universe went into a frenzy, watching Guerrero capture his first and only WWE Title.

C'MON EDDIE! YOU CAN DO IT! YES! EDDIE GUERRERO IS CHAMPION!!!
 
Feb. 15, 2004
Eddie Guerrero wins the WWE Championship

Despite being one of WWE’s most popular Superstars, sports-entertainment’s top prize had eluded Eddie Guerrero for much of his career. Latino Heat was at the top of his game in 2004 and earned a title opportunity against the monstrous Brock Lesnar at No Way Out 2004. The future WWE Hall of Famer seemed to be outmatched by the powerful champion, but a king-sized spear from Goldberg to Lesnar opened the door for the crafty challenger. Guerrero took advantage of Lesnar introducing the championship into the match, reversing the champion’s F-5 into a DDT onto the title. Latino Heat took flight, crashing down on Lesnar with his trademark Frog Splash while the WWE Universe went into a frenzy, watching Guerrero capture his first and only WWE Title.
http://youtu.be/dkx-p_JpYyk

Guess that's why WWE uploaded this match recently.
 
Well, looks like Natalya's ruined now.

-- An angle took place on Friday's SmackDown in which it was suggested that Natalya had accidentally farted during a backstage confrontation with Aksana and SmackDown General Manager Theodore Long. According to both F4WOnline.com and PWInsider.com, it was not a one time occurence as WWE will be continuing the foible going forward with more comedic vignettes.
 
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