Guess who’s back…back again…Mullet’s back…tell a friend.
Like I mentioned during the last recap, just because the weekly diary process became to be too difficult didn’t mean I wasn’t continuing my research and work as the most unsung wrestling historian. At my own pace, I’ve continued to plug away at watching PPVs and jotting down my thoughts. I’ve also continued to track all of the categories that comprise these Flairiods (the period of 16 shows to recap named after the Nature Boy and a very dated Bill Simmons idea). If it were any other time period in wrestling history, I honestly don’t know if I’d have kept the work up like I have.
But I have kept the work up because South Park is the coolest thing, Monica Lewinsky is the most famous name in America and Titanic destroyed all the records. Oh yeah, and wrestling is the hottest thing on TV and the Monday Night Wars have given us the biggest boom period in wrestling (until arguably today?) Who was at the top of the industry and who was riding the popularity wave when they really shouldn’t have been? It’s the Eleventh Flairiod!
Here are my Top 5 Overall MVPs for the Eleventh Flairiod
1. The Rock- It was going to take a special kind of talent to unseat Steve Austin from his perch as the overall MVP like he’s been the past four Flairiods. Go figure it would be his most famous rival. Every single show is a new apex for the People’s Champ as he finds new catchphrases, different ways to grow the hated or beloved character and continues to develop into the underrated in-ring worker that he is. He ties Shawn Michaels’ record for most MVPs in the Flairiod (four) and did it all consecutively. I love the scent of Dwayne Johnson and probably will for quite some time. (Ranked as number 2 overall MVP in Flairiod #10)
2. Chris Jericho- Very much WCW’s version of The Rock in terms of trajectory, crowd reaction and match quality, the future Y2J is far and away the best thing on a sinking ship that he will soon abandon. (Ranked as number 3 disappointment in Flairiod #8)
3. Steve Austin- This is by no means an indication that Stone Cold has slipped since climbing to the top. Others are just stepping up without the massive pressure the Rattlesnake has. He’s still massively over, delivering in big matches and providing moment after moment with his truly once in a generation connection with the audience. In other words, he still gets a big “OH HELL YEAH” from me. (Ranked as number 1 overall MVP in Flairiod #7, #8, #9 and #10, number 5 overall MVP in Flairiod #4 and number 5 disappointment in Flairiod #3)
4. Mankind- The man was thrown off of Hell in a Cell! Of course he’s an overall MVP! Beyond that, Mick Foley laid the groundwork for the sympathetic and oblivious babyface on two different occasions during this time frame. He has earned pulling a sock out of his pants for the biggest pop. (Ranked as number 3 overall MVP in Flairiod #4 and #8 and number 2 uncrowned MVP in Flairiod #3)
5. Jim Ross- This spot almost went to DDP, but I decided to go with the voice of the Attitude Era. When JR is on, he makes bad shows passable and good shows instantly iconic. He keeps Jerry Lawler (mostly) in check and puts over every single person on screen in a way unlike anybody else. He should have been a boomer sooner, but he had to learn and tell stories! (Ranked as number 4 overall MVP in Flairiod #10, number 1 disappointment in Flairiod #2 and number 4 overall MVP in Flairiod #8)
Here are my Top 5 Overall LVPs for the Eleventh Flairiod
1. Mark Henry- He’s beginning to show his personality with Sexual Chocolate, but I’m sad that he won’t show any sort of in-ring prowess for another 10+ years. He’s a lumbering liability every time he gets into the ring. (Ranked as number 3 overall LVP in Flairiod #10 and number 4 uncrowned LVP in Flairiod #8)
2. Michael Cole- Everyone is enjoying the Michael Cole renaissance in 2024, but let’s stop and remember how his career started: awful voiceovers, poorly conducted interviews and a sense that he’s in way over his head. Did Vince have his ear THIS early?!?! (First Flairiod appearance)
3. Vader- This is truly a sad end for the greatest big man in this project’s history, but it isn’t totally unearned. The Mastodon has grown to the size of one and seems to have the technical capabilities and conditioning of an extinct dinosaur, too. (Ranked as number 4 overall MVP in Flairiod #4 and #6, number 2 overall MVP in Flairiod #5 and number 3 disappointment in Flairiod #9)
4. Tammy Lynn Sytch- A fall from grace that will only be rivaled by her own real-life fall 25 years later. The former Sunny is seemingly on all of the sauces in ECW and distracting in about ten different ways. (Ranked as number 3 uncrowned MPV in Flairiod #7)
5. Hollywood Hogan- Oh, brother. When people talk about lazy, politically tyrannical and boring Hulk Hogan, look no further than everything he did in 1998. You can also look at an NBA court, late night talk show or epically bad Batman parody story. (Ranked as number 4 overall LVP in Flairiod #4, number 1 surprise in Flairiod #1, number 2 disappointment in Flairiod #8 and number 3 disappointment in Flairiod #3)
Here are my Top 5 Uncrowned MVPs for the Eleventh Flairiod
1. Vince McMahon- It never feels good to give this total monster credit for anything, but his early heel work is nothing short of revelatory. This is the greatest heel in wrestling history not even at his pinnacle and it’s the owner of the company and the former corniest commentator. Every promo and facial expression is gold. (Ranked as number 1 overall LVP in Flairiod #8 and number 5 overall LVP in Flairiod #9)
2. Kanyon- It turns out taking the skeleton mask off didn’t hurt the Innovator of Offense at all. In fact, getting his in-ring creativity mixed with some good character work has actually made me ask “Who Betta” much earlier than I anticipated. (Ranked as number 1 surprise in Flairiod #9)
3. Juventud Guerrera- It’s not even an argument during this time frame: Juvi was the best cruiserweight in the world and had a really cool connection with the fans after he lost his mask. I’m sad they have already begun to fuck it up, but the Juice sure was loose in 1998. (First Flairiod appearance)
4. Ken Shamrock- He doesn’t feel as special as he did when he debuted last year, but that hasn’t stopped the World’s Most Dangerous Man from still bringing a crazy energy to each show and adding layers to his character once people started turning on him. (Ranked as number 4 uncrowned MVP in Flairiod #9)
5. Mike Awesome- It was only one appearance, but it left an impression that I’m looking forward to seeing again as 1999 dawns. He’s big, he’s mean, he’s athletic and he’s got the coolest fucking mullet. (First Flairiod appearance)
Here are my Top 5 Uncrowned LVPs for the Eleventh Flairiod
1. Sable- There’s no denying her beauty and her popularity. There is definitely some doubt that she should ever speak with a microphone to her lips. There’s increasing doubt that she should be an actual wrestler. The first “Diva” is definitely earning the name in more negative ways than positive ones. (First Flairiod appearance)
2. Scott Taylor- It’s a testament to this period that this lowly little crony is this high on the list for two simple tag matches where he botched a bunch of moves and felt out of place, but it is what it is. He’s certainly not too hot at the moment. (First Flairiod appearance)
3. The Giant- Look, I loved smoking cigarettes and being out of shape, too. I wasn’t wasting all the potential in the world as a true unicorn in my field like the future Big Show. I wish I could say he figures things out in the next Flairiod with his change of scenery, but we all know that isn’t eh case. (Ranked as number 5 uncrowned MVP in Flairiod #8 and number 1 disappointment in Flairiod #7)
4. Lodi- SHUT THE FUCK UP AND PUT YOUR UNFUNNY SIGNS DOWN! (First Flairiod appearance)
5. Giant Silva- When you make the Great Khali look like the Greater Khali in terms of mobility and coordination, find another profession. Thankfully, Silva does. (First Flairiod appearance)
Here are my Top 5 Surprises for the Eleventh Flairiod
1. Disco Inferno- I never want to be the one on the other side of the great collective joke that is dumping on Glenn Gilberti, but I cannot do it during this time. He was excellent in his job of being a comedic heel to the point where I felt people rooting for him in almost every situation he was put in. He busts his ass in matches, sells great and has a gimmick people connect to. You won’t find me replying to Cody on Twitter with this take, though. (First Flairiod appearance)
2. The Cat- Much like Disco Inferno, Ernest Miller is a guy who has figured out who he is and how to get TV time. His matches haven’t gotten better, but all of the dressings before and after sure have. He’s not the Greatest, but he’s pretty darn good as a lower card heel. (First Flairiod appearance)
3. Val Venis- Man, this section is filled with people now with questionable opinions and character. I hate this gray area the gimmick seems to exist in as it pertains to crowd support, but he’s certainly made the most of his reps by owning the promos and sleaze. He’s also a very good hand in the ring from a technical perspective. I’m fine saying “hello” to him at the moment and I’m not even a woman. (First Flairiod appearance)
4. Christian- Edge is definitely the guy that the Fed sees with future dollar signs, but Christian has handled the in-ring aspect of the job better on PPV, in my opinion. Plus, nobody stands in a fluffy shirt without an expression on his fact better! (First Flairiod appearance)
5. Marc Mero- I figured Mr. Sable would have handled his push down the card and constant embarrassment as the hands of his wife poorly, but I think he’s done the best heel work of his life during this stretch. He’s funny, he takes a good beating and he doesn’t overstay his welcome most of the time. Husband of the Year for this man! (Ranked as number 2 disappointment in Flairiod #7)
Here are my Top 5 Disappointments for the Tenth Flairiod
1. The Undertaker- If he’s not throwing Mick Foley off a big structure, he’s stinking the joint up with plodding matches and the most wishy-washy intentions and character. I totally get the Undertaker malaise that started in the IWC around this time. He looks like a Dead Man wrestling some times. (Ranked as number 5 overall MVP in Flairiod #8)
2. Bret Hart- I could write more words than the Hitman’s autobiography about this topic, but I’ll leave it at this: the booking was only part of the problem for Bret in WCW. This ruthless heel character just isn’t working and he’s uninteresting and bored. The Best There Was sounds about right. (Ranked as number 2 overall MVP in Flairiod # 4 and #6 and number 5 uncrowned MVP in Flairiod #3)
3. Fit Finlay- When he was the Belfast Bruiser in 1996, he was a badass. Now, he’s an older guy with a bad crew cut and absolutely no crowd interest. Maybe all of his skill was in the mullet. Call Mike Awesome, Fit! (Ranked as number 3 surprise in Flairiod #7)
4. Sting- It’s the same listless Stinger, just with more personal problems, red paint and the worst facial hair decision of all time. I cannot believe we were better off when he was just in the rafters. (Ranked as number 3 overall MVP in Flairiod #2, number 5 overall MVP in Flairiod #1 and #7 and number 1 disappointment in Flairiod #10)
5. Tracy Smothers- I miss the skinny, underappreciated workhorse from the Young Pistols. Now, we have the pudgy goon who never made it and resorts to silly dances and comedy to get any reaction. (Ranked as number 4 surprise in Flairiod #2)
Here are the rankings for the 16 PPVs in the Eleventh Flairiod:
1. Heat Wave 1998 (ranked 12th all time-MVP: Rob Van Dam, LVP: Buh Buh Ray Dudley)- This was the best ECW PPV since Barely Legal by far and a show that lived up to its reputation. Every match hit to some extent, the stories told were crystal clear and it wasn’t trying to do too much like a normal Paul E. event. It’s almost a mature show if you can believe it. The hope for the promotion feels real after this, but you’ll see it’s mostly for naught shortly.
2. SummerSlam 1998 (ranked 16th all time-MVP: The Rock, LVP: Michael Cole)- Speaking of best, this is undoubtedly the greatest SummerSlam thus far. Take away the ridiculous handicapped comedy match, this is an exciting show with classic storytelling advancements, a focus on the youth movement in the company (especially the legendary IC Title ladder match) and a molten hot crowd.
3. Survivor Series 1998 (ranked 17th all time-MVP: The Rock, LVP: Gerald Brisco)- This is Vince Russo’s swerving magnum opus. It deserves the praise that it receives and truly plays out like an epic TV drama. The surprises hit, the excitement is palpable and it’s a modern masterclass in a show-long narrative. The only thing that drags it down is a mostly underwhelming in-ring product throughout.
4. King of the Ring 1998 (ranked 25th all time-MVP: Mankind, LVP: Triple H)- New stars get elevated while one star gets immortalized and the Attitude Era feels like it’s in full, successful swing by this point. Even without Mankind’s fall, this show would be recommended because it’s a damn hoot.
5. Over the Edge 1998 (ranked 45th all time-MVP: Steve Austin, LVP: Vader)- Ring work continues to mostly be damned, but stories cook with gas and you can’t be mad at the loud, brash characters popping off the screen. The main event scene with Austin, McMahon and Foley is riveting and the undercard is brimming with guys (and girls) ready for their shot.
6. Fully Loaded (ranked 81st all time: MVP: Jim Ross, LVP: Mark Henry)- This show feels like a long version of Raw on acid, but it’s a decent enough trip. There’s nothing outstanding and a couple of stinkers, but the energy and excitement is contagious no matter what. It’s a sloppier show than usual, but it still gets results as a borderline recommendation. Shout out to Sable’s boobs, too.
7. Great American Bash 1998 (ranked 99th all time-MVP: Chavo Guerrero Jr, LVP: Reese)- The best WCW PPV of this era has an awesome first half and a tedious second half. That tedium comes from not really mattering when it’s all said and done. It’s all about getting people to watch Nitro and turning the Monday tide. It’s a shame Booker T, The Flock, the cruiserweights and the Guerreros slow down the main event scene with their four matches in 30 minutes. Plus, this show has a distracting, piss-poor crowd.
8. Halloween Havoc 1998 (ranked 111th all time-MVP: DDP, LVP: Hollywood Hogan)- Like Heat Wave, this show comes with an earned reputation. It’s got typical WCW/nWo messiness, overbooking and nonsense that ruins a solid mid-card and a surprising great main event. Pointless shit like the Nitro Girls, several heatless bouts, non-finishes and awful decisions on the dream matches added on top of the Warrior/fiasco means this one can be skipped unless you love wrestling so bad, it’s good.
9. Judgment Day (ranked 116th all time-MVP: D Lo Brown, LVP: Mark Henry)- One of those throwaway In Your House shows like the next show on the list. You’re not missing much if you skip this show because Raw will detail the next stage of the Austin/McMahon saga the next night. It drives the main story, but isn’t worth the time and wouldn’t have been worth the money back in the day. Especially with Kane and Taker shitting the main event bed.
10. Breakdown (ranked 120th all time-MVP: The Rock, LVP: Droz)- I always figured this show was awful and it’s not as bad as I was thinking, but still barely a PPV. If this was a throwaway Raw, I’m game. Instead, the undercard isn’t ready to carry a show like this and Russo’s seedy booking with a lack of focus on match quality finally rearing its ugliest head here.
11. Bash at the Beach 1998 (ranked 122nd all time-MVP: Chris Jericho, LVP: Dennis Rodman)- There is no “oomph” on this show at all. The undercard has some okay matches (naturally), but there’s nothing to save the messy, short and utterly horrendous top guns (or basketball players) from dragging the whole thing down to a level that is best described as a flagrant foul.
12. Capital Carnage (ranked 136th all time-MVP: The Rock, LVP: Al Snow)- UK only shows are glorified house shows, but those are usually fun and not redundant. I can handle low stakes, but I can’t handle lazy booking or matches. A boring, drab mess is unbecoming of Vinnie Jones’ swag and the shadow of Survivor Series.
13. World War 3 1998 (ranked 141st all time-MVP: Kidman, LVP: Stevie Raw)- The deplorable WCW train doesn’t stop at any station. True story: in my live notes for this show, I just wrote in my recap “what are we doing here?” That’s all I could handle with the nonsense booking, effort and focus. YOU DIDN’T EVEN NEED TO THROW GUYS OVER THE TOP ROPE TO ELIMINATE THEM IN THE BATTLE ROYAL!!!
14. Fall Brawl 1998 (ranked 169th all time-MVP: Saturn, LVP: Scott Hall)- We’ve reached one of three all-time bad shows during this Flairiod and it’s hard to believe it gets worse than this. No less than four bait-and-switches, preposterous and offensive stories like Scott Hall’s personal problems, a misguided focus, bad matches, uninteresting characters and a main event that kills a decade-long match with nine guys barely doing anything. I could keep going, but I have to save my vitriol for two more shows.
15. Road Wild 1998 (Ranked 170th all time-MVP: Chris Jericho, LVP: Steve McMichael)- Another all-time stinker because it’s devoid of any fun or interest at a place that hardly cares. Celebrities suck, wrestlers can’t be bothered and the product insults its audience (except the cruiserweights as usual).
16. November to Remember 1998 (ranked 173rd all time-MVP: Terry Funk, LVP: Tammy Lynn Sytch)- Absolute trash and a bottom five PPV of all time. It’s offensive in an inoffensive way that anyone would think this is wrestling that should be watched. Overbooking that make Eric Bischoff blush, wrestlers in no condition to perform (like Jake Roberts in a polo) and a lack of ability to let the audience breath in the worst way possible throughout. At one point, I wanted to stop breathing so I could stop watching the show.
Here are my Top 5 Favorite Matches for the Eleventh Flairiod
1. Triple H vs The Rock at SummerSlam
2. The Undertaker vs Mankind at King of the Ring
3. Stone Cold Steve Austin vs Dude Love at Over the Edge
4. Goldberg vs DDP at Halloween Havoc
5. Kidman vs Juventud Guerrera at World War 3
Here are my Top 5 Least Favorite Matches for the Eleventh Flairiod
1. Hollywood Hogan vs The Warrior at Halloween Havoc
2. Team WCW vs Team Hollywood vs Team Wolfpac at Fall Brawl
3. Steve McMichael vs Brian Adams at Road Wild
4. Hollywood Hogan and Dennis Rodman vs DDP and Karl Malone at Bash at the Beach
5. Too Much vs Al Snow and Head at King of the Ring
Here are the Top 5 Win Totals in Retro Diary History
1. Sting- 45
2. Hollywood Hogan- 41
3. Bret Hart- 40
4. Randy Savage and The Undertaker- 35
5. Lex Luger- 34
Here are the Top 5 Loss Totals in Retro Diary History
1. Goldust- 32
2. Arn Anderson and Mankind- 31
3. Lex Luger- 30
4. Ric Flair, Randy Savage, Bret Hart and Vader- 29
5. Meng and Scott Hall- 27
Here are the Top 5 for All-Time Favorite Matches
1. Bret Hart- 25
2. Shawn Michaels- 24
3. Ric Flair- 23
4. Steve Austin and Mankind- 18
5. British Bulldog- 15
Here are the Top 5 for All-Time Least Favorite Matches
1. Hollywood Hulk Hogan- 18
2. The Undertaker and Lex Luger- 12
3. Goldust- 9
4. Jim Duggan and the Road Warriors- 8
5. Sid, Randy Savage, Kevin Sullivan, Roddy Piper and The Warrior- 7
Here is the All-Time MVP Leaderboard
1. Steve Austin- 12
2. Bobby Heenan- 10
3. Shawn Michaels- 9
4. Ric Flair and Mankind- 7
5. Bret Hart, Jim Ross and DDP- 6
Here is the All-Time LVP Leaderboard
1. Vince McMahon and Lex Luger- 5
2. Tony Schiavone, Michael Buffer, Roddy Piper, Brutus Beefcake, Nikolai Volkoff, Bob Caudle, Mark Henry, Hollywood Hogan and Nailz- 3
Here are the Top 5 UNPROTECTED HEAD SHOT Recipients
1. Mick Foley- 71
2. Terry Funk- 46
3. Johnny Grunge- 34
4. The Sandman- 28
5. Vader- 24
Here are some of the other things I’m tracking
Billy Gunn has been a total Bitchcake 95% of the time. That’s another improvement!
Ric Flair’s top rope success rate naturally stayed at 45%.
Triple H has appeared to be THE guy 44% of the time (an increase) and done something to surprise me 59% of the time (a decrease).
The Undertaker added three Tombstones and it’s looked like death 59% of the time. Kane added one and it’s looked like death 57% of the time.
DDP has hit 29 Diamond Cutters, but Stone Cold has hit the Stunner 47 times (absolutely pulling away in this competition). Other important totals here: Mikey Whipwreck is at 7, Buh Buh Ray Dudley is at 6, Spike Dudley is at 3, Sable is at 3, Disco Inferno is at 3 and Karl Malone is at 3.
You can predict what happens with Chris Benoit 76% of the time.
Scott Hall, The Rock and Triple H joined the ‘MVP and LVP” list.
Hugh Morrus still has the worst record actively at 0-7, but Scotty Riggs is right behind him at 0-6. Goldberg has the best active record at 8-0, but Rob Van Dam and Tommy Dreamer are both undefeated up to this point on PPV as well.
As predicted, the majority of the PPVs from this Flairiod aren’t good (three of them are bottom 10 all-time at the moment), but the highs are especially high (four shows are in the top 25 all-time at the moment). That just speaks to the era in the industry-everything is getting thrown at the wall and some stuff is sticking and holding. Other stuff sucks. It’s exciting nevertheless. Nobody will forget 1998 in wrestling.
The next Flairiod brings us into 1999 and it’s a wild time. Taz ascends to the top of the ECW mountain, The Rock scrambles Mankind’s brains in front of his kids and movie cameras, WCW’s freefall continues when they return to Hogan vs Flair AGAIN, we see the premiere of a Big Show and the encore of the future Ayatollah of Rock N Rolla, some dude named Blitzkreig who rules and fucking Sid in the land of extreme. Oh, and the most controversial PPV of all time because it didn’t end when it should have.
PPV Rankings
1. WrestleMania 3
2. Royal Rumble 1992
3. Canadian Stampede
4. Spring Stampede 1994
5. Great American Bash 1996
6. Survivor Series 1987
7. Great American Bash 1989
8. WrestleMania X
9. ECW Barely Legal
10. SuperBrawl 2
11. Bash at the Beach 1996
12. Heat Wave 1998
13. SuperBrawl VII
14. Royal Rumble 1993
15. Bash at the Beach 1997
16. SummerSlam 1998
17. Survivor Series 1998
18. Survivor Series 1988
19. Starrcade 1986
20. Royal Rumble 1990
21. SuperBrawl 3
22. Chi-Town Rumble
23. WrestleMania VI
24. WrestleWar 91
25. King of the Ring 1998
26. Starrcade 1983
27. Halloween Havoc 1996
28. Starrcade 1992
29. Slamboree 1997
30. Royal Rumble 1998
31. WrestleWar 90
32. SummerSlam 91
33. Royal Rumble 1997
34. Starrcade 1988
35. Royal Rumble 1995
36. Halloween Havoc 1990
37. King of the Ring 1993
38. King of the Ring 1996
39. WrestleMania XIV
40. Royal Rumble 1996
41. WrestleMania VII
42. Survivor Series 1995
43. Souled Out 1998
44. Fall Brawl 1996
45. Over the Edge 1998
46. SuperBrawl VIII
47. Buried Alive
48. Great American Bash 1990
49. Survivor Series 1991
50. Great American Bash 95
51. World War 3 95
52. Uncensored 1997
53. WrestleMania 2
54. Great American Bash 88
55. WrestleWar 89
56. SuperBrawl I
57. Survivor Series 1996
58. SummerSlam 95
59. Survivor Series 1992
60. Survivor Series 1997
61. This Tuesday in Texas
62. WrestleWar 92
63. Fall Brawl 97
64. A Cold Day in Hell
65. Starrcade 1996
66. King of the Ring 94
67. Slamboree 95
68. Halloween Havoc 93
69. Starrcade 95
70. In Your House 2
71. Spring Stampede 1998
72. Starrcade 93
73. Mind Games
74. In Your House 1
75. Uncensored 1998
76. Survivor Series 1994
77. WrestleMania XII
78. Slamboree 1998
79. Hardcore Heaven 97
80. Great American Bash 1997
81. Fully Loaded 1998
82. The Wrestling Classic
83. Starrcade 1987
84. Beach Blast 1992
85. SummerSlam 1993
86. WrestleMania VIII
87. In Your House 5
88. Royal Rumble 1991
89. Halloween Havoc 1997
90. Good Friends, Better Enemies
91. WrestleMania 13
92. Slamboree 1994
93. One Night Only
94. SummerSlam 1988
95. SummerSlam 1989
96. Starrcade 1989
97. Survivor Series 1989
98. SummerSlam 1992
99. Great American Bash 1998
100. Slamboree 1993
101. Unforgiven-In Your House
102. No Way Out of Texas
103. SuperBrawl IV
104. Degeneration X
105. SummerSlam 1994
106. Final Four
107. Survivor Series 1990
108. Ground Zero
109. Bash at the Beach 1994
110. King of the Ring 1997
111. Halloween Havoc 1998
112. In Your House 3
113. Halloween Havoc 1989
114. Great American Bash 1992
115. Beach Blast 1993
116. Judgment Day 1998
117. Royal Rumble 1994
118. SummerSlam 1997
119. Spring Stampede 1997
120. Breakdown: In Your House
121. Starrcade 1985
122. Bash at the Beach 1998
123. Beware of Dog
124. Bunkhouse Stampede
125. The Big Event
126. Royal Rumble 1989
127. Survivor Series 1993
128. SummerSlam 1990
129. WrestleMania V
130. Badd Blood 1997
131. World War 3 96
132. Fall Brawl 1994
133. Living Dangerously 1998
134. Hog Wild 96
135. In Your House 6
136. Capital Carnage
137. Slamboree 96
138. SuperBrawl V
139. Uncensored 96
140. Fall Brawl 1995
141. World War 3 1998
142. International Incident
143. Battlebowl
144. Revenge of the Taker
145. It’s Time
146. Halloween Havoc 1992
147. Royal Rumble 1988
148. SummerSlam 1996
149. Halloween Havoc 1991
150. WrestleMania 1
151. Halloween Havoc 1994
152. SuperBrawl VI
153. Road Wild 1997
154. Bash at the Beach 1995
155. WrestleMania XI
156. Wrestlepalooza 1998
157. WrestleMania IX
158. World War 3 1997
159. Halloween Havoc 1995
160. Starrcade 1991
161. November to Remember 1997
162. Starrcade 1990
163. WrestleMania IV
164. Starrcade 1997
165. In Your House 4
166. Starrcade 1994
167. Capitol Combat
168. Starrcade 1984
169. Fall Brawl 1998
170. Road Wild 1998
171. Souled Out 1997
172. Fall Brawl 1993
173. November to Remember 1998
174. King of the Ring 1995
175. Great American Bash 1991
176. Uncensored 1995