Hogan would be willing to.....

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★Chuck Zombie★

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Despite what anyone says on the internet, that would be the biggest WM match of all time

On paper, you're right. But guess what, someone thought a Hogan/Warrior rematch was going to be awesome and look how that turned out. Everyone bought that PPV to receive a pile of shit. But the company makes money so who cares that the fans aren't going to get their money's worth.

MikeRaw said:
But it's really only worth it if Austin gets to win, because rally, we're all a little sick of Hogan.

The only way it would be anywhere near worth it would be if this happened:

Ed_Cena said:
Middle Finger, Stunner...1..2..3.. Drink Beer.....Hell Yeah.

There! Everyone wins! Hogan gets paid, Austin gets the win, the fans don't have to watch a shitfest.

What's wrong if Hogan agrees on loosing a match to Steve Austin at WrestleMania? Absolutely nothing. I mean we had Chavo vs. Kane for the ECW Championship as well.

A) Who said Chavo vs. Kane was good? Just because it happened doesn't mean we approve of it.
B)What would be "wrong" with the situation would be that HOGAN SUCKS! You wouldn't want Khali vs. Cena to headline (or be as hyped as this match would be) would you?

Slyfox696 said:
First of all, if Austin vs. Hogan doesn't happen, it doesn't happen for one reason. Because Steve Austin is scared of Hulk Hogan. This isn't even debatable now. Hogan has tried and tried and tried to get Austin in a match at Wrestlemania, and Austin wants no part of Hogan. Most likely, because he's afraid that Hogan will completely outpop him, like Hogan did to Rock. So, if Austin vs. Hogan doesn't happen, blame Austin.

More like thank Austin. And I doubt Austin is afraid of being less popular than the most popular wrestler ever. Hogan outpopping him is pretty much a given and even Austin couldn't really be surprised by it. I think the real reason Austin doesn't want anything to do with it is because he sees Hogan as the money hungry egomaniac that he is.

Slyfox696 said:
Second of all, if a match were to happen between these two, it would be completely epic. People are complaining about the match quality...you all are wrong. The match would be incredible. Everyone gushes over the piece of shit match that was Flair vs. HBK, only because of the hype/circumstance of Flair's retirement. If you thought that was a good match, then you can't POSSIBLY think that Austin vs. Hogan will not be. If it were to happen, then the match would be incredible, and anyone saying differently is wrong. Because match quality is not about a bunch of moves, it's about the story you can tell in the ring. And Hogan and Austin are two of the greatest ever at telling a story.

Well, I'll agree with one thing, I don't think Flair/HBK was as awesome as everyone thought. I've never been a Flair fan. And there towards the end he was pretty damn sloppy. Lol at you saying that the match quality for Austin/Hogan would be awesome. Austin is decent in ring and Hogan is shit. And you're right it's not all about moves. It's about ring psychology, selling, charisma, and timing. And Hogan has none with the exception of charisma....and that's all it takes to be a star obviously. What story is Hogan able to tell? How much he wants himself to be over?

Slyfox696 said:
Finally, people who are FOOLISHLY saying that they'd rather see one of these guys put over a younger star...are you nuts? I mean seriously, have you been dropped on you head several times? Why would you rather watch Austin vs. *insert random midcarder here* instead of Austin vs. Hogan, the two biggest names in wrestling history? That's completely ridiculous. Quit trying to be a "smark", and be a reasonable fan instead. Austin vs. Hogan would trump ANYTHING we've seen in wrestling before, save perhaps Hogan vs. Andre. The match would be on the most historic of levels ever, and you'd rather watch Hogan vs. *insert random dipshit here*. Ridiculous.

Lol, Hogan vs. Andre? Just because it was/is hyped to hell and back doesn't mean it was a good match. You judge matches by the popularity of the names involved and not by the quality/talent of the individuals involved. A "reasonable fan" would want to see popular names, sure, but how about some talent involved as well? I'm sure everyone would love to see matches where you would enjoy watching it all and not just the end. We're not asking for Austin vs. Bam Neely. Kennedy, M.V.P., Orton will be the ones 20 years from now you will be making posts about how epic their next Wrestlemania match will be.

Slyfox696 said:
Austin isn't going to put anyone else over. We've seen that time and again from Austin. The only thing Steve Austin wants to do is come out, relive the glory days and get paid for it. People knock Hogan all the time for the same thing they get Austin a pass on.

The difference between Austin and Hogan is that Austin ISN'T PHYSICALLY ABLE to have matches. He broke his neck. Hogan is able to regularly (as you see) and he still won't put anyone over. Hogan doesn't care about the wrestling business, he cares about money. Austin knows how the business works. And he knows the point is, when you leave, someone else should be above you.

Slyfox696 said:
I guarantee you, that when you look at the people Hogan's put over clean on his way out of the business, compared to the number Austin has put over clean, it's no comparison.

Because he didn't have creative control. When he had creative control, he flat out refused to lose to Shawn Michaels and Randy Orton, stating he'd do a rematch, but then he changes his mind and doesn't want to do rematches at all.....hmmm.

Slyfox696 said:
Hell, remember the temper tantrum Austin had and no-showed the PPV against Coach (I believe it was Taboo Tuesday/Cyber Sunday). Austin hates losing more than Hogan does, and hasn't earned half the right to do so.
That was because they were going to take J.R. off tv...and they did...and for what reason other than to piss J.R. off. Austin was justified since all WWE wanted was to mess with J.R.....they do that a lot for no reason.

Monkeystyle said:
Really? The only times I can recall Austin not wanting to put people over were the nWo's run in WWE, in which case he turned out as being right because clearly the nWo was just a flash in the pan and him losing would've meant nothing. There's Jeff Jarrett, and really who can blame him? Jarrett is one of the most boring, overrated wrestlers on the planet who only won a world titles in a company during it's dying days and one that he owns. And finally there was Brock Lesnar. I recall Vince wanting Austin to do a random job for him on Raw, and Austin balked. Personally I believe Austin when he says that he'd do it with the right build up.

Beyond that there was no one Austin refused to put over. So I'm not quite sure where you're getting your facts from. Oh yeah, your ass.

THANK YOU! I agree here. I don't know about the Lesnar one (since I wasn't able to watch most of the time he was there), but the rest I agree 100% with. I've always thought Jarrett was overrated. Nash falls in the same category as Hogan and Hall....he was released a little while later because of his alcoholism. Who'd want to put that over?

Soulpower said:
THIS! This is one of the main example people use to blast Austin. Vince wanted to have Lesnar and Austin be a throwaway match on RAW (With Lesnar winning), Austin wanted to build the match up properly, so that it would make Brock's win seem like a bigger deal.

Austin was right to walk away, because it was a stupid idea to just give away this match on free tv.

OK, with that being said, I agree with Austin.
 

Slyfox696

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Wait, you mean the one where they wanted him to lose to the Coach? Yeah, I don't blame him. And he made it clear that he wasn't going to work the event prior to it. Not on that very night.
Oh, so once again, it's ok for Austin to not put people over. As I originally said, people give Austin a pass on that which they criticize Hogan.

I'd do it too if they paid me and so would you. It's pretty much free money, I don't begrudge him that.
Then why do people begrudge Hogan when he goes out there to actually WORK for his money?

The only difference between Hogan and Austin is that Hogan actually works a match for his money, whereas Austin just comes out to bury the random midcarder of the night.

Just because it hasn't happened doesn't mean anything. At this point Austin calls his own shots and maybe Vince has asked him to wrestle, but given the fact that Austin has clearly stated he has one match left in him, I can only conclude that if one was pitched, Austin doesn't feel it was worthwhile.
So, it's OK for Austin to not do anything worthwhile, but when Hogan puts Orton over in a feud that culminates with Orton becoming World Champion a year later, that's a good reason to criticize Hogan?

Makes sense.

Tell me who Hogan has legitimately put over and be objective about it.
How about Warrior, Goldberg, Angle, and Lesnar for starters? How about guys like King Kong Bundy, Paul Orndorff, Zeus, Earthquake, Brutus Beefcake, the nWo, Sting, Lex Luger, Edge, and Orton to continue?

There is no denying that ALL of those guys benefitted from working with Hogan, either in opposition to, or with Hogan. THAT'S putting people over.

Whom has Austin put over? Who benefitted from a feud with Austin?
More like thank Austin. And I doubt Austin is afraid of being less popular than the most popular wrestler ever. Hogan outpopping him is pretty much a given and even Austin couldn't really be surprised by it. I think the real reason Austin doesn't want anything to do with it is because he sees Hogan as the money hungry egomaniac that he is.
Why should I thank Austin for being to cowardly to give wrestling the fans the biggest dream match of all time?

Lol at you saying that the match quality for Austin/Hogan would be awesome. Austin is decent in ring and Hogan is shit. And you're right it's not all about moves. It's about ring psychology, selling, charisma, and timing. And Hogan has none with the exception of charisma....and that's all it takes to be a star obviously. What story is Hogan able to tell? How much he wants himself to be over?
You MUST be joking. Hogan has more ring psychology in his little finger than 95% of guys today have in their whole body. Hogan is one of the best ever telling a story in the ring, and selling to the point of making fans support him.

I mean, people talk about the normal face Hogan match and how he always does it...what does it say about Hogan's wrestling ability when he can do the same face match for years and STILL have the fans eating out of the palm of his hand? THAT'S good workrate, and THAT'S good wrestling.

Lol, Hogan vs. Andre? Just because it was/is hyped to hell and back doesn't mean it was a good match.
Who said it was a good match? I said it was arguably the biggest match of all time...which it might no longer be if Austin vs. Hogan were to happen.

You judge matches by the popularity of the names involved and not by the quality/talent of the individuals involved. A "reasonable fan" would want to see popular names, sure, but how about some talent involved as well? I'm sure everyone would love to see matches where you would enjoy watching it all and not just the end. We're not asking for Austin vs. Bam Neely. Kennedy, M.V.P., Orton will be the ones 20 years from now you will be making posts about how epic their next Wrestlemania match will be.
And anyone who says that Hogan has no talent or ability should not be the one to gauge what a good match and talent is.

The difference between Austin and Hogan is that Austin ISN'T PHYSICALLY ABLE to have matches. He broke his neck. Hogan is able to regularly (as you see) and he still won't put anyone over. Hogan doesn't care about the wrestling business, he cares about money. Austin knows how the business works. And he knows the point is, when you leave, someone else should be above you.
1) Hogan put over Orton BIG time in their feud leading up to Summerslam a couple years back. Just because Hogan got the final decision, saying otherwise is completely stupid.

Orton had JUST got back from a 60 day suspension. He had just been made to look like Kurt Angle's bitch at ECW One Night Stand. He had been completely buried by HHH in 2004, suspensions and humiliations after...and then he entered a feud with Hogan. His feud with Hogan is when Orton was taken as a serious challenger again. Hogan even gave Orton a 1-2-3 and a "disputed" finish in their match. One year later, Orton is World Champion. Saying that Hogan didn't put Orton over, is simply ridiculous.

2) Austin broke his neck in 1997...he wrestled for 6 more years after...hardly a compelling argument.

3) Hogan worked in the business for nearly 30 years. Saying he does care about the business is completely asinine.

4) If Austin cared about putting people ahead of him, then he would do something to put someone ahead of him...which he hasn't.

Because he didn't have creative control. When he had creative control, he flat out refused to lose to Shawn Michaels and Randy Orton, stating he'd do a rematch, but then he changes his mind and doesn't want to do rematches at all.....hmmm.
You honestly think that HULK FUCKING HOGAN couldn't dictate the results of his matches back in the 90s and early 00s? That's silly. Also, HBK refused to lose to Hogan. Vince just sided with Hogan more than HBK. As far as the rematch, that's because of his knee surgery he had nearly immediately after.

But, Austin's injury from 10 years ago is worse than Hogans from a couple years ago. Once again, we give Austin a pass for that which we criticize Hogan.

That was because they were going to take J.R. off tv...and they did...and for what reason other than to piss J.R. off. Austin was justified since all WWE wanted was to mess with J.R.....they do that a lot for no reason.
So, it's OK for Austin to refuse to job, but not Hogan. Gotcha. Makes a LOT of sense.

Austin=Pass, Hogan=criticism Hypocrisy at its finest.
 
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^Hey uhh...can't you take a hint?

I'd rather see a longer feud come out of it, not just a 2 week "Raw" buildup leading up to 'Mania 25. Hold off until Summerslam, that way, there's more media exposure to it, and more anticipation that way.
 

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There's Jeff Jarrett, and really who can blame him? Jarrett is one of the most boring, overrated wrestlers on the planet who only won a world titles in a company during it's dying days and one that he owns.

#1 wrestler I hate most. Jarrett only took advantage of the company by becoming champion in those dying years. I don't even consider him overrated, he was champion of a dying company. It's like games against Cincinnati Bengals after going winless was a sure shot, it don't count! He basically fucked the passed out girls and said "I'm the man!" and he's been doin it for years. Girl meaning company, fucking meaning winning. Smart ones know what I mean.
 

★Chuck Zombie★

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Orton had JUST got back from a 60 day suspension. He had just been made to look like Kurt Angle's bitch at ECW One Night Stand. He had been completely buried by HHH in 2004, suspensions and humiliations after...and then he entered a feud with Hogan. His feud with Hogan is when Orton was taken as a serious challenger again. Hogan even gave Orton a 1-2-3 and a "disputed" finish in their match. One year later, Orton is World Champion. Saying that Hogan didn't put Orton over, is simply ridiculous.

If Hogan put Orton over by winning then how did Angle and HHH bury him by doing the same. Orton even beat Angle at the next PPV.

Oh, so once again, it's ok for Austin to not put people over. As I originally said, people give Austin a pass on that which they criticize Hogan.

So would it be ok for Hogan to lose to Mike Adamle? Honestly I wouldn't blame Hogan for passing on that either, but if you are saying not wanting to job to Michaels or Orton is the same as not wanting to job to Coach, you are out of your mind.

The only difference between Hogan and Austin is that Hogan actually works a match for his money, whereas Austin just comes out to bury the random midcarder of the night.

Really, what work did he do at Wrestlemania 21? Oh that's right, he didn't. He came out and buried the random midcarder of the night. Or the RAW 15th Anniversary...same thing.

So, it's OK for Austin to not do anything worthwhile, but when Hogan puts Orton over in a feud that culminates with Orton becoming World Champion a year later, that's a good reason to criticize Hogan?

Makes sense.

Again, Hogan didn't put Orton over. Hogan went in got his win, then left. Bailed on the rematch like he did with Michaels claiming knee problems both times (which is why he should have lost first, won second. You're right, Orton did almost get a win, but after that Hogan just pretty much got up like nothing happened and won.....that's burying.

2) Austin broke his neck in 1997...he wrestled for 6 more years after...hardly a compelling argument.

He broke his neck again in 99. Which led to long term pain. That's a big injury to overcome, and wrestling for 4 more years didn't make it any better.

3) Hogan worked in the business for nearly 30 years. Saying he does care about the business is completely asinine.
Hogan worked where he could make money. He had a great body and was offered money. Tell how does having Bret Hart drop the title to Yokozuna, then Hogan drop the title to Hogan 2 minutes later help the business? Well, by your logic that probably put Hart over more than all 3 of them. And look at Bash At The Beach 2001. Instead of doing what was best for the business by making a new star in Jarrett (that's a different argument there) he wanted the title. Hogan doesn't care about the business, he cares about money. Saying he cares is like saying The Rock cares about Hollywood while he makes shitty movies just for the money.

Hogan is one of the best ever telling a story in the ring, and selling to the point of making fans support him.
Again, that was his charisma. Selling? Please, one of his signatures was NOT selling.

I mean, people talk about the normal face Hogan match and how he always does it...what does it say about Hogan's wrestling ability when he can do the same face match for years and STILL have the fans eating out of the palm of his hand? THAT'S good workrate, and THAT'S good wrestling.
No, that's popularity. John Cena has just as charismatic as Hogan but can wrestle way better than Hogan, he BLOWS Hogan out of the water. And he cares about the business. THAT'S great workrate. Not, "hey, my name is worth money, pay me for shitty wrestling."

Who said it was a good match? I said it was arguably the biggest match of all time...which it might no longer be if Austin vs. Hogan were to happen.
And that's my point exactly, a horrible match is probably the biggest match ever....why? Because WWE hypes it? That's all it had was hype.

And anyone who says that Hogan has no talent or ability should not be the one to gauge what a good match and talent is.
This coming from a Warrior and Hogan fan....ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!!!!

You honestly think that HULK FUCKING HOGAN couldn't dictate the results of his matches back in the 90s and early 00s? That's silly. Also, HBK refused to lose to Hogan. Vince just sided with Hogan more than HBK. As far as the rematch, that's because of his knee surgery he had nearly immediately after.
In the early 2000s, no. I'm pretty sure being a tag team champion hurt his pride. The early 90's it was obvious....he refused to lose clean to Undertaker. He was able to talk Vince into having him win the title at WM9 in a 2 minute match from someone who had JUST won the match. If HBK refused to lose, then why did he lose? He may not have wanted to, but Hogan had a clause in his contract stating that he could choose what he wanted. Vince didn't side with Hogan, Vince COULDN'T side with Shawn. It was either Hogan win or the WWE was in breach. The decision was ALL Hogan's, and he didn't make the right one.

But, Austin's injury from 10 years ago is worse than Hogans from a couple years ago. Once again, we give Austin a pass for that which we criticize Hogan.
Neck injury>knee injury. Austin's prevents him from working well. Hogan's does too. The difference, Austin knows he can't put on a good match, so he doesn't want to put on a match at all. There's no point in having a "big match" if it's going to suck.


NinoBrown said:
#1 wrestler I hate most. Jarrett only took advantage of the company by becoming champion in those dying years. I don't even consider him overrated, he was champion of a dying company. It's like games against Cincinnati Bengals after going winless was a sure shot, it don't count! He basically fucked the passed out girls and said "I'm the man!" and he's been doin it for years. Girl meaning company, fucking meaning winning. Smart ones know what I mean.

Lol....that is genius. Especially the bold part.
 

The Rated R CMStar

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I don't feel like going into Slyfox's entire posts. I might do so later, but just the fact that he credits Randy Orton jobbing to Hogan at Summerslam 06 the fact that Orton won the belt at No Mercy 2007.

By that logic, John Cena became the champion at WM21 thanks to Chris Jericho jobbing to him at Vengeance 2003.
 

Quintastic One

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No the argument be more like claiming that John Cena won the title in wrestlemania 21 because he lost to Brock Lesnar on an episode of Smackdown. lol

All in all I am pretty sure without arguing post for post that MS and Chuck Zombie have totally ripped apart Sly's argument. Here's Fox's two biggest arguments against Austin.

1) He didn't job to The Coach. Wow, the very fact that he tries to defend this position proves he is no qualified to argue about this subject.

and 2) That Austin refuses to job to anyone, also citing Brock Lesnar on a throwaway match on Raw. They gave The Rock a full two months of build up for his loss to Lesnar, I think Austin deserved the same. Also, Austin hasn't had a match, other than the bs call for him to lose to Coach, since 2003. Where he beat Eric Bischoff, and lost to The Rock at Wrestlemania 19. His last official match with the company he put OVER The Rock. In 2002, he beat Ric Flair and Big Show, but also lost to Undertaker in a #1 Contenders match and lost the the NWO after Big Show joined that group. Other notable matches in 2002 were where he defeated Scott Hall at wrestlemania, but lost to Chris Jericho in a title unification match a month prior he also put over Big Bossman and Booker T in a handicap and Booker T again in a first blood match in 2001, putting over Jericho twice in 2001, Jesus Christ man do I have to cite every single match that he has put somebody over for the past ten years to show you that your argument is shit?

Steve Austin has put over just as many people as Hulk Hogan. I am the first to admit that I am a HUGE Hulk Hogan mark, I love the guy, he's my personal hero, and I will never call him a shitty wrestler. But to claim that Steve Austin is not a class act and capable of putting people over as well, which I have just beautifully proven false from you, is assinine. So STFU because you obviously have no clue what your talking about when it comes to anything involved with wrestling.
 

Slyfox696

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I'd rather see a longer feud come out of it, not just a 2 week "Raw" buildup leading up to 'Mania 25. Hold off until Summerslam, that way, there's more media exposure to it, and more anticipation that way.
If they were to start the feud right now, it would be more than enough time for an incredible feud at Wrestlemania.

The feud sells itself, there's not a lot that needs to be done to build it.

If Hogan put Orton over by winning then how did Angle and HHH bury him by doing the same. Orton even beat Angle at the next PPV.
It's the way in which the feud/match plays out.

With Hogan, Orton was a serious challenger, and a serious player in the feud. There's basically NO ONE who will dispute Triple H's burial of Orton, not even the die hard Triple H fans. Most people know that the Orton face turn and feud against Triple H was very poorly done. Similarly, have you seen the Orton match against Angle? Orton was made to look like a bitch. Angle was literally bitch slapping him in the ring. Orton was nothing more than a jobber in his match against Angle.

However, his feud against Hogan is what set Orton up again as a top rate bad guy. It's where Orton was finally getting his heat back, and was finally being considered a true top heel.

That's the difference. It's not just win/lose, it's how the feud progresses. Putting someone over is completely different than losing to someone. You can put someone over, without losing to them.

So would it be ok for Hogan to lose to Mike Adamle? Honestly I wouldn't blame Hogan for passing on that either, but if you are saying not wanting to job to Michaels or Orton is the same as not wanting to job to Coach, you are out of your mind.
You're dealing in a hypothetical, not a fact. The fact is that Austin agreed to participate in Taboo Tuesday, and then backed out when he found out he wasn't going to win. He refused to put someone over.

And, it IS a completely different deal with Michaels and Orton. It mades more sense for Hogan to go over Michaels, and Orton hadn't earned the right, at the time, to go over Hogan. If the match were to happen NOW, then I would agree Orton should be put over Hogan. But, at the time, Orton wasn't deserving of being put over the greatest in the history of wrestling.

And, from a financial standpoint (in both Hogan's and Vince's eyes), it made more sense for Hogan to win than Michaels. Michaels' drawing power, at this stage of his career, is not going to change, as long as he's a regular member of the WWE, and especially losing to the greatest wrestler in the history of wrestling. However, Hogan's could. See Mick Foley and Ric Flair as proof of that. It makes much more sense to preserve Hogan's still significant drawing power, and the risk of losing nothing from HBK's.

Thus, Hogan going over in both of those situations made sense.

Really, what work did he do at Wrestlemania 21? Oh that's right, he didn't. He came out and buried the random midcarder of the night. Or the RAW 15th Anniversary...same thing.
He did nothing at 21...but his actions at WM 21, built to the match at Backlash 2005, where it was HBK and Hogan vs. Hassan and Davairi, which then led to the mega matchup at Summerslam. So, it still served a purpose.

But, when was the last time we saw ANYTHING from Austin serve a purpose? It's just the same thing everytime...finger, Stunner, beers, and another undercard worker not getting put over.

Again, Hogan didn't put Orton over. Hogan went in got his win, then left. Bailed on the rematch like he did with Michaels claiming knee problems both times (which is why he should have lost first, won second. You're right, Orton did almost get a win, but after that Hogan just pretty much got up like nothing happened and won.....that's burying.
Not even close, and I explained this above.

He broke his neck again in 99. Which led to long term pain. That's a big injury to overcome, and wrestling for 4 more years didn't make it any better.
The injury occurred in '97, and he had surgery in '99, if memory serves correctly. But, even if you are correct, that's four years of wrestling after his surgery.

So, my original point remains intact.

Hogan worked where he could make money.
As do all professional wrestlers. What's your point.

He had a great body and was offered money. Tell how does having Bret Hart drop the title to Yokozuna, then Hogan drop the title to Hogan 2 minutes later help the business?
Ask Vince McMahon, he's the one who made the decision.

And, how does it help the business? Hulk Hogan was STILL the biggest draw in wrestling, and Vince was hoping that another Hogan reign would help pull the company upwards, at a time the WWF needed a good role model and some good business. Did it pay off? No, but you can't say that it wasn't a logical idea.

And, I'll tell you how else it helped the business. Heels never carry a promotion. Faces are what draw. Even in the old NWA, it was the face of the territory that drew, Flair just went around to each promotion as the bad guy, so the good guy would have someone to compete against. And so, having Yokozuna win (by cheating, no less), just to get pinned by Hogan, does NOTHING bad to Yokozuna, AND it saves Bret Hart from getting pinned by Hulk Hogan.

Thus, you preserve Hart's reputation, as he was cheated out of the title and didn't lose to Hogan, and you put the belt on the biggest draw in wrestling history. It's not like it was a bad idea. It just didn't work.

Well, by your logic that probably put Hart over more than all 3 of them. And look at Bash At The Beach 2001. Instead of doing what was best for the business by making a new star in Jarrett (that's a different argument there) he wanted the title.
Length of time has nothing to do with amount of care for the business. But, no one is going to wrestle for 30 years if they don't care about the business. It's a completely asinine thing to say. Brock Lesnar and Bobby Lashley didn't care about the business, and they left. And they came along in a time that was MUCH better for workers than when Hogan started.

Hogan doesn't care about the business, he cares about money.
Hogan does care about the business, he is just smart enough to make the money while he does it. That's like saying that Michael Jordan didn't care about basketball, just the money. It's ridiculous.

Again, that was his charisma. Selling? Please, one of his signatures was NOT selling.
Do you understand what charisma is? Charisma is your ability to connect with the crowd. Hogan had some of the greatest charisma in the history of the world. But, so did Bobby Heenan, and he wasn't a top drawing wrestler. Charisma and working ability are two entirely separate things.

Professional wrestling is all about "working" the crowd. It's about selling the illusion of the real fight, and making the crowd believe that what they are seeing could actually be real. It's about connecting with the crowd, and drawing them in to the story you are trying to tell in the ring. And Hogan did that better than anyone. You can't tell me, if you watch a Hogan match, that almost every fan in the audience is intently watching his match, and cheering/booing his actions. You can't tell me that, because it's not true. You can't tell me that people didn't want to watch Hogan work, because that is certainly untrue as he was the best draw in the history of wrestling.

At the end of the day, anyone with a basic understanding of the way wrestling REALLY works, understands that Hogan was a very good professional wrestler.

As far as the selling thing goes, yes, he did the "Hulk Up" routine. But, one of the reasons the hulking up worked so well, is because he sold the beatdown so well. I mean, if you never believed that Hogan was about to get beaten, would you have cared about him hulking up? The answer is no. People came unglued, because there was ALWAYS that shadow of a doubt that Hogan might actually get beaten. And that is a sign of good storytelling and good selling.

No, that's popularity. John Cena has just as charismatic as Hogan but can wrestle way better than Hogan, he BLOWS Hogan out of the water. And he cares about the business. THAT'S great workrate. Not, "hey, my name is worth money, pay me for shitty wrestling."
Bad wrestlers don't become popular, because bad wrestlers don't know how to make the fans care about them. The only way you can make fans care about you is by being a good wrestler. Whether they boo you or cheer you, they do so because you, the wrestler, have made your matches something they are emotionally involved in. And, if you're emotionally involved in that wrestler, you're going to pay to watch him. And if you're paying to watch a wrestler, so you can become emotionally involved in his work, then that man is a good wrestler.

Professional wrestlers are actors. And just like any other actor, the best performance is done by the guy who you believe in the most. And Hogan was the master of making people believe in him.

And that's my point exactly, a horrible match is probably the biggest match ever....why? Because WWE hypes it? That's all it had was hype.
And thus, Austin vs. Hogan would be on track to become the NEW biggest match of all time.

I don't see what your point is. My point is that Hogan vs. Austin could become the biggest match of all time if it were to happen, and that Hogan vs. Andre could very well currently be the biggest match of all time. No where did I mention quality, just the magnitude of the match.

This coming from a Warrior and Hogan fan....ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!!!!
Yes, a fan of the guy who was the biggest draw in wrestling history, and a fan of one of the few guys to beat the biggest draw in wrestling history clean in the middle of the ring.

I find it ironic you're mocking me for thinking that two of the biggest name wrestlers in history were good at what they do. Tell me, what is your opinion on a good wrestler? Someone who works for peanuts at the local flea market in 97 minute matches that no one cares about?

In the early 2000s, no. I'm pretty sure being a tag team champion hurt his pride.
You don't think that Hulk Hogan could have just quit if he didn't want to do that stuff? That's ridiculous. Hulk Hogan is arguably the richest wrestler in history. He has mainstream name and as we've seen, can make a good life for himself on TV. Hulk Hogan didn't need the money, he could have pulled a Steve Austin and gone home at anytime.

But, he didn't. He stayed around, and put guys over, guys like Lesnar and Angle and Edge. But, people don't want to talk about that. No, we'd rather make excuses for why Austin can't put over guys, and ignore all the guys Hogan has put over.

The early 90's it was obvious....he refused to lose clean to Undertaker.
But, he still put him over in a big way.

He was able to talk Vince into having him win the title at WM9 in a 2 minute match from someone who had JUST won the match.
I think it was Triple H who said that NO ONE makes Vince McMahon do something he doesn't want to do.

And I've already explained how it wasn't necessarily a bad idea to try.

If HBK refused to lose, then why did he lose?
Because Vince wanted Hogan to win more than he wanted HBK. For the money reasoning I've already explained.

He may not have wanted to, but Hogan had a clause in his contract stating that he could choose what he wanted. Vince didn't side with Hogan, Vince COULDN'T side with Shawn. It was either Hogan win or the WWE was in breach. The decision was ALL Hogan's, and he didn't make the right one.
Sure Vince could have sided with Shawn. He just didn't. The WWE could have just fired Hogan, and not payed him a dime, like they do to workers all the time. But, Vince didn't. He wanted the Hogan payday, and so he took Hogan's side over Shawn's. Why? Because it was good financial decision.

Neck injury>knee injury. Austin's prevents him from working well. Hogan's does too. The difference, Austin knows he can't put on a good match, so he doesn't want to put on a match at all. There's no point in having a "big match" if it's going to suck.
But, it wouldn't suck. It would be epic. In this match, you'd have two guys who know how to work the crowd, and who know how to sell a story in the match. You have two guys who know how to connect with the fans.

It'd be like Wrestlemania 18, except on a bigger scale.


I don't feel like going into Slyfox's entire posts. I might do so later, but just the fact that he credits Randy Orton jobbing to Hogan at Summerslam 06 the fact that Orton won the belt at No Mercy 2007.

By that logic, John Cena became the champion at WM21 thanks to Chris Jericho jobbing to him at Vengeance 2003.
Orton didn't job to Hogan though. The problem here is that people don't understand the wrestling terms they use.

Jobbing is when you go out to the ring, for the sole intention of making your opponent look good. That's not what happened in Hogan vs. Orton. Orton looked VERY good in his feud AND match with Hogan. Orton one-upped Hogan at just about every turn, even getting the disputed 1-2-3 against Hogan. Orton was VERY close to beating the greatest of all time.

That's not jobbing, that's credibility.

1) He didn't job to The Coach. Wow, the very fact that he tries to defend this position proves he is no qualified to argue about this subject.
No, my position is that people complain when Hogan doesn't lose matches, but when Austin doesn't, then it's ok.

And, I think I have proven my point.

and 2) That Austin refuses to job to anyone, also citing Brock Lesnar on a throwaway match on Raw.
I never said anything about Brock Lesnar. That was someone else who brought that up. As usual, your reading comprehension has failed you.

I think Austin deserved the same.
Vince McMahon didn't. Just like Vince didn't think that HBK or Orton should go over Hogan.

But, I guess that's different right? Could you be any more blind to truth?

His last official match with the company he put OVER The Rock.
LOL, no he didn't.

By Wrestlemania 19, Rock was the bigger name of the two. He didn't put over Rock, he just lost to him. Rock was already more over than Austin.

Once again, people use terms, they don't truly understand.

Steve Austin has put over just as many people as Hulk Hogan.
Which means that Hulk Hogan has put over just as many people as Steve Austin, right? In your mind, this sentence says that Hogan has put over as many people as Austin, since Austin has put over as many as Hogan.

Thus, trying to say that Hogan hasn't put over people is, as you put it, "assinine" [sic].

What's funny is that in your attempt to mock me, you actually proved my point. So, I thank you for that. Never let it be said that incompetence still can't serve a purpose.
 

★Chuck Zombie★

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That's the difference. It's not just win/lose, it's how the feud progresses. Putting someone over is completely different than losing to someone. You can put someone over, without losing to them.
I do agree with that, but look how the feud progressed. Orton sneak attacks Hogan, then Hogan beats him up 2 weeks later, then Hogan beat up a fake Hogan another 2 weeks later with Orton pretty much making fun of Hogan in between. Orton looked weak the entire time and also at Summerslam. Again, he was not put over.
However, his feud against Hogan is what set Orton up again as a top rate bad guy. It's where Orton was finally getting his heat back, and was finally being considered a true top heel.

He was part of the main event at Wrestlemania 22, continued a specific feud with Angle, then did the thing with Hogan. That's a damn good incline. What happened after that though? He was a top bad guy? Feuding with Carlito is on top? Losing at tag team match against Carlito and Super Crazy is on top? Orton was in a bad spot after the Hogan feud until the Rated RKO vs. DX feud. THAT was what put him over.

You're dealing in a hypothetical, not a fact. The fact is that Austin agreed to participate in Taboo Tuesday, and then backed out when he found out he wasn't going to win. He refused to put someone over.
Again it was the circumstances of the situation that caused him to back out, not just that he would lose.

And, it IS a completely different deal with Michaels and Orton. It mades more sense for Hogan to go over Michaels, and Orton hadn't earned the right, at the time, to go over Hogan. If the match were to happen NOW, then I would agree Orton should be put over Hogan. But, at the time, Orton wasn't deserving of being put over the greatest in the history of wrestling.
A) Orton did deserve it. He was on a great track until then.
B) Coach did deserve to go over? COACH? The commentator? He deserved to beat Austin?

And, from a financial standpoint (in both Hogan's and Vince's eyes), it made more sense for Hogan to win than Michaels. Michaels' drawing power, at this stage of his career, is not going to change, as long as he's a regular member of the WWE, and especially losing to the greatest wrestler in the history of wrestling. However, Hogan's could. See Mick Foley and Ric Flair as proof of that. It makes much more sense to preserve Hogan's still significant drawing power, and the risk of losing nothing from HBK's.
It made NO sense for Hogan to go over Michaels seeing as Michaels was still in the business and had more to give. So the even bigger boost in credibility would have helped everyone. The only thing that would have made sense about Hogan going over would be if he put over the next person....which he didn't do. Michale's drawing power wouldn't have changed, you're right, but as long as didn't stick around, his wouldn't have either. The reason Flair's and Foley's dropped was because they went out there past their prime and week after week it would be hard to say "hey they've accomplished a lot, they should be on top." That only works for a little bit, then there's no one else to feud with, so instead of retiring or moving to a different company, they stuck around and got forced into to putting people over every week which when done that much hurts credibility. Losing one match a year won't hurt anything.

He did nothing at 21...but his actions at WM 21, built to the match at Backlash 2005, where it was HBK and Hogan vs. Hassan and Davairi, which then led to the mega matchup at Summerslam. So, it still served a purpose.

But, when was the last time we saw ANYTHING from Austin serve a purpose? It's just the same thing everytime...finger, Stunner, beers, and another undercard worker not getting put over.

OK, I'll give you the Wrestlemania thing, but still Hassan and Davairi were used to set up a bigger feud, which did NOTHING for them.

And I didn't say that what Austin does now is good, it's just Hogan is pretty much in the same boat, so Hogan=Pass, Austin=criticism Hypocrisy at its finest.

The injury occurred in '97, and he had surgery in '99, if memory serves correctly. But, even if you are correct, that's four years of wrestling after his surgery.

So, my original point remains intact.

He reinjured his neck in '99 when they messed up the car stunt with Rikishi. Which forced surgery. i was wrong about it being broken, but injured none the less. And my point is that once you have that many severe injuries on the same body part, you're never 100% again after that. Austin wrestling is a big risk to his health....probably in a life threatening way.

Hogan worked where he could make money.
As do all professional wrestlers. What's your point.
Wrong, most wrestlers get into wrestling because they love the business. If they were all after money, no one would spend years in the indies even after they know WWE won't call them up. No one considers pro-wrestling career source to make money unless the talent scout pretty much guarantees them they will be a top guy. Hogan wanted to get into music but his LOOK impressed people in the wrestling business.

Tell how does having Bret Hart drop the title to Yokozuna, then Hogan drop the title to Hogan 2 minutes later help the business?
Ask Vince McMahon, he's the one who made the decision.
Yeah after Hogan threatened to no show Wrestlemania.

And, how does it help the business? Hulk Hogan was STILL the biggest draw in wrestling, and Vince was hoping that another Hogan reign would help pull the company upwards, at a time the WWF needed a good role model and some good business. Did it pay off? No, but you can't say that it wasn't a logical idea.
Having Hogan as the top guy would help? He'd been the top guy for years and if people stopped watching/buying/etc. that pretty much falls on him and his staleness. That's when new stars need to be made. The logical idea would have been to keep pushing Hart.

Heels never carry a promotion. Faces are what draw. Even in the old NWA, it was the face of the territory that drew, Flair just went around to each promotion as the bad guy, so the good guy would have someone to compete against. And so, having Yokozuna win (by cheating, no less), just to get pinned by Hogan, does NOTHING bad to Yokozuna, AND it saves Bret Hart from getting pinned by Hulk Hogan.
Yoko getting squashed by Hogan did nothing to him? That's a burial. Yoko winning by cheating is fine for both him and Hart though, but Hogan pretty much erasing that does nothing good. You know what would have saved Hart from not getting pinned by Hogan.....Hogan not being involved like the original plan called for and Bret retaining the title.

Length of time has nothing to do with amount of care for the business. But, no one is going to wrestle for 30 years if they don't care about the business.
unless, like in Hogan's case, all of the promoters kiss his ass and pay him more. You'd be surprised what you'd put up with if you got paid enough to do it.

Do you understand what charisma is? Charisma is your ability to connect with the crowd. Hogan had some of the greatest charisma in the history of the world. But, so did Bobby Heenan, and he wasn't a top drawing wrestler. Charisma and working ability are two entirely separate things.
I obviously understand what Charisma is since I agree that Hogan's charisma was through the roof. But comparing Hogan to Heenan? Come on man. No matter how much Charisma one has, no one's going to buy a fat old guy as a top drawing wrestler. Hogan had Charisma and look and that's it and that's all he apparently needed.

Professional wrestling is all about "working" the crowd. It's about selling the illusion of the real fight, and making the crowd believe that what they are seeing could actually be real.
Then how is Hogan on top?

You can't tell me, if you watch a Hogan match, that almost every fan in the audience is intently watching his match, and cheering/booing his actions. You can't tell me that, because it's not true. You can't tell me that people didn't want to watch Hogan work, because that is certainly untrue as he was the best draw in the history of wrestling.
Now, I never said Hogan wasn't a draw, I'm saying that the only thing caused that was because of how much charisma he had. You ever notice that the number one thing talked about when Hogan's matches are reviewed is the energy in the building. No one talks about the match itself because it was more than likely horrible. Everything always fell on the hype of it. And I admit Hogan was GREAT at hyping something, but that was all he had.

At the end of the day, anyone with a basic understanding of the way wrestling REALLY works, understands that Hogan was a very good professional wrestler.
no, he was a very good draw. A good professional wrestler is someone who can do like you said earlier in selling the fight as real physically and emotionally. They don't have to be fast and fancy (see Big Show), but they do have to be able to act it out well, and not just in promos a la Hogan.

Bad wrestlers don't become popular, because bad wrestlers don't know how to make the fans care about them.
In this case I was referring to the technical aspect which Hogan absolutely blew at. He had to do sloppy technical holds when he was in Japan because they would have booed him out of the building despite his charisma. Nowadays, a bad wrestler won't become as popular. Look at Cena, when he was pushed to the top without being that great of a wrestler in the technical aspect, he was booed. Khali will never be a top star because even though he has GREAT presence, he has no technical ability and that is required in this day and age.

Professional wrestlers are actors. And just like any other actor, the best performance is done by the guy who you believe in the most. And Hogan was the master of making people believe in him.
Yeah, before the match. The match is just as important as the hype today. What point does the match even serve if no one cares about that when all is said and done? Why don't they just have promo championships?

I don't see what your point is. My point is that Hogan vs. Austin could become the biggest match of all time if it were to happen, and that Hogan vs. Andre could very well currently be the biggest match of all time. No where did I mention quality, just the magnitude of the match.
my point is that magnitude means nothing if the quality of what it surrounds is horrible. What satisfaction do you get out of magnitude? I'd rather not see a match where all of the moves are sloppily done. that doesn't back up the magnitude at all.

Yes, a fan of the guy who was the biggest draw in wrestling history, and a fan of one of the few guys to beat the biggest draw in wrestling history clean in the middle of the ring.

I find it ironic you're mocking me for thinking that two of the biggest name wrestlers in history were good at what they do. Tell me, what is your opinion on a good wrestler? Someone who works for peanuts at the local flea market in 97 minute matches that no one cares about?
No, I don't follow indies at all. I barely follow TNA. My idea of a good worker is someone who can make a match look real physically and emotionally, not just by the hope/doubt of the outcome. Edge, Big Show, Randy Orton, Shawn Michaels, Kurt Angle, CM Punk, AJ Styles, to name a few. Those are real, well-rounded workers that, although they all have their weaknesses, are the best in the business in my opinion. They do what they can to make it look as though that everything they did actually mattered. Something Hogan and Warrior both were pretty much horrible at.

You don't think that Hulk Hogan could have just quit if he didn't want to do that stuff? That's ridiculous. Hulk Hogan is arguably the richest wrestler in history. He has mainstream name and as we've seen, can make a good life for himself on TV. Hulk Hogan didn't need the money, he could have pulled a Steve Austin and gone home at anytime.
He doesn't need the money, then why does he still try so hard to make it. And why does he complain about how much he gets for his bonuses from WWE after matches? he could have quit, but they're giving him money, so why would he?

I think it was Triple H who said that NO ONE makes Vince McMahon do something he doesn't want to do.

And I've already explained how it wasn't necessarily a bad idea to try.
Of course when an event that's already set up and hyped is held hostage by one of the stars to get what he wants. Hogan basically said it was his way or no way, but he would take it to the last minute. It would ruin an already planned show for Vince to go against Hogan at any point.

Because Vince wanted Hogan to win more than he wanted HBK. For the money reasoning I've already explained.
No because if Hogan didn't get his way, he wouldn't do it at all. And you're right though, it was a better financial decision to let Hogan win than to uin the entire show, but it doesn't make Hogan any less of an asshole for his hostage negotiating.

But, it wouldn't suck. It would be epic. In this match, you'd have two guys who know how to work the crowd, and who know how to sell a story in the match. You have two guys who know how to connect with the fans.

It'd be like Wrestlemania 18, except on a bigger scale.
And whats praised about Wrestlemania 18? The posing after the match and the presence of it. Why does no one talk about how good the match was? Because the match itself sucked. So would Hogan vs. Austin.

 

Axis

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I've got to hop in here, but not as intensely.

Firstly, I'm going to back up Slyfox. I want to say that I see a wrestler's role as being one that creates emotion. I have said this about Flair/Michaels and I will say it about Rock/Hogan; they were both phenomenal matches. One cannot say, "if you ignore the emotion in the match, it sucked," for wrestling is ALL ABOUT emotion. Professional wrestling is not all about what goes on from bell to bell. It is a network of stories that work together to make a product. What goes on in the ring is obviously a HUGE part of that story, however it is not the only part. I judge matches on how well they contribute to the underlying story being told. Therefore I would agree with Chuck's list of great wrestlers, but I would have to add even the IWC taboo workers like Cena and Hogan.

However, I'm going to back up Chuck in my next point. Hogan is a douche bag. After his feud with Hogan, Orton was so out of steam that he was in the Intercontinental scene. He and Carlito were feuding, and they were both highly involved in the six-man (I want to say those were Carlito, Orton, Nitro, Benjamin, Super Crazy, and Chris Masters, but I could be wrong) program around the IC title. Like Chuck said, it wasn't until DX vs Rated RKO that Orton sprung back into action.

However, I want to ignore Yokozuna, Shawn Michaels, and Randy Orton for a moment. You want to talk about using politics to destroy a good moment? Starrcade 1997. Sting had FINALLY earned a shot at the WCW Championship after a full year of seeking retribution. We get to the biggest match-up in years, and it's a dirty finish, because Hogan didn't want to look weak. Sure, Sting one. But, Slyfox, as you said, putting somebody over is not about the win or loss. In this case, Sting won, but he certainly did not get the effects that he would and should have gotten with a clean win.
 

Slyfox696

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I do agree with that, but look how the feud progressed. Orton sneak attacks Hogan, then Hogan beats him up 2 weeks later, then Hogan beat up a fake Hogan another 2 weeks later with Orton pretty much making fun of Hogan in between. Orton looked weak the entire time and also at Summerslam. Again, he was not put over.
You're saying that feud made Orton look weak? I beg to differ greatly.

He was put in a feud with the biggest name of all-time, went the sleazy route of hitting on Hogan's daughter, beat down Hogan, and nearly got the 1-2-3. That's being put over.

He was part of the main event at Wrestlemania 22
Then got suspended for 60 days.

continued a specific feud with Angle
Which culminated in a match at One Night Stand where he was made to look like Angle's bitch.

then did the thing with Hogan. That's a damn good incline.
Being suspended and looking like Angle's bitch is a good incline? I will agree with Hogan being a good incline.

Again it was the circumstances of the situation that caused him to back out, not just that he would lose.
What circumstances? The only circumstance was that Austin was going to lose. That WAS the circumstance.

A) Orton did deserve it. He was on a great track until then.
Being suspended for 60 days and looking like Angle's bitch is a great track? Obviously we differ in opinion on that.

B) Coach did deserve to go over? COACH? The commentator? He deserved to beat Austin?
So, it's OK for Austin to not lose when his opponent isn't worthy of it, but not Hogan?

You are just proving my point. You're excusing that which you criticize Hogan for.

It made NO sense for Hogan to go over Michaels seeing as Michaels was still in the business and had more to give. So the even bigger boost in credibility would have helped everyone.
Except, like I said, Michaels drawing ability isn't going to increase with a win over Hogan, nor will it decrease with a loss to the greatest in history.

However, like Foley and Flair, Hogan's drawing ability CAN be affected with a loss.

The reason Flair's and Foley's dropped was because they went out there past their prime and week after week it would be hard to say "hey they've accomplished a lot, they should be on top." That only works for a little bit, then there's no one else to feud with, so instead of retiring or moving to a different company, they stuck around and got forced into to putting people over every week which when done that much hurts credibility. Losing one match a year won't hurt anything.
Foley and Flair lost credibility because beating them no longer became something that was special.

Beating Hogan is still special.

OK, I'll give you the Wrestlemania thing, but still Hassan and Davairi were used to set up a bigger feud, which did NOTHING for them.
Only because Hassan got kicked off TV due to the London bombings two months later.

And I didn't say that what Austin does now is good, it's just Hogan is pretty much in the same boat, so Hogan=Pass, Austin=criticism Hypocrisy at its finest.
Except that it is not the case, as Hogan's appearance at WM led to TWO separate matches, both of which payed off for the WWE.

He reinjured his neck in '99 when they messed up the car stunt with Rikishi. Which forced surgery. i was wrong about it being broken, but injured none the less. And my point is that once you have that many severe injuries on the same body part, you're never 100% again after that. Austin wrestling is a big risk to his health....probably in a life threatening way.
The car angle happened BECAUSE Austin had neck injury, if I remember correctly...and I think I do. The car angle was the convenient excuse to write him out of storylines.

Wrong, most wrestlers get into wrestling because they love the business. If they were all after money, no one would spend years in the indies even after they know WWE won't call them up. No one considers pro-wrestling career source to make money unless the talent scout pretty much guarantees them they will be a top guy. Hogan wanted to get into music but his LOOK impressed people in the wrestling business.
Most wrestlers go where the money is..in fact, almost all of them do. You can still love what you do, and want to make the most for doing it.

My Michael Jordan example from above applies here.

Yeah after Hogan threatened to no show Wrestlemania.
Source?

Having Hogan as the top guy would help? He'd been the top guy for years and if people stopped watching/buying/etc. that pretty much falls on him and his staleness. That's when new stars need to be made. The logical idea would have been to keep pushing Hart.
Hogan lost the belt at Survivor Series '91, and Wrestlemania 9 was in '93, a year and a half later.

That's a year and a half where Hogan wasn't the top guy...and business was declining.

Yoko getting squashed by Hogan did nothing to him? That's a burial. Yoko winning by cheating is fine for both him and Hart though, but Hogan pretty much erasing that does nothing good. You know what would have saved Hart from not getting pinned by Hogan.....Hogan not being involved like the original plan called for and Bret retaining the title.
No, getting beat by Hogan did nothing bad to him. Yokozuna was a "monster heel". Heel's don't carry a promotion, faces do.

unless, like in Hogan's case, all of the promoters kiss his ass and pay him more. You'd be surprised what you'd put up with if you got paid enough to do it.
Is it really your position that Hogan doesn't care about wrestling and its fans? That Hogan would spend HOURS upon HOURS every day signing autographs, going on talk shows and promoting the WWF, in addition to working matches, for something he didn't like?

Bret Hart has even said that the hours that Hogan put in for the business was incredible. You think someone who doesn't like wrestling and its fans would do that for 30 years?

I obviously understand what Charisma is since I agree that Hogan's charisma was through the roof. But comparing Hogan to Heenan? Come on man. No matter how much Charisma one has, no one's going to buy a fat old guy as a top drawing wrestler. Hogan had Charisma and look and that's it and that's all he apparently needed.
Trying to say that Hogan could keep fans on the edge of their seat for 30 years with no wrestling ability is just ridiculous.

You want to talk about wrestling ability? Hogan was the most over guy in the AWA, a wrestling company that was FAR more about "wrestling" than any promotion that we've seen in the last 30 years. Hogan was over in Japan, working with Antonio Inoki. Hogan was over in the WWF, over in the WCW...you can't tell me that you can main-event the AWA, Japan, WWF and WCW without being a good worker.

Then how is Hogan on top?
Because he did that better than anyone else.

Now, I never said Hogan wasn't a draw, I'm saying that the only thing caused that was because of how much charisma he had. You ever notice that the number one thing talked about when Hogan's matches are reviewed is the energy in the building. No one talks about the match itself because it was more than likely horrible. Everything always fell on the hype of it. And I admit Hogan was GREAT at hyping something, but that was all he had.
You can't create energy with bad matches. A good match is one that can tell a story which causes the crowd to be emotionally involved, which is why people always talk about the energy in a Hogan match.

You think there is just a magical switch Hogan has that makes crowds into his matches? Of course not. They are into them because of his ability in the ring.

no, he was a very good draw. A good professional wrestler is someone who can do like you said earlier in selling the fight as real physically and emotionally. They don't have to be fast and fancy (see Big Show), but they do have to be able to act it out well, and not just in promos a la Hogan.
Why would fans pay to see a guy who can't work? That makes no sense.

Fans pay to see guys who entertain them. And you can't entertain fans in a match with a good body and charisma. It takes ability, which Hogan had loads of.

In this case I was referring to the technical aspect which Hogan absolutely blew at. He had to do sloppy technical holds when he was in Japan because they would have booed him out of the building despite his charisma. Nowadays, a bad wrestler won't become as popular. Look at Cena, when he was pushed to the top without being that great of a wrestler in the technical aspect, he was booed. Khali will never be a top star because even though he has GREAT presence, he has no technical ability and that is required in this day and age.
But Hogan wasn't a technical wrestler. Nor should he have been. Working a technical style has ZERO to do with being a good wrestler, as you've already agreed to.

Hogan was billed as 6'6" and 303 pounds. His character was the Old-Fashioned All-American hero. A guy like that uses power moves. He uses slams and his fists. He doesn't work a technical style, that'd be silly for his character. John Wayne is the stereotypical American that so many people, especially wrestling fans in the day, cling to as ideal. The man who solves problems with his fists, not a bunch of holds, is what the American people wanted...and so that's the match Hogan worked.

And he did it so well, that people payed to watch him do it for 20+ years.

The match is just as important as the hype today.
If this is true, then how come everyone ejaculates over the HBK/Flair crapfest at Wrestlemania?

And, to insinuate that Hogan didn't put on good matches is absurd.

my point is that magnitude means nothing if the quality of what it surrounds is horrible. What satisfaction do you get out of magnitude? I'd rather not see a match where all of the moves are sloppily done. that doesn't back up the magnitude at all.
Your point has NOTHING to do with my point, which is what we were originally discussing.

If you want to talk bout the quality of a match between Hogan and Austin, we can, but that's a completely separate issue. The HYPE for Hogan vs. Austin, just like the hype for Rock vs. Hogan, would be worth the price of the PPV alone.

No, I don't follow indies at all. I barely follow TNA. My idea of a good worker is someone who can make a match look real physically and emotionally, not just by the hope/doubt of the outcome. Edge, Big Show, Randy Orton, Shawn Michaels, Kurt Angle, CM Punk, AJ Styles, to name a few. Those are real, well-rounded workers that, although they all have their weaknesses, are the best in the business in my opinion. They do what they can to make it look as though that everything they did actually mattered. Something Hogan and Warrior both were pretty much horrible at.
But, that's NOT only what makes a good worker.

A good worker is one who plays his character so well that people believe in it. A good worker is one who can play the situation and the crowd in the manner they want. A good worker is one who understands the difference between good guy and bad guy, and how to implement the match in that regard. That's why guys like Angle and Punk aren't very good. They can work a sound match, but it's not a match which applies to the situation.

The best example of this, in my opinion, is the Angle vs. Cena feud in 05/06. Angle played a TERRIBLE heel. Instead of working a slower style, in which the focus was on the babyface, Angle worked an up-tempo style, and made sure to include all of his crowd-popping, high impact moves. That's terrible heel psychology. The heel wants all the focus on the face, not himself. Compare that to AJ Styles (or even heel Hogan). His in-ring work changed drastically as a heel. Styles quit doing a lot of the higher impact moves, and changed the way he worked in the ring. Hogan in WCW as a heel, worked a much slower and more deliberate style in the ring, and usually avoided spots that the crowd might pop for him.

That's the mark of a good wrestler. Someone who fully understands his character's role in the match. And that's why Hogan was good. He sold a realistic story, knew how to play his character the way the crowd wanted, used moves that fit his character, and played the face role beautifully.

People try to separate fans from a match all the time, in judging quality of a match, but it simply cannot be done. Because the whole purpose of a match is to sell realism to fans. And the better the worker is at selling that story, selling that realism, the more the fans want to see him.

And more people wanted to see Hogan than anyone else in history.

He doesn't need the money, then why does he still try so hard to make it. And why does he complain about how much he gets for his bonuses from WWE after matches? he could have quit, but they're giving him money, so why would he?
Why does my step-father, who payed $180,000 in income taxes on the interest he earned on the money he had in the bank, continue to do seminars for thousands of dollars every weekend?

The answer is...why not? If it's something you enjoy, then why not make the money while you're at it?

Of course when an event that's already set up and hyped is held hostage by one of the stars to get what he wants. Hogan basically said it was his way or no way, but he would take it to the last minute. It would ruin an already planned show for Vince to go against Hogan at any point.
OR...

They could have just put Batista in the match...isn't that what they did at Taboo Tuesday?

No because if Hogan didn't get his way, he wouldn't do it at all.
Then why would Vince hire him, fully knowing this? I mean, it's not like Vince was forced to book the match, nor was he forced to give Hogan the control over his character.

But he did..and he chose Hogan over HBK. And it's not like the match conclusion was something that came up last minute, it was a consideration from the moment the match was booked.

And you're right though, it was a better financial decision to let Hogan win than to uin the entire show, but it doesn't make Hogan any less of an asshole for his hostage negotiating.
They could have just let Hogan walk, and inserted Batista...like they did with Austin.

But they didn't, so don't blame Hogan for what Vince wanted. And don't criticize Hogan for that which you excuse Austin.

And whats praised about Wrestlemania 18? The posing after the match and the presence of it. Why does no one talk about how good the match was? Because the match itself sucked. So would Hogan vs. Austin.
I talk all the time about how good the match was. So, I'm not sure who you are referring to.
 

Slyfox696

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You want to talk about using politics to destroy a good moment? Starrcade 1997. Sting had FINALLY earned a shot at the WCW Championship after a full year of seeking retribution. We get to the biggest match-up in years, and it's a dirty finish, because Hogan didn't want to look weak. Sure, Sting one. But, Slyfox, as you said, putting somebody over is not about the win or loss. In this case, Sting won, but he certainly did not get the effects that he would and should have gotten with a clean win.
Well, there were several things that lead up to what happened there.

Have you ever read Bischoff's book, Controversy Creates Cash? There's some great insight into it.

First of all, WCW was poorly booked. They had just acquired Bret Hart, right after the Montreal Screwjob. And with all the hype surrounding Hart, what did WCW do with him? Absolutely nothing. So, Bischoff was DESPARATE to have Hart do something important, since he hadn't done it yet. That's why Hart was special referee/enforcer.

Second of all, Patrick was supposed to make a fast count, but didn't. That's why the ending looked so terrible, and Hart like an idiot. No one has ever accused Patrick of sabatoge, it was just an honest mistake.

Finally, the reason Hogan gave (and supported by Bischoff) for not wanting to lose to Sting was that Sting was drugged up and out of shape. And Hogan didn't feel that losing to someone who appeared completely incapable of carrying the company would be a bad move. And that's why the finish happened the way it did.

I'm not saying it's right, but it's certainly reasonable. And once again, Bischoff could have booked the match entirely different...but he didn't. So, don't just blame Hogan for that. Sting deserves blame as does Patrick and Bischoff.
 

The Rated R CMStar

Guest
Ok, I said I might review your posts, and I will:


You're saying that feud made Orton look weak? I beg to differ greatly.

He was put in a feud with the biggest name of all-time, went the sleazy route of hitting on Hogan's daughter, beat down Hogan, and nearly got the 1-2-3. That's being put over

Orton never got the upperhand on Hulk Hogan. The closest of doing so was when he RKOed him at SNME, and that was only week 1 of his feud. All the other weeks he cut promos bashing Hogan, humilliating imitators, only to then have the real Hogan run him down of the ring.

As for the match, yes, Orton dominated, yes, Orton hit the RKO, they did the screwy ending. Ending of the match? Hogan got back to his feet as if nothing happened, and with a weakened leg thanks to a bad knee (highly sold during the entire match) nailed a leg drop and that was enough to finish Randy Orton, who took barely any offense during the match.

WWE in their kayfabe world even admitted Orton came off looking weak. Edge, in the Cutting Edge where they formed Rated RKO, brought that up.


Which culminated in a match at One Night Stand where he was made to look like Angle's bitch.

No, it culminated with Orton proving he was the better wrestler as Angle beat him in "Extreme" territory, but Orton defeat him at Vengeance in normal one on one rules. Orton walked out of the feud the winner.


So, it's OK for Austin to not lose when his opponent isn't worthy of it, but not Hogan?

You are just proving my point. You're excusing that which you criticize Hogan for.

Austin refused to job to THE COACH. Hogan refused to job to Randy Orton and Shawn Michaels. Do you notice the difference? It's not the same thing. We're not talking about the fact that they refused to job, but we're talking about the fact at WHO they refuse to job.


Trying to say that Hogan could keep fans on the edge of their seat for 30 years with no wrestling ability is just ridiculous.

You want to talk about wrestling ability? Hogan was the most over guy in the AWA, a wrestling company that was FAR more about "wrestling" than any promotion that we've seen in the last 30 years. Hogan was over in Japan, working with Antonio Inoki. Hogan was over in the WWF, over in the WCW...you can't tell me that you can main-event the AWA, Japan, WWF and WCW without being a good worker


The thing here is, Hogan is not a bad worker. We're not talking bad in a Khali level. But he's certainly not in the level of HBK, in which only his matches could justify his feuds. Hogan certainly didn't put crapfest after crapfest, but I'll be damned if I see any match that just by the in ring quality went over 3 stars.


You think there is just a magical switch Hogan has that makes crowds into his matches? Of course not. They are into them because of his ability in the ring

Wrong, they cheer Hulk Hogan for what he represents. People don't cheer Hulk Hogan because of what he does inside the ring, but the whole aura he has around him, and the entire persona he has been able to create.


If this is true, then how come everyone ejaculates over the HBK/Flair crapfest at Wrestlemania

While the fact that the match is overrated is acceptable, it certainly wasn't a crapfest. It was an above decent match that backed down the build up and the hype.


OR...

They could have just put Batista in the match...isn't that what they did at Taboo Tuesday?

Lol, just, lol.

Summerslam 2005 was almost purely based on the fact of seeing HBK vs Hogan for the first time, and you even say that they could have replace that with HBK vs Batista?


The best example of this, in my opinion, is the Angle vs. Cena feud in 05/06. Angle played a TERRIBLE heel. Instead of working a slower style, in which the focus was on the babyface, Angle worked an up-tempo style, and made sure to include all of his crowd-popping, high impact moves. That's terrible heel psychology. The heel wants all the focus on the face, not himself. Compare that to AJ Styles (or even heel Hogan). His in-ring work changed drastically as a heel. Styles quit doing a lot of the higher impact moves, and changed the way he worked in the ring. Hogan in WCW as a heel, worked a much slower and more deliberate style in the ring, and usually avoided spots that the crowd might pop for him

Angle prided himself on the fact that he was the better wrestler between the two, so every move he applied, was a demonstration of him being better than Cena.


Then why would Vince hire him, fully knowing this? I mean, it's not like Vince was forced to book the match, nor was he forced to give Hogan the control over his character.

But he did..and he chose Hogan over HBK. And it's not like the match conclusion was something that came up last minute, it was a consideration from the moment the match was booked

He agreed to a two match feud, in which Hogan would get the first match, and HBK would get the rematch.

Hogan agreed, only to then, close to the event, backed down claiming to be injured, and he would only wrestle the Summerslam match, the one booked for him winning.

That's why HBK oversold during the entire match, so that Hogan was to make looked as a fool, and that's why HBK cut that promo the night afterwards.




Now, let me finish with this.

Do you hear Hogan talking about WWE any other time on the year than when it benefits him? No, in fact, he didn't talk about the WWE for the entire 2008, and now, he's starting to do so just so that he can get the big WM paycheck.

Hogan cares for the money, not wrestling itself. Of course he has some love for it, he has to be after all the time he spent on it, but what he sees on wrestling is money, not personal satisfaction.

Hell, on 2007, since Vince kept him out of the WM23 card, he joined Big Show and the entire build up for their match at Memphis Wrestling was bashing VInce Mcmahon and the WWE.

Stone Cold on the other hand, griefs by the fact that he can't wrestle anymore. That's way he doesnt do anything more than appear, stunner somebody and leave, because that's the only thing he's physically able to do right now.


Also, the fact that you compare Hogan refusing to job to HBK and Orton to Stone Cold refusing to job to Jonathan Coachman is beyond stupid. Seriously. Like I said before, it's not the fact that you don't want to job, but it's AGAINST WHO you don't want to job.
 

CenaMark54

Guest
I just wanted to point out that there is no evidence Hogan refused to job to Orton.

The outcome could have been what the WWE originally intended. Lets face it, more people will pay money to see Hogan win, than to see him lose. I'm not saying its right. Orton should have won that match. However, just being in the ring with Hogan helped Orton out.

Also, on a side note, why is there never any talk of Taker not doing the job?
 

Moonlight Drive

Guest
@ the 'Taker job: Because everybody knows, there's only two people 'net fans are ever aloud to bash about not doing a job, be it true or lies, Triple H & Hulk Hogan. They would also be in breach of the Second Smark Commandment, thou shalt not diss Undertaker.

But in all sereoseness, wasn't it Orton who didn't want to beat 'Taker?

I would participate in this debate, but the fact Coach being used in an argument about 'not jobbing to people', especially in the same sentence of HBK or Orton, is making me laugh uncontrollably. Although it is quite interesting to see the back-and-forth arguments, gotta give props to the neew guy for standing his ground.