WrestleMania XXIV
Date: March 30th, 2008
Location: Florida Citrus Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Commentators: Jim Ross, Jerry Lawler
Attendance: 74,635
The Biggest WrestleMania Under the Sun
Jim Ross welcomes us to the event and introduces the rest of the announcing cast; the ECW guys even get a table, not that they’ll be needed for very long. Lillian Garcia sings the National Anthem, and then a video package highlights all of the different angles and matches that have led to our event tonight.
Event Card:
- Belfast Brawl: JBL vs. Finlay
- Money in the Bank Ladder Match: CM Punk vs. Carlito vs. John Morrison vs. Chris Jericho vs. Mr Kennedy vs. Shelton Benjamin
- Battle of the Brands: Batista vs. Umaga
- ECW Title: Chavo Guerrero © vs. Kane
- Career Threatening Match: Shawn Michaels vs. Ric Flair
- US Title: Montel Vontavious Porter © vs. Matt Hardy
- WWE Heavyweight Title: Randy Orton © vs. John Cena vs. Triple H
- Showcase Match: Floyd Mayweather vs. The Big Show
- World Heavyweight Title: Edge © vs. The Undertaker
Belfast Brawl: John Bradshaw Layfield v Finlay w/ Hornswoggle
The end of a storyline that has enthralled the world of professional wrestling finally finds a resolution. The ‘illegitimate son’ of Vince McMahon was initially revealed as
Hornswoggle until JBL broke the news that
Finlay was the real father. As with all things, this shocking reveal must find its conclusion in the ring, and is done so in a
Belfast Brawl, which, of course, definitely favours Finlay.
An opener that doesn’t quite thrill the crowd, who take this opportunity to beat the lines and get their drinks and hot dogs, and who can blame them when the Money in the Bank ladder match is up next. Seats are half empty as JBL beats Finlay with all sorts of weapons; trash can lids, kendo sticks, and he even tries to use the Shillelagh - but to no avail! Finlay ducks, and takes this one to the outside. Hornswoggle keeps his distance, remembering the vicious beatdown he endured at the hands of JBL inside a steel cage a few weeks ago on RAW.
After some ringside action the fellas get back in and do a wee bit of ‘proper wrestling’ before it all descends into fisticuffs once more. Finlay tries to light up JBL but one moment of hesitation and he GETS HIS HEAD DAMN NEAR BLASTED OFF with a
Clothesline FROM TEXAS From Hell and gets the 3 count. After the match Hornswoggle gets a bit too close to the ring and JBL launches a trash can lid that bounces off his dome sending him flying backwards into the Raw announce table. JR is SHOCKED.
Winner: John Bradshaw Layfield
Money in the Bank Ladder Match: CM Punk vs. Carlito vs. John Morrison vs. Chris Jericho vs. Mr Kennedy vs. Shelton Benjamin
The winner will receive a contract that can be cashed in for a title shot at any of the Heavyweight title belts. The contract is valid for 1 year.
Crazy bumps, over the top spots, and
Shelton Benjamin doing something wild from a ladder - in this case being tipped from the top of a ladder in the ring through a ladder straddling the apron to the barricade. This had it all. All six men looked great here and got their spots in before
John Morrison, equipped with a ladder, wiped everyone out with a moonsault.
CM Punk and
Chris Jericho were the first, and only, two to recover and both men made the long, slow climb back into the ring and then up the ladder. Punk looked set to get the briefcase first until Jericho pulled his legs out from under him, hanging him in a tree of woe from the ladder rungs. Jericho then climbed and calmly retrieved the briefcase that grants him a guaranteed title shot against any of the
Heavyweight Champions from any three of the brands for the next 365 days (starting from…..now!).
Winner: Chris Jericho
Battle of the Brands: Batista vs. Umaga
If you thought the opener was a hard hitting affair, well, you’d be right, but add in 117 pounds - I checked. I thought it would be more but JBL is a big boy -
and this one surely is going to raise the roof. Right? Yes!
Batista came into this as the babyface defending the HONOUR of RAW (because the brands are like gangs, obviously) against the audacity of
Umaga from that filthy disease ridden blue brand *spits*. Basically a way to get on the show, HHH decided that Vince’s original plan of just having a match to have a match wasn’t enough, so Umaga attacked Batista a couple of times through March, costing him a match he had for the US Title against MVP so they are going to have a match! The original plan had Batista overcoming the heelish monster Umaga, but on the night the crowd cheered everything Umaga did and booed Batista relentlessly. So, in a decision that would have massive consequences for him personally, Big Dave called an audible.
The early match was straight forward but it started to settle into a pattern of Batista firing back and Umaga putting him right back down. The crowd were absolutely eating it up. A chop from Umaga (WOO!). A right hand from Batista (BOO!). A lariat from Umaga (YEAHHH!). A spinebuster from Batista (BOO!). A nerve hold (it’s barely been four minutes guys?) from Umaga (YEAHHH!) and Dave Batista is thinking to himself: I do not want to win and get booed out of the arena. How did it come to this? Only a year ago he had a 4 star match with Undertaker (yeah Batista reads the dirt sheets, so what?), and now? Well, let’s make this work.
Batista fired back with some offence as the crowd made this displeasure known, before Umaga cut him off with a samoan drop to mass applause. Umaga followed his cues perfectly and every time the crowd got riled up at some Big Dave offence, Umaga cut him off. Both men headed outside and brawled for a bit with Batista finally getting the upper hand - and the crowd got going again. Is this real heat!? Batista looks to throw Umaga through the steel steps but gets reversed and he crashes through and is laid out. The referee begins to count. We won’t count along, but imagine it’s SO TENSE, the crowd are chanting along and we get to six as Batista stirs. The crowd CRY “SEVEN!” but Batista is clambering in. Umaga rolls right out and BAM. Samoan Spike. He rolls back in again and we begin the whole charade ONE MORE TIME. This time we get to eight and Umaga drags Batista in,
SPINEBUSTER!! Batista nails it out of nowhere but he can’t capitalise.
The ref begins the count, and this one has already gone on thirty seven seconds longer than planned so the voices in his ear are yelling GO HOME, but the ref stays calm and doesn’t rush the count. Both men get up at eight, trade punches, before Batista misses and
THE SAMOAN SPIKE lays him out. Umaga covers, the referee makes a slightly hesitant three count, and the crowd go bananas. Umaga wins, and you’d think Hogan had just body slammed Andre, but the crowd were sick of having Batista rammed down their throats, and they ate up every last bit of this one.
Winner: Umaga
ECW Title: Chavo Guerrero © vs. Kane
Kane earned this title shot by winning the pre-show 24 man battle royal.
This one lasted eleven seconds, kicking The Hart Foundation’s nineteen second victory over The Bolshevik’s at Wrestlemania VI down to second spot.
Kane snuck into the ring behind
Chavo, and by the time Chavito realised what was going on, it was far too late. The bell rang, Kane grabbed Chavo by the throat, and one chokeslam later the match was over and we have a
NEW ECW Heavyweight Champion in the Big Red Machine.
Winner: Kane
As soon as Kane is handed the belt he grabs a can from beneath the ring which happens to be full of gasoline. He pours gasoline all over the title and sets the belt on fire whilst holding it aloft in the air before finally tossing it to the ground, charred and slightly melted, and then he leaves the ring with it. On commentary, Joey Styles and Tazz lose their minds over what they’ve just witnessed whilst the crowd is either too stunned to speak, or they forgot that the ECW brand even had a heavyweight belt to begin with. Tazz says that this spits on the legacy of ECW - although in many ways it honours their humble origins ceding from the NWA way back when. Of course none of that is mentioned on the show, they just repeat words like outrageous, and audacity, until they are saved by a cut to a backstage segment with Snoop Dogg who can’t believe he missed the
Lumberjill Match because he slept in. Get it!?, he was probably high - and certainly not that creative bumped the women to a pre-show match and forgot to rearrange Snoop’s appearance and to update the event card.
Career Threatening Match: Shawn Michaels v Ric Flair
If Ric Flair loses, he has to retire.
We get a video package that documents how we got here™, starting with Vince McMahon declaring that any and every singles match
Ric Flair wrestled in would have the stipulation that, if he lost, he would have to retire. Flair says he can’t imagine risking it all against anyone greater than
Shawn Michaels. It got a bit heated somewhere along the way as Shawn told the story of Old Yeller, and how he was going to put Flair down.
Full of emotion and a trip through memory lane as both men got all their spots in, especially Flair. We had rudimentary chops (WOO!), strutting around the ring, a low blow whilst distracting the referee (for a near-fall!), and a couple of crazy moonsaults, both of which Flair dodged out of the way leaving HBK to crash and burn. Flair works the knee through the match and almost gets Shawn to tap out to the figure four, but he makes it to the ropes to break the hold. They go back and forth with near falls but all of a sudden…WHAM! SWEET CHIN MUSIC! It’s only enough for two but Flair is out on his feet as the crowd roar at his heart to keep fighting. Shawn mutters his iconic “I’m sorry, I love you.” before putting Naitch down for the pinfall with another
Sweet Chin Music.
Winner: Shawn Michaels
An emotionally charged affair that was a fitting final chapter for one of the greatest to ever grace the squared circle. As Flair gets to his feet after the match, the whole house gives him a standing ovation and he drinks it in for one last time. Whilst Flair would only make one further appearance on WWE television for the rest of 2008, he would work behind the scenes with Triple H to launch the new brand in the summer and also act as mentor to a couple of the rookies from Shawn Michaels’ affiliated Texas Wrestling Academy.
Edge is backstage with
Todd Grisham explaining that HE TOO is undefeated at WrestleMania (not winning a MITB match obviously doesn’t count) and tonight he will do what everybody else couldn’t do, and that is to end the streak. He recalls being a kid in the crowd at WrestleMania VI and watching his favourite wrestler WWF Champion
Hulk Hogan in the main event against WWF Intercontinental Champion
Ultimate Warrior, where the winner takes both belts. That night, however, Hogan didn’t go over, and Edge was devastated at this. He knows some kids look at Undertaker the same way he looked at Hogan, and tonight they’re all going to know how he felt eighteen years ago when he wins tonight.
We get a recap of the show so far and the all important HALL OF FAME! This year’s inductees are: ’The Nature Boy’ Ric Flair, ‘High Chief’ Peter Maivia, ‘Soulman’ Rocky Johnson, Mae Young, Eddie Graham, Gordon Solie, and Jack and Gerald Brisco (The Brisco Brothers).
United States Title Match: Montel Vontavious Porter © vs. Matt Hardy
After the high emotional stakes of Ric Flair’s final match,
MVP and
Matt Hardy deliver a much more sombre affair. The story here is that Matt and MVP were at odds last year vying for the US Title until they were inadvertently partnered together and won the WWE Tag Team titles. MVP side-lined Matt with a vicious attack after they lost the belts to Morrison and Miz. On Smackdown two days ago, Matt returned, costing MVP his match against Chris Jericho.
Lots of chain wrestling and jockeying for position early with simple arm drag and suplex exchanges, the two men put on a strong basic performance with no big spots or shenanigans. MVP at one point rolls out of the ring, but otherwise this was pretty much by-the-book wrestling 101 as you can get. MVP looked to hit The Playmaker but Matt reversed and hit the side effect for two. Second rope leg-drop misses as MVP rolls out of the way and BLASTS Matt with a running boot. He sets up for the
Playmaker again but Matt escapes, hits the
Twist of Fate, and gets the three count, the win, and the
United States Title.
Winner: Matt Hardy
MVP is absolutely shocked after the match and he offers Matt a handshake, but Matt shakes his head and leaves. Coachman at ringside is raging at Matt’s disrespect to a man who held the United States title for 316 days! “Our longest reigning US Champion!”. Cole reasons that MVP has shown he cannot be trusted, and there is no way that handshake was genuine. Coachman is absolutely shook by Cole’s words. In completely unrelated news, later that evening Morrison and Miz’s
‘The Dirt Sheet’ would post a photo of
Lex Luger and
Rick Rude with their respective United States Title victories, with Miz attempting (and failing) to get Coach on the phone during their live web show.
Up next is the first of our double header World Title matches; WWE Champion
Randy Orton will defend the title against both
Triple H and
John Cena. Cena won the Rumble but cashed in his chance early at No Way Out, losing via disqualification after Randy put his hands on the referee. Cena demanded a rematch and defeated Orton the next night on RAW in a non-title match with HHH as the guest referee - Hunter had won a number one contenders match to face Orton at Mania. With Cena’s win, RAW General Manager William Regal made the WrestleMania 24 match a three way for Orton’s WWE title.
WWE Title: Randy Orton © vs. John Cena vs. Triple H
Cena had a marching band to play him down to the ring which gets heavily jeered by the crowd to the point you’d think Hunter was the big babyface taking down two dirty stinking heels, such is the Cena effect. Orton is the official heel so Trips and Cena take turns getting the heat on him before he ducks out of the ring and leaves Cena and HHH to stare one another down. Lots of pointing and jabbering until Hunter lights Cena up with a chop, they trade blows but Orton sees his opportunity and takes out both men with a rope hung DDT. He pulls Cena out of the ring and tosses him through the steel steps.
Back in and Hunter cuts off Orton with a running knee and looks to follow that up with a spinebuster but Randy blocks and locks in a sleeper hold. Hunter fights back to his feet but then
RKO! “OUTTA NOWHERE!”. He makes the cover but Cena breaks it up right away before pulling Orton into the STFU which wears Orton down but he manages to crawl to the ropes and rolls outside to take another breather. HHH is back up, so he and Cena pick up where they left off and trade their favourite moves; shoulder block, chop block, spinning sit out powerbomb, and even a knee smash, but Cena gets the better of the exchange with a duck and a bulldog! Five Knuckle Shuffle is set up but Orton looks to get involved. Cena ducks,
FU! Orton got nailed. One…Two…KICK OUT! Cena can’t believe it but he doesn’t have much time to worry about that as HHH pulls him into an Indian Deathlock - “Vintage HHH” - only letting go as he notices Orton getting to his feet.
HHH cuts Orton off right away and both men exchange punches before Orton irish whips HHH into the corner and up and over the ropes to the outside. CENA IS UP! Orton turns around into a leg trip and ANOTHER STFU!! Orton starts crawling to the ropes slowly but he can’t quite get there so HHH reaches in from the outside and pulls Orton to the rope, breaking the hold, but then absolutely waffling Randy with a right hand for his troubles.
“Cena Sucks!” resounds as HHH climbs into the ring and both men exchange Boo/Yay strikes which really gets the crowd going behind HHH. Cena gets the better of it and tries to get HHH up for an FU but gets blocked, Trips tries the Pedigree, blocked! Cena hits the back body and then follows up with a shoulder block!
Five Knuckle Shuffle coming up.. and this time he hits it!
BUT THEN ORTON OUT OF NOWHERE AGAIN!!
RKO!! CENA IS OUT! ONE…TWO…HHH breaks it up!! HHH isn’t messing around and he hits a knee smash, a running knee and a spinebuster on Orton, readying him for the
Pedigree. He hits it! Cena gets back up and FU ON TRIPLE H! Cena covers both men… 1…2…3!
John Cena wins the
WWE Heavyweight Title!! The crowd are absolutely pissed, a wall of noise deafening in its displeasure greets the new champion posing in the ring with the title aloft.
Winner: John Cena
Showcase Match: The Big Show vs. Floyd Mayweather
The real test here was making this one go as long as absolutely possible before Show actually got his hands on
Floyd. Bobbing and weaving only goes so far when your punches don’t land and your gigantic opponent is allowed to bearhug you. Show nearly grabs Floyd but one of Floyd’s entourage distracts
Big Show, so he gets a massive chop off of the apron. Another pops up and gets a right hand, but then Floyd hits the sucker punch to the kidney! Big Show goes to one knee, BUT IT WAS A RUSE! He grabs Floyd by the throat and hoists him up to the top turnbuckle, but then another entourage member pops up - this time with a
steel chair!! They had one idea for this match and they rinsed and repeated it until there are no entourage members left, and Floyd is all alone. Show chops him hard, and then proceeds to stomp on him and “methodically pick him apart” according to Coachman. Show goes for the chokeslam but one of the entourage has resurrected and he distracts Big Show whilst tossing Floyd some
brass knuckles!! Oh my days. Big right hand knocks Big Show out legit - don’t try and tell me he’s just good at selling, I wont accept it. The referee
counts to ten and this one is over!
Winner: Floyd ‘Money’ Mayweather
World Heavyweight Title Match: Edge © vs. The Undertaker
Undertaker won Smackdown’s
Elimination Chamber at
No Way Out to earn this title match, but he also puts his infamous WrestleMania streak on the line.
15-0 going into this one, and whilst Edge claims his own undefeated streak (ignoring the MITB match he didn’t win - I guess he wasn’t explicitly beaten as such), it’s Edge’s
World Heavyweight Title that he puts on the line. Big staredown as
Edge stands toe to toe with the Deadman but Edge’s attempts to throw hands results in him getting lit up and clotheslined over the top rope and to the outside. Early brawling outside until
Undertaker tosses Edge back in but he takes a little bit too long getting back in himself and Edge jumps him as he rolls in. Coachman is eager to remind us that the ‘Master Manipulator’ and ‘Ultimate Opportunist’ may be Undertaker’s most difficult opponent as Edge works over the lower back and when Taker tries to get some momentum going, he gets cut off. Even an attempt at going old school is reversed by Edge who is in complete control of the early portion of this match.
Edge takes a risk and goes up top, but he hasn’t done enough to keep Taker down and he throws Edge off the top rope to the outside with Edge landing hard on his back. The wind knocked out of him, he doesn’t even see Undertaker charging at him with a
suicide dive over the top rope to the outside! Camera’s flash and the crowd pops hard for that one. Referee starts to count them both out but decides otherwise and rolls out to check on both men. Undertaker is first up and he places Edge on the apron for his signature leg drop, but the back is starting to give him some problems now and he winces as he lands. This gives Edge enough time to hit a dropkick to the back and then Edge takes this one outside, dropping Undertaker on and over the barricade with a back suplex, almost taking out a few members of the front row.
Jimmy Korderas eventually coaxes both men back in and Edge locks in a two minute leg lock forcing Taker to drag himself to the ropes. Edge breaks the hold and looks to drag Taker back to the middle but the Deadman fights him off and gets back up, both men trading rights and lefts (BOO! YAY!) until Edge can’t withstand the barrage of punches and he hits the ropes, ducks a clothesline but
RUNNING LARIAT and Taker is getting fired up. He scoops Edge up and drops him on the turnbuckle with
Snake Eyes, but the big boot follow up is dodged and Edge hits a dropkick for a two count! Only Maven can finish Taker with a dropkick, we all know that. Edge goes up top again, forgetting the landing last time, and a double axe handle fails as Taker grabs Edge by the throat, Edge kicks and fights his way out and
IMPALER! 1..2..KICK OUT. Edge gets back up and in position for the spear as Taker gets up to his feet but Taker blocks with the knee,
CHOKESLAM, 2 count!! Taker can’t believe Edge kicked out, and he drags the dazed Edge to the corner for
OLD SCHOOL but Edge pulls Undertaker and crotches him on the top rope. Edge goes up for a top rope superplex and hits it!! Edge, unable to fully cover Undertaker, drapes an arm over for a 2 count.
Both men are worse for wear and you have to think the next big move will be the end of this. We almost find out as Edge is working Taker over in the corner with punches but gets grabbed, lifted and hoisted up for a
Last Ride, but manages to escape and hit a neckbreaker. Back up and Edge sends Taker off the ropes, clothesline misses, RUNNING DDT, 2 count! Now Taker signals for the Last Ride and Edge can’t block this one, landing hard. This has to be it, Taker covers…
One…Two…Th-NO! The crowd thought it was over, they thought that had to be it. Taker can’t believe it, and Edge has to have kicked out on instinct alone as he rolls out of the ring to try and gather himself. Taker follows him out and Edge trips him into the steel steps! Edge puts some distance between the two and gets back in as Korderas starts to count, but Undertaker is back in at six and he shrugs off Edge’s kicks and punches and grabs Edge by the throat, Edge wrangles free again and Taker’s big boot attempt misses Edge and
NAILS THE REFEREE! Korderas is out cold! Edge hits the
Edge-O-Matic but knows he can’t go for the cover. He begins to mock Taker who sits up and grabs Edge by the throat AGAIN but a low blow works on deadmen as well as it does against the living. Edge rolls out and in shades of last year’s Survivor Series he rips a camera from a ring tech who gets shoved hard into the announce table. Edge measures Taker as he gets to his feet and LEVELS him with the camera. Edge looks to rouse the referee who is hanging off the apron, but accidentally knocks Jimmy Korderas off the apron and to the outside!
Edge can’t believe it, and when he turns around he sees Taker sit up and has to wonder what the hell he has to do to keep this man down. He looks for the Tombstone Piledriver but Undertaker reverses, gets Edge up and hits the OG
Tombstone Piledriver, but there is no referee! Taker folds the arms over in a pin out of habit AND
HERE COMES CHARLES ROBINSON making an absolute beeline for the ring at full pelt. WrestleMania entrance ramps are no joke. He finally gets there…One…Two..THR-NO! Edge kicks out again from one of Taker’s signature moves, having already kicked out of the Chokeslam and the Last Ride.
Hawkins and
Ryder, not to be outdone by Charles Robinson, sprint down the ramp too, but to no avail as Taker punches Ryder off the apron, and then Chokeslams Hawkins out of the ring onto Ryder to leave them in a crumpled heap on the outside. Taker turns around and
SPEAR!!! The distraction was enough for Edge to hit the spear! One..Two..KICKOUT! Edge crawls to the far corner and charges Taker, hits the spear, but he’s too tired to get any real impact and UNDERTAKER LOCKS IN A
SINGLE ARM CHOKEHOLD!!! Edge fights and fights but he is in the middle of the ring and he has nowhere to go. He taps! Edge taps!! Undertaker wins!!! We have a new World Heavyweight Champion and the legendary WrestleMania streak remains unbroken. Edge gave everything he had, kickout of out every one of Taker’s signature moves, but even after eighteen years, Undertaker was resourceful enough to break out a new move that Edge had absolutely no counter for.
Winner: The Undertaker
The arena is bathed in a deep dark blue hue (try saying that quickly) and Undertaker celebrates in the ring on one knee, holding an arm up to the creatures of the night as Michael Cole tells us that this was Wrestlemania 24, thank you for watching, and can you believe it, we have a
NEW World Heavyweight Champion!
—
Pre-Show Results:
- 24-Man Battle Royal: Kane def. 24 others to become #1 contender for the ECW Heavyweight Title.
- LumberJill Match: Beth Phoenix & Melina def. Ashley & Maria
Main Show Results:
- Belfast Brawl: JBL def. Finlay [07:23]
- Money in the Bank Ladder Match: Chris Jericho def. CM Punk, Carlito, John Morrison, Mr Kennedy, and Shelton Benjamin [13:07]
- Battle of the Brands: Umaga def. Batista [09:11]
- ECW Heavyweight Title: Kane def. Chavo Guerrero © [00:11]
- Career Threatening Match: Shawn Michaels def. Ric Flair [18:14]
- US Title: Matt Hardy def. MVP © [10:02]
- WWE Title: John Cena def. Randy Orton © and Triple H [16:11]
- Showcase Match: Floyd Mayweather def. The Big Show [10:21]
- World Heavyweight Title: The Undertaker def. Edge © [24:03]
Notes:
All of the changes leading to and at WrestleMania XXIV were made by RNG, the most surprising outcome for me was that most of the matches actually stayed the same with minor superficial changes that didn’t impact the booking or result. The only change I chose was dropping the Lumberjill match to the pre-match show in favour of the US Title Match.
I make mention in the backstory that WWE has introduced ‘legacy contracts’ which is basically a way for me to write main eventers out of storyline for a while as each month after a Pay Per View I will pick two of my more ‘over’ talent, and effectively toss a coin to see if they are going to be shelved for a period of time. I won’t reveal this outside of diary entries and will keep Authorial Notes to a minimum, but that's why you may abruptly see a program be written in such a way as to give someone time off. I will say that after Mania, my two randomly chosen stars were: Mr. McMahon and Ric Flair, which was hilarious since I had already decided both would be gone anyway. I may, in future, do a poll to keep me on my toes, although having already mapped out my way to WrestleMania 25, I may need to proceed with caution!
Final point, TV shows certainly wont be the length of this Mania write-up, and I don’t intend to have move-by-move descriptions of matches going forward - my interest is much more in characters and storylines. I hope to do that justice. Most importantly, I hope you enjoy my version of WWE through 2008 as we slowly pull away from what actually occurred.