Hello and welcome to this special Enuffa.com blog, The History of WrestleMania! This series will discuss and dissect all 36 previous installments of the annual supercard and determine what I feel were the highlights and lowlights each year.
WrestleMania season is usually one of my favorite times of the year, and I always find myself reflecting back on the storied history of this great spectacle. I think about some of my favorite 'Mania matches, what makes a great 'Mania card, and why some shows were so successful while others really don't deserve to fall under the WrestleMania banner. For the record, I'm writing this piece completely from memory, which should give you some idea of how sad and twisted I am.
So without further prattling on, let's get to it.
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Madison Square Garden - 3/31/85 |
This of course was the show that started it all. The great McMahon gamble that paid off not in spades, but truckloads of money. This was one of the first truly mainstream wrestling events on a national scale, and the hype allowed the WWF to break into the pop culture vernacular.
Surprisingly though, the inaugural 'Mania card more resembled a house show than a true supercard. For one thing, having a tag team match as the main event rather than a WWF Title match seems like such an odd choice. Hulk Hogan's ongoing feud with Roddy Piper was such a draw it seems like a singles match for the belt would be the natural main event. However the WWF put that match on MTV that February as a way to hype 'Mania. Clearly it worked, but it made for kind of a watered-down main event for the supercard. Hogan/Mr. T vs. Piper/Orndorff was fine for what it was, but I hardly consider it a classic.
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I always dug this poster for some reason.
These two guys together would beat Rocky Balboa's ass! |
This match also began the trend of celebrities getting involved in big money matches as actual competitors. It occurs to me that the match would've been greatly improved by swapping T out for Jimmy Snuka. But I suppose seeing T wrestle was part of the draw. Mr. T certainly looked like he could hang in the ring with the actual wrestlers but I've always felt that having celebs wrestle damages the business somewhat. More on that later....
The show was also not very stacked for such a marquee event. To be fair, the WWF's roster would expand considerably after this show (Savage and Jake would arrive, the Hart Foundation and the British Bulldogs would form). Elsewhere on the card we had Andre the Giant vs. Big John Studd in a bodyslam challenge (again, this felt watered-down since it wasn't a traditional wrestling match but ended when one man bodyslammed the other) which aside from the spectacle was just two nearly immobile guys plodding through a short match.
The first 'Mania also inexplicably featured several glorified squashes. Tito Santana vs. The Executioner opened the show and was roughly the kind of match you'd see on Wrestling Challenge. King Kong Bundy vs. S.D. Jones and Ricky Steamboat vs. Matt Borne also fell into that category. Hardly worthy of the biggest show of all-time (at that point anyway).
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First match in WrestleMania history |