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| L.A. Sports Arena - 3/24/91 |
The seventh installment ended up being one of the most forgettable. What was intended to be a record-smashing supershow in front of 100,000 fans at the L.A. Coliseum was relegated to the 15,000-seat Sports Arena when ticket sales fell horribly short of expectations. That will happen though when your main event is little more than the exploitation of a minor real-life skirmish in the Middle East. Why the WWF thought the US vs. Iraq angle would draw big business I'm not sure, especially since the real conflict ended over a month before WrestleMania.
Sgt. Slaughter was inexplicably brought in as a turncoat and almost immediately handed the WWF Title at the Royal Rumble, all so he could face the American Hero Hulk Hogan. Surely a Hogan vs. Warrior rematch would've drawn the numbers they wanted, so I'm still unclear why they didn't go that route.
The match was what it was. It certainly could've been worse, but it definitely wasn't good. It's widely considered one of, if not THE worst all-time WrestleMania main event. Slaughter was about as unworthy a WWF Champion as there's ever been and it was a sad day indeed when Hulk Hogan is by far the better worker in a given match. This meandering brawl lasted over 21 minutes before Hogan mercifully put an end to the proceeding with the ol' big boot-legdrop combo. Sadly this didn't even end the feud, as it stretched on and off until SummerSlam. Christ almighty.....
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| Yep. Can't imagine why this didn't sell 100,000 tickets. |
'Mania 7 was saved however by the semi-main event of Randy Savage vs. The Ultimate Warrior, with the stipulation that the loser would have to retire. This feud had been brewing for several months while Warrior was WWF Champion, but Savage was battling nagging injuries and was thus unable to compete for a while. Though I don't consider this match nearly as great as most do, it was easily one of the WWF's best of 1991. This match paved the way for the overuse of finishers in big matchups (see Austin vs. Rock). Savage hit five flying elbow smashes in a row and failed to get the pin, and the Warrior finally won after three flying tackles. Post-match Savage's manager Sherri Martel attacked him, having lost her meal ticket due to the retirement stip. Who should come to Savage's rescue but Miss Elizabeth, much to the delight and tears of the crowd. Savage would spend the next several months as a commentator before returning to action that November.












































