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mitchejw
 Rep: 131 

Re: Shawn Micheals...a few thoughts...Part 1

mitchejw wrote:

If you ask any real wrestling fan who Shawn Micheals is...they would easily be able to tell you that he was made for this. He had something right off the bat that people work decades to obtain. The question I've been asking myself since he officially retired is...why is the best wrestler that ever lived far less known in the world than many lesser wrestling personalities. If that is indeed the case...then what is Shawn Michaels legacy? What did he really mean to the wrestling business, and all things related?

After thinking about these question for awhile...I began to trace Shawn Michael's singles career back to its very roots. The year is 1992 (January), and as the wrestling world is all to famous for doing, they meld a personal disagreement between Shawn Michaels and Marty Jannetty into an on-air feud between the two. Shawn Micheals throws Jannetty through the barber shop winder and launches himself from tag team competition to singles. The plan is for the two to fued for the rest of the year. Sadly, Jannetty falls deep into a drug habit that forces him out of the WWF until the end of the same year. Already the plan for Shawn Michael's rise to the top of the wrestling world is set back from the very beginning.

The bad thing about this timing is that professional wrestling is about to into a very deep lull, and will remain there for the better part of the next 5 years. Hulk Hogan is still with the WWF at this point, along with many other wrestlers that brought wrestling to the forefront in the 1980s. Add to that the Vince McMahon is under heavy pressure from the feds regarding rampant steroid use within the company, and you have quite possibly the worst time in 30 years to possibly be coming up in the wrestling business.

If you go back and look at tapes from this era, you will see that the product was clearly losing its luster. Monday Night RAW debuted in January of 1993 in an arena that held 2,000 people at best.

Back to Shawn Michaels, though...

Shawn Michaels rapid rise to the top of the company begins in early 1992...a point in wrestling history where almost no one was watching it. Amidst great internal strife, the next two years will see MASSIVE fallout and turnover within the WWF. From 1992 to 1994, Hulk Hogan, Ultimate Warrior, Macho Man, Roddy Piper, and many others will make way for questionable replacements like Knuckle Ball Schwartz, Skinner, Doink the clown, and Repo Man. All creations of the early 1990s creative force known as the WWF.

These first couple years are very good to Shawn Michaels. He leads off Wrestlemania XIII (1992) with a match against Tito Santana to good reviews just two months into his singles career. From this point on Shawn Michaels is constantly in the spot light in the WWF. He goes on to lead off Summerslam 1992, as well in a match against Rick Martel. He broke new ground in this match as well with a heel vs heel match. In September of 1992, after just 8 months as a singles wrestler, Shawn wins the WWF Intercontinental Championship, capturing it from the British Bulldog at a match on Saturday Night's Main Event.

At the time that Shawn obtains this title, the Intercontinental title is a very highly esteemed title...recently held by Bret Hart, Mr. Perfect, Roddy Piper, and The Ultimate Warrior. Shawn's career is sky-rocketing in 1992, but the WWF is continuing to fall apart.

A new era embarks at Survivor Series 1992 when relative newbies to the top of the card, Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels squire off for the WWF title. Less than one year ago, Shawn Micheals was a tag team wrestler on a mid-card tag team. In November of 1992, he is wrestling for the WWF championship. This is all great for Shawn Michaels...but the timing is horrible.

Shawn Michaels holds the Intercontinental title for the better part of 1993. At the Royal Rumble in 1993, he finally gets to begin the fued with Marty Jannetty that was planned from the get go. Shawn again leads off Wrestlemannia IX against Tatanka. This match was also went down to good reviews. However, the rest of Wrestlemania IX was abysmal. Hulk Hogan comes out of no where at the end of Wrestlemania and wins the title in a match the wasn't scheduled. Anything good that happeend at Wrestlemania will be forgotten now, as Hulk shows up with now angle build or big pay per view pay off and steals the show.

Interest in wrestling dramatically declines in 1993. Hogan is gone from the WWF in the following 2 months, and will not return for a decade. Hogan does not pass the torch to anyone, and only loses the title because a 'camera' blew up in his face. Michaels holds the Intercontinetal title through out most of 1993, and fueds with Razor Ramon (Scott Hall) over the title that brough him to a match in 1994 at Wrestlemania X. This is the famous ladder match that everyone discusses in the anals of gimmick match history.

The year of 1994 sees many match ups between Shawn Michaels and Razor Ramon. Diesel (kevin nash) also is brought into the mix as a wrestler and acquires the Intercontinental title  from Scott Hall in the mid-summer of 1994. If there is one thing to be said about this year (1994)...it is here that you can clearly see the future of the business of wrestling.

However, fans aren't buying it yet...

Ratings are continuing to slip...and as we approach 1995...things are doomed to get worse.

The final piece of the 1980s wrestling dynasty is let go in the fall of 1994. The Macho Man is released, and never sets foot back in the WWF. Shortly after, Diesel (Kevin Nash) wins the WWF championship at an untelevised house show. This has never happened before the in the WWF and has not happened again since.

In 1995, Shawn Michaels has clearly come into his own. He is now extremely confident, and putting together top teir matches with ease on command. He now gets to feud with former buddy, and now WWF Champion Diesel. For the past 2 years, Shawn has bounced back and forth between both major titles in the WWF, as well as the top of the next generation of talent for the wrestling industry. Another important member for wrestlings future is introduced in 1995 by the name of Jean-Paul Levesque (Triple H).

In large part, fans are not interested. They are tuning into WCW at this point to watch all the wrestlers that the WWF released. WCW is doing new things with these wrestlers that the WWF was afraid to allow to happen due to image and business reasons. Dream matches were now occuring (Hogan vs. Flair, just to name one) and it was becoming clear that these guys had much more mileage to them than the WWF would allow.

Kevin Nash and Scott Hall were wrestling the likes of Jeff Jarrett and Doink the Clown, while Hogan and Sting and the Macho Man were making wrestling history once again and stealing all of the attention. To make matters worse for the WWF, Scott Hall and Kevin Nash announce at the end of 1995 that they will be heading to WCW for the money, and the opportunity to make wrestling history (which they did!) . They were not going to do either in the WWF, wrestling those guys, and making much less than WCW could offer. Many others with potential leave for WCW at this time. The WWF had set the table to reinvent wrestling, and two of their most important pieecs are leaving just as they are blossoming.

Shawn Michaels is blossoming too, but no one is watching. The WWF expereinces their worst ratings in 1995, and 1996...while WCW is thriving. They put the World title on Shawn Michaels at Wrestlemania XXII in 1996, at the same time Scott Hall and Kevin Nash are beginning the NWO angle in WCW. The NWO angle is arguably the most succesful storyline or angle every created in wrestling history. The WWF is realing at this point, and at the time people even thought they would go under.

Shawn Michaels was entering his prime...and no one was watching...

Will
 Rep: 227 

Re: Shawn Micheals...a few thoughts...Part 1

Will wrote:

A cool read smile I'll throw in a few points here and there.

Knuckle Ball Schwartz, Skinner, Doink the clown, and Repo Man

Doink and Knuckleball were both Steve Lombardi (also the Brooklyn Brawler), whilst Steve Keirn was Skinner and also one of the Doinks. Is it possible that just these two guys were responsible for all of the bad gimmicks? tongue Not sure who the Repo Man gimmick was by.

Shawn again leads off Wrestlemannia IX against Tatanka. This match was also went down to good reviews. However, the rest of Wrestlemania IX was abysmal. Hulk Hogan comes out of no where at the end of Wrestlemania and wins the title in a match the wasn't scheduled.

I was at a TNA filming recently and have been on an old-school WWF binge since then. Coincidentally, last night I watched Wrestlemania IX, and was loving the Michaels and Tatanka match - funny that it all goes downhill after this one.

Scott Hall was killer mind, and actually made watching a Bob Backlund match bearable. If you wanna talk about undervalued wrestlers its my opinion that Scott Hall should be the focus of your topic - Michaels might not be "legend" status compared to Hogan, Savage, Hart etc but he's had more than his fair share of pushes, something that Hall rarely had (I know he had his demons, and they continue to haunt him to this day, but didnt all wrestlers back then?).

Hulk Hogan taking the title at Wrestlemania IX was shit. Yoko vs Bret had been okay too, such an unneccesary "surprise" having Hogan come out and take the title in a pay-per-view that had already been littered with gimmicks (Tatanka had the win in hand but Michaels retains through countout, Double Doink, Hogan/Beefcake being DQ'd, Mr. Perfects feet on the ropes, Gonzalez chloroforms Taker (wtf? lol), Mr. Fuji blinding Hart).

Shawn Michaels was entering his prime...and no one was watching...

They were watching in Montreal wink Michaels played a role in one of the greatest wrestling works of all time, but I guess you'll be covering this in one of your next posts.

jorge76
 Rep: 59 

Re: Shawn Micheals...a few thoughts...Part 1

jorge76 wrote:
downliner wrote:

Not sure who the Repo Man gimmick was by.

If I remember correctly, he was one of the guys from Demoltion, "Smash" I believe, but don't quote me on that.

mitchejw
 Rep: 131 

Re: Shawn Micheals...a few thoughts...Part 1

mitchejw wrote:

Yes...that is correct...Ax and Smash were the original Demolition, and then Crush came along in 1990ish. Ax was approaching 50 if I remember correctly...and when Ax left...they tried to continue to the tag team as Smash and Crush but it just wasn't the same...so the split them up...and Crush became Kona Crush from Hawaii. You also saw him at Wrestlemania IX.

Barry Darsow (Smash) was repackeged as a guy who went around taking people's stuff when they didn't pay for it. I remember promos of him lurking around residential neighborhoods looking for (insert generic name here) to take something he hadn't been paying for. I imagine this was happening a lot in American in 1992. Instand heel status as Repoman for Barry Darsow.

James
 Rep: 664 

Re: Shawn Micheals...a few thoughts...Part 1

James wrote:
mitchejw wrote:

why is the best wrestler that ever lived....

Why are you bringing up Ric Flair in a Shawn Michaels thread?



13

alexh0618
 Rep: 14 

Re: Shawn Micheals...a few thoughts...Part 1

alexh0618 wrote:

Oh man, Ive been on a 90s wrestling binge lately. Shawn Michaels has always been one of my favorite wrestlers from that period along with Scott Hall and Bret Hart. Great read... cant wait for part 2.

-D-
 Rep: 231 

Re: Shawn Micheals...a few thoughts...Part 1

-D- wrote:

He had to retire from the back injury right as Attitude era was starting so he wasn't around during the boom therefore most fans who discovered it during that time frame never got a chance to see him.

Axlin16
 Rep: 768 

Re: Shawn Micheals...a few thoughts...Part 1

Axlin16 wrote:

Shawn Michaels simply is not a casual fan's wrestler.

Trust me, right now it's started to begin with the fresh faces. In 10 years, everyone of those guys in the WWE will be talking about how "Shawn Michaels is the greatest wrestler to ever live". Ric Flair will be a distant memory and far too seperated from the youth crowd. Those who were teens during the mid-90's, Attitude Era, DX-era, will then be in their 30's, and citing HBK as their inspiration. Write it down.

Shawn just never appealed to a mainstream audience. He was a heel in most of those years, with an obnoxious pretty boy image that many ignored, because they were paying too much attention to Undertaker or Bret Hart, those with either good gimmicks or were absolute baby faces.

Hogan got major pushes from Vince to turn him into the legend he is today, because it sure as shit wasn't from talent. The guy is a great mic guy, a great seller, but lazy as hell in the ring. Always has been. John Cena is his equivalent of this generation.

The only guy I ever saw have a great gimmick, technical ability, AND be a heel and become a legend is Austin. But then again, what person in America can't relate to 'wanting to get even on your evil boss'?

HBK is the wrestler's wrestler. He had an average gimmick among guys like Hart, Taker and later Austin, was in a dead era for the WWF because at the time of the mass exodus from the company, the Attitude Era wrestlers like Austin, Rock & HHH were still being "grown", and so on...

In other words, Shawn Michaels is the star baseball player, who was a Hall of Famer at a time that the baseball team was in a "rebuilding phase". He's not gonna get the glory of the World Championship team later on that did not include him. Just how it goes, in any entertainment medium...

BLS-Pride
 Rep: 212 

Re: Shawn Micheals...a few thoughts...Part 1

BLS-Pride wrote:

As Kevin Nash once said.. Micheal Jordon only comes around once and while and Shawn is Jordon.

misterID
 Rep: 476 

Re: Shawn Micheals...a few thoughts...Part 1

misterID wrote:

The saddest thing was that he missed that Attitude era window. There's no telling what great matches/angles we missed out on sad

And I believe that he was going to come back during that period when he was a member of The Corporation but his drug habit (he showed up stoned out of his mind to a meeting) got him kicked out of the WWE.

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