M.O.T.Y.? Marty Jannetty vs Shawn Michaels, Monday Night Raw 1993

Michaels vs Jannetty 1993 - Match of the Year?

  • Yes, this was the Match of the Year!

  • Heavenly Bodies vs Steiner Brothers was better

  • Dustin Rhodes vs Rick Rude was better

  • Big Van Vader vs Cactus Jack was better

  • I have a better option!


Results are only viewable after voting.

IrishCanadian25

Going on 10 years with WrestleZone
My apologies for the lengthy delay, Old School Fans, but as promised here is the latest installment of our debate on PWI's Match of the Year. This thread brings us back to a classic match that occured 15 years ago, involving possibly the most prolific tag team split in WWE history - The Rockers Colliding on Monday Night Raw at the Manhattan Center.

This match took place shortly after the first Intercontinental Title Match between the two men at the Royal Rumble in 1993, where Michaels put on a "near-fall" display, getting his shoulder up at 2 and nine-tenths several times before capitalizing on bothced interference by Sensational Sherri. The Raw rematch came from out of nowhere, as Jannetty showed up amidst HBK's feud with Mr. Perfect and challenged Michaels to a rematch, which Michaels sheepishly accepted. The match was an instant classic, and ended with Jannetty rolling up Michaels for his first and only Intercontinental Title reign thanks in part to Mr. Perfect.

A few significant footnotes to this match. Many people (myself included) feel the Royal Rumble match was even better, though as a huge Jannetty mark the outcome of the Raw match was better.

Also, this match was the first Match of the Year award given to Shawn Michaels - he would win the next three as well, and win a record 8 total. The 4 consecutive awards he won from 1993-1996 were each against different opponents.

But was it the match of the year? Or was one of the runner ups better?
 
This is a tough one for me. I loved the Rumble match between these two as well as the Cactus Jack/Vader match. The thing that makes the Michaels/Jannety rivalry so great is that as the Rockers, they were one of the most beloved tag teams. Then Michaels not only split away, he threw Jannety through a glass window. Anyone who was a young kid at that point was in complete shock, and maybe a little terrified. I would have to say that the RAW match was MOTY, mainly because so many people wanted to see Jannety finally take down Shawn (even if it was for only two weeks). It was a pretty emotional win for people who followed the Rockers' career.

The only match that comes close is Vader/Jack. I'm going by my perspective as a kid, but I was flat out afraid of Vader and thought he could litterally kill a man. The match with Jack was effective in making Vader look like a monster.
 
This is a match PWI got right, definately. I was watching this quite recently actually, and yeah it was definately a great match. A few matches do come close, I'd have to agree with Slim in saying the Vader/Jack match was the closest to this, however no other match that year was as great or as memorable as this.

As for the Rumble match, it was also great. The outcome also being better in my opinon. However it wasn't about the outcome in either match, as both were great regardless. However, in my opinon there seemed to be more energy from the 2 guys and from the fans than in the Rumble match. This in itself is why I prefer this match on Raw in comparison.
 
This is a match PWI got right, definately. I was watching this quite recently actually, and yeah it was definately a great match. A few matches do come close, I'd have to agree with Slim in saying the Vader/Jack match was the closest to this, however no other match that year was as great or as memorable as this.

As for the Rumble match, it was also great. The outcome also being better in my opinon. However it wasn't about the outcome in either match, as both were great regardless. However, in my opinon there seemed to be more energy from the 2 guys and from the fans than in the Rumble match. This in itself is why I prefer this match on Raw in comparison.

Both were great, but the outcome kind of had an effect at the time. Fans, mainly kids, who loved the Rockers really wanted to see Marty make a comeback and take out Shawn. I was a huge Rockers fan when I was a kid and was devastated when they split. When Shawn threw Marty through the Barbershop window my friends and I hated him. That was one of the best ways a segment has ever been pulled off. When Jannety returned no one could wait to see him beat Shawn. When he did on RAW, it was a huge moment for long time WWF fans.
 
Jesus I'd forgotten about the stone cold classic was the Heavenly Bodies vs. The Steiners. Awesome match. That's my pick.

The problem with the HBK/Jannetty match is that nobody truly remembers it. Sure it was a good match. But it's not one that'll get people really talking. It's a good match that happened 15 yeasr ago. It didn't change a damn thing, it happened. And while good, has pretty much been forgotten. Maybe it's been eclipsed by other Shawn Michaels matches, or maybe 1993 was just a slow year. I can't really remember.
 
Jesus I'd forgotten about the stone cold classic was the Heavenly Bodies vs. The Steiners. Awesome match. That's my pick.

The problem with the HBK/Jannetty match is that nobody truly remembers it. Sure it was a good match. But it's not one that'll get people really talking. It's a good match that happened 15 yeasr ago. It didn't change a damn thing, it happened. And while good, has pretty much been forgotten. Maybe it's been eclipsed by other Shawn Michaels matches, or maybe 1993 was just a slow year. I can't really remember.

You just picked the Heavenly Bodies vs the Steiners despite the fact that you didn't remember it. Everything you just said about Michaels Jannety goes double for that match.

Jannety winning the IC belt was huge for Rockers fans. This was not even a year and a half after they split, people really wanted to see this. Is the match timeless? No, but for the year, it was the best match and one of the biggest moments, even if it didn't last. Most matches don't change anything in the long run, it doesn't change the fact that they are good.
 
You just picked the Heavenly Bodies vs the Steiners despite the fact that you didn't remember it. Everything you just said about Michaels Jannety goes double for that match.


No I'd forgot about it. There's a slight difference. Now my memory has been jogged I can recall it's x10 the match the HBK/Jannetty one is. I actually watched it recently. But I'm on a 90's WWE binge at the moment and everything is merging into one.

I'm also nominating The Steiners vs. Money Inc. Cage match. I don't mark out often, but I did watching that. It was 15 yeasr since I've seen it though. But The Steiners are awesome as a team. Better than any of that Rockers shit.
 
No I'd forgot about it. There's a slight difference. Now my memory has been jogged I can recall it's x10 the match the HBK/Jannetty one is. I actually watched it recently. But I'm on a 90's WWE binge at the moment and everything is merging into one.

I'm also nominating The Steiners vs. Money Inc. Cage match. I don't mark out often, but I did watching that. It was 15 yeasr since I've seen it though. But The Steiners are awesome as a team. Better than any of that Rockers shit.

I'm not saying the Rockers are better than the Steiners. I wouldn't put the Rockers in my top 10 or anywhere near it. They were however, one of the most over tag teams with the kids, and the breakup made the story heading into this match far better than the Steiners gaining the tag belts.

When you watch today, yes the Steiners matches probably look better. Back in 1993, when the feuds are still fresh in your mind, it makes things different.
 
After loking through the WWE pay per views of that year the only match i could even consider was Hart v. Perfect in the semi-finals of the KOTR. I found it to be a very exciting match with two very good in ring performers.
As for WCW, Windham winning the NWA World Heavyweight title from the Great Muta at Superbrawl III was a classic.
But my pick is the 30+ minute Rude v. Flair match for the WCW International World Heavyweight Title, two of my favorites putting on a great match that gets no recognition
 
After loking through the WWE pay per views of that year the only match i could even consider was Hart v. Perfect in the semi-finals of the KOTR. I found it to be a very exciting match with two very good in ring performers.
As for WCW, Windham winning the NWA World Heavyweight title from the Great Muta at Superbrawl III was a classic.
But my pick is the 30+ minute Rude v. Flair match for the WCW International World Heavyweight Title, two of my favorites putting on a great match that gets no recognition

WOW these are great picks. 8five, thanks for posting these!

The Hart vs Perfect match from KOTR was awesome. It was a war. Even the pre-match banter, with Perfect telling Bret "I owe you for Summer Slam!" was intense as hell. Bret slamming into the barrier in front of the crowd and bruising his ribs. The match was technical mastery, and ended with Perfect AGAIN putting Bret over. The match was even better in the context of the night, with Bam Bam Bigelow getting the bye to the finals because of the Tatanka / Luger draw and Bret having to go through Razor Ramon AND Mr. Prefect just to get a shot at a fresh Bigelow who'd squashed the Big Boss Man.

Windham vs Muta was also awesome. Muta is such a talent, but people forget how good Barry Windham could be. He was really the only guy who was plugged into the 4 Horsemen who made the group STRONGER after Ole left.
 
No way should this have been MOTY. Of course it was a good match, but great? Not even close. I could probably name 30 Shawn Michaels matches better than this one. The story of the feud was good, but the match itself lacked psychology. Their Royal Rumble match was way better. It was paced really well, and when the highs spots and false finishes came into play they actually meant something. This would have been more deserving of MOTY than the match from Raw.

Hart/Ramon from RR, Hart/Perfect and Hart/Bigelow from KOTR were also great matches, much better than Michaels/Jannetty from Raw. And the Steiners/Money Inc cage match that Jake mentioned was an unbelievable match. Much better than any of the bullshit cage matches we see these days.
 
Okay, while the Shawn Michaels/Marty Jannetty match was stellar, I'd have to say there could be argument of one being better. I'll give my take on the H.B.K./Jannetty match after I list the alternatives.

Okay, before I go off this. Someone recently (xfear, I think) said that in order to be a MOTY, its not just about wrestling, its about chemistry, and overall storyline. So keep this in mind, as I'm swerving a bit between good matches, and great storylines.

1. Wrestlemania IX: W.W.F. Championship: Bret Hart v. Yokozuna: Honestly, this was a huge turn for the company (albeit overshadowed by my #2 match) because they were going in the direction of a Superstar who had mammoth size and strength. Yokozuna was being built as the ultimate heel, unstoppable in every way. (again, minus my #2 match) Meanwhile, Bret Hart got on of the first really great matches out of Yokozuna in this Mania classic. Hart showed Yokozuna what noone had before.. a challenge.

The match is an untouched diamond in the rough. Its not physically pretty, but its definately belonging in MOTY quality, because of the impact it had on the sport. And speaking of impactful, it leads me to this...

2. Wrestlemania IX: W.W.F. Championship: Yokozuna v. Hulk Hogan: While I dispise this in every way, it almost (if not completely) destroyed everything Yokozuna was, for a guy who refused to let others be in the Main Event. Hulk Hogan, due to his big name and character standing destroyed the undefeated mammoth monster within mere seconds, to become World Champion, again.

While I hate this match (if you can call it that) and everything it stood for, I can't discount that sadly it impacted the sport of the W.W.F. just as much as the Yoko/Hart match did. Of course it "had" to be Hogan, to be the first to unseat the monster, which was pathetic in every way, but its still legendary. (which naturally is why the prick wanted his name all over it)

3. King of the Ring: Semi-Finals: Bret Hart v. Curt Hennig: Truth be told, the entire Tournament should be a MOTY quality series. Bret Hart and Razor Ramon, Bret Hart and Mr. Perfect, Bret Hart and Bam Bam Bigelow. All three matches were very well done, and all three were impactful on a new Pay Per View they were re-introducing.

I picked this outta the three because it was yet another truly classic gem between Hart & Hennig. While if you wanted to go with impactful purposes, go with Hart v. Bigelow in the Finals. However, Hart/Hennig went to the wire and the limit for both men. Truly a great classic.

4. Summerslam: W.W.F. Championship: Yokozuna v. Lex Luger: Not the greatest in matches. I mean hell, it was utter shit to most people. However the build-up to this match, the fricking "Lex-Express" and the entire storyline surrounding it, being Luger body-slamming (*cough* hip toss *cough*) the guy who hadn't been lifted off his feet.

The match itself would've been so much better had it went with a better finish, but I suppose since they continued to push Luger v. Yokozuna in the later monthes to come, it had the best finish possible, without destroying the credibility of either man. Luger's illegal forearm shot was the perfect excuse to have Yokozuna knocked out cold, and resulting in a count-out. This was (sadly) one of the best matches of that Summer.

5. Shawn Michaels v. Marty Jannetty: The Monday Night Raw match was what was voted on being the proper choice. While the match was hugely technical and very well done, including the finish, it just didn't have a great story behind it.

While many see this as being a great match, I don't see it being any better or different than their Royal Rumble encounter. (Minus the botched finish) Of course unless you're a Marty Jannetty fan, then it was the biggest thing he'd done in his entire career. Overall, it was definately a classic to remember in selective situations, but I'm bent on whether it should deserve Match of the Year awards.

I'd list matches from the W.C.W. and E.C.W. time-frame, but I haven't seen hardly any of them, as I only watched W.W.F. back then. This was the first year I truly got into Professional Wrestling. I've tried renting all the old tapes I could, but I don't remember hardly anything from this era, out of W.C.W. and E.C.W. I'd half-ass it and list matches with big named superstars, but I don't think that'd be far.
 
MOTY has to be a good match and neither of the wrestlemania title matches were any good at all. Arguably that was one of the worse in ring wrestlemanias in history. There were 0 matches that were MOTY worthy, and this is coming from a huge Bret Hart fan who thought he did get a lot out of Yoko in that match. It was overall an extremely soft year for the WWF/E. Other then King of the Ring, we were stuck with a world title picture that was nothing short of recovering from Hulk and Ultimate Warrior and using Bret as a filler for the early parts and Yoko and Luger for the later parts. All of the WCW uppercard matches outshine everything the WWE did outside the King of the Ring. Also, the biggest news of the year was the WCW/NWA split so why not give some credit to the promotion that was finally standing on their own and putting on a ton of in-ring masterpieces.
 
MOTY has to be a good match and neither of the wrestlemania title matches were any good at all. Arguably that was one of the worse in ring wrestlemanias in history. There were 0 matches that were MOTY worthy, and this is coming from a huge Bret Hart fan who thought he did get a lot out of Yoko in that match.

While I don't always agree with xfearbefore, I have to take into acceptance what he said before. P.W.I. doesn't award M.O.T.Y. to wrestlers who just have a great looking match. Apparently its suppose to have something to do with the chemistry, and impact of the match.

With that said, Hulk Hogan v. Yokozuna, the minute long squash and pathetic excuse for putting Hogan over one more time that it was, was still more impactful to the company than Shawn Michaels v. Marty Jannetty on a Raw.

If it was their Royal Rumble match, it'd be arguable. However it was nothing more impactful than for Jannetty, who gained his only single's title run of his career. It impacted one guy.. not one company. Hulk's Championship win impacted the entire company, as A.) He defeated the undefeated mammoth in Yokozuna, B.) He once again became the top guy in the company with the Championship and C.) It showed that the W.W.E. was giving him one last run, and quite possibly wasn't comfortable with Yokozuna holding the Championship and working against anyone else from the time between Mania and King of the Ring.

It was overall an extremely soft year for the WWF/E. Other then King of the Ring, we were stuck with a world title picture that was nothing short of recovering from Hulk and Ultimate Warrior and using Bret as a filler for the early parts and Yoko and Luger for the later parts. All of the WCW uppercard matches outshine everything the WWE did outside the King of the Ring.

Then why not list some of those W.C.W. matches you remember. If all of them outshined everything, except the King of the Ring, then post the most memorable ones to compete with the H.B.K. v. Jannetty match.
 
With that said, Hulk Hogan v. Yokozuna, the minute long squash and pathetic excuse for putting Hogan over one more time that it was, was still more impactful to the company than Shawn Michaels v. Marty Jannetty on a Raw.

If it was their Royal Rumble match, it'd be arguable. However it was nothing more impactful than for Jannetty, who gained his only single's title run of his career. It impacted one guy.. not one company.

Then why not list some of those W.C.W. matches you remember. If all of them outshined everything, except the King of the Ring, then post the most memorable ones to compete with the H.B.K. v. Jannetty match.

I forgot I'd agreed to be Will's anti-hero, so it is now time for the One Man Dynasty to take down the One Man Powertrip.

The Jannetty/Michaels exchange was more significant than the Yokozuna/Hogan exchange.

Michaels vs Jannetty​

a.) For starters, the breakup of the Rockers was a huge surprise and reaffirmed that you never knew what was going to happen by tuning in to wrestling. AH, the good old days.

b.) Furthermore, it established Shawn Michaels as a self-important heel with nuclear heat on him. EVERYONE hated Shawn for what he did by throwing Jannetty through the window.

c.) It also gave the WWF another dimension for creating feud dynamics - the popular tag team breaking up. It's worked for many teams since then.

d.) Moving on, the quality of the matches - the Rumble match was the BEST match of the night, with Hart vs Razor 2nd - showed everybody that the Intercontinental Title remained relevant and exciting without being in the hands of a Hart or a Henning. VERY important for the career of Shawn Michaels.

e.) Next, it did take Jannetty to the next level, which he regrettably wasted.

f.) Finally, the Michaels vs Jannetty feud, coupled with the Michaels vs Perfect feud, gave the WWF an avenue to introduce Diesel as Shawn's bodyguard, resulting in one of the most entertaining and dominant twosomes in a LONG TIME.

Hogan vs Yokozuna​

a.) On the flip side, Hogan's win over Yokozuna was TERRIBLE decision, because it diminutized the accomplishments of Bret Hart having just been screwed out of the WWF Title.

b.) The move temporarily killed Yoko's heat, losing in 128 seconds to Hulk Hogan, who'd also wrestled early that night. They made up for it at KOTR, but barely.

c.) It also took Royal Rumble down a peg, since the Rumble winner DID go on to win the WWF Title (remember, this was the first year the Rumble winner got the Wrestlemania Shot awared to them automatically) and then promptly dropped it back.

d.) Any match that lasts 128 seconds builds NO relevance, NO significance, NO psychology whatsoever.

e.) It created no momentum for the WWF title. What took place between March's Wrestlemania and June's KOTR? I don't remember either. Because Hogan was the champ, and at the time he rarely appeared or defended. Jim Cornette and Mr. Fuji were the ONLY reason that feud had ANY build-up at all!

Then why not list some of those W.C.W. matches you remember. If all of them outshined everything, except the King of the Ring, then post the most memorable ones to compete with the H.B.K. v. Jannetty match.

He did...

After loking through the WWE pay per views of that year the only match i could even consider was Hart v. Perfect in the semi-finals of the KOTR. I found it to be a very exciting match with two very good in ring performers.
As for WCW, Windham winning the NWA World Heavyweight title from the Great Muta at Superbrawl III was a classic.
But my pick is the 30+ minute Rude v. Flair match for the WCW International World Heavyweight Title, two of my favorites putting on a great match that gets no recognition

I anxiously await your rebuttle, Will.
 
a.) For starters, the breakup of the Rockers was a huge surprise and reaffirmed that you never knew what was going to happen by tuning in to wrestling. AH, the good old days.

But in this belief you're saying the split of the Rockers, a Tag Team that didn't hold any Tag Team Championships (due to a error, mainly) overshadows that of Hulk Hogan, the W.W.F.'s top guy from Wrestlemania 1-9, once again claiming glory in winning another World Heavyweight Championship.. Proving doubters wrong, that he wasn't beyond his prime, and he still had it.

b.) Furthermore, it established Shawn Michaels as a self-important heel with nuclear heat on him. EVERYONE hated Shawn for what he did by throwing Jannetty through the window.

Shawn Michaels made his name off of turning on Marty Jannetty, that much is very true. However the debate isn't the Jannetty/Michaels feud in general, its one match. The one match focused on Jannetty (the face) overcoming the odds and gaining a piece of revenge on his former partner, Michaels. (the heel.)

Shawn didn't gain anything from losing to Jannetty, who at that point had been written off as a nobody anymore. When Jannetty returned, it sparked the fans into a fire.. but for Shawn Michaels to lose, it hurt his build slightly because people had already considered Shawn better and far above Jannetty. The only thing this match did, was help Jannetty, not Michaels.

c.) It also gave the WWF another dimension for creating feud dynamics - the popular tag team breaking up. It's worked for many teams since then.

While the Rocker's split was arguably one of the best Tag Team turned single's splits in history.. what other teams truly broke away into big names, off of turning on each other? You can't claim the Hardys, because they still team to this day. Edge and Christian are roughly the only thing you can go off of.

I'm sure I'm missing some teams, but what teams have done the Rocker'isque split and had it work in a similar way?

d.) Moving on, the quality of the matches - the Rumble match was the BEST match of the night, with Hart vs Razor 2nd - showed everybody that the Intercontinental Title remained relevant and exciting without being in the hands of a Hart or a Henning. VERY important for the career of Shawn Michaels.

You're basing their match as being one of the best next to a great technical athlete and a big man. Razor Ramon wasn't the greatest athlete around, and he was still pretty raw in W.W.F. at that time. Plus, that was Hart's first true big man opponent (to my knowledge) so it was more the W.W.F. testing the waters of how well Hart could do.

Meanwhile, you put that up against a red-hot feud and rivalry, with the first meeting between Jannetty and Michaels, and of course they're going to win out. They'd be absolutely horrible and boo'd out of the building if they didn't.

I also agree that the match match the Intercontinental Championship look just as solid, just as needed and just as relevant. However, the W.W.F. Championship will always be the top title.. so regardless of how well over the I.C. matches are to the World title matches, it all comes down to where the match is taking place on the card.

Finally, I agree that Shawn showed the world the title could be exciting without it being in the hands of Hart or Hennig, however I don't give his feud with Jannetty that full credit. Again, it was a well known fact people wrote Marty off almost instantly. So for him to come back and win, was roughly the only thing he could do to keep his head above water. Meanwhile, Shawn went on after their Rumble match, and before their next encounter to have several great matches in between.

e.) Next, it did take Jannetty to the next level, which he regrettably wasted.

Agreed. Marty Jannetty's biggest career moment was winning the Championship from Shawn Michaels. That, however, was not bigger than Hulk Hogan, even in name-sake alone.

f.) Finally, the Michaels vs Jannetty feud, coupled with the Michaels vs Perfect feud, gave the WWF an avenue to introduce Diesel as Shawn's bodyguard, resulting in one of the most entertaining and dominant twosomes in a LONG TIME.

While the "Two Dudes w/ Attitudes" era was a great one, and their team was one of the very best. How is that relevant to discussing H.B.K./Jannetty being M.O.T.Y.?

Thats like me saying while Hogan/Yokozuna at Mania was shit, it set-up Yokozuna to ultimately end what we thought was the end, anyways, of Hulkamania and that rivals, and tops any storyline going ever. Anyone who can end Hulkamania, even in theory, like Yokozuna did from 1993-2002 (in the W.W.F./E.) will set atop the best storyline ever.

Hogan vs Yokozuna​

a.) On the flip side, Hogan's win over Yokozuna was TERRIBLE decision, because it diminutized the accomplishments of Bret Hart having just been screwed out of the WWF Title.

While I completely and definately agree that Hulk Hogan's selfishness was a horrible move and mistake on the W.W.F.'s part, and it hurt both Bret Hart and Yokozuna on that very night.. I'll debate this by saying..

It reconfirms what W.W.F. has ALWAYS wanted you to believe in. That being, "Anything Can Happen." And they proved it. That was the first, and to my knowledge, ONLY time anyone has up and challenged a newly crowned Champion, directly after winning at Wrestlemania's Main Event.. then over-throwing them and winning themselves.

Hogan defeating Yokozuna was a horrible move, but a shocking development that out rivals that of Shawn Michaels turning on Marty Jannetty. (especially since Rick Martel turned on Tito only a few years back, which was all the Rocker's split was to me, was a repeat of the Strike Force break-up.)

b.) The move temporarily killed Yoko's heat, losing in 128 seconds to Hulk Hogan, who'd also wrestled early that night. They made up for it at KOTR, but barely.

Again, I completely agree with you that it was a horrible mistake and misuse of great talent that'd go on to carry the company.. to put over a guy that was ultimately leaving the company within the next several monthes.

However, the debate to this is that they didn't have an alternative for Yokozuna to feud with anyone, while waiting on Lex Luger's face turn. (keep in mind, Luger was heel at Mania IX, and that meant the biggest challenger for Yokozuna would've been a Hart rematch, or possibly the Undertaker, who still had his own issues.)

Logically, Hulk Hogan was the only option they truly had to go with, unless they had Hart retain in fluke fashion, by a disqualification.

None the less, as you said they barely made up for it, but made up for it none the less at King of the Ring, when Yokozuna killed Hulkamania in the W.W.F. from 1993-2002. That, as said before, HAS TO out-rival anything of a Tag Team splitting up.

c.) It also took Royal Rumble down a peg, since the Rumble winner DID go on to win the WWF Title (remember, this was the first year the Rumble winner got the Wrestlemania Shot awared to them automatically) and then promptly dropped it back.

While I'm half and half on this. I'll agree that it was a slap in Yokozuna's face for all he'd accomplished to lose so quickly. However, since it was the first time the winner got a guaranteed Championship match, how can you say it took the Royal Rumble down a peg?

Never before had the winner received a Championship match off that victory. Yokozuna did exactly what he promised he would, off of winning the Rumble. He became a World Champion. It was his cocky attitude that lead to his downfall against Hulk Hogan, not anything to do with the Royal Rumble.

d.) Any match that lasts 128 seconds builds NO relevance, NO significance, NO psychology whatsoever.

While typically I'd agree, on this note I have to debate it. (since thats what I'm doing ;))

Hogan defeating the undefeated mammoth monster, sent Las Vegas into a frenzy. That entire Mania blew hard, and there wasn't a single match on the card that sparked excitement. Until the ending, when the heel won the title and people officially hated and dispised the night.. then Hulk Hogan (still everyone's favorite hero at the time) came out to aid Hart to the back, was goated into an "un-planned" match, defeated the undefeated, and reclaimed the World Heavyweight Championship for not only his fans, but for America.

I'd say that was very psychological, with great significance.

e.) It created no momentum for the WWF title. What took place between March's Wrestlemania and June's KOTR? I don't remember either. Because Hogan was the champ, and at the time he rarely appeared or defended. Jim Cornette and Mr. Fuji were the ONLY reason that feud had ANY build-up at all!

It would've been a dead point in time regardless of whether Hulk Hogan carried it or Yokozuna carried it. At least having the Immortal Hulk Hogan holding it, it gave the company the direction to go in, which they did, by reconfirming Yokozuna as a mammoth threat and upon having him KNOWING he'd face Hulk Hogan.. destroy the Immortal legend.

Hogan no-showing several events and never defending the Championship was a disgrace and it just goes to show you how horrible of a Champion he was. However, the alternative would've been Yokozuna doing what he did anyways, which was destroy random jobber and undersized 'named' opponent in his path, on his way back to glory.

Again, either way, that point during the year was dead, regardless of who had the Championship. However, at least it gave Yokozuna the added pleasure of killing Hulkamania and that was a huge career notch. Definately, out doing Marty Jannetty's fluke win over Shawn Michaels.

Irish, thank you for the debate. I eagerly await your rebuttal.
 
It feels great to be getting into a real back and forth debate. Thank you Will, for indulging me. Now, if someone could please just show me where to pick up my trophy? :)

Alot of your questions and debates, Will, you managed to answer in your own posts, which saves me time. But let me re-affirm my point: Marty Jannetty vs Shawn Michaels was a more significant match than Hulk Hogan vs Yokozuna. And thusly, Match of the Year.

But in this belief you're saying the split of the Rockers, a Tag Team that didn't hold any Tag Team Championships (due to a error, mainly) overshadows that of Hulk Hogan, the W.W.F.'s top guy from Wrestlemania 1-9, once again claiming glory in winning another World Heavyweight Championship.. Proving doubters wrong, that he wasn't beyond his prime, and he still had it.

Hogan won his 5th title in a match that he did NOTHING during, besides duck a salt throw and drop a leg. The title reign was meaningless and crushed a great deal of WWF's momentum. Thank god KOTR reignitied it. So yes, two great "Tag Team Specialists" feuding over the IC Title in a classic match was FAR more significant than Hogan winning his 5th and least meaningful title.

Shawn Michaels made his name off of turning on Marty Jannetty, that much is very true. However the debate isn't the Jannetty/Michaels feud in general, its one match. The one match focused on Jannetty (the face) overcoming the odds and gaining a piece of revenge on his former partner, Michaels. (the heel.)

The feud and the match are practically synonymous. Without the culmination, the revenge, the return of Jannetty, the heel turn has no teeth. It was as much the classic struggle, Michaels BARELY surviving with long 2-count after long two-count, the pain on Jannetty's face when he realized he was within a tenth of a second from reaching his goal, and the celebration when he finally rolled Shawn up for the title.

Hogan already had his name, and so did Yoko. The match between those two didn't positively effect either man - in fact it may have hurt them both in some respects.

While the Rocker's split was arguably one of the best Tag Team turned single's splits in history.. what other teams truly broke away into big names, off of turning on each other? You can't claim the Hardys, because they still team to this day. Edge and Christian are roughly the only thing you can go off of.

I'm sure I'm missing some teams, but what teams have done the Rocker'isque split and had it work in a similar way?

Well, no team ever did it as effectively. The New Age Outlaws. America's Most Wanted. A few others pale in comparison, and more still were singles stars forced together who broke up (Michaels and Diesel and Michaels and HHH) but the Rockers remain the pinnacle of the act. AMW came close, though.

I also agree that the match match the Intercontinental Championship look just as solid, just as needed and just as relevant. However, the W.W.F. Championship will always be the top title.. so regardless of how well over the I.C. matches are to the World title matches, it all comes down to where the match is taking place on the card.

Which is why the term "stole the show" exists. Just because the WWF Title match is the "Main Event" does not mean it's the best match on the card. We all know that. and this match wasn't about the IC Title going OVER the WWF Title (like Summerslam @ Wembley) but about maintaining the title's relevance after they elevated it's main star (Hart) to main event status.

Finally, I agree that Shawn showed the world the title could be exciting without it being in the hands of Hart or Hennig, however I don't give his feud with Jannetty that full credit. Again, it was a well known fact people wrote Marty off almost instantly. So for him to come back and win, was roughly the only thing he could do to keep his head above water. Meanwhile, Shawn went on after their Rumble match, and before their next encounter to have several great matches in between.

Do you remember Jannetty's only successful title defense? I do. One week after winning the belt, he defeated Bam Bam Bigelow by DQ, and after the match, Bigelow flattened Marty. Jannetty didn't look like a champion. WWF never really gave him a chance with that, and every chance he DID get, he blew. And yes, Shawn had some classics - but that run of classics STARTED with his turn on and feud with Jannetty.

While the "Two Dudes w/ Attitudes" era was a great one, and their team was one of the very best. How is that relevant to discussing H.B.K./Jannetty being M.O.T.Y.?

Jannetty defeating Michaels gave the WWF the opening to put Diesel WITH Michaels. You asked early on what Shawn gained by putting Marty over. He gained Kevin Nash as his bodyguard, and left the feud 3x more relevant than he'd started.

It reconfirms what W.W.F. has ALWAYS wanted you to believe in. That being, "Anything Can Happen." And they proved it. That was the first, and to my knowledge, ONLY time anyone has up and challenged a newly crowned Champion, directly after winning at Wrestlemania's Main Event.. then over-throwing them and winning themselves. Hogan defeating Yokozuna was a horrible move, but a shocking development that out rivals that of Shawn Michaels turning on Marty Jannetty.

Will, PLEASE tell me you don't actually believe that Hogan coming out to defeat Yoko was a bigger shock than the Michaels / Jannetty feud.

And in terms of reaffirmation of "surprise," take the Match of the Year on RAW - Jannetty came out in street clothes, and Shawn defiantly said he wouldn't defend against Marty because he wasn't ready to compete. So, Jannetty went to his car to get his bag. NOBODY knew Marty was there, nobody knew that match was happening. The Match of the Year DID come from left field, and nobody was prepared for it.

However, the debate to this is that they didn't have an alternative for Yokozuna to feud with anyone, while waiting on Lex Luger's face turn. (keep in mind, Luger was heel at Mania IX, and that meant the biggest challenger for Yokozuna would've been a Hart rematch, or possibly the Undertaker, who still had his own issues.)
Logically, Hulk Hogan was the only option they truly had to go with, unless they had Hart retain in fluke fashion, by a disqualification.

Months prior to Yokozuna's title win, Fuji held a challenge to see who could knock Yokozuna off his feet, since nobody had done it yet. The man who accomplished that feat? Hacksaw Jim Duggan. Why couldn't Duggan feud with Yokozuna between Wrestlemania and the Luger face turn? Duggan was a former Royal Rumble winner who never got a title run - it would have gotten the patriotic juices flowing as warm the crowd up FOR the Luger turn!

What about Savage? The man Yokozuna eliminated to win the Rumble? Surely HE could have had a passable feud as a 2-time former champion, no?

Hogan defeating the undefeated mammoth monster, sent Las Vegas into a frenzy. That entire Mania blew hard, and there wasn't a single match on the card that sparked excitement. Until the ending, when the heel won the title and people officially hated and dispised the night.. then Hulk Hogan (still everyone's favorite hero at the time) came out to aid Hart to the back, was goated into an "un-planned" match, defeated the undefeated, and reclaimed the World Heavyweight Championship for not only his fans, but for America.

Dude, the crowds at Wrestlemania ALWAYS pop huge, especially for a face over heel title change. Just because the crowd popped doesn't mean the match wasn't useless shit. And the Manhattan Center went NUTS when Jannetty upset Michaels, soo there goes that arguement anyway. Bigger crowd = bigger pop, of course. But it's all relative.


Meanwhile, you put that up against a red-hot feud and rivalry, with the first meeting between Jannetty and Michaels, and of course they're going to win out. They'd be absolutely horrible and boo'd out of the building if they didn't.

Ok, so - red hot feud and rivalry? First match up? Well, YES! That's my point, the match was a HUGE rivalry, which is why it is Match of the Year! Hogan and Yoko had never even been in the ring together prior to this! They had no chemistry and no heat whatsoever! So I reply to your comment with, well, YOUR comment:

Okay, before I go off this. Someone recently (xfear, I think) said that in order to be a MOTY, its not just about wrestling, its about chemistry, and overall storyline. So keep this in mind, as I'm swerving a bit between good matches, and great storylines.

How was Hogan / Yoko better chemistry than Michaels / Jannetty? How was Hogan / Yokozuna better in overall storyline? And how was it a good match?

Will, you know as well as I do, the Jannetty win over Michaels was FAR more significant that the Hogan screwjob over Yokozuna. AND it deserves Match of the Year.

And...One Man Dynasty > One Man Powertrip
 
i have to say the excitement behind the janetty michaels raw match was awesome...i remember watching hbk superkick him and throwing janetty through the barber shop glass... it was the first edgy spot i can think of in the wwf... besides the rockers being one of my favorite tag teams.. seeing these two who knew so much about each others styles was awesome so yeah i think for the history behind it, it could easily be match of the year
 

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