Watching the WWE Network has unearthed a lot of long buried memories: Raw on Friday nights; SmackDown on Saturday mornings; that time Mick Foley won the Monday night war; that time Stone Cold got hit by a car; Crash Holly weighing at allegedly well over four-hundred pounds; Big Bossman behaving badly. When Triple H became The Game and the Cerebral Assassin and, as we're going to discuss, probably the best damn wrestler on the planet.
Triple H is often excluded from the conversations that include Steve Austin and The Rock, or Bret Hart or Shawn Michaels, or even Mick Foley and The Undertaker. The string of matches and feuds Triple H had between late-1999 and mid-2001, one could argue, was better than anything those men, or any wrestler, had put together or has since. Specifically, this is about the span of time between Triple H's feud with Vince McMahon - the birth of the McMahon-Helmsley Era - and Triple H tearing his quad completely off the bone - the end of the Two Man Power Trip. It was the hot streak to end all hot streaks.
Prior to the birth of The Game - or, more accurately, prior to Triple H's first title win - it was unclear where Triple H fit in. He was undoubtedly good but the highest he'd risen was being an awkward Starscream to Undertaker's even more awkward Megatron in the Corporate Ministry. He'd been in the doghouse for a long time following his breaking of the fourth wall when he, Shawn Michaels, Razor Ramon and Diesel hugged it out in Madison Square Garden. Supposedly, Steve Austin really didn't want Triple H to win the belt, to the point that he lost clean to a Mankind double-arm DDT at SummerSlam 1999 rather than give the belt directly to Triple H. In fact, just before SummerSlam 1999, Triple H nearly lost his no. 1 contender status to Chyna. He actually did for a little while. I have vivid memories of watching Triple H's first title win in 1999 and feeling underwhelmed. I was seven.
After Triple H's return from injury in 2002, I think we all remember the discussions about politics, infinite title reigns, burials, twenty minute promos and banging the boss' daughter. No need to go back to that well again, is there?
A man is only as good as his opponent. People often use "Yeah, but he's not that good - look at who he wrestled" to tear someone down, but that's exceptionally silly. Jaws wouldn't have been nearly as good if Chief Brody had been played by Brian Blessed; that doesn't mean Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfuss weren't shit hot. A wrestling match is a partnership and Triple H was fortunate enough to be partnered with, in chronological order: Vince McMahon, Cactus Jack, The Rock, Chris Jericho, Kurt Angle, Chris Benoit, Steve Austin, The Undertaker and... Kane. If you wanted to attempt a similar streak in 2015, you'd probably have at least one singles match against someone like, well, Kane thrown in your way.
That said, this period wasn't non-stop brilliance. For instance, the WWF going out of their way to stop The Rock and Triple H having a one-on-one match at WrestleMania, inserting The Big Show and simultaneously ruining Mick Foley's perfect retirement story, was ludicrous. On the other hand, at least five stone cold classic matches means they must have know what they were doing to some extent.
It quickly became apparent when writing this that this period couldn't be covered in a single post - at least if we take into account the attention span of your average forum contributor, and also my laziness. That in mind, this'll get done one match at a time. Obviously, feel free to sign up to the WWE Network (free for the entire month of February) and watch along. The first match:
A quick catch-up: Triple H doesn't like Vince. Vince doesn't like Triple H. You thought Austin versus McMahon was personal? You don't know anything. Vince costs Triple H the world championship. Triple H responds by putting roofies in Stephanie McMahon's drink and marrying her unconscious body, which is apparently legally binding. There's the implication of rape there, the marriage having apparently been "consummated" several times, but it's probably best not to get into that. Vince obviously takes exception to these events and agrees to a match at Armageddon. If Vince wins, Triple H and Stephanie's wedding will be annulled. If Triple H wins, he gets a championship match.
Cut to Armageddon.
Roman Reigns is full of shit. Oh, I wouldn't even know how to lock up correctly? Doesn't matter, mate - watch Triple H versus Vince McMahon at Armageddon 1999. Triple H hits two elbow drops - that's the extent of wrestling prowess on show. There's a lot of punches; a lot of stiff punches. I mean, Vince is never going to hit a brainbuster so work with what you've got, right? So he wallops the shit out of Triple H and Triple H wallops the shit out of him. Mick Foley brings out a shopping cart full of weapons at one point and the two take turns walloping the shit out of each other with those. They brawl over to the set at the ramp and wallop the shit out of each other with helicopters and heavy artillery. They brawl to the back and wallop the shit out of each other with cars and vending machines. They brawl into the parking lot. Triple H runs off. Or does he? No, he comes back in a car and tries to run over Vince. They brawl back through the parking lot, back through the backstage area, backstage through the artillery and back to ringside.
Meanwhile, Stephanie McMahon looks concerned.
In the final moments, Vinnie Mac finally has Hunter bang to rights. The Game is cornered and the boss has the sledgehammer. Triple H is about to get his head stoved in by his own signature weapon. But wait - what's Stephanie doing in the ring? Oh, she wants to do it - she wants to cave her alleged rapist's head in. Women! Am I right? But wait - she doesn't have the heart for it. Women! Am I right? Triple H grabs the hammer from her, lays Vince out with it, gets the one, gets the two and gets the three. He's not done yet either - he wants to lay Stephanie out, the sick bastard. She turns, looks at him, heartbroken, terrified... pleased? She smiles. The two embrace
SWERVE. Are you sure Russo has left? He has? Oh, because I thought this might be a DOUBLE SWERVE.
Hunter Hearst Helmsley and Stephanie McMahon kiss. They celebrate over Vince's unconscious body. The McMahon-Helmsley era has begun. Before the next pay-per-view, the Royal Rumble, Triple H is the WWF Champion.
From a storyline perspective, things make more sense after the swerve than before. Months previous, Vince had been instrumental in having Stephanie kidnapped by and nearly married to The Undertaker. What is it with Stephanie and weddings? Anyway, yeah, why wouldn't Stephanie be pissed off by this incredible betrayal of trust? This is the birth of Stephanie McMahon, Jezebel of biblical proportions. Prior to this, she was the only McMahon (well, other than Linda) that was innocent and pure and not a monstrous megalomaniac. After this, she's a hugely significant component of what makes Triple H work. There's a reason the McMahon-Helmsley Era is the McMahon-Helmsley Era.
From an in-ring perspective, this is not Triple H's best. Nor, however, is it his worst. Like I've explained, it is just punching and weapon shots. It goes on for half an hour, which is incredibly impressive for a match featuring a non-wrestler, but also quite long for something that doesn't feature so much as a DDT. But it's good. It's a hot storyline. It's got some inventive spots. It shows how good Triple H is, making a fifty-something non-wrestler looks like a genuine threat. It shows his humility as a person, being willing to do that. It shows his ruthlessness as a character, literally making attempts on his opponent's life.
Most importantly, it was the start of something very special.
Next Time: Cactus Jack and The Best WWF Championship Match Ever
Triple H is often excluded from the conversations that include Steve Austin and The Rock, or Bret Hart or Shawn Michaels, or even Mick Foley and The Undertaker. The string of matches and feuds Triple H had between late-1999 and mid-2001, one could argue, was better than anything those men, or any wrestler, had put together or has since. Specifically, this is about the span of time between Triple H's feud with Vince McMahon - the birth of the McMahon-Helmsley Era - and Triple H tearing his quad completely off the bone - the end of the Two Man Power Trip. It was the hot streak to end all hot streaks.
Prior to the birth of The Game - or, more accurately, prior to Triple H's first title win - it was unclear where Triple H fit in. He was undoubtedly good but the highest he'd risen was being an awkward Starscream to Undertaker's even more awkward Megatron in the Corporate Ministry. He'd been in the doghouse for a long time following his breaking of the fourth wall when he, Shawn Michaels, Razor Ramon and Diesel hugged it out in Madison Square Garden. Supposedly, Steve Austin really didn't want Triple H to win the belt, to the point that he lost clean to a Mankind double-arm DDT at SummerSlam 1999 rather than give the belt directly to Triple H. In fact, just before SummerSlam 1999, Triple H nearly lost his no. 1 contender status to Chyna. He actually did for a little while. I have vivid memories of watching Triple H's first title win in 1999 and feeling underwhelmed. I was seven.
After Triple H's return from injury in 2002, I think we all remember the discussions about politics, infinite title reigns, burials, twenty minute promos and banging the boss' daughter. No need to go back to that well again, is there?
A man is only as good as his opponent. People often use "Yeah, but he's not that good - look at who he wrestled" to tear someone down, but that's exceptionally silly. Jaws wouldn't have been nearly as good if Chief Brody had been played by Brian Blessed; that doesn't mean Robert Shaw and Richard Dreyfuss weren't shit hot. A wrestling match is a partnership and Triple H was fortunate enough to be partnered with, in chronological order: Vince McMahon, Cactus Jack, The Rock, Chris Jericho, Kurt Angle, Chris Benoit, Steve Austin, The Undertaker and... Kane. If you wanted to attempt a similar streak in 2015, you'd probably have at least one singles match against someone like, well, Kane thrown in your way.
That said, this period wasn't non-stop brilliance. For instance, the WWF going out of their way to stop The Rock and Triple H having a one-on-one match at WrestleMania, inserting The Big Show and simultaneously ruining Mick Foley's perfect retirement story, was ludicrous. On the other hand, at least five stone cold classic matches means they must have know what they were doing to some extent.
It quickly became apparent when writing this that this period couldn't be covered in a single post - at least if we take into account the attention span of your average forum contributor, and also my laziness. That in mind, this'll get done one match at a time. Obviously, feel free to sign up to the WWE Network (free for the entire month of February) and watch along. The first match:
Triple H versus Vince McMahon, Armageddon 1999:
The Birth of the McMahon-Helmsley Era
The Birth of the McMahon-Helmsley Era
A quick catch-up: Triple H doesn't like Vince. Vince doesn't like Triple H. You thought Austin versus McMahon was personal? You don't know anything. Vince costs Triple H the world championship. Triple H responds by putting roofies in Stephanie McMahon's drink and marrying her unconscious body, which is apparently legally binding. There's the implication of rape there, the marriage having apparently been "consummated" several times, but it's probably best not to get into that. Vince obviously takes exception to these events and agrees to a match at Armageddon. If Vince wins, Triple H and Stephanie's wedding will be annulled. If Triple H wins, he gets a championship match.
Cut to Armageddon.
Roman Reigns is full of shit. Oh, I wouldn't even know how to lock up correctly? Doesn't matter, mate - watch Triple H versus Vince McMahon at Armageddon 1999. Triple H hits two elbow drops - that's the extent of wrestling prowess on show. There's a lot of punches; a lot of stiff punches. I mean, Vince is never going to hit a brainbuster so work with what you've got, right? So he wallops the shit out of Triple H and Triple H wallops the shit out of him. Mick Foley brings out a shopping cart full of weapons at one point and the two take turns walloping the shit out of each other with those. They brawl over to the set at the ramp and wallop the shit out of each other with helicopters and heavy artillery. They brawl to the back and wallop the shit out of each other with cars and vending machines. They brawl into the parking lot. Triple H runs off. Or does he? No, he comes back in a car and tries to run over Vince. They brawl back through the parking lot, back through the backstage area, backstage through the artillery and back to ringside.
Meanwhile, Stephanie McMahon looks concerned.
In the final moments, Vinnie Mac finally has Hunter bang to rights. The Game is cornered and the boss has the sledgehammer. Triple H is about to get his head stoved in by his own signature weapon. But wait - what's Stephanie doing in the ring? Oh, she wants to do it - she wants to cave her alleged rapist's head in. Women! Am I right? But wait - she doesn't have the heart for it. Women! Am I right? Triple H grabs the hammer from her, lays Vince out with it, gets the one, gets the two and gets the three. He's not done yet either - he wants to lay Stephanie out, the sick bastard. She turns, looks at him, heartbroken, terrified... pleased? She smiles. The two embrace
SWERVE. Are you sure Russo has left? He has? Oh, because I thought this might be a DOUBLE SWERVE.
Hunter Hearst Helmsley and Stephanie McMahon kiss. They celebrate over Vince's unconscious body. The McMahon-Helmsley era has begun. Before the next pay-per-view, the Royal Rumble, Triple H is the WWF Champion.
From a storyline perspective, things make more sense after the swerve than before. Months previous, Vince had been instrumental in having Stephanie kidnapped by and nearly married to The Undertaker. What is it with Stephanie and weddings? Anyway, yeah, why wouldn't Stephanie be pissed off by this incredible betrayal of trust? This is the birth of Stephanie McMahon, Jezebel of biblical proportions. Prior to this, she was the only McMahon (well, other than Linda) that was innocent and pure and not a monstrous megalomaniac. After this, she's a hugely significant component of what makes Triple H work. There's a reason the McMahon-Helmsley Era is the McMahon-Helmsley Era.
From an in-ring perspective, this is not Triple H's best. Nor, however, is it his worst. Like I've explained, it is just punching and weapon shots. It goes on for half an hour, which is incredibly impressive for a match featuring a non-wrestler, but also quite long for something that doesn't feature so much as a DDT. But it's good. It's a hot storyline. It's got some inventive spots. It shows how good Triple H is, making a fifty-something non-wrestler looks like a genuine threat. It shows his humility as a person, being willing to do that. It shows his ruthlessness as a character, literally making attempts on his opponent's life.
Most importantly, it was the start of something very special.

Next Time: Cactus Jack and The Best WWF Championship Match Ever