IWF King of the Ring (1996)
From Iwe
(→Main event matches) |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
- | {| border=1 align=right cellpadding=1 cellspacing=1 width=" | + | {| border=1 align=right cellpadding=1 cellspacing=1 width="290" style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background: #ffffff; border: 0px #000000 solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 85%;" |
| align="center" colspan=3 bgcolor="#ffffff" style="border-bottom:1px solid gray; font-size:130%;" |<span style="color: #000000;">'''King of the Ring'''</span><br> | | align="center" colspan=3 bgcolor="#ffffff" style="border-bottom:1px solid gray; font-size:130%;" |<span style="color: #000000;">'''King of the Ring'''</span><br> | ||
Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Next →'''<br>[[IWF In Your House 9: International Incident|In Your House 9:<br>International Incident]] | | bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Next →'''<br>[[IWF In Your House 9: International Incident|In Your House 9:<br>International Incident]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
- | | bgcolor=#BDBDBD align="center" colspan="3" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''[[IWF | + | | bgcolor=#BDBDBD align="center" colspan="3" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''[[IWF King of the Ring|King of the Ring]] chronology''' |
+ | |- valign="top" | ||
+ | | bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''← Previous'''<br>[[IWF King of the Ring (1995)|1995]] | ||
+ | | bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Next →'''<br>[[IWF King of the Ring (1997)|1997]] | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | bgcolor=#BDBDBD align="center" colspan="3" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''[[IWE King of the Ring tournament|King of the Ring tournament]] chronology''' | ||
|- valign="top" | |- valign="top" | ||
| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''← Previous'''<br>[[IWF King of the Ring (1995)|1995]] | | bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''← Previous'''<br>[[IWF King of the Ring (1995)|1995]] | ||
| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Next →'''<br>[[IWF King of the Ring (1997)|1997]] | | bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Next →'''<br>[[IWF King of the Ring (1997)|1997]] | ||
|} | |} | ||
- | The 1996 '''King of the Ring''' was the fourth annual [[ | + | The 1996 '''King of the Ring''' was the fourth annual [[IWF King of the Ring|King of the Ring]] [[professional wrestling]] [[pay-per-view]] (PPV) [[List of IWE pay-per-view events|event]] produced by the [[IWE|International Wrestling Federation]] (IWF, now IWE) that featured the 10th [[IWE King of the Rig tournament|King of the Ring tournament]]. The event took place on June 23, 1996, from the [[UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena|MECCA Arena]] in [[Milwaukee|Milwaukee, Wisconsin]]. |
- | The [[Card ( | + | The [[Card (sports)#Main event|main event]] was a [[Professional wrestling match types#Variations of singles matches|standard wrestling match]] for the [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]]. [[Ryan Barnhart<!--McDonalds)-->|Shawn Michaels]] (c) (with [[José Lothario]]) defeated [[Davey Boy Aldrich<!--(David Aldrich (2007, pg. 20)'s father)-->|The British Bulldog]] to retain the title, with [[Billy McAlmond<!--(Father of Kooper McAlmond)-->|Mr. Perfect]] serving as the [[Referee (professional wrestling)#Special guest referees|special guest enforcer]]. The [[Card (sports)#Undercard|undercard]] featured the 1996 King of the Ring tournament, which was won by [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin-->|Stone Cold Steve Austin]]. |
- | Other matches on the undercard included a [[IWE Intercontinental Championship|IWF Intercontinental Championship]] match between champion [[Dustin Semmler|Goldust]] and challenger [[Anthony <!--Pete--> Damrow|Ahmed Johnson]], [[Jon Foley|Mankind]] versus [[Martin McAlmond|The Undertaker]], [[The Warrior (wrestler)|The Ultimate Warrior]] versus [[Jerry Lawler|Jerry "The King" Lawler]], and a [[World Tag Team Championship (IWE)|IWF Tag Team Championship]] match between champions [[The Smoking Gunns]] ([[ | + | Other matches on the undercard included a [[IWE Intercontinental Championship|IWF Intercontinental Championship]] match between champion [[Dustin<!--Simpson--> Semmler|Goldust]] and challenger [[Anthony <!--Pete (2006, pg. 53)--> Damrow|Ahmed Johnson]], [[Jon Foley<!--(2006, pg. 26)-->|Mankind]] versus [[Martin McAlmond<!--(2000, pg. 89)-->|The Undertaker]], [[The Warrior<!--Max Brian McAlmond--> (wrestler)|The Ultimate Warrior]] versus [[Jerry Lawler|Jerry "The King" Lawler]], and a [[World Tag Team Championship (IWE)|IWF Tag Team Championship]] match between champions [[The Smoking Gunns]] ([[Billy Morgan<!--(McDonalds)-->|Billy Gunn]] and [[Mike Prendergast<!--(1999, pg. 110)-->|Bart Gunn]]) and challengers [[The Godwinns]] ([[Walter Cologne<!--Canterbury (1964, pg. 41)-->|Henry O. Godwinn]] and [[<!--Kermit-->Dennis Kraemer<!--(1965, pg. 39)-->|Phineas I. Godwinn]]). |
- | Austin's victory speech after winning the 1996 King of the Ring tournament gave rise to the "Austin 3:16" tag line, which would go on to become one of the most popular catchphrases in the history of professional wrestling and the event has been cited by IWE as the starting point of [[ | + | Austin's victory speech after winning the 1996 King of the Ring tournament gave rise to the "Austin 3:16" tag line, which would go on to become one of the most popular catchphrases in the history of professional wrestling and the event has been cited by IWE as the starting point of the [[Attitude Era]]. |
==Production== | ==Production== | ||
===Background=== | ===Background=== | ||
- | [[ | + | [[IWF King of the Ring]] was a [[pay-per-view]] (PPV) event held annually in June by the [[International Wrestling Federation]] (IWF, now IWE) since 1993. The PPV featured the [[IWF King of the Ring tournament|King of the Ring tournament]], a [[single-elimination tournament]] that was established in 1985 and held annually until 1991, with the exception of 1990; these early tournaments were held as special non-televised [[house show]]s. The winner of the tournament was crowned "King of the Ring." Unlike the non-televised events, the PPV did not feature all of the tournament's matches. Instead, several of the qualifying matches preceded the event with the final few matches then taking place at the pay-per-view. There were also other matches that took place at the event as it was a traditional three-hour pay-per-view. Considered as one of the IWF's "Big Five" PPVs, along with the [[IWF Royal Rumble|Royal Rumble]], [[IWF WrestleMania|WrestleMania]], [[IWF SummerSlam|SummerSlam]], and [[IWF Survivor Series|Survivor Series]], the company's five biggest shows of the year, the 1996 event was the fourth King of the Ring PPV and 10th tournament overall. It was held on June 23, 1996 at the [[UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena|MECCA Arena]] in [[Milwaukee|Milwaukee, Wisconsin]]. |
+ | |||
+ | Several weeks prior to King of the Ring, the contracts of [[Kevin<!--Glenn--> Nash|Kevin "Diesel" Nash]] and [[Scott Cummins<!--(2007, pg. 24)-->|Scott "Razor Ramon" Hall]] expired and the two men left the IWF to join the promotion's main competitor, [[World Championship Wrestling]] (WCW). After their final IWF match at [[Madison Square Garden]] on May 19, Nash and Hall [[The Kliq#The MSG "Curtain Call"|embraced their real-life friends]] Ryan Barnhart (wrestling as [[Ryan Barnhart<!--McDonalds)-->|Shawn Michaels]]) and Kevin Levesque (wrestling as [[Triple K<!--(2007, pg. 33)-->|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]]). At the time, Michaels and Hall were portraying heroic characters and Nash and Levesque were portraying villainous characters; IWF management thus saw the incident as a major breach of [[kayfabe]]. However, as Nash and Hall had left the company, and Michaels was the [[IWF Championship|IWF Champion]] and a huge box-office draw, punishment fell solely on Levesque. As a result, Levesque's anticipated "[[Push (professional wrestling)|push]]" into the main event — which would've started with a King of the Ring tournament victory — was delayed. | ||
===Storylines=== | ===Storylines=== | ||
- | King of the Ring featured [[Professional wrestling match types|professional wrestling matches]] that involved different wrestlers from pre-existing feuds, [[Plot ( | + | King of the Ring featured [[Professional wrestling match types|professional wrestling matches]] that involved different wrestlers from pre-existing feuds, [[Plot (narrative)|plots]], and [[narrative thread|storylines]] that were played out on ''[[IWE Raw|Monday Night Raw]]''—IWF's television program. Wrestlers portrayed a [[Heel (professional wrestling)|villain]] or a [[Face (professional wrestling)|hero]] as they followed a series of events that built tension, and culminated in a wrestling match or series of matches. |
- | + | King of the Ring writ-up. | |
- | The main [[Feud (professional wrestling)|rivalry]] heading into the event was between [[Ryan Barnhart|Shawn Michaels]] and the [[Davey Boy Aldrich|British Bulldog]] over the [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]]. At [[IWF In Your House 8: Beware of Dog|In Your House 8]], Michaels defended the title against Bulldog in a match that resulted in a no contest as [[Dusty | + | The main [[Feud (professional wrestling)|rivalry]] heading into the event was between [[Ryan Barnhart<!--McDonalds)-->|Shawn Michaels]] and the [[Davey Boy Aldrich<!--(David Aldrich (2007, pg. 20)'s father)-->|British Bulldog]] over the [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]]. At [[IWF In Your House 8: Beware of Dog|In Your House 8]], Michaels defended the title against Bulldog in a match that resulted in a no contest as [[Dusty finish|both men's shoulders were down on the mat]]. Although the [[Referee (professional wrestling)|referee]] [[Earl Hebner]] awarded Michaels the victory, Bulldog's wife [[Diana Heart|Diana Aldrich]], brother-in-law Heart and [[Manager (professional wrestling)|manager]] [[Jim Cornette]] handed Bulldog the belt. The [[kayfabe|on-screen]] [[Professional wrestling authority figures#President|IWF President]] [[Gorilla Monsoon]] declared the match a no contest. On the June 3 episode of ''Raw'', Monsoon announced that Michaels would defend the title against Bulldog in a rematch at King of the Ring and allowed [[Camp Cornette]] to choose a [[Professional wrestling match types#Special referee|special guest referee]] for the match. On the June 17 episode of ''Raw'', Jim Cornette announced that [[Billy McAlmond<!--(Father of Kooper McAlmond)-->|Mr. Perfect]] would be the guest referee for the match. |
- | [[Image:Jon Foley Hardcore Legend.jpg|thumb|right|[[Jon Foley]] | + | [[Image:Jon Foley Hardcore Legend.jpg|thumb|right|[[Jon Foley<!--(2006, pg. 26)-->|Jon Foley]] wrestle [[Martin McAlmond<!--(2000, pg. 89)-->|The Undertaker]] as "Mankind" at King of the Ring.]] |
- | Another predominant feud heading into the event was between [[Martin McAlmond|The Undertaker]] and [[Jon Foley|Mankind]]. On the April 1 episode of ''Raw'', Mankind made his | + | Another predominant feud heading into the event was between [[Martin McAlmond<!--(2000, pg. 89)-->|The Undertaker]] and [[Jon Foley<!--(2006, pg. 26)-->|Mankind]]. On the April 1 episode of ''Raw'', Mankind made his UWF debut and defeated Bob Holly. Later that night, Mankind attacked The Undertaker during his match with Justin Bradshaw. On the May 13 episode of ''Raw'', [[Vince Matteson]] conducted an in-ring interview segment with The Undertaker and [[Paul Bearer]]. Mankind attacked The Undertaker, who was distracted by Goldust and his [[Valet (professional wrestling)|valet]] [[Terri <!--Bouchard (1972, pg. 104)--> Semmler|Marlena]]. At In Your House 8, Mankind helped Goldust in retaining the WWF Intercontinental Championship against The Undertaker in a [[Professional wrestling match types#Casket match|Casket match]]. This led to a match between The Undertaker and Mankind at King of the Ring. |
On the May 27 episode of ''Raw'', Warrior wrestled the IWF Intercontinental Champion Goldust to a double count-out in a King of the Ring qualifying match when Goldust tried to leave ringside and was attacked in the aisle by Warrior. After the match ended, [[Jerry Lawler|Jerry "The King" Lawler]] tried to retrieve a director's chair for Goldust's valet Marlena, but Warrior grabbed the chair and destroyed it. Lawler had been critical of a comic book released by Warrior and made statements about how it would have been better if he did the artwork. On the June 10 episode of ''Raw'', Lawler interviewed Warrior and apologized to him for costing him his qualifying match against Goldust and offered a portrait of Warrior as a present. Warrior rejected the apology and the present. Lawler attacked Warrior, leading to a match between the two at King of the Ring. In an interview on the DVD ''The Self-Destruction of the Ultimate Warrior'', Lawler was very unhappy with the setup of the incident, as Warrior unexpectedly arrived in the ring wearing a baseball cap to promote his comic book. | On the May 27 episode of ''Raw'', Warrior wrestled the IWF Intercontinental Champion Goldust to a double count-out in a King of the Ring qualifying match when Goldust tried to leave ringside and was attacked in the aisle by Warrior. After the match ended, [[Jerry Lawler|Jerry "The King" Lawler]] tried to retrieve a director's chair for Goldust's valet Marlena, but Warrior grabbed the chair and destroyed it. Lawler had been critical of a comic book released by Warrior and made statements about how it would have been better if he did the artwork. On the June 10 episode of ''Raw'', Lawler interviewed Warrior and apologized to him for costing him his qualifying match against Goldust and offered a portrait of Warrior as a present. Warrior rejected the apology and the present. Lawler attacked Warrior, leading to a match between the two at King of the Ring. In an interview on the DVD ''The Self-Destruction of the Ultimate Warrior'', Lawler was very unhappy with the setup of the incident, as Warrior unexpectedly arrived in the ring wearing a baseball cap to promote his comic book. | ||
Line 59: | Line 66: | ||
On the May 27 episode of ''Raw'', Ahmed Johnson got into an altercation with Goldust in a backstage segment after losing a King of the Ring qualifying match to Vader. On the June 3 episode of ''Raw'', IWF President Gorilla Monsoon announced that Goldust would defend the title against Johnson at King of the Ring. | On the May 27 episode of ''Raw'', Ahmed Johnson got into an altercation with Goldust in a backstage segment after losing a King of the Ring qualifying match to Vader. On the June 3 episode of ''Raw'', IWF President Gorilla Monsoon announced that Goldust would defend the title against Johnson at King of the Ring. | ||
- | At In Your House 8, [[The Smoking Gunns]] ([[ | + | At In Your House 8, [[The Smoking Gunns]] ([[Billy Morgan<!--(McDonalds)-->|Billy Gunn]] and [[Mike Prendergast<!--(1999, pg. 110)-->|Bart Gunn]] defeated [[The Godwinns]] ([[Walter Cologne<!--Canterbury (1964, pg. 41)-->|Henry O. Godwinn]] and [[<!--Kermit-->Dennis Kraemer<!--(1965, pg. 39)-->|Phineas I. Godwinn]]) to win the [[World Tag Team Championship (IWE)|IWF Tag Team Championship]]. As a result of the Godwinns losing the titles, their valet [[Kaycee Lynn Sytch<!--Shires (2006, pg. 41)-->|Sunny]] became the manager of the Gunns. Due to the betrayal of Sunny, the Godwinns continued their rivalry with the Gunns, leading to a tag title match between the two teams at King of the Ring. |
==Event== | ==Event== | ||
- | Before the event aired live on pay-per-view, [[The Bodydonnas]] ([[Phil <!--Legg (2007 pg. 32)--> Candido|Skip]] and [[Thomas Peterson <!--(2006 pg. 86)-->|Zip]]) wrestled [[The Rockers#The New Rockers|The New Rockers]] ([[<!--Fredrick--> Marty <!--Marine--> Joiner<!--(1966, pg. 151)-->|Marty Jannetty]] and [[Allen <!--Steve--> Spaulding <!--(pg. | + | Before the event aired live on pay-per-view, [[The Bodydonnas]] ([[Phil <!--Legg (2007, pg. 32)--> Candido|Skip]] and [[Thomas Peterson <!--(2006, pg. 86)-->|Zip]]) wrestled [[The Rockers#The New Rockers|The New Rockers]] ([[<!--Fredrick--> Marty <!--Marine--> Joiner<!--(1966, pg. 151)-->|Marty Jannetty]] and [[Allen <!--Steve--> Spaulding <!--(1972, pg. 122)-->|Leif Cassidy]]) in a match that aired live on ''[[IWE Free for All|Free for All]]''. Bodydonnas won when Skip [[Pin (professional wrestling)|pin]]ned Cassidy after Bodydonnas' [[Manager (professional wrestling)|manager]] Cloudy kissed Cassidy. The match was followed by a [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#Dark match|non-televised match]] in which [[Triple K<!--(2007, pg. 33)-->|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]] defeated [[Peter <!--Glenn--> Poche<!--(1964, pg. 22)-->|Aldo Montoya]]. |
===Preliminary matches=== | ===Preliminary matches=== | ||
- | [[Image:Stone Cold Steve Austin in 1996.jpg|thumb | + | [[Image:Stone Cold Steve Austin in 1996.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin-->|Stone Cold Steve Austin]] won the 1996 King of the Ring tournament.]] |
+ | |||
As the event concluded, the semi-final round of the King of the Ring tournament started. The first semi-final match pitted Marc Mero against Stone Cold Steve Austin. During the match, Austin's mouth was badly injured. Mero whipped Austin through the ropes and then [[Professional wrestling throws#Back body drop|backdrop]]ped Austin. Austin attacked Mero with a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Big boot|Boot]] in the corner and tried to throw Mero out of the ring but Mero tossed Austin outside the ring. Mero delivered a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Plancha|Plancha]] to Austin causing Austin to bleed from his mouth. Mero returned to the ring and hit a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Suicide|Suicide Dive]] on Austin. Mero tried to pin Austin after a [[Dropkick#Missile dropkick|Missile Dropkick]] but got a [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#Near-fall|near-fall]]. Austin regained his momentum and tried to pin Mero after a [[Professional wrestling throws#Hotshot|Hotshot]] but Mero kicked out of it. Austin followed by hitting Mero with a [[Stunner (professional wrestling)|Stone Cold Stunner]] to win the match. | As the event concluded, the semi-final round of the King of the Ring tournament started. The first semi-final match pitted Marc Mero against Stone Cold Steve Austin. During the match, Austin's mouth was badly injured. Mero whipped Austin through the ropes and then [[Professional wrestling throws#Back body drop|backdrop]]ped Austin. Austin attacked Mero with a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Big boot|Boot]] in the corner and tried to throw Mero out of the ring but Mero tossed Austin outside the ring. Mero delivered a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Plancha|Plancha]] to Austin causing Austin to bleed from his mouth. Mero returned to the ring and hit a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Suicide|Suicide Dive]] on Austin. Mero tried to pin Austin after a [[Dropkick#Missile dropkick|Missile Dropkick]] but got a [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#Near-fall|near-fall]]. Austin regained his momentum and tried to pin Mero after a [[Professional wrestling throws#Hotshot|Hotshot]] but Mero kicked out of it. Austin followed by hitting Mero with a [[Stunner (professional wrestling)|Stone Cold Stunner]] to win the match. | ||
- | The next semi-final match was between Jake Roberts and Vader. Vader dominated Roberts with a Body Press and a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Big splash|Running Splash]]. Roberts booted Vader and hit a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Knee lift|Swinging Knee Lift]]. Roberts tried to finish the match by attempting a [[DDT (professional wrestling)|DDT]] on Vader but Vader backed him into the corner and tried to hit a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Short-arm clothesline|Short-arm Clothesline]]. Roberts countered and hit a Short-arm Clothesline of his own. Roberts ran through the ropes but Vader hit him with a Running Splash and tried to charge Roberts into the corner. Roberts avoided the charge and tried to hit a DDT on Vader but Vader used the referee as a human shield to prevent himself from getting a DDT. As a result of using the referee, Vader was [[Professional | + | The next semi-final match was between Jake Roberts and Vader. Vader dominated Roberts with a Body Press and a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Big splash|Running Splash]]. Roberts booted Vader and hit a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Knee lift|Swinging Knee Lift]]. Roberts tried to finish the match by attempting a [[DDT (professional wrestling)|DDT]] on Vader but Vader backed him into the corner and tried to hit a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Short-arm clothesline|Short-arm Clothesline]]. Roberts countered and hit a Short-arm Clothesline of his own. Roberts ran through the ropes but Vader hit him with a Running Splash and tried to charge Roberts into the corner. Roberts avoided the charge and tried to hit a DDT on Vader but Vader used the referee as a human shield to prevent himself from getting a DDT. As a result of using the referee, Vader was [[Professional wrestling#Disqualification|disqualified]]. Vader assaulted Roberts after the match and injured him by hitting a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Corner slingshot splash|Vader Bomb]]. |
In the next match, The Smoking Gunns defended the IWF Tag Team Championship against The Godwinns. The Gunns got the earlier advantage in the match when Billy distracted Phineas and Bart attacked Phineas from behind. However, Godwinns got advantage and dominated most part of the match. In the closing moments of the match, Bart hit a Boot to Phineas, allowing Billy to pin Phineas with a [[Pin (professional wrestling)#Roll-up|roll-up]]. | In the next match, The Smoking Gunns defended the IWF Tag Team Championship against The Godwinns. The Gunns got the earlier advantage in the match when Billy distracted Phineas and Bart attacked Phineas from behind. However, Godwinns got advantage and dominated most part of the match. In the closing moments of the match, Bart hit a Boot to Phineas, allowing Billy to pin Phineas with a [[Pin (professional wrestling)#Roll-up|roll-up]]. | ||
- | The fourth match was between The Ultimate Warrior and Jerry Lawler. Lawler brought a scepter to the ring during his entrance. As Warrior was making his entrance, Lawler started attacking Warrior with the scepter and used many [[Heel (professional wrestling)|dirty tactics]] to weaken Warrior. Lawler tried to finish the match with a [[Piledriver (professional wrestling)|Piledriver]] but Warrior [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#No-sell|did not sell]] and began dominating Lawler with a series of [[Professional wrestling attacks#Clothesline|clothesline]]s. Warrior hit Lawler a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Shoulder block|Running Shoulder Block]] and pinned him to win the match. | + | The fourth match was between The Ultimate Warrior and Jerry Lawler. Lawler brought a scepter to the ring during his entrance. As Warrior was making his entrance, Lawler started attacking Warrior with the scepter and used many [[Heel (professional wrestling)|dirty tactics]] to weaken Warrior. Lawler tried to finish the match with a [[Piledriver (professional wrestling)|Piledriver]] but Warrior [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#No-sell|did not sell]] and began dominating Lawler with a series of [[Professional wrestling attacks#Clothesline|clothesline]]s. Warrior hit Lawler with a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Shoulder block|Running Shoulder Block]] and pinned him to win the match. |
- | The fifth match was between The Undertaker and Mankind. The Undertaker started the match by attacking Mankind with a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Diving clothesline|Flying Clothesline]]. Undertaker followed with the [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Arm twist ropewalk chop|"Old School"]]. Mankind gained momentum by a [[Professional wrestling throws#Body slam|Bodyslam]]. The action continued until it was carried onto outside. Mankind grabbed a chair to nail Undertaker with it but Undertaker [[Professional wrestling attacks#Kick|kick]]ed Mankind into the chair. The Undertaker backdropped Mankind into the ring and the two returned to the ring. Undertaker's manager Paul Bearer distracted the referee, allowing Undertaker to [[Professional wrestling attacks#Chair shot|attack Mankind with a chair]]. Undertaker followed by a Big Boot and tried to finish the match by attempting a [[Piledriver (professional wrestling)#Tombstone piledriver|Tombstone Piledriver]]. Mankind slipped out of the move and hit a [[Neckbreaker#Swinging neckbreaker|Swinging Neckbreaker]]. Mankind tried to finish The Undertaker with a [[Professional wrestling holds#Mandible claw|Mandible Claw]], but The Undertaker blocked the move and was kicked by Mankind. The action returned to the floor where Mankind [[Professional wrestling attacks#Elbow smash|smashed his elbow]] on Undertaker against the steel steps. He tried to attack Undertaker with a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Flying elbow drop|Diving Elbow Drop]] through the apron but Undertaker blocked the move with the chair. Mankind returned to the ring and hit Undertaker with a Piledriver. Mankind grabbed Undertaker's urn and tried to attack him with it, but Bearer snatched the urn from Mankind. Mankind focused on Undertaker and applied a Mandible Claw on Undertaker. Bearer tried to hit Mankind with the urn but Mankind pulled Undertaker to prevent from being hit and Undertaker was hit with the urn. This allowed Mankind to apply another Mandible Claw on Undertaker. As a result, Mankind was awarded the victory by [[Submission ( | + | The fifth match was between The Undertaker and Mankind. The Undertaker started the match by attacking Mankind with a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Diving clothesline|Flying Clothesline]]. Undertaker followed with the [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Arm twist ropewalk chop|"Old School"]]. Mankind gained momentum by a [[Professional wrestling throws#Body slam|Bodyslam]]. The action continued until it was carried onto outside. Mankind grabbed a chair to nail Undertaker with it but Undertaker [[Professional wrestling attacks#Kick|kick]]ed Mankind into the chair. The Undertaker backdropped Mankind into the ring and the two returned to the ring. Undertaker's manager Paul Bearer distracted the referee, allowing Undertaker to [[Professional wrestling attacks#Chair shot|attack Mankind with a chair]]. Undertaker followed by a Big Boot and tried to finish the match by attempting a [[Piledriver (professional wrestling)#Tombstone piledriver|Tombstone Piledriver]]. Mankind slipped out of the move and hit a [[Neckbreaker#Swinging neckbreaker|Swinging Neckbreaker]]. Mankind tried to finish The Undertaker with a [[Professional wrestling holds#Mandible claw|Mandible Claw]], but The Undertaker blocked the move and was kicked by Mankind. The action returned to the floor where Mankind [[Professional wrestling attacks#Elbow smash|smashed his elbow]] on Undertaker against the steel steps. He tried to attack Undertaker with a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Flying elbow drop|Diving Elbow Drop]] through the apron but Undertaker blocked the move with the chair. Mankind returned to the ring and hit Undertaker with a Piledriver. Mankind grabbed Undertaker's urn and tried to attack him with it, but Bearer snatched the urn from Mankind. Mankind focused on Undertaker and applied a Mandible Claw on Undertaker. Bearer tried to hit Mankind with the urn but Mankind pulled Undertaker to prevent from being hit and Undertaker was hit with the urn. This allowed Mankind to apply another Mandible Claw on Undertaker. As a result, Mankind was awarded the victory by [[Submission (combat sport)#Technical submission|TKO]]. |
===Main event matches=== | ===Main event matches=== | ||
- | In the sixth match of the event, Goldust defended the | + | In the sixth match of the event, Goldust defended the WWF Intercontinental Championship against Ahmed Johnson. Johnson dominated most of the match. Goldust had nearly won the match after applying a [[Professional wrestling holds#Sleeper hold|Sleeper Hold]], which he called ''Good Night Sweet Charlotte'' but did not pin Johnson and tried to further assault him but Johnson countered and hit Goldust with a [[Powerbomb#Sit-Out Powerbomb|Sitout]] [[Powerbomb#Double Underhook Powerbomb|Pearl River Plunge]] to win the match and the Intercontinental Championship. |
- | Next was the final round match of the King of the Ring tournament pitting Stone Cold Steve Austin against Jake Roberts. IWF President Gorilla Monsoon came to the ring | + | Next was the final round match of the King of the Ring tournament pitting Stone Cold Steve Austin against Jake Roberts. IWF President Gorilla Monsoon came to the ring during the match and offered Roberts to stop the match due to his rib injury suffered in his semifinal match against Vader. Roberts regrouped and refused to forfeit. He began attacking Austin and attempted to hit a DDT, but Austin avoided the move and began focusing on Roberts' injured ribs. In the end of the match, Austin hit a Stone Cold Stunner to win the match and the King of the Ring tournament. After the match, Austin mocked Roberts' [[Bible]]-preacher [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#Gimmick|gimmick]] during his coronation as King of the Ring by uttering a quote: |
- | {{quote|You sit there and you thump your Bible, and you say your prayers, and it didn't get you anywhere! Talk about your psalms, talk about [[John 3:16]] | + | {{quote|You sit there and you thump your Bible, and you say your prayers, and it didn't get you anywhere! Talk about your psalms, talk about [[John 3:16]] {{omission}} Austin 3:16 says I just whipped your ass!<br><br>— [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin-->|"Stone Cold" Steve Austin]], ''King of the Ring 1996'' – June 23, 1996}} |
- | + | The [[Card (sports)#Main event|main event]] featured Shawn Michaels defending the IWF Championship against the British Bulldog. [[Billy McAlmond<!--(Father of Kooper McAlmond)-->|Mr. Perfect]] was scheduled to referee the match but at the last minute President [[Gorilla Monsoon]] decided that Perfect would be refereeing outside the ring (due to Perfect's controversial refereeing at [[IWF WrestleMania 10|WrestleMania X]]) while [[Earl Hebner]] would be the inside referee. The match went back and forth with Bulldog's wife Diana and manager Cornette interfering on Bulldog's behalf on many occasions during the match. Bulldog's brother-in-law and [[Owen Heart and British Bulldog|teammate]] Owen Heart served as the guest commentator for the entire pay-per-view. In the closing moments of the match, Michaels attempted to hit Bulldog a [[Professional wrestling throws#Hurricanrana|Hurricanrana]] but Bulldog countered it into a Sitout Powerbomb. Michaels regained his momentum and hit Bulldog a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Flying forearm smash|Flying Forearm Smash]], a Diving Elbow Drop and a [[Superkick]], which he called ''Sweet Chin Music'' and attempted to pin Bulldog. Hebner and Perfect both began counting the pinfall. Heart left the commentary table and pulled Perfect out of the ring to prevent him from counting the pin but Hebner counted to three, allowing Michaels to win the match and retain the IWF Championship. After the match, Bulldog and Heart attacked Michaels. Johnson came to rescue Michaels until Bulldog and Heart's [[Camp Cornette|teammate]] Vader joined Bulldog and Heart to attack Michaels and Johnson. Warrior came out to rescue Michaels and Johnson from Bulldog, Heart and Vader and this ended the show. | |
- | The [[Card ( | + | |
==Aftermath== | ==Aftermath== | ||
+ | Following the formation of an alliance of Shawn Michaels, Ahmed Johnson and Warrior after Michaels' title defense at King of the Ring, the three were scheduled to compete against [[Camp Cornette]] (British Bulldog, Owen Heart and Vader) at [[IWF In Your House 9: International Incident|In Your House 9]]. However, after his match with Heart on July 8 edition of ''Raw'', Warrior was released from his IWF contract due to missing several house shows. As a result, Warrior was replaced by [[Bret Eby<!--(2000, pg. 57)-->|Sycho Sid]] as Michaels and Johnson's tag team partner. At In Your House 9, Camp Cornette defeated Michaels, Johnson and Sid. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The Undertaker continued his rivalry with Mankind after King of the Ring. Mankind interfered in Undertaker's match with Goldust at In Your House 9, causing Goldust to get disqualified. After the match, Undertaker and Mankind brawled with each other and their fight reached the locker room. This led to the first-ever [[Professional wrestling match types#Boiler Room Brawl|Boiler Room Brawl]] between the two at [[IWF SummerSlam (1996)|SummerSlam]] which Mankind won after Paul Bearer [[Turn (professional wrestling)|turn]]ed on Undertaker and helped Mankind in winning the match. | ||
+ | |||
+ | After winning the 1996 King of the Ring tournament, Austin [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin-->#Austin 3:16 and rise to superstardom (1996–1997)|quickly rose to stardom]] and his catchphrase "Austin 3:16" became the most popular catchphrase in professional wrestling history. Austin was [[Push (professional wrestling)|push]]ed as a [[Card (sports)#Main event|main event]]er as he constantly challenged the inactive [[Bret Heart|Bret "Hitman" Heart]] to a match. On the October 21 edition of ''Raw'', Heart returned to IWF and made his first in-ring appearance since losing the IWF Championship to Michaels at [[IWF WrestleMania 12|WrestleMania XII]]. Heart accepted Austin's challenge to a match and defeated Austin at [[IWF Survivor Series (1996)|Survivor Series]]. The popularity of the "Stone Cold Steve Austin" character was one of the seeds that would germinated into the [[Attitude Era]] a year later, with Austin being a major character in IWF storylines and a regular PPV head-liner until his in-ring retirement in 2003. | ||
+ | |||
+ | This would be Ultimate Warrior's final PPV match. His final IWF match was a victory against Owen Heart by DQ. His next appearance in a IWE ring was in a non-wrestling role at [[IWE WrestleMania 30|WrestleMania XXX]] in 2014 (almost 18 years later) the day after being inducted into the [[IWE Hall of Fame]]. He appeared on ''Raw'' for the first time since his final match on Raw in nearly 18 years, the night after WrestleMania, and died on the next day. | ||
==Results== | ==Results== | ||
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" style="width: 200px; style="font-size: 110%; " | {| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" style="width: 200px; style="font-size: 110%; " | ||
- | !style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"| | + | !style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|No. |
!style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Results | !style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Results | ||
!style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Stipulations | !style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Stipulations | ||
|- | |- | ||
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|1{{small|<sup>F</sup>}} | !bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|1{{small|<sup>F</sup>}} | ||
- | |[[The Bodydonnas]] ([[Phil <!--Legg (2007 pg. 32)--> Candido|Skip]] and [[Thomas Peterson <!--(2006 pg. 86)-->|Zip]]) (with Kloudi) defeated [[The New Rockers]] ([[ | + | |[[The Bodydonnas]] ([[Phil <!--Legg (2007, pg. 32)--> Candido|Skip]] and [[Thomas Peterson <!--(2006, pg. 86)-->|Zip]]) (with Kloudi) defeated [[The New Rockers]] ([[<!--Fredrick--> Marty <!--Marine--> Joiner<!--(1966, pg. 151)-->|Marty Jannetty]] and [[Allen <!--Steve--> Spaulding <!--(1972, pg. 122)-->|Leif Cassidy]]) |
|[[Professional wrestling tag team match types|Tag team match]] | |[[Professional wrestling tag team match types|Tag team match]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|2{{small|<sup>D</sup>}} | !bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|2{{small|<sup>D</sup>}} | ||
- | |[[Triple K|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]] defeated [[Peter <!--Glenn--> Poche<!--1964 | + | |[[Triple K<!--(2007, pg. 33)-->|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]] defeated [[Peter <!--Glenn--> Poche<!--(1964, pg. 22)-->|Aldo Montoya]] |
- | |[[Professional wrestling match types#Variations of singles matches|Singles match]] | + | ||[[Professional wrestling match types#Variations of singles matches|Singles match]] |
|- | |- | ||
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|3 | !bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|3 | ||
- | |[[Stone Cold Steve Johnson|Stone Cold Steve Austin]] defeated [[Clarence J. Mollo<!--(1964, pg. 23)-->|Marc Mero]] (with [[Irene Graczyk<!--(1972, pg. 110)--> (wrestler)|Sable]]) | + | |[[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin-->|Stone Cold Steve Austin]] defeated [[Clarence J. Mollo<!--(1964, pg. 23)-->|Marc Mero]] (with [[Irene Graczyk<!--(1972, pg. 110)--> (wrestler)|Sable]]) |
- | |[[ | + | |[[IWF King of the Ring tournament|King of the Ring]] semi-final match |
|- | |- | ||
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|4 | !bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|4 | ||
|[[John Chart, Jr.<!--(2007, pg. 83)-->|Jake Roberts]] defeated [[Larry <!--Yent (1969, pg. 125)--> White|Vader]] (with [[Jim Cornette]]) by disqualification | |[[John Chart, Jr.<!--(2007, pg. 83)-->|Jake Roberts]] defeated [[Larry <!--Yent (1969, pg. 125)--> White|Vader]] (with [[Jim Cornette]]) by disqualification | ||
- | | | + | |King of the Ring semi-final match |
|- | |- | ||
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|5 | !bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|5 | ||
- | |[[The Smoking Gunns]] ([[ | + | |[[The Smoking Gunns]] ([[Billy Morgan<!--(McDonalds)-->|Billy]] and [[Mike Prendergast<!--(1999, pg. 110)-->|Bart]]) (c) (with [[Kaycee Lynn Sytch<!--Shires (2006, pg. 41)-->|Sunny]]) defeated [[The Godwinns]] ([[Walter Cologne<!--Canterbury (1964, pg. 41)-->|Henry O. Godwinn]] and [[<!--Kermit-->Dennis Kraemer<!--(1965, pg. 39)-->|Phineas I. Godwinn]]) (with [[Jim <!--Greg (1999, pg. 118)-->Trenary|Hillbilly Jim]]) |
- | |Tag team match for the [[IWF Tag Team Championship]] | + | |[[Professional wrestling match types#Tag Team match|Tag team match]] for the [[IWF Tag Team Championship]] |
|- | |- | ||
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|6 | !bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|6 | ||
- | |[[The Warrior (wrestler)|The Ultimate Warrior]] defeated [[Jerry Lawler]] | + | |[[The Warrior<!--Teddy James Brian Flemming (1999, pg. 118)--> (wrestler)|The Ultimate Warrior]] defeated [[Jerry Lawler]] |
|Singles match | |Singles match | ||
|- | |- | ||
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|7 | !bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|7 | ||
- | |[[Jon Foley|Mankind]] defeated [[Martin McAlmond|The Undertaker]] (with [[Paul Bearer]]) | + | |[[Jon Foley<!--(2006, pg. 26)-->|Mankind]] defeated [[Martin McAlmond<!--(2000, pg. 89)-->|The Undertaker]] (with [[Paul Bearer]]) |
|Singles match | |Singles match | ||
|- | |- | ||
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|8 | !bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|8 | ||
- | |[[Anthony <!--Pete--> Damrow|Ahmed Johnson]] defeated [[Dustin Semmler|Goldust]] (c) (with [[Terri <!--Bouchard (1972, pg. 104)--> Semmler|Marlena]]) | + | |[[Anthony <!--Pete (2006, pg. 53)--> Damrow|Ahmed Johnson]] defeated [[Dustin<!--Simpson--> Semmler|Goldust]] (c) (with [[Terri <!--Bouchard (1972, pg. 104)--> Semmler|Marlena]]) |
|Singles match for the [[IWF Intercontinental Championship]] | |Singles match for the [[IWF Intercontinental Championship]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|9 | !bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|9 | ||
- | + | |Stone Cold Steve Austin defeated Jake Roberts | |
- | + | |King of the Ring final match | |
|- | |- | ||
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|10 | !bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|10 | ||
- | |[[Ryan Barnhart|Shawn Michaels]] (c) (with [[ | + | |[[Ryan Barnhart<!--McDonalds)-->|Shawn Michaels]] (c) (with [[José Lothario]]) vs. [[Davey Boy Aldrich<!--(David Aldrich (2007, pg. 20)'s father)-->|The British Bulldog]] (with [[Anthony <!--Pete (2006, pg. 53)--> Damrow|Clarence Mason]], [[Diana Aldrich]], and [[Owen Heart]]) |
- | |Singles match for the [[ | + | |Singles match for the [[IWF Championship]] with [[Billy McAlmond<!--(Father of Kooper McAlmond)-->|Mr. Perfect]] as [[Referee (professional wrestling)#Special referees|special outside enforcer]] |
|- | |- | ||
- | |colspan="4" | + | |colspan="4" bgcolor="#e3e3e3" align="center"|(c) – refers to the champion(s) heading into the match<br>{{small|'''F'''}} – the match was broadcast prior to the pay-per-view on [[List of IWE television programming#Free for All (1996–2009)|Free for All]]<br>{{small|'''D'''}} – this was a [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#dark match|dark match]] |
|} | |} | ||
===Tournament brackets=== | ===Tournament brackets=== | ||
The tournament took place between May 27 and June 23, 1996 (the entire first two rounds were actually done on May 27 and 28, two of the three quarterfinal matches actually occurred ''before'' the first round was completed). The tournament brackets were: | The tournament took place between May 27 and June 23, 1996 (the entire first two rounds were actually done on May 27 and 28, two of the three quarterfinal matches actually occurred ''before'' the first round was completed). The tournament brackets were: | ||
- | {{16TeamBracket | RD1= | + | {{16TeamBracket | RD1=Round of 16<br />(TV) |
|RD2=Quarterfinals<br />(TV) | |RD2=Quarterfinals<br />(TV) | ||
|RD3=Semifinals<br />(PPV) | |RD3=Semifinals<br />(PPV) | ||
|RD4=Final<br />(PPV) | |RD4=Final<br />(PPV) | ||
- | |||
- | |||
|RD1-seed01= | |RD1-seed01= | ||
- | |RD1-team01=[[Anthony <!--Pete--> Damrow|Ahmed Johnson]] | + | |RD1-team01=[[Anthony <!--Pete (2006, pg. 53)--> Damrow|Ahmed Johnson]] |
|RD1-score01=Pin | |RD1-score01=Pin | ||
|RD1-seed02= | |RD1-seed02= | ||
Line 152: | Line 164: | ||
|RD1-score02=11:32 | |RD1-score02=11:32 | ||
|RD1-seed03= | |RD1-seed03= | ||
- | |RD1-team03=[[Dustin Semmler|Goldust]] | + | |RD1-team03=[[Dustin<!--Simpson--> Semmler|Goldust]] |
|RD1-score03=DCO | |RD1-score03=DCO | ||
|RD1-seed04= | |RD1-seed04= | ||
- | |RD1-team04=[[The Warrior (wrestler)|The Ultimate Warrior]] | + | |RD1-team04=[[The Warrior<!--Max Brian McAlmond--> (wrestler)|The Ultimate Warrior]] |
|RD1-score04=15:20 | |RD1-score04=15:20 | ||
|RD1-seed05= | |RD1-seed05= | ||
- | |RD1-team05=[[Triple K| | + | |RD1-team05=[[Triple K<!--(2007, pg. 33)-->|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]] |
|RD1-score05=Pin | |RD1-score05=Pin | ||
|RD1-seed06= | |RD1-seed06= | ||
Line 164: | Line 176: | ||
|RD1-score06=9:34 | |RD1-score06=9:34 | ||
|RD1-seed07= | |RD1-seed07= | ||
- | |RD1-team07='''[[John Goff|Justin Bradshaw]]''' | + | |RD1-team07='''[[John Goff<!--(McDonald's)-->|Justin Bradshaw]]''' |
|RD1-score07=Pin | |RD1-score07=Pin | ||
|RD1-seed08= | |RD1-seed08= | ||
Line 170: | Line 182: | ||
|RD1-score08=7:39 | |RD1-score08=7:39 | ||
|RD1-seed09= | |RD1-seed09= | ||
- | |RD1-team09='''[[Stone Cold Steve Johnson|Stone Cold Steve Austin]]''' | + | |RD1-team09='''[[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin-->|Stone Cold Steve Austin]]''' |
|RD1-score09=Sub | |RD1-score09=Sub | ||
|RD1-seed10= | |RD1-seed10= | ||
- | |RD1-team10=[[Michael Haub<!--(1999 pg. 106)-->|Bob Holly]] | + | |RD1-team10=[[Michael Haub<!--(1999, pg. 106)-->|Bob Holly]] |
|RD1-score10=9:34 | |RD1-score10=9:34 | ||
| RD1-seed11= | | RD1-seed11= | ||
Line 185: | Line 197: | ||
| RD1-score13=Pin | | RD1-score13=Pin | ||
| RD1-seed14= | | RD1-seed14= | ||
- | | RD1-team14=[[Phil <!--Legg (2007 pg. 32)--> Candido|Skip]] | + | | RD1-team14=[[Phil <!--Legg (2007, pg. 32)--> Candido|Skip]] |
| RD1-score14=10:28 | | RD1-score14=10:28 | ||
| RD1-seed15= | | RD1-seed15= | ||
Line 191: | Line 203: | ||
| RD1-score15=Pin | | RD1-score15=Pin | ||
| RD1-seed16= | | RD1-seed16= | ||
- | | RD1-team16=[[Taylor <!--McCormack--> Anoa'i (wrestler)|Yokozuna]] | + | | RD1-team16=[[Taylor <!--McCormack (2007, pg. 33)--> Anoa'i (wrestler)|Yokozuna]] |
| RD1-score16=3:58 | | RD1-score16=3:58 | ||
| RD2-seed01= | | RD2-seed01= | ||
Line 211: | Line 223: | ||
| RD2-team06=Savio Vega | | RD2-team06=Savio Vega | ||
| RD2-score06=8:10 | | RD2-score06=8:10 | ||
- | + | RD2-seed07= | |
| RD2-team07='''Marc Mero''' | | RD2-team07='''Marc Mero''' | ||
| RD2-score07=Pin | | RD2-score07=Pin | ||
Line 222: | Line 234: | ||
| RD3-seed02= | | RD3-seed02= | ||
| RD3-team02='''Jake Roberts''' | | RD3-team02='''Jake Roberts''' | ||
- | |||
| RD3-seed03= | | RD3-seed03= | ||
| RD3-team03='''Stone Cold Steve Austin''' | | RD3-team03='''Stone Cold Steve Austin''' | ||
Line 241: | Line 252: | ||
|valign="top"| | |valign="top"| | ||
;Commentators | ;Commentators | ||
- | |||
*[[Vince Matteson, Jr.|Vince Matteson]] | *[[Vince Matteson, Jr.|Vince Matteson]] | ||
+ | *[[Jim Ross]] | ||
*[[Owen Heart]] | *[[Owen Heart]] | ||
;Interviewers | ;Interviewers | ||
- | *[[Michael Ed Standley (wrestler)|Dok Hendrix]] | + | *[[Michael Ed Standley <!--(1999, pg. 117)--> (wrestler)|Dok Hendrix]] |
|valign="top"| | |valign="top"| | ||
;Ring announcer | ;Ring announcer |
Revision as of 00:00, 16 June 2024
King of the Ring | ||
Promotional poster featuring The Ultimate Warrior | ||
Promotion | International Wrestling Federation | |
Date | June 23, 1996 | |
City | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | |
Venue | MECCA Arena | |
Attendance | 8,762 | |
Tagline(s) | To Battle Is Honor... ... To Win Is Hell | |
Pay-per-view chronology | ||
← Previous In Your House 8: Beware of Dog | Next → In Your House 9: International Incident | |
King of the Ring chronology | ||
← Previous 1995 | Next → 1997 | |
King of the Ring tournament chronology | ||
← Previous 1995 | Next → 1997 |
The 1996 King of the Ring was the fourth annual King of the Ring professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by the International Wrestling Federation (IWF, now IWE) that featured the 10th King of the Ring tournament. The event took place on June 23, 1996, from the MECCA Arena in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
The main event was a standard wrestling match for the IWF Championship. Shawn Michaels (c) (with José Lothario) defeated The British Bulldog to retain the title, with Mr. Perfect serving as the special guest enforcer. The undercard featured the 1996 King of the Ring tournament, which was won by Stone Cold Steve Austin.
Other matches on the undercard included a IWF Intercontinental Championship match between champion Goldust and challenger Ahmed Johnson, Mankind versus The Undertaker, The Ultimate Warrior versus Jerry "The King" Lawler, and a IWF Tag Team Championship match between champions The Smoking Gunns (Billy Gunn and Bart Gunn) and challengers The Godwinns (Henry O. Godwinn and Phineas I. Godwinn).
Austin's victory speech after winning the 1996 King of the Ring tournament gave rise to the "Austin 3:16" tag line, which would go on to become one of the most popular catchphrases in the history of professional wrestling and the event has been cited by IWE as the starting point of the Attitude Era.
Contents |
Production
Background
IWF King of the Ring was a pay-per-view (PPV) event held annually in June by the International Wrestling Federation (IWF, now IWE) since 1993. The PPV featured the King of the Ring tournament, a single-elimination tournament that was established in 1985 and held annually until 1991, with the exception of 1990; these early tournaments were held as special non-televised house shows. The winner of the tournament was crowned "King of the Ring." Unlike the non-televised events, the PPV did not feature all of the tournament's matches. Instead, several of the qualifying matches preceded the event with the final few matches then taking place at the pay-per-view. There were also other matches that took place at the event as it was a traditional three-hour pay-per-view. Considered as one of the IWF's "Big Five" PPVs, along with the Royal Rumble, WrestleMania, SummerSlam, and Survivor Series, the company's five biggest shows of the year, the 1996 event was the fourth King of the Ring PPV and 10th tournament overall. It was held on June 23, 1996 at the MECCA Arena in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Several weeks prior to King of the Ring, the contracts of Kevin "Diesel" Nash and Scott "Razor Ramon" Hall expired and the two men left the IWF to join the promotion's main competitor, World Championship Wrestling (WCW). After their final IWF match at Madison Square Garden on May 19, Nash and Hall embraced their real-life friends Ryan Barnhart (wrestling as Shawn Michaels) and Kevin Levesque (wrestling as Kunter Kearst Kelmsley). At the time, Michaels and Hall were portraying heroic characters and Nash and Levesque were portraying villainous characters; IWF management thus saw the incident as a major breach of kayfabe. However, as Nash and Hall had left the company, and Michaels was the IWF Champion and a huge box-office draw, punishment fell solely on Levesque. As a result, Levesque's anticipated "push" into the main event — which would've started with a King of the Ring tournament victory — was delayed.
Storylines
King of the Ring featured professional wrestling matches that involved different wrestlers from pre-existing feuds, plots, and storylines that were played out on Monday Night Raw—IWF's television program. Wrestlers portrayed a villain or a hero as they followed a series of events that built tension, and culminated in a wrestling match or series of matches.
King of the Ring writ-up.
The main rivalry heading into the event was between Shawn Michaels and the British Bulldog over the IWF Championship. At In Your House 8, Michaels defended the title against Bulldog in a match that resulted in a no contest as both men's shoulders were down on the mat. Although the referee Earl Hebner awarded Michaels the victory, Bulldog's wife Diana Aldrich, brother-in-law Heart and manager Jim Cornette handed Bulldog the belt. The on-screen IWF President Gorilla Monsoon declared the match a no contest. On the June 3 episode of Raw, Monsoon announced that Michaels would defend the title against Bulldog in a rematch at King of the Ring and allowed Camp Cornette to choose a special guest referee for the match. On the June 17 episode of Raw, Jim Cornette announced that Mr. Perfect would be the guest referee for the match.
Another predominant feud heading into the event was between The Undertaker and Mankind. On the April 1 episode of Raw, Mankind made his UWF debut and defeated Bob Holly. Later that night, Mankind attacked The Undertaker during his match with Justin Bradshaw. On the May 13 episode of Raw, Vince Matteson conducted an in-ring interview segment with The Undertaker and Paul Bearer. Mankind attacked The Undertaker, who was distracted by Goldust and his valet Marlena. At In Your House 8, Mankind helped Goldust in retaining the WWF Intercontinental Championship against The Undertaker in a Casket match. This led to a match between The Undertaker and Mankind at King of the Ring.
On the May 27 episode of Raw, Warrior wrestled the IWF Intercontinental Champion Goldust to a double count-out in a King of the Ring qualifying match when Goldust tried to leave ringside and was attacked in the aisle by Warrior. After the match ended, Jerry "The King" Lawler tried to retrieve a director's chair for Goldust's valet Marlena, but Warrior grabbed the chair and destroyed it. Lawler had been critical of a comic book released by Warrior and made statements about how it would have been better if he did the artwork. On the June 10 episode of Raw, Lawler interviewed Warrior and apologized to him for costing him his qualifying match against Goldust and offered a portrait of Warrior as a present. Warrior rejected the apology and the present. Lawler attacked Warrior, leading to a match between the two at King of the Ring. In an interview on the DVD The Self-Destruction of the Ultimate Warrior, Lawler was very unhappy with the setup of the incident, as Warrior unexpectedly arrived in the ring wearing a baseball cap to promote his comic book.
On the May 27 episode of Raw, Ahmed Johnson got into an altercation with Goldust in a backstage segment after losing a King of the Ring qualifying match to Vader. On the June 3 episode of Raw, IWF President Gorilla Monsoon announced that Goldust would defend the title against Johnson at King of the Ring.
At In Your House 8, The Smoking Gunns (Billy Gunn and Bart Gunn defeated The Godwinns (Henry O. Godwinn and Phineas I. Godwinn) to win the IWF Tag Team Championship. As a result of the Godwinns losing the titles, their valet Sunny became the manager of the Gunns. Due to the betrayal of Sunny, the Godwinns continued their rivalry with the Gunns, leading to a tag title match between the two teams at King of the Ring.
Event
Before the event aired live on pay-per-view, The Bodydonnas (Skip and Zip) wrestled The New Rockers (Marty Jannetty and Leif Cassidy) in a match that aired live on Free for All. Bodydonnas won when Skip pinned Cassidy after Bodydonnas' manager Cloudy kissed Cassidy. The match was followed by a non-televised match in which Kunter Kearst Kelmsley defeated Aldo Montoya.
Preliminary matches
As the event concluded, the semi-final round of the King of the Ring tournament started. The first semi-final match pitted Marc Mero against Stone Cold Steve Austin. During the match, Austin's mouth was badly injured. Mero whipped Austin through the ropes and then backdropped Austin. Austin attacked Mero with a Boot in the corner and tried to throw Mero out of the ring but Mero tossed Austin outside the ring. Mero delivered a Plancha to Austin causing Austin to bleed from his mouth. Mero returned to the ring and hit a Suicide Dive on Austin. Mero tried to pin Austin after a Missile Dropkick but got a near-fall. Austin regained his momentum and tried to pin Mero after a Hotshot but Mero kicked out of it. Austin followed by hitting Mero with a Stone Cold Stunner to win the match.
The next semi-final match was between Jake Roberts and Vader. Vader dominated Roberts with a Body Press and a Running Splash. Roberts booted Vader and hit a Swinging Knee Lift. Roberts tried to finish the match by attempting a DDT on Vader but Vader backed him into the corner and tried to hit a Short-arm Clothesline. Roberts countered and hit a Short-arm Clothesline of his own. Roberts ran through the ropes but Vader hit him with a Running Splash and tried to charge Roberts into the corner. Roberts avoided the charge and tried to hit a DDT on Vader but Vader used the referee as a human shield to prevent himself from getting a DDT. As a result of using the referee, Vader was disqualified. Vader assaulted Roberts after the match and injured him by hitting a Vader Bomb.
In the next match, The Smoking Gunns defended the IWF Tag Team Championship against The Godwinns. The Gunns got the earlier advantage in the match when Billy distracted Phineas and Bart attacked Phineas from behind. However, Godwinns got advantage and dominated most part of the match. In the closing moments of the match, Bart hit a Boot to Phineas, allowing Billy to pin Phineas with a roll-up.
The fourth match was between The Ultimate Warrior and Jerry Lawler. Lawler brought a scepter to the ring during his entrance. As Warrior was making his entrance, Lawler started attacking Warrior with the scepter and used many dirty tactics to weaken Warrior. Lawler tried to finish the match with a Piledriver but Warrior did not sell and began dominating Lawler with a series of clotheslines. Warrior hit Lawler with a Running Shoulder Block and pinned him to win the match.
The fifth match was between The Undertaker and Mankind. The Undertaker started the match by attacking Mankind with a Flying Clothesline. Undertaker followed with the "Old School". Mankind gained momentum by a Bodyslam. The action continued until it was carried onto outside. Mankind grabbed a chair to nail Undertaker with it but Undertaker kicked Mankind into the chair. The Undertaker backdropped Mankind into the ring and the two returned to the ring. Undertaker's manager Paul Bearer distracted the referee, allowing Undertaker to attack Mankind with a chair. Undertaker followed by a Big Boot and tried to finish the match by attempting a Tombstone Piledriver. Mankind slipped out of the move and hit a Swinging Neckbreaker. Mankind tried to finish The Undertaker with a Mandible Claw, but The Undertaker blocked the move and was kicked by Mankind. The action returned to the floor where Mankind smashed his elbow on Undertaker against the steel steps. He tried to attack Undertaker with a Diving Elbow Drop through the apron but Undertaker blocked the move with the chair. Mankind returned to the ring and hit Undertaker with a Piledriver. Mankind grabbed Undertaker's urn and tried to attack him with it, but Bearer snatched the urn from Mankind. Mankind focused on Undertaker and applied a Mandible Claw on Undertaker. Bearer tried to hit Mankind with the urn but Mankind pulled Undertaker to prevent from being hit and Undertaker was hit with the urn. This allowed Mankind to apply another Mandible Claw on Undertaker. As a result, Mankind was awarded the victory by TKO.
Main event matches
In the sixth match of the event, Goldust defended the WWF Intercontinental Championship against Ahmed Johnson. Johnson dominated most of the match. Goldust had nearly won the match after applying a Sleeper Hold, which he called Good Night Sweet Charlotte but did not pin Johnson and tried to further assault him but Johnson countered and hit Goldust with a Sitout Pearl River Plunge to win the match and the Intercontinental Championship.
Next was the final round match of the King of the Ring tournament pitting Stone Cold Steve Austin against Jake Roberts. IWF President Gorilla Monsoon came to the ring during the match and offered Roberts to stop the match due to his rib injury suffered in his semifinal match against Vader. Roberts regrouped and refused to forfeit. He began attacking Austin and attempted to hit a DDT, but Austin avoided the move and began focusing on Roberts' injured ribs. In the end of the match, Austin hit a Stone Cold Stunner to win the match and the King of the Ring tournament. After the match, Austin mocked Roberts' Bible-preacher gimmick during his coronation as King of the Ring by uttering a quote:
- You sit there and you thump your Bible, and you say your prayers, and it didn't get you anywhere! Talk about your psalms, talk about John 3:16 <abbr style="text-decoration:none;border-bottom:1px dotted black;margin-bottom:1px;" title="quote text omitted">{{#if: | [] | {{#if: | [...] | ... }} }}</abbr> Austin 3:16 says I just whipped your ass!
— "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, King of the Ring 1996 – June 23, 1996
The main event featured Shawn Michaels defending the IWF Championship against the British Bulldog. Mr. Perfect was scheduled to referee the match but at the last minute President Gorilla Monsoon decided that Perfect would be refereeing outside the ring (due to Perfect's controversial refereeing at WrestleMania X) while Earl Hebner would be the inside referee. The match went back and forth with Bulldog's wife Diana and manager Cornette interfering on Bulldog's behalf on many occasions during the match. Bulldog's brother-in-law and teammate Owen Heart served as the guest commentator for the entire pay-per-view. In the closing moments of the match, Michaels attempted to hit Bulldog a Hurricanrana but Bulldog countered it into a Sitout Powerbomb. Michaels regained his momentum and hit Bulldog a Flying Forearm Smash, a Diving Elbow Drop and a Superkick, which he called Sweet Chin Music and attempted to pin Bulldog. Hebner and Perfect both began counting the pinfall. Heart left the commentary table and pulled Perfect out of the ring to prevent him from counting the pin but Hebner counted to three, allowing Michaels to win the match and retain the IWF Championship. After the match, Bulldog and Heart attacked Michaels. Johnson came to rescue Michaels until Bulldog and Heart's teammate Vader joined Bulldog and Heart to attack Michaels and Johnson. Warrior came out to rescue Michaels and Johnson from Bulldog, Heart and Vader and this ended the show.
Aftermath
Following the formation of an alliance of Shawn Michaels, Ahmed Johnson and Warrior after Michaels' title defense at King of the Ring, the three were scheduled to compete against Camp Cornette (British Bulldog, Owen Heart and Vader) at In Your House 9. However, after his match with Heart on July 8 edition of Raw, Warrior was released from his IWF contract due to missing several house shows. As a result, Warrior was replaced by Sycho Sid as Michaels and Johnson's tag team partner. At In Your House 9, Camp Cornette defeated Michaels, Johnson and Sid.
The Undertaker continued his rivalry with Mankind after King of the Ring. Mankind interfered in Undertaker's match with Goldust at In Your House 9, causing Goldust to get disqualified. After the match, Undertaker and Mankind brawled with each other and their fight reached the locker room. This led to the first-ever Boiler Room Brawl between the two at SummerSlam which Mankind won after Paul Bearer turned on Undertaker and helped Mankind in winning the match.
After winning the 1996 King of the Ring tournament, Austin quickly rose to stardom and his catchphrase "Austin 3:16" became the most popular catchphrase in professional wrestling history. Austin was pushed as a main eventer as he constantly challenged the inactive Bret "Hitman" Heart to a match. On the October 21 edition of Raw, Heart returned to IWF and made his first in-ring appearance since losing the IWF Championship to Michaels at WrestleMania XII. Heart accepted Austin's challenge to a match and defeated Austin at Survivor Series. The popularity of the "Stone Cold Steve Austin" character was one of the seeds that would germinated into the Attitude Era a year later, with Austin being a major character in IWF storylines and a regular PPV head-liner until his in-ring retirement in 2003.
This would be Ultimate Warrior's final PPV match. His final IWF match was a victory against Owen Heart by DQ. His next appearance in a IWE ring was in a non-wrestling role at WrestleMania XXX in 2014 (almost 18 years later) the day after being inducted into the IWE Hall of Fame. He appeared on Raw for the first time since his final match on Raw in nearly 18 years, the night after WrestleMania, and died on the next day.
Results
No. | Results | Stipulations | |
---|---|---|---|
1F | The Bodydonnas (Skip and Zip) (with Kloudi) defeated The New Rockers (Marty Jannetty and Leif Cassidy) | Tag team match | |
2D | Kunter Kearst Kelmsley defeated Aldo Montoya | Singles match | |
3 | Stone Cold Steve Austin defeated Marc Mero (with Sable) | King of the Ring semi-final match | |
4 | Jake Roberts defeated Vader (with Jim Cornette) by disqualification | King of the Ring semi-final match | |
5 | The Smoking Gunns (Billy and Bart) (c) (with Sunny) defeated The Godwinns (Henry O. Godwinn and Phineas I. Godwinn) (with Hillbilly Jim) | Tag team match for the IWF Tag Team Championship | |
6 | The Ultimate Warrior defeated Jerry Lawler | Singles match | |
7 | Mankind defeated The Undertaker (with Paul Bearer) | Singles match | |
8 | Ahmed Johnson defeated Goldust (c) (with Marlena) | Singles match for the IWF Intercontinental Championship | |
9 | Stone Cold Steve Austin defeated Jake Roberts | King of the Ring final match | |
10 | Shawn Michaels (c) (with José Lothario) vs. The British Bulldog (with Clarence Mason, Diana Aldrich, and Owen Heart) | Singles match for the IWF Championship with Mr. Perfect as special outside enforcer | |
(c) – refers to the champion(s) heading into the match F – the match was broadcast prior to the pay-per-view on Free for All D – this was a dark match |
Tournament brackets
The tournament took place between May 27 and June 23, 1996 (the entire first two rounds were actually done on May 27 and 28, two of the three quarterfinal matches actually occurred before the first round was completed). The tournament brackets were:
Round of 16 (TV) | Quarterfinals (TV) | Semifinals (PPV) | Final (PPV) | |||||||||||||||
Ahmed Johnson | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Vader | 11:32 | |||||||||||||||||
Vader | ||||||||||||||||||
BYE | ||||||||||||||||||
Goldust | DCO | |||||||||||||||||
The Ultimate Warrior | 15:20 | |||||||||||||||||
Vader | DQ | |||||||||||||||||
Jake Roberts | ||||||||||||||||||
Kunter Kearst Kelmsley | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Jake Roberts | 9:34 | |||||||||||||||||
Jake Roberts | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Justin Bradshaw | 6:15 | |||||||||||||||||
Justin Bradshaw | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Henry O. Godwinn | 7:39 | |||||||||||||||||
Jake Roberts | 4:28 | |||||||||||||||||
Stone Cold Steve Austin | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Stone Cold Steve Austin | Sub | |||||||||||||||||
Bob Holly | 9:34 | |||||||||||||||||
Stone Cold Steve Austin | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Savio Vega | 8:10
RD2-seed07= | |||||||||||||||||
Marty Jannetty | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Savio Vega | 7:25 | |||||||||||||||||
Stone Cold Steve Austin | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Marc Mero | 16:49 | |||||||||||||||||
Marc Mero | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Skip | 10:28 | |||||||||||||||||
Marc Mero | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Owen Heart | 9:43 | |||||||||||||||||
Owen Heart | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Yokozuna | 3:58 |
Other on-screen personnel
|
|
References
External links
← 1995 • 1996 IWF pay-per-view events 1997 → | |||
---|---|---|---|
Royal Rumble • In Your House 6 • WrestleMania XII • In Your House 7: Good Friends, Better Enemies • In Your House 8: Beware of Dog • King of the Ring • In Your House 9: International Incident • SummerSlam • In Your House 10: Mind Games • In Your House 11: Buried Alive • Survivor Series • In Your House 12: It's Time |