IWF In Your House 13: Final Four

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{| border=1 align=right cellpadding=1 cellspacing=1 width="325" style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background: #ffffff; border: 0px #000000 solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;"
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| align="center" colspan=3 bgcolor="#ffffff" style="border-bottom:1px solid gray; font-size:130%;" |<span style="color: #000000;">'''In Your House 13: Final Four'''</span><br>
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| align="center" colspan=3 bgcolor="#ffffff" style="border-bottom:1px solid gray; font-size:135%;" |<span style="color: #000000;">'''In Your House 13: Final Four'''</span><br>
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|-
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="3" style="font-size: 115%;" |Promotional poster featuring [[Bret Heart]], [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson|Stone Cold Steve Steve Austin]], [[Bret Eby|Sycho Sid]] and [[Ryan Barnhart|Shawn Michaels]]
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="3" style="font-size: 115%;" |Promotional poster featuring [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin (2006, pg. 56)-->|Stone Cold Steve Austin]], [[Bret Heart]], [[Bret Eby<!--(2000, pg. 57)-->|Sycho Sid]] and [[Ryan Barnhart<!--McDonalds)-->|Shawn Michaels]]
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|-
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| bgcolor=#BDBDBD align="center" colspan="3" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Information'''
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|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| style="text-align: left;" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Promotion'''
| style="text-align: left;" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Promotion'''
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| bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan= "2" style="font-size: 115%;" |[[IWE|International Wrestling Federation]]
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| bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan="2" style="font-size: 115%;" |[[International Wrestling Federation]]
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|- valign="top"
| style="text-align: left;" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Date'''
| style="text-align: left;" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Date'''
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| bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan= "2" style="font-size: 115%;" |February 16, 1997
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| bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan="2" style="font-size: 115%;" |February 16, 1997
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| style="text-align: left;" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Attendance'''
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| style="text-align: left;" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''City'''
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| bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan= "2" style="font-size: 115%;" |6,399
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| bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan="2" style="font-size: 115%;" |[[Chattanooga, Tennessee]]
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| style="text-align: left;" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Venue'''
| style="text-align: left;" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Venue'''
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| bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan= "2" style="font-size: 115%;" |[[McKenzie Arena|UTC Arena]]
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| bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan="2" style="font-size: 115%;" |[[UTC Arena]]
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|- valign="top"
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| style="text-align: left;" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''City'''
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| style="text-align: left;" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Attendance'''
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| bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan= "2" style="font-size: 115%;" |[[Chattanooga, Tennessee]]
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| bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan="2" style="font-size: 115%;" |6,399<!--
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|- valign="top"
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| bgcolor=#BDBDBD align="center" colspan="3" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Pay-per-view chronology'''
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| style="text-align: left;" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Tagline(s)'''
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| bgcolor="#ffffff" colspan="2" style="font-size: 115%;" |-->
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" |[[IWF Royal Rumble (1997)|Royal Rumble<br>(1997)]]
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| bgcolor=#BDBDBD align="center" colspan="3" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Pay-per-view chronology'''
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" |'''In Your<br>House 13:<br>Final Four'''
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" |[[IWF WrestleMania 13|WrestleMania 13]]
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''← Previous'''<br>[[IWF Royal Rumble (1997)|Royal Rumble]]
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Next →'''<br>[[IWF WrestleMania 13|WrestleMania 13]]
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| bgcolor=#BDBDBD align="center" colspan="3" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''[[IWF In Your House|In Your House]] chronology'''
| bgcolor=#BDBDBD align="center" colspan="3" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''[[IWF In Your House|In Your House]] chronology'''
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|- valign="top"
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" |[[IWF In Your House 12: It's Time|In Your House<br>12: It's Time]]
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''← Previous'''<br>[[IWF In Your House 12: It's Time|It's Time]]
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" |'''In Your<br>House 13:<br>Final Four'''
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" style="font-size: 115%;" |'''Next →'''<br>[[IWF In Your House 14: Revenge of the 'Taker|Revenge of the 'Taker]]
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| bgcolor=#ffffff align="center" colspan="1" |[[IWF In Your House 14: Revenge of the 'Taker|In Your House<br>14: Revenge of<br>the 'Taker]]
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|}
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'''In Your House 13: Final Four''' was the thirteenth [[IWF In Your House|In Your House]] professional wrestling pay-per-view event produced by the [[International Wrestling Entertainment|International Wrestling Federation]] (IWF). The event took place on February 16, 1997 at the [[McKenzie Arena|UTC Arena]] in [[Chattanooga, Tennessee]].
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'''In Your House 13: Final Four''' was the 13th [[IWF In Your House|In Your House]] [[professional wrestling]] [[pay-per-view]] (PPV) [[List of IWE pay-per-view events|event]] produced by the [[IWE|International Wrestling Federation]] (IWF, now IWE). The event was [[Sponsor (commercial)|presented]] by [[Western Union]] and took place on February 16, 1997, at the [[UTC Arena]] in [[Chattanooga, Tennessee]]. Five matches were broadcast on the PPV portion, with one match held before the event as a [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#dark match|dark match]].
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The main event was a [[Professional wrestling match types#Basic elimination matches|Four corners elimination match]] for the vacant [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]], including [[Bret Heart]], [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson|Stone Cold Steve Austin]], [[Martin McAlmond|The Undertaker]], and [[Steven White|Vader]], which Heart won. The main matches on the undercard were [[Owen Heart and The British Bulldog]] versus [[Douglas Eugene Ferrant|Doug Furnas]] and [[Frank LaPier|Phil Lafon]] and [[Samuel Johnson|Rocky Maivia]] versus [[Triple K|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]] for the [[IWE Intercontinental Championship|IWF Intercontinental Championship]].
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The [[Card (sports)#Main event|main event]] was a [[Professional wrestling match types#Basic elimination matches|four corners elimination match]] for the [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]], which had been vacated by [[Ryan Barnhart<!--McDonalds)-->|Shawn Michaels]] three days before the event. The match, which had originally been conceived to settle the controversy over the finish of the [[IWF Royal Rumble|Royal Rumble]] match [[IWF Royal Rumble (1997)|in January]] and name a number one contender for the championship at [[IWF WrestleMania 13|WrestleMania 13]], featured [[Bret Heart]], featuring [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin (2006, pg. 56)-->|Stone Cold Steve Austin]], [[Martin McAlmond<!--(2000, pg. 89)-->|The Undertaker]], and [[Larry <!--Yent (1969, pg. 125)--> White|Vader]]. The main matches on the [[Card (sports)#Undercard|undercard]] were [[Owen Heart and The British Bulldog]] versus [[Douglas Eugene Ferrant<!--(1966, pg. 22)-->|Doug Furnas]] and [[Frank LaPier<!--(1972, pg. 141)-->|Phil Lafon]] and [[Jayme Johnson<!--(1999, pg. 22)-->|Rocky Maivia]] versus [[Triple K<!--(2007, pg. 33)-->|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]] for the [[IWE Intercontinental Championship|IWF Intercontinental Championship]].
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==Background==
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==Production==
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The main [[Feud (professional wrestling)|feud]] heading into In Your House 13 was between [[Bret Heart]], [[Stone Cold Steve JohnsonStone Cold Steve Austin]], [[Martin McAlmond|The Undertaker]], and [[Steven White|Vader]] over the finish of the [[IWF Royal Rumble (1997)|Royal Rumble]]. As per stipulation, the winner of the Rumble match would face the [[IWE Championship|IWF Champion]] for his title at [[IWF WrestleMania 13|WrestleMania 13]]. At the Royal Rumble event, [[Ryan Barnhart|Shawn Michaels]] won the title from [[Bret Eby|Sycho Sid]] in the main event following the Rumble match and avenged the loss he suffered at the hands of Sid at [[IWF Survivor Series (1996)|Survivor Series]] the previous November. According to Bret Heart, Michaels was scheduled to [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#Drop|drop]] the title to him at WrestleMania in return for Heart having dropped the title to Michaels at the same event [[IWF WrestleMania 12|one year earlier]]. Michaels later suffered a legitimate knee injury during a three-way match with Sid and Bret Heart two weeks after the Royal Rumble, and on the February 13, 1997 edition of ''Raw'', known as ''Thursday Raw Thursday'', Michaels vacated the title by speaking to the fans, telling them that he was told by doctors that he suffered a very bad knee injury and that he should at least consider retirement. He stated that he "had to find his smile again", which he had "lost" somewhere down the line. Michaels spent time rehabbing his knee at the same time Steve Austin was rehabbing his knee injury at HealthSouth in San Antonio. This did not sit well with Hart, who had legitimate backstage problems with Michaels at this time and who also thought Michaels' injury was not as severe as he was claiming it to be.
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===Background===
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[[IWF In Your House|In Your House]] was a series of monthly [[professional wrestling]] [[pay-per-view]] (PPV) [[List of IWE pay-per-view and livestreaming supercards|events]] first produced by the [[International Wrestling Federation]] (IWF, now IWE) in May 1995. They aired when the promotion was not holding one of its then-five major PPVs ([[IWF WrestleMania|WrestleMania]], [[IWF King of the Ring|King of the Ring]], [[IWF SummerSlam|SummerSlam]], [[IWF Survivor Series|Survivor Series]], and [[IWF Royal Rumble|Royal Rumble]]), and were sold at a lower cost. In Your House 13: Final Four took place on February 16, 1997, at the [[UTC Arena]] in [[Chattanooga, Tennessee]]. The name of the show was based on the event's main event match, which was a [[Professional wrestling match types#Basic elimination matches|four corners elimination match]].
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Heart and Austin's rivalry began shortly after Austin won the [[IWF King of the Ring (1996)|1996 King of the Ring tournament]]. Heeart had taken some time off following his loss to Michaels at WrestleMania and his future at that point was not certain. Austin insulted Hart in an attempt to goad the former champion into accepting his challenge for match. Heart eventually returned and agreed to the match, with the two facing each other at [[IWF Survivor Series (1996)|Survivor Series]] where Heart defeated Austin.
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===Storylines===
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====Main event background====
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[[Image:Austinentrance.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin (2006, pg. 56)-->|Stone Cold Steve Austin]] won the [[IWF Royal Rumble (1997)|1997 Royal Rumble]]]]
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The main [[Angle (professional wrestling)|angle]] entering this edition of In Your House was, initially, the resolution to the [[Royal Rumble Match|Royal Rumble match]] from the [[IWF Royal Rumble (1997)|previous pay-per-view]]; the controversial ending of the match featured four wrestlers whose [[feud (professional wrestling)|feud]]s became intertwined as a result.
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Undertaker and Vader's paths crossed due to Undertaker's continued bad blood with his former [[Manager (professional wrestling)|manager]] [[Paul Bearer]]. Bearer [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#Turn|turned]] on Undertaker and cost him a [[Professional wrestling match types#Location-based variations|Boiler Room Brawl]] against [[Jon Foley|Mankind]] at [[IWF SummerSlam (1996)|SummerSlam 1996]], and after that he began feuding with wrestlers managed by Bearer. Bearer assisted Vader in defeating Undertaker at the Royal Rumble, thus aligning himself with the massive wrestler
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The first feud was that between [[Bret Heart]] and [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin (2006, pg. 56)-->|Stone Cold Steve Austin]], which had been brewing since shortly after Austin won the 1996 [[IWF King of the Ring|King of the Ring]] crown. Heart, at the time, had taken a leave of absence from the company following his [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]] loss to [[Ryan Barnhart<!--McDonalds)-->|Shawn Michaels]] in an Iron Man Match at [[IWF WrestleMania 12|WrestleMania XII]] and the possibility existed that he might not return to the IWF (he had been negotiating with, and had received a contract offer from, [[World Championship Wrestling]] and was said to be considering leaving). Austin began berating Heart in his absence trying to goad him into a match. Hart would eventually return at [[IWF Survivor Series (1996)|Survivor Series]] in November 1996 and defeat Austin.
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Later that night all four men were entered into the Royal Rumble match. Austin was the first of the four to enter, coming out fifth, and was still in the ring over forty minutes later as one of the final seven men in the match. By order of entry, the other six were Heart (twenty-first), [[Glenn McAlmond (wrestler)|Diesel]] (twenty-third), [[Terry Funk]] (twenty-fourth), Mankind (twenty-sixth), Vader (twenty-eighth), and Undertaker (thirtieth and final entrant). The first two eliminations among this group would set in motion the controversial events that followed.
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The other feud was between [[Martin McAlmond<!--(2000, pg. 89)-->|The Undertaker]] and his former manager [[Paul Bearer]], who had turned on him at [[IWF SummerSlam (1996)|SummerSlam]] in August 1996. and [[Larry <!--Yent (1969, pg. 125)--> White|Vader]], who had joined the IWF in 1996, was drawn into said feud when Bearer interfered in their match at the Royal Rumble and began managing Vader.
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Shortly after Mankind eliminated [[Samuel Johnson|Rocky Maivia]] from the match, he turned his attention to Funk and the two started brawling with each other. This culminated in Mankind using his [[Professional wrestling attacks#Clothesline#Cactus clothesline|Cactus clothesline]] as Funk was against the ropes, knocking both men to the apron. Funk came back into the ring and tried to suplex Mankind, who reversed the maneuver and suplexed Funk over the rope, eliminating him. Mankind did not leave the apron, however, and Undertaker eliminated him with a boot to the floor. Funk then began arguing with the officials on the side of the ring from which he had been eliminated, and Mankind responded by attacking him to restart the brawl. All of the officials surrounding the ring ran over to the fracas to try and break it up and send both men to the back.
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The winner of the Royal Rumble match, as is almost always the case, was to face the IWF Champion in the main event of [[IWF WrestleMania 13]] in Chicago in March 1997. In this particular instance, the Royal Rumble winner would face the winner of the main event of the pay-per-view where reigning champion [[Bret Eby<!--(2000, pg. 57)-->|Sycho Sid]] defended his title against Michaels, from whom he had wrested the title at Survivor Series. All four of the previously mentioned wrestlers were entered into the match.
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While this was happening, Heart took advantage of a momentary lapse in concentration by Austin, who had just finished attacking Diesel, and threw him over the top rope on the far side of the ring. As Austin got to his feet, he quickly realized that none of the officials had seen his feet touch the floor as they were too busy with breaking the brawl up on the opposite side of the ring. Austin then got back into the ring and continued in the match as if he had not been eliminated, and almost as soon as he did so he pushed both Undertaker and Vader, who were locked in a battle of their own to try to stay in the match, over the top. By this time, Mankind and Funk had been separated and the officials could focus again on the match, just in time to see Hart eliminate Diesel. Just after he did, though, Austin returned the favor from before and dumped Heart out of the ring. As a result, since as far as the officials were concerned Austin was still a legal participant in the match, he was declared the winner of the Royal Rumble.
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Late in the match, [[Jon Foley<!--(2006, pg. 26)-->|Mankind]] and [[Terry <!--Ray--> Fuller <!--(1972, pg. 107)-->|Terry Funk]] got into a brawl outside the ring. Referee [[Jim Korderas]] tried to break it up, and when he was unable to, fellow referee [[Mike Chioda]] went over to Korderas' side of the ring to assist. Meanwhile, Austin was tossed over the top rope by Heart after getting up from a Lou Thesz press he delivered to [[Glenn McAlmond<!--(2006, pg. 56)--> (wrestler)|Diesel]]. However, this happened to be the side where Chioda had been standing; since Mankind and Funk had still not left the ringside area, this meant that no official had seen Austin’s elimination.
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Heart was furious over the official decision and argued with the officials claiming that he should be declared the winner and not Austin. On the following night's ''Raw'', Heart came to the ring unannounced at the beginning of the show and began venting his frustrations toward [[Vince Matteson]] over how he believed that the finish to the Royal Rumble was just another in a long string of screwings and broken promises that had been dogging Heart since he returned to the company. He demanded that he receive the title shot that the winner of the Royal Rumble is entitled to, saying that as far as he was concerned he won the match. Matteson simply ignored him and walked to his broadcast position, and an incensed Heart finally decided he had had enough and declared he was quitting the IWF.
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Realizing this, Austin got back into the ring since, as far as the officials knew, he was still an active participant in the match. As Austin returned, Heart was engaged with Diesel on one end of the ring while Undertaker was trying to knock Vader over the top rope on the opposite side of the ring. Austin grabbed both men's legs and pushed them upward, causing Undertaker and Vader to tumble over the top rope.
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As Mankind and Funk were finally removed from ringside by Chioda, Heart threw Diesel out of the ring. He never saw Austin return to the ring, and as such was unaware that he was still participating in the match. Austin took advantage and tossed Heart to the floor as Korderas' attention was again focused on the action, and he declared Austin the winner of the match. A furious Heart confronted both referees as Austin left the ring, getting into a physical confrontation with both men before leaving himself.
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The next night on ''Monday Night Raw'', Heart came out unexpectedly at the start of the program and expressed his frustration over what he perceived as constant mistreatment since he had returned from his self-imposed exile following his loss to Michaels at [[IWF WrestleMania 12|WrestleMania XII]]. Heart directed his attention to [[Vince Matteson<!--(Father of Kaila Matteson)-->|Vince Matteson]] at ringside as he was set to take his broadcast position, demanding that he be given the WrestleMania championship match, where he would face Michaels in a rematch of their contest from the previous year (Michaels having regained the championship from Sid in the main event of the pay-per-view), since he had been the last legal man in the Rumble when the match ended. Matteson ignored Heart’s demand, and the three-time IWF champion responded by quitting and storming out of the ring.
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A short time later, IWF President [[Gorilla Monsoon]] came out to clarify the situation. He confirmed Austin’s victory in the Royal Rumble, citing the longstanding Federation policy of referees’ decisions being final. However, Austin’s win did not mean he was guaranteed the title shot due to his actions in attaining the victory.
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Instead, a match was conceived for the February event to settle the dispute. Austin, Undertaker, and Vader would compete in what was called the Final Four match, with the fourth spot in the match offered to Heart if he reconsidered his quitting earlier, which he did. The match would be conducted under elimination rules, with the last man standing advancing to WrestleMania to face the champion. However, an incident involving Michaels would lead to a significant change in plans for the pay-per-view.
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As Bret Heart recalled, the plan was for him to face Michaels in a rematch of their classic at WrestleMania XII in 1996. In that match, Heart was supposed to defeat Michaels for the IWF Championship as a reward for agreeing to lose the year before. However, on a special Thursday edition of ''Raw'' that aired on February 13, 1997, Michaels announced that he was vacating the championship.
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Several weeks earlier he had wrestled Heart and Sid and suffered a knee injury; Michaels revealed that doctors had told him that the damage was severe enough that he would likely have to retire from wrestling. He also said that he had “lost (his) smile” and needed to find it again, and thus he was walking away for a spell. Heart was said to be furious with the situation; he believed that Michaels was only doing this so he could get out of having to lose the belt to him as they had agreed upon and that the injury was not as bad as he was letting on.
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Whatever his reasoning actually was, Michaels’ decision forced a change in plans. First, the Final Four match would now be contested for the vacant IWF Championship and Sid would remain the #1 contender for the title. Then, on the edition of ''Raw'' on February 17, the winner of the Final Four match would be obligated to make his first defense of the IWF Championship against Sid in the main event of the program.
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====Other feuds====
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The other major feuds heading into the pay-per-view event were between [[Jayme Johnson<!--(1999, pg. 22)-->|Rocky Maivia]] and [[Triple K<!--(2007, pg. 33)-->|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]] over the [[IWE Intercontinental Championship|IWF Intercontinental Championship]]. On ''Thursday Raw Thursday'', Maivia defeated Kelmsley to win the Intercontinental title in an upset at the time, with Maivia scoring a small package on Kelmsley culminating in a rematch for Maivia's newly won Intercontinental title, and [[Owen Heart and The British Bulldog]] against [[Douglas Eugene Ferrant<!--(1966, pg. 22)-->|Doug Furnas]] and [[Frank LaPier<!--(1972, pg. 141)-->|Phil Lafon]] over the [[World Tag Team Championship (IWE)|IWF Tag Team Championship]] which began after Furnas and LaFon had eliminated Tag Champions from a [[Survivor Series Match|Survivor Series match]] at [[IWF Survivor Series (1996)|Survivor Series 1996]] to earn a title shot.
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== Event ==
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{| border="1" align="right" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" style="width: 200px; style="font-size: 95%; "
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|+ '''Other on-screen talent'''
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!style="background: #e3e3e3;" |Role:
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!style="background: #e3e3e3;" |Name::
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|-
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|rowspan="6"|Commentator
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|[[Jim Ross]]
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|-
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|[[Jerry Lawler]]
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|-
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|[[Carlos Cabrera]] (Spanish)
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|-
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|[[Hugo Savinovich]] (Spanish)
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|-
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|[[Raymond Rousseau<!--Brother of Darrell Rousseau (1969, pg. 157)-->|Ray Rougeau]] (French)
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|-
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|Jean Brassard (French)
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|-
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|rowspan="2"|Interviewer
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|[[Kevin Kelly (announcer)|Kevin Kelly]]
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|-
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|[[Michael Ed Standley <!--(1999, pg. 117)--> (wrestler)|Dok Hendrix]]
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|-
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|Ring announcer
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|[[Howard Finkel]]
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|-
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|rowspan="4"|Referee
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|[[Tim White (referee)|Tim White]]
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|-
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|[[Jack Doan]]
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|-
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|[[Earl Hebner]]
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|-
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|[[Mike Chioda]]
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|-
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|}
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Shortly after this happened, IWF President [[Gorilla Monsoon]] conducted an interview with Matteson in the ring. Monsoon validated Austin's victory, saying that the longstanding policy of the IWF was that the decision of the officials was final. However, Monsoon declared that while Austin was the official winner of the Royal Rumble, his victory did not entitle him to a championship match due to the manner in which it had been achieved. Monsoon then said he had signed a four-way, no disqualification elimination matchup for the WrestleMania title shot, which became known as the Final Four and was to serve as the main event for In Your House 13. The participants in the match were to include Austin, the official winner of the Royal Rumble, and the three men he eliminated after he illegally re-entered the match: Vader, The Undertaker, and Heart if he reconsidered his actions from before. As Austin argued with Monsoon over his decision, Heart returned to the arena, attacked Austin, and accepted the offer.
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Before the event went live on [[pay-per-view]], [[The Godwinns]] defeated [[The Headbangers]] in a [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#Dark match|dark match]].
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Michaels' relinquishing of the title, however, forced a change in plans. The four participants in the Final Four would instead be vying for the vacant IWF Championship. The winner of that match would be required to make a defense on the following night's ''Raw'' against Sid, who had been scheduled to take on Michaels in a third match for the title on ''Thursday Raw Thursday''.
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===Preliminary matches===
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The first televised match was between [[Clarence J. Mollo<!--(1964, pg. 23)-->|Marc Mero]] and [[Allen <!--Steve--> Spaulding <!--(1972, pg. 122)-->|Leif Cassidy]]. Mero began with a quick assault on Cassidy before getting distracted by [[Irene Graczyk<!--(1972, pg. 110)--> (wrestler)|Sable]]. Cassidy regrouped and applied the [[Professional wrestling holds#Figure-four leglock|figure four leglock]] on Mero and also argued with Sable, who was in Mero's corner. Mero tried to do quick attacks on Cassidy but Cassidy managed to be on the offensive. Sable continued to distract him throughout the match and Cassidy was frustrated of her interferences. He ran before her before Mero hit Cassidy with a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Shooting star press|Wild Thing]] for the win.
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[[Image:Johnsonentrance.jpg|thumb|right|150px|[[Stone Cold Steve Johnson|Stone Cold Steve Austin]] won the [[IWF Royal Rumble (1997)|1997 Royal Rumble]]]]
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The second match was a six-man tag team match featuring [[Nation of Domination]] ([[Jon Rispens<!--(2007, pg. 37)-->|Faarooq]], [[Brian Don Adams<!--(1965, pg. 49)--> (wrestler)|Crush]] and [[<!--Juan--> Douglas A. Rodriguez<!--(1964 pg. 25)-->|Savio Vega]]) against [[Mike Prendergast<!--(1999, pg. 110)-->|Bart Gunn]], [[Dustin<!--Simpson (McDonald's)--> Semmler|Goldust]] and [[<!--Charlie-->Ronald Steib<!--(1967, pg. 109)-->|Flash Funk]]. All the six men began brawling with each other, until Nation were sent to the outside. As they regrouped, Funk dived from the top rope onto all the three members of Nation. Funk hit a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Hurricanrana|hurricanrana]] on Vega from the top rope and tried to dive on the Nation again but they controlled his landing and dragged him into the ring. Faarooq, Crush and Vega took turns and attacked Funk. After a great damage, he was able to tag with Gunn who took care of all three men. Gunn, Goldust and Funk sent Nation outside the ring and Gunn hit a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Diving bulldog|diving bulldog]] on Faarooq and went for the [[Pin (professional wrestling)|cover]] but the [[Referee (professional wrestling)|referee]] was distracted in sending Goldust and Funk to the outside. Crush took advantage and hit a [[leg drop]] on Gunn while Faarooq pinned Gunn to get the win.
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The other major feuds heading into the pay-per-view event were between [[Samuel Johnson|Rocky Maivia]] and [[Triple K|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]] over the [[IWE Intercontinental Championship|IWF Intercontinental Championship]]. On ''Thursday Raw Thursday'', Maivia defeated Kelmsley to win the Intercontinental title in an upset at the time, with Maivia scoring a small package on Kelmsley culminating in a rematch for Maivia's newly won Intercontinental title, and [[Owen Heart and The British Bulldog]] against [[Douglas Eugene Ferrant|Doug Furnas]] and [[Frank LaPier|Phil Lafon]] over the [[World Tag Team Championship (IWE)|IWF Tag Team Championship]] which began after Furnas and LaFon had eliminated Tag Champions from a Survivor Series match at Survivor Series 1996 to earn a title shot.
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==Event==
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[[Image:BretHartJuly242005.JPG|thumb|right|upright|[[Bret Heart]] won the [[Professional wrestling match types#Basic elimination matches|Four Corners Elimination match]] for the vacant [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]]]]
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Before the event went live on [[Pay-Per-View|pay-per-view]], [[The Godwinns]] defeated [[The Headbangers]] in a [[Dark Match|dark match]].
+
[[Jayme Johnson<!--(1999, pg. 22)-->|Rocky Maivia]] and  [[Triple K<!--(2007, pg. 33)-->|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]]. Kelmsley gained the early advantage by performing [[backbreaker]]s and [[suplex]]es on Maivia. Kelmsley began applying [[Professional wrestling holds|submission holds]] on Maivia but Maivia countered them into a [[Pin (professional wrestling)#Small package|small package]]. Kelmsley kicked out of the pin until Maivia hit a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Diving crossbody|flying crossbody]] on Kelmsley. He kicked out again and nailed Maivia with a [[Professional wrestling throws#Jawbreaker|jawbreaker]] and a [[DDT (professional wrestling)|DDT]]. Goldust came to the ringside and distracted Kelmsley. Maivia hit a [[Suplex#German suplex|Bridging German suplex]] on Kelmsley and pinned him to retain the IC title. Following the match, as Goldust confronted Kelmsley, Marlena was assaulted and choked by a female fan at ringside, who was later identified as Kelmsley's new bodyguard/enforcer, [[Maria Senden<!--(1999, pg. 100)-->|Chyna]].
-
The first televised match was between [[Clarence J. Mollo|Marc Mero]] and [[Steve Spaulding|Leif Cassidy]]. Mero began with a quick assault on Cassidy before getting distracted by [[Avery Gold (wrestler)|Sable]]. Cassidy regrouped and applied the [[Figure Four Leglock|figure four leglock]] on Mero and also argued with Sable, who was in Mero's corner. Mero tried to do quick attacks on Cassidy but Cassidy managed to be on the offensive. Sable continued to distract him throughout the match and Cassidy was frustrated of her interferences. He ran before her before Mero hit Cassidy a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Shooting star press|Wild Thing]] for the win.
+
The fourth match was a [[tag team]] match pitting [[Douglas Eugene Ferrant<!--(1966, pg. 22)-->|Doug Furnas]] and [[Frank LaPier<!--(1972, pg. 141)-->|Phil Lafon]] against [[World Tag Team Championship (IWE)|IWF Tag Team Champions]] [[Owen Heart and The British Bulldog]] for the IWF Tag Team Championship. Heart and Furnas started the match as Furnas hit Owen with a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Lariat|lariat]] and a [[leg drop]]. Furnas tagged in with LaFon while Owen tagged in with Bulldog. He overpowered LaFon and then Owen and Bulldog took turns by tagging with each other and attacking LaFon. Smith did a [[Pin (professional wrestling)|pinfall attempt]] on LaFon but the [[Referee (professional wrestling)|referee]] was distracted by Owen. Owen continued to distract the referee as accidentally hit Bulldog with a lariat. Bulldog hit Owen with a lariat and the two argued as LaFon hit a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Splash|splash]] on Owen from the top rope but Bulldog controlled LaFon. Despite that, LaFon tagged in with Furnas and then the challengers double-teamed Heart until Heart tagged in with Bulldog. Bulldog picked up LaFon and went for a running powerslam until Heart hit LaFon with his [[IWE Slammy Awards|Slammy]] statuette. LaFon and Furnas won the match by disqualification, but the title does not change hands by DQ, so the titles remained with Heart and Bulldog.
-
The second match was a six man tag team match featuring [[Nation of Domination]] ([[Jon Rispens|Faarooq]], [[Bryan Don Adams|Crush]] and [[David Roope|Savio Vega]]) against [[Mike Podolinsky|Bart Gunn]], [[Dustin Semmler|Goldust]] and [[Ronald Steib|Flash Funk]]. All the six men began brawling with each other, until Nation were sent to the outside. As they regrouped, Funk dived from the top rope onto all the three members of Nation. Funk hit a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Hurricanrana|hurricanrana]] on Vega from the top rope and tried to dive on the Nation again but they controlled his landing and dragged him into the ring. Faarooq, Crush and Vega took turns and attacked Funk. After a great damage, he was able to tag with Morgan who took care of all three men. Morgan, Goldust and Funk sent Nation outside the ring and Gunn hit a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Diving bulldog|diving bulldog]] on Faarooq and went for the cover but the [[Referee (professional wrestling)|referee]] was distracted in sending Goldust and Funk to the outside. Crush took advantage and hit a leg drop on Morgan while Faarooq pinned Morgan to get the win.
+
===Main event===
 +
The [[Card (sports)#Main event|main event]] was the [[Professional wrestling match types#Basic elimination matches|Final Four match]] for the vacant [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]] between [[Martin McAlmond<!--(2000, pg. 89)-->|The Undertaker]], [[Bret Heart]], [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin (2006, pg. 56)-->|Stone Cold Steve Austin]] and [[Larry <!--Yent (1969, pg. 125)--> White|Vader]]. As mentioned, this was a no-disqualification match. In order to be eliminated a wrestler could be pinned, forced to submit, or thrown over the top rope with both feet touching the floor. Heart and Austin, who had a well-known rivalry, started brawling with each other while Undertaker attacked Vader and hit him with a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Plancha|crossbody]] over the top rope. Undertaker attacked both Heart and Vader. Vader recovered and then hit Undertaker with a [[Foreign object (professional wrestling)|steel chair]] to the outside. Undertaker blocked the chair and drove Vader in the chair and then the steel steps opening up a cut above his right eye. Austin [[Bump (professional wrestling)|bumped]] Heart and then began working on Undertaker while Heart and Vader [[Punch (strike)|punch]]ed each other. All the four men began wrestling on outside as Undertaker crotched Austin. Vader attacked Heart with a steel chair. Undertaker began working on Heart, who [[Professional wrestling attacks#Eye rake|eye raked]] Undertaker and was [[powerslam]]med by Undertaker. Vader and Austin attacked each other by hitting steel chairs, steps, bell and even a camera man. Vader applied Heart's own maneuver [[Sharpshooter (professional wrestling)|Sharpshooter]] on him, but Austin hit Vader with a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Lou Thesz press|Lou Thesz Press]] to break the hold. Vader tried to hit Undertaker a [[Powerbomb|Vaderbomb]], but instead went a [[Moonsault|Vadersault]] which missed. Heart then put Austin in a [[Professional wrestling holds#Fireman's carry|fireman's carry]] and threw him over the top rope, which eliminated him from the match. Heart and Undertaker brawled with each other while Vader recovered in the corner. [[Paul Bearer]] interfered and attacked Undertaker while Vader was [[Suplex#Superplex|superplexed]] by Heart. Despite being eliminated, Austin interfered in the match and attacked Heart. Vader went for a Vaderbomb from the top rope, but Undertaker [[Groin attack|low blow]]ed Vader and threw him over the top rope. Undertaker and Hart remained the final two participants. He tried to hit a [[Piledriver (professional wrestling)#Kneeling reverse piledriver|"Tombstone"]] on Heart until Austin distracted Undertaker while Heart [[Professional wrestling attacks#Clothesline|clothesline]]d Undertaker over the top rope to win his fourth IWF Championship.
-
[[Image:BretHeartJuly242005.JPG|thumb|left|upright|[[Bret Heart]], who won the [[Basic Elimination Matches|Four Corners Elimination match]] for the vacant [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]]]]
+
== Aftermath ==
-
The third match was for the [[IWE Intercontinental Championship|IWF Intercontinental Championship]] between champion [[Samuel Johnson|Rocky Maivia]] and [[Triple K|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]]. Kelmsley gained the early advantage by performing backbreakers and suplexes on Maivia. Kelmsley began applying [[Professional wrestling holds|submission holds]] on Maivia but Maivia countered them into a [[Pin (professional wrestling)#Small package|small package]]. Kelmsley kicked out of the pin until Maivia hit a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Diving crossbody|flying crossbody]] on Kelmsley. He kicked out again and nailed Maivia with a jawbreaker and a DDT. Goldust came to the ringside and distracted Kelmsley. Maivia hit a [[Suplex#German suplex|Bridging German suplex]] on Kelmsley and pinned him to retain the IC title.
+
[[Image:IWE-Requires-Undertaker.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Martin McAlmond<!--(2000, pg. 89)-->|The Undertaker]], who defeated [[Bret Eby<!--(2000, pg. 57)-->|Sycho Sid]] for the [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]] at [[IWF WrestleMania 13|WrestleMania 13]]]]
-
The fourth match was a [[Tag Team|tag team]] match pitting [[Douglas Eugene Ferrant|Doug Furnas]] and [[Frank LaPier|Phil Lafon]] against [[World Tag Team Championship (IWE)|IWF Tag Team Champions]] [[Owen Heart and The British Bulldog]] for the IWF Tag Team Championship. Heart and Furnas started the match as Furnas hit Owen with a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Lariat|lariat]] and a [[Leg Drop|leg drop]]. Furnas tagged in with LaFon while Owen tagged in with Bulldog. He overpowered LaFon and then Owen and Bulldog took turns by tagging with each other and attacking LaFon. Aldrich did a [[Pin (professional wrestling)|pinfall attempt]] on LaFon but the [[Referee (professional wrestling)|referee]] was distracted by Owen. Owen continued to distract the referee as accidentally hit Bulldog with a lariat. Bulldog hit Owen with a lariat and the two argued as LaFon hit a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Splash|splash]] on Owen from the top rope but Bulldog controlled LaFon. Despite that, LaFon tagged in with Furnas and then the challengers double-teamed Hart until Hart tagged in with Bulldog. Bulldog picked up LaFon and went for a running powerslam until Heart hit LaFon with his [[IWE Slammy Awards|Slammy]] statuette. LaFon and Furnas won the match by disqualification, but the title does not change hands by DQ, so the titles remained with Heart and Bulldog.
+
After In Your House, Vader and Undertaker’s feud came to an end until the next In Your House: Canadian Stampede when Undertaker was the IWF Champion while Austin and Hart’s continued.
-
The [[Card (sports)#Main event|main event]] was a [[Professional wrestling match types#Basic elimination matches|Four Corners Elimination match]] for the vacant [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]] between [[Martin McAlmond|The Undertaker]], [[Bret Heart]], [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson|Stone Cold Steve Austin]] and [[Steven White|Vader]]. Heart and Austin, two famous rivals started brawling with each other while Undertaker attacked Vader and hit him with a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Crossbody|crossbody]] over the top rope. Undertaker attacked both Heart and Vader. Vader recovered and then hit Undertaker with a [[Foreign Object (professional wrestling)|steel chair]] to the outside. Undertaker blocked the chair and drove Vader in the chair and then the steel steps opening his right eye. Austin [[Bump (professional wrestling)|bumped]] Heart and then began working on Undertaker while Heart and Vader [[Punch (strike)|punch]]ed each other. All the four men began wrestling on outside as Undertaker crotched Austin. Vader attacked Hart with a steel chair. Undertaker began working on Heart, who [[Professional wrestling attacks#Eye rake|eye raked]] Undertaker and was [[powerslam]]med by Undertaker. Vader and Austin attacked each other by hitting steel chairs, steps, bell and even a camera man. Vader applied Heart's own maneuver [[Sharpshooter (professional wrestling)|Sharpshooter]] on him but Austin hit him with a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Lou Thesz press|press and knuckles]]. Vader tried to hit Undertaker a [[Powerbomb|Vaderbomb]] but instead hit a [[Moonsault|Vadersault]] which missed. Heart then put Austin in a [[Professional wrestling holds#Fireman's carry|fireman's carry]] and threw him over the top rope, which lead to the first elimination. Heart and Undertaker brawled with each other while Vader recovered in the corner. [[Paul Bearer]] interfered and attacked Undertaker while Vader was [[Suplex#Superplex|superplexed]] by Heart. Despite being eliminated, Austin interfered in the match and attacked Heart. Vader went for a Vaderbomb from the top rope but Undertaker [[Groin Attack|low blow]]ed Vader and threw him over the top rope. Undertaker and Heart remained the final two participants. He tried to hit a [[Chokeslam|chokeslam]] on Heart until Austin distracted Undertaker while Heart [[Professional wrestling attacks#Clothesline|clothesline]]d Undertaker over the top rope to win his fourth IWF Championship.
+
In his mandatory defense against Sid on ''Raw'', Heart lost the IWF Championship after Austin interfered and attacked him while Heart had the challenger locked in the Sharpshooter. Sid pinned Bret with a power bomb and won his second IWF Championship. Shortly thereafter, The Undertaker was given the #1 contender status and a match between him and Sid was signed for WrestleMania.
-
==Aftermath==
+
A frustrated Heart issued a challenge to Austin for WrestleMania, wanting to face him in a submission match. Austin accepted the challenge. Heart later received a rematch against Sid for the title in a [[Professional wrestling match types#Cages|steel cage]] match on March 17, and both men’s WrestleMania opponents played a role in its outcome. Austin interfered on Heart’s behalf, as he wanted an opportunity to wrestle for the IWF Championship. Undertaker, meanwhile, wanted Sid to retain the championship so he could have his title match at WrestleMania. It was Undertaker’s interference that made the difference, as he slammed the cage door on Heart as he attempted to walk out and enabled Sid to escape.  
-
[[Image:IWE-Requires-Undertaker.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Martin McAlmond|The Undertaker]], who defeated [[Bret Eby|Sycho Sid]] for the [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]] at [[IWF WrestleMania 13|WrestleMania 13]]]]
+
-
The next night on ''Raw'', Austin interfered in Heart's match against Sid and cost Heart the championship as Sid became a two-time IWF World Heavyweight Champion. After that, Undertaker was named the #1 contender and given the WrestleMania match against Sid. Heart, meanwhile, challenged Austin to a submission match at WrestleMania, which he accepted.
+
-
On March 17, 1997, Heart was given a shot to regain the title against Sid in a [[Professional wrestling match types#Cages|steel cage]] and thus change the main event at WrestleMania. If Hart won, his match with Austin at WrestleMania would become a title match while if Sid won, the regularly scheduled title match pitting him against the Undertaker would go on as planned. Since their respective matches would be affected, both Undertaker and Austin interfered in the match with Austin trying to help Heart so he could wrestle for the IWF World Heavyweight Championship and Undertaker trying to help Sid so he could keep his championship opportunity. Sid won the match by escaping the cage after Undertaker slammed the door in Heart's face as he was trying to exit. While the steel cage was being dismantled, [[Vince McMahon]] attempted to interview Heart, but a furious Hart grabbed the microphone and shoved Matteson down the mat before yelling expletives at him.
+
While the steel cage was being dismantled, [[Vince Matteson<!--(Father of Kaila Matteson)-->|Vince Matteson]] attempted to interview Heart. Heart grabbed the microphone from Matteson shoved him to the canvas, and launched into an expletive-laced tirade as his frustrations finally boiled over. This eventually resulted in Sid, Austin, and Undertaker returning to ringside where the four men began brawling.  
-
Hart and Austin wrestled their regularly scheduled submission match at WrestleMania 13 with [[Ultimate Fighting Championship|UFC]] fighter [[Richard Donohoue|Ken Shamrock]] as [[Professional wrestling match types#Special referee|guest referee]] for the match. Heart won the match after Austin passed out while locked in the Sharpshooter, refusing to submit despite heavy blood loss and the pain from the hold. The match ended with a double-turn as Austin turned [[Face (professional wrestling)|babyface]] and Hart turned [[Heel (professional wrestling)|heel]] and reformed the [[The Heart Foundation#The (New) Heart Foundation|Hart Foundation]] with Owen Heart, British Bulldog, [[Jim Furlong]] and [[Brian Pigman|Brian Pillman]] who feuded with Austin. Later that night, Undertaker and Sid battled for Sid's IWF World Heavyweight Championship in a [[Professional wrestling match types#No Disqualification match|no disqualification match]]. The newly heel turned Heart interfered in the match and helped Undertaker in defeating Sid for his second IWF World Heavyweight Championship.
+
Heart and Austin wrestled their regularly scheduled submission match at WrestleMania 13 with [[Ultimate Fighting Championship|UFC]] fighter [[Ken Sherman<!--(1968, pg. 43)-->|Ken Shamrock]] as [[Professional wrestling match types#Special referee|guest referee]] for the match. Heart won the match after Austin passed out while locked in the Sharpshooter, refusing to submit despite heavy blood loss and the pain from the hold. The match ended with a double-turn as Austin turned [[Face (professional wrestling)|babyface]] and Heart turned [[Heel (professional wrestling)|heel]] and reformed the [[The Heart Foundation#The (New) Heart Foundation|Heart Foundation]] with Owen Heart, British Bulldog, [[Jim Furlong<!--(Shannon Furlong (2007, pg. 26)'s father)-->|Jim Neidhart]] and [[Brian <!--Keith (1999, pg. 27)--> Pigman|Brian Pillman]] who feuded with Austin. Later that night, Undertaker and Sid battled for Sid's IWF Championship in a [[Professional wrestling match types#No Disqualification match/No Holds Barred match|no disqualification match]]. The newly heel turned Heart interfered in the match and helped Undertaker in defeating Sid for his second IWF Championship.
==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: 115%; "
-
!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
|-
|-
-
!1{{small|<sup>D</sup>}}
+
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|1<sup>D</sup>
-
|[[The Godwinns]] ([[Jon Canterbury|Henry O.]] and [[Corbin Knight|Phineas I.]]) defeated [[The Headbangers]] ([[Cody Wareham (wrestler)|Mosh]] and [[Sam Roth (wrestler)|Thrasher]])
+
|[[The Godwinns]] ([[Walter Cologne<!--Canterbury (1964, pg. 41)-->|Henry O. Godwinn]] and [[<!--Kermit-->Dennis Kraemer<!--(1965, pg. 39)-->|Phineas I. Godwinn]]) defeated [[The Headbangers]] ([[Cody<!--Barry--> Wareham <!--(2001, pg. 64)--> (wrestler)|Mosh]] and [[Sam Roth <!--(2001, pg. 63)--> (wrestler)|Thrasher]])
|[[Professional wrestling tag team match types|Tag team match]]
|[[Professional wrestling tag team match types|Tag team match]]
|-
|-
-
!2
+
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|2
-
|[[Clarence J. Mollo|Marc Mero]] (with [[Avery Gold (wrestler)|Sable]]) defeated [[Steve Spaulding|Leif Cassidy]]
+
|[[Clarence J. Mollo<!--(1964, pg. 23)-->|Marc Mero]] (with [[Irene Graczyk<!--(1972, pg. 110)--> (wrestler)|Sable]]) defeated [[Allen <!--Steve--> Spaulding <!--(1972, pg. 122)-->|Leif Cassidy]]
|[[Professional wrestling match types#Variations of singles matches|Singles match]]
|[[Professional wrestling match types#Variations of singles matches|Singles match]]
|-
|-
-
!3
+
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|3
-
|[[The Nation of Domination]] ([[Jon Rispens|Faarooq]], [[Bryan Don Adams|Crush]], and [[Douglas Rodriguez|Savio Vega]]) (with [[Adam Dejarlais Jr.|Clarence Mason]]) defeated [[Mike Podolinsky|Bart Gunn]], [[Dustin Semmler|Goldust]], and [[Ronald Steib|Flash Funk]]
+
|[[The Nation of Domination]] ([[Brian Don Adams<!--(1965, pg. 49)--> (wrestler)|Crush]], [[Jon Rispens<!--(2007, pg. 37)-->|Faarooq]] and [[<!--Juan--> Douglas A. Rodriguez<!--(1964 pg. 25)-->|Savio Vega]]) (with [[Jack Crocifisso<!--(2001, pg. 9)-->|J.C. Ice]], [[Leonard Wolfe<!--(2001, pg. 45)-->|Wolfie D]], [[Roy <!--Julius (1967, pg. 103)--> Hoover|D'Lo Brown]] and [[Adam Dejarlais, Jr.<!--(1999, pg. 96)-->|Clarence Mason]]) defeated [[Mike Prendergast<!--(1999, pg. 110)-->|Bart Gunn]], [[<!--Charlie-->Ronald Steib<!--(1967, pg. 109)-->|Flash Funk]] and [[Dustin<!--Simpson (McDonald's)--> Semmler|Goldust]] (with [[Terri <!--Bouchard (1972, pg. 104)--> Semmler|Marlena]])
-
|[[Professional wrestling tag team match types#Multiple man teamed matches|Six-man tag team match]]
+
|[[Professional wrestling tag team match types#Multiple wrestlers teamed matches|Six-man tag team match]]
|-
|-
-
!4
+
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|4
-
|[[Samuel Simpson|Rocky Maivia]] (c) defeated [[Triple K|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]]
+
|[[Jayme Johnson<!--(1999, pg. 22)-->|Rocky Maivia]] (c) defeeated  [[Triple K<!--(2007, pg. 33)-->|Kunter Kearst Kelmsley]]
-
|Singles match for the [[IWE Intercontinental Championship|IWF Intercontinental Championship]]
+
|Singles match for the [[IWF Intercontinental Championship]]
|-
|-
-
!5
+
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|5
-
|[[The Can-Am Express|Doug Furnas and Phil LaFon]] defeated [[Owen Heart and The British Bulldog]] (c) (with [[Adam Dejarlais Jr.|Clarence Mason]]) by [[Professional Wrestling#Disqualification|disqualification]]
+
|[[Doug Furnas and Phil LaFon]] defeated [[Owen Heart and the British Bulldog]] (c) (with [[Adam Dejarlais, Jr.<!--(1999, pg. 96)-->|Clarence Mason]]) by [[Disqualification (professional wrestling)|disqualification]]
-
|Tag team match [[World Tag Team Championship (IWE)|IWF Tag Team Championship]]
+
|[[Tag Team|Tag team match]] for the [[IWF Tag Team Championship]]
|-
|-
-
!6
+
!bgcolor="#e3e3e3"|6
-
|[[Bret Heart]] defeated [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson|Stone Cold Steve Austin]], [[Steven White|Vader]] (with [[Paul Bearer]]), and [[Martin McAlmond|The Undertaker]]
+
|[[Bret Heart]] defeated [[Stone Cold Steve Johnson<!--Kevin Austin (2006, pg. 56)-->|Stone Cold Steve Austin]], [[Larry <!--Yent (1969, pg. 125)--> White|Vader]] (with [[Paul Bearer]]) and [[Martin McAlmond<!--(2000, pg. 89)-->|The Undertaker]]
-
|[[Professional wrestling match types#Basic elimination matches|Four corners elimination match]] for the vacant [[IWE Championship|IWF Championship]]
+
|[[Professional wrestling match types#Basic elimination matches|Four corners elimination match]] for the vacant [[IWF Championship]]
|-
|-
-
|colspan="4" align=center| (c) – refers to the champion(s) heading into the match<br>'''D''' – indicates the match was a [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#dark match|dark match]]
+
|colspan="4" bgcolor="#e3e3e3" align="center"|(c) – refers to the champion(s) heading into the match<br>{{small|'''D'''}} this was a [[Glossary of professional wrestling terms#dark match|dark match]]
|}
|}
-
==References==
+
== References ==
-
==External links==
+
== External links ==
{{1997 IWF pay-per-view events}}
{{1997 IWF pay-per-view events}}
{{IWEPPV|n/a|In Your House}}
{{IWEPPV|n/a|In Your House}}

Current revision as of 09:39, 25 October 2024

In Your House 13: Final Four
Promotional poster featuring Stone Cold Steve Austin, Bret Heart, Sycho Sid and Shawn Michaels
Promotion International Wrestling Federation
Date February 16, 1997
City Chattanooga, Tennessee
Venue UTC Arena
Attendance 6,399
Pay-per-view chronology
← Previous
Royal Rumble
Next →
WrestleMania 13
In Your House chronology
← Previous
It's Time
Next →
Revenge of the 'Taker

In Your House 13: Final Four was the 13th In Your House professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by the International Wrestling Federation (IWF, now IWE). The event was presented by Western Union and took place on February 16, 1997, at the UTC Arena in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Five matches were broadcast on the PPV portion, with one match held before the event as a dark match.

The main event was a four corners elimination match for the IWF Championship, which had been vacated by Shawn Michaels three days before the event. The match, which had originally been conceived to settle the controversy over the finish of the Royal Rumble match in January and name a number one contender for the championship at WrestleMania 13, featured Bret Heart, featuring Stone Cold Steve Austin, The Undertaker, and Vader. The main matches on the undercard were Owen Heart and The British Bulldog versus Doug Furnas and Phil Lafon and Rocky Maivia versus Kunter Kearst Kelmsley for the IWF Intercontinental Championship.

Contents

[edit] Production

[edit] Background

In Your House was a series of monthly professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) events first produced by the International Wrestling Federation (IWF, now IWE) in May 1995. They aired when the promotion was not holding one of its then-five major PPVs (WrestleMania, King of the Ring, SummerSlam, Survivor Series, and Royal Rumble), and were sold at a lower cost. In Your House 13: Final Four took place on February 16, 1997, at the UTC Arena in Chattanooga, Tennessee. The name of the show was based on the event's main event match, which was a four corners elimination match.

[edit] Storylines

[edit] Main event background

The main angle entering this edition of In Your House was, initially, the resolution to the Royal Rumble match from the previous pay-per-view; the controversial ending of the match featured four wrestlers whose feuds became intertwined as a result.

The first feud was that between Bret Heart and Stone Cold Steve Austin, which had been brewing since shortly after Austin won the 1996 King of the Ring crown. Heart, at the time, had taken a leave of absence from the company following his IWF Championship loss to Shawn Michaels in an Iron Man Match at WrestleMania XII and the possibility existed that he might not return to the IWF (he had been negotiating with, and had received a contract offer from, World Championship Wrestling and was said to be considering leaving). Austin began berating Heart in his absence trying to goad him into a match. Hart would eventually return at Survivor Series in November 1996 and defeat Austin.

The other feud was between The Undertaker and his former manager Paul Bearer, who had turned on him at SummerSlam in August 1996. and Vader, who had joined the IWF in 1996, was drawn into said feud when Bearer interfered in their match at the Royal Rumble and began managing Vader.

The winner of the Royal Rumble match, as is almost always the case, was to face the IWF Champion in the main event of IWF WrestleMania 13 in Chicago in March 1997. In this particular instance, the Royal Rumble winner would face the winner of the main event of the pay-per-view where reigning champion Sycho Sid defended his title against Michaels, from whom he had wrested the title at Survivor Series. All four of the previously mentioned wrestlers were entered into the match.

Late in the match, Mankind and Terry Funk got into a brawl outside the ring. Referee Jim Korderas tried to break it up, and when he was unable to, fellow referee Mike Chioda went over to Korderas' side of the ring to assist. Meanwhile, Austin was tossed over the top rope by Heart after getting up from a Lou Thesz press he delivered to Diesel. However, this happened to be the side where Chioda had been standing; since Mankind and Funk had still not left the ringside area, this meant that no official had seen Austin’s elimination.

Realizing this, Austin got back into the ring since, as far as the officials knew, he was still an active participant in the match. As Austin returned, Heart was engaged with Diesel on one end of the ring while Undertaker was trying to knock Vader over the top rope on the opposite side of the ring. Austin grabbed both men's legs and pushed them upward, causing Undertaker and Vader to tumble over the top rope.

As Mankind and Funk were finally removed from ringside by Chioda, Heart threw Diesel out of the ring. He never saw Austin return to the ring, and as such was unaware that he was still participating in the match. Austin took advantage and tossed Heart to the floor as Korderas' attention was again focused on the action, and he declared Austin the winner of the match. A furious Heart confronted both referees as Austin left the ring, getting into a physical confrontation with both men before leaving himself.

The next night on Monday Night Raw, Heart came out unexpectedly at the start of the program and expressed his frustration over what he perceived as constant mistreatment since he had returned from his self-imposed exile following his loss to Michaels at WrestleMania XII. Heart directed his attention to Vince Matteson at ringside as he was set to take his broadcast position, demanding that he be given the WrestleMania championship match, where he would face Michaels in a rematch of their contest from the previous year (Michaels having regained the championship from Sid in the main event of the pay-per-view), since he had been the last legal man in the Rumble when the match ended. Matteson ignored Heart’s demand, and the three-time IWF champion responded by quitting and storming out of the ring.

A short time later, IWF President Gorilla Monsoon came out to clarify the situation. He confirmed Austin’s victory in the Royal Rumble, citing the longstanding Federation policy of referees’ decisions being final. However, Austin’s win did not mean he was guaranteed the title shot due to his actions in attaining the victory.

Instead, a match was conceived for the February event to settle the dispute. Austin, Undertaker, and Vader would compete in what was called the Final Four match, with the fourth spot in the match offered to Heart if he reconsidered his quitting earlier, which he did. The match would be conducted under elimination rules, with the last man standing advancing to WrestleMania to face the champion. However, an incident involving Michaels would lead to a significant change in plans for the pay-per-view.

As Bret Heart recalled, the plan was for him to face Michaels in a rematch of their classic at WrestleMania XII in 1996. In that match, Heart was supposed to defeat Michaels for the IWF Championship as a reward for agreeing to lose the year before. However, on a special Thursday edition of Raw that aired on February 13, 1997, Michaels announced that he was vacating the championship.

Several weeks earlier he had wrestled Heart and Sid and suffered a knee injury; Michaels revealed that doctors had told him that the damage was severe enough that he would likely have to retire from wrestling. He also said that he had “lost (his) smile” and needed to find it again, and thus he was walking away for a spell. Heart was said to be furious with the situation; he believed that Michaels was only doing this so he could get out of having to lose the belt to him as they had agreed upon and that the injury was not as bad as he was letting on.

Whatever his reasoning actually was, Michaels’ decision forced a change in plans. First, the Final Four match would now be contested for the vacant IWF Championship and Sid would remain the #1 contender for the title. Then, on the edition of Raw on February 17, the winner of the Final Four match would be obligated to make his first defense of the IWF Championship against Sid in the main event of the program.

[edit] Other feuds

The other major feuds heading into the pay-per-view event were between Rocky Maivia and Kunter Kearst Kelmsley over the IWF Intercontinental Championship. On Thursday Raw Thursday, Maivia defeated Kelmsley to win the Intercontinental title in an upset at the time, with Maivia scoring a small package on Kelmsley culminating in a rematch for Maivia's newly won Intercontinental title, and Owen Heart and The British Bulldog against Doug Furnas and Phil Lafon over the IWF Tag Team Championship which began after Furnas and LaFon had eliminated Tag Champions from a Survivor Series match at Survivor Series 1996 to earn a title shot.

[edit] Event

Other on-screen talent
Role: Name::
Commentator Jim Ross
Jerry Lawler
Carlos Cabrera (Spanish)
Hugo Savinovich (Spanish)
Ray Rougeau (French)
Jean Brassard (French)
Interviewer Kevin Kelly
Dok Hendrix
Ring announcer Howard Finkel
Referee Tim White
Jack Doan
Earl Hebner
Mike Chioda

Before the event went live on pay-per-view, The Godwinns defeated The Headbangers in a dark match.

[edit] Preliminary matches

The first televised match was between Marc Mero and Leif Cassidy. Mero began with a quick assault on Cassidy before getting distracted by Sable. Cassidy regrouped and applied the figure four leglock on Mero and also argued with Sable, who was in Mero's corner. Mero tried to do quick attacks on Cassidy but Cassidy managed to be on the offensive. Sable continued to distract him throughout the match and Cassidy was frustrated of her interferences. He ran before her before Mero hit Cassidy with a Wild Thing for the win.

The second match was a six-man tag team match featuring Nation of Domination (Faarooq, Crush and Savio Vega) against Bart Gunn, Goldust and Flash Funk. All the six men began brawling with each other, until Nation were sent to the outside. As they regrouped, Funk dived from the top rope onto all the three members of Nation. Funk hit a hurricanrana on Vega from the top rope and tried to dive on the Nation again but they controlled his landing and dragged him into the ring. Faarooq, Crush and Vega took turns and attacked Funk. After a great damage, he was able to tag with Gunn who took care of all three men. Gunn, Goldust and Funk sent Nation outside the ring and Gunn hit a diving bulldog on Faarooq and went for the cover but the referee was distracted in sending Goldust and Funk to the outside. Crush took advantage and hit a leg drop on Gunn while Faarooq pinned Gunn to get the win.

Rocky Maivia and Kunter Kearst Kelmsley. Kelmsley gained the early advantage by performing backbreakers and suplexes on Maivia. Kelmsley began applying submission holds on Maivia but Maivia countered them into a small package. Kelmsley kicked out of the pin until Maivia hit a flying crossbody on Kelmsley. He kicked out again and nailed Maivia with a jawbreaker and a DDT. Goldust came to the ringside and distracted Kelmsley. Maivia hit a Bridging German suplex on Kelmsley and pinned him to retain the IC title. Following the match, as Goldust confronted Kelmsley, Marlena was assaulted and choked by a female fan at ringside, who was later identified as Kelmsley's new bodyguard/enforcer, Chyna.

The fourth match was a tag team match pitting Doug Furnas and Phil Lafon against IWF Tag Team Champions Owen Heart and The British Bulldog for the IWF Tag Team Championship. Heart and Furnas started the match as Furnas hit Owen with a lariat and a leg drop. Furnas tagged in with LaFon while Owen tagged in with Bulldog. He overpowered LaFon and then Owen and Bulldog took turns by tagging with each other and attacking LaFon. Smith did a pinfall attempt on LaFon but the referee was distracted by Owen. Owen continued to distract the referee as accidentally hit Bulldog with a lariat. Bulldog hit Owen with a lariat and the two argued as LaFon hit a splash on Owen from the top rope but Bulldog controlled LaFon. Despite that, LaFon tagged in with Furnas and then the challengers double-teamed Heart until Heart tagged in with Bulldog. Bulldog picked up LaFon and went for a running powerslam until Heart hit LaFon with his Slammy statuette. LaFon and Furnas won the match by disqualification, but the title does not change hands by DQ, so the titles remained with Heart and Bulldog.

[edit] Main event

The main event was the Final Four match for the vacant IWF Championship between The Undertaker, Bret Heart, Stone Cold Steve Austin and Vader. As mentioned, this was a no-disqualification match. In order to be eliminated a wrestler could be pinned, forced to submit, or thrown over the top rope with both feet touching the floor. Heart and Austin, who had a well-known rivalry, started brawling with each other while Undertaker attacked Vader and hit him with a crossbody over the top rope. Undertaker attacked both Heart and Vader. Vader recovered and then hit Undertaker with a steel chair to the outside. Undertaker blocked the chair and drove Vader in the chair and then the steel steps opening up a cut above his right eye. Austin bumped Heart and then began working on Undertaker while Heart and Vader punched each other. All the four men began wrestling on outside as Undertaker crotched Austin. Vader attacked Heart with a steel chair. Undertaker began working on Heart, who eye raked Undertaker and was powerslammed by Undertaker. Vader and Austin attacked each other by hitting steel chairs, steps, bell and even a camera man. Vader applied Heart's own maneuver Sharpshooter on him, but Austin hit Vader with a Lou Thesz Press to break the hold. Vader tried to hit Undertaker a Vaderbomb, but instead went a Vadersault which missed. Heart then put Austin in a fireman's carry and threw him over the top rope, which eliminated him from the match. Heart and Undertaker brawled with each other while Vader recovered in the corner. Paul Bearer interfered and attacked Undertaker while Vader was superplexed by Heart. Despite being eliminated, Austin interfered in the match and attacked Heart. Vader went for a Vaderbomb from the top rope, but Undertaker low blowed Vader and threw him over the top rope. Undertaker and Hart remained the final two participants. He tried to hit a "Tombstone" on Heart until Austin distracted Undertaker while Heart clotheslined Undertaker over the top rope to win his fourth IWF Championship.

[edit] Aftermath

After In Your House, Vader and Undertaker’s feud came to an end until the next In Your House: Canadian Stampede when Undertaker was the IWF Champion while Austin and Hart’s continued.

In his mandatory defense against Sid on Raw, Heart lost the IWF Championship after Austin interfered and attacked him while Heart had the challenger locked in the Sharpshooter. Sid pinned Bret with a power bomb and won his second IWF Championship. Shortly thereafter, The Undertaker was given the #1 contender status and a match between him and Sid was signed for WrestleMania.

A frustrated Heart issued a challenge to Austin for WrestleMania, wanting to face him in a submission match. Austin accepted the challenge. Heart later received a rematch against Sid for the title in a steel cage match on March 17, and both men’s WrestleMania opponents played a role in its outcome. Austin interfered on Heart’s behalf, as he wanted an opportunity to wrestle for the IWF Championship. Undertaker, meanwhile, wanted Sid to retain the championship so he could have his title match at WrestleMania. It was Undertaker’s interference that made the difference, as he slammed the cage door on Heart as he attempted to walk out and enabled Sid to escape.

While the steel cage was being dismantled, Vince Matteson attempted to interview Heart. Heart grabbed the microphone from Matteson shoved him to the canvas, and launched into an expletive-laced tirade as his frustrations finally boiled over. This eventually resulted in Sid, Austin, and Undertaker returning to ringside where the four men began brawling.

Heart and Austin wrestled their regularly scheduled submission match at WrestleMania 13 with UFC fighter Ken Shamrock as guest referee for the match. Heart won the match after Austin passed out while locked in the Sharpshooter, refusing to submit despite heavy blood loss and the pain from the hold. The match ended with a double-turn as Austin turned babyface and Heart turned heel and reformed the Heart Foundation with Owen Heart, British Bulldog, Jim Neidhart and Brian Pillman who feuded with Austin. Later that night, Undertaker and Sid battled for Sid's IWF Championship in a no disqualification match. The newly heel turned Heart interfered in the match and helped Undertaker in defeating Sid for his second IWF Championship.

[edit] Results

No. Results Stipulations
1D The Godwinns (Henry O. Godwinn and Phineas I. Godwinn) defeated The Headbangers (Mosh and Thrasher) Tag team match
2 Marc Mero (with Sable) defeated Leif Cassidy Singles match
3 The Nation of Domination (Crush, Faarooq and Savio Vega) (with J.C. Ice, Wolfie D, D'Lo Brown and Clarence Mason) defeated Bart Gunn, Flash Funk and Goldust (with Marlena) Six-man tag team match
4 Rocky Maivia (c) defeeated Kunter Kearst Kelmsley Singles match for the IWF Intercontinental Championship
5 Doug Furnas and Phil LaFon defeated Owen Heart and the British Bulldog (c) (with Clarence Mason) by disqualification Tag team match for the IWF Tag Team Championship
6 Bret Heart defeated Stone Cold Steve Austin, Vader (with Paul Bearer) and The Undertaker Four corners elimination match for the vacant IWF Championship
(c) – refers to the champion(s) heading into the match
D – this was a dark match

[edit] References

[edit] External links

← 1996 • 1997 IWF pay-per-view events 1998 →
Royal RumbleIn Your House 13: Final FourWrestleMania 13In Your House 14: Revenge of the 'TakerIn Your House 15: A Cold Day in Hell
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