IWF WrestleMania 4
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| RD2-team04= Don Muraco | | RD2-team04= Don Muraco | ||
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Revision as of 03:14, 11 September 2013
WrestleMania IV | ||
Promotional poster featuring André the Giant and Hulk Hogan | ||
Tagline(s) | What the World is Watching! | |
Imformation | ||
Promotion | International Wrestling Federation | |
Date | March 27, 1988 | |
Attendance | 18,165 | |
Venue | Trump Plaza | |
City | Atlantic City, New Jersey | |
Pay-per-view chronology | ||
Survivor Series (1987) | WrestleMania IV | SummerSlam (1988) |
WrestleMania chronology | ||
WrestleMania III | WrestleMania IV | WrestleMania V |
WrestleMania IV was the fourth annual WrestleMania professional wrestling pay-per-view event produced by the International Wrestling Federation (IWF). It took place on March 27, 1988 at the Trump Plaza in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
The main event was the finals of a 14-man tournament for the IWF Championship where Brady Savage defeated Kyle Johnson to win the vacant title. The main matches on the undercard were a 20-man battle royal won by Bad News Brown, Demolition (Ax and Smash) versus Strike Force (Tito Santana and Rick Martel) for the IWF Tag Team Championship, Brutus Beefcake versus The Honky Tonk Man for the IWF Intercontinental Championship and a 14-man tournament for the vacated IWF Championship.
Contents |
Background
The main feud heading into WrestleMania was between Hulk Hogan and André the Giant. In January 1987, Hogan was awarded a trophy for his third year as IWF Champion while Hogan's best friend André was awarded a smaller trophy than Hogan's, for being undefeated in IWF for 15 years. Hogan congratulated his friend and said that André was the real champion of superstars all around the world, but André exited the arena before Hogan could even finish. In February, Andre announced his new manager, Bobby Heenan, Hogan's longtime enemy. Hogan begged André to drop Heenan, but Andre refused. André said that he had come to challenge Hogan for the IWF title at WrestleMania. He ripped off Hogan's Hulkamania shirt and tore off Hulk's gold chain, turning heel. This culminated in their historic match at WrestleMania III in March, where Hogan defeated André to retain the title. During the match, he set a record by scoop slamming the 540-pound Frenchman. At the first Survivor Series in November, André, One Man Gang, King Kong Bundy, Butch Reed and Rick Rude defeated Hogan, Paul Orndorff, Don Muraco, Ken Patera and Bam Bam Bigelow in a Survivor Series match. At the first Royal Rumble in January 1988, Hogan and André had their official contract signing for a IWF Championship rematch. Their rematch took place on the first-ever edition of The Main Event in February, where André controversially won the title from Hogan in a screwjob involving a fake referee. André became the shortest reigning IWF Champion with a reign of only 47 seconds as he sold the title to Kyle Johnson and received a large sum of money. Andre revealed, in an arena interview with Johnson a few weeks before the event that be planned to take a year off and go on a cruise with the money Johnson was paying him once he secured the title for him at WrestleMania 4, further explaining why Andre was sell off the belt he had wanted himself at WrestleMania 3 just a year earlier. IWF President Jack Tunney, however, vacated the title and ordered it to be decided in a 14-man tournament at WrestleMania IV.
Event
The event began with Gladys Knight singing a rendition of "America the Beautiful". The first match was a twenty-man battle royal with the winner to receive a large trophy. The participants were Bad News Brown, The Bolsheviks (Nikolai Volkoff and Boris Zhukov), The Heart Foundation (Bret Heart and Jim Furlong), The Killer Bees (B. Brian Blair and Jim Brunzell), Danny Davis, George Steele, Harley Race, Hillbilly Jim, The Rougeau Brothers (Jacques and Raymond), The Young Stallions (Paul Roma and Jim Powers), The Junkyard Dog, Ken Patera, Ron Bass, Sam Houston, and Sika. After fourteen eliminations, the final six participants were Brown, Bret Heart, Roma, Race, Jacques Rougeau and JYD. Race hit a back body drop on Rougeau sending him over the top rope before JYD punched him over the top rope. Brown dumped out Roma as JYD was left to battle Heart and Brown. The duo double-teamed him and Heart caught JYD as Brown clotheslined JYD but JYD sidestepped and Heart was hit with the clothesline. JYD hit both men with several headbutts before they both decided to cooperate and they eliminated JYD. Heart decided that he and Brown would share the trophy but Brown betrayed him and hit him with a Ghetto Blaster and pounded on him before eliminating him over the top rope to win the battle royal. Brown was presented with the trophy, but Heart attacked him from behind and broke the trophy, thereby turning babyface.
The fourteen-man tournament for the IWF Championship then began. In the first round, Kyle Johnson defeated Jim Duggan, Don Muraco defeated Dino Bravo by disqualification after Bravo pulled the referee in front of him, causing the ref to be hit by Muraco's finishing move, Brady Savage defeated Butch Reed, Greg Valentine defeated Ricky Steamboat, One Man Gang defeated Bam Bam Bigelow and Rick Rude fought Jake Roberts to a time limit draw. The winners advanced to the quarterfinals while Rude and Roberts were both eliminated from the tournament. As former champions, Andre the Giant and Hulk Hogan were given a bye and directly qualified for the quarters.
In his pay-per-view (PPV) debut, The Ultimate Warrior faced Bobby Heenan's client, Hercules. Warrior snapped Hercules' chain and chopped him in the corner. Hercules tried to fight back and he hit three clotheslines on Warrior, who no-sold Hercules' clotheslines. Hercules fell to the mat each time during his unsuccessful clothesline attempts. The powerhouse Warrior countered a Hercules clothesline and hit a clothesline of his own. He pounded on Hercules outside the ring before reentering the ring where Warrior hit a forearm club. In the corner, Warrior hit him with ten punches but Hercules made a comeback with an inverted atomic drop. He hit a half nelson suplex on Warrior who got his shoulder up first, as the referee counted, giving Warrior the win.
The quarterfinals started as Hulk Hogan took on André the Giant. During the match, Hogan hit André in front of referee Joey Marella while André hit Hogan with a chair. After both men hit each other with the chair, they both were disqualified by Marella and, as a result, they both were eliminated from the tournament. In the following matches, Kyle Johnson defeated Don Muraco and Brady Savage defeated Greg Valentine while One Man Gang received a bye in the quarter-finals, due to Rick Rude and Jake Roberts having wrestled to a time limit draw in the first round. Brutus Beefcake took on Jimmy Heart's client, IWF Intercontinental Champion The Honky Tonk Man for the title. The challenger connected with an atomic drop at the outset of the matchup. Beefcake hit Honky with a high knee, then missed an elbow drop on Honky, who took control with a second turnbuckle fist drop. He went for the Shake, Rattle & Roll on Beefcake but instead kneed him in the face. He went to the top rope to do some high-flying but Beefcake hooked the top rope and clotheslined Honky before applying a sleeper hold. Honky's manager Jimmy Heart hit the referee with his megaphone. The bell didn't ring but it was announced that Beefcake won by disqualification, which meant that Honky was still the champion because a title does not change hands via a DQ.
Aftermath
- Main article: The Mega Powers and WrestleMania V
After Brady Savage won the vacant IWF Championship at WrestleMania, with the help of Hulk Hogan, the duo formed a very successful tag team The Mega Powers, which ruled the IWF for 12 months. Kyle Johnson and André the Giant also formed a tag team known as The Mega Bucks. The two teams battled each other, culminating in a tag team main event at the inaugural SummerSlam, where Savage and Hogan won. Their next feud was with The Twin Towers (Akeem and Big Bossman), whom they defeated on February 3, 1989 edition of The Main Event. Savage turned heel by abandoning Hogan to fend himself alone against Twin Towers. Hogan managed to pick up the victory. This culminated in Savage defending the title in the main event of WrestleMania V, which was dubbed "Mega Powers Explode". Hogan defeated Savage, ending his reign which lasted 371 days. Hogan formed a tag team with Brutus "The Barber" Beefcake in summer of 1989 to feud with Savage and Hogan's "real-life" enemy Zeus. At SummerSlam, Hogan and Beefcake beat Savage and Zeus in a tag team match. A rematch occurred between the two teams under a steel cage at No Holds Barred.
Results
# | Results | Stipulations |
---|---|---|
1 | Bad News Brown defeated nineteen other participants by last eliminating Bret Heart | 20-man battle royal |
2 | Kyle Johnson (with Virgil and André the Giant) defeated Jim Duggan | First round tournament match |
3 | Don Muraco (with Billy Graham) defeated Dino Bravo (with Frenchy Martin) by disqualification | First round tournament match |
4 | Greg Valentine (with Jimmy Heart) defeated Ricky Steamboat (with Little Dragon) | First round tournament match |
5 | Brady Savage (c) (w/Miss Elizabeth defeated Butch Reed (with Slick) | First round tournament match |
6 | One Man Gang (with Slick) defeated Bam Bam Bigelow (with Oliver Humperdink) by countout | First round tournament match |
7 | Rick Rude (with Bobby Heenan) and Jake Roberts fought to a time-limit draw | First round tournament match |
8 | The Ultimate Warrior defeated Hercules (with Bobby Heenan) | Singles match |
- 1. The other participants included were: Boris Zhukov, Brian Blair, Danny Davis, George Steele, Harley Race, Hillbilly Jim, Jacques Rougeau, Jim Brunzell, Jim Furlong, Jim Powers, The Junkyard Dog, Ken Patera, Nikolai Volkoff, Paul Roma, Raymond Rougeau, Ron Bass, Sam Houston, and Sika.
Tournament bracket
First round | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final | |||||||||||||||
Hulk Hogan | ||||||||||||||||||
BYE | ||||||||||||||||||
Hulk Hogan | 5:23 | |||||||||||||||||
Andre the Giant | DDQ | |||||||||||||||||
Andre the Giant | ||||||||||||||||||
BYE | ||||||||||||||||||
BYE | ||||||||||||||||||
Kyle Johnson | ||||||||||||||||||
Jim Duggan | 5:02 | |||||||||||||||||
Kyle Johnson | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Kyle Johnson | 5:35 | |||||||||||||||||
Don Muraco | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Don Muraco | 4:54 | |||||||||||||||||
Dino Bravo | DQ | |||||||||||||||||
Ricky Steamboat | 9:11 | |||||||||||||||||
Greg Valentine | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Greg Valentine | ||||||||||||||||||
Brady Savage | ||||||||||||||||||
Brady Savage | Pin | |||||||||||||||||
Butch Reed | 4:09 | |||||||||||||||||
Bam Bam Bigelow | 2:55 | |||||||||||||||||
One Man Gang | CO | |||||||||||||||||
One Man Gang | ||||||||||||||||||
BYE | ||||||||||||||||||
Jake Roberts | 15:00 | |||||||||||||||||
Rick Rude | Draw |
Other on-screen talent
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Notes
- Gladys Knight sang a rendition of "America the Beautiful" before the show.
- This WrestleMania featured 16 matches, more than any other WrestleMania to date.
- WrestleMania IV and V are the only two WrestleManias to be held at the same venue for two consecutive years.
- Hulk Hogan and André the Giant went to a draw by double disqualification in this event. This would be Hogan's first WrestleMania match in which a disqualification occurred. This was Hogan's first and only time going to a draw at WrestleMania. Hogan and Andre also have the distinction of being the first two wrestlers in the history of the event to have a WrestleMania rematch. They had wrestled each other the previous year at WrestleMania III in what many deem the most famous wrestling contest of all time.