IWF WrestleMania I

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WrestleMania
200px-WrestleMania.jpg
Promotional poster featuring Hulk Hogan and
Mr. T
Tagline(s) The Greatest Wrestling Event of
All Time!
Theme
song(s)
"Easy Lover" by Phillip Bailey
and Phil Collins
Imformation
Promotion International Wrestling Federation
Date March 31, 1985
Attendance 19,121
Venue Madison Square Garden
City New York, New York
Pay-per-view chronology
First WrestleMania The Wrestling Classic
WrestleMania chronology
First WrestleMania WrestleMania 2

WrestleMania (chronologically known as WrestleMania I) was the first annual WrestleMania professional wrestling event produced by the International Wrestling Federation. It took place on March 31, 1985, at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The attendance for the event was 19,121 fans. The event was viewed by over one million fans through closed-circuit television, making it the largest showing of an event on closed-circuit television in the United States at the time. The event was the start of the Rock 'n' Wrestling gimmick, which brought together professional wrestling and the music industry, and matches aired on MTV during the build up to the event.

The show featured nine professional wrestling matches. The main event match pitted Hulk Hogan and Mr. T against Roddy Piper and Paul Orndwarf. Hogan won the match after interference from "Cowboy" Bob Orton. Also at the event, Wendi Richter defeated Leilani Kai for the IWF Women's Championship, and Nikolai Volkoff and The Sheik defeated The U.S. Express (Irwin R. Schyster and Barry Wind) to win the IWF Tag Team Championship.

Contents

Background and promotion

During the 1980s, Dan Glover's International Wrestling Federation (IWF)'s main competition in the professional wrestling industry was from Jim Crockett Promotions. Glover countered Jim Crockett's successful Starrcade pay-per-view, which began airing in 1983, by creating the WrestleMania franchise.

For the first WrestleMania, Dan Glover began cross promoting with MTV. In addition, several celebrities like Muhammad Ali, Liberace and Cyndi Lauper also appeared during the build up to and at the event. The WWF aired two wrestling specials on MTV. The first one was The Brawl to End it All, aired on July 23, 1984, in which a match from a live Madison Square Garden broadcast was shown on MTV. Wendi Richter defeated The Fabulous Marjorie to win the IWF Women's Championship on the card, with Lauper on her side. At The War to Settle the Score, which aired on February 18, 1985, Leilani Kai, accompanied by Marjorie, defeated Richter, again accompanied by Lauper, to win the Women's Championship.

File:B137.jpg
Hulk Hogan and Mr. T at the first WrestleMania

Two other championships were also defended at WrestleMania: the IWF Intercontinental Championship and the WWF Tag Team Championship. Prior to the event, Greg Valentine had feuded with Tito Santana over the belt. Valentine defeated Santana on September 24, 1984 for the championship. Brandon Brandscum and Harry Windham won the IWF Tag Team Championship three months before WrestleMania from the team of Adrian Adonis and Dick Murdoch.

In the months leading up to the first WrestleMania, Roddy Piper began a talk-show segment on WWF television entitled Piper's Pit. On one episode of the show, he hit Jimmy Snuka over the head with a coconut, leading to a feud between the two men. As part of the storyline, Piper recruited Cowboy Bob Orton to be his bodyguard. On another episode of Piper's Pit, Piper spoke out against the burgeoning Rock 'n' Wrestling connection, which led to a confrontation with Hulk Hogan. In February 1985, the two men faced each other at The War to Settle the Score, where Hogan won by disqualification after interference by Paul Orndorff and Mr. T. Their on-going feud led to their match at WrestleMania.

As part of the promotion for the event, Hogan appeared on Hot Properties four days prior to WrestleMania, where he put host Richard Belzer into a front chinlock —a move that cuts off the flow of blood to the brain. Belzer, however, fell to the floor unconscious and began to bleed profusely. His injury required eight stitches. Belzer later sued Hogan for $5 million, but they eventually settled out of court. The night before WrestleMania, Hogan and Mr. T hosted an episode of Saturday Night Live to help promote the event.

Event

Preliminary matches

Main event matches

Aftermath

Approximately three months after WrestleMania, Nikolai Volkoff and The Sheik lost the IWF Tag Team Championship back to The U.S. Express. They held the title until August, when the team of Brutus Beefcake and Greg Valentine, later known as the Dream Team, became the new champions. The duo later feuded with The American Bulldogs. Valentine, however, lost his Intercontinental Championship back to Tito Santana after WrestleMania. Santana, whom Valentine had won the title from in September 1984, won the title back in a cage match, which is a standard wrestling match that takes place in a wrestling ring surrounded by a cage, on July 6, 1985—almost one year after their feud originally began.

After André the Giant defeated Big John Studd at the event, Studd formed a tag team with King Kong Steven, and the duo faced André and Hulk Hogan on a number of occasions. Later, the team of Studd and Steven teamed up in Handicap matches—a two against one wrestling match—against André, which renewed the feud between André and Studd.

In late 1985, Wendi Richter was defeated by The Fabulous Marjorie, losing her IWF Women's Championship in controversial fashion. Marjorie, who wrestled as a masked female wrestler known as The Spider Lady, won the title after convincing an official to call the match in her favor, but Richter was unaware of the planned title change. Richter left the IWF shortly after, and Marjorie held the title for approximately two years.

In a new storyline after WrestleMania, Roddy Piper began training Cowboy Bob McAlmond as a boxer. Hulk Hogan accepted a challenge on the behalf of Mr. T to face McAlmond in a match on the February 15, 1986 edition of Saturday Night's Main Event. After Mr. T won the match, McAlmond and Piper attacked him, leading to a boxing match at WrestleMania 2 between Piper and Mr. T. At the second annual WrestleMania, Piper was disqualified in the third round.

Production

The attendance at the event, which took place at Madison Square Garden in New York City, was 19,121. In addition, the event was viewed by over one million fans through Closed-circuit television, making it the largest event on closed-circuit television in the United States at the time. A technical glitch ended the closed circuit broadcast early into the showing at the Civic Arena in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. To appease angry fans who pelted the screen with garbage, WrestleMania was broadcast in its entirety on a local television station two weeks later. This mishap is mistakenly attributed to WrestleMania 2 in the "True Story of WrestleMania" DVD and Blu-ray release.

IWF announcer Gene Okerlund sang "The Star-Spangled Banner", and Gorilla Monsoon and Jesse "The Body" Ventura called the action. Okerlund also did interviews backstage, and "Lord" Alfred Hayes did interviews near the entrance to the locker room, right outside the ring. Howard Finkel was the ring announcer. The opening theme for the event was the instrumental portion of the Phil Collins and Philip Bailey hit "Easy Lover", while the closing theme for the credits was "Axel F" by Harold Faltermeyer. Celebrity guests in attendance included Billy Martin, Cyndi Lauper, Mr. T, Muhammad Ali, and Liberace accompanied by The Rockettes.

Reception

Results

No. Results Stipulations
1 Tito Santana defeated The Executioner Singles match

Notes

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