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You can claim Bret put you to sleep as much as you want, but you can't argue with his body of work, and that many more of his matches are critically acclaimed.
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Gorgeous speaking the beautiful truth.
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A few things:
A) Bret was not a terrible promo by any stretch. As a heel, I'd even go as far to say he was a pretty damn good promo. B) Owen was a great promo too. He was also hilarious on commentary when they let him do that. C) Fuck all this Hart hate. They were both amazing. |
Bret Hart is probably in something like 85% of my favorite matches of all time.
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Owen was the motherfucking shit. Love him. But he wasn't a main even talent, at least while Bret was around.
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Owen was the first heel that I ever cheered for. As much as I loved him, though, he would have seemed out of place in the main event. If he ever were going to win the big one, it would have HAD to have been in the Bret feud. Once that didn't happen, I think he was placed right where he needed to be.
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Had Owen made it to the brand split era, he would've been as featured a talent as Edge,Jericho, JBL, Booker T, Kane, Big Show, del Rio and other guys who were "the man" on Smackdown but never really THE man.
Just a victim of his time. Owen would be an amazing foil to Cena these days. He just got lost in incredibly deep and talented roster in the mid to late 90s. |
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By STD's logic, The Funkasaurus is a first ballot hall of famer.
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Followed by cabbage-patching Lance Storm and Adam Rose.
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Every great wrestler is a mark for himself. C'mon son.
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And if you're even talking about what happened in that place in Quebec, that was an isolated incident. That definitely shouldn't be the man's entire legacy.
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I'm about to stare at myself in the mirror for two hours once people stop responding to my posts tonight.
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Name one star who wasn't a mark for themselves? Being a mark for themselves meant that when the time came to do the job the guy who got the rub benefited. Warrior beating Hogan or HBK beating Bret doesn't mean shit if you had put a Chris Jericho type in the role of doing the job.
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Even Chris Jericho wrote three books. Tell me he's not a mark for himself too.
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He just didn't ever really have any power potential, so to speak. Cruiserweight in WCW, non-homegrown talent in WWF. If he COULD have had more stroke, he would have used it. He started feuding with Goldberg (the hottest thing in WCW at the time) without anyone asking him to. Think about that.
Love Jericho, btw. |
As do I. But if Bret, Hogan or even Cena laid down as seemingly voluntarily as he did they wouldn't have mattered near as much nor been such a big deal to beat cleanly.
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Agreed
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Bret didn't have the buyrates/power to bury guys.
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Buyrates/power have jack shit to do with the ability to elevate another worker simply by working with them. Putting Owen over at Wrestlemania was the biggest win of Owen's career, not because Bret was some jobber but because he was a fucking winner and beating him mattered.
When HBK beat Bret for the title? Bret was a winner. It meant something. Bret making Waltman look like he could go with the big dogs in valiant loss to the champ on Raw. Austin losing to Bret but coming out a bonafide superstar. Buyrates or not it's hard to point to other guys who've been able to accomplish that. How many guys did HBK or diesel make? Hogan? The only one who's been able to replicate what Bret did is Cena. |
If Cena's wrasslin was a little less sloppy he would be on Bret's level as far all around wrestling, bell to bell (not the entire package though, cuz an easy argument could say Cena is better than Bret, and as much as I'd argue for Bret til the bitter end, it's a fair argument regardless). Cena is a fucking tremendous in ring talent, but he does what I like to call "Hollywood" moves, similar to Hogan and The Rock, where it just takes away the air of authenticity behind it... though particularly with The Rock and John Cena, it doesn't hinder their bell-to-bell THAT much. Just a nitpick I guess.
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I agree. He has a very main event, more theatrical style in which he works his matches. But God damn it I've been so impressed with his work the least few years, especially this year, that I have to hand it to the guy. Sure, I'd like some character development and sometimes the promos get dull, but Jesus H. Christ he's put on a string of just tremendous matches week after week after week.
For all intents and purposes Cena should have won over anybody who is a naysayer of his in ring work. Guy's been a stud this year. |
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Cena definitely should consider himself fortunate. He's fine from that botched move during his match with Owens at that house show Friday.
I respect the hell out of Cena, but I do NOT want to see him take back the U.S. title @ NoC in 2 weeks. Let Rollins hold it for a bit along with the WWE WHC. |
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And yes Owen was awesome on commentary I was just watching Ahmed V Goldust and something about Owens comments during that match just crack me up. |
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Just want to thank everybody for their suggestions, we got to read a lot of them on the show, which is now available to listen to at the following link:
http://squaredcirclegazette.podbean....stlersEver.mp3 Join the panel as we talk the luckiest and unluckiest wrestlers in the history of the business, discussing the careers of Kevin Nash, Daniel Bryan, Bruno Sammartino, Bob Backlund, Ahmed Johnson, Mr. Kennedy, Sid, Bret Hart, Shawn Michaels, Steve Austin, Brian Pillman, Ted DiBiase, Brutus Beefcake, Jake Roberts, and yes, Triple H, as well as many more! A really fun show this week as break down the chance elements that led many to their destinations, check it out~! |
Wooooo my post got read
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Bo Dallas is a modern day Bret Hart
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Heath Slater is a modern day Reno Riggins
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Heath Slater is the modern day Kevin Sullivan.
Also, Bo has better mic skills than Bret, so that's a bad comparison by me. |
He wasn't completely but I would put Dr. Death Steve Williams on the "unlucky" list. The man was an amazing wrestler and had a "full" career in Japan and the territories.... but I guess it would be unlucky for him to end up ending his career with the Brawl for All and never getting a chance to shine in the WWE.
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Another "Dr. Death" that was kinda unlucky was David Schultz. He is the "infamous" wrestler that slapped John Stossel in the face for saying that wrestling was fake in the 80s. Then again, it was both an unlucky/ lucky situation for him. Unlucky because the slap affectively ended his career but I guess he could also be considered lucky because if not for slapping a reporter live on 20/20, he probably wouldn't be remembered by fans.
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I remember he was on TNT and he invited the camera crew to dinner with his wife and kids. He spent the whole time berated his stupid children and lazy wife. Kicked everybody out. Hilarious.
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Dr. David Schultz was basically a JTTS at the time anyways. He was doing jobs for Tito Santana and Andre. He would have probably moved on within 6 months even if the incident didn't occur.
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