Sorry guys, missed Stone Cold getting AK'ed, and in turn got AK'ed myself
Quickly
Storyline: Canada vs USA (WWF) circa 1997
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2009-2001
1991-2000 - Rob Van Damn
1980-1990 - The Million Dollar Man Ted DiBaise
Pre-80's
Tag Team
Stable
Women's - Stacey Keibler
Personality
Storyline - Canada vs USA (WWF 1997)
Title Belt
PPV - Royal Rumble 21
Match
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"Calgary Flames is the best team in all the land" - My Brainwashed Son
In the Stable Division, team Droopy's Dungeon selects
The (New) Hart Foundation
War with United States (1997)
The re-formed Hart Foundation was a pro-Canadian stable that was born after the events of 1997's WrestleMania 13, where Bret Hart defeated his then-nemesis Stone Cold Steve Austin in their Submission Match.[5][56] The fans, in the context of one match, turned on Bret and began supporting Steve Austin, who was the rebellious anti-hero who "flipped the bird", swore on television and did whatever he wanted, when he wanted to. Because of their new-found love for Austin, the fans in the U.S.A. began to turn on Bret Hart, thus causing a "North American war". Bret Hart in response reunited himself with Jim Neidhart and recruited Owen Hart, The British Bulldog, and Brian Pillman to form the new Hart Foundation.[5]
This stable opposed the United States, and even degraded the United States and its values whereas they would speak highly of Canada and Europe (where they were beloved). The New Hart Foundation usually brought the Canadian and British flags out to their matches, and in their promos would talk in disgust about the United States and its inhabitants in general, thus causing fan reactions and making the New Hart Foundation (and Bret Hart in particular) unpopular in the States but highly popular everywhere else. Their main feud was with Stone Cold. At Canadian Stampede, Hart Foundation took part in a historic 10-man tag-team match where the entire Hart Foundation faced the team of Steve Austin, Legion of Doom, Ken Shamrock, and Goldust. In the decision, Owen Hart pinned Steve Austin. The entire Hart family came into the ring to celebrate afterwards.[57]
The stable was highly successful, garnering every WWF Championship title they had to offer at the time, including the WWF Championship,[44]WWF Intercontinental Championship,[43]WWF European Championship[58] and WWF Tag Team Championship.[7]
The end of Hart Foundation (1997)
The new Hart Foundation eventually disbanded in late 1997. Pillman was found dead of an undetected heart condition on October 5, the day of In Your House: Badd Blood.[59] The following pay-per-view, Survivor Series 1997, Bret (who was leaving the WWF to join World Championship Wrestling) lost the WWF Championship to Shawn Michaels in the infamous "Montréal Screwjob".[60] Both Neidhart and Smith left over the incident, but Owen remained feeling that he may have been sued for breach of contract if he left.
In the Favorite Match category team Piper's Pit Stains is happy to select:
Kurt Angle vs. Shane McMahon at King Of The Ring 2001
This bout is insane and must-see viewing for hardcore wrestling fans. Things don't get interesting until Shane and Kurt take their fight to the floor. Before that, Angle gives Shane a lesson in mat wrestling. Trading blows in front of the King Of The Ring entrance way, Kurt Angle belly-to-belly suplexes Shane into some glass KOTR panels. It's a sick bump but the panel doesn't shatter. Kurt does it again and Shane goes right through. There is broken glass everywhere. Both men are cut and bleeding from wounds all over their bodies. In the area behind the panels, Angle belly-to-belly suplexes Shane into two more panels before throwing him through another one. The carnage due to the broken glass everywhere is hard to watch. Shane is wheeled back to the ring on an equipment box where trash cans and street signs are put into play. Angle positions Shane on the top rope then secures a wooden plank up there as well. Angle Olympic Slams Shane off the wooden plank and into the middle of the ring.
Angle pins Shane.
With my 6th round pick I am proud to select, in the personality category...
"Eric Bischoff"
2001-2009 - CM Punk
1991-2000 - William Regal
1980-1990 - Curt Hennig
Pre-80's - Abdullah the Butcher
Tag Team - Miz & Morrison
Stable
Women's
Personality - Eric Bischoff
Storyline
Title Belt
PPV
Match
after grabbing our second baseman last round, Team Hulkamania is going off the board once again to grab our catcher this round.
In the title belt category, team Hulkamania selects the WWF "Winged Eagle" Championship belt, first sported by Hulk Hogan on Saturday Nights' Main Event in February 1988:
The following link discusses this design as well as the many other versions of the WWF/E Championship:
In the Stable Division, team Droopy's Dungeon selects
The (New) Hart Foundation
War with United States (1997)
I quit watching the WWF shortly after this, but what was so amazing about this Foundation and its storyline was the 180 fans response. One week they are greeted with thunderous boos and and are the pinnacle of heels, next week and a trip over the border and they hero's and loved.... only to be booed and heels the following week.
__________________ 2018 OHL CHAMPIONS
2022 OHL CHAMPIONS
Team Stylin' and Profilin' is proud to select as our stable, The Hennan Family.
Sometimes it takes a good manager to help promote a good wrestling; and one of the best managers was Bobby "the Brain" Heenan. Bobby Heenan started off his WWF career managing Jesse Ventura; but would later move on to Big John Studd after Ventura retired from in-ring performances. Big John Studd started off feuding with Andre the Giant in a body-slam challenge that went all the way to Wrestlemania I. Then his next target was the WWF champion Hulk Hogan. Heenan Family member King Kong Bundy fought Hogan in a steel cage at Wrestlemania II. Then he would recruit Andre the Giant to fight Hogan at Wrestlemania III. The Heenan Family would later go on to include WWF tag team champions The Brain Busters (Arn Anderson and Tully Blanchard,) and Intercontinental champions "Ravishing" Rick Rude and Mr. Perfect. The last member of the Heenan Family would be Ric Flair, who would go on to win the WWF title two times. The stable ended in 1993 when Bobby Heenan left the company. While many other manager led stables would come, none of them had the same effect as the Heenan Family.
With it's sixth pick, Team Kayfabe selects, in the Tag Team category, one of the most underrated tag teams of all time, The Can-Am Express of Dan Kroffat (Phil Lafon) & Doug Furnas.
...man... I got AK'd (albeit unintentionally) after about 32 minutes. I can understand because my name wasn' listed in the thread title, but it still kind of sucks, especially considering I was thinking about picking Bill Goldberg. I'm not gonna' cry over spilled milk though, just a heads up to be aware next time.
...including the Savage / Steamboat match and the infamous Hogan vs. Giant title bout, WrestleMania 3 was the highest attended pro-wrestling event in history (I believe) unless you count some shows that took place in Pyongyang, North Korea (according to some website).
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That's the bottom line, because StoneCole said so!
The might Grand Wizard Captain Crunch has decided to add some sexy to his stable.
In the personality category, the good Captain selects the sexy the incredible Sunny aka Tammy Lynn Sytch
And yourrrr welcome
2009-2001
1991-2000 - Edge
1980-1990 - The undertaker
Pre-80's - Gorgeous George
Tag Team - The Legion of Doom
Stable
Women's
Personality (announcer/valet/manager/bodyguard/special referee)
Storyline
Title Belt
PPV
Match Bret Hart vs Steve Austin Wrestlemania 13
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My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings;
When Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) announced the creation of their women's division in 2007, Szantyr, using her Talia Madison ring name, was announced as one of the ten wrestlers in a 10-woman Gauntlet match to crown the first TNA Women's World Champion at Bound for Glory pay-per-view.[11] Before the show she made non-wrestling appearances on the October 5 episode of TNA Today[12] and the October 11 Impact!, standing at ringside for the debut match of Awesome Kong along with the other gauntlet match participants. In the weeks following the gauntlet match, her ring name was changed to Velvet Sky.
The Beautiful People
At the December Turning Point pay-per-view, Sky and Angelina Love were paired together and dubbed "Velvet Love Entertainment",[13] later renamed to "The Beautiful People". After defeating O.D.B. and Roxxi Laveaux early in the show, Love and Sky assisted Gail Kim in her match against Awesome Kong.[13] They assisted Kim again after another match against Kong on the December 6 edition of Impact! and at Final Resolution pay-per-view, helping to stop a brawl post match.[14]
On the March 13 edition of Impact!, Sky and Love attacked Roxxi Laveaux and later that night Gail Kim, thus becoming villains for the first time in TNA. At Lockdown, Sky participated in the first ever "Queen of the Cage" match, which was won by Laveaux. Sky participated in the Make Over Battle Royal-Ladder Match at Sacrifice, which was won by Gail Kim. The two later added another factor to their gimmicks, placing brown paper bags over opponents heads. On July 17 episode of Impact!, Sky won a Knockouts Battle Royal for number one contendership to the Women's Knockout Championship, but lost the title match the next week as well as two more title matches immediately following to then champion Taylor Wilde.
The Beautiful People began associating with Cute Kip, who become known as their "fashionist". At Bound For Glory 2008, The Beautiful People and Cute Kip were defeated by ODB, Rhaka Khan, and Rhino.
As indicated by the name, the Anti-Americans differed from previous incarnations of Team Canada in that they were anti-American rather than pro-Canadian. As a result of this, the emblem of the stable was not the Canadian flag, but an American flag flown upside down.
...
The Anti-Americans then jumped from SmackDown to Raw on July 29, and immediately began a feud with The Undertaker. This is when Jim Ross started referring to the group as "The Un-Americans". They went on to feud with Booker T and Goldust, who Storm and Christian defeated in a Tag Team Championship title match at SummerSlam on August 25. In the same night, The Undertaker defeated Test in a singles match.
In late August and early September, The Un-Americans attempted on several occasions to burn the American flag, but were thwarted on each occasion by Booker T, Goldust, Kane and Bradshaw. In mid September, the EnglishWilliam Regal joined the stable. At Unforgiven on September 22, The Un-Americans lost to Booker T, Goldust, Kane and Bubba Ray Dudley in an eight-man tag team match.
With my 6th pick in the draft, I am proud to select in the Tag Team category – The Outsiders
“The Outsiders were formed in 1996 when Hall and Nash signed with World Championship Wrestling after leaving the World Wrestling Federation. In the storyline, Hall led an invasion, appearing on WCW programming and insinuating that he was doing so under orders from his WWF employers and warning that he would soon be joined by others. Their angle was the precursor to the heelturn of Hulk Hogan and the formation of the New World Order (nWo), a major wrestling storyline that dominated WCW programming for several years afterwards.
The Outsiders captured the WCW World Tag Team Championship six times, first winning them from Harlem Heat (Booker T and Stevie Ray) at Halloween Havoc in October 1996. They dropped the title to The Steiner Brothers (Rick and Scott Steiner) at the 1997 Souled Out event, only to have WCW President Eric Bischoff reverse the decision on the next night's edition of WCW Monday Nitro. A near repeat of these events occurred the next month when Hall and Nash lost to the team of Lex Luger and The Giant at SuperBrawl VII, with Bischoff again abusing his power and quickly returning the titles to The Outsiders.
In October 1997, fellow nWo member Syxx began substituting for a legitimately injured Nash, teaming with Hall to defend the titles on numerous occasions. This pairing eventually lost the title to The Steiner Brothers in on October 13, 1997. The Outsiders and Steiners traded the title back and forth at both televised and non-televised events until Scott turned on his brother, joining the nWo and giving the title to Hall and Nash.
In May 1998 The Outsiders team broke up due to dissension within the nWo, with Hall choosing to join nWo Hollywood and Nash joining with The Wolfpac, a name that the Outsiders and Syxx trio originally referred to themselves as in 1997. The split team faced each other once later in the year before coming back together in December 1999 to win the WCW World Tag Team Championship one more time. It did not last, however, as Hall legitimately no-showed an event, the title was stripped from them, and the team was dissolved.
”
2001-2009 à The Phenomenal AJ Styles
1991-2000 à Raven
1980-1990 à Bam Bam Bigelow
Pre-80's à The Dynamite Kid
Tag Team à The Outsiders
Stable à The Karachi Vice
Women's
Personality
Storyline
Title Belt
PPV
Match
Last edited by socalwingfan; 03-04-2009 at 06:37 PM.
With our 6th Round Pick, The Second City Saints select:
In the Woman's Category:
The Fabulous Moolah
While she's not the hottest pick out there, she is definitely one of the greatest female wrestlers to ever lace up the boots.
Mary Lillian Ellison[6] (July 22, 1923 – November 2, 2007), better known by her ring nameThe Fabulous Moolah, was an American female professional wrestler who was marketed by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) as holding the record for the longest title reign by any athlete in any professional sport.[1] She began her twenty-seven year championship reign in 1956.[1] For many years she was the leading promoter of woman's professional wrestling. She was also known as being the first WWF Women's Champion. According to WWE, Moolah held the title a total of four times.[2]
During her career, Moolah wrestled in Canada, Mexico, Japan, and throughout Europe.[1] She became the oldest champion in the history of professional wrestling when she won the WWF Women's title at seventy-six years of age, in 1999, forty-three years after she first won the title.[2] Moolah was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 1995.[7]