Hulk Hogan Vs Warrior Wrestlemania 6

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Rosangela Pinkard

unread,
Aug 5, 2024, 1:01:34 PM8/5/24
to clicimnate
Historicmatch. Maybe I'm just down on the build, but I've always thought this was a solid match, and I just ... didn't think that this time. When you see what other people are doing during the same time period all over the world, it stands out less than it would have otherwise I guess. It is wisely laid out (well, sort of), which is more a credit to Pat Patterson than these two, who were competent but not really actively good.

I agree that Hogan used the post-match to build sympathy, but I don't really understand how they could have gone in a different direction. After all of that Clash of the Titans build, Hogan can't exactly just leave and let that be that. The hug is actually the best part of the match, and the image of Warrior celebrating in the ring with both belts while Hogan literally fades into the background before our eyes is a powerful one.


Long drawn-out spots to try to beat the "50/50" drum over our heads, though the crowd seems pretty solidly behind Hogan, particularly when the Warrior goes after the knee injury. The knee spot was constructed as a deliberate shot at Sting, and Gorilla even mentions a possible dislocated patella which of course Hogan shrugs off. 50-50 is the story of the match and Patterson deserves credit for consistently laying it out as such, but...well, this is a bunch of comic book splash panels come to life. There is some certain appeal in that, but this is SO much looser and not all that well-executed compared to the other matches of the time period--long chinlocks and a bearhug that really kills the crowd. Warrior also pretty much blows up running the whole length to the ring and it really shows by the end of the match.


This didn't hold up as well for me either. Part of that is greater exposure to what else was going on in the country and in the world, and part of it is knowing now the extent that Warrior's title run was a failure and that the reset button wasn't all that far away.


This didn't strike me any differently that it ever has. It was a well-designed match that nonetheless highlighted some serious flaws in the guy who won. The wrestling itself was often poorly executed, but they hit most of the big-picture buttons they were supposed to hit.


I liked the result at the time because I never liked Hogan and was tired of seeing him go over on all the big shows. But looking back, it's indeed obvious that he was the guy you'd want on top long-term.


I love the analogy of comic book splash pages brought to life as that is exactly what this is. Even though this match had more eye rolling moments than I had remembered , mainly Hogan shrugging off the leg and Monsoon calling this match like ass, I still really like this match and think it was a best possible case scenerio situation for the match and timeframe of the performers. And dammit even though I have seen this match a 100 times, I still got some chills in the closing sequence and ending celebration.


I think this is near the end for Jesse as commentary. Crowd seems to be a bit more on Hogan's side. Total big match feel. Crowd is huge. Big strength challenges between the two early which the crowd eats up. Hogan gets clotheslined to the outside and gets his knee hurt. Knee looking fine though after a couple minutes. Jess name drops Richard Belzer when Hogan gets the front face lock on. Hebner sucks. He really hurts these matches on repeated viewings. His counts are just awful. Warrior hulks up and hits the repeated clotheslines. Hogan barely kicks out on a supllex. Bearhug is our first slow moment of match. Hogan outsmarts Warrior on the flying shoulderblock. Hebner is down though so no pinfall. Warrior gets his own false three count. Hebner actually makes a decent false three count. Press slam/splash but Hogan kicks out! Hulk up. Looks like the same old finish but Warrior avoids the leg drop and gets the pin off the splash. Really smart worked match between the two. Match still holds up well to me. Hogan presents the title to Warrior and passes the torch. Well, for a couple months anyways. Even Jesse shows some respect towards Hogan.


I think this is one of the best announced matches in the first 6 or so years of WWF PPVs. That's not saying much, but Ventura got off a lot of great lines (the Richard Belzer line, pointing out all of the times Hulk Hogan has benefit from ref bumps) and in general, I think not having to play heel worked to his advantage here.


I don't know that I have anything else to say about the match that hasn't been said a hundred times before. It's probably the best possible match these two could have had, and the way it was laid out, Clash of the Titans-style, to play to a big crowd, and a match that could play to the absolute back row of a stadium, is very impressive. Warrior deserves a lot of credit for getting Hogan up for the Gorilla Press, especially having worked a long match (no snarky comment about it being long for a Warrior match; this was legit a long match. I wouldn't call it anything close to one of the best matches of the year, but I think I'd safely call it good.


But thank God they didn't work the rematch at Wrestlemania VII as was planned. I would have had no desire to watch these guys cut promos on each other on the 1991 Yearbook after watching the build to this.


It had the feel and atmosphere of a great occasion as two superheroes collided. Going north of 20m wasn't ideal as they both had poor cardio. It was turgid at times during the rest hold segments. The ref bump, and indeed Hebner himself were horrible as usual. Yet it was always intriguing and quite well layed out as a 50/50 face vs face battle. The Warrior just edged it at the end. About as good a match as they could have realistically hoped for given their limitations. At the time it must have seemed like a changing of the guard moment. It was actually just the Warrior's high point.


Just watched this again, I just feel it has always been overhyped to me. I watched this back to back with the Slaughter match and I think the Slaughter match is much better, but does not get the same level of praise. It is a good tit for tat match where both guys shows they could do the same things to each other, which gets across the point how evenly matched they are. Even though in the fans' eyes, Hogan is clearly superior. I have always wondered what the point that knee injury was to serve because at first I always thought it was a dickish move by Hogan to increase his babyface heat at the expense of the new babyface, which is at least logical. If it is a shot at Sting that just strikes me as a stupid way to cut out Warrior's knees from under him (that was fully intended). The chinlocks and bearhugs were a little too much for me. The best part of this match was the finish. I thought that was really well executed and you really had the feeling that you had no idea who was going to win. Betting against Hogan, just never seems like a smart move. The Warrior Splash not getting the pinfall followed by the Hulk-Up was just perfect bait for the eventual missed leg drop followed by the Warrior Splash victory. I feel like Loss nailed it by saying that the parting scene is the best part of the match and it really feels like the start of a new era.


I feel that is what Vince is better than anyone else at achieving is iconic, timeless moments. The matches he produces/book don't always produce the greatest bell-to-bell results, but he always delivers on a powerful image that will resonate you forever. I think it is this ability to distill wrestling down to static, iconic images is the reason he is one of the greatest promoters of all time. Hogan/Warrior is more about the image after than it is about the match.


Probably has been overhyped over the years, but it's still one of my sentimental favorites and still not a bad match in of itself. Pat Patterson deserves tons of credit, because I think without him, this might have crashed and burned, but as it happened, I still think it did what it set out to do, despite Warrior not working out in the long run.


I like how Jesse shifted to being neutral (even going as far to say that "Hulkamania will live forever", which is pretty uncharacteristic otherwise). I liked him better in WCW for this reason. He seemed more left-of-center than totally heel, which worked well with what WCW was doing.


Just watched this again, I just feel it has always been overhyped to me. I watched this back to back with the Slaughter match and I think teh SLaughter match is much better, but does not get the same level of praise. It is a good tit for tat match where both guys shows they could do the same things to each other, whoch gets across the point how evenly matched they are. Even though in the fans' eyes, Hogan is clearly superior. I have always wondered what the point that knee injury was to serve because at first I always thought it was a dickish move by Hogan to increase his babyface heat at the expense of teh new babyface, which is at least logical. If it is a shot at Sting that just strikes me as a stupid way to cut out Warrior's knees from under him (that was fully intended). The chinlocks and bearhugs were a little too much for me. The best part of this match was the finish. I thought that was really well executed and you really had the feeling that you had no idea who was going to win. Betting against Hogan, just never seems like a smart move. The Warrior Splash not getting the pinfall followed by the Hulk-Up was just perfect bait for the eventual missed leg drop followed by the Warrior Splash victory. I feel like Loss nailed it by saying that the parting scene is the best partt of the match and it really feels like the start of a new era.


I feel that is what Vince is better than anyone else at acheiving is iconic, timeless moments. The matches he produces/book don't always produce the greatest bell-to-bell results, but he always delivers on a powerful image that will resonate you forever. I think it is this ability to distill wrestling down to static, iconic images is the reason he is one of the greatest promoters of all time. Hogan/Warrior is more about the image after than it is about the match.

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages