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Goatman Reviews Wrestling

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The Goatman Offline
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Post: #11
RE: Goatman Reviews Wrestling
As for wrestlers i would get rid of this is gonna be a big list lol

Men.
Chuck taylor
Serpentico
Angelico
Jack evans
Luthor
The butcher
The blade
Evil uno
Stu grayson
Joey janela
Sonny kiss
Alan angels
Nakazawa
Preston vance
Shawn spears
Jake roberts
Tully blanchard

Women.
Big swole
Abadon
Emi sakura
Ivelisse
Jade Cargill
Leva Bates
Vickie guerrero

Who i would push
Adam page but not as a sad depressed drunk but as an ass kicking cowboy.

Jungle boy who has the most upside of anybody on this roster but he need to bulk up a bit.

Ricky starks i liked him on nwa power and i think given the right push and a lot of mic time he could do well.

And as i said anna jay and tay conti they needs to be the faces of the womens division.

Who i would sign if i had the money khan has

Tessa blanchard
Thunder rosa
Allysin Kay
Zelina vega
Alex hammerstone
Harry smith
The von erich brothers
Thom Latimer

I miss Amber Coen
(This post was last modified: 17-01-2021 23:57 by The Goatman.)
17-01-2021 23:15
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winsaw Offline
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Post: #12
RE: Goatman Reviews Wrestling
I have to pull you up the the Ric Flair not drawing money comments mate, they are simply not true, In the 80's he's official rated of the bigger draw money wise in two of the years and 2nd behind Hogan in another 5 years , it's a mith that he worked in empty arena in 1984 he drew 900k from a nwa world title match in Texas, a year later in 85 he drew 250k for an nwa match in Charlotte, in his 84-86 heyday he selled regularly 75000-100000 tickets each week, he was so the official number one draw in 92 his first with wwf,
Between 1976 and 2004 he was in the top 10 draw list in 18 different years making him official the 4th highest draw ever behind Sammartino, Thesz and Londos,

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18-01-2021 01:29
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The Goatman Offline
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Post: #13
RE: Goatman Reviews Wrestling
(18-01-2021 01:29 )winsaw Wrote:  I have to pull you up the the Ric Flair not drawing money comments mate, they are simply not true, In the 80's he's official rated of the bigger draw money wise in two of the years and 2nd behind Hogan in another 5 years , it's a mith that he worked in empty arena in 1984 he drew 900k from a nwa world title match in Texas, a year later in 85 he drew 250k for an nwa match in Charlotte, in his 84-86 heyday he selled regularly 75000-100000 tickets each week, he was so the official number one draw in 92 his first with wwf,
Between 1976 and 2004 he was in the top 10 draw list in 18 different years making him official the 4th highest draw ever behind Sammartino, Thesz and Londos,

You got this info off jim cornette's site didn't you ? So he is the 4th biggest draw ever behind Sammartino, Thesz and Londos but he is 8th on the list of biggest atractions/draws Huh i would take what cornette says with a pinch of salt he puts over who he wants and turns on them at the drop of a hat, if ric flair was such a draw why was nwa/wcw always struggling until hulk hogan came in ? And that £900k he drew was a stadium show that was only 30% full texas stadium holds 95k people and there was 32k there so he didn't exactly draw that night and i find it hard to believe he was drawing 75-100k people to shows every week as i said nwa ran small arenas during the 80s unless it was a big show like a starrcade so for him to be bringing in that many people a week would mean he was wrestling everyday of the week in sell out 15-20k seating arenas which wasn't happening and i dont get the bit about he was the number one draw in 92 based on what ? 92 was the year that wwf started going down hill business wise so he was the number one draw when they wasn't drawing as many people to the show as they was the year before ?

I miss Amber Coen
(This post was last modified: 18-01-2021 03:09 by The Goatman.)
18-01-2021 02:26
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winsaw Offline
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Post: #14
RE: Goatman Reviews Wrestling
^^ the facts is the facts he drew big money consistently,
He did the 75000+ weekly figure by working Friday, Saturday and Sunday and drawing 20k+ each night plus smaller shows in the week that's how the territory system worked the nwa champ had the wrestle non stop to get the best round every promotion,
I said he was 4th in the list of most consistent drawers , he was in the top 10 yeaely drawers list 18 times he had good money every year for a long time as you say in some poorly run promotions, he's 8th in the all time list as people like Hogan drew a bigger total but over a shorter time Hogan was only at the top for 8 years during the wwf explosion,
All wrestling was on a downer in the early 90s he was still able to sell shows thought with out him wwf would have been in a worse position and not been able to build on the UK explosion they had a couple of year later that keeper them going until attatude got the fans back in usa,
Flair drew big for a long time that's why he had the nwa belt for so long as every promotion in the nwa knew if he was on there show they sold more tickets,

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(This post was last modified: 18-01-2021 13:51 by winsaw.)
18-01-2021 13:32
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The Goatman Offline
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Post: #15
RE: Goatman Reviews Wrestling
(18-01-2021 13:32 )winsaw Wrote:  ^^ the facts is the facts he drew big money consistently,
He did the 75000+ weekly figure by working Friday, Saturday and Sunday and drawing 20k+ each night plus smaller shows in the week that's how the territory system worked the new champ had the wrestle non stop to get the best round every promotion,
I said he was 4th in the list of most consistent drawers , he was in the top 10 yeaely drawers list 18 times he had good money every year for a long time as you say in some poorly run promotions, he's 8th in the all time list as people like Hogan drew a bigger total but over a shorter time Hogan was only at the top for 8 years during the wwf explosion,
All wrestling was on a downer in the early 90s he was still able to sell shows thought with out him wwf would have been in a worse position and not been able to build on the UK explosion they had a couple of year later that keeper them going until attatude got the fans back in usa,
Flair drew mini for a long time that's why he had the nwa belt for so long as every promotion in the nwa knew if he was on there show they sold more tickets,

Where are these facts otherthan what cornette says ? Show me a week in the 1980s where flair was the draw and had 20k+ fans in attendance on friday, saturday and sunday there are very few arenas in the us that even hold that many people most big arena's hold between 15-18k like most things in wrestling his figures are inflated other than the greensboro Coliseum and charlotte Coliseum that held more than 20k people so unless they ran the same 2 buildings every night where he was getting there 20k+ fans in attendance only cornette knows and hogans drawing power lasted longer than 8 years look at wcw in the late 90s and even early 2000 in wwe.

Also in flairs wwf run in 92 he was alway second fiddle to hogan look a mania 8 flair was the champ but hogan was still the main event so dont know how he was the number 1 draw in 92...

Another thing about that list cornette is comparing a guy from the 1920s to the 80s 90s 2000s which is ridiculous

I miss Amber Coen
(This post was last modified: 18-01-2021 14:26 by The Goatman.)
18-01-2021 14:19
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winsaw Offline
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Post: #16
RE: Goatman Reviews Wrestling
(18-01-2021 14:19 )The Goatman Wrote:  Also in flairs wwf run in 92 he was alway second fiddle to hogan look a mania 8 flair was the champ but hogan was still the main event so dont know how he was the number 1 draw in 92...

because by the 90s Hogan was only really wrestling on PPV shows but Flair was still working TV and House shows every week, thats why in 95 Flair is the number one drawing wrestler in the usa for wcw even though Hogan was champ at the time in wcw,
drawing bums on seats and getting PPV buys are very different things, its why Sting is never in the lists of top drawers as his fans where mostly young and women who where less likely to watch live preferring to watch on tv,
Hogan really did only draw for that 8 years in the 80s as from the 90s on he didn't work enough shows to out draw other people,

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(This post was last modified: 19-01-2021 15:05 by winsaw.)
19-01-2021 15:03
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winsaw Offline
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Post: #17
RE: Goatman Reviews Wrestling
it was quirt in work last night so i had the time to find out what most people think to be the most accurate list of drawing bums onto seats in wrestling and most think its this of form Dave Meltzer

the formula he uses is 1 point for selling 10000 seats then another point for 20000 and another for 30000 and so on giving a simple points based system, if a wrestler is listed as having a dominant year it means hes so far ahead of everyone else that year

it throws up some interesting things, i didn't know,

just thought Bruno Sammartino was number 1 all the way from getting his shot at the to at the start of the 60s until he was final over taken in the mid 70s but thats not the case at the The Sheik beat him for 5 years straight including a dominant year, its also unlikey Bruno would have had things his own way in the early 60s had Buddy Rogers not had to retire,

Vince Ju has often said his dad didn't know what he was doing when he took the belt of Superstar Billy Graham and put it on old school worker Bob Backlund who is often seen as not a good champ but with the belt is the number 1 draw for 4 years including a dominant year and breaks Rogers record for most big gates in one year in another year, history should view him and Vince's old man better,

Hogans 84-91 run is amazing 4 dominant years in a row including setting all-time record for most big gates in one year, that will never be done again,

it shows how wrestling in Japan and Mexico rose so much in the late 80s early 90s, in 93 there is noe usa wrestler in the top 10,

it also shows how big wrestlers where in japan and mexico like Konnan and Bob Sapp who couldn't draw a $ when they went to usa,

interesting to see HHH have the best run of consistent top 10s since Flair another one you dont realise

also puts to bed those who say Rock was always riding Austin tales

i always though

1908 - Frank Gotch and George Hackenschmidt

1909 - Frank Gotch

1910 - 1. Great Gama and Stanislaus Zbyszko; 3. Frank Gotch; 4. Dr. Ben Roller

1911 - 1. Frank Gotch and George Hackenschmidt

1912 - 1. Frank Gotch

1913 - 1. Stanislaus Zbyszko and George Lurich; 3. Frank Gotch

1914 - Unavailable

1915 - 1. Charley Cutler; 2. Joe Stecher

1916 - 1. Joe Stecher; 2. Ed “Strangler” Lewis

1917 - 1. Joe Stecher; 2. Charley Peters, Jim Londos, John Pesek Ad Santel, Wladek Zbyszko; John Olin, Ed “Strangler” Lewis

1918 - 1. Joe Stecher, Ed “Strangler” Lewis and Wladek Zbyszko

1919 - 1. Ed “Strangler” Lewis; 2. Wladek Zbyszko; 3. Joe Stecher and Jim Londos

1920 - 1. Joe Stecher; 2. Jim Londos; 3. Earl Caddock and Ed “Strangler” Lewis; 5. John Pesek

1921 - 1. Ed “Strangler” Lewis; 2. Earl Caddock; 3. Jim Londos, John Pesek and Stanislaus Zbyszko

1922 - 1. Stanislaus Zbyszko; 2. Earl Caddock and Ed “Strangler” Lewis

1923 - 1. Ed “Strangler” Lewis; 2. Jim Londos; 3. Stanislaus Zbyszko and John Pesek

1924 - 1. Ed “Strangler” Lewis and Jim Londos; 3. Toots Mondt and Stanislaus Zbyszko

1925 - 1. Ed “Strangler” Lewis, Joe Stecher, Wayne Munn and Stanislaus Zbyszko

1926 - 1. Jim Londos; 2. Joe Stecher; 3. Ray Steele, John Pesek, Ed “Strangler” Lewis and Jim Browning

1927 - 1. Jim Londos and John Pesek

1928 - 1. Jim Londos; 2. John Pesek and Ed “Strangler” Lewis; 4. Joe Stecher, Dick Shikat, Gus Sonnenberg, Ray Steele

1929 - 1. Gus Sonnenberg; 2. Ed “Strangler” Lewis; 3. Joe Stecher; 4. Jim Londos; 5. Dick Shikat; 6. Stanley Stasiak and Joe Malciewiez

1930 - 1. Dick Shikat and Jim Londos; 3. Gus Sonnenberg and Everett Marshall; 5. Gino Garibaldi, Abe Coleman and Man Mountain Dean; 8. Stanley Stasiak, Karl Pojello, Ed “Strangler” Lewis, Hans Steinke, Ed Don George, Milo Steinborn an Rudy Dusek

1931 - 1. Jim Londos (dominant year, set all-time record for biggest national drawing card); 2. Ray Steele; 3. Jim McMillen and Gus Sonnenberg; 5. Rudy Dusek and Sandor Szabo; 7. Herb Freeman, Pat O’Shocker, Kola Kwariani, George Calza

1932 - 1. Jim Londos (dominant year); 2. Henri DeGlane; 3. Ed “Strangler” Lewis and Dick Shikat; 5. Jack Washburn

1933 - 1. Jim Londos (dominant year); 2. Henri DeGlane; 3. Jim Browning; 4. Ed Don George; 5. Ray Steele and Gus Sonnenberg; 7. Joe Stecher, Dick Shikat and Ed “Strangler” Lewis

1934 - 1. Jim Londos (dominant year, near record breaker); 2. Man Mountain Dean; 3. Dick Shikat; 4. Ed Don George, Ed “Strangler” Lewis, Jim Browning; 6. Joe Savoldi; 7. Joe Stecher and George Zaharias; 9. Everett Marshall, Henri DeGlane, Orville Brown and Gino Garibaldi

1935 - 1. Danno O’Mahoney (dominant year); 2. Jim Londos and Man Mountain Dean; 4. Vincent Lopez; 5. Ed “Strangler” Lewis; 6. Ed Don George; 7. Orville Brown and Gus Sonnenberg; 9. Chief Little Wolf and Ernie Dusek

1936 - 1. Danno O’Mahoney (dominant year); 2. Yvon Robert; 3. Ed Don George; 4. Everett Marshall, Ali Baba, Rube Wright, Vincent Lopez and Earl McCready

1937 - 1. Jim Londos (dominant year); 2. Everett Marshall; 3. Yvon Robert; 4. Orville Brown

1938 - 1. Jim Londos and Steve Casey; 3. Lou Thesz, Everett Marshall and Bronko Nagurski; 6. Vincent Lopez

1939 - 1. Jim Londos, Vincent Lopez and Dave Levin; 4. Lou Thesz, Everett Marshall, Dean Detton and Mildred Burke

1940 - 1. Jim Londos; 2. Bronko Nagurski and Maurice “French Angel” Tillet; 4. George Zaharias, Lou Thesz, Bill Longson and Ed Don George

1941 - 1. Bill Longson (dominant year); 2. Ed Don George and Wlasislow Talum; 4. Mildred Burke

1942 - 1. Bill Longson (dominant year); 2. Yvon Robert; 3. Maurice “French Angel” Tillet; 4. Lou Thesz and Sandor Szabo

1943 - 1. Bill Longson (dominant year); 2. Bobby Managoff, Swedish Angel and Vic Holbook; 5. Sandor Szabo and Yvon Robert

1944 - 1. Bill Longson (dominant year); 2. Whipper Billy Watson and Sandor Szabo; 4. Swedish Angel and Warren Bockwinkel

1945 - 1. Bill Longson (dominant year); 2. Wlasislow Talum and Bob Wagner

1946 - 1. Bill Longson (dominant year); 2. Buddy Rogers; 3. Yvon Robert and Primo Carnera; 5. Ray Vilmer, Frank Sexton, Wlasislow Talum, Bobby Managoff, Lou Thesz and Jim Londos

1947 - 1. Bill Longson; 2. Frank Sexton; 3. Lou Thesz and Whipper Billy Watson; 5. Gorgeous George; 6. Bob Wagner, Buddy Rogers, Larry Moquin and Bert Assirati

1948 - 1. Gorgeous George; 2. Bill Longson; 3. Enrique Torres; 4. Ernie & Emil Dusek; 6. Babe & Chris Zaharias and Whipper Billy Watson; 8. Maurice “French Angel” Tillet; 9. Sandor Szabo, Frank Sexton, Don Eagle, Manuel Garza, Buddy Rogers, Yvon Robert and Primo Carnera

1949 - 1. Gorgeous George and Whipper Billy Watson; 3. Lou Thesz; 4. Buddy Rogers, Yvon Robert and Don Eagle; 7. Argentina Rocca, Bill Longson and El Santo

1950 - 1. Lou Thesz and Argentina Rocca; 3. Buddy Rogers, Primo Carnera and Gorgeous George; 6. Don Eagle and Yukon Eric; 8. Whipper Billy Watson, Yvon Robert, Nanjo Singh, Bill Longson and Maurice “French Angel” Tillet

1951 - 1. Lou Thesz; 2. Whipper Billy Watson, Buddy Rogers and Great Togo; 5. Bill Longson and Yvon Robert; 7. Argentina Rocca, Yukon Eric, Enrique Llanes and Rikidozan

1952 - 1. Lou Thesz (dominant year); 2. Argentina Rocca and Killer Kowalski; 4. Buddy Rogers Primo Carnera, Verne Gagne and Baron Michele Leone; 8. Bobby Managoff, Pat O’Connor and Mighty Atlas

1953 - 1. Lou Thesz and Blue Demon; 3. El Santo; 4. Killer Kowalski and Verne Gagne; 6. Yvon Robert and Argentina Rocca; 8. Hans Schmidt, Tony Borne, Yukon Eric, Whipper Billy Watson and Al & Tiny Mills

1954 - 1. Argentina Rocca; 2. Verne Gagne, Pat O’Connor and Rikidozan; 5. El Santo; 6. Killer Kowalski, Mike & Ben Sharpe, Masahiko Kimura, Bert Assirati; 10. Whipper Billy Watson, Lou Thesz, Hans Schmidt

1955 - 1. Lou Thesz; 2. Wilbur Snyder; 3. Argentina Rocca and Hans Schmidt; 5. Killer Kowalski, Yukon Eric, Neff Maiava, Buddy Rogers, Emile Czaja and Rikidozan

1956 - 1. Argentina Rocca and Whipper Billy Watson; 3. Lou Thesz; 4. Killer Kowalski, Dr. Jerry Graham and El Santo; 7. Verne Gagne and Wilbur Snyder; 9. Dick the Bruiser, Ivan & Karol Kalmikoff, Reggie (Crusher) & Stan Liswoski; Miguel Perez, Edouard Carpentier, Don Leo Jonathan and Gorgeous George

1957 - 1. Lou Thesz; 2. Argentina Rocca; 3. Gene Kiniski; 4. Killer Kowalski and Edouard Carpentier; 6. Rikidozan; 7. Miguel Perez; 8. Whipper Billy Watson; 9. Hans Schmidt and Bobo Brazil

1958 - 1. Argentina Rocca & Miguel Perez (dominant year); 2. Killer Kowalski; 3. Edouard Carpentier; 4. Dr. Jerry Graham; 5. Fabulous Kangaroos and Eddie Graham; 7. Don Leo Jonathan, Pat O’Connor, The Sheik, Wild Bull Curry, Tony Borne and Black Shadow

1959 - 1. Argentina Rocca & Miguel Perez (dominant year); 2. Dick the Bruiser, Dr. Jerry & Eddie Graham, and Killer Kowalski; 5. Johnny Valentine; 6. Buddy Rogers and Wilbur Snyder; 8. Lord Athol Layton, Hans Schmidt, Angelo Poffo, Yukon Eric, Whipper Billy Watson, Gene Kiniski, Gorgeous George, The Sheik, Edouard Carpentier, Roy & Ray Shire (Ray Stevens)

1960 - 1. Buddy Rogers; 2. Argentina Rocca; 3. Dick the Bruiser, Bearcat Wright and Pat O’Connor; 6. Eddie Graham, Sweet Daddy Siki and Killer Kowalski; 9. Bruno Sammartino; 10. Cowboy Bob Ellis, Gene Kiniski and Yukon Eric

1961 - 1. Buddy Rogers (dominant year, set all-time record for biggest single year draw); 2. Argentina Rocca; 3. Johnny Valentine; 4. Pat O’Connor; 5. Bob Orton; 6. The Fabulous Kangaroos, Dick the Bruiser, Argentina Apollo; 9. Cowboy Bob Ellis, Ray Stevens, Fred Blassie and Rikidozan

1962 - 1. Buddy Rogers (dominant year); 2. Ray Stevens; 3. Johnny Valentine; 4. Bobo Brazil; 5. Cowboy Bob Ellis and Pepper Gomez; 7. Fred Blassie, Rikidozan and The Crusher; 10. Wilbur Snyder, Lou Thesz, Johnny Barend and Killer Kowalski

1963 - 1. Bruno Sammartino; 2. Buddy Rogers (should be noted Rogers’ last match of the year was May 17 due to heart problems, was on the way to a dominant year, and he still ended up finishing a close second) and Lou Thesz; 4. Killer Kowalski and Freddie Blassie; 6. The Destroyer; 7. Bobo Brazil and Hans Mortier; 9. Ray Stevens, Edouard Carpentier, Bearcat Wright and Gorilla Monsoon

1964 - 1. Bruno Sammartino (dominant year); 2. Fritz Von Erich; 3. Lou Thesz; 4. Dick the Bruiser; 5. Freddie Blassie and Gene Kiniski; 7. Ray Stevens, Johnny Valentine, Giant Baba, Waldo Von Erich and Gorilla Monsoon

1965 - 1. Bruno Sammartino (dominant year); 2. Cowboy Bill Watts; 3. Fritz Von Erich, Dick the Bruiser, Bill Miller; 6. Lou Thesz, Johnny Valentine, Kinji Shibuya, Toyonobori, Rene Guajardo, Karloff Lagarde, Ray Mendoza

1966 - 1. Lou Thesz; 2. Gene Kiniski; 3. Bruno Sammartino; 4. Fritz Von Erich; 5. Dick the Bruiser; 6. Giant Baba and Johnny Valentine; 8. Ernie Ladd (an impressive total since Ladd only wrestled during the pro football off-season as he was an AFL star player at this point in time), Dory Funk Jr., The Crusher

1967 - 1. Bruno Sammartino; 2. Gene Kiniski; 3. Giant Baba; 4. Mark Lewin; 5. Gorilla Monsoon; 6. The Crusher, Johnny Valentine, Edouard Carpentier, Verne Gagne, Ray Stevens and Toru Tanaka

1968 - 1. Bruno Sammartino; 2. Lou Thesz; 3. Gene Kiniski, Dara Singh, Bobo Brazil and Dick the Bruiser; 7. The Crusher; 8. Giant Baba, Freddie Blassie, Ray Stevens and Mil Mascaras

1969 - 1. The Sheik (dominant year); 2. Bruno Sammartino and Dory Funk Jr.; 4. Ray Stevens; 5. Mad Dog & Butcher Vachon; 7. Ivan Koloff and Bobo Brazil; 9. Jacques Rougeau Sr., Dick the Bruiser and Gene Kiniski

1970 - 1. The Sheik; 2. Bruno Sammartino; 3. Freddie Blassie; 4. Dory Funk Jr.; 5. The Crusher, Mad Dog Vachon and Pat Patterson; 8. Ray Stevens; 9. Gene Kiniski, Dick the Bruiser, Verne Gagne

1971 - 1. The Sheik; 2. Pedro Morales; 3. Freddie Blassie; 4. John Tolos; 5. Dory Funk Jr.; 6. Mil Mascaras; 7. Tiger Jeet Singh; 8. Tex McKenzie, The Crusher, Black Gordman, Bruno Sammartino, Luke Graham & Tarzan Tyler

1972 - 1. The Sheik; 2. Pedro Morales; 3. Ernie Ladd; 4. Dory Funk Jr., Dick the Bruiser & The Crusher, Bruno Sammartino and Pampero Firpo; 8. John Tolos; 9. Killer Kowalski; 10. Black Gordman, Blackjack Lanza, Mil Mascaras and Ray Stevens

1973 - 1. The Sheik; 2. Pedro Morales; 3. Dick the Bruiser; 4. Ernie Ladd; 5. Bruno Sammartino; 6. The Crusher; 7. Johnny Valentine; 8. Dory Funk Jr. and Superstar Billy Graham; 10. Harley Race and Jack Brisco

1974 - 1. Bruno Sammartino; 2. The Sheik; 3. Jerry Lawler; 4. Jack Brisco; 5. Andre the Giant and Valiant Brothers; 7. Chief Jay Strongbow, Don Leo Jonathan; 9. Killer Kowalski, Dick the Bruiser and Jackie Fargo

1975 - 1. Bruno Sammartino (dominant year); 2. Spyros Arion; 3. Jack Brisco; 4. Mongolian Stomper; 5. Andre the Giant; 6. Jerry Lawler; 7. Ivan Koloff; 8. Dick the Bruiser, The Crusher, Robert Fuller, Perro Aguayo

1976 - 1. Bruno Sammartino (dominant year); 2. Antonio Inoki; 3. Superstar Billy Graham; 4. Terry Funk, Ivan Koloff and Stan Hansen; 7. Andre the Giant; 8. Jerry Lawler; 9. Ric Flair and Nick Bockwinkel

1977 - 1. Superstar Billy Graham; 2. Bruno Sammartino; 3. Harley Race and Jerry Lawler; 5. Ken Patera; 6. Dusty Rhodes; 7. The Sheik and Mil Mascaras; 9. Gene & Ole Anderson and Bill Dundee

1978 - 1. Superstar Billy Graham ; 2. Bob Backlund; 3. Dusty Rhodes; 4. Harley Race; 5. Bruno Sammartino; 6. Ric Flair and Andre the Giant; 8. Canek, Ernie Ladd and Ivan Koloff

1979 - 1. Bob Backlund; 2. Harley Race; 3. Ric Flair; 4. Andre the Giant; 5. Bruno Sammartino, Ricky Steamboat and Pat Patterson; 8. Peter Maivia, Ivan Koloff, Nick Bockwinkel and Dusty Rhodes

1980 - 1. Bob Backlund; 2. Bruno Sammartino; 3. Larry Zbyszko; 4. Harley Race and Ken Patera; 6. Andre the Giant; 7. Hulk Hogan; 8. Antonio Inoki; 9. Ric Flair and Stan Hansen

1981 - 1. Bob Backlund (dominant year); 2. Andre the Giant; 3. Ric Flair and Stan Hansen; 5. Hulk Hogan; 6. Sgt. Slaughter; 7. Killer Khan and Nick Bockwinkel; 9. Jerry Blackwell, Harley Race and Dusty Rhodes

1982 - 1. Bob Backlund (breaks Rogers record for most big gates in one year); 2. Ric Flair; 3. Hulk Hogan; 4. Nick Bockwinkel; 5. Jimmy Snuka; 6. Perro Aguayo, Sgt. Slaughter, Roddy Piper and Superstar Billy Graham; 10. Andre the Giant, Junkyard Dog and Ken Patera

1983 - 1. Ric Flair; 2. Bob Backlund; 3. Harley Race; 4. Don Muraco; 5. Sgt. Slaughter; 6. Hulk Hogan; 7. Andre the Giant; 8. Jimmy Snuka; 9. Ricky Steamboat and John Studd

1984 - 1. Hulk Hogan (set all-time record for most big gates in one year); 2. Ric Flair; 3. Antonio Inoki; 4. Iron Sheik; 5. Kerry Von Erich; 6. Andre the Giant; 7. Paul Orndorff and Road Warriors; 9. Junkyard Dog; 10. Nick Bockwinkel and Canek

1985 - 1 Hulk Hogan (set all-time record for most big gates in one year); 2. Ric Flair; 3. Roddy Piper; 4. Paul Orndorff and Road Warriors; 5. Andre the Giant; 6. John Studd; 7. Bob Orton Jr.; 8. Randy Savage and Antonio Inoki; 10. Kevin & Kerry Von Erich

1986 - 1. Hulk Hogan (set all-time record for most big gates in one year); 2. Ric Flair and Paul Orndorff; 4. Road Warriors; 5. Randy Savage; 6. Dusty Rhodes and Nikita Koloff; 7. Roddy Piper and King Kong Bundy; 9. Midnight Express and Tito Santana

1987 - 1. Hulk Hogan (dominant year); 2. Ric Flair; 3. Randy Savage; 4. Kamala; 5. Road Warriors; 6. Dusty Rhodes and One Man Gang; 8. Andre the Giant and Antonio Inoki; 10. Harley Race and Carlos Colon

1988 - 1. Hulk Hogan; 2. Randy Savage; 3. Ric Flair and Andre the Giant; 5. Ted DiBiase; 6. Lex Luger; 7. Big Bossman; 8. Tully Blanchard; 9. Road Warriors, Dusty Rhodes and Carlos Colon

1989 - 1. Hulk Hogan; 2. Randy Savage; 3. Big Bossman; 4. Ultimate Warrior; 5. Big Van Vader; 6. Akira Maeda; 7. Antonio Inoki; 8. Andre the Giant, Carlos Colon and Rick Rude

1990 - 1. Hulk Hogan; 2. Ultimate Warrior; 3. Stan Hansen; 4. Mr. Perfect; 5. Riki Choshu; 6. Konnan and Rick Rude; 8. Big Van Vader, Perro Aguayo and Earthquake

1991 - 1. Hulk Hogan; 2. Ric Flair; 3. Konnan; 4. Perro Aguayo; 5. Sgt. Slaughter; 6. Ultimate Warrior; 7. Tatsumi Fujinami; 8. Undertaker, Genichiro Tenryu and Canek

1992 - 1. Ric Flair; 2. Konnan; 3. Hulk Hogan and Sid Vicious; 5. Cien Caras; 6. Bret Hart; 7. Randy Savage; 8. Vampiro; 9. Davey Boy Smith; 10. Perro Aguayo

1993 - 1. Konnan; 2. Cien Caras; 3. Perro Aguayo; 4. Genichiro Tenryu; 5. Mascara Ano 2000 and El Hijo del Santo; 7. Keiji Muto; 8. Riki Choshu, Love Machine, Octagon and Tatsumi Fujinami (Bret Hart was No. 1 in the United States)

1994 - 1. Konnan; 2. Bret Hart; 3. Shinya Hashimoto; 4. Nobuhiko Takada and Perro Aguayo; 6. Genichiro Tenryu; 7. Antonio Inoki, Owen Hart and Love Machine; 10. Cien Caras, Keiji Muto and Atsushi Onita

1995 - 1. Shinya Hashimoto; 2. Ric Flair; 3. Antonio Inoki; 4. Konnan and Keiji Muto; 6. Perro Aguayo; 7. Masahiro Chono; 8. Mitsuharu Misawa and Cien Caras; 10. Nobuhiko Takada and Diesel

1996 - 1. Nobuhiko Takada; 2. Shawn Michaels; 3. Shinya Hashimoto; 4. Bret Hart; 5. Keiji Muto; 6. Diesel; 7. Ric Flair, Kenta Kobashi, Toshiaki Kawada, Akira Taue, Vader, Genichiro Tenryu, El Hijo del Santo and Riki Choshu

1997 - 1. Shinya Hashimoto; 2. Undertaker; 3. Shawn Michaels; 4. Bret Hart; 5. Naoya Ogawa; 6. Lex Luger and Keiji Muto; 8. Steve Austin; 9. Hulk Hogan; 10. Riki Choshu, Kevin Nash and Mick Foley

1998 - 1. Steve Austin (set all-time record for most big gates in one year); 2. Undertaker; 3. Kane; 4. Mick Foley; 5. The Rock; 6. Bill Goldberg; 7. Hulk Hogan; 8. HHH; 9. Sting; 10. Randy Savage

1999 - 1. The Rock (set all-time record for most big gates in one year); 2. Steve Austin; 3. HHH; 4. Big Show; 5. Kane; 6. Undertaker; 7. Keiji Muto; 8. Bill Goldberg; 9. Ric Flair; 10. Kevin Nash

2000 - 1. The Rock (set all-time record for most big gates in one year); 2. HHH; 3. Kurt Angle; 4. Kane and Chris Benoit; 6. X-Pac; 7. Undertaker; 8. Road Dogg; 9. Naoya Ogawa; 10. Kensuke Sasaki and Chris Jericho

2001 - 1. Steve Austin; 2. The Rock; 3. Kurt Angle; 4. HHH; 5. Undertaker; 6. Chris Jericho; 7. Kane; 8. Kensuke Sasaki, Chris Benoit and Keiji Muto

2002 -1. The Rock; 2. Bob Sapp; 3. HHH; 4. Hulk Hogan; 5. Chris Jericho; 6. Steve Austin; 7. Kazushi Sakuraba; 8. Brock Lesnar; 9. Yuji Nagata and Mirko Cro Cop

2003 - 1. Brock Lesnar; 2. HHH; 3. Kazushi Sakuraba; 4. Big Show and Kurt Angle; 6. Yuji Nagata, Hulk Hogan, Kenta Kobashi, Masahiro Chono, Bill Goldberg, Shawn Michaels and Wanderlei Silva

2004 - 1. HHH; 2. Chris Benoit; 3. Bob Sapp and Eddie Guerrero; 5. Shawn Michaels; 6. La Parka; 7. Randy Orton, Ric Flair and Kenta Kobashi; 10. Shinsuke Nakamura, Cibernetico and Perro Aguayo Jr.

2005 - 1. Kenta Kobashi; 2. HHH; 3. Mistico and Ultimo Guerrero; 5. Atlantis, John Cena and Batista; 8. Rey Bucanero and Cibernetico; 10. Kurt Angle and El Hijo del Santo

2006 - 1. Mistico; 2. Perro Aguayo Jr. and Dr. Wagner Jr.; 4. Atlantis and Black Warrior; 6. John Cena and Negro Casas; 8. Ultimo Guerrero & Rey Bucanero; 9. La Parka, Konnan and Muerte Cibernetico (Mesias)

2007 - 1. John Cena; 2. Mistico; 3. Batista; 4. Randy Orton and Perro Aguayo Jr; 6. Ultimo Guerrero; 7. Dr. Wagner Jr.; 8. Cibernetico; 9. Hector Garza and Great Khali

2008 - 1. Mistico; 2. HHH; 3. Perro Aguayo Jr.; 4. Ultimo Guerrero and Hector Garza; 6. Cibernetico; 7. Zorro and Shocker; 9. Shawn Michaels and Chris Jericho

currently walking on the Sunny side of the street

Best Cap Poster 2016 & 2017, runner-up 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022 & 2023
19-01-2021 15:52
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The Goatman Offline
King Of Goats
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Post: #18
RE: Goatman Reviews Wrestling
^^
Couple of questions
1. where do you work where people are wrestling fans ? Lol

2.Thats just a list from dave meltzer how on earth does he know how many people went to shows in 1910s lol i want to see facts and figures the thing with meltzer he never show evidence to his claims

3.And the list seems a little flawed because there are wrestlers on there who you know wasn't main eventing they just so happened to be on the same card as a big star...i mean most of those wrestlers in the 80's were riding Hogan's coattails. Anytime i see One Man Gang on a list as a draw and i dont care what year it was...it seems pretty flawed. Would triple h even be on the list if he wasnt around when all the huge stars like austin, rock, cena was drawing all the fans ?

4.why are there mma fighters on the list ?

I miss Amber Coen
(This post was last modified: 19-01-2021 19:02 by The Goatman.)
19-01-2021 17:36
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The Goatman Offline
King Of Goats
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Posts: 5,885
Joined: Jul 2017
Reputation: 70
Post: #19
RE: Goatman Reviews Wrestling
WcW Spring Stampede 1999
Known as the last good wcw ppv i don't really agree with that fall brawl 2000 was imo

Opening match Blitzkrieg vs Juventud Guerrera
This match is basically a match you would see on aew every week a gymnastic spot fest but 20 years before its time.
Entertaining match juvi won with the juvi driver off the middle rope 7/10

Hardcore match Hak vs Bam bam bigelow
good match between these two but best thing about the match was bobby heenan's commentary.
Bam bam wins 6/10

Next scotty riggs vs mikey whipwreck
Not really a match that should be on ppv but it was ok.
Riggs won with a flying forearm 5/10

Match 4 was konnan vs disco inferno
This was a good match these two worked very well together.
Konnan won with the last dance 7/10

Cruiserweight championship match
Rey mysterio jr vs billy kidman
Best match on the show they was given time to craft one of the best matches of 1999.
Rey won with a top rope rana 9.5/10

Tag titles match raven's rules
Raven & saturn vs benoit & malenko
Another great match
Benoit & malenko win 9/10

Us title match
Scott steiner vs booker T
Great match these two always worked so well together and roid rage steiner was amazing to watch
Steiner picks up the win 8.5/10

Up next kevin nash vs Goldberg
Not as good as their starrcade match but it was short and to the point
Goldberg wins with his jackhammer 5/10

Main event time Wcw championship 4 way match
Ric Flair vs DDP vs Sting vs Hulk hogan
Great main event everybody worked well it had great story telling to it and set other things up
DDP wins his first wcw world title with the diamond cutter 9/10

Unlike most wcw ppvs this one got better as it went on, overall a great show worth checking out.
Show rating 8.5/10

I miss Amber Coen
(This post was last modified: 20-01-2021 12:21 by The Goatman.)
20-01-2021 12:20
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Doddle Offline
Probably Not Dr Kildare
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Posts: 26,411
Joined: Jun 2010
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Post: #20
RE: Goatman Reviews Wrestling
I thought when you started this that you'd be doing classic reviews rather than current ones Smile

Arthur Miller Wrote:I think the job of the artist... is to remind people of what they have chosen to forget.
21-01-2021 15:59
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