Bananaphone and WrestleMania III: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox Wrestling event
{{reliable sources|date=March 2008}}
|name=WrestleMania III
{{Infobox Album | <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Albums -->
|image=WMIII.JPG
Name = Bananaphone|
|tagline=Bigger, Better, Badder
Type = [[Album]] |
|theme=Who's Zooming Who? ([[Aretha Franklin]])
Artist = [[Raffi (musician)|Raffi]] |
|promotion=[[World Wrestling Entertainment|World Wrestling Federation]]
Cover = Bananaphone.jpg |
|date=March 29, 1987<ref name=slam>{{cite web|url= http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/Wrestlemania20/WrestleMania3.html|title=Steamboat - Savage rule WrestleMania 3|last=Powell |first=John|publisher=SLAM! Wrestling|accessdate=2007-10-14}}</ref>
Released = 1994 |
|venue=[[Pontiac Silverdome]]<ref name=slam/>
Recorded = March–June 1994 |
|city=[[Pontiac, Michigan]]<ref name=slam/>
Genre = [[Children's music]] |
|attendance=93,173<ref name=slam/><ref name=factstats>{{cite web|url= http://www.wwe.com/shows/wrestlemania/history/wm3/factsstats/|title=WrestleMania III Facts and Stats|publisher=WWE|accessdate= 2007-10-14}}</ref><ref name=randy>{{cite web|url= http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCO/is_3_5/ai_108049489/pg_2|title=Interview: Randy Savage|last=Yandek|first=Chris| publisher=Wrestling Digest|accessdate=2007-10-14|month=October | year=2003}}</ref><ref name=top25>{{cite web|url= http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCO/is_4_4/ai_94123536|title=The main events: ladies and gentlemen, may we present the 25 most memorable matches in the last 25 years|last=Eck|first=Kevin|publisher=Wrestling Digest|accessdate=2007-10-14|month= December | year= 2002}}</ref><ref name=80s26>{{cite book|title=Main Event: WWE in the Raging 80s|first=Brian|last=Shields|publisher= Simon and Schuster|pages=pp. 26|year=2006|isbn=1416532579}}</ref><ref name=ecw>{{cite book|title=The Rise & Fall of ECW: Extreme Championship Wrestling|last=Loverro|first=Thom|publisher=Simon and Schuster|year=2006|isbn=1416510583}}</ref>
Length = 52:07|
|lastevent=[[WrestleMania 2]]
Label = [[Rounder Records]] |
|nextevent=[[Survivor Series (1987)]]
Reviews =*[[Allmusic]] {{Rating|4.5|5}} [http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&token=&sql=10:2so7gjtro6iw link]|
|event=[[WrestleMania]]
Last album = ''[[Evergreen Everblue]]''<br />(1990) |
|lastevent2=[[WrestleMania 2]]
This album = '''''Bananaphone'''''<br />(1994) |
|nextevent2=[[WrestleMania IV]]
Next album = ''[[Raffi Radio]]''<br />(1997) |
}}
}}


'''WrestleMania III''' was the third annual [[WrestleMania]] [[professional wrestling]] [[pay-per-view]] event produced by the [[World Wrestling Entertainment|World Wrestling Federation]] (WWF). The event was held on March 29, 1987 at the [[Pontiac Silverdome]] in [[Pontiac, Michigan]].<ref name=slam/>
'''''Bananaphone''''' is the name of a children's [[album]] released in 1994. The title track's [[lyrics]] describes the bananaphone, a [[portmanteau]] of the words [[banana]] and [[telephone]]. The song uses many [[pun]]s such as "It's a phone with appeal!" (a peel) and [[nonce word]]s like "bananular" and "interactive-odular" as [[Raffi Cavoukian|Raffi]] extols the virtues of his unique telephone.


The event is particularly notable for the reported attendance of 93,173, the largest recorded attendance for a live indoor sporting event in North America and the largest paying crowd in the [[history of professional wrestling]].<ref name=slam/><ref name=factstats/><ref name=top10>{{cite web|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCO/is_6_4/ai_98249762| title=Mania madness: The top 10 matches from the fabled history of WWE's showcase event|last=Loria|first=Keith|publisher= Wrestling Digest|accessdate=2007-10-14|month=April | year=2003}}</ref> Though the attendance number is subject to dispute, the event is considered to be the pinnacle of the [[1980s wrestling boom]].<ref name=slam/><ref name=about>{{cite web|url= http://prowrestling.about.com/od/wrestlemania/p/wm3.htm|title=WrestleMania III|last=Cohen|first=Eric|publisher=About| accessdate=2007-10-19}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingGuestColumn/schramm_99may7.html|title=A history of crowds|last=Schramm|first=Chris|publisher=SLAM! Wrestling|accessdate=2007-07-27|date=1999-05-07}}</ref> Almost one million fans watched the event at 160 closed circuit locations in North America.<ref name=slam/> The number of people watching via pay-per-view was estimated at several million,<ref name=slam/> and pay-per-view revenues were estimated at $10 million.<ref>{{cite book|title=Ringside: A History of Professional Wrestling in America|first=Scott M.|last=Beekman|publisher= Greenwood Press|year=2006|isbn=027598401X|pages=pp. 128}}</ref>
== Internet popularity ==


==Background==
The song became an [[Internet meme]] when the [[flash animation]] [http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/166521 "Banana Phone"] was released on the website [[Newgrounds|Newgrounds.com]]. Since then, many fan-made music videos for the song have been created. The sped-up version has also been used in a flash movie featuring the badgers from another Internet meme, [[Badger Badger Badger]].
Like all other [[WrestleMania]] events, WrestleMania III was hyped for several months in advance. The main [[Feud (professional wrestling)|feud]] stemmed from [[André the Giant]]'s [[kayfabe]] turn and betrayal of his ally, the [[WWE Championship|WWF Champion]] [[Hulk Hogan]],<ref name=top21>{{cite web|url=http://www.wwe.com/shows/wrestlemania/history/top21| title=Top 22 Matches in WrestleMania History|publisher=WWE|accessdate=2007-10-17|month=March | year=2007}}</ref> which began when Hogan was presented a trophy for being the WWF Champion for three years,<ref name=bigone>{{cite web|url= http://www.wwe.com/inside/listthis/ruggedroadstomania/roadstomania1|title=The Big One|last=McAvennie|first=Mike|date=2007-03-30|accessdate=2007-10-19|publisher=WWE}}</ref> and André, his good friend, came out to congratulate him.<ref name=80s38>{{cite book|title=Main Event: WWE in the Raging 80s|last=Shields|first=Brian|publisher=Simon and Schuster|year=2006|isbn=1416532579| pages=pp. 38}}</ref> Shortly afterwards, André was presented a slightly smaller trophy for being "undefeated in the WWF for 15 years"<ref name=bigone/> and Hogan came out to congratulate André, but ended up being the focal point of the interview. Annoyed by this, André walked out during Hogan's congratulation speech and not long after that, on an edition of the interview segment ''[[Piper's Pit]]'', [[Bobby Heenan]], a long-time Hogan adversary, announced himself to be André's new [[Manager (professional wrestling)|manager]].<ref name=top25/> André then challenged Hogan to a title match at WrestleMania III and attacked Hogan, ripping off Hogan's T-shirt and crucifix necklace.<ref name=slam/><ref name=80s26/><ref name=80s38/>


Another main feud leading up to the event was between [[Ricky Steamboat]] and the [[WWE Intercontinental Championship|Intercontinental Champion]] [[Randy Savage]]. The feud began during a title match between the two when Savage attacked Steamboat as he greeted fans at ringside.<ref name=slam/> Savage then pushed Steamboat over the security rail and delivered an elbow shot that thrust Steamboat's throat into the rail, injuring his [[larynx]] and sending him to the hospital.<ref name=slam/><ref name=top21/> This resulted a long, bitter feud that lasted for six months, included several bloody match-ups and finally culminated at WrestleMania.<ref name=top10/> [[George Steele]] was in Steamboat's corner, having developed a crush on Savage's [[Manager (professional wrestling)#Managers vs. valets vs. enforcers|valet]], [[Miss Elizabeth]].<ref name=top25/>
On September 4, 2007, "Bananaphone" received what is thought to be its first ever full play on a commercial radio station when [[John Warburton]] played it on his [[breakfast]] show on [[96.2 The Revolution]] with the promise that it would cheer people up. A snippet of the song had previously been played on the show after being found by [[production assistant]] Jim Hall. Prior radio exposure of the song occurred in [[snippet]] form only and usually in a sped up version (in the manner of, for example, [[Alvin and the Chipmunks]]). This version became a staple in [[2004]] on ''[[The Opie & Anthony Show]]''. The show still uses it today, though rarely. Another snippet of "Bananaphone" is occasionally used at the end of some segments of ''[[The Colbert Report]]''.


[[Billy Jack Haynes]] and [[Ray Fernandez|Hercules Hernandez]]' feud started when Bobby Heenan continuously taunted Haynes, telling him that Hercules was the real master of the [[Professional wrestling holds#Full nelson|full nelson]]; which came to a boiling point when Hercules attacked Haynes on an edition of ''[[WWF Superstars of Wrestling|Superstars of Wrestling]]'', which led to their match at WrestleMania. This battle was advertised as the "Full Nelson Challenge."<ref name=wweresults/>
The sped-up version has been played during Cincinnati Reds radio broadcasts, in the event that the play-by-play team needs to take calls from the audience to kill time during rain delays.


Another heated feud leading up to this event was between [[Harley Race]] and the [[Junkyard Dog]]. When ''The WWF Wrestling Classic'' became the [[King of the Ring]] tournament, Harley Race went on to win the tournament and began referring to himself as "King" Harley Race, and coming to the ring in a royal crown and cape to the ceremonial accompaniment of the classical music piece "Great Gates of Kiev" by [[Modest Mussorgsky]].<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.wwe.com/superstars/halloffame/harleyrace/bio/|title=Hall of Fame Bio: Harley Race|publisher=WWE|accessdate=2007-10-17}}</ref> After each of his victories, Race forced his defeated opponent to "bow and kneel" before him. Usually, Race's manager, Bobby Heenan, forced the defeated opponent to "bow and kneel" by grabbing his hair.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.kayfabememories.com/Wrestlers/WLrace-2.htm|title=Harley Race Page 2|last=Owens|first=Chris| publisher=Kayfabe Memories|accessdate=2007-10-17}}</ref> Junkyard Dog protested Race's self-proclaimed monarchy in the WWF and stated there would never be a complete ruler in the WWF, which led to a match on the January 3, 1987 episode of ''[[WWE Saturday Night's Main Event|Saturday Night's Main Event]]'', in which the King and his manager both tried to make Junkyard Dog bow for them. This set the stage for the WrestleMania match, which included the stipulation that the loser had to bow to the winner.<ref name=wweresults>{{cite web|url=http://www.wwe.com/shows/wrestlemania/history/wm3/results/|title=WrestleMania III Results|publisher=WWE|accessdate=2007-10-17}}</ref>
==Track listing<ref>http://www.rounder.com/index.php?id=album.php&musicalGroupId=1006&catalog_id=3517</ref>==
#Bananaphone (Creber, Raffi) 3:12
#Shake a Toe (Creber, Raffi) 2:57
#The World We Love (Creber, Raffi) 3:23
#Slow Day (Creber, Raffi) 4:02
#The Changing Garden of Mr. Bell (Hubbard, [[Silversher & Silversher|Silversher]]) 4:07
#Naturally (Creber, Raffi) 3:04
#Spring Flowers [instrumental] (Raffi) 3:16
#C-A-N-A-D-A (Connors) 3:28
#Michael Row the Boat Ashore (Traditional) 3:25
#First Peoples (Creber, Raffi) 4:37
#Dee Myth [instrumental] (Raffi) 2:59
#Cowlit Night (Raffi) 3:16
#The Gorilla Song (Knowles, Knowles) 2:10
#Simple Gifts (Traditional) 2:51
#Down by the Riverside (Traditional) 3:13
#The Shmenge Polka [instrumental] (Raffi) 2:07


On January 26, 1987, the [[British Bulldogs]] lost the [[World Tag Team Championship (WWE)|WWF Tag Team Championship]] to [[The Hart Foundation]] in a match that saw the [[Dynamite Kid]] so debilitated that he was carried to the ring by [[Davey Boy Smith]] and did not see much physical action. [[Dan Marsh|Danny Davis]] was the [[Referee (professional wrestling)|referee]] and allowed The Hart Foundation to use illegal double-team maneuvers.<ref name=HartFoundation>{{cite web|url= http://www.wwe.com/inside/titlehistory/worldtagteam/30445413212221|title=Hart Foundation's first reign|publisher=WWE| accessdate=2007-07-26}}</ref> After being given some time off to recuperate, the Bulldogs continued their rivalry with The Hart Foundation when they teamed up with [[Tito Santana]] against the Foundation and the referee-turned-wrestler Danny Davis in a six-man tag team match at WrestleMania III.<ref name=wweresults/>
== References ==
{{Reflist}}


[[Rock music|Rock]] singer [[Alice Cooper]] was in [[Jake Roberts]]' corner during his match with [[The Honky Tonk Man]]. The Honky Tonk Man had attacked Roberts with a guitar on Roberts' interview segment ''The Snake Pit'', which [[Legit (professional wrestling)|legitimately]] injured Roberts' neck.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.wrestlinggonewrong.com/video/igw_jtsr.html|title=Honkey Tonk Man nearly kills Jake "The Snake" Roberts|publisher= Wrestling Gone Wrong|accessdate=2007-10-19}}</ref><ref name=mf228>{{cite book|last=Foley|first=Mick|title=Have A Nice Day: A Tale of Blood and Sweatsocks|publisher=HarperCollins|year=2000|isbn =0061031011|pages=pp. 288}}</ref> This event began Roberts' [[Turn (professional wrestling)|turn]] into a babyface as well as the feud between the wrestlers, which culminated in their WrestleMania match.
[[Category:Raffi albums]]
[[Category:1994 albums]]
[[Category:Internet memes]]


The feud between [[Adrian Adonis]] and [[Roddy Piper]] began when, following a leave of absence from the WWF, Piper returned to find his ''Piper's Pit'' segment replaced by ''The Flower Shop'', a segment hosted by then-effeminate wrestler Adrian Adonis.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://prowrestling.about.com/od/wrestlersnotinwweortna/p/roddypiper.htm|title=Roddy Piper Biography|last=Cohen|first=Eric|publisher=About|accessdate=2007-10-17}}</ref> Piper, who returned as a [[Face (professional wrestling)|face]], spent weeks crashing Adonis' show and trading insults, leading to a "showdown" between the two segments that ended with Piper being assaulted and humiliated by Adonis, Piper's former bodyguard [[Bob Orton, Jr.|"Cowboy" Bob Orton]], and [[Don Muraco]]. The trio left Piper with his face covered in red lipstick, lying in the middle of the remnants of the destroyed Piper's Pit set. In response, Piper stormed the set of Adonis' show and destroyed it with a baseball bat. This led to their [[professional wrestling match types#Luchas de Apuestas|Hair vs. Hair match]] at WrestleMania III, which was billed as Piper's retirement match from wrestling before becoming a full-time actor.<ref name=80s26/>
== External Links ==


==Event==
[http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/166521 The Banana Phone video on NewGrounds.]
{| class=wikitable style="font-size:90%; margin: 0.5em 0 0.5em 1em; float: right; clear: right;"
|+ '''Other on-screen talent'''
!style="background: #e3e3e3;" |Role:
!style="background: #e3e3e3;" |Name:
|-
|rowspan=3|Commentator
|[[Bobby Heenan|Bobby "The Brain" Heenan]]<br/>{{small|(Rougeaus/Dream Team match)}}
|-
|[[Gorilla Monsoon]]
|-
|[[Jesse Ventura]]
|-
|rowspan=5|Referee
|John Benella
|-
|[[Dave Hebner]]
|-
|Jack Kruger
|-
|Jack Lutz
|-
|[[Joey Marella]]
|-
|rowspan=4|Interviewer
|[[Mary Hart]]<ref name=celebs/>
|-
|[[Vince McMahon]]
|-
|[[Gene Okerlund|"Mean" Gene Okerlund]]
|-
|[[Bob Uecker]]<ref name=celebs/>
|-
|rowspan=2|Ring announcer
|[[Howard Finkel]]
|-
|[[Bob Uecker]]<ref name=slam/><ref name=celebs>{{cite web|url=http://www.wwe.com/shows/wrestlemania/history/wm3/celebrities/ |title=WrestleMania III Celebrities|publisher=WWE|accessdate=2007-10-14}}</ref>
|-
|Timekeeper
|Mary Hart<ref name=slam/>
|-
|Supporting
|[[Alice Cooper]]<ref name=slam/><ref name=celebs/><br/>{{small|(in [[Jake Roberts]]' corner)}}
|-
|Vocalist
|[[Aretha Franklin]]<ref name=slam/><ref name=celebs/>
|}

[[Vince McMahon]] claims that as he was about to announce "Welcome to WrestleMania III," he felt the spirit of his father [[Vincent J. McMahon]], who had died three years earlier. After he made that announcement he introduced [[Aretha Franklin]], who opened the show singing a rendition of "''[[America the Beautiful]]''."<ref name=celebs/>

The first match of the night was [[Can-Am Connection|The Can-Am Connection]] versus [[Bob Orton]] and [[Don Muraco|The Magnificent Muraco]]. This match ended when [[Rick Martel]] gave Don Muraco a [[Professional wrestling aerial techniques#Crossbody|high cross-body]] to get the win for his team.<ref name=slam/><ref name=results>{{cite web|url= http://www.prowrestlinghistory.com/supercards/usa/wwf/mania.html#III|title= WrestleMania III|publisher=Pro Wrestling History| accessdate=2007-10-13}}</ref>

The next match that aired was [[Ray Fernandez|Hercules]] (with [[Bobby Heenan]] in his corner) against [[Billy Jack Haynes]] in the "Full Nelson Challenge." The match ended when Haynes locked Hercules in the [[Professional wrestling holds#Full nelson|full nelson]] outside the ring and both were counted out.<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/> After the match, Bobby Heenan assaulted Haynes, and Haynes chased Heenan into the ring, where Hercules then assaulted Haynes with his chain before locking him in a full nelson of his own.<ref name=m87>{{cite web|url=http://www.ndg.lv/lapa/wrestling/WWF%2085-1999/m87.htm| title=Wrestlemania III Results|accessdate=2007-10-19}}</ref>

The [[Professional wrestling tag team match types#Mixed tag team match|Mixed Tag Team Match]] between [[King Kong Bundy]] and his [[Midget professional wrestler|midget]] team of [[Eric Tovey|Lord Littlebrook]] and [[Shigeri Akabane|Little Tokyo]] against [[Hillbilly Jim]] and his own midget team of [[Raymond Kessler|The Haiti Kid]] and [[Lionel Giroux|Little Beaver]] was next. King Kong Bundy's team was disqualified when Bundy attacked Little Beaver, because Bundy was not supposed to be in the ring with the midgets.<ref name=wweresults/>

The "Loser Must Bow" match between [[Junkyard Dog]] and King [[Harley Race]] followed. "Mean" [[Gene Okerlund]] was with Bobby Heenan, Harley Race, and [[The Fabulous Moolah]] in the ring, where Moolah predicted that Junkyard Dog would have to bow to the King as he is supposed to do.<ref name=m87/> Bobby gave Moolah the crown and told her to put it on the King's head after the match.<ref name=m87/> Junkyard Dog came out to the ring to a big ovation in the Silverdome.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.wwe.com/shows/wrestlemania/history/wm3/|title=WrestleMania III|publisher=WWE|accessdate=2007-10-19}}</ref> During the match, the two battled back and forth, and Harley Race gave the Junkyard Dog a [[Suplex#Belly to belly suplex|belly to belly suplex]] when he was distracted by Bobby Heenan to get the win. Due to the stipulation, He did a little bow (as he is supposed to, due to the pre-match stipulation) and then hit Harley Race with a steel chair. After attacking Race, Junkyard Dog took the King's royal robe and left the ring with it in hand.<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/>

The next match that aired was [[The Dream Team (professional wrestling)|The Dream Team]] against [[The Fabulous Rougeaus]]. [[Raymond Rougeau]] started off the match by locking up with [[Edward Leslie|Brutus Beefcake]]. The two men later tagged out, and [[Greg Valentine|Greg "The Hammer" Valentine]] brawled with [[Jacques Rougeau]] as [[Dino Bravo]] looked on from the outside of the ring. Raymond performed a [[Rear naked choke#"Sleeper Hold" in professional wrestling|sleeper hold]] on Valentine and was followed by Beefcake jumping off the ropes and accidentally hitting the Hammer with a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Double axe handle|double axe handle]]. The Rougeau Brothers gave Valentine a double team move, but the referee was arguing with Beefcake. The match ended when Dino Bravo jumped off the top rope and hit Raymond while he was pinning Valentine, where Valentine pinned him for the win.<ref name=m87/> The Dream Team argued for most of the match, which led to Greg Valentine and Dino Bravo departing together, without Beefcake.<ref name=factstats/>

Footage of an interview with [[Roddy Piper]] was aired as Piper made his way to the ring to face [[Adrian Adonis]], who was accompanied by [[Jimmy Hart]], in Piper's retirement match.<ref name=m87/> Piper and Adonis began the match by attacking each other with a belt. Adonis put a sleeper hold on Piper in the middle of the ring and released the hold thinking that he won the match. When Jimmy Hart got in the ring to celebrate with Adonis, Brutus Beefcake came to the ring to help Piper recover, and Piper attacked Adonis and performed a sleeper hold of his own.<ref name=80s49>{{cite book| title=Main Event: WWE in the Raging 80s|last=Shields|first=Brian|publisher=Simon and Schuster|year=2006|isbn=1416532579|pages= pp. 49}}</ref> Piper got the victory, and after the match was over, Brutus got in the ring and cut Adrian Adonis' hair as Piper held Jimmy Hart down.<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/> Adonis then ran from the ring in embarrassment.<ref name=80s49/>

Up next was a six-Man [[tag team]] match featuring [[Dan Marsh|Danny Davis]] and [[The Hart Foundation]] against [[British Bulldogs|The British Bulldogs]] and [[Tito Santana]], where the Bulldogs had many near-falls, yet [[Jim Neidhart]] broke up most of them. When all six wrestlers got in the ring, Danny Davis hit [[Davey Boy Smith]] with Jimmy Hart's [[megaphone]] and pinned him for the win.<ref name=m87/>

[[Butch Reed]]'s pay-per-view debut against [[Koko B. Ware|"The Bird Man" Koko B. Ware]], was the following match. Reed won the match with a rollup after a high cross-body from Koko. After the contest, Reed's manager [[Ken Johnson (wrestling)|Slick]] got in the ring and attacked Koko B. Ware, but Tito Santana quickly rushed to the ring and stopped Slick, ripped some of his clothes off, and retreated as Reed got back in the ring, only to get a [[Dropkick|double drop kick]] from Koko and Santana.

The next contest was a title match involving [[WWE Intercontinental Championship|WWF Intercontinental Champion]] [[Randy Savage]] and [[Ricky Steamboat]]. The match itself lasted for nearly fifteen minutes<ref name=top25/><ref name=top10/> At one point, Savage was about to use the ring bell as a weapon but was stopped by [[George Steele]], who knocked him off of the top rope.<ref name=top25/> When Savage attempted to give Steamboat a [[Professional wrestling throws#Scoop slam|scoop slam]], Steamboat reversed it into a [[Pin (professional wrestling)#Small package|small package]] to get the win and become the new WWF Intercontinental Champion,<ref name=top25/><ref name=top10/> marking the first time in WrestleMania history that the Intercontinental Championship changed hands.<ref name=factstats/><ref name=80s42>{{cite book|title=Main Event: WWE in the Raging 80s|first=Brian|last=Shields|publisher=Simon and Schuster|year=2006|isbn=1416532579| pages=pp. 42}}</ref> This match is considered by many to be one of the greatest matches in [[World Wrestling Entertainment]] history.<ref name=randy/><ref name=top25/><ref name=top10/><ref name=80s42/>

The tenth match of the night was between [[The Honky Tonk Man]] and [[Jake Roberts]], who had [[Alice Cooper]] in his corner. When Jake went for the [[DDT (professional wrestling)|DDT]], Honky Tonk Man's manager Jimmy Hart pulled Roberts' legs, and the Honky Tonk Man rolled up Roberts from behind, held on to the ropes, and pinned him for the win.<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/> After the match, Alice Cooper got in the ring and used Roberts' python Damien to attack Hart.<ref name=m87/>

The [[Iron Sheik]] and [[Nikolai Volkoff]] were in-action next against [[The Killer Bees (professional wrestling)|The Killer Bees]]. Slick asked all of the fans to rise to respect Nikolai Volkoff's singing of the [[National Anthem of the Soviet Union|Soviet National Anthem]], and when Volkoff began singing, [[Hacksaw Jim Duggan]] came to the ring with his [[Lumber|two-by-four]], which had an American flag attached to it, got on the microphone and said that Volkoff was not going to sing because America is the land of the free and the home of the brave.<ref name=m87/> While the match ensued, Duggan stayed at ringside. When The Iron Sheik locked a [[Professional wrestling holds#Camel clutch|camel clutch]] on one of the Killer Bees, Jim Duggan hit him with his two by four, resulting in a The Iron Sheik and Nikolai Volkoff winning the bout by [[Professional wrestling#disqualification|disqualification]].

[[Image:Hogan and Andre.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Andre the Giant applying a [[Professional wrestling holds#Bear hug|bear hug]] to Hulk Hogan in their WWF Championship match.]]
In what was billed as the "biggest main event in sports entertainment,"<ref name=main>{{cite web|url= http://www.wwe.com/shows/wrestlemania/history/wm3/mainevent/|title=WrestleMania III Main Event|publisher=WWE|accessdate=2007-10-14 }}</ref> the match pitted [[WWE Champion|WWF Champion]] [[Hulk Hogan]] defending the title against [[André the Giant]].<ref name=slam/> [[Howard Finkel]] introduced the guest ring announcer, [[Bob Uecker]], and the time keeper, [[Mary Hart]]. Bobby Heenan was in André the Giant's corner as he came to the ring. The fans booed André heavily, yet Hogan came to the ring to a huge ovation.<ref name=m87/> Approximately two minutes into the match, Hogan attempted to bodyslam André, but he was unable to lift the giant and nearly lost the match when Andre fell on him and apparently pinned him,<ref name=main/> but later on, André gave Hogan an Irish whip to the far side of the ring and attempted a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Big boot|big boot]] on Hogan, but Hogan gave André a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Clothesline|clothesline]] to take him down, and Hogan then [[Professional wrestling throws#Scoop slam|scoop slammed]] the 540-pound André and executed a [[leg drop]] to get the win and retain the championship.<ref name=top25/><ref name=ecw/><ref name=main/>

==Aftermath==
Because of the success of WrestleMania III and to capitalize on the feud between Hogan and André, the [[Survivor Series]] event was created.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://prowrestling.about.com/od/ringresults/a/survivorseries.htm|title=The History of the Survivor Series|publisher=About|accessdate=2008-01-03}}</ref>

Roddy Piper went on to film ''[[Hell Comes to Frogtown]]'' and ''[[They Live]]'' and then made sporadic appearances on television before finally returning to host a ''[[Piper's Pit]]'' segment at [[WrestleMania V]].<ref name=80s49/> He continued to be active in professional wrestling for more than a decade.<ref name=factstats/> André the Giant was absent for approximately a year, and later returned to wrestling, but only for the money and not for the glory.<ref name=top25/> The first televised match between Andre the Giant and Hulk Hogan after WrestleMania III was on [[WWF The Main Event#The Main Event I|The Main Event]] on [[NBC]] on February 5, 1988 and drew 33 million viewers, making it the most watched match in professional wrestling history.<ref name=top25/> The [[List of professional wrestling slang#A|angle]] surrounding this match was that after winning the match, André ended Hogan's four-year reign as champion with the help of a [[Screwjob (professional wrestling)|screwjob]] finish involving twin referees [[Earl Hebner|Earl]] and [[Dave Hebner]].<ref name=top25/><ref>{{cite book|title=Main Event: WWE in the Raging 80s|first=Brian|last=Shields|publisher=Simon and Schuster|year=2006|isbn=1416532579| pages=pp. 57}}</ref> Their feud culminated in a rematch at [[WrestleMania IV]] as part of a tournament to crown a new champion.<ref name=slam/><ref name=top25/>

Twenty years later, [[WrestleMania 23]] celebrated WrestleMania III by returning to the [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]] [[metropolitan area]], showing footage from WrestleMania III, having [[Aretha Franklin]] sing "''[[America the Beautiful]]''," and having [[Glen Jacobs|Kane]] scoop slam [[The Great Khali]].<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.onlineworldofwrestling.com/results/wweppv/wrestlemania23.html|title=WrestleMania 23|publisher=Online World of Wrestling|accessdate=2007-10-13}}</ref> Also in 2007, WrestleMania III was re-released on [[DVD]].<ref name=DVD>{{cite web|url= http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/Reviews/2007/05/07/4160986.html|title=WrestleMania III re-release OK, but not extraordinary|author=Matt McKinder|publisher=CANOE -- Slam! Sports|accessdate=2008-01-03}}</ref> The DVD included pre-WrestleMania interviews and matches, including the battle royal from ''Saturday Night's Main Event'' that Hercules won and optional pop-up trivia facts during the event.<ref name=DVD/>

== Results ==
{| style="font-size: 85%; text-align: left;" class="wikitable sortable" width="100%"
|-
!style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|'''#'''
!style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|'''Results'''
!style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|'''Stipulations'''
!style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|'''Times'''
|-
|-
|1
|The [[Can-Am Connection]] ([[Rick Martel]] and [[Tom Zenk]]) defeated [[Bob Orton, Jr.|Bob Orton]] and [[Don Muraco|The Magnificent Muraco]] (with [[Harry Fujiwara|Mr. Fuji]]).<ref name=slam/><ref name=results>{{cite web|url= http://www.prowrestlinghistory.com/supercards/usa/wwf/mania.html#III|title=WrestleMania III|publisher=Pro Wrestling History| accessdate=2007-10-13}}</ref>
|[[Tag team]] match
|05:37
|-
|2
|[[Billy Jack Haynes]] and [[Ray Fernandez|Hercules]] (with [[Bobby Heenan]]) fought to a [[Professional wrestling#Countout|double countout]].<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/>
|[[Professional wrestling match types#Variations of singles matches|Singles match]]
|07:44
|-
|3
|[[Hillbilly Jim]], [[Raymond Kessler|The Haiti Kid]] and [[Lionel Giroux|Little Beaver]] defeated [[King Kong Bundy]], [[Shigeri Akabane|Little Tokyo]] and [[Eric Tovey|Lord Littlebrook]] by [[Professional wrestling#Disqualification|disqualification]].<ref name=slam/><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.100megsfree4.com/wiawrestling/pages/wwf/wwfwm.htm|title=WrestleMania PPV Cards|publisher=Wrestling Information Archive|accessdate=2007-10-13}}</ref>
|[[Professional wrestling tag team match types#Mixed tag team match|Mixed tag team match]]
|03:23
|-
|4
|[[Harley Race]] (with [[Bobby Heenan]] and [[The Fabulous Moolah]]) defeated The [[Junkyard Dog]].<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/>
|Loser Must Bow match
|04:22
|-
|5
|[[The Dream Team (professional wrestling)|The Dream Team]] ([[Greg Valentine]] and [[Edward Leslie|Brutus Beefcake]]) (with [[John L. Sullivan (wrestler)|Johnny Valiant]] and [[Dino Bravo]]) defeated [[The Fabulous Rougeaus]] ([[Jacques Rougeau|Jacques]] and [[Raymond Rougeau|Raymond]]).<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/>
|Tag team match
|04:03
|-
|6
|[[Roddy Piper]] defeated [[Adrian Adonis]] (with [[Jimmy Hart]]).<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/>
|[[professional wrestling match types#Luchas de Apuestas|Hair vs. Hair match]]
|06:54
|-
|7
|[[The Hart Foundation]] ([[Bret Hart]] and [[Jim Neidhart]]) and [[Dan Marsh|Danny Davis]] (with [[Jimmy Hart]]) defeated The [[British Bulldogs]] ([[Davey Boy Smith]] and The [[Dynamite Kid]]) and [[Tito Santana]].<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/>
|6-man tag team match
|08:52
|-
|8
|[[Butch Reed]] (with [[Ken Johnson (wrestling)|Slick]]) defeated [[Koko B. Ware]].<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/>
|Singles match
|03:39
|-
|9
|[[Ricky Steamboat]] (with [[George Steele]]) defeated [[Randy Savage]] (c) (with [[Miss Elizabeth]]).<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/>
|Singles match for the [[WWE Intercontinental Championship|WWF Intercontinental Championship]]
|14:35
|-
|10
|[[The Honky Tonk Man]] (with [[Jimmy Hart]]) defeated [[Jake Roberts]] (with [[Alice Cooper]]).<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/>
|Singles match
|07:04
|-
|11
|The [[Iron Sheik]] and [[Nikolai Volkoff]] (with [[Ken Johnson (wrestling)|Slick]]) defeated [[The Killer Bees (wrestling)|The Killer Bees]] ([[Brian Blair]] and [[James Brunzell|Jim Brunzell]]) by disqualification.<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/>
|Tag team match
|05:44
|-
|12
|[[Hulk Hogan]] (c) defeated [[André the Giant]] (with [[Bobby Heenan]]).<ref name=slam/><ref name=results/>
|Singles match for the [[WWE Championship|WWF Championship]]
|12:01
|-
|}

==References==
{{Reflist|2}}

==Further reading==
*{{cite book|last=Shields|first=Brian|title=Main Event: WWE in the Raging 80s|publisher=Pocket Books|year=2006|isbn=978-1-4165-3257-6 }}

== External links ==
{{Portal|Professional wrestling|break=yes}}
*[http://www.wwe.com/shows/wrestlemania/history/wm3/ The Official Website of WrestleMania III]
*[http://www.wwe.com/shows/wrestlemania/history/wm3/factsstats/ WrestleMania III Facts/Stats]

{{WWEPPV|WrestleMania}}

[[Category:1987 in professional wrestling]]
[[Category:Sports in Michigan]]
[[Category:Pontiac, Michigan]]
[[Category:WrestleMania|WrestleMania 03]]

[[es:WrestleMania III]]
[[fr:WrestleMania III]]
[[it:WWF WrestleMania III]]
[[pt:WrestleMania III]]
[[ro:WrestleMania III]]
[[ru:Рестлмания III (реслинг)]]
[[sm:WrestleMania III]]
[[simple:WrestleMania III]]

Revision as of 23:41, 10 October 2008

WrestleMania III
File:WMIII.JPG
PromotionWorld Wrestling Federation
DateMarch 29, 1987[1]
CityPontiac, Michigan[1]
VenuePontiac Silverdome[1]
Attendance93,173[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Tagline(s)Bigger, Better, Badder
Pay-per-view chronology
← Previous
WrestleMania 2
Next →
Survivor Series (1987)
WrestleMania chronology
← Previous
WrestleMania 2
Next →
WrestleMania IV

WrestleMania III was the third annual WrestleMania professional wrestling pay-per-view event produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). The event was held on March 29, 1987 at the Pontiac Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan.[1]

The event is particularly notable for the reported attendance of 93,173, the largest recorded attendance for a live indoor sporting event in North America and the largest paying crowd in the history of professional wrestling.[1][2][7] Though the attendance number is subject to dispute, the event is considered to be the pinnacle of the 1980s wrestling boom.[1][8][9] Almost one million fans watched the event at 160 closed circuit locations in North America.[1] The number of people watching via pay-per-view was estimated at several million,[1] and pay-per-view revenues were estimated at $10 million.[10]

Background

Like all other WrestleMania events, WrestleMania III was hyped for several months in advance. The main feud stemmed from André the Giant's kayfabe turn and betrayal of his ally, the WWF Champion Hulk Hogan,[11] which began when Hogan was presented a trophy for being the WWF Champion for three years,[12] and André, his good friend, came out to congratulate him.[13] Shortly afterwards, André was presented a slightly smaller trophy for being "undefeated in the WWF for 15 years"[12] and Hogan came out to congratulate André, but ended up being the focal point of the interview. Annoyed by this, André walked out during Hogan's congratulation speech and not long after that, on an edition of the interview segment Piper's Pit, Bobby Heenan, a long-time Hogan adversary, announced himself to be André's new manager.[4] André then challenged Hogan to a title match at WrestleMania III and attacked Hogan, ripping off Hogan's T-shirt and crucifix necklace.[1][5][13]

Another main feud leading up to the event was between Ricky Steamboat and the Intercontinental Champion Randy Savage. The feud began during a title match between the two when Savage attacked Steamboat as he greeted fans at ringside.[1] Savage then pushed Steamboat over the security rail and delivered an elbow shot that thrust Steamboat's throat into the rail, injuring his larynx and sending him to the hospital.[1][11] This resulted a long, bitter feud that lasted for six months, included several bloody match-ups and finally culminated at WrestleMania.[7] George Steele was in Steamboat's corner, having developed a crush on Savage's valet, Miss Elizabeth.[4]

Billy Jack Haynes and Hercules Hernandez' feud started when Bobby Heenan continuously taunted Haynes, telling him that Hercules was the real master of the full nelson; which came to a boiling point when Hercules attacked Haynes on an edition of Superstars of Wrestling, which led to their match at WrestleMania. This battle was advertised as the "Full Nelson Challenge."[14]

Another heated feud leading up to this event was between Harley Race and the Junkyard Dog. When The WWF Wrestling Classic became the King of the Ring tournament, Harley Race went on to win the tournament and began referring to himself as "King" Harley Race, and coming to the ring in a royal crown and cape to the ceremonial accompaniment of the classical music piece "Great Gates of Kiev" by Modest Mussorgsky.[15] After each of his victories, Race forced his defeated opponent to "bow and kneel" before him. Usually, Race's manager, Bobby Heenan, forced the defeated opponent to "bow and kneel" by grabbing his hair.[16] Junkyard Dog protested Race's self-proclaimed monarchy in the WWF and stated there would never be a complete ruler in the WWF, which led to a match on the January 3, 1987 episode of Saturday Night's Main Event, in which the King and his manager both tried to make Junkyard Dog bow for them. This set the stage for the WrestleMania match, which included the stipulation that the loser had to bow to the winner.[14]

On January 26, 1987, the British Bulldogs lost the WWF Tag Team Championship to The Hart Foundation in a match that saw the Dynamite Kid so debilitated that he was carried to the ring by Davey Boy Smith and did not see much physical action. Danny Davis was the referee and allowed The Hart Foundation to use illegal double-team maneuvers.[17] After being given some time off to recuperate, the Bulldogs continued their rivalry with The Hart Foundation when they teamed up with Tito Santana against the Foundation and the referee-turned-wrestler Danny Davis in a six-man tag team match at WrestleMania III.[14]

Rock singer Alice Cooper was in Jake Roberts' corner during his match with The Honky Tonk Man. The Honky Tonk Man had attacked Roberts with a guitar on Roberts' interview segment The Snake Pit, which legitimately injured Roberts' neck.[18][19] This event began Roberts' turn into a babyface as well as the feud between the wrestlers, which culminated in their WrestleMania match.

The feud between Adrian Adonis and Roddy Piper began when, following a leave of absence from the WWF, Piper returned to find his Piper's Pit segment replaced by The Flower Shop, a segment hosted by then-effeminate wrestler Adrian Adonis.[20] Piper, who returned as a face, spent weeks crashing Adonis' show and trading insults, leading to a "showdown" between the two segments that ended with Piper being assaulted and humiliated by Adonis, Piper's former bodyguard "Cowboy" Bob Orton, and Don Muraco. The trio left Piper with his face covered in red lipstick, lying in the middle of the remnants of the destroyed Piper's Pit set. In response, Piper stormed the set of Adonis' show and destroyed it with a baseball bat. This led to their Hair vs. Hair match at WrestleMania III, which was billed as Piper's retirement match from wrestling before becoming a full-time actor.[5]

Event

Other on-screen talent
Role: Name:
Commentator Bobby "The Brain" Heenan
(Rougeaus/Dream Team match)
Gorilla Monsoon
Jesse Ventura
Referee John Benella
Dave Hebner
Jack Kruger
Jack Lutz
Joey Marella
Interviewer Mary Hart[21]
Vince McMahon
"Mean" Gene Okerlund
Bob Uecker[21]
Ring announcer Howard Finkel
Bob Uecker[1][21]
Timekeeper Mary Hart[1]
Supporting Alice Cooper[1][21]
(in Jake Roberts' corner)
Vocalist Aretha Franklin[1][21]

Vince McMahon claims that as he was about to announce "Welcome to WrestleMania III," he felt the spirit of his father Vincent J. McMahon, who had died three years earlier. After he made that announcement he introduced Aretha Franklin, who opened the show singing a rendition of "America the Beautiful."[21]

The first match of the night was The Can-Am Connection versus Bob Orton and The Magnificent Muraco. This match ended when Rick Martel gave Don Muraco a high cross-body to get the win for his team.[1][22]

The next match that aired was Hercules (with Bobby Heenan in his corner) against Billy Jack Haynes in the "Full Nelson Challenge." The match ended when Haynes locked Hercules in the full nelson outside the ring and both were counted out.[1][22] After the match, Bobby Heenan assaulted Haynes, and Haynes chased Heenan into the ring, where Hercules then assaulted Haynes with his chain before locking him in a full nelson of his own.[23]

The Mixed Tag Team Match between King Kong Bundy and his midget team of Lord Littlebrook and Little Tokyo against Hillbilly Jim and his own midget team of The Haiti Kid and Little Beaver was next. King Kong Bundy's team was disqualified when Bundy attacked Little Beaver, because Bundy was not supposed to be in the ring with the midgets.[14]

The "Loser Must Bow" match between Junkyard Dog and King Harley Race followed. "Mean" Gene Okerlund was with Bobby Heenan, Harley Race, and The Fabulous Moolah in the ring, where Moolah predicted that Junkyard Dog would have to bow to the King as he is supposed to do.[23] Bobby gave Moolah the crown and told her to put it on the King's head after the match.[23] Junkyard Dog came out to the ring to a big ovation in the Silverdome.[24] During the match, the two battled back and forth, and Harley Race gave the Junkyard Dog a belly to belly suplex when he was distracted by Bobby Heenan to get the win. Due to the stipulation, He did a little bow (as he is supposed to, due to the pre-match stipulation) and then hit Harley Race with a steel chair. After attacking Race, Junkyard Dog took the King's royal robe and left the ring with it in hand.[1][22]

The next match that aired was The Dream Team against The Fabulous Rougeaus. Raymond Rougeau started off the match by locking up with Brutus Beefcake. The two men later tagged out, and Greg "The Hammer" Valentine brawled with Jacques Rougeau as Dino Bravo looked on from the outside of the ring. Raymond performed a sleeper hold on Valentine and was followed by Beefcake jumping off the ropes and accidentally hitting the Hammer with a double axe handle. The Rougeau Brothers gave Valentine a double team move, but the referee was arguing with Beefcake. The match ended when Dino Bravo jumped off the top rope and hit Raymond while he was pinning Valentine, where Valentine pinned him for the win.[23] The Dream Team argued for most of the match, which led to Greg Valentine and Dino Bravo departing together, without Beefcake.[2]

Footage of an interview with Roddy Piper was aired as Piper made his way to the ring to face Adrian Adonis, who was accompanied by Jimmy Hart, in Piper's retirement match.[23] Piper and Adonis began the match by attacking each other with a belt. Adonis put a sleeper hold on Piper in the middle of the ring and released the hold thinking that he won the match. When Jimmy Hart got in the ring to celebrate with Adonis, Brutus Beefcake came to the ring to help Piper recover, and Piper attacked Adonis and performed a sleeper hold of his own.[25] Piper got the victory, and after the match was over, Brutus got in the ring and cut Adrian Adonis' hair as Piper held Jimmy Hart down.[1][22] Adonis then ran from the ring in embarrassment.[25]

Up next was a six-Man tag team match featuring Danny Davis and The Hart Foundation against The British Bulldogs and Tito Santana, where the Bulldogs had many near-falls, yet Jim Neidhart broke up most of them. When all six wrestlers got in the ring, Danny Davis hit Davey Boy Smith with Jimmy Hart's megaphone and pinned him for the win.[23]

Butch Reed's pay-per-view debut against "The Bird Man" Koko B. Ware, was the following match. Reed won the match with a rollup after a high cross-body from Koko. After the contest, Reed's manager Slick got in the ring and attacked Koko B. Ware, but Tito Santana quickly rushed to the ring and stopped Slick, ripped some of his clothes off, and retreated as Reed got back in the ring, only to get a double drop kick from Koko and Santana.

The next contest was a title match involving WWF Intercontinental Champion Randy Savage and Ricky Steamboat. The match itself lasted for nearly fifteen minutes[4][7] At one point, Savage was about to use the ring bell as a weapon but was stopped by George Steele, who knocked him off of the top rope.[4] When Savage attempted to give Steamboat a scoop slam, Steamboat reversed it into a small package to get the win and become the new WWF Intercontinental Champion,[4][7] marking the first time in WrestleMania history that the Intercontinental Championship changed hands.[2][26] This match is considered by many to be one of the greatest matches in World Wrestling Entertainment history.[3][4][7][26]

The tenth match of the night was between The Honky Tonk Man and Jake Roberts, who had Alice Cooper in his corner. When Jake went for the DDT, Honky Tonk Man's manager Jimmy Hart pulled Roberts' legs, and the Honky Tonk Man rolled up Roberts from behind, held on to the ropes, and pinned him for the win.[1][22] After the match, Alice Cooper got in the ring and used Roberts' python Damien to attack Hart.[23]

The Iron Sheik and Nikolai Volkoff were in-action next against The Killer Bees. Slick asked all of the fans to rise to respect Nikolai Volkoff's singing of the Soviet National Anthem, and when Volkoff began singing, Hacksaw Jim Duggan came to the ring with his two-by-four, which had an American flag attached to it, got on the microphone and said that Volkoff was not going to sing because America is the land of the free and the home of the brave.[23] While the match ensued, Duggan stayed at ringside. When The Iron Sheik locked a camel clutch on one of the Killer Bees, Jim Duggan hit him with his two by four, resulting in a The Iron Sheik and Nikolai Volkoff winning the bout by disqualification.

Andre the Giant applying a bear hug to Hulk Hogan in their WWF Championship match.

In what was billed as the "biggest main event in sports entertainment,"[27] the match pitted WWF Champion Hulk Hogan defending the title against André the Giant.[1] Howard Finkel introduced the guest ring announcer, Bob Uecker, and the time keeper, Mary Hart. Bobby Heenan was in André the Giant's corner as he came to the ring. The fans booed André heavily, yet Hogan came to the ring to a huge ovation.[23] Approximately two minutes into the match, Hogan attempted to bodyslam André, but he was unable to lift the giant and nearly lost the match when Andre fell on him and apparently pinned him,[27] but later on, André gave Hogan an Irish whip to the far side of the ring and attempted a big boot on Hogan, but Hogan gave André a clothesline to take him down, and Hogan then scoop slammed the 540-pound André and executed a leg drop to get the win and retain the championship.[4][6][27]

Aftermath

Because of the success of WrestleMania III and to capitalize on the feud between Hogan and André, the Survivor Series event was created.[28]

Roddy Piper went on to film Hell Comes to Frogtown and They Live and then made sporadic appearances on television before finally returning to host a Piper's Pit segment at WrestleMania V.[25] He continued to be active in professional wrestling for more than a decade.[2] André the Giant was absent for approximately a year, and later returned to wrestling, but only for the money and not for the glory.[4] The first televised match between Andre the Giant and Hulk Hogan after WrestleMania III was on The Main Event on NBC on February 5, 1988 and drew 33 million viewers, making it the most watched match in professional wrestling history.[4] The angle surrounding this match was that after winning the match, André ended Hogan's four-year reign as champion with the help of a screwjob finish involving twin referees Earl and Dave Hebner.[4][29] Their feud culminated in a rematch at WrestleMania IV as part of a tournament to crown a new champion.[1][4]

Twenty years later, WrestleMania 23 celebrated WrestleMania III by returning to the Detroit metropolitan area, showing footage from WrestleMania III, having Aretha Franklin sing "America the Beautiful," and having Kane scoop slam The Great Khali.[30] Also in 2007, WrestleMania III was re-released on DVD.[31] The DVD included pre-WrestleMania interviews and matches, including the battle royal from Saturday Night's Main Event that Hercules won and optional pop-up trivia facts during the event.[31]

Results

# Results Stipulations Times
1 The Can-Am Connection (Rick Martel and Tom Zenk) defeated Bob Orton and The Magnificent Muraco (with Mr. Fuji).[1][22] Tag team match 05:37
2 Billy Jack Haynes and Hercules (with Bobby Heenan) fought to a double countout.[1][22] Singles match 07:44
3 Hillbilly Jim, The Haiti Kid and Little Beaver defeated King Kong Bundy, Little Tokyo and Lord Littlebrook by disqualification.[1][32] Mixed tag team match 03:23
4 Harley Race (with Bobby Heenan and The Fabulous Moolah) defeated The Junkyard Dog.[1][22] Loser Must Bow match 04:22
5 The Dream Team (Greg Valentine and Brutus Beefcake) (with Johnny Valiant and Dino Bravo) defeated The Fabulous Rougeaus (Jacques and Raymond).[1][22] Tag team match 04:03
6 Roddy Piper defeated Adrian Adonis (with Jimmy Hart).[1][22] Hair vs. Hair match 06:54
7 The Hart Foundation (Bret Hart and Jim Neidhart) and Danny Davis (with Jimmy Hart) defeated The British Bulldogs (Davey Boy Smith and The Dynamite Kid) and Tito Santana.[1][22] 6-man tag team match 08:52
8 Butch Reed (with Slick) defeated Koko B. Ware.[1][22] Singles match 03:39
9 Ricky Steamboat (with George Steele) defeated Randy Savage (c) (with Miss Elizabeth).[1][22] Singles match for the WWF Intercontinental Championship 14:35
10 The Honky Tonk Man (with Jimmy Hart) defeated Jake Roberts (with Alice Cooper).[1][22] Singles match 07:04
11 The Iron Sheik and Nikolai Volkoff (with Slick) defeated The Killer Bees (Brian Blair and Jim Brunzell) by disqualification.[1][22] Tag team match 05:44
12 Hulk Hogan (c) defeated André the Giant (with Bobby Heenan).[1][22] Singles match for the WWF Championship 12:01

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai Powell, John. "Steamboat - Savage rule WrestleMania 3". SLAM! Wrestling. Retrieved 2007-10-14.
  2. ^ a b c d e "WrestleMania III Facts and Stats". WWE. Retrieved 2007-10-14.
  3. ^ a b Yandek, Chris (2003). "Interview: Randy Savage". Wrestling Digest. Retrieved 2007-10-14. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Eck, Kevin (2002). "The main events: ladies and gentlemen, may we present the 25 most memorable matches in the last 25 years". Wrestling Digest. Retrieved 2007-10-14. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  5. ^ a b c Shields, Brian (2006). Main Event: WWE in the Raging 80s. Simon and Schuster. pp. pp. 26. ISBN 1416532579. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  6. ^ a b Loverro, Thom (2006). The Rise & Fall of ECW: Extreme Championship Wrestling. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 1416510583.
  7. ^ a b c d e Loria, Keith (2003). "Mania madness: The top 10 matches from the fabled history of WWE's showcase event". Wrestling Digest. Retrieved 2007-10-14. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  8. ^ Cohen, Eric. "WrestleMania III". About. Retrieved 2007-10-19.
  9. ^ Schramm, Chris (1999-05-07). "A history of crowds". SLAM! Wrestling. Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  10. ^ Beekman, Scott M. (2006). Ringside: A History of Professional Wrestling in America. Greenwood Press. pp. pp. 128. ISBN 027598401X. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  11. ^ a b "Top 22 Matches in WrestleMania History". WWE. 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-17. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  12. ^ a b McAvennie, Mike (2007-03-30). "The Big One". WWE. Retrieved 2007-10-19.
  13. ^ a b Shields, Brian (2006). Main Event: WWE in the Raging 80s. Simon and Schuster. pp. pp. 38. ISBN 1416532579. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  14. ^ a b c d "WrestleMania III Results". WWE. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
  15. ^ "Hall of Fame Bio: Harley Race". WWE. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
  16. ^ Owens, Chris. "Harley Race Page 2". Kayfabe Memories. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
  17. ^ "Hart Foundation's first reign". WWE. Retrieved 2007-07-26.
  18. ^ "Honkey Tonk Man nearly kills Jake "The Snake" Roberts". Wrestling Gone Wrong. Retrieved 2007-10-19.
  19. ^ Foley, Mick (2000). Have A Nice Day: A Tale of Blood and Sweatsocks. HarperCollins. pp. pp. 288. ISBN 0061031011. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  20. ^ Cohen, Eric. "Roddy Piper Biography". About. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
  21. ^ a b c d e f "WrestleMania III Celebrities". WWE. Retrieved 2007-10-14.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "WrestleMania III". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved 2007-10-13. Cite error: The named reference "results" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Wrestlemania III Results". Retrieved 2007-10-19.
  24. ^ "WrestleMania III". WWE. Retrieved 2007-10-19.
  25. ^ a b c Shields, Brian (2006). Main Event: WWE in the Raging 80s. Simon and Schuster. pp. pp. 49. ISBN 1416532579. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  26. ^ a b Shields, Brian (2006). Main Event: WWE in the Raging 80s. Simon and Schuster. pp. pp. 42. ISBN 1416532579. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  27. ^ a b c "WrestleMania III Main Event". WWE. Retrieved 2007-10-14.
  28. ^ "The History of the Survivor Series". About. Retrieved 2008-01-03.
  29. ^ Shields, Brian (2006). Main Event: WWE in the Raging 80s. Simon and Schuster. pp. pp. 57. ISBN 1416532579. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  30. ^ "WrestleMania 23". Online World of Wrestling. Retrieved 2007-10-13.
  31. ^ a b Matt McKinder. "WrestleMania III re-release OK, but not extraordinary". CANOE -- Slam! Sports. Retrieved 2008-01-03.
  32. ^ "WrestleMania PPV Cards". Wrestling Information Archive. Retrieved 2007-10-13.

Further reading

External links