Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThe first ever Royal Rumble battle royal, a staggered battle royal with a new participant every 2 minutes. Also: WWF Women's Tag Team Championship (2 out of 3 falls) : The Jumping Bomb Angel... Leggi tuttoThe first ever Royal Rumble battle royal, a staggered battle royal with a new participant every 2 minutes. Also: WWF Women's Tag Team Championship (2 out of 3 falls) : The Jumping Bomb Angels vs. The Glamour Girls, 2 our of 3 Falls Match: The Islanders vs. The Young Stallians, Ri... Leggi tuttoThe first ever Royal Rumble battle royal, a staggered battle royal with a new participant every 2 minutes. Also: WWF Women's Tag Team Championship (2 out of 3 falls) : The Jumping Bomb Angels vs. The Glamour Girls, 2 our of 3 Falls Match: The Islanders vs. The Young Stallians, Ricky Steamboat vs. Rick Rude, & the contract signing for the Hulk Hogan/Andre the Giant rem... Leggi tutto
Recensioni in evidenza
In what would be far from the only incidence of tactical booking, the first Royal Rumble event took place on the 24th of January 1988 in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. On the same night, Jim Crockett Promotions aired the Bunkhouse Stampede PPV. Overall, this feels much more like a filmed house show, rather than a true event and there are some aspects of it that are so staggeringly boring I'm surprised the Canadian's didn't riot.
The show does open well though, with a match between Ravishing Rick Rude and Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat. This is a pretty good stuff until the messy ending, which saw Rude get disqualified but not realise and believe that he had won for a considerable amount of time after the bell. Again, it's the sort of match that works well on a house show, but only with a feud that's planned to continue.
Then we have Dino Bravo lifting weights ahead of attempting the Bench Press World record. This goes on for hours, as they gradually add the weights on. Despite his Canadian status, the crowd hate Bravo and ignore his pleas for silence. He eventually does "break the record" but only with Ventura's help. In my dark moments, I fear that I might be asleep and dreaming of a life where this was over, but will eventually have to wake up to forty more interminable minutes of it.
The Jumping Bomb Angels (Noriyo Tateno and Itsuki Tamazaki) beat The Glamour Girls (Judy Martin and Leilani Kai) for the WWF Womens tag team Championships in a two out of three falls match. This was a little sloppy, but the Jumping Bomb Angels are doing some stuff that even the most athletically gifted male performers in the WWF weren't doing at the time. It says something about the standing of the match though that Vince McMahon hasn't bothered to learn the individual names of the Angels, despite putting his title on them.
Hogan and Andre sign the contract for their rematch after WrestleMania 3. This also takes a long time and Ted DiBiase is left to fill time repeating his questions as either Hogan or Andre, or both, miss their cues.
Then there's the Rumble itself. They don't have the presentation quite right yet. The countdown is inconsistent, and the buzzer is missing. They do cut to picture in picture to show the entrant through, which is nice. The actual match is a mixed bag of older guys and a couple of people on the rise, like Bret Hart, Jake Roberts and The Ultimate Warrior - it's the One Man Gang that distinguishes himself as the one to beat though, which eventually Jim Duggan does.
There's still half and hour to go on the show though? There's another match and it's again two our of three falls, this time between The Islanders (Haku and Tama) and The Young Stallions (Paul Roma and Jim Powers). This was slow and dull and there's an injury to Paul Roma that see's the Islanders run out a dominant 2 - 0 victory.
The show is still not over though, as then, with a rapidly emptying stadium around them, Vince and Jessie recap the show. It's looks terrible and I can see why they didn't continue to do this NFL style wrap up for long.
I mean, it's nice for a completist point of view - but this is very much not what the event would be in just a few years' time and it's hard to recommend this particular show.
The event itself was wonderful, great matches, and a showcase of the talent which would emerge to be legendary and house hould names in WWF: Bret "Hitman" Hart, "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan , Jake "The Snake", The "Magnificent" Morocco and Honky Tonk Man to name a few.
First Rumble to be won by the "Hacksaw" and one of the best. Not even released on video, but several copies exist, if anyone's interested.
The first and start of a classic "WWE" annual event, as Hacksaw(Hi Oh!) wins the first Royal Rumble!
The 88 Royal Rumble had it teases as it featured bad guy Dino Bravo trying to break the world bench press record(you make the call I believe he got a little help from ex wrestler and bad guy commentator Jesse Ventura). And the program featured a contract signing for a world title rematch between Hulk Hogan and Andre the Giant.
Other undercard matches were pretty good as the opening grudge match was full of action between Ricky the Dragon Steamboat and the now late Rick Rude, which ended in a DQ victory for the Dragon. And two tag matches that involved winner take two out of three falls, the last match(which was oddly after the main attraction of the Royal Rumble battle) a tag match that featured the Islanders winning against the injured duo of the Young Stallions. And very memorable and exciting high flying fun was the second match that being a women's world tag team championship match between The Glamour Girls and The Jumping Bomb Angels. As the Japanese duo angels(who were attractive and could do some athletic moves) would become world tag team champs, really this match was a wild card treat. Overall well done "WWF" event the classic first one which started the yearly tradition of "The Royal Rumble".
Lo sapevi?
- QuizDuring the event, Dino Bravo made a world record attempt to bench press 715 lbs. Bravo was successful but with the help of spotter Jesse "The Body" Ventura.
- BlooperDuring the Ricky Steamboat/Rick Rude match, there is a spot where Rude has Steamboat in a sleeper hold. The referee raises Steamboat's arm three times and it drops three times which should result in Rude winning the match. Commentator Jesse Ventura even points this out. Confused, the referee raises his hand one more time, Steamboat gets out of the hold, and the match continues.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Dark Side of the Ring: The Last Ride of the Road Warriors (2020)
- Colonne sonoreLa Marseillaise
Written by Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 2h 24min(144 min)
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