Forgotten Favorites 05.07.09: King of the Ring 2001 - Kurt Angle vs. Shane McMahon
Posted by Jim Grimm on 05.07.2009
The Olympian wrestled twice before stepping in the ring with Shane'O Mac. Did the gold medallist have anything left in the tank, or would the new WCW owner walk out victorious?
Welcome back, wrestling fans.
If this is your first time here, beware. I have a tendency to blow many fans' minds by offering a wealth of trivial wrestling information. You have been warned. And oh yeah, this might help:
The evil master of wrestling history, who rules from his titanic towers of evil, takes great joy in robbing his followers of cherished memories. He has even gone so far as to wave his billion-dollar wand on more than one occasion in an attempt to completely erase particular pockets of time. Well, we, the people, have refused to stand for such injustices, and as a result, I have been called upon to right the wrongs of time.
This week I'm prepared to take heat for covering this match. But I stand by this match as one that WWE has failed to properly acknowledge over the years, regardless of its cult status with die-hard fans.
And so I ask, who wants great wrestling?
King of the Ring - June 24, 2001 Street Fight
Kurt Angle vs. Shane McMahon
HOW IT WENT DOWN
The May 31st, 2001 edition of WWE SmackDown is regarded as having showcased one of the best matches of the last ten years. On that night, Steve Austin defended the WWE Title against Chris Benoit in his hometown of Edmonton, Alberta. However, what also occurred that night that gets way less attention was the beginnings of a serious rivalry. A serious rivalry that would result in one hell of a serious match in just a few short weeks.
Before Austin and Benoit tore the house down, Kurt Angle and Chris Jericho stepped into the ring for an awesome encounter of their own. Jericho and Benoit had recently been a thorn in the side of Vince McMahon and his beloved freshly-heeled Steve Austin, so the ever-loyal company-man Kurt Angle stepped up for his boss to put Jericho in his place. However, another of Vince's foes would make his presence known in the Angle-Jericho match, when Shane McMahon, the brand new owner of WCW, interfered on Jericho's behalf. Following the match, a livid Olympian stormed into Commissioner William Regal's office and demanded a match with Shane McMahon at the upcoming King of the Ring PPV.
The following week on Raw, Angle paid a follow-up visit to Regal, ensuring that his match with Shane was a done deal. Regal made everything official, and Angle declared that not only would he crush the new WCW owner at KOTR, but he'd also become the first ever repeat KOTR Tournament winner. Later that night, Angle displayed his superiority over the world when he teamed with the Holly Cousins to defeat the Dudleyz and Spike, pinning Bubba Ray after an Angle Slam.
Angle's winning ways (as well as his problems with the Hollys) continued days later on SmackDown. In the first round of the KOTR Tournament, Angle pinned Hardcore Holly and advanced to the Quarter-Finals.
Just a few days later on Raw, Angle was out in the ring again listing the many ways in which he rules the universe. He reminded fans that in just a couple of weeks he would embarrass the new WCW owner and win the KOTR title in one night. But when Kurt called out his "cowardly" competition, he got a little more than he bargained for in a surprise appearance by the Undertaker. Paranoid about the man stalking his wife and remembering Kurt's history with Stephanie and HHH, Taker accused Angle of being the man filming his wife. Angle, the fine gentleman he is, remarked that he once met Taker's wife and did not find her remotely attractive. Apparently this was a mistake, since Angle ended up on the receiving end of a Last Ride moments later. And when all was said and done, when Taker had left the ring and Angle was just getting back to his feet, Shane McMahon rushed the ring and gave Kurt a taste of his own medicine, downing him with an Angle Slam.
One week later, Angle had his Quarter-Final KOTR match against Jeff Hardy, forcing the then-tag-team-specialist to tap out to the Ankle Lock. Later that night Angle came to ringside to provide color commentary for another Quarter-Final match, calling the action as Christian took on the Big Show. With a good amount of history between the guys, Edge and Kurt Angle worked their deceptive magic to ensure a Christian pinfall victory after a Conchairto. Now Angle, Edge, Christian, and Rhyno -- four guys that had watched each others backs throughout their WWE careers -- made up the Semi-Final brackets of the tournament.
And so the night of King of the Ring came. In the first match of the night, Angle took on Christian in a Semi-Final contest. Much to the surprise of everyone, Shane McMahon got involved on behalf of Kurt Angle, helping the Olympian deliver an Angle Slam to a distracted Christian and pick up the victory. Angle moved on to the Finals to face Edge, who picked up a victory over Rhyno in the second match of the night. Shane McMahon would make his presence known yet again in the Tournament Final, but this time it was far less Angle-appreciated. During a moment of referee incompetence, Shane ran in an delivered a Spear to Angle, leading him right into an Edge DDT and a pinfall loss.
Shane went out of his way to help Angle defeat Christian in order to ensure Angle wrestled twice before even entering the Street Fight. And then in the Final, Shane made sure that Angle was robbed of the glory he so desired. So we had seen plenty of both of these guys at KOTR before they even locked up for their Street Fight.
Did Angle have anything left in the tank for a third match? Could Shane hang with an Olympic Gold Medalist? Take a look and see for yourself.
WHY IT SHOULD BE REMEMBERED
If some insane individual should ever tell you that Kurt Angle is overrated, you should immediately grab a copy of the King of the Ring 2001 DVD and bludgeon said mental person with it. The Olympian wrestled THREE TIMES that night, putting on great-to-fucking-great matches with Christian, Edge, and Shane McMahon. And somehow each match was better than the one before it, culminating in the twenty-plus-minute joygasm that was the Street Fight. Not surprisingly, it wasn't long after King of the Ring that fans started to realize just how good Angle really was, and he suddenly went from one of the E's most over heels to one of its most popular heroes. Angle's face heat was off the charts that summer during his feud with Steve Austin. From then on it was rivalry after rivalry, classic match after classic match, with Angle putting on clinics against Kane, Edge, Hogan, Mysterio, Benoit, and so on. I feel like this KOTR Street Fight was what really got the ball rolling on Angle's ascent to legendary status, where the discussion of Angle's status among the greats really got started. With discussions of money drawn put to the side, a perfectly legitimate case can be made for Kurt Angle as the greatest to ever step inside the ring, and it all can be traced back to his Street Fight with Shane'O Mac.
Angle's career took off in 2001 following this Street Fight
And as for Shane, this match speaks pretty damn highly about what the guy's willing to do for the fans. Part of the reason I wanted to cover this match this week was because, as of late, Shane McMahon has bored me out of my skull. This week's Raw was one of the most agonizing experiences of my wrestling fandom. It wasn't Monday Night Raw. It was Monday Night 2 HOURS OF SHANE MCMAHON VS THE WWE CHAMP! And the worst part (aside from Shane being booked on par with the WWE Champion) is that Shane is not this bad. Or at least he wasn't at one point in history. There was a time when a Shane McMahon match was something special. Once he shockingly tore the house down with Test at SummerSlam '99, every time Shane was booked for a match you knew some serious shit was going to go down. Whether he was wrestling his own father, Big Show, Kane, or "The Lethal Stoic" Steve Blackman, you knew that at some point in the match Shane was going to take a sick bump, which often times turned into multiple sick bumps. I'm not saying that in order for Shane to recapture his old glory he needs to start risking his life again for my entertainment, but the dude needs to show me something other than his ever-slowing shuffle and his (by this point) quite tired Van Terminator. Oops, I meant COAST TO COAST! LOLZ~!!!1!
Sorry ... not sure what happened there ...
The point I'm getting at is that if any other fans out there have been miserably groaning at the recent underwhelming overexposure of the Boy Wonder, we still have nights like King of the Ring 2001 that we can look back on and remember fondly. There was a time when Shane McMahon was willing to do anything to steal the show, and good goddamn, did he ever steal the show at KOTR '01. Although to cut Shane a little slack, everybody gets older. Everybody loses a little spring in their step over time. And it's not so much that Shane isn't willing to take insane bumps these days as much as his body probably just cannot withstand that kind of brutality. But there was a time when Shane seemed to give little regard for being Suplexed retarded, and nights like KOTR '01 have cemented that in history.
WHY IT ISN'T REMEMBERED
Everyone remembers the sheer brilliance of the Alliance angle. Just as everyone remembers my skills with sarcasm. But when you think back to the Alliance, you think of the babyface WWE defending itself from the invasion of the heel WCW/ECW Alliance. That's the basic plot that WWE followed for most of the summer and fall of 2001. But before WWE became the good guys in the fight, before the ECW name even entered the picture, it was the group of WCW invaders that were seen as the babyfaces. I think part of the reason WWE might skip over this Street Fight in the history books is because it makes the booking of the time look a little ... odd. Initially fans were excited to see fresh faces on WWE television, popping for appearances by guys like Lance Storm and Mike Awesome. Shane McMahon had big time face heat after his "purchase" of WCW, and he was clearly the fan favorite throughout his feud with Kurt Angle. But then, almost overnight, Shane became the evil, unappreciative son once more, and suddenly he was determined to run his father out of business. He partnered with Paul Heyman and Stephanie McMahon to form the Alliance, and the rest was WrestleCrap history. By the time Invasion came around a month after KOTR, the face/heel lines had been drawn. The main event saw Kurt Angle on the babyface Team WWE, where he and four other men battled five Alliance representatives chosen by the now-evil Shane McMahon and his sister. The KOTR Street Fight is one of the only times you're going to see WCW owner Shane McMahon coming to the ring for a huge face pop, and for that reason I think this match has kind of lost its place over time.
He may not seem like it these days, but Shane used to be one violent S.O.B.
And while Shane and Angle may have stolen the show match-wise, that night also played host to several other significant moments in history, ones that are usually revisited much more by WWE. KOTR '01 marked the WWE PPV debut of ex-WCW talent Booker T and Diamond Dallas Page (no, the WrestleMania pink Cadillac doesn't count). DDP, in the midst of a stalker angle that was only going to get better (and by better I mean worse), appeared to much fan interest, begging the Undertaker to come out and make him famous. Booker T appeared to an even greater audience reaction when he made his presence known by attacking Stone Cold during his main event title defense. Oh and you might be familiar with that title match as the last match Chris Benoit had before sitting on the shelf for a year, rehabbing his neck. Of course WWE will never reference this ever again, but throughout Benoit's career that KOTR Triple Threat was often looked back to when discussing the Crippler's neck problems, earning much more attention that Angle-Shane was ever given. And then aside from big debuts and career-altering injuries, we had the actual KOTR tournament itself, where the future Rated-R Superstar made his first major singles impression on WWE. WWE hasn't gone out of its way in recent years to highlight Edge's first victory on the road to singles greatness, but even then it's still gotten more attention than the Street Fight that happened the same night. So with the debut of WCW talent, injuries to major superstars, and newer superstars springboarding, it's easy to see how the Street Fight may have taken a backseat historically.
WILL IT BE REMEMBERED?
I might be saying this too much lately, but I'm kind of bending the rules with this week's pick. I'm sure the majority of you guys are probably familiar with this match, and a lot of you likely watched it live. But since it happened, WWE has not given it the proper credit it deserves. This was easily one of the best matches of 2001, and yet I can't remember the last time WWE has acknowledged its existence. With no WWE-endorsed Angle DVDs in the forseeable future, the slim chances of a Shane DVD ever being released, and the destruction of King of the Ring, my hopes aren't all that high for the future. I would love to see a King of the Ring Anthology set, but I'm not counting on it happening anytime soon.
Feedback! (or, Proof That The World Knows I Exist!)
How about the Last Ride match between Taker and Kennedy at Armageddon 2006 for Forgotten Favourites ?
Posted By: Paul
That is indeed a good possibility. The whole Taker-Kennedy program got mixed reviews from a lot of people, so I'd enjoy making a case for their historical significance. Kennedy didn't exactly go super-over as many had hoped, but the two guys still put on some good matches together.
THANK YOU X 1000!!!!! I have always loved this match since I ordered the PPV and purchased the VHS! It has always been a guilty pleasure of mine to see Shamrock and Undertaker tear it up. Your article reeks of greatness this week.
Posted By: B~Rad73
You, sir, reek of greatness. Glad to see great wrestling bringing joy to the world.
How about Taka Michinokou defending his light heavyweight championship against El Pantera at No Way Out 1998?
Posted By: Guest#7250
I haven't seen this one, so I'm going to have to check it out. I love me some Taka though.
Hey jim! great article again! I particularly liked the part where you took off all your clothes really slowly and stared right into the camera!
Keep up the good work. Wrestling r teh awesomez
Posted By: AllUrBaseRBelong2Me
IT NEVER POSTS AGAIN OR IT GETS THE HOSE.
Ministry Undertaker was fucking awesome!
Posted By: Guest#0565
Agreed. The dude was straight up EVIL and answered to no one ... until Vince was revealed as the higher power. He may not have been in the best ring shape of his career, but the dude was damned entertaining.
Yep - it's out in the UK in a tagged classics pack with St. Valentine's Day Massacre.
Posted By: Sepulchasm
Damn you, UK!
Great article,I actually watched this match the night I read this article.I think one of the next forgotten favorites should be CM Punk vs. Elijah Burke from Judgement Day 2007.It was 15+ minutes of a great match.Look forward to reading the next forgotten favorite.Keep up the good work.
Posted By: Guest#8564
I've been considering doing one of the many awesome outings that Punk and Burke had in ECW. I was going to cover a televised match, but now that you bring it up I'm going to go back and take a look at Judgment Day one more time. Thanks, yo!
"Eventually they're going to want to freshen things up, and one or two of these guys is going to undergo a change. But none of this is going to happen until the kids stop chanting for Cena, so I wouldn't hold my breath."
I couldnt agree more, people always say Cena and Batista need to freshen up their act which they do. However, people arent tired of Orton and Edge as heels because they have both evolved since this match, both are probably at their peak in terms of heel-dom.
As a side note though, I am praying that after two years of HHH bullcrap involvement that we get Orton-Cena 1-1 at Wrestlemania and a glorious double turn that would make the internet explode.
Posted By: Brad
WWE pulling off a double turn with any two guys at this point would make the internet explode, since it would mean that the E actually thought outside the box at a creative meeting. I agree that HHH has ruined what should've been Orton-Cena at either one of the last two WMs, so let's hope that if they run it for WM 26 that we get a solid, logical feud between the two. That's all I'm asking for. As far as Cena turning heel goes, my money's on it happening sometime during or after his next program with Batista. Unless Big Dave is the one who's going to turn.
Edge was certainly injured in the run-up to WM23, because if you remember he didn't wrestle at all from that RVD match right the way to mania. He was always stirring the shit up between the other MITB participants, so they would fight amongst themselves leaving him (storyline-wise) fresh.
Posted By: Quinny
He's a sneaky and deceptive man. But then again, he's Canadian.
"Where to, Stephanie?!?!" Greatest line on a wrestling broadcast ever. Even if, by that point, we had to suffer through the mind-numbingly illogical Corporate Ministry. Still, Satanic, bearded Undertaker was beyond awesome. Having been raised in a strict Christian household it felt like forbidden fruit that I was destined to love.
Russo could, and did, turn out a lot of crap (he's got his own WrestleCrap wing, don't he?) but when he and Vinnie Mac worked together they could come up with some damn captivating television. It didn't often make sense, and could contradcit itself from week-to-week, but damn if I wasn't on my couch at 8pm (or was it still 7:57 at that time?) every Monday.
And, once again, the UK bogarts all the good shit.
Posted By: neverAcquiesce
Russo came up with some ridiculous (and downright stupid) stuff, but as you said the man was certainly capable of coming up with captivating TV. I was intrigued every step of the way through the mind-boggling booking of the Attitude Era. Of course, I was also 12 years old, so I was a lot more forgiving of illogical storylines. But even looking back now, Russo and Vince were masters of interweaving nearly every angle into one mega-storyline. The entire Survivor Series '98 broadcast is still (in my opinion) one of sports-entertainment's greatest accomplishments, simply because everything was connected. Things got a little too connected the following year with the Corporate Ministry, with all sorts of wires crossing, but at least the effort to unify the show was there.
Have we covered Taka vs HHH for the WWF Title yet? BEST.MATCH.EVER.
Wrestling went downhill after Taka didn't win the title!
Posted By: Kyle
HOW did I forget about this match? HOW? You, Kyle, are the man. If I can find this match online it stands a very good chance of being covered.
I had never thought Taker had taken steroids until I saw that photo. Holy crap, that guy is jacked.
Posted By: Guest#3702
Silly, mortal. You think Undertaker uses earth steroids? The dude is jacked by the power of the dark side.
This match seems to have mixed feelings from people, i remember it been pretty good tho some find it a bit boring & im sure the crowd is pretty dead.
Still i gotta agree that ministry Taker was really cool, his matches wernt the best back then but the carracter was insane.
Posted By: jbardo
Yeah, the crowd wasn't all that hot during the match. But I chalk that up to Attitude's focus on characters over wrestling action. And indeed, Ministry Taker was the bomb diggity.
I'm sorry but I just can't figure out why people think the single most boring character of the Attitude era was so great. Are you just basing it on the pictures of him, or what? The guy gained about 50 pounds and proceeded to drop a big fat turd in the ring and on the mic every single chance he got.
Then he left for six months, and Biker Taker was fresh for a month or two upon his return before we were right back where we left off with him, burying guys who needed the rub. I don't think he was ever remotely interesting until he met up with Angle in 2006.
Posted By: The REAL MP
There are many things you can call Ministry Taker, but "boring" is not one of them. The dude may not have been in the best shape of his career, but I'll be damned if he wasn't one of the most intriguing characters on the show. He SACRIFICED people, man. He tied them to a faux-crucifix and SACRIFICED them. Fans weren't tuning in for wrestling action in 1999 anyway; they were watching for the larger-than-life characters. And Undertaker was most definitely larger-than-life.
Man...every week you continue to make me go "Holy Shit...no he didn't bring that match back from the grave!!!"...in a good way of course. Dude...seriously keep up the good work! Definitely keeping me on my toes for my future column ideas!!
Posted By: Julian Bond
Thanks, man. Hope this week was another pleasant surprise.
"I don't think he was ever remotely interesting until he met up with Angle in 2006."
In terms of ring work i agree with that, the last 3 years has easily been the most consistantrun hes had as far as good matches go.
Posted By: jbardo
Like jbardo, if we're applying that statement to his ring work, I agree. Taker's matches the last few years have been, hands down, the best of his career.
i rememberwatching Shamrock vs. Taker on VHS.I actually thought Shamrock was going to win...that is until he tried to Tombstone Taker and we all know if your name is not Kane you can't Tombstone Taker.
Posted By: The Gold Standard
Which makes me wonder why so many people have actually tried to Tombstone him. You'd think this would be common knowledge amongst the wrestlers by now, but apparently not.
great article...thank you for giving their match a shout out...i own the vhs copy of backlash...it was a great match that far exceeded expectations and showed some of undertakers untapped talent...its sad though...after matches like this...you cant help but wonder how many other wrestlers are being held down by wwe.? i would have loved to see angle/shamrock....or shamrock/ benoit.....even shamrock/jericho...
Posted By: Guest#0420
Shamrock/Jericho almost happened but never came to be. I would've given up my family to see Angle vs. Shamrock in each of their primes, but fate can be quite cruel to avid wrestling fans.
@The REAL MP
Workrate-wise, yes, Taker was never *that great* prior to '06 or so (unless Bret, Shawn, or Kurt was standing across from him). Ten years ago I would never have expected something like WrestleMania XXV to come out of the Dead Man.
Buuuuuuuuttt, his satanic character was fucking awesome. The look, the followers, the music (fuck all y'all, I totally dug the rock version), Satantaker was what Attitude was all about.
Posted By: neverAcquiesce
This is basically the same reaction I had. Attitude was about characters, not workrate.
When i was 10 i fucking loved this undertaker... Not sure why. Kinda worrying if I think about it.
Posted By: Tomithy
Can you not hear your true calling? Is the Dark Father not whispering your name?
thank you for liking my work. you should see the submissions I practice on michelle.
Posted By: the undertaker
HOT DAMN! A ZOMBIE READS MY COLUMN!
still waiting for Bret vs. 123 Kid, WWF Championship match from monday night raw.
Posted By: Guest#3907
Haven't forgotten about it, don't worry. It was featured on the Best of Raw DVD, so I'm hesitant to cover it. But hell, great matches deserve attention, so I'm keeping it in the bullpen.
This match was fucking great. Backlash 99, next to No Mercy, was probably the best pay per view from that year.
Posted By: CharlesBronson
I'm kind of partial to SummerSlam, but Backlash was a hell of a show. And HOT DAMN! CHARLES BRONSON READS MY COLUMN!
I always thought Shamrock was underrated. Sure, the guy might have had the personality of an ironing board, but he was a pretty good wrestler. The fact that he could legitimately kick some serious ass and have even big tough guys pissing their pants like babies is cool too.
On the other hand, I think Ministry Taker is overrated as hell. I've always preferred the gray-gloved, spooky Undertaker from when he first joined the WWF when he would be powered by the urn. It might sound cartoony nowadays but that Undertaker was damn cool.
Posted By: Zingy
Shamrock could've done some great stuff if only he'd debuted just a couple of years later than he did. As far as Ministry Taker goes, I loved every minute of it. The cartoony Taker wasn't really my cup of tea, but any Taker is good Taker.
Thanks so much for this... Ive seen this match get flack for being slow and boring but its probably my fav none Rocky/Ken Shamrock match out there.
Posted By: Chad
Any bad heat this match gets is totally unwarranted. Shamrock had some awesome matches in his short career in the E, and this was definitely one of his best.
I remember at the time everyone was shitting all over this match, but I loved it. The spectacle of seeing someone break down Taker like Shamrock did coupled with that fucking Chokeslam-to-Armbar counter (this should've got 3 stars on that alone) just made this match for me. I would've loved to see how Ken would've made out if he'd just stayed around for a few months longer as opposed to leaving before the Radicals arrived.
Posted By: AJP
If Shamrock had been given the opportunity to learn and really apply himself as a wrestler (rather than the short-tempered dude who goes in his ZONE) I fully believe he would've given us some classics. He could've done some amazing things with Benoit or Guerrero.
- -
And that'll do it for this week. I wasn't able to get to all of the comments, but some are better than none, I guess. Next week I'll return to form. Remember to keep those suggestions coming. You guys had some awesome ones last week that I hope I'm able to cover in future columns.
This match will -always- be remembered, at least by the fans, for the sick, sick attempted suplexes through the glass.
Posted By: August (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 12:08 AM
Angle/Shane was the definition of brutality. Bar none. And this was coming right after Shane O' Mac's crazy PPV matches against Vince and Big Show. He's not the best worker, but damn, Shane is hardcore.
And Kurt Angle...what else can be said about him after that match? For a guy who had almost never been involved in extreme matches up till that point in time, he sure adapted to the style well.
Great column, as always.
Posted By: nastrodamus (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 12:19 AM
That belly to belly through the glass was EVIL!!!!
Posted By: The Gold Standard (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 12:43 AM
Awesome choice this week. Thanks.
As for a suggestion, how about the Two Man Power Trip v Benoit and Jericho. That match will prolly never be on a DVD bc of Benoit and the HHH injury. The build to the match was awesome and the match itself totally lived up to the hype.
What you think?
Posted By: ROHawkeye (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 01:13 AM
i thought he killed shane.
Posted By: jd (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 01:17 AM
Forgotten my ass some of the best matches I have ever seen have Shane in them!
Posted By: Daniel (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 02:25 AM
Shane McMahon sucks
Posted By: christiansbale (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 02:34 AM
Great choice for a match, and I agree with what you said about this being the time period when the fans started to realize how great Angle was. However, I think the match that REALLY started that train of thought was the one with The Rock at NWO 01 for the title. That was the first 'Angle-style' match I remember with the numerous reversals and mat wrestling.
Posted By: Jabber (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 04:17 AM
I love the article Jim, and this is no exception, however it should be noted that this probably wasn't the best match to choose in my opinion. For a few reasons:
1. It will ALWAYS be remembered, because Shane's bump (and attempted bumps) through the glass is one of the sickest spots in wrestling history. It was also a part of the opening RAW montage for a long time.
2. This match, and I'd go as far to say almost ANY match, of 2001 will always be remembered in DVD. at the end of 2001, RAW had a recap of the top 10 matches of the year, as well as the top 5 slaps, kisses, shocks, food moments etc. This match comes in at number #4 I believe, with only the HHH vs. Austin 3 stages of hell, TLC 2, and Jericho/Benoit vs. HHH/Austin beating it out. Anyway, like I said, it is on DVD and is called 'best moments of WWF 2001'.
Not taking anything away from the match though, or the article. It was a good read :)
Posted By: Banz (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 05:20 AM
Total jizz of the pants this match, Super mother f'n Angle Slam + Belly-Belly through glass + Good ol Ass Wooping = WIN!
Glad to see someone also wants a logical Main Event WM feud between Orton and Cena!
Posted By: Brad (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 05:24 AM
I felt that Austin/Jericho/Benoit was match of the night actually, but this match rocked my face as well - for an untrained wrestler and a guy in his third match? Awesome.
Although, I have to question the point at which you said the fued started. It started on the Raw after Judgment Day didn't it? At Angle's re-medalling ceremony after he won them back from Benoit? With the Angle Slam/Ankle lock on Shane? Provoking Shane's attack (which you mentioned)?
It was in the pre-match video package.
Posted By: Mr Quimby's Beard (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 06:11 AM
This match will -always- be remembered, at least by the fans, for the sick, sick attempted suplexes through the glass.
Posted By: August (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 12:08 AM
I agree, this is definitely not a forgotten favourite.
Great article though
Posted By: Guest#4599 (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 07:01 AM
I remember watching KOTR 2001 and falling asleep for a lot of it, then all of sudden the street fight happened and in the space of 20 minutes my thoughts on Kurt Angle changed immediately.. I went from thinking he was a quality goofy wrestler to straightout badass.
Kurt Angle if you based his time in WWE would surely have to go down as the best pure wrestler ever? In 6 years without the company truely getting behind him as the number 1 guy he was probably the most respected and over guy in the company (by the time Austin and Rock stopped working falltime).
Angle was the total package as a performer.. and I don't mean in the Lex Luger way!
Posted By: Andrew Barbarash (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 07:17 AM
How about covering ECW Originals vs The New Breed, Extreme Rules from the ECW following Wrestlemania?
Is it a classic? Not necessarily, but a REALLY fun match that showed what should have gone down at 'mania - a trend that seems to occur year after year in some form or another.
Posted By: Guest#7028 (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 07:23 AM
This is one of my top 5 matches of all time. Shane was unbelievable in this match and the DVD has a great commentary by Shane and Kurt explaining the match.
Don't forget Shane's match at Backlash in the same year against Big Show. Shane took the sickest bumps of all time.
Posted By: ozstar13 (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 07:29 AM
How can this be considered forgotten people still talk about it all the time.
Posted By: AOD (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 08:05 AM
I havnt watched this in years but remember it been pretty crazy, gotta love the finish with the angle slam off the top rope or was it off a table?
Posted By: jbardo (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 08:06 AM
i knew this one would be coming sometime ;). it still shocks me how this match has still not been released on any dvd yet but im sure it will be on one someday. ;)
Posted By: Craig J (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 08:31 AM
This match will always be remembered and I always use it in my top 5 WWE/WWF matches of all time. Angle = Awesome, Shane = Insane. Angle + Shane reeks of awesomeness.
Posted By: nin666 (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 08:50 AM
Here's another point. Edge/Angle match point Edge on the main event Track.
Forgoten Fave canidate: Kidman/Rey Rey vs World Greastest Tag Team Unforgiven 04 I Think
Posted By: ilb320 (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 09:01 AM
Tore the house down with Test?
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Posted By: The Fuj (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 09:36 AM
I disagree about the Shane DVD. He keeps his "commerative" jerseys (a la KOTR and last Monday night) and dollars to donuts is a wrestling nerd. He'll want his kids to see his matches, and rumors say he has stroke with the boss.
Posted By: icon zeke (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 09:38 AM
great match...but might be a kind of a waste for this column cause everyone remembers it anyways
Posted By: Guest#0848 (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 09:43 AM
This was one of my favorite matches of all time and truly cemented Kurt Angle as a fucking wrestling machine. This PPV should be a testiment to Angles conditioning and diversity as a wrestler
Posted By: Ultra Gepetto (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 09:52 AM
This was the first PPV I ordered at home, and it was Awesome! I remember wanting Edge to win KOTR and no one I was watching with thought he was good enough to do it. I also remember Shane O'Mac getting belly to bellied senseless through the glass and the Angle-slam off of the top rope/make shift plattform. Oh the carnage! What also makes this PPV memorable for me is getting to see Y2J and The Crippler prove them selves in the main event after H's tore his quad a few weeks before. Also the DDP admittance to stalking Taker's (ex)wife and the arrival of Booker T in the Main event makes this a highly remembered show.
Now if only I still had a VHS player to watch this on.
Posted By: Bring Back King of the Ring (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 10:10 AM
I don't think anybody who saw this match has forgotten it. I also don't care. This match was the bee's knees. Shane had a death wish and Angle was more then happy to fulfill it. This is up there with 'Taker-Foley HITC, Sabu-Funk Barbed Wire and Joe-Necro among the most brutal displays of violence I've ever seen in a wrestling ring.
Posted By: Guest#1893 (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 11:13 AM
I can't overstate how much I love love love this match. Unbelivable brutality (especially for the owner's son) and a great story to boot. And having it take place during the era of JR and Heyman only elevates its awesomeness. I was beyond stoked to find the DVD a few years ago in a used video game store for a mere five bucks.
While this match gets tons of love from the IWC the PPV as a whole tends to fly well below the radar despite featuring a kickass main event (Walls/Crossface combo!!!) and no less than three Kurt Angle matches. But I would argue that Kurt's rise to Wrestling Royalty began during his three PPV series with Benoit starting at WrestleMania. At least, that's when I went from being a mark for him to having an unbreakable mancrush (though the seeds were planted when he wooed me with the graceful soliloquy of, "Tap, Rock, or I'll break your fucking ankle!").
That Austin/Benoit match would make a great induction. Yes, I know, it's Benoit, but it was essentially forgotten by the WWE as early as 2002; the only mention I recall is a brief highlight package of the match on Austin's "What?" DVD. It's crazy that those two had a kickass match on Raw that week that is all but forgotten itself due to the classic they taped twenty-four hours later.
I forgot about how well crafted Survivor Series '98 was. Maybe WWE would do well by hiring some big-picture-thinking/long-term-planning comic book writers for Creative. Just a thought.
Posted By: neverAcquiesce (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 11:34 AM
Angle is overrated. The guy is the definition of "workrate in lieu of psychology or storytelling". Not to say that he isn't enjoyable to watch or that he "can't" tell a story (See: Wrestlemania XXI, with Michaels, Shawn), but he's one of the spottiest wrestlers of all time.
I think it was more of a series of matches that solidified Angle as a top talent, not just this match.
- Triple Threat with Rock and HHH: Not the actual match, but that Angle fought back from injury to play a small role at the end. That was insane dedication for a rookie (of course, that's just how Angle is, but it was impressive back then instead of crazy).
- Six Man Hell in a Cell: I don't think people gave Kurt a snowball's chance in Hell of winning this, and that he did win showed that WWE was behind him.
-vs. The Rock, NWO: The match where Angle lost the title was the best match of his first title reign, and showed that he was likely going to go back to it.
- The Entire Benoit Series: Benoit elevated Angle's already impressive workrate to the insane levels it reached from 2001-2003.
- vs. Shane: For all the reasons you mentioned.
- vs. Austin, Summer Slam: You covered this in your first column, I think. This match proved if you put Angle in a main event, he'll deliver.
Posted By: Chief Runs With Beer (Registered) on May 07, 2009 at 12:07 PM
I want to point out that was 1/4" tempered which is why it didn't break, usually for breakaway you use 1/8"
Posted By: M:-X (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 12:19 PM
The DVD for KOTR 2001 doesn't appear to be readily available. Anyone know how to get a copy?
Posted By: Noirfan (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 01:04 PM
"The DVD for KOTR 2001 doesn't appear to be readily available. Anyone know how to get a copy?"
Ebay's got three DVD copies as of right now.
Posted By: neverAcquiesce (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 01:40 PM
Shane and his father tend to very well in hardcore style matches, like cage, last man stadning, street fight etc. And that's usually it. Give them a regular match and it usually sucks or okay
Posted By: Guest#6866 (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 02:24 PM
This match isn't forgotten at all. It's the opposite, it's overrated.
Posted By: CharlesBronson (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 05:05 PM
I actually think this match is the reason KOTR 2001 is remembered. I seriously don't remember any of the other events/matches you mentioned from this event other than Angle/Shane. Plus, the failed glass breaking is the first image on the "Don't Try This at Home" message at the beginning of practically every WWE DVD.
Posted By: JLAJRC (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 05:44 PM
The Taka vs HHH match is available on a video-sharing website if you search for the two participants' names in a popular search engine...
Posted By: Chumpy (Registered) on May 07, 2009 at 06:21 PM
this match will always be a favorite of mine .. but it will never be forgotten .. it was absoultly brutal .. it proved shane had great tallent ... pulled off a sweet SSP even though it was on a garbage can ..
just sucks hes not what he used to be ... my how has he fallen in the past 9 years .. not even comming close to orton on raw this past week
Posted By: Baxter (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 08:34 PM
Got to disagree. The bumps for this are featured in the don't try this at home package on EVERY wwe dvd release. How is that not being remembered?
Posted By: Jonberg (Guest) on May 07, 2009 at 09:16 PM
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