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 411mania » Wrestling » Columns



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The Contentious Ten 01.04.10: Bret Hart Matches
Posted by Aaron Hubbard on 01.04.2010



Welcome to the new top ten column on 411! Due to some spectacular timing, I've got an excellent topic for my debut. Tonight, Bret "The Hitman" Hart makes his return to a WWE ring after a twelve year absence in what is sure to be one of the most surreal and exhilarating moments in Raw history. To celebrate the occasion, I'll be listing Bret's ten greatest matches. I'll tell you, it was quite the challenge to narrow it down to just ten, and the honorable mentions are almost as good as the ones that did make the list, and almost as numerous.

Honorable Mentions

Bret Hart vs. Davey Boy Smith, In Your House V
This match was an excellent follow-up to their Summer Slam classic. The roles were reversed as Bret was the babyface and Bulldog the heel, and the dynamic was just as good. Both very technical and very, very bloody the match unfortunately did a horrible buy rate and didn't receive the proper recognition until it was released on Bret's DVD set.

Bret Hart vs. Diesel, Survivor Series 1995
This is one of the best examples of Bret Hart carrying an inferior worker to a great match. Lots of brawling and creative spots highlight this match. Bret gave it his best effort and pulled out a great match, and won his third WWF Championship in the process. However, there are far better matches in Bret's resume that knock this off of the list.

Bret Hart vs. Shawn Michaels, Survivor Series 1992
Five years before the Montreal Screwjob these two had quite a fantastic match for the WWF Championship here. The hatred between the two hadn't developed and all you see here is two guys trying to have a great match and prove that they are the future of the business. They succeeded on both fronts, delivering a terrific match and starting the definitive rivalry of the ‘90's.

Bret Hart vs. Mr. Perfect, King of the Ring 1993
Technically better than their Summer Slam match but not as important to Bret's career or to wrestling history. Both men were babyfaces and Perfect was in better health, so they did a lot of great wrestling in this one before Bret won with a small package reversal. One of three great matches Hart on this evening, and one of his best.

Bret Hart vs. Undertaker, Summer Slam 1997
One of the most important matches in WWF history as it set up a lot of important things, like DX, the Montreal Screwjob, and the Taker-Michaels feud. Both men gave a fantastic effort and pulled out a great match. However, they had a better one a little bit later that actually does make the list. Very important, but not quite good enough to make Bret's top ten.

Bret Hart vs. Razor Ramon, Royal Rumble 1993
One of the highlights of Bret's first run with the WWF Championship. Razor was in peak form here and was trying to make a name for himself and prove that he was worthy of being thrust into the main event so quickly. Bret gave him a great match here that is one of Scott's best and a match that always gets lost in Bret's endless series of **** matches.

Bret Hart vs. Ricky Steamboat, Boston Garden 1986
One of Bret's first truly great singles matches in the World Wrestling Federation. These two could probably have had a good match in their sleep, but they were both working very hard here. This is one of my personal favorites of Bret's because he hadn't started using a lot of his signature offense, so the match is less predictable.

And now, the top ten. For those wondering, the criteria I used were:

1: Importance to Bret's Career
2: Match Quality
3: Focus on Variety of Opponents/Styles
4: Personal Preference



X

Bret Hart vs. Roddy Piper
Wrestlemania VIII, Intercontinental Championship

A lot of people like to focus on Bret Hart's technical acumen, but I personally believe that that aspect of Bret is overrated and another aspect is highly underrated. That would be his storytelling. This match is one of the best examples of it, with another guy who ranks among the best storytellers in the business. "The Rowdy One" wasn't exactly known for his technical acumen, but he knew how to play on a crowd's emotions. In this match, he walked the fine line between desperate babyface champion and cheating heel champion. He threw punches and slaps when he realized he couldn't match Bret on the mat and didn't hesitate to go after Bret's cut, even biting it. And in his defense, Hart faked a shoulder injury to try to get a quick roll-up early in the match, so all was fair. But when the crowd booed him as he prepared to nail Bret with the ring bell, Piper dropped it and applied his patented sleeper instead. In the end, that cost him, as Bret was able to climb up the turnbuckles and pin Piper's shoulders to the mat, one of the very few to do so to Piper in WWE.

Bret is often criticized by detractors for wrestling the same basic match every time out. In some ways, this is true. Bret used a lot of his patented maneuvers when making his comeback, including this match. But all wrestlers do that to an extent. What matters is how you use the moves in the context of the match and adapting your style to suit your opponent. This was a fine example of Bret changing his usual strategies to deal with the wily Piper. The result was Piper's best match and one that proved that Bret could work the WWF's main event style without sacrificing his quality wrestling. This match set Bret on the path to becoming a World Champion.


IX

Bret Hart vs. Shawn Michaels
Wrestlemania XII, Iron-Man Match

Considering Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels is possibly the most famous rivalry, in-ring or otherwise, in wrestling history, I would be completely remiss to not have this match on the list. Some people call it overrated and boring, but these are subjective opinions. Let me give you some real facts though. Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels wrestled for an hour in the main event of a Wrestlemania. Wrestlemania main-events were known for having matches that were style over substance, like Hogan vs. Andre and Hogan vs. Warrior. This was totally different. This was two artists, two great workers, both in their prime, putting on a wrestling clinic for sixty minutes. For the longest time, this was the World Wrestling Federation's gift to fans of wrestling. The company that was famous for "sports entertainment" put on an incredible, old-school, one hour wrestling match. The fact that Vince McMahon and company were willing to put on this match showed just how much Bret Hart has influenced WWE.

The one-hour match featured a little bit of everything, from chain wrestling to brawling to high flying. Bret spent a majority of the first half of the match having his arm worked by Shawn before making a comeback in the second half, unleashing all of his patented offense and busting out a few new tricks. Shawn took a brutal beating, taking backbreakers, a piledriver, and a back body drop from the ring to the floor. But he endured the onslaught and fought back with his entire arsenal, which still wasn't enough to put Bret away. Hart would go the sixty minutes without being beaten, only to have the match restarted. Michaels would hit two superkicks to win his first WWE Championship, but Bret had wrestled for an hour at the Granddaddy of Them All. He has had better matches and they rank higher on this list, but few are as iconic as this one.


VIII

Bret Hart vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin
Survivor Series 1996, #1 Contender's Match


This was the first match between Hart and Austin, and set the stage for a feud that I consider to be the best of all time. The premise for this match was simple. Bret Hart had taken a leave of absence after losing the Iron Man match with Shawn Michaels, but was ready to make his return. During his absence, Steve Austin's star had skyrocketed. Both guys deserved a chance to get into world title contention. Austin wanted to prove that he could beat a top star like Bret, and Bret wanted to prove that he wasn't about to be overshadowed by a new star. So the classic tale of the grizzled veteran and the young breakout began. And what a beginning it was.

This match literally had it all. Both men were out to prove how good they were, and so they didn't hesitate to pull out their best maneuvers. Austin proved his technical acumen, applying a variety of holds and working over Hart's neck, but he didn't hesitate to break the rules. He punched Bret's jaw, raked his eyes, and sent him crashing into the guardrail, the turnbuckles, and the post. Bret put on a wrestling clinic, survived Austin's assault, and went blow-to-blow with him and nothing else worked. Austin survived the Sharpshooter. Bret survived the Stunner. The match ended in a near fluke, as Austin applied Ted DiBiase's Million Dollar Dream only to have Hart climb up the turnbuckles and pin him (shades of another match on this list). Even in a loss, Austin had a star making performance, gaining much and losing little from the loss. As for Bret, the victory showed that he could still go with the best of them. This match is a classic that is a brilliant example of how to build a match. They set the bar incredibly high for themselves, but what is more amazing is that they were able to surpass it.


VII

Bret Hart vs. The Undertaker
One Night Only, WWF Championship

Undertaker and Bret Hart is one of my personal favorite rivalries. Why? Undertaker was a power wrestler whose character could take enormous sums of punishment without being defeated. Hart was a scientific wrestler who could counter all of Taker's big moves and methodically cut his legs down. The result is that you had both guys who really couldn't beat the other, which gave us many lengthy, knock-down drag-out affairs. In my opinion, this was the best of the bunch. This was coming off of the Summer Slam match where Bret won the WWF Championship under controversial circumstances involving Shawn Michaels. This was Taker's rematch and the London crowd loved both guys, creating a terrific atmosphere.

Jim Ross summed up the match with his call: "Bret Hart wrestling with finesse, the Undertaker wrestling with fury." The match was intense and physical, with both wrestlers showing a lot of skill and a lot of aggressiveness. In the end, Hart would get tied up in the ropes and Taker whaled on him with punches that drew a disqualification. For me, it was one of the best uses of a screwy finish because of the dynamic between Bret and Taker. While it was awesome to watch the two titans battle, there really was no way they could convincingly beat each other. When people talk about Bret's greatest matches they usually talk about the athletic contests between him and athletes of similar size and style, but I think that his ability to have great matches with big men like Undertaker and Diesel is just as impressive if not more so. This is the finest example of Bret doing just that.


VI

Bret Hart vs. Owen Hart
Summer Slam 1994, WWF Championship Cage Match

Bret's second title reign was his longest and probably his best. One of the reason's it was so good was that he had a perfect rival in his brother Owen. Owen had defeated his brother on the same night that Bret won the title from Yokozuna and had also been crowned the 1994 King of the Ring, and was just as good as Bret in the ring, so he had credibility. With the obvious personal issues between the two it made sense to put them inside of the steel cage. Despite Bret being down with the flu, the brothers Hart had a fantastic outing that is one of the best steel cage matches of all time. The match was competitive, exciting, intense and brutal, and they did it without losing a single drop of blood.

How did they manage to have a classic cage match without shedding the life-giving fluid? By suplexing each other off of the side of the cage, torturing each other with Sharpshooters, and drilling each with huge right hands for the entire match. But the real highlight of the match is how hard they fight and scrap to get out of the cage and to keep the other man in the cage. Hair and tights were pulled and hundreds of wild punches were thrown. Whenever one man would get within a hair of escaping, the other would dive and grab whatever they could to keep the match going. In the end, they both climbed out of the cage at the same time and Bret won by smashing Owen's face into the cage, trapping him in the metal bars so he could escape. My only real criticism of the match is that a lot of the appeal of the match is the drama over who will win and when the victory will happen. Once you know, a lot of the cage climbing seems a bit tedious. However, this match is a brilliant example that a cage doesn't have to be bloody to be hate-filled and dramatic.


V

Bret Hart vs. Chris Benoit
Monday Nitro, Owen Hart Tribute Match

I don't think there's a better reason for a great match to happen than for it to be a brother's tribute to a great athlete who nobody has a bad word to say about. For my money, this is the best tribute match of all time, and there are two reasons for that. For one, Bret is family and Chris Benoit was one of Owen's best friends, so there is a lot of genuine emotion. Two, both guys wrestle a style similar to the one Owen wrestled, so it's a tribute to his ability as a wrestler. This was a brilliantly wrestled match between two extremely gifted technical wrestlers, with no shenanigans a clean finish. If you take the match out of context and just watch it as a wrestling match, it's a clinic that deserves to be talked about in the same breath as Bret's classics and Benoit's classics. They execute at a very high level, with tons of high impact moves and brilliant counters. The final counter from Benoit's Crossface to Bret's Sharpshooter is a thing of beauty.

But when you put it in context, the quality of the match isn't all that important. This is a brother doing what he does best, giving everything he has, in memory of his fallen brother. It is an incredibly emotional match that has sort of been forgotten about for obvious reasons. However, it's still a personal tradition of mine to watch this match every May 23. This match wasn't very important to Bret's career, as he had already done everything there was to do in the wrestling business, but it's probably more important to Bret's life than any other match on the list. A sentimental pick, but you can put it up against any other match on this list and it will hold up.


IV

Bret Hart vs. Mr. Perfect
Summer Slam 1991, Intercontinental Championship

This was Bret Hart's coming out party as a singles wrestler. Curt Hennig was the "perfect" guy to make Bret look like a star. He could wrestle a long match that would allow Bret to showcase all of his best moves, and he could sell all of those moves in a way that made Bret look like a superhero. I don't think a match like this would get over with people today, because Hart was a white-meat babyface playing the underdog and Perfect was a cocky, arrogant and talented heel. These days, people would boo Bret out of the building and cheer for Hennig. But in 1991, you couldn't ask for a better opponent. The match was a classic that proved that Bret was just as great by himself as he was in the Hart Foundation.

The match was very intense, technically sound, and also had a lot of showmanship. Perfect was using every dirty trick in the book, pulling hair, raking the eyes, kicking below the belt, using his manager to distract Bret and knocking him into the barricade. Bret worked a frantic pace, busting out all of crowd-pleasing offense and attacking the leg to set up for the Sharpshooter. Once Bret got the hold on, Perfect immediately submitted and Bret became the Intercontinental Champion. While the match is very good on its own merit, its placement this high is also due to being a very important match in Bret's career. It was also a preview of the style that would dominate the next few years of main events.


III

Bret Hart vs. Owen Hart
Wrestlemania X

Despite being overshadowed by the show-stealing ladder match between Razor Ramon and Shawn Michaels, this match is one of the greatest of all time. A wrestling purist's wet dream, with terrific scientific wrestling, amazing storytelling, and hard work. Lots and lots of hard work. If you look at this based simply on the moves, it is one of the best technical matches of all time with absolutely flawless execution. When you add in the very personal and competitive rivalry between Bret and Owen, you have wrestling nirvana. Owen was jealous of his brother Bret and was trying to step out of his shadow. Bret was a little reluctant to wrestle his brother, but he didn't shy from trying to teach him a lesson in the ring and prove his superiority. But that proved a lot more difficult than Bret expected, as Owen was quite the technician himself, and he could also fly and brawl.

If you have wondered what critics mean when they say "in-ring storytelling", watch this match and how Owen goes from being just another cocky punk to a bonafide star in the span of twenty minutes. Bret starts the match by schooling Owen on the mat, but when he gets a little too cocky and dives outside, he hurts his knee. Owen goes to town on the leg, proving to be every bit as skilled as Bret and even more vicious. And then Bret starts to make a comeback and hits all of his best moves, but Owen survives them, showing the tenacity to back up his bravado. And then, when Bret tries a victory roll, Owen expertly counters it and pins his brother clean. In this match, he proved he could hang with the Hitman and came away with a shocking victory. While the story of the match is more about Owen than Bret, the match is one of Bret's finest in-ring efforts. I still consider this to be the best pure wrestling match of all time.


II

Bret Hart vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin
Wrestlemania 13, No Disqualification Submission Match

And this would be the match that topped the Survivor Series match. Some consider it the greatest match in Wrestlemania history, and it definitely has a case. The intensity in this match is off the charts, with the two rivals brawling all over the arena, Bret going after Austin's leg relentlessly, Austin using different submission holds to try to get the win, and chairs, wires, and a ring bell adding to the carnage. The finale is one of the best and most important in wrestling history. Bret puts Austin in the Sharpshooter, Austin bleeding like a sieve but refusing to quit. Austin would try to break the hold and would succeed momentarily before passing out in a pool of his own blood. Bret attacked after the bell, and in the span of about two minutes, Austin became a valiant hero and Bret became an unsportsmanlike villain. It was an incredible double turn the likes of which may never be duplicated again.

Austin and Hart were made to wrestle each other. Both men were brilliant storytellers, but they worked different styles. Bret wrestled the pure, technical style taught to Stampede grapplers. Austin was the toughest S.O.B. in wrestling and was renowned for his brawling. But then, Bret could brawl and Austin knew how to wrestle. When they wrestled, you knew you were in for a competitive, hard-hitting, technically sound and athletic contest that will more than likely steal the show. But when you add in the diametrically opposing ideologies, with Bret representing the traditions of the past and Austin sticking a middle finger to those traditions, and a crowd that was ready to switch, those competitive contests became deeply personal battles that would change the fate of WWE, and the ramifications of their rivalry can still be felt to this day.


I

Bret Hart vs. Davey Boy Smith
Summer Slam 1992, Intercontinental Championship

Why this doesn't have the flawless execution of the Wrestlemania X match, or the far-reaching effects of the Wrestlemania 13 match, Hart vs. Smith at Wembley is arguably the most important match in Bret's career. While he lost the match, he still defended his championship in the main event on a major show in front of over 80,000 people. This was Bret's first big-time main event and he excelled in that position, carrying the Bulldog to the best match of his career, and making his own in the process. It is no coincidence that Bret defeated Ric Flair for the WWE Championship shortly after this match, because he proved worthy of being a champion and in the main event with this contest.

While time and the internet have exposed this match as little more than a carry job, it is still an excellent contest. Bret put on a clinic with move after move, and helped to get the U.K. crowd even more behind their hometown boy. The match started with great chain wrestling that hadn't been seen in WWF main events to that point, with many subtle moments that made it more than simply a show of technical prowess. The match got better and better down the stretch, with dramatic false finishes and high impact moves. Smith would get the win by countering a sunset flip and become the Intercontinental Champion, but it was Hart who made the match as good as it was. While other matches on this list are better, this match features Bret's best individual performance. The match is Bret's personal favorite, and the career defining moments it had for both men makes it one of the most fondly remembered matches in wrestling history.

*****

Next week, I'll be taking a look at the best TNA matches of the companies history. For now, here's one last thing to remember Bret Hart by.





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Comments (63)

 
Bret vs Hakushi... always good matches as well

Posted By: kid (Guest)  on January 03, 2010 at 11:39 PM

 
 
I'd probably change the order of 1, 2, and 3, but still a great list. well done!

Posted By: Jason (Guest)  on January 03, 2010 at 11:40 PM

 
 
Sorry to correct you, but in the Honorable Mentions list you listed the Bret Hart vs. Razor Ramon match at the 1992 Royal Rumble. But actually, it was 1993, after all, the '92 Rumble saw Ric Flair win the WWF Championship in the Royal Rumble itself. Again, sorry to correct you, but i thought it was a mistake that could have been avoided.

Posted By: Guest 84 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 12:07 AM

 
 
Totally worth mentioning that Bulldog was drugged out of his mind beforehand and literally forgot everything he was meant to do in the ring. Bret not only carried him, but made up the match on the spot.

Posted By: Guest#9517 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 12:12 AM

 
 
Aaron, you said that in your honorable mentions section in reference to Bret v Davey Boy that "the roles were reversed (from their Summerslam classic) and this time Bret was the face and Davey the heel.

I'm pretty sure that the match at Wembley Stadium was a face vs face match. Davey was the fan favourite but Bret certainly wasn't a heel.


Posted By: APinOz (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 12:19 AM

 
 
Great column, keep up the good work.

Posted By: MBD (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 12:21 AM

 
 
What a terrible list.
The Austin and Hart SS96 match should be ranked well above Undertaker at One Night Only and its above Benoit and Hart for sure.


Posted By: WhatTheHell (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 12:26 AM

 
 
good list, i would also add Bret/Diesel from Rumble 95 to the short list, Bret could sure carry guys in his prime.

Posted By: Guest#3270 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 12:29 AM

 
 
Bret Hart vs. Razor Ramon was RR '93 not '92. Bret wasn't at '92 as he lost the IC belt to the Mountie who would defend and lose to Piper at RR '92.

Posted By: senorfro (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 12:33 AM

 
 
I would break this down into the top 3, the next 3, and then the final 4 of your top 10 and I cannot argue with any of them. Maybe I would think to tweak some of the orders a slight bit within those groups, but you pretty much nailed it.

Posted By: Guest#3813 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 12:36 AM

 
 
Very good list. You got 8/10 with what I would have had as my top 10, only because I would remove Benoit from the list. But that's my personal choice to not glorify Benoit, but I respect those who choose not to exclude him.

In that place, I would put his first title win against Flair.

And I'd have the Surivior Series match vs. Backlund in there instead of the Taker match.


Posted By: Michael (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 01:09 AM

 
 
Great column... I truly enjoy all the work you guys on 411Mania do.

Posted By: Draven (NWA 4 Life) (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 01:25 AM

 
 
Did John Peters just up and quit without saying goodbye already? I hate when people do that.

Posted By: Hubbard? (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 01:25 AM

 
 
Awesome list. I'm sure everyone's would be slightly different, but I think your top 5 would be on everyone's in one order or another. I personally would've ranked the Iron Man match higher, I don't think it's overrated in any way and is one of the greatest matches in history. More of a Shawn Michaels match though.

I also agree with Kid, Bret vs Hakushi was awesome. Bret vs Backlund in the submission match was epic, vs Diesel from the Rumble with all the interferences was awesome, any match vs Curt Hennig, his matches against Bam Bam, his tag matches with the Anvil against the Rockers, the Rougeaus, the Bulldogs, etc... Bret Hart was truly a professional wrestling artist.


Posted By: Se7en17 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 01:45 AM

 
 
Great list! Great rationale and no contempt for the reader, unlike that Peters guy that did this before.

This was a well-written stroll down memory lane.


Posted By: Guest#3696 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 01:53 AM

 
 
mania 13 is number one for me. And thats not just Brets matches, thats out of ALL wrestling matches

Posted By: joe blow (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 02:22 AM

 
 
his matches with mr. perfect were always the same formula

Posted By: Guest#4373 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 02:36 AM

 
 
Decent list but suffers from absolutely no mention of the Canadian Stampede 10 man tag main event, featuring the loudest crowd reaction to a match in the 90s and some damn choice action!

Posted By: Guessed (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 02:38 AM

 
 
Who's Bret Hart?

Posted By: poffo316 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 02:40 AM

 
 
I've got no time for the Iron Man with Michaels, but I ahve to admit I'd forgotten how many top matches Bret had. I think its sad that his only memorbale match from WCW was a tribute to his brother with someone who went as badly wrong as Benoit.

Bret should of had classics with Sting, Flair, Hogan and half the larger cruiser weights.


Posted By: caboose (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 04:31 AM

 
 
The list is obviously subjective etc... I'd of swooped a few around but overall absolutely fantastic stuff and it's good to see you understand GREAT wrestling in context of importance. Shame you never applied this to your top 100 wrestlers of the decade list.

Bret truly is one of the greatest performers of all time.

Also the 'Who are you to doubt El Dandy' promo was EPIC.


Posted By: Andrew Barbarash (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 04:57 AM

 
 
Also while I'm here I think Bret/Austin Sur series 96' match is criminally underrated in general. Despite it not being as important or perhaps influential interms of future styles of wrestling... it is far superior match overall than WM13 in my opinion. I think it could rank easily in the top 3 non gimmick straight out wrestling matches of all time.

Posted By: Andrew Barbarash (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 05:00 AM

 
 
"How bout Hypnosis?"

Lmao!


Posted By: Hart Fan (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 05:09 AM

 
 
the Survivor Series 1997 match is totally underrated because of the screwjob. it was a great main event with crazy heat.

agree about the SummerSlam match being at the number one spot, though.


Posted By: mr. nym (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 05:15 AM

 
 
you cant go wrong in any of these matches in any order.
bret also had great matches vs:
hakushi
bam bam bigelow
razor ramon
ric flair
ricky steamboat
randy savage
sting (which was a travesty as wcw didnt follow up on this feud).


Posted By: rey (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 05:31 AM

 
 
I'll throw this out there: In Bret's book towards the end of his WCW run Kevin Nash told Bret while they waited in the gorilla position that SSeries'95 was the best match of his entire career!

And Bret actually doesn't like the Rumble'93 match with Razor and gives Hall a lot of credit in the book for getting that much better by June to put on a what Bret considered a much better match at KOTR'93


Posted By: Guest#0669 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 06:01 AM

 
 
Should be mentioned that Owen's SummerSlam94 promo inside a steel cage in a dark empty arena looked awesome

Posted By: Guest#6237 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 06:04 AM

 
 
As a huge Bret Hart mark I enjoyed reading through this list, and while I feel that some things could be tweaked, I enjoyed reading it overall. My only main gripe is that the Mania 13 bout wasn't number one. To me, that is Bret Hart's greatest match, it's certianlly Austin's greatest match, it was the best match of the year, dare I even say best match of the decade, and without doubt the greatest Wrestlemania match of all time. With that said I respect your number one choice and I loved your list. Well done.

Posted By: John (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 06:57 AM

 
 
Can't believe that Bret v The Kid isn't on this list somewhere and the Taker One Night Only match was in Birmingham, not London. There are a few Bret matches that slip under the radar as well, such as his match with Jean-Pierre LaFitte at IYH3 and the KOTR Final with Bam Bam. For crowd heat alone the Lawler/Doink double at SummerSlam 93 deserves a mention

Posted By: guest (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 07:08 AM

 
 
Great list, i would have Bret-Perfect KOTR in my top 5, i love that match.

Posted By: jbardo (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 07:54 AM

 
 
"I'll be taking a look at the best TNA matches of the companies history."

Extra AJ, hold the Jarrett please.
A serving of Kurt Angle on the side.


Posted By: Quimby (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 08:02 AM

 
 
"Some people call it overrated and boring, but these are subjective opinions."

Aren't all opinions subjective?


Posted By: Bob (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 08:59 AM

 
 
I'll alwas remember his match with the 123 Kid on Raw. Great match, I remember actually thinking Waltman had a chance. Thats how good Bret made him look. His matches with Hakusi were top notch as well.

Posted By: sefdog (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 09:01 AM

 
 
Just to correct you on a little slip up; One Night Only was held in Birmingham NOT London. Brummie crowds FTW

Posted By: ShaneSilver (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 09:47 AM

 
 
Surprised none of Bret's Stampede matches against the likes of Dynamite Kid and Nick Bockwinkel were mentioned here. I also agree that Bret had some incredible matches around 1993 with Bam Bam Bigelow - some of their really exceptional ones being on tours overseas (one can been seen on the Coliseum Video, 'GLOBAL WARFARE'). At least one of the Hart/Bigelow bouts should be listed in the Honorable Mentions. Also, in WCW, many forget the clinic between Hart and Dean Malenko on Nitro. A hidden gem for sure!

Posted By: Devin (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 09:51 AM

 
 
Dammit why did Benoit have to go crazy on us. It was cool of Bret to want to put Benoit over that day but in hindsight it was a very good thing he didn't.

At least Brets matches with Owen haven't been tainted.


Posted By: Propagandhi (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 10:16 AM

 
 
His match against the 123 kid was an awesome match and should have got on the list as for his match with Savage on saturday night main event.

Who are you to doubt el dandy?


Posted By: Greg (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 10:23 AM

 
 
As someone who started watching wrestling in 99 I missed Bret's career...

However I have seen most of his best matches since...

5)vs British Bulldog: Summerslam 92
4)vs Owen Hart: Wrestlemania X
3)vs Mr Perfect: Summerslam 91
2)vs Austin: Wrestlemania XIII
1)vs Michaels: Wrestlemania XII


Posted By: Oz (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 10:32 AM

 
 
Interesting list to say the least, I always thought that the Bret/Owen match in White Plains, NY was their best match with eachother. The Summerslame match wasa bit bring,good for a cage match but average for a Bret/Owen match.

Posted By: Steven (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 10:36 AM

 
 
Great list and much respect for including Benoit on the list as that match was a great match between the two and as technically sound told the level of respect and love they had for Owen. His other matches on this list were good I would have had the 1-2-3 Kid match as an honorable mention because the match did pull the fans in and Bret for a few moments in that match sold the concern that he might not beat the Kid. Great story telling in that match.

Posted By: Guest#1105 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 10:48 AM

 
 
There isn't any one outstanding candidate, but I'd have thrown in a Hart Foundation vs Bulldogs match somewhere in there.

Good list though!


Posted By: Vordeo (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 11:21 AM

 
 
I like the list mainly because of your criteria. Hart vs. Taker was overshadowed due to the Michaels-Bulldog controversy and the DX angle, but Hart will always be a great ambassador in my eyes. I was a Michaels fan when I was a kid, but after hearing about the backstage politics and bitching, I've realized how great of a star Hart was for the WWF. He wasn't flashy or a monster, but he was definitely someone who you knew was going to give his all for the fans.

Posted By: Guest#3532 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 11:50 AM

 
 
And they say Bret couldn't cut a promo, ROFL

Posted By: Justin (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 12:41 PM

 
 
Get that CHILD MURDERER chris benoit off of your stupid lists!

Posted By: bad taste (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 01:36 PM

 
 
I was in attendance for two of these matches. While Hart/Austin at WM13 was a career maker, the Bret/Owen cage match felt terribly boring with its overemphasis on escape. Hard to argue with any of the top four. It really is amazing that while Bret wasn't on the technical level of Angle or Benoit, he has more historically significant matches than anyone not named Hulk Hogan. I hated his guts in the good way, always on the edge of my seat hoping to see him lose. As a fan of 20+ years, time has done nothing to fade my memory of these classics. Great list.

Question: Was Bret ripping off Mr. Perfect's singlet at Summerslam planned? It just seemed needlessly malicious to do that to my favorite wrestler. It's also odd that you can plainly see Perfect frantically shaking his head no at the ref as the submission was called.


Posted By: Jason Douglas (Registered)  on January 04, 2010 at 02:19 PM

 
 
I remember WWF releasing a British Bulldogs tape back in the day. They had on it Davey vs Anvil & Dynamite vs Bret in singles action. I LOVED that match as I have to agree with Bret that pound for pound there was NOBODY better than Dynamite Kid.

Posted By: guest (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 03:39 PM

 
 
Get that CHILD MURDERER chris benoit off of your stupid lists!

Posted By: bad taste (Guest) on January 04, 2010 at 01:36 PM

Stop being a pussy, fuck.


Posted By: diablerie (Registered)  on January 04, 2010 at 03:46 PM

 
 
"Decent list but suffers from absolutely no mention of the Canadian Stampede 10 man tag main event, featuring the loudest crowd reaction to a match in the 90s and some damn choice action!"

Ooooooo that's a really good one. WHAT SAY YOU, Hubbard? We demand answers, unless you're not a real jam-up guy like our friend El Dandy over there.

My #1 would have been the submission match. That's amongst anything ever in wrestling, by the way. Not just Bret matches. Except for maybe Rock/Austin II.


Posted By: The REAL MP (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 03:51 PM

 
 
the hart/benoit tribute match sucked dick.

Posted By: Csonkamaniac III (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 04:10 PM

 
 
Oh my God, that is the greatest Bret Hart promo ever!

Posted By: Tadano (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 04:12 PM

 
 
Get that CHILD MURDERER chris benoit off of your stupid lists!

Posted By: bad taste (Guest) on January 04, 2010 at 01:36 PM

Stop being a pussy, fuck.

Posted By: diablerie (Registered) on January 04, 2010 at 03:46 PM

I guess you like Murderers, especially ones that kill children, you probably are one. If that happened to you or your family (god forbid), you would'nt feel the same way dude.


Posted By: bad taste (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 05:00 PM

 
 
hard to argue with this list. he had so many great matches. im sure you could argue the order, but who cares? thats why im not too ecxited about him coming back? its not gonna change anything.

Posted By: pjl (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 05:08 PM

 
 
"Hitman" had some great matches in WCW besides Chris Benoit. I remember a US title defense vs Booker T on Nitro that was at least **** and some of his matches with Savage in WWF and WCW were easily ****

Posted By: Darren Runne (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 05:21 PM

 
 
Aw hell, why not:

Honorable mentions: 20-man tag at inaugural Survivor Series, vs. Perfect at Summerslam 91, vs. Lawler at Summerslam 1993 (not much of a match, but tremendous entertainment), vs. 123 Kid on Raw in 94 (on the Best of Raw set, seriously overlooked match)

10.) vs. Diesel at Survivor Series 95
9.) vs. Backlund at Survivor Series 94
8.) vs. Austin at Survivor Series 96 (alright stop--Bret gets a lot of press for being the Summerslam MVP, but LOOK at all those great SurSer matches! Not sure what my point was...)
7.) vs. Michaels at WM12
6.) vs. Perfect at KOTR 93
5.) 10-man tag at Canadian Stampede
4.) vs. Owen, cage match at Summerslam
3.) vs. Bulldog at Summerslam
2.) vs. Owen at WMX
1.) vs. Austin at WM13

As you see, I find your top 3 to be unimpeachable, even if the order is a bit off. Bret says the stuff with Dynamite in Stampede was the very best of his career, so PRAAAAAAY that some of it gets released on the forthcoming Hart Foundation set.


Posted By: The REAL MP (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 05:29 PM

 
 
Iron Man is 9. Dumb. Its the greatest match of all time. Flawless.

Posted By: Craig (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 05:53 PM

 
 
Glad Peters is gone! That guy was a pretentious jerk.

Posted By: Guest#0322 (Guest)  on January 04, 2010 at 06:28 PM

 
 
Awesome, awesome article. Bret Hart is by far the greatest wrestler of all time. I don't see how his technical abilities are overrated in the least bit; he's never seriously injured an opponent and like you said yourself, he can carry anyone to a good match. That pretty much proves he's at least a great technical wrestler, if not one of the best. And I don't think his storytelling is underrated either, is he not considered the greatest storyteller of all time? Top 3 matches on this list(and they are some of the best of all time) were totally constructed by him. He came up with the endings, he told the opponents what they were going to do. In the Bulldog match, not only did Bret come up with the whole match but he had to explain the match to Bulldog as they were wrestling it because Bulldog did nothing but smoke crack for the weeks leading up to SummerSlam and forgot it all. In the Austin match, they had to blade secretly because there was a no blood policy in the WWF at the time. Austin had never bladed before so Bret had to do it for him, and nobody in the back expected a blade job at all.

And I think the Hart vs HBK Ironman match is overrated. It IS boring, and the fact that it's 1 hour long isn't that impressive. Hart did plenty of 60 minute matches in Stampede. Sure this was on WM, doesn't make the match better, just more important. I think it should have been really high on the list, or even an honourable mention.

There is nobody that has as impressive of a list of matches as Bret Hart, especially against such a wide variety of opponents. I'm glad to see Bret back in the WWE so maybe he will get the recognition he deserves. The Montreal Screwjob ruined his career, which is sad because he is truly one of the greatest ever.


Posted By: 420 (Guest)  on January 05, 2010 at 11:00 AM

 
 
Get that CHILD MURDERER chris benoit off of your stupid lists!

Posted By: bad taste (Guest) on January 04, 2010 at 01:36 PM

If you look at the top it says the criteria are:

1: Importance to Bret's Career
2: Match Quality
3: Focus on Variety of Opponents/Styles
4: Personal Preference

Nowhere does it says his opponent must not be involved in a future murder. Stop bringing up irrelevant shit.


Posted By: DarthDaver (Guest)  on January 05, 2010 at 11:26 AM

 
 
well you almost got away without someone getting TOO over the top about the inclusion of Benoit. Almost, I thought this column would be get away with it but looks like you will never get a clear article here without it being touched on.

Posted By: Guest#1935 (Guest)  on January 05, 2010 at 03:42 PM

 
 
No love for any tag matches?

Canadian Stampede PPV main event deserves an honorable mention.

PLus, every austin v. hart match needs to be in top ten.


Posted By: Hart Foundation (Guest)  on January 05, 2010 at 07:12 PM

 
 
Bret owns you, son.

Posted By: Boris Malenko (Guest)  on January 05, 2010 at 07:14 PM

 
 
Monday's Raw didn't really show it, but man, Bret could cut an awesome promo. That El Dandy promo was so natural and smooth. Everyone today sounds like (and probably are) reciting a line from a script. If Hogan does nothing else but teach todays' wrestlers the art of cutting a promo that doesn't sound like it was written for you and performed like some high-school drama production, he will have provided them with an incredibly useful tool.

Posted By: BDC (Guest)  on January 07, 2010 at 10:34 AM

 
 
1.) Bret Hart vs. Stone Cold, Street Fight/Submission Match, Wrestlemania XIII (maybe the greatest WWF match ever)
2.) Bret Hart vs. Shawn Michaels, Iron Man Match, Wrestlemania XII
3.) Bret Hart vs. British Bulldog, SummerSlam 1992
4.) Bret Hart vs. Owen Hart, Wrestlemania X
5.) Bret Hart vs. Owen Hart, SummerSlam 1994
6.) Bret Hart vs. Mr. Perfect, SummerSlam 1991
7.) Bret Hart vs. Undertaker, SummerSlam 1997/One Night Only (both really good)
8.) Bret Hart vs. Diesel, Survivor Series 1995
9.) Bret Hart vs. Roddy Piper, Wrestlemania VIII
10.) Bret Hart vs. Hakushi, In Your House May 1995
Runners Up: vs. Chris Benoit, Owen Tribute match, vs. Razor Ramon, Royal Rumble '93, vs. Bam Bam Bigelow, King of the Ring '93, vs. Mr. Perfect, King of the Ring '93, vs. British Bulldog, In Your House Dec '95


Posted By: Chuck (Guest)  on March 14, 2011 at 04:55 AM

 


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