The Contentious Ten 01.23.12: Top 10 Most Memorable Royal Rumble Eliminations
Posted by Nick Bazar on 01.23.2012
From Ric Flair's match-winning elimination of Sid Justice and Gene Snitsky's decapitating of Paul London to the gang-up on Earthquake, Shawn Michaels coming up just short and more, 411's Nick Bazar counts down the top ten most memorable Royal Rumble eliminations!
Hello, and welcome to The Contentious Ten! My name is Nick Bazar, and I thank you for clicking.
The Royal Rumble is less than a week away, and that means Wrestlemania season is just around the corner. The Rumble is usually one of the best and most entertaining shows of the year, and a huge part of that is thanks to the Rumble match itself. Over the years, we've been treated to a number of memorable performances and moments within the Rumble match. We have also been treated to a number of fantastic Royal Rumble eliminations. This list looks at such eliminations. The eliminations that went beyond your typical "toss over the top" and into a category that has to be seen to be appreciated. And so, the Top Ten Memorable Royal Rumble Eliminations…
X
It's a Rumble, Macho!
What makes the Royal Rumble different from all other matches in wrestling? Well, it has 30 participants, it gives you a shot to headline Wrestlemania and it usually lasts for at least an hour. Oh yeah, and you can't win by pinning your opponent. Someone really should have informed Randy Savage of that last one before he entered the 1993 Royal Rumble- it would have saved him some embarrassment and could have helped him win the match. You see, in the closing minutes of the match, Savage's strategy was to get the huge Yokozuna off of his feet. Why? I have no idea. Anyway, when he finally did manage to knock Yoko onto the mat, he saw the opportunity to capitalize on that with his signature Flying Elbow Drop…and make the cover. No, Macho! What are you doing?! Needless to say, this was his undoing as Yoko powered Savage off of his chest and over the top rope in one swift motion to win the match. Now that I think about it, Macho had it coming- he went to the top rope about four times in those final minutes. He was practically begging to get eliminated.
IX
The Faceplant
TAKA Michinoku will be remembered for three things by the large majority of American wrestling fans: becoming the first WWF Light Heavyweight Champion, challenging Triple H for the WWF Championship on an episode of Raw and destroying his poor face at Royal Rumble 2000. Let's be honest though, that third one is in a distant first place. Let me try to describe this for you (or you could just watch the video, which is what you're probably doing right now): TAKA is minding his own business when Gangrel begins to club his back ferociously. He grabs TAKA and begins to motion him towards the ropes when Big Boss Man joins in. Together, they launch TAKA over the top rope and send him flipping onto the floor outside. What does TAKA land on? Sadly, his face. You know a pay-per-view is brutal when Triple H's nasty calf gash and Cactus Jack's thumbtacked face have legit competition for most painful spot of the night.
VIII
Nearly Decapitated
Oh, now I understand why Big Boss Man joined in on eliminating TAKA Michinoku in such a vicious manner- because he himself experienced a similar pain eight years prior. If you haven't seen this, the elimination comes at about the 33:30 mark in the video above. After having his way with Ric Flair, Boss Man was all sorts of hyped up. I mean, he was busting out roundhouse kicks and getting ready to eliminate the Nature Boy from the match. He charges and dives with a crossbody- unfortunately, Flair ducks and Boss Man ends up tangling himself in the ropes. As he is tumbling over the ropes, his neck catches the bottom rope and it damn near snaps in half. Basically, Boss Man was like "I see your Mick Foley torn ear, and I raise you a torn head." You know, if Foley's accident had happened before this. Anyway, this is something that could have ended horribly wrong; fortunately, Boss Man was too much of a man to let a little rope to the neck keep him down. Hey, maybe that's why Undertaker tried to kill him with a noose at Wrestlemania 15?
VII
It Takes Five
This was the original "gang up" style elimination in a Royal Rumble match, and the kind of elimination that has seen numerous imitations in the years since. The year was 1990, and the man was Earthquake. He had a couple of eliminations to his name and was doing well, but Jim Neidhart had different plans for the big man. He began attacking Earthquake and was soon followed by the likes of Smash, Jimmy Snuka, Haku, Ted DiBiase and Dino Bravo. They forced him to the corner and finally over the top rope to eliminate him. It was a great visual and one of the first really memorable moments the Royal Rumble would provide wrestling fans. It also helped to enforce Earthquake as a monster, building him up for an eventual showdown with Hulk Hogan at that year's Summerslam. We've seen this style of elimination done with guys like Viscera, Mark Henry, The Great Khali, Rikishi and Big Show, but I don't think it was ever as effective as it was with Earthquake.
VI
Nearly Decapitated, Part 2
Alright Snitsky, maybe you didn't cause Lita's miscarriage. Maybe you didn't kick a baby into an audience (wait, what?). But there's no getting around this one. At Royal Rumble 2005, you tried to kill Paul London- simple as that. That one was your fault. London was trying his best to stay in the match, even ducking one of your clotheslines. Apparently, that upset you and you put triple the juice behind the second clothesline. Guess what? That second clothesline connected, and it sent that little Indy astronaut flipping inside out onto the floor below. I'll bet that's not the kind of shooting star press London wanted to land at that particular time. You know how I said TAKA's Rumble elimination was one of the few things he'll be remembered for by most American wrestling fans? Well, this elimination is unfortunately the only thing the casual WWE fan will remember about Paul London. And maybe his run with Brian Kendrick, but I think most people were paying attention to Ashley Massarro.
V
Draw
The 1994 Royal Rumble match was not one of the event's best moments. It lacked excitement and fun, and only had a handful of entrants that could realistically walk away with the win. Fortunately, the silver lining came at the very end of the match when it was narrowed down to two men: Bret Hart and Lex Luger. They wrestled toward the ropes and ended up going over the top at the exact same time. Nothing like that had been seen before in a Royal Rumble match. Who wins? The referees talked it over, the announcers debated it and we were treated to replays, but the conclusion was always the same: both guys hit the floor at the exact same time. It's pretty remarkable how well timed they were. This is a scripted ending that could have easily come off poorly on television, but they pulled it off flawlessly. The sense of confusion came across very realistically and helped emphasize the unpredictability of the Rumble match. A few years later, the same situation would take place with Batista and John Cena, only that time, it wasn't by design.
IV
So Close
Heading into Royal Rumble 2010, Shawn Michaels had one mission in mind: win the Rumble and challenge the World Heavyweight Champion, The Undertaker, at Wrestlemania. Michaels still couldn't cope with the fact that he had failed to end Taker's undefeated Mania streak the year before, and was obsessed with proving he could be the man to do it. After having his request for a rematch denied by The Deadman previously, winning the Rumble was the only way he knew how to get it. Throughout the course of the match, Michaels was clearly determined to walk away with victory. No one was safe from elimination at the hands of the Heart Break Kid, not even his best friend, Triple H. However, his luck would run out on the apron when he would lose his footing for a second after a Superkick on Edge. Batista recognized this and gave Michaels a push- it was just enough to send Michaels to the floor. The visual of Michaels desperately grasping for a hold of the ropes on his way down is fantastic, especially taking his storyline in the match into account.
III
The Front Facelock
Any mention of Chris Benoit on this site continues to stir up negativity, and that's completely fair, but there's no way this list is complete without his match-winning elimination of Big Show at Royal Rumble 2004. Realistically, there's no way a man the size of Benoit could toss a man the size of Show over the top rope. That's what makes the execution of this elimination all the more awesome. Instead of relying on his power, Benoit stuck with what got him to where he was- technical wrestling ability. He locked in a front facelock/guillotine and slowly started forcing Show over the top. He cranked and cranked until Show had no choice but to spill to the floor. It's the ultimate underdog victory, especially considering the fact that Benoit entered at number one. Had the horrific events that led to the demise of Benoit and his family not taken place, there is no doubt in my mind that this elimination would still be touted as one of the great Royal Rumble moments by the WWE and even wrestling fans in general.
II
Lucky Number 30
This is just another awesome chapter in the lengthy feud that was The Undertaker vs. Shawn Michaels. This one came a couple of years before their classics at Wrestlemania, and still holds its own in terms of excitement. In fact, I wouldn't argue if you called this the most exciting finish to a Royal Rumble match ever. After Edge and Randy Orton were eliminated, the final two came down to Michaels and Taker. What followed was a lengthy back and forth confrontation, the likes of which you rarely see in a Rumble match. I was on the edge of my seat the entire time, having absolutely no idea who would win. It was a finish that really highlighted all the positives of a Rumble match. It showed off why people look forward to it every year. In the end, Michaels went for his trusty Superkick, but Taker telegraphed it and sent him over the top rope. A perfect ending and a fantastic elimination. It was also the very first time the 30th entrant won the Rumble match.
I
Dirtiest Player in the Game
The 1992 Royal Rumble match is still considered the template for a perfect Rumble match. It's hard to argue with that as it is just that- perfect. Perfect in its execution, in its pacing, in its excitement and most importantly, in its ending. Ric Flair entered at number three and managed to make it all the way to the end, giving us a performance that only the Nature Boy could provide. In the closing seconds of the match, Sid Justice eliminated Hulk Hogan, which led to Hogan grabbing Sid's arm through the ropes in a rare heel-like moment for the Hulkster. Flair, the opportunistic guy that he was, saw this and capitalized by quickly lifting Sid up and over the top rope to win the match and the WWF Championship in the process. A brilliant ending that proved exactly why they call Flair "The Dirtiest Player in the Game." He didn't care about rules or morals, he was happy as long as he got the win, and on that night, it worked out just like he planned. It is, in my opinion, the most memorable Royal Rumble elimination of all time.
Posted By: Guest#4193 (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:10 PM
Muhammad Hassan?
Posted By: SHADE (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:14 PM
Maven?
Posted By: Guest#1596 (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:20 PM
Snitsky eliminating London is my favorite
Posted By: Bill (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:24 PM
My favorite was the at-that-time Tough Enough rookie Maven drop-kicking Undertaker from behind, sending him over the top rope in 2002 - as both the crowd and Jim Ross/Jerry Lawler went insane, followed by Undertaker returning to the ring to beat down Maven.
Posted By: Nick M. (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:27 PM
Where's Maven drop kicking the Undertaker and all the heels uniting against Muhammad Hassan?
Posted By: Finn (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:29 PM
I may or may not be one of the first of several to say this but, Flair was #3 in 1992, not 2.
Posted By: gwpbrian (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:30 PM
No Austin sneaking back in the rumble to eliminate Hart?
Posted By: Facepalm (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:32 PM
I TOLD YOU MONSOON! I TOLD YOU!
Classic Heenan!
Posted By: Guest#5413 (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:32 PM
I HATED the Benoit-Big Show finish, just because it would have made no sense for Show to win the Rumble. Super smarky I know, I should have dug the David vs. Goliath story, but it sucked all the drama out. It should have been either Angle or Goldberg in there at the end.
Posted By: A.C. (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:33 PM
Pretty good list. A few of those eliminations i had never seen before.
I would have included Reys elimination of randy to win at the 2006 rumble but whatever.Nice article.
Posted By: J (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:38 PM
I remember watching the 92 Rumble and being kinda shocked at the pop Sid got when he elminated Hogan. On the one hand, I fully expected the crowd to be deflated when Hulk got elminated. On the other hand though, this was at the time when the first serious backlashes against Hulk's stale act were starting to show with the fans.
Posted By: Person (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:38 PM
I was watching that today on the Flair DVD set and I don't think Flair ever understands that for a wrestling company to be truly taken seriously the top man at the company has to be a good guy. He has the same fantasy that HHH has. It doesn't work for a universal or mainstream audience.
Posted By: Ken (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:40 PM
Great theme this week, I loved the Maven eliminates Undertaker and what followed
Posted By: Derek (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:40 PM
Taka wasn't an official participant in the Rumble; therefore, his "elimination" shouldn't even be on this list.
Posted By: HsK (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:45 PM
Undertaker being eliminated by Maven?
Posted By: yes. (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:46 PM
Any match with Ric Flair in it deserves to be number 1 on any list, especially when he goes bell to bell in anything hat lasts 60 minutes.
Go look online for some Flair vs. Windham matches from the 80's - that's how you sports entertain!
Posted By: Guest#3492 (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:47 PM
As a student of the Royal Rumble (I own and have catalogued and studied all of the DVDs), I am always disappointed by the execution of the Final Two. You would think they would book the ending to be a long, hard-fought contest, but only once has this proven true. The Undertaker (whose worst performance was a decent one in 1992) and Shawn Michaels (who only gave one performance that was less than solid, in 1990) set a standard that I don't see being met any time soon when they locked up in 2007. And yes, I did see his 2003 performance. That was a fluke.
Posted By: Guest Guest (Guest) (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:47 PM
Austin/Hart from royal rumble 97? How the hell did that not make this list?!
Posted By: uhh (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:49 PM
I would have the Taka and London eliminations reversed, and maybe have Taka's in the top 5. That was the original, was better, and it was funny how they kept showing the clip over and over throughout the match(and how Funaki still kept coming out). Besides that, pretty good list.
Posted By: Still Guest#8287 (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:50 PM
I hate when you guys write stuff like this. Dumb stuff like what you said about Paul London. I remember plenty about Paul London's WWE run, but this elimination isn't part of it. And I do remember plenty about him & Kendrick, but nothing to do with Ashley.
So no, not everybody only remembers the things you do & forgets everything else that you think we should forget about.
Posted By: matrix1004 (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:57 PM
no maven eliminating the undertaker?....FAIL!!!!!!!!!!
Posted By: Guest#9214 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:04 AM
Good, fun list. I would probably add the 2001 Rumble elimination when the bloodied Austin finally clotheslined the unstoppable Kane over the top rope.
Posted By: RR01 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:04 AM
You can't talk about Flair's win without mentioning Bobby Heenan's commentary. His "YES! YES! YES!" is the "Giants win the pennant!" or pro wrestling.
Posted By: Mike (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:05 AM
Flair entered the Rumble #3.
Posted By: Michael Uphoff (Registered) on January 23, 2012 at 12:07 AM
Maven eliminating undertaker?
Posted By: Mike (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:09 AM
Can't forget Maven eliminating Taker. That was quite the WTF moment!
Posted By: Guest#3220 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:10 AM
Where is Maven dropkicking undertaker over the top rope?
Posted By: Guest (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:11 AM
list not valid- no maven eliminating Undertaker
Posted By: Guest#3571 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:12 AM
Good list. I would have maybe put either the Shawn Michaels eliminating Davey Boy Smith to win or one of the novelty one's like Luke the Bushwacker being eliminated so quick. But no huge complaints.
BTW, Ric Flair entered number 3, not number 2.
Posted By: E-Rock (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:24 AM
No Bushwhacker Luke going out in 5 seconds and still leaving the ring doing the Bushwhacker walk? Son I am disappoint.
Posted By: Guest#8098 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:24 AM
Austin eliminates Bret Hart after already being eliminated?
Posted By: Guest#4713 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:29 AM
No mention of any of Kane's eliminations? If the man disserves any praise, it's for his many records he's set at the event, so some of his many eliminations should be mentioned.
Posted By: Drew (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:45 AM
Yoko eliminating Macho Man at #10? Is that a joke? That ending was so contrived & looked so phony (moreso than usual in pro-wrestling). Macho did most of the work in launching himself over the top rope. And, wasn't the real injury to TAKA that he dislocated his shoulder at the Rumble? And, he dislocated it again sometime later in a match against Dean Malenko.
Posted By: NoirFan01 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:49 AM
Its already been said but....Maven.
Posted By: Guest#9118 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 01:06 AM
So no Hogan clotheslining the Warlord over the top right after he gets in the ring or Santino's record breaking one second performance?
Posted By: Guest#4063 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 01:12 AM
I agree with most here, Maven taking out Taker needs to be here, it was great.
Posted By: Still Guest#8287 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 01:26 AM
I find it interesting that no one ever, not even during the commentary of that Rumble itself, mentions that Benoit was in a feud with Paul Heyman at the time, and Benoit personally eliminated every one of Heyman's men to win the Rumble, ending with Big Show.
Posted By: Scott B (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 01:27 AM
Maven/Undertaker is THE rumble elimination!
also Beth Phoenix eliminating Khali in 2010 and Drew Carey in 2001 for honourable mentions
Posted By: Guest#3233 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 01:28 AM
No attempted double chokeslam on Austin and Triple H by The Hurricane??? What the deuce? Funniest elimination of all time.
Posted By: KMaC (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 01:39 AM
Flair was #3.
Posted By: Guest#3462 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 01:57 AM
Was sure that the "only one of shawn michaels feet hit the floor" elimination of Bulldog would be #1. To not make the list is incredible.
Honky Tonk in 2001? Austin eliminated but coming back in to win in '97? Vince eliminating Austin in '99? Thought they all wouldve made the list.
Posted By: Guest#9656 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 02:11 AM
A bloodied Austin chairshotting the bejesus out of a Jason Voorhees-like Kane was an epic one.
The reaction to Rey eliminating HHH made it a memorable elimination as well.
Posted By: Guest#7856 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 02:11 AM
Yeahhhh, Maven eliminating Taker not being on the list is ridiculous. It's easier bigger than the Nearly Decapitated list, and it's the biggest "holy shit" elimination in Rumble history.
Posted By: Jacob (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 02:20 AM
Edge v Gillberg on the apron??
Posted By: Stylo112 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 02:29 AM
Not a fan of including Benoit on this. But Kudos for at least mentioning the stuff surrounding him. I hate it when they act like nothing happened.
Posted By: Michael (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 02:39 AM
Wow. This is a pretty lame list. The moment I saw the title, I though Maven eliminating UT in 2002 had to be there, but it wasn't. Granted, it didn't have the long-term impact on Maven's career that people had hoped, but it was still a great visual, especially the royal ass-kicking that UT gave Maven afterwards.
For pure entertainment, I enjoyed the hell out of Rikishi dancing with 2 Cool then eliminating the two immediately after.
For visuals, the London elimination was great, but the Hardy double-elimination in 2001 was also awesome, particularly since Jeff Hardy hit the floor square from the top rope. Ouch.
And while it may not technically have been an elimination, HBK's hanging on with a "skin the cat" move to save himself from elimination in 1995, followed by his elimination of Bulldog was a thing of beauty.
But I'd say Flair probably deserves to be # 1, if only because Hogan's dick move marked the first real backlash against him from the fans (which of course would be edited for the original VHS).
And the double elimination in 94 was also memorable. As a runner up, I'd also put the Cena/Batista double-elimination in 2005, if only because it led to McMahon blowing out his quads rushing to the ring to reverse it and continue the match.
Posted By: Michael L (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 04:00 AM
Rick Martel sets the longevity record and Bulldog eliminates him to the loudest pop of the night. A testament to Martel's heel heat.
Posted By: Guest#2858 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 04:59 AM
Never seen Benoit win the Rumble before - it was really cool watching the audience explode when he won. Just adds to my feelings of sadness that Benoit's brain damage wasn't picked up on until after the double murder suicide.
Posted By: JAK (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 05:30 AM
Two good recent ones both involving Michaels.
2008 (I think) - Shelton Benjamin jumps all over the place after coming in only to get superkicked out...
and...
2010 - The Triple H elimination. Although essentially most people remember the Survivor Series 09 spot better.
Posted By: Guest#0967 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 05:41 AM
As a student of the Royal Rumble (I own and have catalogued and studied all of the DVDs), I am always disappointed by the execution of the Final Two. You would think they would book the ending to be a long, hard-fought contest, but only once has this proven true. The Undertaker (whose worst performance was a decent one in 1992) and Shawn Michaels (who only gave one performance that was less than solid, in 1990) set a standard that I don't see being met any time soon when they locked up in 2007. And yes, I did see his 2003 performance. That was a fluke.
Posted By: Guest Guest (Guest) (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:47 PM
Understood about the final two having a long match (I've often thought about it too) but there is one problem with that theory. You have to figure that at least one of the guys in the final two is not fresh, they might have entered at anything higher than, say, number 25, or they have exerted a lot of energy eliminating guys.
There would be know way then that, realistically, they could wrestle a whole match as if the Rumble had not occurred.
Posted By: The Ethnic Squirrel (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 05:58 AM
I HATED the Benoit-Big Show finish, just because it would have made no sense for Show to win the Rumble. Super smarky I know, I should have dug the David vs. Goliath story, but it sucked all the drama out. It should have been either Angle or Goldberg in there at the end.
Posted By: A.C. (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:33 PM
the wwe originally planned benoit and angle as the final 2. they would wrestle for some 5 minutes before benoit eliminates angle and win the match. they then changed the finish with big show to make benoit look more impressive by dumping the 7 ft giant over the top rope.
though you're right. once angle got eliminated, everybody knew benoit was going to win.
Posted By: Jesse (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 06:05 AM
anyone noticed that when boss man got eliminated in 92, he went over the top rope by himself. yet minutes later, savage would jump over the top rope (to attack jake roberts) and the undertaker brings savage back to the ring. gorila and heenan would then explain that you have to be thrown out by someone in order to be eliminated. where were they when big boss man got elinimated? what's up with that?
i think macho jumping out of the ring was a blooper.
Posted By: Guest#4390 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 06:15 AM
What about Maven?(no pun intended)
Posted By: The Great Capt. Smooth (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 06:19 AM
Batista/Cena was not by design? I would love to hear the rest of the story on that.
Posted By: Guest#8467 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 06:29 AM
Never saw the Benoit win. That was fucking awesome.
Posted By: Guest#9582 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 06:33 AM
The best bit about the TAKA one is Lawler's reaction and his insistence on repeating the clip about four more times before the match ended.
Posted By: Owain J. Brimfield (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 06:34 AM
cry baby bitches moaning for ever more Maven! as always!
Posted By: Guest#0267 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 06:43 AM
I seriously hate when people just name every other possible option in the comments section with a "What about...?" BUT...
When I saw this headline, I immediately thought Undertaker/Maven...that honestly should have been top 3, and it's really glaring to leave it off.
Posted By: James Jones (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 06:58 AM
"TAKA is minding his own business when Gangrel begins to club his back ferociously"
Yeah, he was minding his own business attacking people after already having been thrown out (twice?) in a match he wasn't even supposed to be in...
Posted By: Guest#3267 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 07:05 AM
Sid eliminating Sgt. Slaughter in 1992 should be here.
He shot Sarge at the corner like a fucking cannon, and the bump Sarge took was great - it really put Sid over as a scary powerful guy.
Posted By: Loki (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 08:00 AM
Don't remember the year but Daniel Puder getting stiffed to hell and back by Eddy, Benoit and Hardcore Holly was hilarious!!!
Posted By: Deano (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 09:03 AM
Saddest thing about that Savage elimination is that they could've done the exact same finish had Randy just mounted Yoko and rained fists on him until being hoisted out. So dumb.
Michaels elimination in 2010 was so well done it even worked the smarts, looking like a genuine accident for a second there.
I always liked Austin's elimination of Bart Gunn in the '97 Rumble, where Bart's feet kept on sliding all the way under the apron and he splatted on the floor.
Maven's elimination of Taker should be on here somewhere.
Posted By: neverAcquiesce (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 09:22 AM
Batista/Cena was not by design? I would love to hear the rest of the story on that.
Posted By: Guest#8467 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 06:29 AM
Not much of a story really. They botched the finish so the refs panic and split the decision (after likely being told to do so through their headsets) until Vince comes down to bark orders and fix things...from a seated position after tearing both quads entering the ring. If I remember correctly, they were also very quickly running out of allotted PPV time and needed to finish ASAP.
My favorite part of the story is, reportedly, Vince no-sold TWO TORN QUADS and fucking WALKED to the back before collapsing. If true, that is mental.
Posted By: neverAcquiesce (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 09:26 AM
"Michaels went for his trusty Superkick, but Taker telegraphed it and sent him over the top rope."
Telegraphing a punch (or a move, or whatever) is unintentionally signaling where it's going to land before throwing it. It's like tipping your pitches. Taker couldn't have telegraphed Michaels' kick. Michaels could telegraph it and Taker could see it coming and avoid it, but you can't telegraph someone else's move.
Posted By: Dave Perry (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 09:52 AM
Kane choke slamming Sabu out of the rumble thru a table was top elimination material for sure. No Kane love at all?!
Posted By: Stevie Boy (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 09:53 AM
And there is the Warlord in his Phantom Of The Opera gear. He stands on the ring apron snarling & scowling at the fans, not paying attention to Hulk Hogan coming up behind him, clotheslining him in & then 1 second more, clotheslining him out...did you have fun?
And then there's one of the Bushwhackers marching down the aisle, marching into the ring, gets eliminated very quickly by someone, then marches down the aisle to the locker room...did you have fun?
Posted By: Guest#1061 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:08 AM
About the Taka one, what is not put in was that Taka wasn't even in the Rumble itself. Him and Funake kept interupting it because they were angry at not being in the rumble match (this is Kafabe terms) and each time the participants kept throwing them back out.
SO not really an elimination sorry.
Posted By: Guest#2725 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:09 AM
Maven eliminating Taker is the most memorable individual elimination ever. That was an absolute shocker and perfectly executed.
Posted By: Andrew Barbarash (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:09 AM
there are three eliminations that are clearly missing from this list:
1. muhammad hassan 2005 by everyone in the ring - this is not like the earthquake elimination. this is everyone in the ring stopping what they're doing, circling hassan, ganging up on him and eliminating him not because they deemed him a challenge, but because they HATED him. completely says everything about how the wwe brilliantly booked this guy, and why hassan was one of the greatest heels in wwe history. until they screwed it up.
2. undertaker 2002 by maven - so completely out of the blue. maven's career was extremely unimportant, but he'll always be remembered for this. it's his claim to fame.
3. bushwacker luke 1999 by earthquake - he comes down the aisle doing his bushwacker walk, gets in the ring, is immediately grabbed by earthquake, walked to the other side, thrown over the top rope, and does his bushwacker walk back to the dressing room. total time in the ring: 4 seconds. hysterical.
Posted By: Double C (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:18 AM
No Maven is a crime. And the Benoit elimination isn't bad because it's Benoit, it's just bad because it's a shitty elimination. So you're about to hear some negativity from each end.
Posted By: Guest#0845 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:25 AM
What about Vince McMahon's quads being eliminated by his attempt to crawl into the ring?
Posted By: Ron Mexico (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:32 AM
I remember watching the 92 Rumble and being kinda shocked at the pop Sid got when he elminated Hogan. On the one hand, I fully expected the crowd to be deflated when Hulk got elminated. On the other hand though, this was at the time when the first serious backlashes against Hulk's stale act were starting to show with the fans.
Posted By: Person (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:38 PM
What was even more interesting was the recaps in the following weeks where the pop was dubbed over with boos. God forbid Hulk's elimination be cheered. *eyeroll*
Posted By: Lala Land (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:38 AM
anyone noticed that when boss man got eliminated in 92, he went over the top rope by himself. yet minutes later, savage would jump over the top rope (to attack jake roberts) and the undertaker brings savage back to the ring. gorila and heenan would then explain that you have to be thrown out by someone in order to be eliminated. where were they when big boss man got elinimated? what's up with that?
i think macho jumping out of the ring was a blooper.
Posted By: Guest#4390 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 06:15 AM
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If you wanna talk semantics, Bossman's elimination was based on his forward momentum in trying to eliminate Ric Flair, but Ric ducking. Savage just propelled himself over the ropes by himself to get Jake Roberts.
Posted By: Person (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:59 AM
Maven and Undertaker was a good one I agree that was hilarious. But how about a couple more like when Bulldog thought he eliminated Shawn Micheals and Michaels got back in because both his feet didn't floor. Everyone thought Bulldog won at first.That was a good one. Or the many times a heel tries to hide under the ring and tries to get back in and STILL loses the rumble.
Posted By: Kyle (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:59 AM
taka wasnt even in the rumble
Posted By: Guest#2878 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 11:27 AM
Pretty much not a fan of either of the "decapitations," the Taka faceplant, or the shitty Benoit/Big Show finish.
Others have mentioned good finishes. I would add Andre the Giant eliminating himself after Jake pulls his snake out of the bag.
Posted By: Guest#0251 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 11:32 AM
stone cold '97. the elimination that wasnt.
Posted By: rey (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:20 PM
Surprised no mention of '95 with Michaels' false elimination where Bulldog's music plays and he gets dumped over.
As one of the commenters did mention, that Sarge elimination in 1992 was incredibly sick...they didn't keep the camera on it long enough, but Piper's elimination of IRS via tie-pull was also creative as hell. God, how did they go downhill so fast in 1992?? That Rumble might've been the most stacked roster they've ever had...even the filler guys were studs.
Posted By: Team J-Rod (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 12:34 PM
I was watching that today on the Flair DVD set and I don't think Flair ever understands that for a wrestling company to be truly taken seriously the top man at the company has to be a good guy. He has the same fantasy that HHH has. It doesn't work for a universal or mainstream audience.
Posted By: Ken (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:40 PM
Then how do you explain the Four Horsemen carrying JCP for years.
Posted By: Charlie Harvell (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 01:31 PM
Even if you are still a fan of Chris "I murdered my wife and child and took the coward's way out" Benoit, it was still a lame elimination. It doesn't deserve to make the list for that reason alone, also because, you don't glorify child killers!
Also I agree with everyone asking where is Maven eliminating Undertaker??? Also, HBK/Bulldog finish? Each of those would have deserved number 3. Take that and Paul London off the list.
Posted By: Benoit=Killer (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 02:04 PM
Good on you for not ducking out on having Benoit's Rumble win high up the list. Bonus points for no mention of Rey Mysterio too!
Posted By: Guest#3379 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 02:21 PM
I'm with the Maven crowd...probably my personal favorite elimination, just due to how things were at the time, and how it came off on TV.
Posted By: Yup (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 02:31 PM
...the shitty Benoit/Big Show finish.
Others have mentioned good finishes. I would add Andre the Giant eliminating himself after Jake pulls his snake out of the bag.
Posted By: Guest#0251 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 11:32 AM
Andre/Jake wasn't the finish to that Rumble and I fail to see how Andre simply stepping out over the top rope to get away from a snake is a good elimination of an immovable giant, but the epic struggle for leverage on that guillotine isn't.
Posted By: Guest#2794 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 02:37 PM
Rick Martel sets the longevity record and Bulldog eliminates him to the loudest pop of the night. A testament to Martel's heel heat.
Posted By: Guest#2858 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 04:59 AM
Definitely the biggest pop of the match, but you've GOT to acknowledge Ultimate Warrior tearing the Iraqi flag at the beginning of his match against Sgt. Slaughter. That was one of the biggest pops ever.
I knew this list would receive a lot of backlash. Pretty much any Royal Rumble list will need a "Top 30" listing, because there are about 5 great moments in most Rumble matches.
Posted By: Guest Guest (Guest) (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 03:16 PM
How about Andre going "Fuck This!!" and eliminating himself when Jake came back with Damien in '89?
Posted By: Boogie (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 03:49 PM
Buncha Maven marks.
Me and my friend were concerned for the rest of the show if Paul London was still alive after that Snitsky elimination! How fun was Snitsky!? Bring him back.
Posted By: Guest#4405 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 03:59 PM
NOT ONE mention of Austin eleminating Kane in 2001. The arena damn near exploded. Not to mention that was probably the most important rumble win ever because of what followed
Posted By: Guest#7627 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 04:46 PM
Who is Paul London?
Posted By: John L. (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 05:09 PM
typical iwc bullshit at the top. London and Lex Bret are easily top two. Flair barely did jackshit. I also love how everyone hates on 1994 for some reason that is a great rumble. You want to talk about a rumble were realistically hardly anyone could win it is 1992. Hogan, Flair, Savage, Sid, Taker, or Piper. Piper only for his storyline and then have to hot shot it to Flair anyway. Sid just coming back from injury was a long shot as was Taker who just hot shotted the belt back to Hogan or Savage who had just returned and had Hogan not left wouldnt have been champ in 1992. Even though I love Savage.
Posted By: radtke (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 05:18 PM
My buddy brings up the Bushwacker Luke elimination every so often, so last week since it's Rumble season, I pulled out the DVD of his elimination. Me, him and my brother must have watched that 5 times in a row and laughed just as hard everytime.
I'd have Maven/Taker on here as well. also HBK's on foot touching the floor deal should be up there. Other than that pretty good list.
Posted By: Andre the Midget (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 05:52 PM
Hassan should DEFINITELY be on this list..the pop the crowd gave when EVERYONE started stomping him was insane! Mavens elimination of taker was cool..but totally taken away by Takers immediate burial of him after.
Posted By: mcstunna (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 05:56 PM
Nobody mentions Vader sending Flash Funk flying to the floor with no way to save his ass. Looked awesome and the commentators hardly mentioned it.
Posted By: Red Rex (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 06:16 PM
I'd like to mention Vader taking the SWAT team member's (twin fat bald butterball guy) head off with a vicious clothesline in 1996.
They show a replay and it's the stiffest clothesline I've ever seen. Mr Perfect on commentary just goes "Took his head off..."
Posted By: Oh! Lymping Hero (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 09:03 PM
It's been said...
Bulldog vs. Martel.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpb7IS_IACo
about 1:45 in.
This one too. Mysterio getting rid of Triple H (about 5:50 in)
Posted By: Guest#5303 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 09:19 PM
Lex Bret was bullshit and bossman was a botch...BY FAR number one is maven undertaker I can understand if u watched it for the first time now that u wouldn't care...but that was the biggest shocker ever...honorable mention to Andre eliminating himself when jake threw his snake in the ring and when Beth eliminated Khali
Posted By: Hartlizel (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:25 PM
Damn, already about 100 comments, I'm not going through those. That said, the first one that popped into my mind was Maven eliminating the Undertaker. It was so shocking that the winner of tough enough would take out the Phenom. He sure as hell paid for it, too.
Also, the Bushwacker (I don't remember if it was Butch or Luke) coming out, getting into the ring, getting tossed, and continuing on like nothing happened has stood out.
And that TAKA one was sick. They showed that all night, and Jerry Lawler joked about it at length. Poor TAKA.
Posted By: G-Walla (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:41 PM
I was watching that today on the Flair DVD set and I don't think Flair ever understands that for a wrestling company to be truly taken seriously the top man at the company has to be a good guy. He has the same fantasy that HHH has. It doesn't work for a universal or mainstream audience.
Posted By: Ken (Guest) on January 22, 2012 at 11:40 PM
Then how do you explain the Four Horsemen carrying JCP for years.
Posted By: Charlie Harvell (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 01:31 PM
Charlie hits the nail on the head! Back in those days, I tuned in to see Flair and the Horsemen destroy Dusty, Magnum, RnR Express, Sting and so on.
Posted By: chAd_b (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 11:31 PM
And there is the Warlord in his Phantom Of The Opera gear. He stands on the ring apron snarling & scowling at the fans, not paying attention to Hulk Hogan coming up behind him, clotheslining him in & then 1 second more, clotheslining him out...did you have fun?
Posted By: Guest#1061 (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 10:08 AM
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Small correction, Warlord wasn't in his Phantom of the Opera silver-half mask phase just yet...he was in his Powers of Pain gear still.
Posted By: Team J-Rod (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 11:31 PM
BUNCHA.
MAVEN.
MARKS.
Snitsky beheaded Paul London.
Posted By: Guest#4026 (Guest) on January 24, 2012 at 12:44 AM
Santino being instantly eliminated
Posted By: Guest#6253 (Guest) on January 24, 2012 at 05:30 AM
And there is the Warlord in his Phantom Of The Opera gear. He stands on the ring apron snarling & scowling at the fans, not paying attention to Hulk Hogan coming up behind him, clotheslining him in & then 1 second more, clotheslining him out...did you have fun?
And then there's one of the Bushwhackers marching down the aisle, marching into the ring, gets eliminated very quickly by someone, then marches down the aisle to the locker room...did you have fun?
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I stand corrected...Warlord was still in his Powers of Pain attire so that would be either 1989 or 1990 that that happened.
And yes, it was Earthquake that knocked out Butch in that record moment.
Posted By: Guest#6818 (Guest) on January 24, 2012 at 10:47 AM
Then how do you explain the Four Horsemen carrying JCP for years.
Posted By: Charlie Harvell (Guest) on January 23, 2012 at 01:31 PM
I had friends who were huge wrestling fans and they didn't know who Flair or the Horsemen were until 1992 in WWF, They were bigger fans (Super Fans) than ANYONE here, collected stickers, action figures, you name it. ok it's an East Coast thing, North Carolina to Texas. WHICH PROVES MY POINT!!!!!!!!!!!!! And let's also blame it on TV executive producers who didn't want a wrestling show appealing to a PG or G audience starring a bad guy. Just remember when the Horseman were faces in 1999 (Spring Stampede) they got booed in Seattle: Benoit and Malenko circled the ring and were confused as to how they should react; and just yesterday Kane and Ryder were getting little to no fan reaction in PHOENIX!!! And you're going to hate to hear this but JCP was a small organization until the early 1990s. Universally you can't have bad guys at the top.
Posted By: Ted the Lawyer (Guest) on January 24, 2012 at 03:34 PM
Lex Bret was bullshit and bossman was a botch...BY FAR number one is maven undertaker I can understand if u watched it for the first time now that u wouldn't care...but that was the biggest shocker ever...honorable mention to Andre eliminating himself when jake threw his snake in the ring and when Beth eliminated Khali
Posted By: Hartlizel (Guest) on January 24, 2012 at 05:01 PM
How about Shawn eliminating Yokozuna AND Vader AT THE SAME TIME! That was awesome.
Posted By: JWestmoreland (Guest) on January 24, 2012 at 09:18 PM
one elimination not mentioned: the jerry lawler stopping what he was saying, mid-sentence, putting his headset down, entering the rumble, getting tossed right away and going back to finish his sentence.
Posted By: sdmcc (Guest) on January 25, 2012 at 01:38 AM
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