Forgotten Favorites 01.22.09: Royal Rumble 1999 - Mankind vs. The Rock
Posted by Jim Grimm on 01.22.2009
Prepare for this Sunday's Rumble by revisiting one of the event's bloodiest and most intense WWE Title matches. Did I mention its an I Quit Match?
Well, since 411 hasn't canned me yet and negative feedback hasn't completely ruined my self esteem, I am back yet again to remember the matches that have slipped through WWE's historical cracks. My job is to help fans relive some legendary encounters while also enlightening some younger fans on matches they may have never known existed. I'm not one for wasting your time, so let's get right down to it for this week.
Sometimes two wrestlers will have a blood feud that lasts for several weeks or months. Over the course of their feud, several wars will be waged inside the ring, the goal being to up the ante a bit more with each match. Because of this, some matches, despite their high entertainment value, get lost in the shuffle. Sometimes history will look fondly on one or two encounters between rivals, while others end up lost in time. In late '98 and early '99, two guys had a hell of a feud over the World Wrestling Federation Championship. They battled at four consecutive PPVs, had several televised matches, and exchanged the WWF Title multiple times. But one of their matches, arguably their best, has not gotten the recognition it deserves from WWE.
Royal Rumble - January 24, 1999
World Wrestling Federation Championship I Quit
Mankind vs. The Rock
HOW IT WENT DOWN
For most of 1998, Stone Cold Steve Austin was the man in the World Wrestling Federation. He rose to a level of popularity unseen by any other wrestler while plowing through any obstacle thrown in his way by evil bossman Mr. McMahon. Vince's dream to get the WWF Title off of Austin was realized at September's Breakdown PPV, when a screwy finish to a Triple Threat involving Austin, Kane, and Undertaker resulted in a vacated title. Two months later at Survivor Series, a tournament was held to crown a new champion. Heading into the PPV, it seemed as if McMahon's handpicked winner was a slightly out-of-touch Mankind. At the time, Foley was the gullible innocent goofball who only wanted to impress his, uh, "Dad." And while McMahon and Mankind didn't really have much in common, Vince could at least control Mrs. Foley's baby boy if he were to win the WWF Title. He was a far better candidate for a corporate champion than rebellious McMahon-haters like Stone Cold or The Rock. But wait ... what's that up ahead? Is that a .... SWERVE?
The tournament came down to Mankind and The Rock in the finals. In a spot that refuses to leave pro wrestling, Rock turned Mankind over for the Sharpshooter and Vince McMahon immediately called for the bell. The Rock had sold his soul in order to win his first WWF Championship, and he no longer cared about the people. People's Elbow? Funk that. How about Corporate Elbow? The Rock became the centerpiece of The Corporation, McMahon's personal army, consisting of guys like Ken Shamrock, The Big Bossman, and The Punisher Andrew Martin. McMahon had led Mankind to the slaughter at Survivor Series, knowing full well that the plan was to make The Rock the new "corporate" champion. Mankind was understandably not happy about this, and a rematch was scheduled for December's Rock Bottom PPV. A No Contest led to yet another title match on Raw, when Foley finally won his first WWF Title. Mankind would only agree to a rematch held under "I Quit" rules, a match he felt that he couldn't lose and Rock couldn't win. The Rock, willing to do anything to reclaim the gold, accepted. The match was signed for the Royal Rumble PPV in January.
I Quit promo package and a badass Rock interview
The match itself was, er, violent. They start throwing punches before the bell even sounds, and then it's a game of who can bludgeon the other with more foreign objects. They battle around ringside, using microphones, steel chairs, and the ring bell. Mr. Socko makes a brief appearance, but Foley soon realizes the worthlessness of the move, since an unconscious Rock can't say "I Quit."
Later on, both men get owned by the Spanish announce table when Rock sets Foley up for a Rock Bottom ... and the table gives out underneath them! Soon the fight moves up the ramp and towards the stage. Rocky manages to find a ladder and climbs up to the row of fans' seats just above the wrestler's entrance. Foley follows him up, but Rock is able to gain the advantage with a low blow. A couple of seconds later, Rock smacks the yellow off Foley's teeth, and FOLEY FLIES!
Foley could fly long before Shane Helms had Hurripowers
He falls from the stands down onto a heap of electrical equipment! WE HAVE SPARKS, PEOPLE. WE HAVE NO ARENA LIGHTS! A spotlight shines down on a laid-out Foley, and now Shane O'Mac is out to try and stop the fight. But Rock has none of it! "No, nothing! That son of a bitch will scream I Quit and I'll be damned if he doesn't!"
Rock leads Foley back to the ring, and here is where the Corporate Champ reveals that he in fact has no soul. He HANDCUFFS Foley BEHIND HIS BACK and begins to stomp the shit out of him. Foley is able to mount a small come back with a low blow and an attempt at biting Rock's face off, but once Rocky grabs a steel chair all of Foley's hopes are gone. Rock lays the chair across the face of a downed Foley, then hits the ropes and lands the Corporate Elbow on the chair! Foley manages to get back up to his feet, and with his hands still cuffed behind his back, gets BLASTED with a chair to the face! Foley drops to his knees and receives ANOTHER CHAIRSHOT TO THE FACE! The Rock grabs the microphone, ordering Mankind to quit, but Foley only mutters, "You'll have to kill me."
When Mankind is back up, he gets ANOTHER CHAIRSHOT. But he's still standing! ANOTHER CHAIRSHOT! Still standing! ANOTHER! And Foley goes down!
Mankind rolls out of the ring and tries to escape up the ramp, but Rock is in hot pursuit. ANOTHER CHAIRSHOT! Foley struggles to get to his feet, barely limping up the ramp. ANOTHER CHAIRSHOT! AND ANOTHER! Foley's hair, face, and mask are now soaked in blood. When he gets back up, he takes yet ANOTHER chairshot to the face! He tries stumbling away, but Rock BLASTS him in the BACK OF THE FUCKING HEAD! FOLEY GOES DOWN! The Rock has a microphone, and he says he guaranteed he'd make Mankind scream I Quit. And when he brings the mic down to Foley's seemingly unconscious body, Mankind is heard screaming, "I quit! I quit! I quit!" The bell sounds and The Rock is declared the new World Wrestling Federation Champion.
In a sidenote, Mankind did not actually quit. On Raw it was revealed that The Corporation were involved in some dirty monkey business, playing a recording of Foley's voice over the arena's speaker system. The match stands as awesome on its own, but the screwy finish makes it even better, showing off a shade of clever that WWE hasn't seemed to possess for a long time.
WHY IT SHOULD BE REMEMBERED
It's strange to look back at times when these guys weren't yet icons. It's even stranger to look at a match like this in particular, where each guy is right on the cusp of entering legendary territory. These are the kinds of matches that cement careers. The Rock had just risen to main event status a couple of months prior to the Rumble, and while he was damn over, he was not yet as insanely MEGA over as he would become. His list of memorable matches up to this point had been mid-card battles with Triple H and Ken Shamrock over the Intercontinental Title. This was really the first time The Rock was able to truly SHINE on PPV. He'd proven himself plenty already in the promo department, but this was the first time he made a serious impact inside the ring. His complete dominance of Foley put Rock over big time as a legit tough guy, making him as serious a threat in the ring as on the microphone. The ensuing Rock-Austin WrestleMania main event would've been huge regardless of the I Quit Match, but there's no doubt that it boosted Rock's credibility before the showdown.
And while this wasn't the match that made Foley's career -- that honor likely going to his HIAC with Undertaker several months prior -- it damn sure helped secure his spot in history. It was also the first in a long line of matches over the next several years years where Foley got his ass handed to him in the name of establishing the next big heel. The Rock, Triple H, Randy Orton, and Edge all owe a serious debt to Mick Foley for helping them to reach their full potential in the ring and with the audience. He may not be the best technical wrestler, but I'll be damned if the dude hasn't sacrificed his well being for the business at an extreme level.
Another reason this match needs to be remembered is because it was the peak of one hell of a feud. WWE hasn't completely forgotten the Mankind/Rock feud, but it gets nowhere near the credit it deserves. The reason for this is the feud basically existed in order to keep Rock and Austin away from each other before WrestleMania. After dropping the belt, Stone Cold had to work his way through a series of McMahon-created challenges in order to finally earn a title shot at WrestleMania. During this time period, WWE had to establish The Rock as the new top heel champion, and that's where Mick Foley came in. Stone Cold vs. The Rock was the inevitable WM main event, but The Rock needed that extra bit of starpower before the match. His blood feud with Mick Foley is what undoubtedly put The Rock over the top as the guy to beat in WWE, and it made Austin's eventual title victory that much more important.
WHY IT ISN'T REMEMBERED
Retrospective DVDs have been released for each of these guys, and yet while each DVD covers their storied feud, neither contains this classic match. 2004's Mick Foley's Greatest Hits and Misses understandably opts for Mankind's Raw title victory. The Rock's 2008 DVD features three, yes, THREE matches with Mankind, and yet their Royal Rumble encounter is nowhere to be found. While their Survivor Series, Last Man Standing, and Ladder matches were all great stuff, their I Quit match easily stands as their best work together. So what the hell, bro? Why no I Quit love on these DVDs?
The better question might be, Why no I Quit love in WWE these days? Last Man Standing and Ladder matches have been whored our repeatedly over the past few years. Steel Cage and Hell in a Cell matches are just as common. And yet the I Quit match, which has produced some of the most emotional moments in wrestling history, has been put to the side and ignored. The last classic I Quit was a hell of a match between Ric Flair and Mick Foley at SummerSlam 2006 (a potential future article), but what about before that? A meaningless Chavo/Mystero match on SmackDown a couple years ago? Cena/JBL in a damned bloody but ultimately forgettable title bout? Again I ask: What the hell, bro?
The I Quit match is storytelling at its finest. Two men hate each other so much that they're willing to beat the shit out of each other until one man surrenders. Or in the case of Rumble '99, until one man seemingly surrenders. Foley's dubbed "I Quit" added yet another dimension to the story of the match, as Rocky came out looking not just like a violent douche, but a sneaky trickster as well. And everybody likes to see a violent, douchey trickster get his comeuppance. But shenanigans can't be pulled at the end of every I Quit match, and I think this is one of the reasons we don't see too many of them. In order for the match to end, one dude has to clearly say into a microphone that he gives up. Tapping out is one thing; 20,000 people hearing you say "I Quit" is another entirely. I don't know if the I Quit drop-off is a case of the wrestlers protecting themselves, Vince not wanting to damage his talent's reputation, or a combination of both. But with less I Quit matches taking place now, there's little reason to go back and revisit some of the classics, at least as far as WWE is concerned. And this, kids, is a damn shame. Rock and Mankind had one hell of a fight at the Rumble, and their match deserves its proper place in wrestling history.
WILL IT BE REMEMBERED?
Eventually. Foley will eventually return to WWE, and when that happens he'll receive another DVD release. His Greatest Hits and Misses is a quality DVD, but two discs for his entire career is kind of selling the dude short. Whenever he decides to come back and make nice with Vince, I wouldn't be surprised to see another DVD release with this match on it. A new Rock DVD probably won't come around for a long time, but yo has got to come back and get inducted into the Hall of Fame eventually. Both Rock and Foley have kind of faded from historical significance the past few years as far as WWE is concerned, and it has everything to do with their personal career choices. It sounds unfair that Vince would bastardize a legend's legacy based on a particular guy's choice to move on from WWE, but that's the way of things nowadays.
But no matter what, The Rock and Mick Foley are WWE legends. They are sure fire Hall of Famers, and both will be back on WWE television someday in some capacity. When Vince can get over the fact that two of his biggest stars have moved on, that's when these two guys will get the true respect they deserve. And hopefully respect for their classic I Quit match will follow.
What do you guys think? Was this the best Rock vs. Mankind? Did it belong on either of their DVDs, or were their other matches superior? Keep discussing, keep throwing out ideas, and I'll keep trying to be somewhat entertaining.
Until next time, you know the drill. Stay safe and out of jail.
I remember seeing that match an gotta say the rock pretty much beat da crap outta mankind with those chairshots...hmm I wonder if I can find a link to dat match...
Posted By: Peewee (Guest) on January 21, 2009 at 11:42 PM
Sure fire Hall of Famers? I'd easily give the honor to Foley, but The Rock doesn't make it in my eyes.
Posted By: Just Saying... (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 12:49 AM
In one of Foley's biography's he mentions that he actually was very offended by the match. Because The Rock hit him too many times with the chair, then out of all the people that came to see if he was okay after the match, The Rock was not one of them. This really upset Foley, which is the only reason that I can come up with as to why it's not more well known.
Posted By: Kerwin White (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 12:57 AM
da rock rulezorz
jim grimm uz mah h3rrow
Posted By: Clayton Bigsby (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 01:29 AM
Why isn't this match on Foley and Rock DVDs? Because every Royal Rumble PPV in their entirety is already on DVD. The Ladder match from RAW and the St. Valentine's Day Massacre matches aren't. Heck, there's isn't even a Survivor Series anthology set yet. I'd rather have the matches from RAW and minor PPVs then one from one of the most well known PPVs a second or third time.
This is a great match but it's not forgotten by any stretch of the imagination.
Posted By: Ron Mexico (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 01:41 AM
You forgot about the I Quit match at One Night Stand '08 between Melina and Beth Phoenix. Sure, it was just a 10 minute submission match that looked like the Hart Dungeon's greatest hits, but I loved that match. Easily one of the best women's matches in recent memory.
Posted By: Gothekain (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 03:32 AM
There is a fantastic Michael Cole quote in this match. In the early going once they go to the outside and over the announce table Mankind grabs a chair and hits the Rock, viewers at home get this gem
"STEEL STAIRS into the back... What a chairshot!"
Posted By: Brad (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 07:02 AM
Sure fire Hall of Famers? I'd easily give the honor to Foley, but The Rock doesn't make it in my eyes.
Posted By: Just Saying... (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 12:49 AM
---------
Er, are you fucking retarded? I'm no Rock mark, but if you dont think he'll be going into the HOF then you are a fucking idiot. He's a 9-time world champion and one of the most charismatic and popular wrestlers of ALL TIME.
Posted By: Johnny X (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 08:26 AM
sorry Jim, but all your picks so far are stupid because EVERYBODY remembers them. like I said in the comment section of the Austin/Angle match, why not pick something that isn't a "classic" for once? Kurt Angle vs. Rey Mysterio from 06/02/2006, THAT'S a forgotten favorite. nearly twenty minutes great wrestling with a lame finish. still a **** match on free tv.
Posted By: guy incognito (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 08:44 AM
How can this be a forgotten favorite when most of the 411 columnists had this as one of the top 5 royal rumble moments? You want a forgotten favorite from a rumble...go find Rockers/Orient Express '91
Posted By: Guest#8650 (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 09:05 AM
So far every match you have done a column on isn't forgotten. Good concept, horrible execution.
also "Sure fire Hall of Famers? I'd easily give the honor to Foley, but The Rock doesn't make it in my eyes." This is so obviously just a way of getting cheat "heat" on the comments section. But I ask you this-why?
What's the point?
Do you come back later to check on this comment section to see if you got anyone fired up?
I don't get it...
Posted By: Polish Post (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 09:31 AM
I understand your reasoning (this match didn't make either man's DVD set), but since this match was featured extensively in Behind the Mat, I wouldn't have thought it necessary for inclusion.
Posted By: TAT (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 09:56 AM
Loved this match. Was actually there live and it single-handedly saved a lackluster PPV. Seeing Austin and McMahon got at it for a few minutes was fun, but everybody left talking about the title match. I still regulary watch it, and it's one of the few matches that can get me to cringe time and again.
Posted By: neverAcquiesce (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 11:05 AM
The Rock doesn't make it in your eyes?
He was the first guy to ever hold 7 world champions
Posted By: Kent Baker (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 12:10 PM
I don't get your criteria, as this is by no means a forgotten classic. This was viewed by many as the best match of 99 (admittedly a weak year workratewise), and I think it even was the PWI winner for MOTY in 99. Furthermore, the match itself and the aftermath was immortalized in the film "Beyond the Mat."
If you want to address a "Forgotten Favorite", then why don't you do Bret Hart v. Pierre LaFitte from 95? That was a five star match?
Or how about Fit Finley v. Steve Regal from Uncensored 96 (one of the stiffest matches ever to be in WCW)?
Those were solid midcard matches that haven't gotten the recognition they deserved.
Posted By: Michael L (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 12:32 PM
Sure fire Hall of Famers? I'd easily give the honor to Foley, but The Rock doesn't make it in my eyes.
Posted By: Just Saying... (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 12:49 AM
Yea, that's a pretty dumb statement. Vince inducted the Rock's family just to get him at last year's hall of fame and you don't think he'd induct the Rock? Just for the fact the Rock is so recognizable outside the "wwe universe" as well as loved within makes him probably an easier selection than Foley, for Vince.
Posted By: Official Manhugger (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 12:41 PM
Also what do you mean by saying both have faded from historical significance the past few years? Both are recognized by the wwe, and in the past year alone Foley was an announcer and involved in promos with Edge, while the Rock was the undercard to Ric Flair's Hall of Fame. You want the guys main eventing ppv's?
Posted By: Official Manhugger (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 12:52 PM
I remember HalfTime Heat when Mick won the WWE strap pinning the rock with a forklift full of kegs. That was a messy fight, some spots were funny when the rock was drinking some JD and told Mick to stop making a damn mess! LOL
Posted By: guest1228 (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 12:56 PM
"I don't get your criteria, as this is by no means a forgotten classic. This was viewed by many as the best match of 99 (admittedly a weak year workratewise), and I think it even was the PWI winner for MOTY in 99. Furthermore, the match itself and the aftermath was immortalized in the film "Beyond the Mat.""
The idea is to look at matches I feel WWE hasn't properly acknowledged over the years, based on career DVDs and periodic nostalgic flashbacks. This has nothing to do with a match's popularity in the IWC or in mediums outside WWE. I realize most longtime diehards are familiar with this match. I'm suggesting that WWE hasn't remembered it as much as they should have.
Posted By: Jim Grimm (Registered) on January 22, 2009 at 01:30 PM
two things --
1) The end of this match made no sense to a LOT of people, because Heat wasn't carried live. It actually aired opposite the Rumble. So we had no idea where the "I quit i quit i quit" came from. It wasn't until later, when the announcers explained it, that we understood anything. Took a lot away from the match, not knowing where the Voice Of Foley came from.
2) This match was one of the focal points of Beyond The Mat. And not in a good way. It had such a negative air about it that the WWE probably chose on purpose not to include it.
Posted By: Spaz Monkey (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 01:56 PM
The best Rock-Foley moment was the halftime heat match wehre they ended up fighting in an office.....Rock is slapping the ignorant taste out of foleys mouth, and the phone rings...Rock answers it and says "No, Mankind can't come to the phone right now, he has my FOOT IN HIS ASS" God, that was instant classic
Posted By: Jay (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 02:08 PM
Kerwin,
Rock did come check on Mick after that match. Watch Beyond the Mat. He checks on him when he is getting his head stitches after that match. He even talks to one of Mick's kids. Mick does remark that he got excessive with the chair shots and Rock admits a misunderstanding of signals.
Posted By: BigDog6ft9 (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 02:21 PM
I gotta agree that this match is far from forgotten. In fact, I think this is probably the most famous match in their entire feud, even if the WWE doesn't want to acknowledge it for some reason. I certainly remember it more than their ladder match or their last man standing match.
Posted By: JLAJRC (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 06:12 PM
"The end of this match made no sense to a LOT of people, because Heat wasn't carried live. It actually aired opposite the Rumble. So we had no idea where the "I quit i quit i quit" came from. It wasn't until later, when the announcers explained it, that we understood anything. Took a lot away from the match, not knowing where the Voice Of Foley came from.
---------------------------------------
Not even close.
The "I quit" that was recorded and played at the end of the match was from an interview on RAW. Not from HEAT. Which aired an hour before the PPV. Heat aired LIVE from 7-8 on PPV weekends back in the late 90's.
Also, the whole thing wasn't explained until the NEXT NIGHT on RAW because everyone was suppossed to think that Mick Foley DID say "I Quit". Which was unheard of at the time.
Posted By: cm HUNK (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 06:26 PM
"His Greatest Hits and Misses is a quality DVD, but two discs for his entire career is kind of selling the dude short."
It's been rereleased with 3 discs, so isn't it 3 discs for his entire career?
Posted By: Guest#3567 (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 06:27 PM
who exactly forgot this match?
and I agree, that Melina/Phoenix match was AWESOME
Posted By: Drue (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 07:17 PM
The Rock's irresponsible and dangerous handling of Mick during this match is the reaon I'll never respect the Rock. Anybody who does support him is a fucking idiot, and should have their heads bashed in with a chair eleven times.
Posted By: MBD (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 07:23 PM
Did the Rock n Sock connection resign or is this column a one shot deal?
Posted By: nill (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 10:10 PM
Sure fire Hall of Famers? I'd easily give the honor to Foley, but The Rock doesn't make it in my eyes.
Posted By: Just Saying... (Guest) on January 22, 2009 at 12:49 AM
This guy must be an idiot. The Rock is far more likely to get it than Foley. Especially now.
Posted By: Save it. (Guest) on January 23, 2009 at 12:34 AM
You want an awesome match that people have forgotten?
Dean Malenko vs. Scotty 2 Hotty for the Light Heavyweight Championship from Backlash 2000
Posted By: Ron Mexico (Guest) on January 23, 2009 at 03:55 AM
The idea is to look at matches I feel WWE hasn't properly acknowledged over the years, based on career DVDs and periodic nostalgic flashbacks. This has nothing to do with a match's popularity in the IWC or in mediums outside WWE. I realize most longtime diehards are familiar with this match. I'm suggesting that WWE hasn't remembered it as much as they should have.
Posted By: Jim Grimm (Registered) on January 22, 2009 at 01:30 PM
then again: why do it? you are catering to a "IWC audience" (what the hell are readers of this site? "casual fans"? hell no!). why not make this column something really worth reading?
Posted By: guy incognito (Guest) on January 23, 2009 at 04:00 AM
While this I-Quit match was certainly very good, respectively, I don't think this was their best match. I feel it should've been included on @ least The Rock's DVD if not Foley's. This was a crucial point in getting The Rock over as a legit main event heel. Also, in regards to their other matches being superior, I feel that the Last Man Standing and Ladder matches were better than the I Quit match, respectively.
Posted By: Wayne (Guest) on January 23, 2009 at 06:58 AM
This match is something I would think to find on Luke Park's Raw is Blogged match of the week on wrestlingnewsworld.com
But to not totally discredit you, it seems you have the tools here to execute a good article your just not living up to the potential. Like others I recommend going to a match that makes you dig for it and find it, not just remember back to.
Posted By: kinaj (Guest) on January 23, 2009 at 07:59 PM
One quote during this match from the Rock will forever be burned into my brain...."Bells will be ringing...."
Posted By: RD81 (Guest) on January 23, 2009 at 10:02 PM
I think the main reason this match doesn't get much recognition is because of Beyond the Mat. BTM depicted the match in a negative light and I still can't watch it without cringing.
They may also be trying to sell the Royal Rumble 1999 DVD. Lord knows nothing else on that DVD is going to draw.
Posted By: Jamie (Guest) on March 24, 2009 at 02:36 PM
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