WCW NITRO Night of Champions.

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This Weeks Blog and Dvd Report from Yours Truly The Bodybender. It’s the Final Show for Wcw as a Promotion. To me one of the Saddest nights in Wrestling as I was a pretty Diehard Wcw Fan. In my Collection I am honored to own the Dvd for this show,which I just received today. The Show took place on March 26th,2001. Vince McMahon  opens the show,talking about how he now Owns WCW And he will address the fans and stars of Wcw. It was called the Night of Champions as Every Belt was up for Grabs. Ric Flair came out and spoke to the fans for a few minutes and Challenged Sting-this is the Main Event and what a more fitting way for this great promotion to say Goodbye to its fans. I always wish Vince had kept it alive cause it was truly great.

Booker T Vs Scott Steiner opened the Show for the World Heavyweight Championship as Every athlete gave their all for every match and Booker T Comes away with the Us and World Heavyweight Championship in a great match and here for you is that match.

The Next Match is a 3 way match for a shot at the Cruiserweight Tag Team Championship . The Winner faces Prime Time Elix Skipper and Kid Romeo. You have Billy Kidman and Rey vs The Jung Dragons vs Shannon Moore and Evan Kariages. Rey and Kidman come out on top in this one. From here we have Chavo Vs “Sugar”Shane Helms with the Nitro Girls,Shane was the defending Champion in this match. Every match was Pay Per View worthy as the guys gave everything they had. Shane came out on top in the match,finishing Chavo with his backward piledriver. From there the Natural Born Thrillers defeated Team Canada (Mike Awesome and Lance Storm) . Then Shawn Stasiak defeated the Legendary Bam Bam Bigelow. The Filthy Animals won the Cruiserweight Tag Championship from Elix “PrimeTime” Skipper and Kid Romeo. And with a Tear in my Eye, Sting defeated the “Nature Boy” Ric Flair in the final Wcw Match ever. When Wwe had Wcw matches it was just Vince’s way to bury this promotion. But he kept alot of Footage alive on Video, so for that I am grateful and of course he made a ton of Money as well. Wcw gave fans some of the greatest moments of all time, but in the End could not sustain itself, with the Money, the Ego’s a failing America Online which was all just too much for Them to handle, and many Mistakes with Talent. From the Greatest run of the Nwa 1980’s to 2001 we all got to enjoy WCW And This was the Final Nitro Show. Thank You for enjoying this Weekly Blog.. You all make it great.

This Day in Wrestling History (July 11): Brock Lesnar Wins the UFC Heavyweight Championship

https://www.cagesideseats.com

61 years ago today in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Angelo Savoldi defeated Dory Funk, Sr. to win the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship.

58 years ago today in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Gene Kinski defeated Verne Gagne to win the AWA World Heavyweight Championship.

32 years ago today in Greensboro, North Carolina, Lex Luger defeated Nikita Koloff to win the NWA United States Championship.

On the same day in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, “Dr. Death” Steve Williams defeated Big Bubba Rogers to win the UWF Heavyweight Championship.

Williams would be the last UWF Champion, as the promotion was bought out by Jim Crockett Promotions back in April, but would not fold until December 1987. Side nugget: Williams was the only babyface champion in the brief history of the promotion.

30 years ago today in Hokkaido, Japan, Stan Hansen and Genichiro Tenryu defeated Jumbo Tsuruta and Yoshiaki Yatsu to win the All Japan Pro Wrestling World Tag Team Championship.

20 years ago today, WCW presented Bash at the Beach (WWE Network link) from the National Car Rental Center in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. 13,624 were in attendance, with 175,000 homes purchasing the event on PPV. That’s down from 580,000 for the 1998 edition.

  • Ernest Miller defeated Disco Inferno.
  • Rick Steiner defeated Van Hammer to retain the WCW World Television Championship.
  • David Flair defeated Dean Malenko to retain the WCW United States Heavyweight Championship.
  • The No Limit Soldiers (Konnan, Rey Misterio, Jr., Swoll, and Brad Armstrong) defeated The West Texas Rednecks (Curt Hennig, Bobby Duncum, Jr., Barry Windham, and Kendall Windham) 4-2 in a tag team elimination match.
  • Fit Finlay won a Junkyard Invitational. Other participants were Ciclope, Jerry Flynn, Johnny Grunge, Hardcore Hak, Horace Hogan, Brian Knobbs, Hugh Morrus, La Parka, Steven Regal, Rocco Rock, Silver King, David Taylor, and Mikey Whipwreck. The match, which took place in an actual junkyard, could have only been won by climbing a fence and escaping the junkyard. Contrary to conventional belief, this was not the match where Finlay suffered an injury that nearly caused amputation of his leg. That was in another match against Knobbs later in the month.
  • The Jersey Triad (Diamond Dallas Page, Chris Kanyon, and Bam Bam Bigelow) defeated Perry Saturn and Chris Benoit to retain the WCW World Tag Team Championship.
  • Buff Bagwell defeated Roddy Piper in a boxing match by knockout 36 seconds into the third round. Famed boxing referee Mills Lane officiated the match.
  • Randy Savage and Sid Vicious defeated Kevin Nash and Sting. As Savage got the winning fall in the match, he won the WCW World Heavyweight Championship.

15 years ago today, WWE presented Vengeance (WWE Network link) from the Harford Civic Center in Harford, Connecticut. About 7,000 were in attendance, with 240,000 homes purchasing the event on PPV.

  • Tajiri and Rhyno defeated Garrison Cade and Jonathan Coachman.
  • Batista defeated Chris Jericho.
  • La Résistance (Róbert Conway and Sylvain Grenier) defeated Ric Flair and Eugene by disqualification to retain the World Tag Team Championship.
  • Matt Hardy defeated Kane in a no disqualification match.
  • Edge defeated Randy Orton to win the WWE Intercontinental Championship.
  • Victoria defeated Molly Holly to become the #1 contender for the WWE Women’s Championship.
  • Chris Benoit defeated Triple H to retain the World Heavyweight Championship.

14 years ago today on RAW from East Rutherford, New Jersey (WWE Network link), Matt Hardy makes his return to WWE three months after he was released from the company.

Hardy, while rehabbing a knee injury, discovered that his girlfriend Amy Dumas (aka Lita) was having an affair with one Adam Copeland (aka Edge). The story quickly made the rounds on the Internet. With WWE unable to contain the virtual flames, it was Hardy who got the axe (in a bit of trivia, Matt’s friend Terry Gerin, aka Rhyno, was released the same day for an unrelated incident). It also didn’t help Matt’s case that (a) he was injured, (b) Edge was on the verge of a main event push, and (c) Lita was one of the most popular performers on the roster.

The surprise firing did little to quell the flames: 15,000 fans signed a petition to get Matt Hardy rehired; in addition, Paul Heyman himself acknowledging the relationship at ECW One Night Stand about a month prior forced the WWE’s hand at least somewhat: they were forced to turn the popular Lita heel.

In Hardy’s surprising return to the company, he ambushed Edge—twice (first following an interview concerning his opponent Kane, then following the Edge-Kane bout). The second ambush resulted in Hardy being hauled out of the arena in handcuffs, but not before he encouraged fans to see him in Ring of Honor (he worked a show that weekend in Woodbridge, Connecticut). Hardy was never acknowledged on commentary, creating at least an illusion that Matt wasn’t exactly welcome on their lawn.

14 years ago today in Tokyo, Japan, Shinya Hashimoto died of a brain aneurysm. He was just 40 years old.

Born July 3, 1965 in Toki City, Gifu, Japan, Hashimoto began training in judo in his late teens. In April 1984, he began training at the New Japan Pro Wrestling Dojo. Five months later, the 19-year old Hashimoto debuted against Tatsuoshi Goto.

Over the next four years, he wrestled abroad as well as New Japan, including in the United States for the Continental Wrestling Association, Canada for Stampede Wrestling, and World Wrestling Council in Puerto Rico. It was while he was in Puerto Rico he formed Toukon Sanjushi, The Three Musketeers, with two fellow trainees from Hashimoto’s class, Masahiro Chono and Keiji Mutoh (also in that class were wrestler-turned-actor Akira Nogami and junior heavyweight legend Jushin Thunder Liger).

In April 1989, Hashimoto took part in a tournament for the IWGP Heavwyeight Championship. He knocked off Riki Choshu and Victor Zangiev, but would lose to Big Van Vader in the semifinals. In September, he teamed with Masa Saito to win the IWGP Tag Team Championship. They would hold the belts until the following April when they were defeated by Chono and Mutoh.

The Musketeers cemented themselves as the future of New Japan as the top three scorers in the 1991 G1 Climax (Hashimoto and Chono had five points each; Chono won a tiebreaker bout to advance to the final, while Mutoh won his block with four points; Chono went on to defeat Mutoh in the final).

On September 20, 1993, Hashimoto defeated Mutoh, known now as the Great Muta, to win the IWGP Heavyweight Championship. He held the title for seven months before being defeated by Tatsumi Fujinami. But he would not be without the title long; Hashimoto would win it back just four weeks later and hold it for just over one calendar year before being defeated by Mutoh.

After adding a second IWGP tag team championship reign in July 1995, he would defeat Nobuhiko Takada to win the IWGP Heavyweight Championship for a third time in April 1996. He was briefly a double champion, but Hashimoto and Junji Hirata lost the tag titles to Takashi Iizuka and Kazuo Yamazaki in June 1996. His third IWGP Heavyweight Championship lasted 489 days, a New Japan record. It was Kensuke Sasaki that would defeat him in August 1997. The next year, Hashimoto captured the G1 Climax title.

Hashimoto would have an intense rivalry with Judo champion Naoya Ogawa over his final years with the company. Ogawa defeated him in 1997 and again in April 2000 (the two also had a bout in 1999 which may or may not have turned into a shoot); the April 2000 bout served as a write-off, as Hashimoto was fired from New Japan. He did return for an All Japan/New Japan crossover event in October, where he submitted Tatsumi Fujinami.

In November 2000, Hashimoto founded Pro Wrestling Zero-One, with its first show taking place in March 2001. Later in the year, Hashimoto challenged then-NWA World Heavyweight Champion Steve Corino. Their October bout ended in controversy, leading to the title being vacated. Hashimoto would win it in December in a triple threat match that included Gary Steele. He would hold the title until being controversially defeated for the title in March 2002 by Dan Severn.

In October 2002, Hashimoto teamed with old rival Naoya Ogawa to win the NWA Intercontinental Tag Team Championship from John Heidenreich and Nathan Jones. They would lose them two months later to Matt Ghaffari and Tom Howard. They would win them back in April 2003, but they were stripped of the titles when Ogaya threw Ghaffari over the top rope during the match, a no-no in the NWA.

In February 2003, Hashimoto defeated The Great Muta for the All Japan Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship, joining Muta as the only men to hold the NWA, All Japan, and New Japan heavyweight titles. Hashimoto vacated the Triple Crown title in August 2003 due to a knee injury.

In early 2005, citing financial problems, Shinya left Zero-One, leaving Shinjiro Otani in charge of the company. Many also believed he was training for a comeback and would be a part of a “Three Musketeers” reunion in late July. He would never make the reunion.

On the morning of July 11, 2005, Hashimoto suffered a brain aneurysm. He died en route to the hospital and was pronounced dead. He was 40 years old. Hashimoto’s sister Masanari claimed that Shinya was complaining of chest pains and a faster than usual heartbeat, but he never contacted a doctor about it. Doctors claim high blood pressure and other stresses led to his death. Hashimoto had been on a heart medication in 2004, but he had to stop taking it following shoulder surgery.

Posthumously, New Japan Pro Wrestling retired the second version of the IWGP Heavyweight Championship belt (he was the first to wear it when he was presented with it during his third run in 1997). The belt was infamously unretired when Brock Lesnar left New Japan with the third version of the belt in his possession in July 2006; the belt was retired again in February 2008. On ZERO1’s seventh anniversary show in 2008, then-IWGP heavyweight champion Shinsuke Nakamura defeated Kohei Sato. He presented the second IWGP heavyweight title belt to his son Daichi.

At the time of Hashimoto’s passing, he left behind a son (who made his pro wrestling debut in 2011 with a loss to Masahiro Chono) and two daughters. Also at the time of his passing, he was seeing Kaori Fuyuki, the ex-wife of Kodo Fuyuki.

Hashimoto, the Tokyo Sports 1994 Wrestler of the Year, was inducted into the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame in 2000, and posthumously inducted into the NWA and New Japan Pro Wrestling Halls of Fame in 2010.

10 years ago today at UFC 100 in Las Vegas, Nevada, Brock Lesnar defeated Frank Mir via TKO in the second round to unify the UFC Heavyweight and Interim Heavyweight Championships.

At 1.6 million home buys, the show is the most bought in UFC history, and to this day remains one of the most bought events in PPV history (the UFC record has since been surpassed by UFC 202, which did 1.65 million home buys last August).

UFC 100 finished second in the Best Major Wrestling Show category in the 2009 Wrestling Observer Newsletter awards; Dragon Gate USA’s debut show, Open the Historic Gate, won the award despite UFC 100 getting more first-place votes.

9 years ago today, TNA presented Victory Road from the Impact Zone at Universal Studios in Orlando, Florida.

  • Douglas Williams defeated Brian Kendrick in an Ultimate X/submission match for the TNA X Division Championship. The match could be won if either wrestler submitted the other or retrieved the belt from the Ultimate X cables. Williams submitted Kendrick to retain the title.
  • Brother Ray defeated Brother Devon & Jesse Neal in a 3-way match.
  • Angelina Love defeated Madison Rayne to become the new TNA Knockouts Champion. Had Angelina lost the match, Love would have been forced to retire.
  • A.J. Styles and Kazarian defeated Rob Terry and Samoa Joe.
  • Hernandez defeated Matt Morgan in a steel cage match.
  • Jay Lethal defeated Ric Flair.
  • The Motor City Machine Guns (Alex Shelley and Chris Sabin) defeated Beer Money, Inc. (James Storm and Robert Roode) to win the vacant TNA World Tag Team Championship.
  • Kurt Angle defeated D’Angelo Dinero.
  • Rob Van Dam defeated Jeff Hardy, Mr. Anderson, and Abyss in a four-way match to retain the TNA World Heavyweight Championship.

8 years ago today at an Impact taping at the Impact Zone in Orlando, Sting defeated Mr. Anderson to win the TNA World Heavyweight Championship.

This would begin the fourth and final TNA world title for Sting. He was briefly tied for most TNA world titles until Angle defeated Sting for the title less than a month later at Hardcore Justice.

7 years ago today, WWE announces it had made a $5 million investment in social media service Tout.

The service enables its users to send 15 second videos. The service gained popularity when Shaquille O’Neal used it to announce his retirement from basketball in June 2011.

But with Twitter introducing Vine just six months later and Instagram adding video capabilities to its social media service the following summer, the partnership bombs. WWE does not renew their deal with Tout when it expires two years later.

6 years ago today, WWE opens their Performance Center in Winter Park, Florida.

The official training facility of the WWE, it’s 26,000 square feet and includes seven training rings, a strength and conditioning program, edit and production facilities, and a voice-over room that performers and announcers can practice.

Cagesider GuyNamedJason took a tour of the facility just before NXT Takeover: Rival back in February 2015. Read and enjoy it, as it’s probably the closest you’ll get to it, as the Performance Center is not open to the general public.

However, if you have $1,596.44 (that’s $1,499 + the 6.5% Florida state tax), you can get a tour of the facility too on Monday, July 24.

BONUS! Taped 6 years ago today, an early NXT gem as Antonio Cesaro and Sami Zayn meet in a best-of-three falls match. This match aired on the August 21, 2013 episode of NXT (WWE Network link)


It’s a happy 39th birthday to Theodore James Wilson, known better to wrestling fans as Tyson Kidd.

The last graduate of the famed Hart Dungeon, Wilson is a Hart by marriage; he married Natalya Neidhart in 2013. Wilson competed most notably in Stampede Wrestling from 1995 to 2007. In late 2006, he signed a WWE developmental deal. He joined the main roster in 2009 with David Hart Smith and his girlfriend at the time Natalya. Known as the Hart Dynasty, they won WWE Tag Team Championship in 2010.

Wilson floundered for most of the next three years, but experienced a resurgence after he returned from a torn meniscus in late 2013. In 2015, he began teaming with Cesaro. Unofficially dubbing themselves “The Brass Ring Club”, the duo won the tag titles at Fastlane in February 2015.

In June 2015, Wilson suffered a severe neck and spinal injury during a dark match against Samoa Joe. The injury he suffered has just a 5% survival rate. Wilson survived, though his in-ring career is likely over. Last month, news broke that Wilson is being prepared to take on a producer role within the company and he will return to Total Divas for the seventh season.

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WWE DVD Release Dates 

The latest WWE DVD & Blu-ray Release Dates for 2019. This list is updated periodically using official schedules, and dates shown are for the United States.

https://www.wrestlingdvdnetwork.com/

July
9th The Miz: A-List Superstar (DVD) BUY
23rd Stomping Grounds 2019 (DVD)
August
13th Extreme Rules 2019 (DVD)
27th Getting Rowdy: The Unreleased Matches of Roddy Piper (DVD) BUY
September
10th SummerSlam 2019 (DVD)
24th Super Showdown 2019 (DVD)

Bret Hart Talks WWE Hall Of Fame Incident And Jim Neidhart, Legal Update On Attacker Zachary Madsen

WWE Hall of Famer Bret Hart recently spoke with Sports Illustrated and commented on the incident at the 2019 WWE Hall of Fame ceremony, where he was attacked by a fan named Zachary Madsen while doing the induction speech for The Hart Foundation.

“I came to the Hall of Fame with a real purpose to honor my friend and speak on his behalf about our accomplishments together, and I was not going to let someone ruin that moment,” Hart said. “As soon as that disruption happened, my immediate focus was on finishing my speech and saying what I had to say. I’m glad that did not ruin the moment for Jim.”

The Hitman continued talking about The Anvil and said they had a magical relationship.

“I loved Jim,” Bret said. “He was a team guy, and he liked the different styles that we had, with him being more of a power guy and me as the technical guy. We had a magical relationship, together for six years straight. I laughed so hard every day with Jim. When I look back on my career, I have to thank Jim for all the happy days we had.”

In an update on Madsen, he was scheduled to be in a Kings County Criminal Courtroom in Brooklyn on Tuesday but the case has been postponed for a fifth time. The new court date is Monday, September 9.

Madsen was charged with two counts of third degree assault and trespassing for the WWE Hall of Fame incident. Madsen hit the ring during the speech by Natalya and Bret, but was quickly taken by wrestlers and security. The third degree assault charges are misdemeanors. Madsen is facing up to 1 year in jail for each account.

Alexa Bliss Dealing With Bad Sinus Infection Going Into WWE Extreme Rules

As noted, Alexa Bliss has missed recent WWE TV events due to an illness. She is still scheduled to team with Nikki Cross for the 2-on-1 Handicap Match against SmackDown Women’s Champion Bayley at Sunday’s WWE Extreme Rules pay-per-view.

Bliss is currently suffering from a “really bad” sinus infection, according to Dave Meltzer on Wrestling Observer Radio.

Bliss’ sinus infection is the reason Cross was added to the match. Meltzer noted that originally they were not going to have Cross in the match, but plans changed due to Bliss’ illness.

Bliss has not commented on being out of action, but she did make this tweet with the “face with thermometer” emoji earlier this week:

Batista Reveals Stipulation He Wanted For WrestleMania 35 Match With Triple H

Batista has had an up and down relationship with WWE over the years. Batista officially announced his retirement following his WrestleMania defeat at the hands of long-time mentor and rival Triple H. Batista appeared on Talk is Jericho and revealed that they wanted the match to be a “Hell in a Cell” bout.

“Originally, we wanted it to be a Hell in a Cell,” Batista revealed. “Vince didn’t want it because of the pay-per-view (Hell in a Cell being its own event). We needed bells and whistles; we needed the drama. We are two old guys that haven’t wrestled in a while, we have already got the history. We just needed the violence.”

One of the memorable moments of their no holds barred match came when Triple H extracted Batista’s nose ring with a pair of needle nose pliers. Batista said that idea came from the Game himself.

“That was all Hunter,” Batista explained. “I would never wear that out to the ring. But Hunter asked if I was going to wear it out and said he had a spot and explained it. I said, ‘Hell yeah I’ll wear it out!’ We talked about pulling it out, it was great.”

Batista admitted that he was beaten up during the match. He noted that a table bump hurt the worst because he took it wrong.

“I was really beaten up,” Batista recalled. “I took a really bad bump. The bump that looked like it hurt the least, hurt the worst. It was this bump I took on a table, I took it all kinds of wrong. So, I felt a little beat up, but I felt really satisfied, at peace with myself, I was happy to go out with that. It was weird, I had such hatred coming back on my last run, but I felt all love this time around. I wanted to beat myself up to show the fans it meant something to me.”

Batista noted that he talked to Vince McMahon after the match, and the Chairman of the Board was happy with how it turned out.

“When I got back to gorilla, everyone was gone,” Batista said. “I did talk to Vince. It wasn’t anything emotional, but he was really happy. All along he was really happy I was back. We butted heads a little bit, not in a bad way, but a creative way. It’s weird, I have had my differences with Vince, but I have always gotten along with him. I don’t have anything bad to say about him.”

If you use any of the quotes in this article, please credit Talk is Jericho with an h/t to Wrestling Inc. for the transcription.

 

WWE Superstars Thank Kevin Owens After He Speaks Out Against Shane McMahon, WWE On Owens’ Stunner

This week’s WWE SmackDown saw Kevin Owens’ babyface push continue in a big way as he singled out Shane McMahon as being one of the worst things WWE fans have seen.

The angle started with Shane nixing the planned Owens vs. Dolph Ziggler singles match after the two were found brawling in the parking lot earlier in the day. Shane sent Owens home but Owens came back into the building and gave a fired-up rant on how bad it is to see Shane get more WWE TV time these days.

“Cut the music, I got something to say,” Owens said. “You know what, last week I came out here and I spoke the truth about Dolph Ziggler but it looks like tonight someone else needs to hear the truth and that’s Shane McMahon. Now I’ve sat back and tried to be a good guy, a good company guy, and not piss anyone off for too long, and I’m done with that because it didn’t get me anything. So, you know what? A while ago I watched the entire McMahon Family come out in this ring and say, ‘Hey, from now on we’re going to listen to the fans and give the audience what they want.’ But the only thing that’s happened since then is Shane McMahon has gotten more power, more authority and more TV time than anyone, and trust me when I say that nobody watching ever wanted that.

“You know, now we have to sit back every week on every show and listen to Shane McMahon call himself the best in the world and every time that happens it makes me sick, makes me want to come out here and smash my head into this stupid table. You need to hear this. [as Shane appeared on the stage] This is the biggest load of crap I have ever seen.”

This is where Shane came out and had Owens’ mic cut. Owens grabbed another mic and continued his rant.

“Hey, guess what, idiot? There’s more than one microphone and I’m not done,” Owens said. “You know, every time you call yourself the best in the world, that is an insult and slap to the face to every single person in the back, in the locker room, who break their backs week in, week out, on TV, on the road, around the world, to be WWE Superstars, and it makes me sick. It makes me sick and it makes everybody sick. You know what happens when you call yourself the best in the world? Everybody back there, including me, is thinking, ‘Shane McMahon can kiss my ass!'”

Shane had the mic cut again and continued to taunt Owens.

“I’m not done,” Owens said. “I would never call myself the best in the world and there’s 100 people back there… and you take up TV time for Apollo Crews, Buddy Murphy, Ali, Liv Morgan, Asuka, AOP, Kairi Sane…”

This is when Owens escaped through the crowd as Shane ordered security to stop him. Owens continued to rant about how he’s had enough as he left the arena. As seen in the video above, fans gave Owens a huge pop for speaking out about Shane, which has been the general feeling among fans on social media for weeks now.

As seen below, Murphy, Ali and Morgan tweeted “thank you” messages to Owens after he name-dropped them in the promo. Morgan called him the “GOAT” in her tweet.

Owens later appeared at the end of the SmackDown main event, which saw Ziggler take a loss to Roman Reigns. Shane had been at ringside with Drew McIntyre, but Owens ended up hitting Shane with a Stunner. WWE tweeted a clip of the Stunner and referenced a WWE Hall of Famer Steve Austin catchphrase. It’s been reported that WWE gave Owens the Stunner earlier this year to help get him over as a babyface, before they had to turn him heel. Now that Owens is back working as a babyface, it’s believed that he will be pushed hard in that role.

“Arrive. Raise Hell. (Stun your boss) Leave,” WWE tweeted, a reference to The Rattlesnake.

Below is a GIF of the Stunner, along with the other related tweets.

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