History of the WWE Championship | Part 5 | The Game

In mid 1999, there were all these rumors that Triple H had it guaranteed in his contract that he’d get a run with the WWE Championship. As ridiculous and childish as that sounds, it wasn’t that far fetched given all the nonsense that had been going on with Shawn Michaels and Bret Hart two years earlier. So it seemed like a no-brainer that Triple H was winning the title at SummerSlam when it was announced he was getting a shot. But what fans didn’t count on was just how much Steve Austin didn’t want to do the job for him. 

August 22, 1999 – Minneapolis, Minnesota

Mankind def. Steve Austin and Triple H {WWF Championship Triple Threat Match}
From the 12th Summerslam. This was a really low energy effort from Austin. No playing to the crowd, no follow up charisma after hitting a move. He clearly didn’t want to be there. At one point he accidentally got himself stuck upside down in the ropes and it was really sad. Jesse Ventura’s involvement was more irritating than anything. This was a really weird match where the deck was massively stacked against the heel, with two babyface opponents and a ref who hated him. The finish was really flat, as Austin took two finishers but everyone expected HHH to win so Foley’s win at 16:23 didn’t get a reaction. **¼ 

August 23, 1999 – Ames, Iowa

Triple H def. Mankind {WWF Championship Match}
From Raw 326. Unlike Jesse Ventura the night before, Shane McMahon does a great job as the corrupt guest referee here. He finds clever ways to avoid counting for Mankind and then quickly gets his ass kicked. Foley bumped here like he gave a damn too. The match wasn’t much outside of that, too short to really pull me in, but at least both guys wrestled like the title was on the line. Triple H got his first title at 8:43. ***

September 16, 1999 – Las Vegas, Nevada

Vince McMahon def. Triple H {WWF Championship Match}
From Smackdown 5. You can tell Vince Russo is still around because the title is changing hands every other week on television. If they were set on making Vince champion, this is how you do it. He got beat up, Shane (the referee) got beat up, Pat Patterson & Gerald Brisco got beat up, and Linda got embarrassed. Plus, Steve Austin helping his greatest enemy got Triple H over as an even bigger evil dickhead. It wasn’t really a match, lasting only 8:55, but it really worked. **½ 

September 26, 1999 – Charlotte, North Carolina

Triple H def. The British Bulldog, The Rock, The Big Show, Kane, and Mankind {WWF Championship Six Pack Challenge Match}
From Unforgiven. Because of a stipulation in the main event of a PPV two months earlier, McMahon wasn’t allowed to defend the title so he vacated it. How that stipulation didn’t stop him from winning the title in the first place doesn’t make sense because this all happened in 1999. I’m very impressed with how this match tied together a bunch of stories and kept the momentum of the match going at the same time. Everyone had something important to do. The Rock got to show off, through his attacks on Triple H and impressive offense against the Big Show, that he could be the top babyface in the company. Mankind proved a good foil for Triple H. Kane and the Big Show feuded with each other. The referee strike storyline cost the Big Show (and then later by extension the Rock) the title. Even the British Bulldog, who spent a lot of the match doing nothing, got to screw the Rock in the end. Special enforcer Steve Austin being forced to count the winning pin for Triple H at 20:28, the guy who he’d sacrificed to his old nemesis a month earlier, was really fun irony. Great stuff all around a good change of pace from the brawling garbage main events that dominated the year. **** 

November 14, 1999 – Detroit, Michigan

The Big Show def. Triple H and The Rock {WWF Championship Triple Threat Match}
From the 13th annual Survivor Series. This was pretty bad. It was all meandering brawling with a suplex here and there on the floor so the crowd didn’t totally lose interest. Then Triple H attacked Shane McMahon (the guest referee for the bajilliionth time), all hell broke loose, and then Vince McMahon walked down and counted the fall for Show at 16:15 despite not being a referee in any capacity. Dumb and boring. It’s weird to think about being at this show live, remembering nothing about it except for the Intercontinental Championship match and the very end of this match, and thinking about the fact that it was twenty years ago. TWENTY years! *½ 

January 3, 2000 – Miami, Florida

Triple H def. The Big Show {WWF Championship Match}
From Raw 345. The crowd was dead for this, and to be honest they weren’t given much reason not to be. This was as run-of-the-mill of a match as you’ll see, certainly not a match that felt like it was for the WWE Championship. D-X casually distracted the referee so Triple H could hit a low blow and the Pedigree for the win at 7:08. ** 

April 30, 2000 – Washington, D.C.

The Rock def. Triple H {WWF Championship Match}
From the second Backlash. Watching these title changes one after the other bring up annoying quirks; why isn’t Vince McMahon able to count on Triple H’s behalf here when he was perfectly able to do so for Big Show a few months earlier? Why is Shane McMahon ALWAYS the guest referee?! Other than that this was a lot of fun thanks in large part to the crowd heating up watching the Rock fight through all the Regime interference. Fat Steve Austin beating everyone up with a chair at the end was fun too. In a nutshell, this was good for a lot of the same reasons the Six Pack Challenge at Unforgiven was good, turned up a few notches and mixed with what made McMahon’s title win fun. Rock hit the People’s elbow for the win at 19:22. ****

May 21, 2000 – Louisville, Kentucky

Triple H def. The Rock {WWF Championship Iron Man Match}
From Judgment Day. This had everything that was missing from the WrestleMania XII Iron Man match. It had a clear babyface and heel, which gave us creative cheating. It had distinct stages and a great pacing. It had a nice halftime break where both guys brawled up the ramp and referee Shawn Michaels declared a logical reason to allow it. It also had a wild finish that was similar to the Backlash match but just different enough, and allowed for a tragic error in Undertaker’s return. I love this match. Triple H won because the Undertaker got the Rock disqualified right before the sixty-minute time limit, giving the challenger six points to the champ’s five. This was the best WWF title change to date, and probably ever in my opinion. *****

June 25, 2000 – Boston, Massachusetts

The Rock, The Undertaker & Kane def. Triple H, Vince McMahon & Shane McMahon {WWF Championship Six Man Tag Match}
From the eighth King of the Ring. The match is terrible not just because a six-man tag match should never decide the champion, but because it set a precedent wherein this became a thing that would happen again. Most of this was boring, but there were a couple unintentionally hilarious moments. The Undertaker missed a cue, which forced the Rock to straight up kick out of the Pedigree. The McMahons controlling the Rock for more than a minute happened, which was insane. The crowd didn’t care about any of it. They paid lip service to the stipulation by having the babyfaces fight with each other because whoever got the pin got the title, but then Triple H acted like a moron and thought that Kane was on his side at one point. Triple H got really devalued here. Shane McMahon took a hell of a bump though. The Rock pinned Vince at 17:54 for the title. **¼ 

October 22, 2000 – Albany, New York

Kurt Angle def. The Rock {WWF Championship No Disqualification Match}
From the second No Mercy. Good pacing and build. The Stephanie McMahon interference escalated into Triple H interference and then very consequential Rikishi interference. This reminded me a lot of Backlash with major angles coming together to influence the course of history for the title. Angle used Rikishi’s errant onslaught to hit Rock with the Olympic Slam at 21:45. ****

February 25, 2001 – Las Vegas, Nevada

The Rock def. Kurt Angle {WWF Championship Match}
From the second No Mercy. This was frustrating, because it was a legitimate five-star match that was hurt by the completely pointless Big Show interference (which didn’t lead to anything interesting or important and basically just reset the match) and by Earl Hebner making near-fall counts like he was drunk three times. I can’t believe Hebner lasted four more years in WWE after his performance here. But the action in this match was insane, the most aggressive and athletic WWF Championship title change to date. Rock hit the Rock Bottom and shot a look at Hebner like he would actually kill him to win the title at 16:53. ****½ 

April 1, 2001 – Houston, Texas

Steve Austin def. The Rock {WWF Championship No Disqualification Match}
From WrestleMania X-7. This was the peak of the style, which was dirty bloody brawling in front of rabid fans. Was Austin turning heel in his home state a mistake? Maybe because I’m not sure who thought the crowd would boo him. But then I’m not sure that any crowd would boo just because Austin got help from Vince McMahon to beat up the Rock. The evil Austin character, in all of it’s iterations (mean, then paranoid, then funny) wound up being incredible, and people who don’t agree are humorless. But this match is bittersweet nonetheless, as it signalled a slow decline into whatever the hell WWE is now. Austin hit a million chair shots for the win at 28:08. ****¾ 

WCW is about to invade, then the nWo, and yet most of it isn’t as bad as many of us remember it. And through it all Kurt Angle will fight for the title and then Brock Lesnar will jump in to join him. So, good stuff. Come back for it, even if it never gets as good as it was here.