Tuesday, 10 May 2011

WWE World Heavy Weight Champion

christian entering in extreme rules 2011

christian becoming new world heavy weight champion by beating del rio in laders match

christian becoming new world heavy weight champion by beating del rio in laders match

christian and del rio in laders match

christian becoming new world heavy weight champion by beating del rio in laders match

christian becoming new world heavy weight champion by beating del rio in laders match

Monday, 9 May 2011

WWE Champion Extreme Rules 2011

john cena becoming champion after beating the miz, and john morison


john cena becoming champion after beating the miz, and john morison

john cena in extreme rules 2011

john cena becoming champion after beating the miz, and john morison


john cena becoming champion after beating the miz, and john morison

john cena becoming champion after beating the miz, and john morison

Sunday, 8 May 2011

Foremr wrestler,Hall of fame,Curt Henning

Curtis Michael "Curt" Hennig (March 28, 1958 – February 10, 2003), also known by the ring name Mr. Perfect, was an American professional wrestler, manager and color commentator who worked for, among other promotions, Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA), the American Wrestling Association (AWA), World Championship Wrestling (WCW) and the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). He was the son of wrestler Larry "The Axe" Hennig, and father to current WWE superstar Michael McGillicutty.
Among other accolades, he is a four-time world champion: one-time AWA World Heavyweight Champion (reigning for over a year), one-time WWC Universal Heavyweight Champion, and two-time i-Generation World Heavyweight Champion; and two-time WWF Intercontinental Champion. Considered one of the greatest Intercontinental Champions of all time,Hennig was the longest-reigning champion of the 1990s and has been credited with helping bring the importance of the Intercontinental Championship close to that of the WWF Championship during the decade. Although recurring back problems prevented Hennig from being considered for a WWF Championship reign,he challenged for the title and enjoyed success in managerial and color commentary roles when inactive from in-ring competition. In addition to championship success in WCW in the late 1990s, he was also a member of the New World Order and later, wrestling stable and country music group, West Texas Rednecks, who recorded their infamous, tongue-in-cheek song, "Rap is Crap."Hennig returned to the WWF for a brief period in 2002, being one of the last three men remaining at that year's Royal Rumble. He later wrestled for TNA, challenging for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship, prior to his death on February 10, 2003.
Described by WWE as a "tremendous talent" and "one of the best in-ring technicians of his generation",Hennig was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2007 by former Major League Baseball third baseman, and longtime friend, Wade Boggs. A number of Hennig's peers consider him to be one of, if not the, greatest in-ring performers of all time.
Mr.Perfct

Mr.Perfct

Mr.Perfct

Mr.Perfct

Mr.Perfct

Mr.Perfct

Mr.Perfct

Mr.Perfct

Sunday, 1 May 2011

WWE Extreme Rules Matches

rey mysterio vs cody rhodes fall counts anywhere

john cena 2011 extreme rule poster

randy orton vs cm punk last man standing match

john cena vs the miz vs john morison triple threat match of WWE championship steel cage match      

WWE World heavy weight championship match ledder match, alberto del rio vs christien

WWE World heavy weight championship match ledder match, alberto del rio vs
 christien

jerry lowler and jim ross vs maichael cole and jack swagger

Saturday, 23 April 2011

Extreme Rules World heavy weight Championship Match

world heavy weight weight championship belt

world heavy weight weight championship belt

edge leaving the wwe so their is a match between the del rio and christian who wins the match will become the world heavy weight champion. christian qualifies after beating superstars in smackdown and qualifies for the extreme rules where he can face del rio in the heavy weight championship match.

edge in the last time in wwe

edge looking upon the belt

after beating the superstars christian is appreciated by the edge for qualifying for the championship match

Alberto Del-rio vs Christian

edge leaving with the belt

Hall Of Fame Edge Retirement

A man named Adam Copeland walked away from the career he loved tonight.  He walked away from the limelight, his adoring fans, the television cameras, the crowds… everything.  Where he goes from here is yet to be determined but I’ll be damned interested to know!!!
Adam Copeland is better known to the world as Edge, “The Rated-R Superstar.”  He wrestled for the last fourteen years in World Wrestling Entertainment and has held more titles in that organization than any other person in history.  That says a lot for his talent and his ability to perform.  The WWE is not an easy place to make it… believe me.
I’ve never been there, but I’ve known quite a few people who have been and couldn’t cut the mustard.  It’s the pinnacle of the wrestling business.
There are lots of people who will be reading this and saying things like “Wrestling is fake” or something of the same ilk, but I would challenge the most athletic of those people to put themselves up against any of the people who are wrestling in the WWE – or TNA – or most of the guys on the independent circuit, for that matter.  You wouldn’t be able to hold a candle to them.
Tell me when baseball, basketball, football, soccer…  when do those seasons begin and end?  There’s no off-season in wrestling.  On any given night in this country, you’ll find professional wrestlers giving their all in front of a crowd… from crowds of five to crowds of fifty thousand, “the boys” (and that includes the girls in the business… it’s a colloquialism, not a sexist statement) are giving their all – and sometimes paying the ultimate price for doing what they love.
Wrestling is scripted.  There’s a word that all wrestlers know.  Kayfabe.  That is – in the wrestling world, anyway – the portrayal of events as real or unscripted….. the suspension of disbelief.
Those of you who rattle on and on about wrestling being fake and chastising those of us who are true fans of the “male soap opera” as I’ve heard it described, should be chastising yourselves for watching NCIS or – worse yet – shelling out $20 for a night out at the movies.  Hey.. just so you know.. what you’re watching on the screen is scripted… it’s fake…. LL Cool J is not an undercover agent for the US Navy… Bruce Willis is not some rogue cop who likes blowing up buildings and shooting bad guys… They’re actors on a stage, playing their part.  That’s what professional wrestlers are… or at least that’s half of what they are… the other half is pure athlete…   Next time you see Bruce or LL…. ask them if they do their own stunts!
I got the chance to see Adam Copeland wrestle before he entered the WWE… which, by the way was in May of ’96.  He was wrestling – with his WWE tag partner Christian – as a character named Sexton Hardcastle.   What an awesome match that was.  I was thoroughly entertained and thought the 14 hour trip that my buddy and I took to see those two work was well worth the time and money.   I bought some “gimmick” he was selling, glad to be able to do something to show him how much I appreciated his work!
I watched that guy on television and in arenas throughout the southeast for the last fourteen years and have loved every moment – with the exception of one really poorly thought out angle that should have never been put on TV, but which gave him the moniker of “Rated-R Superstar.”  He put his body on the line, night in and night out.  He pulled off moves in the ring that I couldn’t dream were possible, much less re-create.  He was truly awe inspiring.
He broke his neck some years back and had to leave the business for a while.  During the time he was out, he began writing a weekly column on WWE.com called “The EDGE-ucation of Adam Copeland.”  This was one of the very first times that the WWE had publicly broken “kayfabe.”  I thought it was interesting to see how Adam viewed the business and his character.  The column was very insightful and was always an entertaining read.
He’s been injured on more than a few occasions, the most recent being a ruptured Achilles tendon… an injury he came back from in less than eight months time.
He defended his World Heavyweight Championship – a title he was honored with on 11 different occasions in his career – successfully at WrestleMania. He will now go into the history books as one of the very few workers to retire as a champion. Thanks to that broken neck from 11 years ago!
The business of wrestling should be left to people who are trained to do so… not to your kids, not to you…   These guys work very hard to choreograph their matches, to practice their moves, to improvise with each other in front of a crowd and – on the independent circuit, where EVERY wrestler gets their start – they do so for very little pay.  Don’t try this at home…. if you want to be a wrestler – find a credible school where you can learn to execute the moves safely and learn to “bump” without severely injuring yourself or someone else, then – when your instructors think that you’re ready – head out for your first match…
I’d like to take this opportunity to thank Adam Copeland for taking me – and all his other fans – on one helluva ride!  Your charisma and passion inside the ring will be sorely missed.  I was looking forward to at least a few more stellar matches, but alas am thankful to have had the opportunity to see you work.  Your presence on my television screen will be missed, but I hope to see you in another realm of entertainment and hopefully, in time, a return to the WWE in another capacity.
You said that Jason told you that you had been able to work for the last nineteen years “on your own terms” and that’s something to be damned proud of… I hope that you are proud to know that there are millions of fans that were happy to let you do so and are still happy to be able to say that we are – and always will be – EDGEHEADS!
Here’s the link to view his retirement speech from Monday Night Raw:
Here is the official statement from the WWE, which explains the reason for his retirement…
“Less than a week after his successful title defense against Alberto Del Rio at WrestleMania XXVII, World Heavyweight Champion Edge has been forced to retire from in-ring competition due to injury. The unexpected news brings to an end a storied WWE career spanning 13 years and consisting of 11 World Title reigns.
“The Rated-R Superstar had been suffering numbness and uncontrollable trembling in his arms and hands. This is not the first time Edge has experienced these symptoms of nueropraxia. An MRI in Atlanta last Monday was sent to Dr. Joseph Maroon, a renowned neurosurgeon and professor of neurosurgery at The Pittsburgh School of Medicine. After careful examination of the MRI, it was determined that Edge would never be cleared to compete again, and thus, he is forced to retire.
“In 2003, Edge underwent a two level spinal fusion of the discs between his C5, C6 and C7 vertebrae. After being cleared to compete, The Rated-R Superstar returned to the ring, resulting in stenosis of the spine, or a narrowing of the spinal column, above and below the fused discs. This narrowing resulted in less and less of the vital fluid needed to protect the spinal cord. Medical professionals cannot clear Edge to compete ever again in WWE since doing so could result in paralysis or even death.”

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edge

edge

edge

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edge

edge


Tuesday, 19 April 2011