The guy who low blowed Randy Orton got off easy. Stone Cold even said in an interview that as long as you stay behind the barricade, you can pretty much say whatever you want to the wrestlers and you’re good, but once you cross that barricade or step in the ring, they consider you fair game.
Sounds fair to me. Their going out of their way breaking the rules, only fair the wrestlers get to get physical to protect themselves. Especially the guy who low blowed Randy Orton, he lucky Randy didn't get a chance to beat the crap out of him
@@christophertom5552 If that guy had watched what happened to the guy who tried to attack Steve Austin in Germany, he wouldn’t have thought about it. Austin’s opponent, HHH, absolutely destroyed that dude, and even the ref got in a few kicks for good measure.
@@edwardbishop9487 Well they can do it the proper way then at meet and greets. Stop being an apologist for this bullshit behaviour, surely you're intelligent enough to know better than that.
Some people love being edgy dickheads for the sake of being edgy dickheads. I went for a night out at my local rock club a few days after 9/11 and the DJ called for a minute's silence. Some prick thought it would be funny to make a part noise. But the silence that greeted him made sure he got the message.
Attention? I wouldn’t be surprised that people who do that sort of thing just wants 15 minutes of fame. But you’re just showing everyone that you have no shame
100% agree. Say what you will about the business itself, the 10 bell salute is a tribute and a farewell to a fallen friend. Disrespect that, and you have no business ever being present again.
The idea that some dude thought he could get signed by WWE by potentially hurting one of their top stars is, well, it's certainly not an intelligent thought
5:17 I died. The dude with the OMG shirt just casually goes to the corner to pose while the rest of wrestler's are kicking the shit out of the fan LMAO.
And of course it was the white T-shirt guy... Idk why he thought it was a good idea to try and slap a wrestler in the ring with his colleagues around...
It wasn't really that disrespectful, it's more just heckling a heel than being disrespectful. And I hope the fan still got to stay, because it was in character for Iyo Shirai. I remember the same thing happened to Chris Jericho. A fan said "go back to Toronto" and Jericho said "I'm from Winnipeg you idiot!."
I guess Io Shirai learned from Chris Jericho when he was insulted by a fan shouting "Go back to Toronto" and Jericho shouted back "I'm from Winnipeg, you idiot!" 😂
What these fans don't realize is that this pisses the wrestlers off. They are at work. If someone came to annoy me in the same manner at work, i'd def. do what some of these guys did.
@@JonCombo And from what I've heard in the case of Bret Hart getting attacked it could have been life threatening due to past injuries so you can excuse to the wrestlers wanting to tear the "fan" in question literally apart
One of the biggest take always from this is that the punches and kicks thrown by wrestlers at these fans, look the same as working punches/kicks. There's very little visual difference between a pulled punch and real one and you can only tell the difference after seeing the bruises left on people.
9/10 the 'pulled' punch has the same motion which is practiced to the point of insanity facing a mirror as that's what you gotta do to throw a 'believable' punch... the 1/10 is the fist isn't closed/grasped and the motion is thrown with only speed and no power. It takes absolutely no effort for them to turn that fake punch into a real one.
Michael Cole wasn't a bad commentator, it was just a character and he was just doing his job. Cole's response was justified when the caller went out of his way just to harass him. Can't really blame him for lashing out.
People are finally waking up to the fact that Cole is actually great, but simply had Vince in his ear for over a decade. I actually commend his patience, I would have tapped out that shit so quickly.
Yeah, that's what I was thinking. Why give them their money back? (Probably to avoid a potential lawsuit, even though I'm pretty sure they'd lose in court.)
I wonder what happened to those guys who got in the ring but didn't attack any wrestlers, but instead just started doing finishers on each other in the ring.
i was at that smackdown, it was in london at the o2. it was also daniel bryan’s final match before his first retirement. the fans were youtubers from a prank channel called troll station, and i think they just got held by security for a few hours and sent home
People should realize that Nash was a military police officer before he got into wrestling. Of course he’s going to know how to handle someone getting out of control.
Stone Cold talk about this that fan have something on his hand which why HHH did that because it can a weapon like knife but later they realized it's a newspapers roll but still don't ever jump out of the barricade and get into the ring
@@painvillegaming4119 you realise its an act right? if any of them could actually fight theyd be competing in a league somewhere not rolling around in lycra with other men
As an almost lifelong wrestling fan, I must give credit where credit is due to the referees, wrestlers and security protecting the business whilst being professional. If i was any one of those, and a fan tried to either enter the ring/physically assault a wrestler/showed disrespect in a time of mourning, I would probably be fined for assaulting the disrespectful "fan" so much that they wouldnt be able to walk again
@@dord4453 believe me, have been there, done that, would recommend, though only if one is prepared to realise that anger issues are just the surface of many deep, psychological issues.
I sat in the 2nd row of a WWF show when I was 10 and still believed this was real. Imagine my excitement when a 50 something man (this was NO actor) climbed over the guard rail and jumped onto the apron to attack Road Dogg of Degeneration X during a tag team match....MAN I BET THAT DUDE IS STILL IN RECOVERY 25 YEARS LATER!!! it was truly epic
No, But that sounds INCREDIBLE! will have to see if I can find video for that... this happened in Edmonton, Canada 1996 (long before we became worthy of a televised event) Dogg and Double J tuned him up pretty good before the security had their fun@@johnsimmons8456
I met Triple H once. At the 2009 NAGA World Grappling Championships in Columbus, Ohio. I kid you not when i tell you that his biceps were the size of my torso. (I am a smaller male) But i can tell you he’s one of the last people you wanna get attacked by.
I agree! best decade ever! But not for wrestling. That would be 80's Hulkamania & Rick Flair easily... early 90's best era to be young & late 90's best time to be lil older & wild... Music,,movies,,style/swag esp on girls.. Except for those Jynco jeans. Thank god i never liked em.
@@k-dawgbroadcasting5444- LMAO at the refs workout as much of the wrestlers. If you look at some of the most popular/consistent WWF/WCW refs the past 30 years, they were all either fat AF or skinny as rails. To claim that any ref's physique comes close to the in ring talent is laughable in all honesty.
I didn't say physique. They're supposed to be smaller than the wrestlers for credibility sake. Most refs are probably every bit as tough as the wrestling
@@ryandeffley7652nothing was said about body, he said workout I don't look like I worked out a day in my life because I didn't care about looks. I was after the strength To different looks and things
The best funniest one was Paul Harman calling out a guy who thought it would be a good idea to propose to his girlfriend during Heyman speech even Brock lost character was almost in stitches laughing.😂
Japanese people largely descend from mainland Chinese & Korean people (Yayoi). They are closely related, so it’s natural that they can pass off as each other. I don’t know why Asians get so fragile over this fact. You don’t see Europeans get offended if you confuse a Norwegian for an Englishman.
pretty much the same reason scottish people become severely offended at being called English. A very bad relationship with who their being called. @@ion6538
@@conorhaddock3956 I don't care if they do or don't. All I know is I'm not trying to have some big motherfucker like Nash coming to tackle me. I prefer having non-broken bones, thanks.
@@conorhaddock3956 That was bait but - even Pride didn't exist when Nash was up and coming. Or even when Angle was up and coming but I guess Angle was not skilled enough to be an actual fighter right?
I still can’t understand why these people think getting in the ring is a good idea while there are 2 or more 250+ pounders, 6ft+ athletes and on top of all that, the area is fully guarded
Back in the 90's I had a professional wrestler as a neighbor. He told me there was an unwritten rule that any spectator who got in the ring automatically got beat up. I believe it.
I am not a wrestling fan, per se. So-much-so that I had no idea that wrestlers had to put up with violent fans. Having watched this I can only say that I have so much respect for the wrestlers.
The uploaded said the fan deserved the shots Eddie gave him for pushing that ladder over, but said nothing about how cat like Eddie’s reflexes were for landing safely. That could have gone far worse for Eddie if he wasn’t so agile.
Around the late 90s, at a NYC MSG WWF house show, a front row fan grabbed Big show. Big Show open hand upper cut the fan. The fan back fipple into the 3rd row, landing on top of the 3rd row fans. He looked like a rag doll. A bunch of security grabbed him, & tossed him out.
yeah that guy diserved everytthing that the fans said at him and he should have been yelled at like doudly and paul did he should have got that too but im fine wih whatever he got
How fast Triple H went from being an opponent to protecting his co-worker from a potential attack by a crazed fan tells you what a good dude he is behind the scenes. For all they knew that guy had a weapon and meant harm. Yeah they rough each other up to put on a good show, but those guys travel and spend a lot of time together. They form lifelong friendships and look out for one another.
triple H train his entire life not wrestle but to snipe rogue fans. dude record is perfect when it comes to reacting to weirdos stepping into the ring.