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10 Times Wrestling History Repeated Itself

1. The Piledriver’s Revenge


When ‘Stone bloodless’ Steve Austin fought Owen Hart at Summerslam in August 1997, he would be severely injured in a botched piledriver reversal spot. As planned, Hart countered 


10 Times Wrestling History Repeated Itself

2. McMahon, Part Three: Stolen Belts And Screwjobs


Part of the motive that Vince McMahon panicked so badly at the idea of Bret ‘The Hitman’ Hart leaving the WWF with the WWF championship in 1997 used to be because he’d 


10 Times Wrestling History Repeated Itself

3. McMahon, Part Two: Hulkamania And The Yes! Movement


It’s strange, however the man Hulk Hogan should quite often identify probably the most with is wrestling babyface phenomenon Daniel Bryan. Both guys went through the same disorders with the administrative center, however thirty-one years apart.


10 Times Wrestling History Repeated Itself

4. McMahon, Part One: That’s Karma For You


Within the early Eighties, quickly after purchasing the world Wrestling Federation from his dad, Vince McMahon Jnr. Commenced to reshape his imaginative and prescient for the company: he’d been since 


10 Times Wrestling History Repeated Itself

5. The Evil Masked Doppelganger


In 1982, All Japan professional Wrestling brought in Mark ‘Rollerball’ Rocco from the united kingdom to play the evil counterpart to Satoru Sayama’s Tiger mask persona. The story went that Black Tiger 


10 Times Wrestling History Repeated Itself

6. Never Hit The Man With The Microphone


In 2000, ECW alumnus Taz had returned to WWF television from injury a heel, viciously attacking babyface competitors and forcing the voice of the WWF, Jim ‘J.R.’ Ross to refer to him as a bit of rubbish on air.


10 Times Wrestling History Repeated Itself

7. Next Generation To Legacy


Continuing the theme of gimmick infringement… in 2002, at the same time working for TNA, second generation wrestlers Brian Lawler (Jerry ‘The King’ Lawler’s son, who’d wrestled for the WWF