Royal Rumble (1991) Explained

Royal Rumble
Tagline:Friend vs Friend, Foe vs Foe
It's Every Man for Himself!
Promotion:World Wrestling Federation
Date:January 19, 1991
Venue:Miami Arena
City:Miami, Florida
Attendance:16,000
Lastevent:Survivor Series
Nextevent:WrestleMania VII
Event:Royal Rumble
Lastevent2:1990
Nextevent2:1992

The 1991 Royal Rumble was the fourth annual Royal Rumble professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE). It took place on January 19, 1991, at the Miami Arena in Miami, Florida. It centered on the Royal Rumble match, a modified battle royal in which participants enter at timed intervals instead of all beginning in the ring at the same time.

Seven matches were contested at the event, including one dark match. The main event was the 1991 Royal Rumble match, which was won by Hulk Hogan, who last eliminated Earthquake, making Hogan the first multi-time Royal Rumble winner. In other featured matches on the undercard, Sgt. Slaughter defeated The Ultimate Warrior to win the WWF Championship, Ted DiBiase, and Virgil defeated Dusty Rhodes, and Dustin Rhodes, The Mountie defeated Koko B. Ware, and The Rockers (Marty Jannetty and Shawn Michaels) defeated The Orient Express (Kato and Tanaka).

Production

Background

The Royal Rumble is an annual gimmick pay-per-view (PPV), produced every January by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) since 1988. It is one of the promotion's original four pay-per-views, along with WrestleMania, SummerSlam, and Survivor Series, which were dubbed the "Big Four".[1] It is named after the Royal Rumble match, a modified battle royal in which the participants enter at timed intervals instead of all beginning in the ring at the same time. The match generally features 30 wrestlers. The 1991 event was the fourth event in the Royal Rumble chronology, and was scheduled to be held on January 19, 1991, at the Miami Arena in Miami, Florida.[2] [3]

Storylines

The card consisted of seven matches. The matches resulted from scripted storylines, where wrestlers portrayed heroes, villains, or less distinguishable characters to build tension and culminated in a wrestling match or series of matches. Results were predetermined by WWF's writers, with storylines produced on their weekly television shows; Superstars, Wrestling Challenge, and Prime Time Wrestling.[4]

The main feud heading into the Royal Rumble was between the WWF World Heavyweight Champion The Ultimate Warrior, who had been champion since defeating Hulk Hogan at WrestleMania VI on April 1, 1990, and Sgt. Slaughter, who had returned to the WWF in 1990 and became a villainous (heel) sympathizer of the Iraqi government. Their feud began building during a time when the United States was engaged in Operation Desert Shield (which became Operation Desert Storm on January 17, two days before the Royal Rumble). During the build-up to their match, Slaughter and his manager, General Adnan, cut several anti-American promos to build heat for the event; at one point, Slaughter unwrapped a present and revealed a pair of boots purportedly sent to him by Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. In the meantime, "Macho King" Randy Savage challenged Warrior to a series of matches, which Warrior successfully answered.

Event

Other on-screen personnel
Role:Name:
CommentatorGorilla Monsoon
Roddy Piper
InterviewerGene Okerlund
Sean Mooney
Ring announcerHoward Finkel
OfficialShane Stevens
RefereesFred Sparta
Mike Chioda
Earl Hebner
Joey Marella

Main event matches

The tag team match pitting Ted DiBiase, and Virgil against Dusty Rhodes, and Rhodes' son, Dustin Rhodes was most notable for Virgil's split from DiBiase. Tensions that had been building between the two in the previous weeks exploded when – after the match – Virgil struck DiBiase in the head with his Million Dollar Championship to turn into a face. DiBiase had verbally abused Virgil throughout the match, and at one point, attacked him and threw him from the ring after he was being dominated by the Rhodes team. DiBiase went on to pin Dusty Rhodes with a roll-up.[5] After the match, DiBiase demanded Virgil bring the Million Dollar Championship into the ring and strap it around his waist. Once he got in the ring, Virgil would drop the belt at DiBiase's feet, to which DiBiase ordered Virgil to pick it up. As DiBiase gloated and then turned back around, Virgil hit him in the face with the championship.

Before the Warrior-Slaughter match at the Royal Rumble, Queen Sherri (Savage's valet) attempted to seduce Warrior into granting Savage a title shot. Warrior refused, enraging Savage. During the match itself, Warrior easily fought off a double-team attack by Adnan and Slaughter, running Adnan off before shredding the Iraqi flag and stuffing it into Slaughter's mouth. As Warrior was attempting to finish off Slaughter, Sherri interfered by grabbing Warrior's leg; Warrior chased Sherri down the aisle before he was attacked by Savage near the platform area. Savage struck Warrior with a spotlight as Slaughter regained his senses and distracted the referee. After several minutes of Slaughter holding the advantage, Warrior rallied and set up Slaughter for the gorilla press slam (Warrior's finishing move). However, Warrior grabbed Sherri (who had returned to ringside) and press slammed her onto Savage, who had also appeared at ringside. This gave Slaughter time to hit a knee strike to Warrior's back. Warrior fell into the ropes, where Savage shattered his royal scepter on Warrior's head while the referee was distracted. Slaughter then hit the unconscious Warrior with an elbow drop and pinned him to win the match and championship. After Warrior came to his senses, he ran backstage to find Savage.[5]

The Royal Rumble marked the continuation of an ongoing feud between Hulk Hogan and Earthquake, whose roots dated to mid-1990 when Earthquake injured Hogan in a sneak attack during "The Brother Love Show". Hogan and Earthquake were the final two competitors in the Royal Rumble, and Hogan eliminated Earthquake to win the Royal Rumble.

The pay-per-view broadcast also included pre-taped comments from fans outside the arena, wishing the United States troops a quick and safe return from the Middle East and an announcement that Hogan would tour military bases across the country to support the troops.[5]

Reception

In the January 28, 1991 issue of his Wrestling Observer Newsletter, Dave Meltzer referred to the match between The Rockers, and The Orient Express as the best WWF pay-per-view match since the WrestleMania III match between Ricky Steamboat, and Randy Savage.[6] Meltzer also wrote that he considered it the best WWF pay-per-view to that point in time.[7]

A fan vote in the February 11, 1991 issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter had 268 out of 328 fans give the show a thumbs up. 41 gave a thumbs down, while 19 gave a thumbs in the middle. The Rockers vs. The Orient Express received the majority of votes for the show's best match, with 157. Koko B. Ware vs. The Mountie received the most votes for the worst match of the night with 98.[8]

Aftermath

Following his WWF World Heavyweight Championship loss, Warrior focused on revenge against Savage, with their first encounter being a steel cage match on January 21 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, which Savage won (with help from Sensational Sherri); Warrior was enraged and – despite being restrained by several referees, and other wrestlers – attacked Sherri after the match by slamming her in the ring. Meanwhile, Warrior was unsuccessful in regaining the title, losing a series of steel cage matches to Slaughter, usually due to interference from Sensational Sherri. Warrior and Savage eventually agreed to a "career vs. career match" at WrestleMania VII, which Warrior won. (Slaughter, meanwhile, also defended his belt against "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan, with Duggan winning a majority of these matches by countout or disqualification.)

Hogan, meanwhile, was named the number-one contender for Slaughter's WWF World Heavyweight Championship. During a promo that took place right after the Slaughter-Warrior match, Gene Okerlund "received word" that Slaughter was defacing the American flag; to which Hogan vowed that Slaughter's reign as World Heavyweight Champion would be short-lived. At WrestleMania VII, Hogan defeated Slaughter to become WWF World Heavyweight Champion for the third time. (Before WrestleMania VII, Hogan defeated Earthquake in a series of "stretcher matches" to finish their feud.) Though Hogan received a title shot against Sgt. Slaughter in WrestleMania, it would not be until 1993 that the Royal Rumble match winner automatically received a WWF World Title shot at the following WrestleMania.

The Barbarian would begin teaming with Haku for tag team matches but were both mired in the midcard. Barbarian would leave WWF in mid-1992 and return to WCW.

Dusty and Dustin Rhodes left the WWF after their match, both returning to WCW, Dusty retired from active wrestling and became a booker and commentator, and Dustin returned to wrestling as "The Natural" and began feuding with Larry Zbyszko and later Terry Taylor. Four years later, Dustin would return to the WWF as the androgynous wrestler "Goldust".

Results

Royal Rumble entrances and eliminations

A new entrant came out approximately every 2 minutes.

DrawEntrantOrderEliminated bydata-sort-type="number"Time[9] Eliminations
Bret HartThe Undertaker20:330
Dino BravoGreg Valentine03:060
Greg Valentine15Hulk Hogan44:031
Paul RomaJake Roberts14:050
The Texas TornadoThe Undertaker24:170
Rick Martel26The British Bulldog52:174
Saba SimbaRick Martel02:270
Bushwhacker ButchThe Undertaker10:070
Jake RobertsRick Martel12:581
10Hercules18Brian Knobbs37:361
11Tito Santana16Earthquake30:230
12The Undertaker10Hawk & Animal14:163
13Jimmy SnukaHawk08:060
14The British Bulldog27Earthquake & Brian Knobbs36:433
15Smash14Hulk Hogan18:220
16Hawk11Rick Martel & Hercules06:372
17Shane Douglas21Brian Knobbs26:230
18Randy Savage9(never entered match)00:000
19Animal12Earthquake06:391
20Crush19Hulk Hogan18:340
21Jim Duggan13Mr. Perfect04:440
22Earthquake29Hulk Hogan24:424
23Mr. Perfect23The British Bulldog16:141
24Hulk Hogan

Notes and References

  1. Ian Hamilton. Wrestling's Sinking Ship: What Happens to an Industry Without Competition (p. 160)
  2. Web site: Specialty Matches: Royal Rumble. WWE. 2007-12-03.
  3. Web site: Waldman. Statistical survival – breaking down the Royal Rumble. https://archive.today/20120714085840/http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/2005/02/01/917194.html. usurped. July 14, 2012. Jon. SLAM! Wrestling. 2007-12-09. 2005-02-02.
  4. Web site: Live & Televised Entertainment of World Wrestling Entertainment. World Wrestling Entertainment. 2009-10-25. 2013-10-20. https://web.archive.org/web/20131020225403/http://corporate.wwe.com/company/events.jsp. dead.
  5. http://www.thehistoryofwwe.com/91.htm
  6. Web site: January 28, 1991 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: WWF Royal Rumble review, tons of news. Observer Staff. Wrestling Observer Newsletter. F4WOnline.com. January 28, 1991. September 4, 2019.
  7. Web site: February 4, 1991 Observer Newsletter: Pivotal week in the life of Dave Meltzer. Observer Staff. Wrestling Observer Newsletter. F4WOnline.com. February 4, 1991. September 4, 2019.
  8. Web site: February 11, 1991 Observer Newsletter: WrestleMania relocated, Clash of Champions reviewed. Observer Staff. Wrestling Observer Newsletter. F4WOnline.com. February 11, 1991. September 4, 2019.
  9. Web site: Hulk Hogan (spot No. 24) wins the Royal Rumble Match . January 31, 2014 . WWE.