#4 Insurrextion 2002 (May 4, 2002)
There was no WWE Championship defence at Insurrextion 2002, but considering the 48-year-old Hulk Hogan was the Undisputed Champion at this point, that was no bad thing.
Without Hogan, WWE put on a largely entertaining show.
The main event instead saw a grudge match between Triple H and The Undertaker, which stemmed from Backlash 2002, where 'Taker's interference had cost The Game to lose the Undisputed Championship to the Hulkster.
The card opened with an electric bout between Intercontinental Champion, Eddie Guerrero and Rob Van Dam. The pair had clashed two weeks earlier at Backlash and this encounter was every bit as good as that one. Fast-paced, with big moves aplenty, the finish came when Latino Heat was disqualified for smashing RVD with the title belt.
A youthful Brock Lesnar tagged with the annoying Shawn Stasiak in a bout versus The Hardy Boyz. Lesnar did not want a partner but the bonkers, Stasiak tagged himself into the match at every opportunity. This eventually backfired and Stasiak was pinned to lose the bout for his team. He earned a pasting from Lesnar post-match for his insolence.
The semi-main event was the only singles contest between Stone Cold Steve Austin and Big Show to ever take place on a pay per view. Once pencilled in as a potential headliner for WrestleMania 2000, the pair put on a passable match-up, which due to outside interference, shielded the fact that both men were not in peak physical shape. However, due to the outside shenanigans of Ric Flair and the nWO, this was an entertaining attraction.
The headline bout pitting Triple H versus The Undertaker was a perfectly acceptable brawl. Early on, the top rope snapped adding to the drama. After a steady stream of big moves, The Game eventually put Big Evil away with the Pedigree to close the show on a high.