#2 WWE has a macho garden party.
At a live event in Boston Garden on February 8th, 1986, the Macho Man Randy Savage era began in earnest in WWE. In front of a sold-out Boston crowd, the Macho Man unseated Tito Santana to claim the Intercontinental Title belt.
WWE typically didn’t use the Boston Garden as a place for live event title changes, so the win was shocking. From that moment, a legend was born.
Randy Savage already had a strong career in smaller territories before coming to the WWE. Once in the WWE, with his flamboyant robes, high flying style and the lovely Elizabeth by his side, the Macho Man instantly became an attraction.
Great in the ring and on the mic, Savage quickly became one of the company’s top heels. It was not a surprise that the company chose him to win its second biggest title.
Savage would hold the IC title for a then-record 414 days and was soon becoming one of the WWE’s most popular stars, despite playing a heel. He was chosen as the next WWE champion when Hogan took time off to film a movie. One night in Boston and the Macho Madness experience was off and running.
#1. The night Hulkamania took off.
Whether you love him or hate him, there can be no denying Hulk Hogan’s place in WWE history. He brought about Hulkamania, made pro wrestling mainstream and fulfilled Vince McMahon’s vision of having WWE Superstars. At a live event, on January 23rd, 1984, at Madison Square Garden in New York, WWE history was changed forever.
McMahon handpicked Hulk Hogan as the superstar who would take WWE first nationally and then globally. First, he had to take the title off of Bob Backlund and get it to the perfect heel champion for his next superstar. He did that with the Iron Sheik.
So on January 23rd in front of a sold out live crowd at MSG, Hulkamania was born. Hogan pinned the Sheik in under six minutes and sent the live crowd into a frenzy.
Hogan’s win was both the start of one era and the end of another. Soon, live events became the main way to promote WWE. PPV events replaced live events as the place where storylines would come to a conclusion.
Major title changes will almost exclusively take place on PPVs and never again at live events. After Hogan’s victory, it would be nearly 10 years before a WWE title changed hands at anything other than a PPV.
Hulk Hogan’s win at a live event at Madison Square Garden in New York nearly 38 years ago marked the changing of the guard. Vince McMahon’s WWE would soon go nationwide and eventually global and sports entertainment would never be the same.
Live events are still a great place to watch the WWE, but you are unlikely to see moments like these again.
Have you ever attended a live event where a title change took place? Please share your memories in the comments section below.