Royal Rumble (2002): Difference between revisions
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The fourth match was a [[Professional wrestling match types#Street Fight|Street Fight]] between [[Ric Flair]] and [[Vince McMahon]]. Flair gained the early advantage with punches and [[Professional wrestling attacks#Backhand chop|knife edge chops]]. McMahon attacked him with weapons, and sent him into the ringpost and steps. McMahon applied the [[Professional wrestling holds#Figure four leglock|figure four leglock]], but Flair reversed it. McMahon reached the ropes, and went outside the ring. Flair hit McMahon with a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Low blow|low blow]], a television monitor and a lead pipe. Flair forced McMahon to submit to the figure four leglock to win the match.<ref name=411mania/><ref name=slam/> |
The fourth match was a [[Professional wrestling match types#Street Fight|Street Fight]] between [[Ric Flair]] and [[Vince McMahon]]. Flair gained the early advantage with punches and [[Professional wrestling attacks#Backhand chop|knife edge chops]]. McMahon attacked him with weapons, and sent him into the ringpost and steps. McMahon applied the [[Professional wrestling holds#Figure four leglock|figure four leglock]], but Flair reversed it. McMahon reached the ropes, and went outside the ring. Flair hit McMahon with a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Low blow|low blow]], a television monitor and a lead pipe. Flair forced McMahon to submit to the figure four leglock to win the match.<ref name=411mania/><ref name=slam/> |
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[[File:Jerichoentrance.jpg|thumb|right|200px|alt=|[[Chris Jericho]], the [[WWE Championship|Undisputed WWF Champion]]]] |
[[File:Jerichoentrance.jpg|thumb|right|200px|alt=|[[Chris Jericho]], the [[WWE Championship|Undisputed WWF Champion]]]] |
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The fifth match was between [[Chris Jericho]] and [[Dwayne Johnson|The Rock]] for the [[WWE Championship|Undisputed WWF Championship]]. Jericho took control early in the match, and removed the padding off one of the turnbuckles. Jericho attempted the [[Boston crab|Walls of Jericho]], but The Rock escaped. Jericho continued his control until The Rock delivered a [[Suplex#Superplex|superplex]], and a [[Suplex#Belly to belly suplex|snap overhead belly to belly suplex]]. Jericho retaliated with two [[Moonsault#Springboard moonsault|Lionsaults]]. The Rock then countered a [[Dropkick#Missile dropkick|missile dropkick]], and applied the [[Sharpshooter (professional wrestling)|Sharpshooter]]. [[Lance Storm]] and [[Jason Reso|Christian]] distracted the referee as Jericho submitted. Jericho executed a [[Powerslam#Side slam|Rock Bottom]] and attempted a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Elbow drop|People's Elbow]], but The Rock avoided it and threw Jericho out of the ring. The Rock executed a Rock Bottom through an announce table. Jericho countered a Rock Bottom and applied the Walls of Jericho, but The Rock reached the ropes. The Rock accidentally hit the referee and Jericho hit The Rock with the title belt. Jericho signaled [[Nick Hamilton|Nick Patrick]] (a [[Heel (professional wrestling)|heel]] referee) to come out, and referee. The Rock executed a [[DDT (professional wrestling)|DDT]], but Patrick refused to count the pinfall. The Rock attacked Patrick, and executed a |
The fifth match was between [[Chris Jericho]] and [[Dwayne Johnson|The Rock]] for the [[WWE Championship|Undisputed WWF Championship]]. Jericho took control early in the match, and removed the padding off one of the turnbuckles. Jericho attempted the [[Boston crab|Walls of Jericho]], but The Rock escaped. Jericho continued his control until The Rock delivered a [[Suplex#Superplex|superplex]], and a [[Suplex#Belly to belly suplex|snap overhead belly to belly suplex]]. Jericho retaliated with two [[Moonsault#Springboard moonsault|Lionsaults]]. The Rock then countered a [[Dropkick#Missile dropkick|missile dropkick]], and applied the [[Sharpshooter (professional wrestling)|Sharpshooter]]. [[Lance Storm]] and [[Jason Reso|Christian]] distracted the referee as Jericho submitted. As The Rock disposed of them, Jericho took advantage and executed a [[Powerslam#Side slam|Rock Bottom]] and attempted a [[Professional wrestling attacks#Elbow drop|People's Elbow]], but The Rock avoided it and threw Jericho out of the ring. The Rock executed a Rock Bottom through an announce table. Jericho countered a Rock Bottom and applied the Walls of Jericho, but The Rock reached the ropes. The Rock accidentally hit the referee and Jericho hit The Rock with the WWF title belt. Jericho signaled [[Nick Hamilton|Nick Patrick]] (a [[Heel (professional wrestling)|heel]] referee) to come out, and referee. The Rock executed a [[DDT (professional wrestling)|DDT]], but Patrick refused to count the pinfall. The Rock attacked Patrick with a Rock Bottom, and executed a [[Professional wrestling throws#Spinebuster|Spinebuster]] and a People's Elbow on Jericho. As The Rock tried to revive the original referee, Jericho hit a low blow, and sent The Rock into the exposed turnbuckle. Jericho pinned The Rock with a roll-up using the ropes to retain the title.<ref name=411mania/><ref name=slam/> |
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===Main event=== |
===Main event=== |
Revision as of 15:46, 2 September 2020
Royal Rumble (2002) | |||
---|---|---|---|
Promotion | World Wrestling Federation | ||
Date | January 20, 2002[1] | ||
City | Atlanta, Georgia[1] | ||
Venue | Philips Arena[1] | ||
Attendance | 16,106[2] | ||
Tagline(s) | 30 Men, One Match, One W1nner | ||
Pay-per-view chronology | |||
| |||
Royal Rumble chronology | |||
|
Royal Rumble (2002) was the fifteenth annual Royal Rumble professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE). It took place on January 20, 2002, at the Philips Arena in Atlanta, Georgia, and was the final Royal Rumble produced under the WWF name.[1]
The main event was the Royal Rumble match, which Triple H won, after last eliminating Kurt Angle. The other matches were Chris Jericho versus The Rock for the Undisputed WWF Championship, Ric Flair versus Vince McMahon in a Street Fight, Edge versus William Regal for the WWF Intercontinental Championship, the team of Spike Dudley and Tazz versus the Dudley Boyz for the WWF Tag Team Championship, and Trish Stratus versus Jazz for the WWF Women's Championship.[3][4]
Production
Background
The Royal Rumble is an annual pay-per-view, produced every January by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) since 1988. It is one of the promotion's original four pay-per-views, along with WrestleMania, SummerSlam, and Survivor Series, dubbed the "Big Four".[5] 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. Traditionally, the winner of the match earns a world championship match at that year's WrestleMania. For 2002, the winner earned a match for the Undisputed WWF Championship at WrestleMania X8, following the unification of the WWF Championship and (WCW) World Championship as the Undisputed WWF Championship at Vengeance in December 2001. 2002 was the fifteenth event in the Royal Rumble chronology and the last to occur before the introduction of the first brand extension in March, which split the roster into two distinct brands, Raw and SmackDown, represented by the shows of the same name. It was also the last Royal Rumble under the WWF name, as the promotion was renamed to World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) in May.[6][7]
Storylines
The card consisted of six 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, Raw and SmackDown.[8][9]
The main feud was between Chris Jericho and The Rock for Jericho's Undisputed WWF Championship. The feud, which had begun in October 2001 while the two were members of Team WWF during the InVasion and traded the WCW Championship between them, continued at Vengeance, when Jericho defeated both The Rock and the reigning WWF Champion Stone Cold Steve Austin to unify the titles.[10][11] On the following night's episode of Raw, Jericho successfully defended the Undisputed title over Stone Cold Steve Austin in a Steel cage match with help from Booker T. During the following two weeks, Jericho had successfully defended the title against the likes of Rob Van Dam, The Big Show, and Kurt Angle. The Rock earned a match for the Undisputed WWF Championship at the Royal Rumble on the January 3 episode of SmackDown! by defeating Booker T.[12] On the January 10 episode of SmackDown!, The Rock and Rob Van Dam defeated Jericho and Test when The Rock made Jericho submit with the Sharpshooter.[13]
The secondary feud was between the two WWF Co-Owners Ric Flair and Vince McMahon. The feud all started on the November 19 episode of Raw, when Flair made his return to the WWF and revealed that he has bought Shane and Stephanie's stock to the WWF which now means that he and Vince were partners that own the company. On the December 27th episode of SmackDown!, McMahon came to the ring to share his new years resolutions when he was interrupted by Flair. Flair reminded Vince how he had hired him to come to the WWF when he was under contract with NWA back in 1988 until Flair left NWA and came to the WWF and how he had won the 1992 Royal Rumble match and became WWF Champion. Flair also brought up his main event match with "Macho Man" Randy Savage at WrestleMania VIII. Flair then claimed that he looked through all the contracts one of which he pulled out that said "Vince McMahon Owner-Wrestler" which meant that Vince would wrestle at Royal Rumble. McMahon asked who got the balls to step into the ring with him and Flair punched Vince in the mouth and announced that the two of them would face each other at the Royal Rumble. The following week, Flair announced that the match would be a Street Fight which Vince agreed to. The next four weeks saw Flair and McMahon confronting each other in the build up to their match which includes McMahon mocking Flair by putting on a blonde wig and his blue robe and also assaulting him with a lead pipe. During an interview, McMahon says he loves destroying lives and promised to destroy Flair's life at Royal Rumble.
On the January 7 episode of Raw, buildup towards the Royal Rumble match started, with Austin saying he wanted to enter. Later that night, Triple H made his return after missing nearly eight months with an injury and announced that he too would be entering the Royal Rumble match. He was interrupted by Kurt Angle, who then announced his intentions to enter the match, which was to be his first, and mentioned his victory over Triple H at the previous year's Royal Rumble event when he was the reigning WWF Champion. Triple H performed a Pedigree on Angle in retaliation.[14] During a match between Austin and Angle on the January 10 episode of SmackDown!, Kane, The Big Show, and Triple H all interfered. In the end, only Triple H remained standing, until The Undertaker stared him down from the top of the ramp.[13] On the January 14 episode of Raw, Triple H stated that he wants to win the Undisputed WWF Championship. Austin came out, and they fought until The Undertaker came out, and hit Triple H with a chair, allowing Austin to hit the Stone Cold Stunner. The Undertaker then hit Austin with the chair.[15] On the January 17 episode of SmackDown!, Austin and Triple H defeated Angle and Booker T. After the match, The Undertaker again came out, and stared them down.[16]
The feud between Edge and William Regal continued from Vengeance. On the December 10 episode of Raw, Edge mocked Regal, prompting Regal to nail him from behind with brass knuckles.[17] On the December 13 episode of SmackDown!, William Regal and Kurt Angle faced Edge and Rikishi in a tag match. After the match, Edge hit Regal with a steel chair and an Edgecution onto the chair, breaking his nose, and causing him to bleed.[18] On the January 7 episode of Raw, Regal interfered after Edge's victory over Lance Storm and hit him with brass knuckles.[14] Regal challenged Edge to a match for the WWF Intercontinental Championship at the Royal Rumble, and Edge accepted.[13] On the January 14 episode of Raw, Edge and Rob Van Dam faced William Regal and Test, where Regal pinned Edge after using the brass knuckles.[15] On the January 17 episode of SmackDown!, Regal defeated Rob Van Dam when he used brass knuckles behind the referee's back. Later on the night, Regal came out during Edge's match with Test but failed to interfere when Edge nailed him and referee Nick Patrick with a chair.[16]
Event
Preliminary matches
Role: | Name: |
---|---|
Commentator | Jerry Lawler |
Jim Ross | |
Carlos Cabrera (Spanish) | |
Hugo Savinovich (Spanish) | |
Interviewer | Jonathan Coachman |
Michael Cole | |
Lilian Garcia | |
WWF New York host | Shawn Michaels |
Ring announcer | Howard Finkel |
Referee | Mike Chioda |
Jack Doan | |
Brian Hebner | |
Earl Hebner | |
Jim Korderas | |
Theodore Long | |
Nick Patrick | |
Charles Robinson | |
Tim White |
The first match was between Spike Dudley and Tazz, and the Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudley and D-Von Dudley) for the WWF Tag Team Championship. The Dudley Boyz dominated Spike in the beginning with Bubba Ray ripping off Spike's neck brace. Spike fought back by performing a Dudley Dog but failed to capitalize. The Dudley Boyz then double-teamed Spike while the referee was preoccupied with Tazz. Tazz eventually came in, and both dominated. Stacy Keibler, who accompanied the Dudley Boyz, climbed on the apron, and attempted to distract Tazz and Tazz locked in the Tazzmission until Devon broke the hold. Spike hit the Dudley Dog on Bubba and attempted to do the same on Devon but Spike was thrown out of the ring, Devon then ran at Tazz in the corner which was dodged, Tazz then applied the Tazzmission to retain the title.[3][4]
The second match was between Edge and William Regal for the WWF Intercontinental Championship. Before the match, the referee found brass knuckles in Regal's tights, and confiscated them. The match went back and forth until Regal knocked Edge out of the ring. Regal applied the Regal Stretch, but Edge reached the ropes to break the hold. Edge attempted a spear, but Regal pushed the referee to receive the move. Regal took out another pair of brass knuckles and hit Edge with them. The referee recovered to count the pinfall for Regal to win the title.[3][4]
The third match was between Trish Stratus and Jazz for the WWF Women's Championship with Jacqueline as Special Guest Referee. Jazz had the early advantage, focusing on Stratus' injured hand. Jazz then confronted Jacqueline, and they shoved each other. Stratus attempted a bulldog but Jazz countered with a roll-up, and executed a snap DDT. Stratus blocked an attack in the corner, and delivered a bulldog to win the match, and retained the title.[3][4]
The fourth match was a Street Fight between Ric Flair and Vince McMahon. Flair gained the early advantage with punches and knife edge chops. McMahon attacked him with weapons, and sent him into the ringpost and steps. McMahon applied the figure four leglock, but Flair reversed it. McMahon reached the ropes, and went outside the ring. Flair hit McMahon with a low blow, a television monitor and a lead pipe. Flair forced McMahon to submit to the figure four leglock to win the match.[3][4]
The fifth match was between Chris Jericho and The Rock for the Undisputed WWF Championship. Jericho took control early in the match, and removed the padding off one of the turnbuckles. Jericho attempted the Walls of Jericho, but The Rock escaped. Jericho continued his control until The Rock delivered a superplex, and a snap overhead belly to belly suplex. Jericho retaliated with two Lionsaults. The Rock then countered a missile dropkick, and applied the Sharpshooter. Lance Storm and Christian distracted the referee as Jericho submitted. As The Rock disposed of them, Jericho took advantage and executed a Rock Bottom and attempted a People's Elbow, but The Rock avoided it and threw Jericho out of the ring. The Rock executed a Rock Bottom through an announce table. Jericho countered a Rock Bottom and applied the Walls of Jericho, but The Rock reached the ropes. The Rock accidentally hit the referee and Jericho hit The Rock with the WWF title belt. Jericho signaled Nick Patrick (a heel referee) to come out, and referee. The Rock executed a DDT, but Patrick refused to count the pinfall. The Rock attacked Patrick with a Rock Bottom, and executed a Spinebuster and a People's Elbow on Jericho. As The Rock tried to revive the original referee, Jericho hit a low blow, and sent The Rock into the exposed turnbuckle. Jericho pinned The Rock with a roll-up using the ropes to retain the title.[3][4]
Main event
The main event was the Royal Rumble match. The Undertaker, the eighth entrant, dominated upon entering the match, and eliminated all four of the remaining participants. Matt Hardy entered next and Lita, who accompanied Matt, entered the ring to help. The next entrant was Jeff Hardy, and all three attacked The Undertaker. The Undertaker eventually eliminated them both. The Hardys returned, and continued their attack, but were thrown out again. This distraction allowed Maven, the following entrant, to eliminate The Undertaker. The Undertaker returned, beat down Maven, and eliminated him. The Undertaker assaulted Scotty 2 Hotty during his entrance, and continued his attack on Maven into the crowd, and to the backstage area, including smashing his head into a popcorn machine. The match continued with Christian and Scotty 2 Hotty battling it out, and the ring began to fill with more wrestlers. Austin, the nineteenth entrant, dominated upon his entrance, and eliminated all three of the remaining participants. While he waited for the next entrant, he brought Christian and Chuck, whom he had eliminated, back in, and beat them down. Austin then eliminated the next two entrants, leaving him the only man in the ring. Triple H made his in-ring return from injury at No. 22, brawling with Austin. Mr Perfect returned as the twenty-fifth entrant to a loud ovation. The Big Show, the twenty-seventh entrant, dominated upon entering until Kane entered next. Kane eliminated The Big Show, and Kane was eliminated by Austin and Kurt Angle, the twenty-sixth entrant.[3][4] Rob Van Dam made his Royal Rumble debut by entering the ring at No. 29, taking down nearly everyone with a variety of high-flying moves, until Triple H delivered the Pedigree to him. Booker T, also making his Royal Rumble debut, entered at No. 30 and eliminated Van Dam. He then did the Spin-a-Roonie, and was quickly eliminated from the Rumble after receiving a Stone Cold Stunner from Austin.
The final four remaining were Austin, Triple H, Angle and Perfect. Angle executed an Angle Slam on Triple H and three German suplexes on Austin. Austin hit a low blow on Angle, but Perfect and Angle double-teamed him. Angle eliminated Austin as he was trying to eliminate Perfect. Austin pulled Perfect outside and attacked him before Angle attacked Austin from behind. Back in the ring, Perfect and Angle attacked Triple H. Austin entered the ring and hit Perfect, Angle and Triple H with a steel chair before leaving. Angle attacked Perfect with a clothesline by accident, and Perfect executed a Perfect-Plex on Angle. Triple H then eliminated Perfect with a clothesline, leaving only Angle and Triple H. It went back and forth before Angle sent Triple H over the top rope with a back body drop, but Triple H held on. Angle thought he had won, and celebrated. Triple H took advantage, and executed a facebuster knee smash on Angle, followed by a clothesline over the top rope to win the Royal Rumble match.[3][4]
Aftermath
Austin won a number one contender's match against Kurt Angle on the January 28 episode of Raw to earn a match for the Undisputed WWF Championship at No Way Out. A feud between Austin and Chris Jericho started with Jericho interfering in Austin's match by attacking him with his title belt.[20]
The Undertaker continued his feud with Maven over the elimination during the Royal Rumble match, which grew to include The Rock after he mocked Undertaker for his quick elimination. The Undertaker's interference led to The Rock losing to Kurt Angle in the tournament to challenge for the Undisputed championship at No Way Out.[21] On the February 4 episode of Raw, during a tag team match, The Undertaker grabbed a steel lead pipe from his motorcycle and nailed The Rock in the head with it, allowing Chris Jericho to score the pinfall win. The Rock retaliated by hitting him with a chair and helping Maven win the WWF Hardcore Championship that Undertaker had won at Vengeance; however The Undertaker performed a Tombstone Piledriver on The Rock onto the hood of a limousine in revenge.[22] A match was made between the two at No Way Out.[20]
Kurt Angle started a feud with Triple H, unhappy about how he lost the Royal Rumble match, and attacked Triple H after a confrontation.[23] During Triple H's match with Booker T, Angle interfered and attacked Triple H. Angle then had Vince McMahon make a match between the two at No Way Out for Triple H's title shot at WrestleMania X8.[24] Triple H and his on-screen wife Stephanie McMahon were having problems, so she faked a pregnancy and demanded that they renew their wedding vows. Triple H discovered the truth, and ended their marriage.[20] Stephanie McMahon then announced herself as the guest referee in the match at No Way Out.[25]
Results
No. | Results[1][26] | Stipulations | Times[27] | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Spike Dudley and Tazz (c) defeated The Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudley and D-Von Dudley) (with Stacy Keibler) by submission | Tag team match for the WWF Tag Team Championship | 5:06 | ||
2 | William Regal defeated Edge (c) | Singles match for the WWF Intercontinental Championship | 9:45 | ||
3 | Trish Stratus (c) defeated Jazz | Singles match for the WWF Women's Championship with Jacqueline as special guest referee | 3:43 | ||
4 | Ric Flair defeated Mr. McMahon by submission | Street Fight | 14:55 | ||
5 | Chris Jericho (c) defeated The Rock | Singles match for the Undisputed WWF Championship | 18:48 | ||
6 | Triple H won by last eliminating Kurt Angle | 30-man Royal Rumble match for an Undisputed WWF Championship match at WrestleMania X8 | 1:09:22 | ||
|
Royal Rumble entrances and eliminations
A new entrant came out approximately every 2 minutes.
Draw[28] | Entrant | Order | Eliminated by | Time[29] | Eliminations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Rikishi | 6 | The Undertaker | 13:39 | 1 |
2 | Goldust | 4 | 12:52 | 0 | |
3 | Big Boss Man | 1 | Rikishi | 03:05 | 0 |
4 | Bradshaw | 3 | Billy Gunn | 07:17 | 0 |
5 | Lance Storm | 2 | Al Snow | 04:46 | 0 |
6 | Al Snow | 5 | The Undertaker | 05:12 | 1 |
7 | Billy Gunn | 7 | 03:37 | 1 | |
8 | The Undertaker | 10 | Maven | 07:40 | 7 |
9 | Matt Hardy | 9 | The Undertaker[1] | 04:16 | 0 |
10 | Jeff Hardy | 8 | 01:30 | 0 | |
11 | Maven | 11 | 03:34 | 1 | |
12 | Scotty 2 Hotty | 12 | Diamond Dallas Page | 02:36 | 0 |
13 | Christian | 16 | Stone Cold Steve Austin | 12:14 | 3 |
14 | Diamond Dallas Page | 13 | Christian | 05:15 | 1 |
15 | Chuck | 17 | Stone Cold Steve Austin | 09:04 | 2 |
16 | The Godfather | 15 | Christian & Chuck | 01:48 | 0 |
17 | Albert | 14 | 00:48 | 0 | |
18 | Perry Saturn | 18 | Stone Cold Steve Austin | 02:57 | 0 |
19 | Stone Cold Steve Austin | 27 | Kurt Angle | 26:46 | 7 |
20 | Val Venis | 19 | Stone Cold Steve Austin | 02:58 | 0 |
21 | Test | 20 | 01:42 | 0 | |
22 | Triple H | - | Winner | 23:14 | 4 |
23 | The Hurricane | 21 | Stone Cold Steve Austin & Triple H | 00:39 | 0 |
24 | Faarooq | 22 | Triple H | 00:36 | 0 |
25 | Mr. Perfect | 28 | 15:18 | 0 | |
26 | Kurt Angle | 29 | 16:09 | 2 | |
27 | Big Show | 23 | Kane | 02:45 | 0 |
28 | Kane | 24 | Kurt Angle | 01:02 | 1 |
29 | Rob Van Dam | 25 | Booker T | 02:12 | 0 |
30 | Booker T | 26 | Stone Cold Steve Austin[2] | 00:33 | 1 |
^ Undertaker assaulted and eliminated Maven following his own elimination by Maven.
^ This was Austin's 36th career elimination in the Royal Rumble, which was a record held for eight years until Shawn Michaels broke it in the 2010 Royal Rumble.
References
- ^ a b c d e "Royal Rumble 2002 Results". Online World of Wrestling. Retrieved 2008-03-26.
- ^ Wahlers, Dan (2004-01-21). "Royal Rumble history part two". Wrestling Observer. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "411's WWF Royal Rumble Report 1.20.02". 411mania. 2002-01-21. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Powell, John (2002-01-21). "Rumble 2002 stumbles Triple H wins WrestleMania spot". Slam! Sports. Canadian Online Explorer. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ Ian Hamilton. Wrestling's Sinking Ship: What Happens to an Industry Without Competition (p. 160)
- ^ "Specialty Matches: Royal Rumble". WWE. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
- ^ Waldman, Jon (2005-02-02). "Statistical survival – breaking down the Royal Rumble". SLAM! Wrestling. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
- ^ Grabianowski, Ed. "How Pro Wrestling Works". HowStuffWorks. Discovery Communications. Archived from the original on November 18, 2013. Retrieved March 5, 2012.
- ^ "Live & Televised Entertainment". WWE. Archived from the original on February 26, 2009. Retrieved March 21, 2012.
- ^ "Vengeance 2001 official results". WWE. Archived from the original on 2007-07-16. Retrieved 2007-07-29.
- ^ "Vengeance 2001 results". Online World of Wrestling. Retrieved 2008-01-30.
- ^ Keith, Scott (2002-01-04). "The SmarkDown Rant – January 3 / 2002". 411mania. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ a b c McCluskey, Sean (2002-01-10). "411's WWF Smackdown Report 1.10.02". 411mania. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ a b "411's WWF Raw Report 1.7.02". 411mania. 2002-01-07. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ a b Mahuad, Carlos (2002-01-14). "411's WWF Raw Report 14.01.02". 411mania. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ a b McCluskey, Sean (2002-01-17). "411's WWF Smackdown Report 1.17.02". 411mania. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ "411's WWF Raw Report 12.10.01". 411mania. 2001-12-10. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ Keith, Scott (2001-12-13). "The SmarKdown Rant – December 13 / 2001". 411mania. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ "WWF Royal Rumble 2002". Hoffco, Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ a b c "411's WWF Raw Report 2.11.02". 411mania. 2002-02-11. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ McCluskey, Sean (2002-01-24). "411's WWF Smackdown Report 1.24.02". 411mania. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ McCluskey, Sean (2002-02-07). "411's WWF Smackdown Report 2.7.02". 411mania. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ Mahuad, Carlos (2002-01-20). "411's WWF Raw Report 20.01.02". 411mania. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ "411's WWF Raw Report 2.4.02". 411mania. 2002-02-04. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ McCluskey, Sean (2002-02-14). "411's WWF Smackdown Report 2.14.02". 411mania. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ "Royal Rumble 2002 Results". WWE. Retrieved 2008-03-25.
- ^ "Royal Rumble 2002". Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved January 22, 2012.
- ^ "Rumble Match: Triple H (spot No. 22) wins the Royal Rumble Match". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved April 8, 2011.
- ^ "Royal Rumble 2002". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved April 8, 2011.