The WWF 1994 Edition of The King of The Ring
Part two of our look back at WWF King of the Ring brings us to the Baltimore Arena. Parts of this epic Pay Per View were excellent, while others were horrible. Let’s start with the good!
The Good!
This show featured the coming out party of “The King of the Harts” Owen Hart who ran through the tournament with ease, winning three straight. His first-round effort was against Tatanka, a less than 9 minute victory.
His second match was short, only 3.37 minutes, but a five-star classic against the 123 Kid. It was nonstop high-flying action and one of the best matches of a loaded 1994.
With the help of a heel turning Jim Neidhart, the Rocket became the king! He put on three great matches, and truly cemented himself as a main event player, capping off a great summer of 1994 for him. This truly was the “ascent” of The Rocket turning into the King. A great night for Owen, and very well deserved!
The Bad
As tremendous as the effort from Owen was, the effort on the microphone from Art Donovan was the worst in the history of PPV. The retired football was lost the entire time, didn’t realize wrestling was scripted and time and time again, became more concerned with the weights of the wrestlers, and had no interest in the actual match.
It was a solid card, but the main event was lacking purpose and it showed. The match between Jerry The King Lawler and Rowdy Roddy Piper failed to deliver. Towards the end, Lawler attacked Piper with a foreign object, which knocked Piper to the mat. Then, while trying to pin Piper, Jerry Lawler placed his feet on the ropes for leverage.
The fan at ringside dressed as Piper pushed Lawler’s feet off, however, which allowed Piper to perform a back suplex and get the victory. It was a weak ending to a match no one was really into. The night should have ended with Owen Hart.