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WrestleMania 2000 (also known as WrestleMania 16) was the 16th annual WrestleMania professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). It took place on April 2, 2000, at the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim in Anaheim, California .
WWF WrestleMania 2000 uses the exact same game engine previously seen in WCW/nWo Revenge, which released the previous year. More than 50 WWF wrestlers were included in the game, and, with the exception of existing superstars' move sets, all of them can be freely edited to the player's liking.
WWF: WrestleMania 2000: Anaheim, California: Triple H (c) defeated The Rock, Mick Foley and Big Show in a Fatal 4-Way elimination match for the WWF Championship [3] April 11 FMW: Winning Road 2000: Day 11 Tokyo, Japan: H and Mr. Gannosuke vs. Masato Tanaka and Balls Mahoney in a tag team match April 14 CMLL: 44. Aniversario de Arena México ...
The Rock in no disqualification match with The Big Show as guest referee to win the WWF Championship. WrestleMania 2000. Date: April 2, 2000 Venue: Arrowhead Pond, Anaheim, California Attendance ...
WWF In Your House was released in 1996 for the PlayStation, Sega Saturn, and MS-DOS. WWF War Zone was released in 1998 for PlayStation, Nintendo 64, and Game Boy. WWF WrestleMania 2000 (video game) was released in 1999 for Nintendo 64. WWF No Mercy was released in 2000 for Nintendo 64. WWF Raw was released in 2002 for Xbox and Windows.
WrestleMania IX was the first WrestleMania held at an outdoor venue. It was also the first and only time in WrestleMania history that the WWF World Heavyweight Championship switched twice. Yokozuna defeated Bret Hart to become the WWF World Heavyweight Champion, only to lose it to Hulk Hogan in an impromptu match.
The WrestleMania X-Seven stage. The event included eleven matches that each resulted from scripted storylines. Results were predetermined by writers of the World Wrestling Federation, [9] [10] while storylines were produced on WWF's weekly television shows, Raw is War and SmackDown! along with its supplementary programs, Sunday Night Heat and Jakked/Metal.
The concept of the pay-per-view was based around the backlash from WrestleMania 2000. The main event was a singles match for the WWF Championship with Shane McMahon as special guest referee, in which The Rock (aided by the returning Stone Cold Steve Austin) defeated Triple H to win the championship.