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The fourth match was The Undertaker versus Luther Reigns. [5] [11] Mark Jindrak accompanied Reigns to the ring but was ejected before the match started. [5] Reigns hit The Undertaker with the ring bell and applied various submission holds. The Undertaker countered with a Tombstone piledriver to win the match. [5] [12]
Additionally, the matches of Eddie Guerrero versus Luther Reigns, Spike Dudley versus Nunzio, Booker T versus John Cena, and the Last Ride match were all rated a 4 out of 10. [ 19 ] The event was released on DVD on November 9, 2004. [ 25 ]
On the February 17 episode of SmackDown!, Undertaker defeated Jindrak, after which Reigns smashed a television camera over Undertaker's head. On February 20, Reigns wrestled against The Undertaker at No Way Out. Jindrak was thrown out before the match started and although Reigns managed to hold his own, Undertaker ultimately won the match. [7]
Armageddon was established in 1999 as World Wrestling Entertainment's (WWE) December pay-per-view (PPV) and was held every year except in 2001. [3] The 2004 event was held on December 12 at the Gwinnett Center in the Atlanta suburb of Duluth, Georgia.
This was an eight-way elimination match, also involving John Cena, René Duprée, Kenzo Suzuki, Rob Van Dam, Billy Gunn, Charlie Haas, and Luther Reigns. WWE recognizes Booker T's reign as beginning on July 29, 2004, when the episode aired on tape delay. [92] 101 John Cena: October 3, 2004: No Mercy: East Rutherford, NJ: 2 2: 3
This was a mask vs. title match. WWE recognizes Mysterio's reign as ending on September 4, 2009, when the following episode aired on tape delay. [144] 125 John Morrison: September 1, 2009: SmackDown: Cleveland, OH: 3 103: 99 WWE recognizes Morrison's reign as beginning on September 4, 2009, when the episode aired on tape delay.
In response to President Donald Trump's executive order banning diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, the Pentagon's intelligence agency has paused special event programs and related events ...
The 2004 SummerSlam was the 17th annual SummerSlam professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). It was held for wrestlers from the promotion's Raw and SmackDown! brand divisions.