Thursday, May 28, 2020

Ranking Heel WWF Champions-"Macho Man" Randy Savage


             

            I debated on whether to include the title reign of Randy Savage considering he spent the majority of it as a babyface.  However, it gave me a chance to compare and contrast both his babyface and heel phases and calculate some interesting data results.  Concentrating more on the heel phase, Savage won 96% of his matches, with 40% being clean wins.  His clean wins were nearly double that of the Iron Sheik and Billy Graham, and 10% more than Ivan Koloff.  Savage’s overall winning percentage was at least 20% more than all three of the previous entrants in this series.  One factor could certainly be that he spent the majority of his entire reign as a babyface and his transition to heel did not lead to any major booking formula changes.  One could argue his momentum as a babyface champion played a factor in his success as a heel champion.
            As a babyface, Savage worked with Ted Dibiase often, with matches that winded down around September 1988.  Then, Savage worked with Andre the Giant with disqualification wins and no-contests.  Besides Andre he wrestled upcoming mid-card acts such as Bad News Brown, Rick Rude, and Haku.  Bare in mind, the WWF was running multiple sects of house shows with various rosters, or Savage may have had stronger opponents, or at least more variation.  After his heel turn, he only won clean against Bad News Brown, and won against the Ultimate Warrior in count-out victories.


TOTAL MATCHES (babyface and heel)-169
TOTAL WINS-135 (80%)
TOTAL CLEAN WINS-83 (61%)
TOTAL NON-CLEAN WINS-52 (39% of wins, 31% of total matches)
TOTAL LOSSES-17 (10%)
TOTAL CLEAN LOSSES-1 (6% of losses, 6% of total matches)
TOTAL NO-CONTESTS-17 (10%)

Total Babyface Matches (Before and including February 3, 1989 tag team match where he turned heel)-143 (85% of total matches)
Total Wins-110 (77% of face wins, 65% of total matches)
Total Clean Wins-73 (66% of face wins, 54% of total wins)
Total Non-Clean Wins-37 (34% of faces wins, 27% of total wins)
Total Losses-16 (11% of face matches, 9% of total matches)
Total Clean Losses-0
Total No-Contests-17 (12% of face matches, 10% of total matches)

Total Heel Matches-26 (15% of total matches)
Total Wins-25 (96% of heel matches, 19% of total wins)
Total Clean Wins-10 (40% of heel wins, 7% of total wins)
Total Non-Clean Wins-15 (60% of heel wins, 11% of total wins)
Total Losses-1 (4% of heel matches, 6% of total matches)
Total Clean Losses-1 (same as above number)
Total No-Contests-0
Steve Viglio
stevesgraps@yahoo.com

Friday, May 22, 2020

Ranking heel WWE Champions #3-The Iron Sheik




The Iron Sheik has certainly proven to be a cult favorite over the last fifteen years due to his outlandish behavior.  Using Cage Match and The History of WWE for results, the Iron Sheik had twenty-eight total matches for the WWE World title, first beating Bob Backlund at Madison Square Garden on December 26, 1983.  He went on to lose the belt to Hulk Hogan in the same venue on January 28, 1984, beginning Hogan’s ground-breaking reign as WWE champion as the company was nationalizing their product.
            For his clean wins, he mostly beat job guys such as Ken Jugan, Sal Bellomo, and John Callahan.  He beat “Chief” Jay Strongbow on December 27, 1983, which was not clean, and proceeded to beat him several more times throughout his reign.  The results I have for those wins do not list the finish and it is possible they shared the same finish as the December 27 match, and I did not include those in his clean win total.  He never lost clean, excluding his loss to Hogan to end his reign, so his reign has that as a strength I guess.  He lost via disqualification two times to Bob Backlund and once to Ivan Pitski.  Here are the overall stats and percentages for his reign…

28 total matches
21 Overall wins-75%
10 Clean wins-36%
5 non-clean wins-18%
4 Losses-14%
2 Draws-7%
1 Unknown finish against Ivan Putski on January 15, 1984

            Comparing Sheik to Ivan Koloff and Billy Graham, he ranks number three, just looking at overall clean wins.  Overall, the Iron Sheik lacked any tangible and credible wins, and seems to compare well to Ivan Koloff’s.

            Nikolai Volkoff and the Iron Sheik won the WWE tag belts at WrestleMania I on March 31, 1985 but they did not have a particularly good run.  They lost to Barry Windham and Mike Rotundo numerous times, including singles losses to both guys for Sheik.  They only won against job guys and one sole win against the British Bulldogs, before losing the belts to Windham and Rotundo in three minutes on June 17, 1985.  On a side-note, Sheik won the Most Underrated Wrestler award in the Observer for 1980.