10 Best WWE In Your House Matches EVER

The choice of a New Generation and the saviours of future ones.

By Michael Hamflett /

NXT's decision to bring back the In Your House branding for their upcoming TakeOver special might have been motivated by more than just a bit of celebratory nostalgia, but the giddy thrill of those hovering just below their key demographic - your writer included - highlighted how effective it was at providing just that.

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Contrary to similar requests for the return of Halloween Havoc, the original King Of The Ring or WarGames (before NXT actually managed that one) the vaunted title wasn't devised around a very specific theme or stipulation other than the fact that - like every other pay-per-view - it would be in the viewer's house. At a push, the identity was the stage. A giant cartoonish house for a set was emblematic of the company's overall ethos at the time, as was the brightly coloured lettering and divisive blue-and-yellow "WWF" logo that atop it.

These are likely the only significant touches fans will expect from NXT's version, not least because the black-and-gold brand can't reanimate the best and brightest from the New Generation to go at the level they did in the mid-1990s. Not enough people were investing at the time and more's the pity - the work on these shows was closer to a standard TakeOver in style and form than anything that had come before...

10. Bret Hart Vs Jean-Pierre Lafitte (In Your House 3)

Triple H tells the story his "Curtain Call" punishment coming with a line from Vince McMahon about eating platefuls of sh*t and learning to like the taste of it. What then, had Bret Hart done to practically drown in the stuff a year earlier?

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'The Hitman' had failed to draw as Champion in 1994, but retained the deeper affection of those that did stick with the company post-Hulk Hogan. Alongside Shawn Michaels and select others, he dragged the product kicking and screaming into a new generation before the company branded it as such. For that, he was cast as a racist to fight a ninja, made to feud with a dentist and here, take on a real life pirate that had stolen one of his many ring jackets.

Of course, the pirate was working big man Jean-Pierre Lafitte and Bret Hart was The Best There Ever Will Be, so their lone pay-per-view singles match was a total triumph for the art-form in the face of a totally artless build. Hart took heavy blows in a battle of power over finesse, reducing his own established stature before evading Lafitte's riskier assaults to claim back his f*cking jacket it mattered half as much as the match had just made it seem.

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