That Time Triple H Buried ECW In Philadelphia

By Michael Hamflett /

WWE.com

Many had to fall for Triple H to rise. Steve Austin had a rare stare at the lights for him in October 1999, The Rock put him over every other week, and Vince McMahon even gave his body and his daughter to the cause. Mick Foley's masterful manipulation of the wrestling audience was the missing piece of the puzzle though.

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In conclusively beating Foley - as Cactus Jack, no less - at his own game twice on back-to-back pay-per-views in January and February 2000, Hunter was finally established as the headliner he'd long believed himself to be. His work was sensational, his character was established and his push was assured. A heel of his stature had the perfect babyface foe too. The Rock had sped past him as early as 1998 on their shared race to the top, but new money was to be made with both on top.

'The Great One's Royal Rumble victory (via a billion twists and turns en route) saw him through to a WrestleMania main event and Backlash follow-up, but he wasn't the most over performer on WWE's first pay-per-view of the new millennium. On that historic Madison Square Garden show, to a small man went the biggest pop.

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