10 Wrestling Moments That Will Make You Really Feel Old

It's been 17 years since Undertaker chucked Mankind from that cell.

Mankind Undertaker 1
WWE.com

As is often noted, the professional wrestling business never has any real time off. Sure, Lucha Underground is trying out the concept of season-long runs, but the rest of the industry simply never stops.

What that largely results in is a slightly hazy recollection when it comes to timeframes and just exactly when certain events took place. For lack of a better term, quite often shows and PPVs just blur into one, week after week, month after month, year after year. Before you know it, rookies have become main eventers, main eventers have retired, faces are now heels and vice versa, and far too many former talents have had sad endings.

To some, Hulk Hogan’s WWF heyday may seem like only yesteryear, whereas to others it may feel like somebody like Edge only retired last year, and then there’s those who look back at extinct promotions with the thought that their demise was a fairly recent occurrence.

When the realisation sets in that these events happened far longer ago than you’d care to admit, that’s when you start to feel old and realise just how long it is that you’ve been watching wrestling in some form or another.

With that said, in a read that will have you checking yourself for grey hairs, here’s 10 wrestling moments that will make you feel mighty old.

10. WCW Hasn't Existed For 14 Years

Mankind Undertaker 1
WWE.com

Now whilst World Championship Wrestling would briefly live on as part of the then-WWF’s Invasion angle, the promotion itself ceased to exist way back in 2001; a whopping 14 years ago!

It doesn’t feel all that long ago that fans saw Shane McMahon turn up on the final episode of Nitro and reveal that he’d purchased the company..

In real terms, it was Vince McMahon who purchased Ted Turner’s ailing wrestling company, picking up the naming rights and tape library for a measly $4.2 million. Ever the competitive sort, Vince saw this as one final kick in the nuts to Turner and those associated with the one-time rival company. It also brought closure to the Monday Night Wars, although in reality WCW had stopped being a competitor way before then.

What followed was a half-assed “invasion” of available WCW talent; a talent pool that was bereft of the major names of WCW’s heyday, which led to ECW superstars aligning with WCW and also the turn of certain WWF superstars in order to make the Alliance seem like a threat.

It’s 14 years since WCW was put to bed, and it’s fair to say that it’s 14 years since the WWE saw any form or real competition, with the current product certainly reflecting that.

Senior Writer
Senior Writer

Once described as the Swiss Army Knife of WhatCulture, Andrew can usually be found writing, editing, or presenting on a wide range of topics. As a lifelong wrestling fan, horror obsessive, and comic book nerd, he's been covering those topics professionally as far back as 2010. In addition to his current WhatCulture role of Senior Content Producer, Andrew previously spent nearly a decade as Online Editor and Lead Writer for the world's longest-running genre publication, Starburst Magazine, and his work has also been featured on BBC, TechRadar, Tom's Guide, WhatToWatch, Sportkskeeda, and various other outlets, in addition to being a Rotten Tomatoes-approved film critic. Between his main dayjob, his role as the lead panel host of Wales Comic Con, and his gig as a pre-match host for Wrexham AFC games, Andrew has also carried out a hugely varied amount of interviews, from the likes of Robert Englund, Kane Hodder, Adrienne Barbeau, Rob Zombie, Katharine Isabelle, Leigh Whannell, Bruce Campbell, and Tony Todd, to Kevin Smith, Ron Perlman, Elijah Wood, Giancarlo Esposito, Simon Pegg, Charlie Cox, the Russo Brothers, and Brian Blessed, to Kevin Conroy, Paul Dini, Tara Strong, Will Friedle, Burt Ward, Andrea Romano, Frank Miller, and Rob Liefeld, to Bret Hart, Sting, Mick Foley, Ricky Starks, Jamie Hayer, Britt Baker, Eric Bischoff, and William Regal, to Mickey Thomas, Joey Jones, Phil Parkinson, Brian Flynn, Denis Smith, Gary Bennett, Karl Connolly, and Bryan Robson - and that's just the tip of an ever-expanding iceberg.