8 Wrestling Moments EVERYONE Remembers Wrong
7. Jim Ross Announces Kane's Arrival
There is plenty of debate about who is pro wrestling's commentary GOAT these days, but it's a fact that Jim Ross is attached to many of the most significant calls in wrestling history. His iconic enthusiasm is ingrained in our minds, from hysterically shrieking "Tyson and Austin! Tyson and Austin!" to less monosyllabic calls like, "Climb the ladder, kid. Make yourself famous".
When listing all-time great debuts, it doesn't get more exciting than the debut of Kane. The Undertaker was embroiled in a bitter and malicious feud with Paul Bearer involving Mankind, and even saw 'Taker unleash a fireball towards his former manager. In return, Bearer threatened to reveal to the world 'The Deadman's darkest hidden secret. After a three-month build, in which Bearer told the tale of The Undertaker's pyromaniac past, where 'The Phenom' had set fire to his family's funeral home with his whole family burned alive inside, his brother Kane finally debuted at Badd Blood: In Your House in 1997 with a legendary four-word introduction from the commentary desk.
Wrestling folklore and a million bad impersonations imagined that Jim Ross was the one to shriek, "That's gotta be Kane!" However, it was actually Vince McMahon who was responsible for this infamous call, as Shawn Michaels defeated The Undertaker in the very first Hell In A Cell match.