Ranking Every General Manager In WWE Raw History

16. Mick Foley

Raw General Managers
WWE.com

Let the record show that this does not include Mick Foley's tenure as WWE Commissioner in 2000. Otherwise, he likely would have been leading the list for his amazing efforts. Rather, this accounts only for his short-lived reign as Raw general manager in December 2003. He had the potential to be one of the best GMs of all-time, but he wasn't around long enough for that to happen.

Shortly following Stone Cold Steve Austin's departure from the program, Foley took the reigns of Raw starting on on December 1, but being on the road full-time again eventually caught up to him and he asked to be written out of storylines only three weeks into his GM stint.

While he did nothing of note while in charge, his exit from Raw was memorable. Randy Orton challenged him to a match for his Intercontinental Championship, and when Foley refused, Orton called him a coward. They would rekindle their rivalry months later when Foley resurfaced in the 2004 Royal Rumble match as a surprise entrant to confront The Legend Killer.

Contributor
Contributor

Since 2008, Graham has been a diehard pro wrestling fan and, in 2010, he combined his passions for WWE and writing when he joined Bleacher Report. Equipped with a master's in journalism, Graham has contributed to WhatCulture, FanSided's Daily DDT, Sports Betting Dime, and GateHouse Media. Along the way, he has conducted interviews with wrestling superstars like Chris Jericho, Edge, Goldberg, Christian, Diamond Dallas Page, Jim Ross, Adam Cole, Tessa Blanchard, Ryback, and Nick Aldis among others.