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who won all of the matches yesterday at unforgiven first one to tell ALL of them gets 10.......

2006-09-18 04:18:08 · 7 answers · asked by sexychelsea14 1 in Sports Wrestling

7 answers

cena Trish MN orton kane flair and dx

2006-09-18 04:24:46 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Johnny Nitro beat Jeff Hardy
Umaga vs Kane (Double Count Out)
Spirit Squad beat The Highlanders
DX beat The McMahons and Big Show
Trish beat Lita
Randy Orton beat Carlito
John Cena beat Edge

2006-09-18 11:46:51 · answer #2 · answered by RandyOrtonfan84 5 · 0 0

Well... I personally liked the play by play by our boy Juan. Two thumbs up! Well done.

2006-09-18 12:50:16 · answer #3 · answered by jennyrascal 4 · 0 0

juan s, why didn't you just simply put who won the matches, instead of writing a book?

2006-09-18 11:28:20 · answer #4 · answered by A_WWE_FAN_4LYFE 6 · 0 0

Very creative juan..

2006-09-18 11:27:28 · answer #5 · answered by Dawn of PacMan 3 · 0 0

cena
kane and umanga (sp?) count out
trish
dx
s.squad
r.orton

2006-09-18 11:35:25 · answer #6 · answered by chris m 5 · 0 0

The Champ is back
By Louie Dee
September 17, 2006


Going into Unforgiven, the odds against John Cena regaining the WWE Championship seemed insurmountable. But just like he always seems to do, Cena proved the odds makers wrong in front of a capacity crowd at the Air Canada Centre. After giving Edge a vicious FU off a 16-foot ladder through two stacked tables, Cena grabbed the WWE Championship to win the Tables, Ladders and Chairs Match and become a three-time WWE Champion.

To borrow a line from Mr. McMahon, no one thought Cena had a chance in hell of walking out of the Air Canada Centre with the gold. Not only is Toronto Edge’s hometown, but TLC is his specialty match – a match Cena had never competed in prior to Unforgiven. To win, Cena would not only have to counter Edge’s experience and use the three signature weapons to his fullest advantage, but he would also have to climb a ladder and retrieve the WWE Championship hanging high above the ring.

For Cena, it was either win the gold or leave RAW and sign with SmackDown; General Manager Theodore Long was in attendance looking on from a skybox, and in an odd way, he may have hoped for the same result as the 16,105 WWE fans in attendance. Those 16,105 were firmly in hometown boy Edge’s corner, as he was rabidly cheered (and Cena vociferously booed) during the introductions. The Rated-R Superstar was even nearly crying during those introductions, as this was “his match” and a moment he had lived his entire life for.

Unfortunately for him, Cena would not be denied. Being in enemy territory was nothing new for him, as back in June he faced Rob Van Dam in a hostile extreme environment at ECW One Night Stand; in fact, it was because of Edge that Cena lost the WWE Championship to RVD that night.

On this night, it was Edge who took the early advantage, showing that he is comfortable in any situation a TLC Match may present. However, Cena quickly learned how to use the three signature weapons. At one point, Cena sandwiched the champion inside of one of the ladders and then applied the STFU while he was stuck in the steel. Edge feverishly tapped out, but with the only way to win being to climb a ladder and retrieve the gold, his voluntary submission was ignored by the referee.

After losing the Women’s Championship earlier in the night, Lita was conspicuous by her absence in Edge’s corner. But, after both men had severely brutalized each other, she would stick her nose in at an opportune time. Cena had an opportunity to climb for the championship, but just as he was about to grab the gold, Lita ran to the ring and tipped the ladder over, sending Cena crashing over 15 feet down through a table at ringside.

Later, however, Lita’s interference would backfire. As Edge climbed a ladder and Cena tried to stop him, Lita nailed Cena with a chair. This caused the challenger to fall forward… right into the ladder. The force sent Edge crashing off the ladder and through a ringside table, and Lita looked on horrified as she surveyed the wreckage. As she did, Cena grabbed the former Women’s Champion and finally took care of her, delivering a vicious FU that many would feel was well-deserved.

However, that allowed Edge time to recover, and he and Cena both wound up climbing the same ladder. The two men slugged it out, and in a moment that no one will ever forget, Cena scooped the WWE Champion up on his shoulders. He then dropped him nearly 20 feet with an FU, sending the Rated-R Superstar crashing through a stack of tables.

In that moment, Edge’s TLC dominance was derailed. With the Rated-R Superstar lying crumpled in a mess of wooden wreckage, Cena unhooked the WWE Championship to win the match. He then hugged his father (a man that Edge viciously attacked weeks ago) at ringside, but the celebration was more subdued; as Unforgiven went off the air, the emotional new champion stood in the arena with a drained look on his face.

Following the match, the new champion told WWE.com exactly why that was, revealing that the brutality and carnage of the match was almost too much.

“The way it went down…what was done needed to be done and nothing more than that,” he said. “This is a competitive sport, but you never want to end anyone’s career. Edge didn’t want to quit, so I did what I had to do to win.”

Still, even with everything stacked against him – lack of experience, hostile Canadian crowd, RAW career on the line – Cena turned it up a notch and rose to the occasion. Both men left their heart and soul in the Air Canada Centre, but when all was said and done, it was John Cena left standing tall with the gold.


Be sure to check WWE.com on Monday for an exclusive interview with the new WWE Champion, John Cena.

Nitro escapes Toronto with the gold
By Craig Tello
September 17, 2006


With assistance from the underhanded Melina, Intercontinental Champion Johnny Nitro successfully defended his gold against Jeff Hardy in Hardy’s first pay-per-view match since his return to WWE last month. Just as she was two weeks ago on RAW, Melina was instrumental in the outcome of the match between these competitors – this time giving Nitro the controversial victory over Hardy.

In the opening contest of Unforgiven, Hardy – one of the youngest Intercontinental Champions of all time – looked to win the gold for the second time in Toronto on Sunday night. Driven by the support of the vocal sold-out Air Canada Centre crowd, an emotional Hardy used his trademark high-risk offensive to maintain control throughout most of the match.

Nitro gained the advantage on the challenger after Hardy injured his leg. Still frustrated after being doused with paint by Hardy days earlier on RAW, Nitro was aggressive in his assault and kept Hardy grounded for several moments. The two continued to exchange a variety of highly innovative maneuvers; Hardy even landed the Swanton Bomb on the champion, but Nitro managed to get his foot on the rope to break the count.

Moments later, Melina set herself on the apron and was inadvertently bumped hard to the floor by Nitro who was tossed into the ropes. With Nitro incapacitated and Melina on the arena floor, Hardy began his recovery.

Earlier in the week, Hardy told WWE.com that he would need to be prepared for Melina but maintain his focus on the champion. Unfortunately for the free-spirited Hardy, as he neared the ropes, Melina suddenly ceased nursing her ankle, removed her boot, leapt to her feet and blasted Hardy in the face with the thick heel of her boot. An opportunistic Nitro then got the cover and the three-count on Hardy, making it the second time that Melina saved Nitro and his Intercontinental Championship.


Moments after the disappointing loss, Jeff was met in the locker room area by his brother, Matt, in what was the first time the two appeared together at the same WWE event since No Way Out in February 2003. Matt encouraged his brother until their emotional reunion was curtailed by Women’s Champion Lita. A sarcastic Lita mocked the Hardys, calling the meeting off the three “an impromptu Team Extreme reunion.”

Calling Jeff a screw up and claiming that Matt would never be a champion, the Women’s Champion commented on the irony of Lita being the only one to be holding a championship. She continued by inviting Matt and Jeff to watch her beat Trish Stratus later in the night and then see Edge send John Cena packing to SmackDown like he did to Matt last year. Lita then proudly strutted away from her former allies, pleased with herself for disrupting the long-awaited reunion of one of the most lauded tandems in WWE history: the Hardy Boyz


And the monster is…
By Jen Hunt
September 17, 2006




After weeks of battling over who is WWE's true monster, Kane and Umaga came to Unforgiven to settle the question once and for all. It is a question that remains unanswered, as both the Samoan Bulldozer and the Big Red Monster were counted out and the match was recorded as a no contest. Considering the behemoths nearly destroyed each other in the ring, then went on to fight their way through the audience and out of the arena, it is safe to assume the two will continue to fight until one is crowned the biggest, baddest, meanest, greatest monster in WWE.

Before Kane came out for the match, Armando Alejandro Estrada told the audience that if they thought Kane was a monster, then they were a bunch of big red dummies just like Kane. But Estrada's arrogance turned to fear when he was surrounded by fire and face to face with the creature he had just been mocking. Who will win the war of the monsters? Will it be mortuary fire survivor Kane, or will it be the savage Samoan Bulldozer Umaga? Only time will tell.

Strength in numbers
By Brett Hoffman
September 17, 2006




The time-tested theory that strength lies in numbers was affirmed on Sunday at Unforgiven. World Tag Team Champions, The Spirit Squad, made full use of their five-on-two advantage as they successfully defended the gold in an intense back and forth battle with The Highlanders.

Two weeks ago on RAW, the Highlanders won a number one contender’s match to earn the right to face the obnoxious Spirit Squad at Unforgiven. On Sunday night though, the pride of Scotland fell victim to the same fate as every other challenger to the Squad’s gold.

At one point late in the match, the Highlanders had things under control and appeared to be closing in on victory. However, with the referee’s attention focused elsewhere, Squad member Johnny, who wasn’t even in the match, jumped on the apron and knocked Rory senseless with the Johnny-Go-Round, allowing Mikey to put the eccentric Scot away with a facebuster.

Who, if anyone, will put an end to the Spirit Squad’s annoying antics? Will anyone stop their reign and remove their grip on the tag-team division’s richest prize? What’s next for the Highlanders? Will the loss deter them in their quest for the tag-team gold?

Trish bows out on top
By Steven Schiff
September 17, 2006




Before a vociferously partisan crowd and amidst chants of “Thank you Trish!” six-time Women’s Champion Trish Stratus made it lucky number seven by defeating Lita in front of 16,105 of her hometown supporters in Toronto’s Air Canada Centre. Trish paid homage to another classic Canadian Superstar by applying the Sharpshooter, forcing Lita to tap out and hand over the Women’s Championship to the woman who has been the penultimate WWE Diva for the past seven years.

It was clearly a moving night for Trish, who had been riding a wave of emotion since news broke on WWE.com that she would be retiring after Unforgiven. It was not Trish, however, but her long-time rival Lita, who made the announcement, frustrating the most decorated Diva in WWE history. It was only appropriate that Trish’s final match would come against Lita, the Diva with whom she has waged more than a few all-out grudge matches and the woman she faced in her WWE debut. Lita could not have wanted anything more than to taint Trish’s legacy by defeating her on her home turf in her final match, but Trish made sure that she ended the intensely personal rivalry the same way she has conducted herself throughout her storied career: on her terms and no one else’s.

As Trish made her way to the ring, it was clear that her emotions were swirling as she took her time at the top of the stage to give a long, pensive look around the arena. She appeared to be soaking in the rush of a WWE entrance one last time, wishing she could acknowledge each and every one of the WWE fans in the sold-out Air Canada Centre.

She would get her chance to do so at the conclusion of what was, not surprisingly, an intensely physical contest between two bitter rivals. After nearly scoring several pin-falls, Trish was finally able to corner Lita and lock in the Sharpshooter, lifting the impassioned crowd to its feet as they raucously cheered their hometown hero.

Once Lita submitted, the torrent of emotion gave way to relieved triumph, as the capacity crowd saluted Trish with a standing ovation. Announcers Jim Ross and Jerry “The King” Lawler joined in the celebration, as did a bleary-eyed Lilian Garcia, while Trish held the Women’s Championship high above her head for the seventh and final time. Then, in the classy fashion WWE fans have come to know and revere from their favorite Diva, Trish took a bow and blew a kiss to the still frenzied crowd, as her emotional roller coaster finally eased back into the station.

Trish got her storybook ending, but it is a curious ending for the Women’s Championship because – for the first time in WWE history – a champion is retiring with the gold. Will Trish relinquish her championship? If so, who will take over? Certainly Trish would not turn it back over to previous champ Lita, her most bitter rival. Will the Women’s Championship simply be retired along with its greatest ambassador? The world will be looking to RAW tomorrow night for answers. For now, Trish can celebrate a well-fought match, a well-deserved Women’s Championship and a magical seven-year ride in WWE that will not soon be forgott

Orton overpowers Carlito
By Zack Zeigler
September 17, 2006


The last time Randy Orton was live on pay-per-view in Toronto’s Air Canada Centre he defeated Chris Benoit to become the youngest World Heavyweight Champion in WWE history. At Unforgiven, in the same building he earned his position among WWE elite, Orton was able to counter a high-risk aerial maneuver from Carlito and turn it into a match ending RKO. With the victory, Orton went one-up in his personal battle with the Caribbean Superstar.

With Orton’s despicable actions before the match – he insulted Trish Stratus and played down her decision to retire after Unforgiven – it seemed like Carlito would have all the ammunition he’d need to pull him through to victory. But the turnout that would have avenged Orton’s shameful actions toward Trish didn’t happen. In the end, Orton’s in-ring awareness allowed him to emerge victorious. The Legend Killer may have come out on top at Unforgiven, but the question remains: was that the end of the rivalry between these two young Superstars; or, was it simply the end of the beginning?

Carlito may be one of the coolest Superstars in WWE, but he’s also aggressive and dedicated to climbing the ranks in sports-entertainment. There’s one question that has yet to be answered: what type of aggression would Carlito unleash if he ever lost his cool? And is Randy Orton the one who can elicit that kind of reaction from Carlito?

thats it

2006-09-18 11:22:38 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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