Date | October 7, 1986 | ||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Rochester War Memorial Arena | ||||||||||||||||
Kayfabe | |||||||||||||||||
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Working | |||||||||||||||||
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Result | |||||||||||||||||
Tom Magee defeats Bret Hart [1] |
Bret Hart vs. Tom Magee was a professional wrestling match between Bret Hart and Tom Magee, of the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). The un-televised match took place at the Rochester War Memorial Arena in Rochester, New York on October 7, 1986 as part of a WWF Wrestling Challenge taping. [2]
The infamous match, which was one of Magee's first after signing with the WWF, [3] was a carry job by Hart, [4] impressed WWF chairman Vince McMahon and Pat Patterson, who felt Magee was the next Hulk Hogan. [5] [6]
The tape was thought to have been lost, as the WWE could not locate it in its vault. [7] This led many professional wrestling tape traders to consider it a "holy grail". [8] Professional wrestling photographer Mary-Kate Anthony had previously helped Bret Hart convert his VHS copies of his movies into digital, and Hart did not request the physical VHS tapes back. [9] In March 2019 Anthony announced on Twitter she had located the tape. [10] On May 13, 2019, the WWE Network aired a documentary entitled Holy Grail: The Search for WWE's Most Infamous Lost Match which detailed the legend behind the match and the recovery of the tape, and also featured interviews with Magee and Hart. [11]
Bret Sergeant Hart is a Canadian-American retired professional wrestler. A member of the Hart wrestling family and a second-generation wrestler, he has an amateur wrestling background, wrestling at Ernest Manning High School and Mount Royal College. A major international draw within professional wrestling, he has been credited with changing the perception of mainstream North-American professional wrestling in the early 1990s by bringing technical in-ring performance to the fore. Hart is widely regarded as one of the greatest professional wrestlers of all time; Sky Sports noted that his legacy is that of "one of, if not the greatest, to have ever graced the squared circle". For the majority of his career, Hart used the epithet "the Hitman".
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