WrestleMania 2
WrestleMania 2 was a 1986 professional wrestling pay-per-view event produced by the World Wrestling Federation. It was the second annual WrestleMania and took place on Monday, April 7, 1986, making it the only WrestleMania that was not held on a traditional Sunday until the two-night WrestleMania 36 in April 2020. The event took place at three venues on the same day: first at the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Uniondale, New York, then at the Rosemont Horizon in Rosemont, Illinois, and finally at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena in Los Angeles, California.
Each venue had its own card of four matches each, totaling 12 matches for the PPV broadcast that were shown back-to-back-to-back. The main event of WrestleMania 2, which was in Los Angeles, featured WWF World Heavyweight Champion Hulk Hogan defending the title against King Kong Bundy in a Steel Cage match. In the last match in Chicago, The British Bulldogs faced The Dream Team for the WWF Tag Team Championship, while the final match in Uniondale was a boxing match pitting Mr. T against Roddy Piper. The undercard in Uniondale also saw WWF Intercontinental Heavyweight Champion Randy Savage defend his title against George Steele, while the card in Chicago featured a 20-man battle royal involving WWF wrestlers and National Football League players.
WrestleMania 2 received generally poor reviews, with much of the criticism being centred around the decision to hold it as three separate events across the country. Many publications rank it as amongst the worst WrestleMania events of all time.
Production
Background
Following the success of WrestleMania I in 1985, the American professional wrestling promotion World Wrestling Federation scheduled a second WrestleMania for the following year, thus establishing WrestleMania as an annual pay-per-view event for the company. Unlike the previous year, WrestleMania 2 was scheduled to be held at three venues on Monday, April 7, 1986: the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Uniondale, New York, the Rosemont Horizon in the Chicago suburb of Rosemont, Illinois, and the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena in Los Angeles, California. Each location was scheduled to have its own card of four matches each, which were broadcast back-to-back-to-back, starting in Uniondale, then Chicago, and finally Los Angeles.Broadcasters
The event featured separate commentary and announce teams in each location. The commentating teams consisted of Vince McMahon and Susan Saint James in New York; Gorilla Monsoon, Gene Okerlund, and Cathy Lee Crosby in Chicago; and Jesse Ventura, Alfred Hayes, and Elvira in Los Angeles. The ring announcers were Howard Finkel, Chet Coppock, and Lee Marshall.Celebrities
sang a rendition of "America the Beautiful" before the show at the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in New York. Celebrity guests in attendance for the New York segment included: Cab Calloway, Darryl Dawkins, G. Gordon Liddy, Joan Rivers, Joe Frazier, Lou Duva, Herb, and Susan Saint James. Celebrity guests in attendance for the Chicago segment included: Clara Peller, Dick Butkus, Ed Jones, Ozzy Osbourne, Bill Fralic, Ernie Holmes, Harvey Martin, Jim Covert, Russ Francis, William Perry, and Cathy Lee Crosby. The Los Angeles segment included celebrity guests Ricky Schroder, Robert Conrad, Tommy Lasorda, and Elvira.Storylines
The card featured 12 matches, which resulted from scripted storylines and had results predetermined by the WWF. Building to the event, storylines between characters played out on WWF's primary television programs, Championship Wrestling, All-Star Wrestling, Saturday Night's Main Event and Prime Time Wrestling.File:Hulk Hogan2.jpg|thumb|upright|Hulk Hogan faced King Kong Bundy in a Steel Cage match for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship at WrestleMania.
Three of the main-event feuds were set up on the March 1, 1986, Saturday Night's Main Event V. The main feud heading into WrestleMania 2 was between Hulk Hogan and King Kong Bundy, with the two battling over the WWF World Heavyweight Championship. Although they had wrestled occasionally before, their first nationally televised encounter was on the November 2, 1985, Saturday Night's Main Event III where Hogan teamed up with André the Giant against André's rivals Bundy and Big John Studd. Hogan and André won the match by disqualification. On March 1, Hogan defended his WWF title against The Magnificent Muraco. Just as Hogan was about to pin Muraco, Bundy ran into the ring and—with Muraco's help—initiated a 2-on-1 assault on Hogan, repeatedly crushing him with his body weight to break his ribs. Hogan had a very serious injury, while Bundy challenged Hogan for the title. With revenge on his mind, Hogan decided not to heed his doctor's advice and accepted the challenge; a match was then booked between the two in a steel cage for the WWF title.
The second feud heading into the event was between Mr. T and Roddy Piper. Piper established himself as the top heel in the WWF in 1984. A year later, he joined Paul Orndorff and Bob Orton to feud with Hulk Hogan and Mr. T who defeated them in the main event of the first-ever WrestleMania. The Piper/Mr. T feud restarted in 1986 after their real-life hatred for each other became known, prompting the WWF to turn their animosity for one another into a feud. Piper, and others in the locker room, genuinely disliked Mr. T because he was an actor and had no prior wrestling training. In response, Mr. T became a special WWF boxer and began competing in boxing matches. On the March 1 Saturday Night's Main Event V, Mr. T defeated Orton in a boxing match. After the match, Piper distracted Mr. T, allowing Orton to attack from behind and start a 2-on-1 assault. Mr. T then demanded revenge, leading to his boxing match against Piper.
The third main feud heading into WrestleMania was between The Dream Team and The British Bulldogs over the WWF Tag Team Championship. On August 24, 1985, Beefcake and Valentine won the tag titles from The U.S. Express. The British Bulldogs challenged Beefcake and Valentine for their titles immediately after their win. They retained their titles against the Bulldogs at a house show on September 11 by getting disqualified. They again defended the titles against the Bulldogs Saturday Night's Main Event V, where they emerged victorious against them. After the Bulldogs twice failed to win the titles, Dream Team agreed to defend their titles against them for a final time with a title match set at WrestleMania.
The other major feud heading into WrestleMania 2 was between Randy Savage and George Steele. Its genesis came after Steele, who used a neanderthal, "missing link"-type gimmick, became smitten with Savage's manager, the beautiful Miss Elizabeth. Their first meeting took place on Saturday Night's Main Event IV, before Savage won the Intercontinental Championship. Steele would frequently be distracted by Elizabeth, which Savage used to his advantage. Along with former champion Tito Santana, Steele became one of Savage's top challengers for the title.
Event
WrestleMania 2 emanated from three arenas: Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Uniondale, New York, the Rosemont Horizon in Rosemont, Illinois and the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena in Los Angeles.New York
In the first match of the show in the New York arena, Paul Orndorff faced The Magnificent Muraco. In the early part of the match, Orndorff body slammed Muraco. As the crowd reacted and Orndorff celebrated, he turned towards Mr. Fuji and made a racist, slanty-eyed gesture followed by an Italian salute. This controversial moment is edited out of most home video versions of the match and is edited out of the versions shown on Peacock and Netflix. Both men fought to a double count-out.Next was a WWF Intercontinental Heavyweight Championship match between Randy Savage and George Steele, where Savage was seconded by his real-life wife Miss Elizabeth. Late in the match, Steele became the first man to ever kick out of Savage's signature elbow drop from the top turnbuckle. Savage pinned Steele with a roll-up and put both of his feet on the ropes for leverage. As a result, Savage retained the Intercontinental Heavyweight Title.
The third match was between Jake Roberts and George Wells. Roberts hit a DDT on Wells and pinned him to win the match. After the match, Roberts allowed his snake Damian to slither over Wells, who foamed from the mouth.
The last match was a boxing match between Mr. T and Roddy Piper. T was seconded by boxer Joe Frazier, while Piper was seconded by boxing trainer Lou Duva. Piper was disqualified for bodyslamming T at 1:15 in the fourth round.
| Role: | Name: |
| Commentator | Vince McMahon |
| Commentator | Gorilla Monsoon |
| Commentator | Gene Okerlund |
| Commentator | Jesse Ventura |
| Commentator | Lord Alfred Hayes |
| Ring announcer | Howard Finkel |
| Ring announcer | Chet Coppock |
| Ring announcer | Lee Marshall |
| Ring announcer | Joan Rivers |
| Ring announcer | Tommy Lasorda |
| Referees | Dick Kroll |
| Referees | Jack Lotz |
| Referees | Dave Hebner |
| Special Guest Referees | Dick Butkus |
| Special Guest Referees | Ed "Too Tall" Jones |
| Special Guest Referees | Robert Conrad |
| Special Guest Commentator | Susan Saint James |
| Special Guest Announcer | Cathy Lee Crosby |
| Special Guest Announcer | Ernie Ladd |
| Special Guest Announcer | Elvira |
| Special Guest Timekeepers | Herb |
| Special Guest Timekeepers | Clara Peller |
| Special Guest Timekeepers | Ricky Schroder |
| Special Guest Vocalist | Ray Charles |