That is fucking badass man! Been looking for footage of this for years. There are tidbits around. This is the crescendo of tommy rich...loved that guy growing up!! Can't believe I haven't heard this yet!
This feud is a lot like the Austin/HHH feud in 2000-2001. Very personal
Last edited by Fish (Sun-4-Sep-2016 22:21:26)
Glad someones excited about this.
Some extra news on it:
I won't be watching it tomorrow when it's released, but I should hopefully have seen it by the end of the week. My mate is as excited about seeing it as I am so gonna watch it together.
Sounds pretty bad ass. I will see if I can watch it tomorrow before I head out to work.
Shit's funny just saw Scott Dawson even tweeting WWE about the validity of the video. Even the boys didn't know!
Dawson is a total 80s fan and goes bonkers over anything to do with mid-Atlantic Wrestling hahaha
A match that was thought to be lost to the ages has apparently been found, and WWE are releasing it on the WWE Network on the 6th September. Described by some as the precursor to the "hell in a cell" match, The Last Battle of Atlanta was the final match between “Wildfire” Tommy Rich and “Mad Dog” Buzz Sawyer who had one of the longest, most personal and violent feuds in pro wrestling history. They appeared to have legit hatred of each other and they ended their feud with a blood bath of a match, that featured both men locked inside the first ever roofed-in steel cage, with Sawyer’s manager Paul Ellering locked in a separate cage above the cage they were fighting in. Funnily enough, not long after this match, they formed a tag team despite everyone thinking that they truly hated each other. Maybe they just beat that hatred out of themselves in the final match of their long feud.
Shawn Michaels described the match as the inspiration for the first ever Hell in a Cell match that would hit WWE 14 years later.
In 2012, WWE did an article on the video, saying:
To make it even more interesting, some historians have listed the match as the rarest unseen footage in wrestling history. Reports say that Ole Anderson accidentally ruined the only footage of the match that there was, but pictures of the match did survive so people do know that it actually took place.
According to WWENetworkNews.com, WWE have managed to get their hands on the footage somehow, and will be adding The Last Battle of Atlanta to the WWE Network on the 6th September as a part of their "Hidden Gems" collection that showcases rare footage. If this is true and WWE really have managed to unearth the rarest footage in wrestling history, it won't be long until everyone will be able to watch a match that previously, only an infinitely small percentage of people have ever laid eyes on.
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