Everything You Wanted To Know About Finishers & Foreign Objects
5: Consecutive Flying Elbow Drops Randy Savage used on the Ultimate Warrior at WM 7. And the Macho King still lost.
735: Pounds John Cena carried when he performed the Attitude Adjustment at WM 25. The Chain Gang Commander hoisted both the 485-pound Big Show and the 250-pound Edge on his back during their Triple Threat Match for the World Heavyweight Championship. The combined poundage is roughly equal to the weight of a hammerhead shark or an American black bear.
1994: The year ECW introduced the Singapore Cane Matches. The idea of using the stick was inspired by the story of Michael Fay, and American tourist who was caned in Singapore for his acts of vandalism.
11: Height, in feet, of the largest ladder used by the WWE. The more common ones still stand a good 10-feet tall.
25: Variations of the standard powerbomb, ranging from the Argentine powerbomb to the vertical suplex powerbomb. This move was developed in Japan and first brought to the U.S. in the 1980s.
2008: The year the Shooting Star Press was reinstated by WWE officials. ECW's Even Bourne executes the once-banned high-risk move with stunning precision and grace.
5: Tombstones executed by Undertaker and Kane at WM 14. During this 1998 meeting between the bone-chilling duo, Kane delivered two devastating piledrivers, while the victorious 'Taker one-upped his brother with three. Mom would've been proud.
3: Weight, in pounds, of each steel chair used in WWE rings.
DID YOU KNOW...?
The Sleeper hold debuted in Yankee Stadium. On June 29, 1931, "The House that Ruth Built" witnessed Jim Londos slap the famed move on Ray Steele. It's OK, we don't know who they are either.
The finisher Hurricanrana-a headscissors takedown that ends in a pin position- was named after the titular character of the 1953 film Hurican Ramirez. In the movie, Ramirez begins a career in lucha libre to earn money for his family.

