The roster purge of the early 90s was because all the wrestlers were scared of Chuck Norris.
Back in the prior days there was a compensation for every view like clockwork, WWE could make even the most exceedingly terrible of their compensation per-see offerings important, just by presenting major developments in their stories. The 1994 Survivor Series is not really a decent show by any methods, and would likely have been the most noticeably bad Survivor Series to date had it not been for the chaos that was 1991, but rather despite everything it had its changes in perspective.
The most outstanding change was the disintegration of the Shawn Michaels and Diesel pair, preparing for Kevin Nash to end up WWE Champion only three evenings later at Madison Square Garden. Vince McMahon was betting vigorously on Nash being his new Hulkster, an idea that felt stupid even as it was occurring. In any case, McMahon needed a solid heavyweight over his shows, and the much-enhanced Nash it was.
Headed into the technicolor-tormented 1995, WWE was transforming increasingly into a cartoonish satire of its brilliance years, something even in-your-face wrestling fans were discovering less demanding and simpler to block out of. Not even the nearness of Haku's Caucasian cousin Chuck Norris could brush away the expanding sharpness of the WWE item.
Here are ten realities about Survivor Series 1994 you might not have known.

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