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WWE Hall of Fame
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The WWE Hall of Fame is a hall of fame which honors professional wrestlers and professional wrestling personalities maintained by WWE. Originally known as the "WWF Hall of Fame", it was created in 1993 when André the Giant was posthumously inducted with a video package as the sole inductee that year. The 1994 and 1995 ceremonies were held in conjunction with the annual King of the Ring pay-per-view events and the 1996 ceremony was held with the Survivor Series event. Since 2004, the promotion has held the ceremonies in conjunction with WrestleMania. Since 2005, portions of the induction ceremonies have aired on television and since 2014, the entire ceremony has aired on the WWE's livestreaming platforms.
Key Information
As of 2025, there have been 254 inductees, with 134 wrestlers inducted individually, 49 Legacy inductees, 20 group inductions (consisting of 54 wrestlers within those groups), 14 celebrities, 9 Warrior Award recipients, and 1 Immortal Moment recipient (a category introduced in 2025 to honor historical matches). Eight wrestlers have been inducted twice in two categories: Ric Flair, Shawn Michaels, Booker T, Hulk Hogan, Scott Hall, Kevin Nash, "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, and Triple H; while two two-time inductees were inducted twice as a member of a group: Sean Waltman (D-Generation X and The New World Order) and Barry Windham (The Four Horsemen and The U.S. Express); while Bret "The Hitman" Hart is the only wrestler to be inducted three separate times in three separate categories. Sixty-eight members have been inducted posthumously.
History
[edit]The World Wrestling Federation (WWF) established the WWF Hall of Fame in 1993. It was first announced on the March 22, 1993, episode of Monday Night Raw where André the Giant, who had died nearly two months prior, was announced as the sole inductee.[1][2][3] In the proceeding two years, induction ceremonies were held in conjunction with the annual King of the Ring pay-per-view events. The 1996 ceremony was held with the Survivor Series event, for the first time in front of a paying audience as well as the wrestlers, after which, the Hall of Fame went on hiatus.[4]
After an eight-year hiatus the promotion — renamed World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) in 2002 — scheduled the 2004 ceremony to coincide with WrestleMania,[5] establishing the traditional date for all following ceremonies. Highlights of the 2004 ceremony were shown at WrestleMania XX, followed by the inductees appearing on the entrance stage in a condensed ceremony, which would become a Hall of Fame tradition from that point forward. The full version was released on DVD on June 1, 2004.[6] Beginning with the 2005 ceremony, an edited version of the Hall of Fame was broadcast on Spike TV (2005)[7] and on the USA Network (2006[8]–present[9]); these were aired on tape delay. Since 2005, the entire Hall of Fame ceremony has been packaged as part of the annual WrestleMania DVD release,[10] and from 2014, has been broadcast live on the WWE Network streaming service.[11] The 2021 ceremony was pretaped on March 30 and April 1 and aired on April 6. In addition to the WWE Network in international markets, the event also aired on Peacock in the United States after the American version of the WWE Network had merged under Peacock in March that year.[12]
Although a building has never been built to represent the Hall of Fame, WWE has looked into constructing a facility. In 2008, Shane McMahon, then-Executive Vice President of Global Media of WWE, stated that WWE had been storing wrestling memorabilia in a warehouse for years, with all items categorized and dated in case a facility is created.[13] Ric Flair stated in 2020 that WWE was in the process of creating a building for the Hall of Fame and that it would be in Florida in the Orlando area,[14] but plans had been delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[15] The current WWE president has expressed interest about creating a hall of fame building in 2021.[16]
Specialty inductees
[edit]Celebrity wing
[edit]The "celebrity wing" of the Hall of Fame is dedicated to celebrities who have made memorable appearances on WWE programming, and/or have had longtime associations with WWE (or professional wrestling in general), who have been very successful in other fields.
Warrior Award
[edit]
In 2015, WWE introduced the Warrior Award for those who had "exhibited unwavering strength and perseverance, and who live life with the courage and compassion that embodies the indomitable spirit of the Ultimate Warrior".[17]
While WWE promoted Warrior Award recipients as Hall of Fame inductees,[18][19] they were not included in the Hall of Fame section at WWE.com[20] and an image gallery which shows "every WWE Hall of Famer ever" does not contain any recipient.[21]
The award was created following the Ultimate Warrior's death. During his April 2014 Hall of Fame speech shortly before his death, he proposed that there be a special category called the "Jimmy Miranda Award" for WWE's behind-the-scenes employees.[22][23] Miranda, who died in 2002, was part of the WWE merchandise department for more than 20 years.[24] Former WWE ring announcer Justin Roberts expressed disappointment at how WWE used portions of Warrior's Hall of Fame speech to promote the award but left out Warrior's intentions of honoring WWE's off-screen employees.[25][26] WWE responded, "It is offensive to suggest that WWE and its executives had anything, but altruistic intentions in honoring Connor and his legacy with The Warrior Award", adding that "moving forward the award will be given annually to acknowledge other unsung heroes among WWE's employees and fans".[27] From 2019 until its discontinuation in 2024, all recipients had been either current or former WWE employees.[28]
Traditionally, Dana Warrior, the widow of the Ultimate Warrior, presented the award. Dana Warrior was released from the company in 2023, and the Warrior Award was discontinued.
Legacy inductees
[edit]In 2016, WWE introduced a new category for the Hall of Fame called the "Legacy" wing. Inductees in this category are from several eras of wrestling history, going back to the early 20th century.[29] All but two inductees, Hisashi Shinma and MSG Network creator Joseph Cohen, have been inducted posthumously. Legacy inductees are recognized with a video package at the ceremonies.[30][31]
The Legacy wing has received criticism, specifically regarding the abbreviated way of the inductions. Journalist Dave Meltzer said "this is the category they (WWE) use to honor people who, for whatever reason, they don't feel are marketable names to the modern audience to put in their actual Hall of Fame".[32] Promoter and manager Jim Cornette criticized the fact that recognizable names like Jim Londos or El Santo were part of a video package.[33] Previously, Legacy inductees were not announced before the ceremonies and families of posthumous inductees were not notified of their inductions. This practice was criticized by family members of Legacy inductees Bruiser Brody and Ethel Johnson.[34][35] The Legacy wing was discontinued in 2021, but was reinstated in 2025, now with inductees announced beforehand as well as having their families present and acknowledged at the ceremony.[36]
Immortal Moment
[edit]During the March 28, 2025, episode of SmackDown, WWE unveiled a new "Immortal Moment" category for the Hall of Fame, honoring historic and influential matches. The first induction in this new category was Bret "The Hitman" Hart vs. "Stone Cold" Steve Austin in a no disqualification submission match with Ken Shamrock as the special guest referee from WrestleMania 13. This induction made Hart the first-ever three-time inductee while also making Austin a two-time inductee.[37]
Classes
[edit]1993
[edit]| WWF Hall of Fame (1993) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWF | ||
| Date | March 22, 1993 | ||
| City | New York City, New York | ||
| Venue | Manhattan Center | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
WWF Hall of Fame (1993) was the inaugural class of the WWE Hall of Fame. During the March 22, 1993, episode of Monday Night Raw a video package announcing André the Giant's induction was shown.[3] No ceremony took place, and André was inducted posthumously. In March 2015 a condensed version of the 1994 ceremony was added to the WWE Network.[38] Due to no original ceremony, the 1993 induction of André was discussed by Gene Okerlund and Renee Young as part of the 1994 commentary.
| Image | Ring name (Birth Name) |
Inducted by | WWE recognized accolades |
|---|---|---|---|
| André the Giant (André Roussimoff) |
None | One-time WWF World Heavyweight Champion One-time WWF World Tag Team Champion[3] |
1994
[edit]| WWF Hall of Fame (1994) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | World Wrestling Federation | ||
| Date | June 9, 1994 | ||
| City | Baltimore, Maryland | ||
| Venue | Omni Inner Harbor International Hotel | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
WWF Hall of Fame (1994) was the event that featured the introduction of the second class to the WWE Hall of Fame. The event was produced by the WWF on June 9, 1994, from the Omni Inner Harbor International Hotel in Baltimore, Maryland.
In March 2015 a condensed version of the ceremony was added to the WWE Network.[38] Due to the original ceremony only being partially recorded and not originally intended to air, Gene Okerlund and Renee Young host the program with added commentary.
| Image | Ring name (Birth Name) |
Inducted by | WWE recognized accolades |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arnold Skaaland | Shane McMahon | One-time WWWF United States Tag Team Champion and long-time manager of Bruno Sammartino and Bob Backlund in WWF[39] | |
| Bobo Brazil (Houston Harris) |
Ernie Ladd | Seven-time WWWF United States Heavyweight Champion One-time NWA United States Heavyweight Champion[40] | |
| Buddy Rogers (Herman Rohde Jr.) |
Bret Hart | Posthumous inductee: One-time NWA World Heavyweight Champion and first WWWF World Heavyweight Champion[41] | |
| Chief Jay Strongbow[42] (Luke Scarpa) |
Gorilla Monsoon | Four-time WWWF/WWF World Tag Team Champion[43] | |
| "Classy" Freddie Blassie | Regis Philbin | Held over 30 NWA regional championships. Long-time manager in WWF[44] | |
| Gorilla Monsoon (Robert Marella) |
Killer Kowalski | Two-time WWWF United States Tag Team Champion Former WWF announcer and onscreen President[45] | |
| — | James Dudley | Vince McMahon | First African American to run a major arena in the United States[46] |
1995
[edit]| WWF Hall of Fame (1995) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWF | ||
| Date | June 24, 1995 | ||
| City | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | ||
| Venue | Marriott Hotel | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
WWF Hall of Fame (1995) was the event that featured the introduction of the third class to the WWE Hall of Fame. The event was produced by the WWF on June 24, 1995, from the Marriott Hotel in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The event took place the same weekend as King of the Ring.
In March 2015 a condensed version of the ceremony was added to the WWE Network.[38] Due to the original ceremony only being partially recorded and not originally intended to air, Gene Okerlund and Renee Young host the program with added commentary. It has been discovered that the full ceremony has been recorded (albeit with low quality) and has been uploaded on YouTube
The 1995 class featured two posthumous inductees. Antonino Rocca was presented by his wife, and The Grand Wizard was represented by Bobby Harmon.
| Image | Ring name (Birth Name) |
Inducted by | WWE recognized accolades |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antonino Rocca (Antonino Biasetton) |
Miguel Pérez | Posthumous inductee. One-time WWF International Heavyweight Champion Pioneer of the acrobatic wrestling style[47] | |
| Ernie Ladd | Bill Watts | Won several NWA regional titles, and was one of few professional wrestlers to have had a successful career in American football[48] | |
| George "The Animal" Steele (William Myers) |
Pat Myers | One of professional wrestling's first monster heels[49] | |
| Ivan Putski (Józef Bednarski) |
Scott Putski | One-time WWF Tag Team Champion[50] | |
| The Fabulous Moolah (Mary Ellison) |
Alundra Blayze | A three-time WWF Women's Champion. Her first reign is recognized as lasting a record 28 years[51] The first woman to be inducted. In 1999 she won the Women's Championship one more time. | |
| The Grand Wizard (Ernie Roth) |
Sgt. Slaughter | Posthumous inductee. Long-time heel manager in WWF[52] | |
| Pedro Morales | Gorilla Monsoon | Savio Vega accepted the induction One-time WWWF World Heavyweight Champion whose reign lasted nearly three years The first WWF Triple Crown Champion[53] He was also the first Latino to win the world title[54] |
1996
[edit]| WWF Hall of Fame (1996) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWF | ||
| Date | November 16, 1996 | ||
| City | New York City, New York | ||
| Venue | Marriott Marquis | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
WWF Hall of Fame (1996) was the event which featured the introduction of the fourth class to the WWE Hall of Fame. The event was produced by the WWF on November 16, 1996, from the Marriott Marquis in New York City, New York. The event took place the same weekend as Survivor Series.
In March 2015 a condensed version of the ceremony was added to the WWE Network.[38] Due to the original ceremony only being partially recorded and not originally intended to air, Gene Okerlund and Renee Young host the program with added commentary.
Due to Vincent J. McMahon's death in 1984, he was posthumously inducted by the McMahon family.
| Image | Ring name (Birth Name) |
Inducted by | WWE recognized accolades |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jimmy "Superfly" Snuka | Don Muraco | One-time NWA United States Heavyweight Champion Two-time NWA World Tag Team Champion Two-time ECW Heavyweight Champion[55] | |
| Johnny Rodz (John Rodriguez) |
Arnold Skaaland | Wrestled in WWF for nearly two decades[56] | |
| Killer Kowalski (Edward Spulnik) |
Triple H | One-time WWWF World Tag Team Champion, held 17 NWA regional championships[57] | |
| "Captain" Lou Albano | Joe Franklin | One-time WWWF United States Tag Team Champion As a manager, he led 13 different tag teams to a record 17 tag team titles,[58] and four singles wrestlers to various championships His association with Cyndi Lauper was pivotal in turning professional wrestling into a mainstream phenomenon[59] | |
| Mikel Scicluna | Gorilla Monsoon | One-time WWWF World Tag Team Champion One-time WWWF United States Tag Team Champion[60] | |
| Pat Patterson (Pierre Clermont)[61] |
Bret Hart | One-time and first WWF Intercontinental Heavyweight Champion, one-time AWA World Tag Team Champion and held over 20 NWA regional championships Credited as the creator of the Royal Rumble match Patterson won the WWF Hardcore Championship in 2000 and the WWE 24/7 Championship in 2020[62] | |
| Vincent J. McMahon | Shane McMahon | Posthumous inductee. Founder and longtime promoter of the World (Wide) Wrestling Federation[63] |
| Group | Inducted by | WWE recognized accolades |
|---|---|---|
| The Valiant Brothers | Tony Garea | One-time WWWF World Tag Team Champions First tag team to be inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame[64] |
| Jimmy Valiant (James Fanning) – four-time NWA Television Champion Johnny Valiant (John Sullivan) – became a manager in the WWF and AWA during the 1980s | ||
2004
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2004) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | March 13, 2004 | ||
| City | New York City, New York | ||
| Venue | New York Hilton Midtown | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Big John Studd[65] | Big Show |
| Bobby Heenan[66][67] [68] |
Blackjack Lanza | |
| Don Muraco[69] | Mick Foley | |
| Greg Valentine[70] | Jimmy Hart | |
| Harley Race[71] | Ric Flair | |
| Jesse Ventura[72] | Tyrel Ventura | |
| Junkyard Dog[73] | Ernie Ladd | |
| Sgt. Slaughter[74] | Pat Patterson | |
| "Superstar" Billy Graham[75] | Triple H | |
| Tito Santana[76] | Shawn Michaels | |
| Celebrity | Pete Rose[77] | Kane |
2005
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2005) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 2, 2005 | ||
| City | Los Angeles, California | ||
| Venue | Universal Amphitheatre | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Bob Orton Jr.[78] | Randy Orton |
| Jimmy Hart[79] | Jerry Lawler | |
| Hulk Hogan[80] |
Sylvester Stallone | |
| The Iron Sheik[81] | Sgt. Slaughter | |
| Nikolai Volkoff[82] | Jim Ross | |
| Paul Orndorff[83] | Bobby Heenan | |
| Roddy Piper[84][85][86] | Ric Flair |
2006
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2006) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 1, 2006 | ||
| City | Rosemont, Illinois | ||
| Venue | Rosemont Theatre | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Bret Hart[87] | Stone Cold Steve Austin |
| Eddie Guerrero[88] | Chris Benoit, Rey Mysterio and Chavo Guerrero | |
| Gene Okerlund[89] | Hulk Hogan | |
| Sherri Martel[90] | Ted DiBiase | |
| Tony Atlas[91][92] | Special Delivery Jones | |
| Verne Gagne[93][94][95] | Greg Gagne | |
| Group | The Blackjacks (Blackjack Mulligan and Blackjack Lanza)[96] |
Bobby Heenan |
| Celebrity | William Perry[97] | John Cena |
2007
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2007) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | March 31, 2007 | ||
| City | Detroit, Michigan | ||
| Venue | Fox Theatre | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Curt Hennig[98] | Wade Boggs |
| Dusty Rhodes[99][100][101] | Cody Rhodes and Dustin Rhodes | |
| Jerry Lawler[102][103] | William Shatner | |
| Jim Ross[104] | Stone Cold Steve Austin | |
| Mr. Fuji[105] | Don Muraco | |
| Nick Bockwinkel[106][107][108] | Bobby Heenan | |
| The Sheik[109] | Rob Van Dam and Sabu | |
| Group | The Wild Samoans (Afa and Sika)[110] |
Samu and Matt Anoaʻi |
2008
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2008) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | March 29, 2008 | ||
| City | Orlando, Florida | ||
| Venue | Amway Arena | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Eddie Graham[111] | Dusty Rhodes |
| Gordon Solie[112] | Jim Ross | |
| Mae Young[113][114] | Pat Patterson | |
| Peter Maivia[115] | The Rock | |
| Rocky Johnson[116] | ||
| Ric Flair[117][118][119] | Triple H | |
| Group | The Brisco Brothers (Jack Brisco[120] and Gerald Brisco[121]) |
John "Bradshaw" Layfield |
2009
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2009) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 4, 2009 | ||
| City | Houston, Texas | ||
| Venue | Toyota Center | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Bill Watts[122] | Jim Ross |
| Howard Finkel[123] | Gene Okerlund | |
| Koko B. Ware[124] | The Honky Tonk Man | |
| Ricky Steamboat[125] | Ric Flair | |
| Stone Cold Steve Austin[126][127] | Vince McMahon | |
| Group | The Funks[128] (Terry and Dory Jr.) |
Dusty Rhodes |
| The Von Erichs (Fritz, Kevin, David, Kerry, Mike and Chris) |
Michael Hayes |
2010
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2010) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | March 27, 2010 | ||
| City | Phoenix, Arizona | ||
| Venue | Dodge Theatre | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Antonio Inoki[129] | Stan Hansen |
| Gorgeous George[130][131] | Dick "The Destroyer" Beyer | |
| Maurice Vachon[132] | Pat Patterson | |
| Stu Hart[133] | Bret Hart | |
| Ted DiBiase[134] | Ted DiBiase Jr. and Brett DiBiase | |
| Wendi Richter[135] | Roddy Piper | |
| Celebrity | Bob Uecker[136] | Dick Ebersol |
2011
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2011) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 2, 2011 | ||
| City | Atlanta, Georgia | ||
| Venue | Philips Arena | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Abdullah the Butcher[137] | Terry Funk |
| Bob Armstrong[138] | Scott, Brad and Brian Armstrong | |
| Jim Duggan[139][140] | Ted DiBiase | |
| Shawn Michaels[141] | Triple H | |
| Sunny[142][143] | WWE Divas | |
| Group | The Road Warriors[144] (Hawk, Animal and Paul Ellering[145]) |
Dusty Rhodes |
| Celebrity | Drew Carey[146] | Kane |
2012
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2012) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | March 31, 2012 | ||
| City | Miami, Florida | ||
| Venue | American Airlines Arena | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Edge[147] | Christian |
| Mil Máscaras[137] | Alberto Del Rio | |
| Ron Simmons[148] | John "Bradshaw" Layfield | |
| Yokozuna[149] | Jimmy Uso and Jey Uso | |
| Group | The Four Horsemen[150] (Ric Flair, Barry Windham, Arn Anderson, Tully Blanchard and J. J. Dillon) |
Dusty Rhodes |
| Celebrity | Mike Tyson[151] | Shawn Michaels and Triple H |
2013
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2013) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 6, 2013 | ||
| City | New York City, New York | ||
| Venue | Madison Square Garden | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Bob Backlund[152] | Maria Menounos |
| Booker T[153] | Stevie Ray | |
| Bruno Sammartino[154] | Arnold Schwarzenegger | |
| Mick Foley[155] | Terry Funk | |
| Trish Stratus[156] | Stephanie McMahon | |
| Celebrity | Donald Trump[157] | Vince McMahon |
2014
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2014) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 5, 2014 | ||
| City | New Orleans, Louisiana | ||
| Venue | Smoothie King Center | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Carlos Colón Sr.[158] | Carlito, Eddie and Orlando Colón |
| Jake Roberts[159] | Diamond Dallas Page | |
| Lita[160] | Trish Stratus | |
| Paul Bearer[161] | Kane | |
| Razor Ramon[162] | Kevin Nash | |
| The Ultimate Warrior[163] | Linda McMahon | |
| Celebrity | Mr. T[164] | Gene Okerlund |
2015
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2015) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | March 28, 2015 | ||
| City | San Jose, California | ||
| Venue | SAP Center | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Alundra Blayze[165] | Natalya Neidhart |
| Kevin Nash[166] | Shawn Michaels | |
| Larry Zbyszko[167] | Bruno Sammartino | |
| Randy Savage[168] | Hulk Hogan | |
| Rikishi[169] | The Usos | |
| Tatsumi Fujinami[170] | Ric Flair | |
| Group | The Bushwhackers[171] (Luke Williams and Butch Miller) |
John Laurinaitis |
| Celebrity | Arnold Schwarzenegger[172] | Triple H |
| Warrior Award | Connor "The Crusher" Michalek[173] | Dana Warrior and Daniel Bryan |
2016
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2016) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 2, 2016 | ||
| City | Dallas, Texas | ||
| Venue | American Airlines Center | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Big Boss Man[174] | Slick |
| The Godfather[175] | John "Bradshaw" Layfield and Ron Simmons | |
| Jacqueline | Bubba Ray and D-Von Dudley | |
| Sting[176] | Ric Flair | |
| Stan Hansen[177] | Vader | |
| Group | The Fabulous Freebirds (Michael Hayes, Terry Gordy, Buddy Roberts and Jimmy Garvin) |
Big E, Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods |
| Celebrity | Snoop Dogg[178] | John Cena |
| Warrior Award | Joan Lunden | Dana Warrior |
| Legacy | Art Thomas | N/A |
| Ed Lewis | ||
| Frank Gotch | ||
| George Hackenschmidt | ||
| Lou Thesz | ||
| Mildred Burke | ||
| Pat O'Connor |
2017
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2017) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | March 31, 2017 | ||
| City | Orlando, Florida | ||
| Venue | Amway Center | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Beth Phoenix[179] | Natalya[180] |
| Diamond Dallas Page[181] | Eric Bischoff[182] | |
| Kurt Angle[183] | John Cena[184] | |
| Rick Rude[185] | Ricky Steamboat[186] | |
| Theodore Long[187] | John "Bradshaw" Layfield and Ron Simmons[188] | |
| Group | The Rock 'n' Roll Express[189] (Ricky Morton and Robert Gibson) |
Jim Cornette[190] |
| Warrior Award | Eric LeGrand | Dana Warrior |
| Legacy | Bearcat Wright | N/A |
| Dr. Jerry Graham | ||
| Haystacks Calhoun | ||
| Judy Grable | ||
| June Byers | ||
| Luther Lindsay | ||
| Martin Burns | ||
| Rikidōzan | ||
| Toots Mondt |
2018
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2018) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 6, 2018 | ||
| City | New Orleans, Louisiana | ||
| Venue | Smoothie King Center | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Goldberg[191] | Paul Heyman[192] |
| Hillbilly Jim[193] | Jimmy Hart[194] | |
| Ivory[195] | Molly Holly[196] | |
| Jeff Jarrett[197] | Road Dogg[198] | |
| Mark Henry[199] | Big Show[200] | |
| Group | The Dudley Boyz[201] (Bubba Ray and D-Von Dudley) |
Edge and Christian[202] |
| Warrior Award | Jarrius "JJ" Robertson[203] | Dana Warrior |
| Celebrity | Kid Rock[204] | Triple H |
| Legacy | Boris Malenko | N/A |
| Cora Combs | ||
| Dara Singh | ||
| El Santo | ||
| Hiro Matsuda | ||
| Jim Londos | ||
| Lord Alfred Hayes | ||
| Rufus R. Jones | ||
| Stan Stasiak | ||
| Sputnik Monroe |
2019
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2019) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 6, 2019 | ||
| City | Brooklyn, New York | ||
| Venue | Barclays Center | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Brutus Beefcake[31] | Hulk Hogan[205] | |
| Individual | The Honky Tonk Man[206] | Jimmy Hart[31] |
| Torrie Wilson[31] | Stacy Keibler[31] | |
| Group | D-Generation X[207] (Triple H, Shawn Michaels, Chyna, Road Dogg, Billy Gunn and X-Pac) |
N/A |
| Harlem Heat[31] (Booker T and Stevie Ray) | ||
| The Hart Foundation[31] (Bret Hart and Jim Neidhart) |
Natalya | |
| Warrior Award | Sue Aitchison[208] | Dana Warrior and John Cena[31] |
| Legacy | Buddy Rose[31] | N/A |
| Bruiser Brody[31] | ||
| Hisashi Shinma[31] | ||
| Jim Barnett[31] | ||
| Joseph Cohen[31] | ||
| Luna Vachon[31] | ||
| Primo Carnera[31] | ||
| Special Delivery Jones[31] | ||
| Toru Tanaka[31] | ||
| Wahoo McDaniel[31] |
2020
[edit]Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020 Hall of Fame ceremony did not take place. As such, the Class of 2020 was inducted alongside the Class of 2021 at the 2021 ceremony.
| WWE Hall of Fame (2021) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 6, 2021 | ||
| City | St. Petersburg, Florida | ||
| Venue | Tropicana Field | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | ||
| John "Bradshaw" Layfield[209] | N/A | |
| Jushin Thunder Liger[210] | ||
| The British Bulldog[211] | ||
| Group | The New World Order[212] (Hulk Hogan, Kevin Nash, Scott Hall and Sean Waltman) | |
| The Bella Twins[213] (Nikki Bella and Brie Bella) | ||
| Celebrity | William Shatner[214] | |
| Warrior Award | Titus O'Neil[215] | |
| Legacy | Baron Michele Leone[216] | |
| Brickhouse Brown[216] | ||
| Gary Hart[216] | ||
| Ray Stevens[216] | ||
| Steve Williams[216] |
2021
[edit]- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Eric Bischoff[217] | N/A |
| Kane[218] | ||
| Molly Holly[219] | ||
| Rob Van Dam[220] | ||
| The Great Khali[221] | ||
| Celebrity | Ozzy Osbourne[222] | |
| Warrior Award | Rich Hering[223] | |
| Legacy | Buzz Sawyer[216] | |
| Dick the Bruiser[216] | ||
| Ethel Johnson[216] | ||
| Paul Boesch[216] | ||
| Pez Whatley[216] |
2022
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2022) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 1, 2022 | ||
| City | Dallas, Texas | ||
| Venue | American Airlines Center | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Queen Sharmell[224] | Booker T |
| The Undertaker[225] | Vince McMahon | |
| Vader[226] | Jesse White | |
| Group | The Steiner Brothers (Rick Steiner and Scott Steiner)[227] |
Bron Breakker |
| Warrior Award | Shad Gaspard[228] | Dana Warrior |
2023
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2023) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | March 31, 2023 | ||
| City | Los Angeles, California | ||
| Venue | Crypto.com Arena | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Rey Mysterio[229] | Konnan |
| Stacy Keibler[230] | Mick Foley and Torrie Wilson | |
| The Great Muta[231] | Ric Flair | |
| Celebrity | Andy Kaufman[232] | Jerry Lawler and Jimmy Hart |
| Warrior Award | Tim White[233] | John "Bradshaw" Layfield and Ron Simmons |
2024
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2024) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 5, 2024 | ||
| City | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | ||
| Venue | Wells Fargo Center | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Bull Nakano[234] | Alundra Blayze |
| Lia Maivia[235] | The Rock | |
| Paul Heyman[236] | Roman Reigns | |
| Thunderbolt Patterson[237] | Big E, Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods | |
| Group | The U.S. Express (Mike Rotunda and Barry Windham)[238] |
Bo Dallas and Mika Rotunda |
| Celebrity | Muhammad Ali[239] | The Undertaker |
2025
[edit]| WWE Hall of Fame (2025) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotion | WWE | ||
| Date | April 18, 2025 | ||
| City | Winchester, Nevada | ||
| Venue | Fontainebleau Las Vegas | ||
| WWE Hall of Fame chronology | |||
| |||
- Class headliners appear in boldface
| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Lex Luger[240] | Diamond Dallas Page |
| Michelle McCool[241] | The Undertaker | |
| Triple H[242] | Shawn Michaels | |
| Group | The Natural Disasters (Earthquake and Typhoon)[243] |
N/A |
| Immortal Moment | Bret "The Hitman" Hart vs. "Stone Cold" Steve Austin in a No Disqualification Submission match with Ken Shamrock as the special guest referee from WrestleMania 13[244] | CM Punk |
| Legacy | Dory Funk Sr.[245] | N/A |
| Ivan Koloff[245] | ||
| Kamala[245] |
To be inducted
[edit]2026
[edit]| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Stephanie McMahon | The Undertaker[246] |
Future class (TBD)
[edit]| Category | Inductee | Inducted by |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | Batista[247] | TBD |
Ceremony dates and locations
[edit]

Reception
[edit]Omissions and refused inductions
[edit]
In 2012, The Post and Courier columnist Mike Mooneyham noted that the Hall has garnered criticism due to the inductions of questionable performers, and the omissions of major names within the industry.[267] Bob Backlund declined induction multiple times,[268] and The Ultimate Warrior wrote that he refused the honor in 2010;[269] they were eventually inducted in 2013 and 2014, respectively. Randy Savage was long recognized as being noticeably absent;[270] Chris Jericho said that the Hall achieved a level of legitimacy by inducting Savage in 2015.[271] Mick Foley long described Vader as "the most glaring and obvious omission from the #WWEHOF";[272][273] this was later corrected when he was posthumously inducted as part of the Class of 2022.[226] Chyna is also a topic of conversation of whether or not she should be inducted due to the nature of her post-WWE career. Ultimately, she was posthumously inducted as a member of D-Generation-X in 2019, although fans, family and fellow wrestlers have since started petitioning for her solo posthumous induction. The most recent discussion amongst fans about a potential induction to the Hall of Fame is about the potential posthumous induction of Bray Wyatt in the near future. Fans started petitioning for his induction, whether it be solo or as part of The Wyatt Family, after his death in August 2023.
Bruno Sammartino, the longest-reigning WWWF World Heavyweight Champion, was once critical of the Hall of Fame. Sammartino disapproved of celebrity inductees such as Pete Rose and William Perry, and said of the ceremony: "What's the point to a Hall of Fame? Is it a building I can actually go to? No. Give me a break".[274] Sammartino declined previous induction offers, before accepting in 2013. Paul Levesque (Triple H) said that it was important for Sammartino to be inducted from a "legitimacy standpoint" and ESPN said that his induction was an opportunity to legitimize the Hall of Fame.[275] After being announced as an inductee, Sammartino said he considered the Hall to be legitimate.[276]
In December 2021, Jeff Hardy was released from WWE. On March 8, 2022, the day that Hardy's no-compete clause expired, WWE reached out to Hardy and offered him an inductee spot to the WWE Hall of Fame (2022) ceremony. Jeff Hardy declined the offer because he was offended, felt like it wasn't time yet and he wanted Matt Hardy to be inducted alongside him.[277]
The Chris Benoit question
[edit]In June 2007, a double-murder suicide occurred involving Chris Benoit, who murdered his wife and youngest son before committing suicide. Benoit, who held numerous major championships, had a stellar career in the WWF/E, WCW and ECW, and was widely renowned as one of the greatest technical wrestlers of his generation. He was widely thought of during his later career and life as a guaranteed future WWE Hall of Famer. However, once his actions at the end of his life were discovered, that thought quickly dissipated. Despite this, in the years following, a posthumous WWE Hall of Fame induction of Benoit became a regular topic of debate and discussion. While arguments have been made by a number of pro-wrestling fans and industry alumni for Benoit to one day be inducted on account of his in-ring work, the overwhelming opinion from the majority of industry veterans is that the nature of Benoit's demise disqualifies him from ever entering. Benoit is a member of two professional wrestling Hall of Fames outside WWE, namely the Stampede Wrestling Hall of Fame and the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame; both inductions took place in the years prior to his murders (1995 and 2003 respectively).[278]
Quality of inductees
[edit]
Ric Flair has stated there are several wrestlers in the Hall of Fame that didn't deserve it, but he didn't name names.[279] Koko B. Ware, who worked as an undercard wrestler in WWF, is often billed as a controversial inductee since he was selected before wrestlers such as Randy Savage or Bruno Sammartino.[280][281][282] Caleb Smith of Slam Wrestling questioned how Ware was inducted, but former WWWF World Heavyweight Champion Ivan Koloff never was before his 2017 death.[283] 411Mania writer Steve Cook defended his Hall of Fame status since he was very popular with fans and some of his losses were historic, while Kevin Pantoja described him as "the floor for inductees".[284]
Superstar Billy Graham publicly slammed the hall and demanded that WWE remove him from it, due to the 2011 induction of Abdullah the Butcher. Graham wrote: "It is a shameless organization to induct a bloodthirsty animal such as Abdullah the Butcher into their worthless and embarrassing Hall of Fame and I want the name of Superstar Billy Graham to be no part of it".[285] In 2018, Bret Hart, who headlined the 2006 ceremony, criticized the omissions of several wrestlers, primarily Dynamite Kid and his brother Owen, as well as the inductions of the likes of The Rock 'n' Roll Express and The Fabulous Freebirds, who experienced little success in WWE. Hart said he would not go to another ceremony until WWE inducts "proper, deserving candidates".[286] Hart attended the 2019 ceremony to be inducted for a second time as part of The Hart Foundation.[31] Hart also asked WWE to remove Goldberg from the Hall of Fame, stating that "he got in there for hurting everybody he worked with" (which included himself in 1999).[287] In 2021, after the January 6 United States Capitol attack, Mick Foley asked Vince McMahon to remove Donald Trump, who was then President of the United States, from the Hall of Fame, though it ultimately did not occur.[288]
Dave Scherer of PWInsider has questioned how WWE can sustain the 2004–present Hall of Fame model, due to legends being rapidly inducted. He wrote: "There are only so many people that they can have headline a class. They really need to make more new stars to ensure that they can keep filling arenas for the ceremony".[289] 411Mania's Ryan Byers said WWE standards are "weird" since several inductees have Hall of Fame careers, but others "made it in for political reasons, longstanding loyalty to the promotion".[290]
Praise and criticism
[edit]Owen Hart's widow, Martha Hart, responded to calls for him to be inducted by stating: "Their Hall of Fame? They don't even have a Hallway of Fame. It doesn't exist. There's nothing. It's a fake entity. There's nothing real or tangible. It's just an event they have to make money. They put it on TV and have a celebration, and it's just so ridiculous. I would never even entertain it. It's garbage."[291] Sabu also criticized the Hall of Fame, saying "I'd only do it because I need the money... I don't consider it a real Hall of Fame".[292]
Others have offered praise for the Hall of Fame. World Wrestling Council promoter and 26-time WWC Universal Heavyweight Champion Carlos Colón Sr. said that his 2014 induction was a "realization of a dream".[293] Arn Anderson, who was inducted in 2012 as part of The Four Horsemen, said that the induction was the "pinnacle of [his] wrestling life".[294] 2015 Hall of Fame headliner Kevin Nash stated that two things in the professional wrestling business are real: "When you win your first championship and when you get inducted into the Hall of Fame". Nash claimed this is a sentiment to which colleague Ric Flair also subscribes.[295] During his 2013 induction, Donald Trump said that the honor meant more than "having the highest ratings in TV, being a best-selling author or getting a spot on the Hollywood Walk of Fame".[296]
See also
[edit]References
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External links
[edit]WWE Hall of Fame
View on GrokipediaHistory
Inception in the early 1990s
The World Wrestling Federation (WWF) established its Hall of Fame in 1993 following the death of André the Giant on January 27, 1993.[14] [15] André, whose real name was André René Roussimoff, was named the inaugural inductee posthumously to recognize his contributions as a prominent performer in WWF events during the 1970s and 1980s, including his iconic role in the main event of WrestleMania III in 1987.[16] The induction was announced on the March 22, 1993, episode of Monday Night Raw through a video package that highlighted André's career achievements and impact on professional wrestling.[17] Unlike subsequent classes, no formal ceremony took place, marking a modest beginning for the institution designed to honor individuals associated with WWF's history.[18] This initial step reflected WWF's effort under owner Vince McMahon to commemorate legacy figures during a period of internal challenges, including legal issues related to steroid use and a shift toward younger talent in the roster.[12] The sole focus on André as the first class underscored the Hall of Fame's origins tied directly to his passing and enduring popularity.[14]Initial ceremonies and hiatus
The WWE Hall of Fame originated in early 1993 following the death of André the Giant on January 27, 1993. His posthumous induction as the sole member of the inaugural class was announced via a video tribute on the March 22, 1993, episode of Monday Night Raw, without a formal ceremony.[2][3] The first organized induction ceremony took place on June 9, 1994, at the Omni Inner Harbor International Hotel in Baltimore, Maryland, coinciding with the King of the Ring pay-per-view event. This event honored the 1994 class, comprising 13 wrestling figures including Buddy Rogers, Freddie Blassie, Gorilla Monsoon, and Pedro Morales, aimed at celebrating pioneers during a time of WWF's competitive struggles.[19][20] Subsequent ceremonies continued annually: on June 24, 1995, at the Marriott Hotel in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, again tied to King of the Ring, inducting the 1995 class such as Antonino Rocca and The Valiant Brothers; and on November 17, 1996, at the Marriott Marquis in New York City, linked to Survivor Series, featuring inductees like Pat Patterson, Captain Lou Albano, and Vincent J. McMahon.[21][22][23] These non-televised events emphasized historical recognition to engage fans amid declining attendance in the mid-1990s. After the 1996 ceremony, the Hall of Fame went on hiatus for eight years until its revival in 2004, as WWF—rebranded WWE—shifted to the Attitude Era's focus on edgy, modern content, diminishing the need for nostalgic promotions when business rebounded strongly.[24][25]Revival and ongoing evolution
Following a hiatus after the 1996 ceremony, the WWE Hall of Fame was revived in 2004 with an induction event held on March 13 in New York City, honoring Superstar Billy Graham, Greg Valentine, Pete Rose, Big John Studd (posthumously), among others selected for their contributions to wrestling.[26] This revival aligned the Hall of Fame with WWE's WrestleMania weekend, establishing it as an annual pre-WrestleMania event starting that year.[10] The 2004 ceremony marked a shift toward broader recognition, including celebrity inductees like Pete Rose, expanding beyond traditional wrestlers to acknowledge crossovers with mainstream entertainment.[26] Subsequent ceremonies maintained this annual cadence, with the 2005 event inducting Hulk Hogan, Roddy Piper, and others, and portions beginning to air on television networks like USA Network, increasing visibility.[10] Full ceremonies were initially packaged with WrestleMania DVD releases from 2005 onward, evolving to live broadcasts on WWE Network starting in 2014, which allowed global streaming access.[27] Over time, the format has adapted to WWE's production scale, incorporating video tributes, live performances, and larger venues tied to WrestleMania host cities, such as the 2006 event at Rosemont Theatre near Chicago.[28] This evolution reflects WWE's strategy to leverage nostalgia for fan engagement during its flagship event, with inductee selections increasingly drawing from diverse eras while prioritizing figures central to company history.[10] By 2025, the ceremony continued this tradition, inducting Paul Levesque (Triple H), Michelle McCool, Lex Luger, and The Natural Disasters, though reports indicated internal dissatisfaction with the 2024 format, prompting considerations for structural changes ahead of WrestleMania 41.[29][30]Recent developments and expansions
In 2025, WWE expanded the Hall of Fame by introducing the "Immortal Moment" category, designed to recognize specific historic matches or events that significantly influenced professional wrestling.[31] This addition was announced during the March 28, 2025, episode of Friday Night SmackDown, with the inaugural inductee being the Hulk Hogan vs. André the Giant main event from WrestleMania III on March 29, 1987, which drew a reported attendance of 93,173 at the Pontiac Silverdome.[31] The category aims to honor singular achievements beyond individual careers, broadening the institution's scope to include pivotal on-screen milestones.[32] The Legacy wing also saw an expansion in the 2025 class with three posthumous inductees—Kamala (James Harris), Dory Funk Sr., and Ivan Koloff—marking the first such trio since 2021 and bringing the wing's total to 49 members.[33] These selections highlight WWE's ongoing effort to retroactively acknowledge pre-1980s territorial era figures whose contributions laid foundational elements of the industry, such as Koloff's 1971 WWWF Championship reign and Funk Sr.'s training of future champions in the Amarillo territory.[34] Following the April 18, 2025, ceremony in Las Vegas—which followed SmackDown and extended late into the night—WWE indicated plans to adjust the event's format to reduce duration and improve timing.[35] Internal discussions focused on shortening speeches and potentially shifting the event away from post-SmackDown scheduling to avoid fan fatigue, as the 2025 runtime exceeded three hours and drew criticism for pacing.[36] These modifications reflect WWE's response to logistical challenges in aligning the ceremony with WrestleMania weekend demands.[35]Types of Inductees
Main individual and group inductees
The main individual and group inductees form the core of the WWE Hall of Fame, recognizing professional wrestlers, managers, referees, promoters, and other on-screen and behind-the-scenes figures whose careers directly shaped WWE's in-ring product, storylines, and championship lineages.[10] These inductees are typically selected by WWE executives, such as Triple H in his role as Chief Content Officer, based on factors including longevity in the company, title achievements, drawing power, and lasting influence on wrestling's evolution from territorial eras to global entertainment.[23] Unlike specialized categories, this primary group emphasizes contributions within professional wrestling itself, often prioritizing those with extensive WWE tenures over external fame.[37] Individual inductees include solo performers like André the Giant, inducted in 1993 for his iconic rivalry with Hulk Hogan at WrestleMania III, which drew over 93,000 attendees to Pontiac Silverdome on March 29, 1987, and Bruno Sammartino, honored in 2013 after holding the WWWF Championship for a record 4,040 days across two reigns from 1963 to 1971 and 1973 to 1977.[23] More recent examples encompass Kane (Glenn Jacobs), inducted in 2021 for his 1997 debut as the Undertaker's half-brother and subsequent 11 world title reigns across WWE brands, and Triple H (Paul Levesque), added in 2025 for 14 world championships and executive roles post-2010 retirement.[38] Group inductees honor tag teams or factions, such as the New World Order (nWo)—Kevin Nash, Scott Hall, and Hulk Hogan—inducted in 2020 for their 1996 WCW invasion angle that influenced WWE's Attitude Era storylines, and D-Generation X (DX), enshrined in 2019 with members Triple H, Shawn Michaels, Chyna, Rick Rude, and Sean Waltman for their rebellious 1997-1998 antics that boosted ratings during the Monday Night Wars.[37] The selection process lacks a formal public voting system or published criteria, leading to perceptions of favoritism toward WWE loyalists; for instance, long-time employees like Pat Patterson, inducted in 1996 as the first Intercontinental Champion, receive priority over regional stars with minimal WWE exposure.[23] As of 2025, this category includes over 130 individuals and 20 groups (encompassing 54 wrestlers), with some like Shawn Michaels inducted multiple times—individually in 2011 and via DX in 2019—highlighting WWE's flexible approach to recognizing multifaceted careers.[10] Inductions occur annually during a televised or streamed ceremony, often the night before WrestleMania, where speeches detail career highlights; the 2025 class featured Lex Luger for his 1990s All-American persona and multiple world title challenges, Michelle McCool as a two-time Divas Champion bridging eras, and the Natural Disasters tag team (Earthquake and Typhoon) for their dominant 1991-1992 run including a WWF Tag Team Championship reign.[39] This category's emphasis on empirical contributions, such as match attendance records and merchandise sales, underscores WWE's business-oriented lens in perpetuating its legacy.[23]Celebrity wing
The celebrity wing recognizes celebrities outside professional wrestling who have participated in WWE events, provided entertainment value through appearances, or exhibited longstanding support for the promotion. Introduced in 2004, it aims to highlight crossovers that elevated WWE's mainstream visibility by inducting figures from sports, acting, music, and business whose involvements generated publicity or entertainment.[26][40] Inductions occur irregularly, often tied to WrestleMania weekend ceremonies, with selections emphasizing verifiable on-screen contributions rather than mere fandom.[23] Pete Rose became the inaugural inductee in 2004 for his appearance at WrestleMania I on March 31, 1985, where he unsuccessfully attempted to interfere in a match and was hit in the head with a baseball bat by Jimmy Hart, drawing laughs and media attention amid WWE's push for national recognition.[41] Mr. T followed in 2005, inducted for co-headlining WrestleMania I's main event on March 31, 1985, partnering with Hulk Hogan against Roddy Piper and Paul Orndorff in a match that symbolized WWE's alliance with pop culture icons to attract non-traditional audiences.[42] William Perry, known as "The Refrigerator," entered in 2006 after body-slamming Jerry Blackman at WrestleMania X2 on April 1, 1990, capitalizing on his NFL fame from the Chicago Bears to boost event hype.[41]| Year | Inductee | Notable WWE Involvement |
|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Bob Uecker | Served as ring announcer and appeared in vignettes during WrestleMania III buildup in 1987, leveraging his baseball broadcaster persona for comedic segments.[41] |
| 2011 | Drew Carey | Participated in the 2001 Royal Rumble match on January 21, 2001, entering at No. 2 and being eliminated quickly, plus hosted segments tying into his "The Price Is Right" role.[41] |
| 2012 | Mike Tyson | Acted as special enforcer and performed the post-match face-off at WrestleMania XIV on March 29, 1998, between Shawn Michaels and Stone Cold Steve Austin, aiding the latter's rise amid his boxing notoriety.[41] |
| 2013 | Donald Trump | Hosted WrestleMania XXIII on April 1, 2007, and funded a "Battle of the Billionaires" match where he had Vince McMahon shaved bald, generating significant ticket sales and media coverage.[42] |
| 2015 | Arnold Schwarzenegger | Made guest appearances, including refereeing a match at SummerSlam 1999 on August 22, 1999, and expressed fandom publicly, aligning with WWE's action-hero image.[43] |
| 2016 | Snoop Dogg | Performed at multiple events, participated in matches like against John Cena at WrestleMania 23 on April 1, 2007, and hosted segments, contributing to WWE's hip-hop integrations.[43] |
| 2020 | Kid Rock | Delivered musical performances at WrestleMania events, including the national anthem at WrestleMania 23, enhancing pre-show spectacles.[43] |
Warrior Award for women's contributions
The Warrior Award, established in 2015 as a distinct category within the WWE Hall of Fame, recognizes individuals who have demonstrated exceptional strength, perseverance, courage, compassion, and love, qualities reflective of WWE Hall of Famer The Ultimate Warrior.[44] Although not exclusively designated for women, the award has honored female recipients for contributions emphasizing personal resilience and societal impact rather than in-ring wrestling achievements.[44] These selections, often presented by Dana Warrior, the widow of The Ultimate Warrior, occur annually during Hall of Fame ceremonies, typically preceding WrestleMania events.[45] The inaugural Warrior Award went to Dana Warrior on April 4, 2015, during the ceremony at WrestleMania 31 in Levi's Stadium, Santa Clara, California. Dana Warrior was acknowledged for her role in preserving and advancing her husband's legacy after his posthumous induction days before his death on April 8, 2014, including promoting messages of family, truth, and intensity through WWE partnerships and personal advocacy.[45] In 2016, the award was presented to Joan Lunden on March 31 at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California, recognizing her survival of stage-four brain cancer diagnosed in 2014 and her subsequent efforts to educate on early detection and women's health issues via books, speeches, and media appearances. Lunden, a former co-host of Good Morning America from 1976 to 1987, reached millions through her platforms, emphasizing proactive medical screening. Sue Aitchison received the honor on April 6, 2019, at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, for her 33 years of service as WWE's Director of Community Outreach since joining in 1986. Her work facilitated over 10,000 wishes through partnerships with Make-A-Wish and other charities, coordinated talent visits to children's hospitals, and supported disaster relief efforts, directly impacting thousands of individuals with critical illnesses or hardships.[44] Aitchison's tenure included managing WWE's annual Tribute to the Troops events and community programs, demonstrating sustained commitment to altruism amid professional demands.[44]| Year | Recipient | Key Contributions Recognized |
|---|---|---|
| 2015 | Dana Warrior | Legacy preservation and advocacy for Ultimate Warrior's values post-induction.[45] |
| 2016 | Joan Lunden | Cancer survivorship and public health awareness campaigns. |
| 2019 | Sue Aitchison | Long-term community outreach, including Make-A-Wish coordination and charity events.[44] |
Legacy wing for posthumous honors
The Legacy wing of the WWE Hall of Fame, introduced in 2016, recognizes wrestlers and contributors from the early decades of professional wrestling, particularly those who died before potential induction and whose roles in building the industry were frequently overlooked by WWE's primary selection process.[47] This category enables posthumous honors for figures from pre-WWF territories and foundational eras, expanding the Hall beyond modern stars without requiring live induction ceremonies.[33] By 2025, it had inducted approximately 49 individuals, focusing on pioneers such as catch-as-catch-can experts and territorial champions who influenced wrestling's global development.[33] The wing addresses a historical gap in WWE's recognition, prioritizing empirical contributions like championship reigns, drawing power, and stylistic innovations over alignment with WWE's narrative. For instance, early inductees included Ed "Strangler" Lewis, a dominant world heavyweight champion in the 1920s who popularized submission holds, and Frank Gotch, whose 1908-1913 rivalry with George Hackenschmidt drew massive crowds and legitimized wrestling as a spectator sport.[48] Later additions encompassed territorial icons like Bruiser Brody, known for his intense brawling style in the 1970s and 1980s that boosted attendance in promotions outside WWE, and Luna Vachon, a hardcore women's wrestler active in the 1990s whose posthumous entry in 2019 highlighted overlooked female trailblazers.[33] Criticism has arisen regarding the wing's status, with some observers and fans arguing it relegates inductees to a secondary tier lacking the prestige of main Hall ceremonies, prompting WWE to pause additions after the 2021 class amid backlash over perceived undervaluation of legacies.[49] This hiatus lasted until 2025, when WWE revived the category with three inductees: James "Kamala" Harris, a Ugandan Giant gimmick performer who drew crowds in the 1980s via his imposing presence and feud with Hulk Hogan; Dory Funk Sr., a promoter and wrestler who trained multiple world champions in the mid-20th century; and Ivan Koloff, the Russian Bear who ended Bruno Sammartino's seven-year WWWF title reign in 1971.[8] These selections underscore the wing's role in causal acknowledgment of wrestling's evolutionary roots, though debates persist on whether it fully equates to ceremonial honors.[50]Immortal Moments for historic events
The Immortal Moments category, introduced by WWE on the March 28, 2025, episode of SmackDown, recognizes pivotal historical matches and events that shaped professional wrestling's narrative and cultural impact.[9] This subcategory expands the Hall of Fame beyond individuals to honor specific in-ring occurrences, emphasizing their role in elevating performers, altering storylines, and influencing fan engagement.[51] Unlike traditional inductees, Immortal Moments focus on collective achievements within matches, with participants often present to accept the honor, as seen in the inaugural ceremony.[9] The first Immortal Moment inducted was the No Disqualification Submission match between Bret Hart and "Stone Cold" Steve Austin at WrestleMania 13 on March 23, 1997, held at the Rosemont Horizon in Rosemont, Illinois, before 18,853 attendees.[9] In this "I Quit" bout, Hart forced Austin to submit via the Sharpshooter after 22 minutes of intense action marked by profuse bleeding from Austin—depicted as passing out rather than verbally quitting—which shifted audience sympathy toward Austin despite Hart's technical victory.[52] This outcome propelled Austin's anti-establishment persona to superstardom, catalyzing WWE's Attitude Era transition amid competition from WCW, while solidifying Hart's heel turn and international heel alignment.[9] Hart and Austin accepted the induction in person at the April 18, 2025, ceremony in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with CM Punk delivering the induction speech highlighting the match's enduring legacy in match quality and character development.[53] As of October 2025, no additional Immortal Moments have been announced, positioning this category as an evolving tribute to wrestling's most transformative spectacles rather than annual fixtures.[51] Its creation reflects WWE's intent to archive events with verifiable attendance, broadcast metrics, and long-term business repercussions, such as boosted merchandise sales and ratings post-WrestleMania 13.[52] Future inductees may include other high-profile contests, but selections prioritize empirical influence over subjective acclaim.[9]Inductee Classes by Year
1993 Class
The inaugural WWE Hall of Fame class of 1993 consisted solely of André the Giant, inducted posthumously shortly after his death on January 27, 1993, from congestive heart failure at age 46 in Paris, France.[2] Born André René Roussimoff on May 19, 1946, in Grenoble, France, he suffered from acromegaly, resulting in his extraordinary height of 7 feet 4 inches and weight exceeding 500 pounds, which defined his larger-than-life presence in professional wrestling.[14] His induction was announced during a video package on the March 22, 1993, episode of Monday Night Raw, marking the establishment of the WWE Hall of Fame without a formal live ceremony, which began the following year.[17] André's career in the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) spanned the 1970s and 1980s, where he became one of the promotion's biggest draws due to his unmatched physical stature and charisma. Debuting prominently in North America around 1973, he feuded with top competitors and held the WWF World Tag Team Championship once with Tony Atlas in 1981.[14] His most iconic moment came at WrestleMania III on March 29, 1987, when Hulk Hogan body-slammed him in front of a record-breaking crowd of 93,173 at the Pontiac Silverdome, solidifying his role as a foundational figure in modern wrestling spectacles.[14] Beyond wrestling, André appeared in films like The Princess Bride (1987) as Fezzik, enhancing his global fame.[14] The decision to honor André as the first inductee reflected his unparalleled impact on WWF's popularity during its expansion era under Vince McMahon Jr., where his matches consistently headlined events and drew massive audiences. No other inductees were named for 1993, distinguishing it from subsequent annual classes that expanded the roster.[23] His legacy endures through tributes like the André the Giant Memorial Battle Royal, introduced at WrestleMania XXX in 2014.[14]1994 Class
The 1994 class of the WWE Hall of Fame recognized seven figures pivotal to the promotion's early development, including wrestlers, managers, and behind-the-scenes contributors from the 1950s through the 1970s. The induction ceremony occurred on June 9, 1994, at the Omni Inner Harbor in Baltimore, Maryland, as a non-televised event.[26] This group highlighted territorial-era stars who helped establish the WWWF's foundation under Vince McMahon Sr., emphasizing in-ring innovation, character work, and operational support rather than contemporary mainstream appeal.[54] Arnold Skaaland, a former NWA World Light Heavyweight Champion and wrestler-manager, was honored for his dual roles in the ring and corner, including training and managing WWWF Champion Bruno Sammartino during key defenses.[54] Skaaland's decision to throw in the towel on Sammartino's behalf ended the latter's record-setting first WWWF Championship reign of over 7 years on January 18, 1971, against Ivan Koloff.[54] Bobo Brazil, a pioneering wrestler active from the 1950s to the 1980s, earned induction for breaking racial barriers as one of the first prominent African-American headliners in major promotions, known for his powerful headbutts and matches against top heels.[55] Brazil competed extensively in the WWWF, facing champions like Bruno Sammartino and contributing to the era's diverse undercard appeal.[55] "Nature Boy" Buddy Rogers, the inaugural WWWF Champion crowned on April 25, 1963, by defeating Antonino Rocca, was posthumously inducted after his death in 1992; his flamboyant style and figure-four leglock influenced future stars like Ric Flair.[56] [57] Rogers held the title briefly before dropping it to Sammartino, but his showmanship defined early WWWF villainy.[56] Chief Jay Strongbow, portraying a Native American warrior gimmick, was recognized for his reliability as a fan-favorite babyface and tag-team specialist, including partnerships that drew strong house support in the 1960s and 1970s.[58] Despite never capturing a singles world title, Strongbow's consistent performances solidified midcard draw status.[59] "Classy" Freddie Blassie, a notorious heel with a career spanning decades, received accolades for his biting promos, loaded glove tactics, and later managerial role guiding stars like the Iron Sheik; his WWWF tenure amplified antagonistic archetypes.[20] Gorilla Monsoon transitioned from a dominant big-man wrestler in the 1960s—known for his size and agility—to a legendary play-by-play announcer, providing authoritative commentary that enhanced WWF broadcasts through the 1980s and early 1990s.[60] Monsoon's in-ring record included victories over foes like Killer Kowalski, underscoring his versatility.[61] James Dudley, the first African-American hired by the promotion in 1962, was inducted for his 35-year tenure as a doorman, ring announcer, and logistics coordinator, particularly at events in the Washington, D.C., area; Vince K. McMahon personally performed the induction.[62] Dudley's behind-the-scenes efforts supported seamless operations at venues like the Capital Centre.[62]1995 Class
The 1995 WWE Hall of Fame induction ceremony occurred on June 24, 1995, at the Philadelphia Marriott Hotel in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as part of events surrounding the King of the Ring pay-per-view.[26] [21] Six individuals were honored: Antonino Rocca, "Big Cat" Ernie Ladd, The Fabulous Moolah, George "The Animal" Steele, The Grand Wizard, and Ivan Putski.[21] [63] The class featured two posthumous inductees, with Rocca presented by his wife and The Grand Wizard represented by Bobby Harmon.[63] Antonino Rocca (1921–1977), an Argentine-Italian performer, rose to prominence in the 1950s through acrobatic high-flying techniques and agility that captivated audiences, particularly in New York where he headlined Madison Square Garden events and formed a celebrated tag team with Miguel Pérez.[64] [65] His innovative style influenced subsequent generations of wrestlers despite limited formal championships, emphasizing crowd appeal and athletic displays over scripted outcomes.[66] "Big Cat" Ernie Ladd (1938–2007), a former American Football League defensive tackle standing 6 feet 9 inches and weighing over 300 pounds, transitioned to wrestling in the 1960s as a dominant heel, challenging WWWF Champion Bruno Sammartino multiple times and capturing regional heavyweight titles including the NWA United States Heavyweight Championship.[67] [68] Ladd's physical presence and trash-talking persona made him a territorial draw, with accolades extending to WCW Hall of Fame induction in 1994 prior to his WWE recognition.[69] The Fabulous Moolah (1923–2007), born Mary Lillian Ellison, dominated women's wrestling for decades, holding the WWF Women's Championship for a record 28 years starting in 1956 after winning a 14-woman battle royal, while also training numerous female performers and booking matches.[70] [71] Inducted by Alundra Blayze, her career bridged territorial eras to WWF's national expansion, including tag team appearances in the 1980s Rock 'n' Wrestling period.[63] [72] George "The Animal" Steele, real name Jim Myers (1937–2017), portrayed a feral, turnbuckle-chewing monster heel from 1967 onward, engaging in high-profile rivalries with Bruno Sammartino and engaging fans through his unhinged gimmick despite no WWF singles titles.[73] A high school teacher by profession, Steele's dual life and physicality, including a green tongue effect, sustained his popularity into the 1980s.[74] The Grand Wizard, Ernie Roth (1926–1983), served as a flamboyant heel manager in WWF from the 1970s, handling stars like Superstar Billy Graham and Andre the Giant with signature $5,000 "bribes" and tuxedo attire that amplified villainy.[75] [76] His microphone work and promotional flair elevated managed talent's drawing power, building on earlier roles in other territories.[77] Ivan Putski (born Józef Bednarski, 1941), dubbed "Polish Power" or "The Polish Hammer," debuted in WWF in 1979, winning the WWF Tag Team Championship with Tito Santana that year via his powerful clothesline finisher and bodybuilder physique.[78] [79] Putski's fan-friendly strongman appeal and prior regional successes in Texas territories solidified his midcard status through the early 1980s.[80]1996 Class
The 1996 induction ceremony for the WWE Hall of Fame took place on November 16, 1996, in New York City, serving as a prelude to the Survivor Series event.[22] This fourth class honored contributors from the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, predecessor to WWE) era, recognizing wrestlers, managers, promoters, and tag teams whose performances and roles shaped territorial and national wrestling landscapes in the mid-20th century.[81] The selections emphasized longevity, territorial success, and direct ties to WWF founder Vince McMahon Sr.'s operations, reflecting the promotion's roots in Northeast circuits rather than broader national stardom.[26] The inductees included manager Captain Lou Albano, inducted by New York media personality Joe Franklin; he managed multiple WWF champions, including Ivan Putski and The British Bulldogs, contributing to over a dozen title reigns and pioneering the flamboyant manager archetype in the 1980s WWF expansion.[26] Baron Mikel Scicluna, a Maltese heel wrestler active from the 1960s to 1970s, was inducted by Gorilla Monsoon; known for stiff bouts and tag team work, he competed in over 2,000 WWF matches, often as an enforcer in mid-card feuds.[10] Jimmy "Superfly" Snuka, inducted by Don Muraco, gained fame for high-flying moves like the Superfly Splash, holding the WWF Intercontinental Championship in 1982 and influencing aerial wrestling styles despite limited main-event longevity.[22] Johnny Rodz, a journeyman technician from the 1960s-1980s, was recognized for training future stars at his New York gym and competing in preliminary WWF bouts, embodying the gritty enhancement talent role with a record approaching 3,000 matches across independents.[82] Killer Kowalski, a dominant villain with a legitimate amateur background, trained wrestlers like Triple H and held NWA titles in territories; his WWF tenure in the 1960s-1970s featured brutal knee drops and over 5,000 documented matches.[83] Pat Patterson, inducted for his 1970s WWF runs as Intercontinental Champion (inaugural in 1979) and matchmaker role, innovated the title's tournament format and advised on booking.[84] Vincent J. McMahon, founder of the Capitol Wrestling Corporation (evolved into WWF), was posthumously honored for establishing the Northeast syndicate in 1953, booking stars like Buddy Rogers and expanding via TV syndication to 12 million viewers by the 1960s.[47] The Valiant Brothers (Johnny "Luscious" Valiant and Jimmy "Handsome" Valiant), the first tag team inducted, captured WWWF Tag Team Championships in 1971 and 1976, known for their biker gimmick, synchronized offense, and drawing power in sold-out arenas across territories.[85] Their induction by tag champions Owen Hart and The British Bulldog highlighted enduring tag division influences.[86] This class prioritized backstage architects and territorial stalwarts over flashier icons, aligning with WWF's selective early criteria amid competition from WCW.[81]2004 Class
The 2004 WWE Hall of Fame induction ceremony took place on March 13, 2004, at the Hilton New York in New York City, reviving the event after an eight-year absence since 1996 and coinciding with WrestleMania XX the following evening.[87][26] This class introduced the celebrity wing with Pete Rose, a Major League Baseball record-holder for hits who participated in comedic WrestleMania segments, such as being "batted" by Kane at WrestleMania XIV in 1998.[26] The ten wrestling inductees encompassed wrestlers and personalities whose contributions spanned the 1970s through 1990s, emphasizing athletic prowess, character work, and draw power in WWF programming; two were posthumous, reflecting their lasting impact despite early deaths from health issues common in the era's wrestling environment.[10] Key inductees included "Superstar" Billy Graham, a former WWWF World Heavyweight Champion who held the title from April 30, 1977, to February 21, 1978, after defeating Bruno Sammartino in a historic upset at Madison Square Garden; his flamboyant promos, muscular physique from bodybuilding background, and colorful persona influenced later stars like Hulk Hogan and Ultimate Warrior.[88] Graham was inducted by Triple H, highlighting his role in bridging athletic and entertainment wrestling styles.[26] Bobby "The Brain" Heenan, renowned as one of wrestling's premier managers and commentators, guided champions like Andre the Giant, Rick Rude, and Mr. Perfect to over 20 world titles across promotions; his sharp wit and heel advocacy elevated storylines, while his broadcasting added analytical edge to WWF telecasts in the 1980s and 1990s.[89] Harley Race, an eight-time NWA World Heavyweight Champion prior to joining WWF in 1986 as a "King" gimmick authority figure, brought legitimacy through stiff, realistic matches and feuds that reinforced WWF's territorial expansion; his career spanned over 30 years with a reputation for toughness earned in brutal Midwestern territories.[10] Sgt. Slaughter (Robert Remus), a military-themed enforcer who captured the WWF Championship on March 31, 1991, at WrestleMania VII amid a controversial Iraqi sympathizer angle that drew real-world media scrutiny for its timeliness during the Gulf War, also held the Intercontinental title and co-founded the Iron Sheik's heel stable.[26] Tito Santana excelled as a technical high-flyer, winning the WWF Intercontinental Championship twice (1984 and 1989) and WWF Tag Team titles with Ivan Putski and Rick Martel, amassing over 500 matches in WWF from 1984 to 1993 with consistent midcard popularity.[10] Greg "The Hammer" Valentine, a hard-hitting brawler, secured the WWF Intercontinental Championship in September 1984 by defeating Tito Santana with controversial fast-count allegations, and later formed the tag team Visionaries with Brutus Beefcake; his stiff style and feuds, including the figure-four leglock adoption from Pat O'Connor, defined 1980s heel work.[26] Big John Studd (John Minton), a towering 6'10" powerhouse posthumously inducted after dying of liver cancer in 1995 at age 47, challenged for the WWF title in the early 1980s and famously lost a $15,000 body slam bet to Hulk Hogan at WrestleMania I in 1985, cementing his role as a dominant monster heel.[10] The Junkyard Dog (Sylvester Ritter), honored posthumously following his 1998 death from a car accident at age 45, rose as a charismatic babyface in Mid-South Wrestling before joining WWF in 1984, headlining cards with chain-rattling entrances and feuds that boosted house shows despite limited title success.[26] Jesse "The Body" Ventura, a tag team specialist who won the AWA World Tag Team titles and later became WWF's colorful 1980s color commentator partnering with Gorilla Monsoon, enhanced viewer engagement through predictive banter and heel advocacy; his wrestling peak included managing Adrian Adonis before transitioning to broadcasting.[10] The ceremony's video packages and speeches underscored these figures' roles in WWF's national expansion, with inductees appearing collectively at WrestleMania XX for fan recognition, though full proceedings remained invite-only to maintain exclusivity.[26]| Inductee | Inductor | Key WWF Tenure Highlights |
|---|---|---|
| Superstar Billy Graham | Triple H | WWWF Champion 1977-1978; promo innovator.[26] |
| Greg Valentine | Jimmy Hart | IC Champion 1984; tag specialist.[26] |
| Big John Studd (posthumous) | Son John Minton Jr. | Giant heel; WrestleMania I slam loss.[26] |
| Sgt. Slaughter | Pat Patterson | WWF Champion 1991; military gimmick.[26] |
| Bobby Heenan | Blackjack Lanza | Managed multiple champions; commentator.[26] |
| Tito Santana | Shawn Michaels | 2x IC Champion; tag titles.[26] |
| Harley Race | (Not specified) | King gimmick 1986; NWA legacy.[26] |
| Junkyard Dog (posthumous) | Road Warrior Animal | Charismatic draw 1980s; chain matches.[26] |
| Jesse Ventura | (Not specified) | Tag wrestler; iconic broadcaster.[26] |
| Pete Rose (Celebrity) | Kane | MLB hits king; WM comedy bits.[26] |
2005 Class
The 2005 induction ceremony occurred on April 2, 2005, at the Rosemont Theatre in Rosemont, Illinois, the night prior to WrestleMania 21, and was hosted by Gene Okerlund. A condensed version aired later that evening on Spike TV. The class comprised seven inductees, selected for their significant roles in WWE's history, including championship reigns, memorable rivalries, and managerial influence during the 1980s expansion era. These wrestlers and personalities helped elevate WWE's national profile through high-profile feuds and larger-than-life personas.| Inductee | Inductor | Notable WWE Achievements |
|---|---|---|
| "Cowboy" Bob Orton Jr. | Randy Orton | Competed in WWE from 1984 to 1987, known for his role in feuds alongside Roddy Piper, including attacks on key figures like Captain Lou Albano; held the WWF North American Championship prior to WWE tenure.[90] |
| Hulk Hogan | Sylvester Stallone | Six-time WWE Champion, with reigns totaling over 2,000 days; headlined WrestleMania I in 1985, drawing 93,173 fans to symbolize WWE's mainstream breakthrough; defeated The Iron Sheik to begin his first title run on January 23, 1984.[91] [92] |
| The Iron Sheik | Sgt. Slaughter | WWE Champion for 28 days in 1983 after defeating Bob Backlund on December 26, 1983, ending a seven-year reign; former WWE World Tag Team Champion with Nikolai Volkoff; portrayed as a dominant heel embodying anti-American sentiment during the Cold War era.[93] [94] |
| Jimmy Hart | Jerry Lawler | Managed multiple WWE Tag Team Champions, including The Hart Foundation and Money Inc.; known as "The Mouth of the South" for his megaphone-assisted promos; influenced over 12 title reigns across territories before WWE.[91] [95] |
| "Mr. Wonderful" Paul Orndorff | Bobby Heenan | Main event challenger to Hulk Hogan at WrestleMania 1, drawing sellout crowds; won the WWE World Tag Team Championship with Hulk Hogan in 1986 before turning heel; renowned for athletic prowess and intense stare-downs that built anticipation for matches.[96] [95] |
| "Rowdy" Roddy Piper | Ric Flair | Hosted "Piper's Pit" segments that ignited iconic feuds, such as with Hulk Hogan leading to WrestleMania I; WWE Intercontinental Champion in 1984 for 71 days; billed as a trash-talking antagonist who drew heel heat through unscripted-style promos.[91] [92] |
| Nikolai Volkoff | Jim Ross | WWE World Tag Team Champion with The Iron Sheik in 1985, holding titles for 112 days; performed as a Soviet heel singing the Russian anthem to provoke crowds; participated in over 200 matches in WWE during the 1980s.[94] |
2006 Class
The seventh WWE Hall of Fame class was inducted during a ceremony on April 1, 2006, at the Rosemont Theatre in Rosemont, Illinois, the evening prior to WrestleMania 22.[97] This group included wrestlers and managers from WWE's territorial and modern eras, a pioneering tag team, a longtime interviewer, a territorial promoter-wrestler, and an NFL celebrity crossover athlete who participated in WWE events.[91] Bret "The Hitman" Hart, a second-generation wrestler and leader of the Hart Foundation, was recognized for his technical prowess and multiple title reigns, including five WWF Championships, two WWF Intercontinental Championships, and two WWF Tag Team Championships with Jim Neidhart.[98] His induction highlighted his role in elevating in-ring storytelling during the early 1990s transition from the Hulk Hogan era.[99] "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, the anti-authority icon who propelled WWE's Attitude Era surge, earned honors for six WWE Championships, three Royal Rumble victories (a record at the time), two Intercontinental Championships, and his pivotal feud with Vince McMahon that drew record audiences.[100] Austin's beer-bashing persona and physical style defined mainstream wrestling's peak popularity in the late 1990s.[101] Eddie Guerrero, inducted posthumously following his death on November 13, 2005, from heart failure, was celebrated for his high-flying innovation, charisma, and 2004 WWE Championship win after defeating Brock Lesnar at No Way Out.[102] Guerrero also secured four WWE Tag Team Championships and excelled in cruiserweight divisions, blending lucha libre roots with storytelling elements like "lie, cheat, and steal."[103] "Mean" Gene Okerlund, a staple interviewer across promotions, was inducted for conducting thousands of backstage segments in WWF/WWE from 1984 to 1993, delivering iconic promos for stars like Hulk Hogan and setting the standard for wrestling announcing professionalism.[104] His quick wit and catchphrases like "Now you listen here" bridged generations of fans.[105] Sensational Sherri (Sherri Martel), a versatile performer, received acclaim for her WWF Women's Championship reign from 1987 to 1989 and managerial roles guiding Ted DiBiase, Randy Savage, and Shawn Michaels to multiple world titles through interference tactics and vocal intensity.[106] The Blackjacks (Blackjack Lanza and Blackjack Mulligan), a dominant heel tag team, were honored for their 1975 WWWF World Tag Team Championship win and feared brawling style that terrorized opponents across territories before WWE.[107] Their mustache-and-hawser aesthetic and post-match stomps cemented their legacy as enforcers.[108] Verne Gagne, primarily an AWA architect with 10 AWA World Heavyweight Championships, was inducted for his amateur wrestling Olympic background, early WWWF appearances, and influence on national expansion through talent exchanges and promotional standards.[109][110] Tony Atlas, known as Mr. USA, was recognized as the first African American WWF Tag Team Champion alongside Rocky Johnson in 1983, plus his powerlifting feats and bodybuilding titles that showcased athletic diversity in WWE.[111] William "The Refrigerator" Perry, the Chicago Bears defensive lineman, earned a celebrity slot for his 1990 Survivor Series battle royal participation and brief WWE matches, capitalizing on his 1986 Super Bowl fame for crossover appeal near the All-American Wrestling Federation venture.[112]2007 Class
The 2007 class of the WWE Hall of Fame included eight inductees, recognizing contributions spanning wrestling, management, and commentary within the promotion's history. The induction ceremony occurred on March 31, 2007, at the Fox Theatre in Detroit, Michigan, the night before WrestleMania 23.[113] Inductees were selected for their in-ring prowess, character development, and influence on WWF/WWE storylines, with two receiving posthumous honors. Dusty Rhodes, inducted by his sons Cody and Dustin Rhodes, was celebrated for his charismatic persona as "The American Dream" and key WWF appearances in the 1970s, where he challenged Pedro Morales for the WWWF Championship and teamed with Bruno Sammartino to win the WWWF International Tag Team Championship in 1972.[114] His later 1980s WWF run, including the polka dot attire gimmick, highlighted his adaptability despite creative constraints, underscoring his broader impact on wrestling psychology and fan connection.[115] Jerry "The King" Lawler, inducted by actor William Shatner, earned recognition as a multi-time Memphis-area champion who transitioned to WWF as both wrestler and color commentator alongside Jim Ross, delivering memorable rivalries like his 1990s feud with Bret Hart.[116] His tenure combined technical skill with mic work, influencing WWF's territorial integration. Jim Ross, the iconic play-by-play announcer, was honored for his voice-of-WWF role starting in 1993, providing vivid commentary during the Attitude Era and calling over 2,000 episodes of Raw and numerous pay-per-views.[10] Nick Bockwinkel, inducted by Bobby Heenan, brought AWA polish to WWF with his articulate heel persona, competing in the 1980s and enhancing midcard matches through technical execution and promo sophistication.[117] Mr. Fuji (Harry Fujiwara), inducted alongside representative Don Muraco, excelled as a cunning manager for heels like Demolition and as a wrestler known for his cane-assisted attacks and salt-throwing tactics in WWF feuds during the 1980s.[10] The Wild Samoans (Afa and Sika), a dominant tag team, were inducted for winning the WWF Tag Team Championship three times in the early 1980s under manager Captain Lou Albano, amassing 21 tag titles across promotions with their hard-hitting Samoan style.[118] Posthumous inductee "Mr. Perfect" Curt Hennig, presented by Wade Boggs, was lauded for his flawless athleticism and undefeated streak portrayal in WWF from 1988 to 1996, executing signature moves like the Perfect-Plex in high-profile matches against Hulk Hogan and others before departing.[119] Hennig, who died in 2003, influenced technical wrestling standards. The Sheik (Ed Farhat), also posthumous and inducted by Rob Van Dam and Sabu, pioneered hardcore elements in WWF with his pencil-stabbing and fireball spots, holding the WWWF United States Heavyweight Championship twice in the 1960s and drawing crowds through territorial dominance.[120] Farhat, deceased in 2003, represented early international heel archetypes.[121]2008 Class
The 2008 WWE Hall of Fame class was inducted during a ceremony held on March 29, 2008, at the Amway Arena in Orlando, Florida, the night before WrestleMania XXIV.[122][123] Hosted by Gene Okerlund and Todd Grisham, the event marked the first time an active WWE wrestler, Ric Flair, received the honor while still under contract, shortly before his scripted retirement storyline culminated at WrestleMania.[124] The inductees spanned wrestlers, promoters, announcers, and family legacies, highlighting contributions from the mid-20th century territorial era through WWE's expansion period. Ric Flair, inducted by Triple H, was recognized for his 34-year career, including two stints in WWE where he captured the WWF Championship twice (1992 and once more in a controversial switch) and the Intercontinental Championship in 1991–1992.[125] Flair's persona as the "Nature Boy"—defined by flamboyant robes, mic work, and a record 16 world titles across promotions—elevated him as a draw in WWE's 1990s New Generation era, despite initial fan resistance to his heel role.[126] "High Chief" Peter Maivia (posthumous) and Rocky Johnson, inducted together by Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson as the first grandfather-father pair in WWE history, represented Samoan and Caribbean wrestling lineages. Maivia, a WWWF competitor in the 1970s known for his agility and tribal chief gimmick, wrestled key matches against figures like Bob Backlund and contributed to WWE's early international appeal through Polynesian heritage.[127] Johnson, active in WWE from 1983 to 1985, teamed with Tony Atlas to win the first African-American WWF Tag Team Championship in 1983, pioneering diverse representation in title contention during a period of limited opportunities for non-white performers.[128] Mae Young was honored for her pioneering role in women's wrestling, spanning over five decades from the 1940s carnival circuits to WWE storylines in the late 1990s and early 2000s, where she performed alongside The Fabulous Moolah and engaged in comedic angles that extended her career into her 70s.[124] Posthumous inductees included Eddie Graham, a Florida Championship Wrestling promoter and NWA World Tag Team Champion who influenced WWE's territorial acquisitions by emphasizing athletic realism over spectacle.[129] Gordon Solie, the "Dean of Wrestling Announcers," provided commentary for Championship Wrestling from Florida events that WWE later absorbed, known for his encyclopedic knowledge and straight-faced delivery during 1960s–1980s matches.[129] The Brisco Brothers—Jack Brisco (NWA World Heavyweight Champion 1970–1971) and Gerald Brisco—were inducted for their tag team dominance in the 1970s WWWF, holding titles and later serving as WWE road agents, with Jack's amateur wrestling background (NCAA champion) lending credibility to WWE's sports-entertainment hybrid.[122] Their induction underscored WWE's nod to foundational tag specialists who bridged puroresu influences and American promotions.2009 Class
The WWE Hall of Fame Class of 2009 ceremony occurred on April 4, 2009, at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas, coinciding with WrestleMania 25 weekend and hosted by Jerry Lawler and Todd Grisham.[130] The inductees comprised wrestlers Ricky Steamboat, Koko B. Ware, Terry Funk, Dory Funk Jr., Bill Watts, the Von Erich family (Fritz, Kevin, David, Kerry, Mike, and Chris von Erich), and longtime ring announcer Howard Finkel.[130] [131] This class highlighted a mix of in-ring performers, promoters, and behind-the-scenes figures who contributed to wrestling's territorial era and national expansion, with several selections recognizing regional impacts in Texas and the Mid-South.[132] Ricky Steamboat, inducted for his technical prowess and memorable rivalries, competed in WWE from 1985 to 1994, holding the Intercontinental Championship once and the WWF Tag Team Championship once with Rick Savage.[133] His WrestleMania III bout against Randy Savage drew 93,173 fans and is noted for elevating storytelling through athleticism.[134] Steamboat's career emphasized clean, high-energy matches that influenced subsequent generations, leading to his post-retirement roles as a WWE trainer and agent starting in 2005.[133] Koko B. Ware, a high-flying midcard performer active in WWE during the 1980s, gained recognition for his charisma and aerial maneuvers despite limited main-event success.[131] Ware's tenure included feuds that showcased athleticism in an era transitioning to larger-than-life characters, contributing to WWE's roster depth.[10] The Funk brothers—Dory Funk Jr. and Terry Funk—were honored collectively for their longevity and innovation across promotions, with Terry's WWE stints including a brief 1980s run and a 1997 tag team title reign with Mick Foley at WrestleMania XIV lasting 11 days.[135] Dory Jr. focused more on territorial work, but the duo's NWA World Heavyweight Championship reigns (Terry in 1975, Dory from 1969–1971) underscored their foundational role in modern wrestling's structure.[136] Terry pioneered hardcore elements later adopted in ECW, though his WWE impact was episodic.[137] Bill Watts, known as "Cowboy" Bill Watts, earned induction primarily for his promotional work in Mid-South Wrestling, where he built a draw through realistic storytelling and regional rivalries from the 1970s to 1980s.[138] As a wrestler, he held titles like the Mid-South North American Championship multiple times, but his WWE recognition stems from influencing talent development that fed into national expansion.[139] Watts' induction speech deviated from script, emphasizing family and industry evolution.[140] The Von Erich family represented Texas wrestling's dynasty, with patriarch Fritz von Erich (real name Jack Adkisson) as a promoter and one-time AWA World Heavyweight Champion who founded World Class Championship Wrestling (WCCW).[132] Sons Kevin, David, Kerry, Mike, and Chris contributed through WCCW feuds, notably against the Freebirds, drawing massive local crowds in the 1980s; Kerry held WCWA World Heavyweight Championship five times.[132] The posthumous inclusion of deceased members (David in 1984, Kerry in 1993, Mike in 1987, Chris in 1991, Fritz in 1997) acknowledged family tragedies amid their territorial dominance.[141] Howard Finkel, WWE's longest-tenured employee over 40 years starting in 1975, served as ring announcer, introducing iconic moments with phrases like "the sound of the heartbeat of the WWE."[142] His role extended to Madison Square Garden events and television, enhancing spectacle without in-ring participation.[143] Finkel's induction highlighted non-wrestling contributions to production consistency.[144]| Inductee | Induction Type | Key WWE/Related Achievements |
|---|---|---|
| Ricky Steamboat | Individual | WWF Intercontinental Champion (1); WrestleMania III main event draw of 93,173.[133] [134] |
| Koko B. Ware | Individual | 1980s aerial specialist; midcard staple in roster expansion era.[131] |
| Dory Funk Jr. & Terry Funk | Group (Funks) | Terry: WWF Tag Team Champions (1, 1997); NWA World Champion (Terry 1975).[135] [136] |
| Bill Watts | Individual | Mid-South promoter; influenced talent pipeline to WWE.[138] |
| Von Erich Family | Group | WCCW territorial icons; multiple WCWA titles (e.g., Kerry 5x World Heavyweight).[132] |
| Howard Finkel | Individual | 40-year announcer; voiced WrestleMania eras.[142] |
2010 Class
The 2010 WWE Hall of Fame class was inducted during a ceremony held on March 27, 2010, at the Dodge Theatre in Phoenix, Arizona, preceding WrestleMania XXVI.[145][146] This seventh annual event recognized seven figures for their contributions to professional wrestling, including four living inductees in the individual category—Ted DiBiase, Wendi Richter, and Antonio Inoki—and three posthumous honorees: Gorgeous George, Maurice "Mad Dog" Vachon, and Stu Hart—alongside one celebrity inductee, Bob Uecker.[147] The selections emphasized wrestlers with significant ties to WWE's territorial and national expansion eras, as well as broader industry influence, though WWE's criteria prioritize performers who advanced its brand over pure athletic or drawing metrics.[148] Ted DiBiase, known as the "Million Dollar Man," was the first publicly announced inductee on the February 8, 2010, episode of WWE Raw, celebrated for his portrayal of a ruthless, money-obsessed heel who held the WWF Tag Team Championship three times (twice with Mike Rotunda and once with IRS) and the NWA National Heavyweight Championship, drawing crowds through promos that mocked economic inequality in the 1980s wrestling boom.[149] His career spanned over 20 years, including stints in Mid-South Wrestling where he won the North American Heavyweight Championship six times, but WWE highlighted his role in elevating mid-card storytelling via the Million Dollar Dream submission hold and feuds with top babyfaces like Hulk Hogan.[150] Wendi Richter, a two-time WWF Women's Champion (1985–1986), was inducted for pioneering women's wrestling visibility in WWE during the Rock 'n' Wrestling era, headlining events alongside Cyndi Lauper and defeating The Fabulous Moolah for the title on November 23, 1985, in a match that drew mainstream media attention.[147] Her defenses against challengers like Joyce Grable and Princess Jasmine helped sustain the division until its decline post-1987, though her abrupt "screwjob" loss to The Spider Lady (a masked Moolah) on November 25, 1985, underscored WWE's control over talent contracts and storylines.[151] Antonio Inoki, founder of New Japan Pro-Wrestling, received induction for his global impact, including a 1976 exhibition match against Muhammad Ali on June 26 in Tokyo that, despite controversy over rules and outcome (a 15-round draw), bridged wrestling and boxing, influencing hybrid promotions.[152] He held the WWF World Martial Arts Heavyweight Championship for over 11 years (1972–1987) and promoted WWE's early international tours, though his WWE appearances were limited compared to his dominance in Japan, where he won the IWGP Heavyweight Championship three times.[153][148] Posthumous inductee Gorgeous George (George Wagner, died December 24, 1963) was honored as a 1940s–1950s innovator who popularized showmanship, holding the World Heavyweight Championship (NWA version) and drawing television audiences with sprayed silver hair, robes, and valet antics that influenced later stars like Muhammad Ali.[154] Maurice "Mad Dog" Vachon (died August 21, 2013), a five-time AWA World Heavyweight Champion, was recognized for his brutal brawling style in WWF territories during the 1970s–1980s, often teaming with brother Paul or feuding as a scarred villain.[151] Stu Hart (died October 16, 2003), patriarch of the Hart wrestling family, was inducted for training generations at his Calgary dungeon, producing talents like Bret Hart and Owen Hart, though his Stampede Wrestling promotion folded in 1984 amid competition from larger entities.[154] Bob Uecker, the celebrity inductee and broadcaster, earned the nod for his WWE appearances, including commentary at WrestleMania III (1987) and acting roles in films like Major League (1989), where his self-deprecating humor aligned with wrestling's entertainment ethos; he never wrestled but amplified WWE's crossover appeal through 1980s TV sketches.[145] The ceremony featured family acceptances for posthumous members and emphasized legacy over recent performance, reflecting WWE's pattern of inducting foundational figures to legitimize its history amid criticisms of selective omissions.[155]2011 Class
The WWE Hall of Fame Class of 2011 featured four inductees: wrestler Shawn Michaels, the tag team The Road Warriors (Joseph Laurinaitis as Animal and the posthumous induction of Michael Hegstrand as Hawk) with their longtime manager Paul Ellering, and manager Tammy Lynn Sytch, known professionally as Sunny. The ceremony occurred on April 2, 2011, at Philips Arena in Atlanta, Georgia, the evening prior to WrestleMania XXVII.[156][157] This class highlighted performers from WWE's national expansion era through the 1990s Attitude period, emphasizing athletic innovation, managerial influence, and on-screen charisma that drew high television ratings. Shawn Michaels received induction for a career marked by technical prowess and high-profile matches, including four WWE Championship reigns between 1992 and 1998, two Royal Rumble victories in 1995 and 1996, and main-event appearances at multiple WrestleManias, earning him the nickname "Mr. WrestleMania."[158] Triple H, a longtime rival and collaborator, served as his inductor, with Michaels delivering an emotional speech reflecting on his 2010 retirement after losing to The Undertaker at WrestleMania XXVI, ending a 25-year in-ring tenure that included overcoming a severe back injury in 1998.[159] The Road Warriors and Paul Ellering were jointly inducted, recognizing their dominant partnership originating in the American Wrestling Association in 1983, where the team—characterized by face paint, spiked shoulder pads, and a no-sell style of power moves—captured multiple tag titles across promotions before joining WWE in 1990.[160] In WWE, they held the World Tag Team Championship twice (1990–1991 and briefly in 1992 as The Legion of Doom), feuding with teams like Demolition and The Hart Foundation, while Ellering's strategic mic work and use of a trained attack dog enhanced their intimidating presence.[161] Animal accepted on behalf of the group, noting Hawk's death in 2003 from heart complications at age 46, during a speech emphasizing their influence on hardcore and tag team aesthetics.[162] Sunny's induction acknowledged her role as a pioneering female on-screen personality in WWE's mid-1990s product, managing acts like The Bodydonnas (to World Tag Team Championship success in 1995), Owen Hart, and The Godwinns, which correlated with spikes in viewership as she became AOL's most-downloaded celebrity image of 1996 and a two-time Slammy Award winner for "Woman of the Year."[163] As the first woman inducted since 1995's Sensational Sherri, her speech focused on personal struggles post-WWE, including leaving the company in 1998 amid reported backstage issues, underscoring her impact on evolving gender dynamics in wrestling entertainment despite limited in-ring competition.[164] The class's selections reflected WWE's emphasis on legacy acts capable of drawing nostalgia crowds, with attendance estimated in the thousands for the invite-only event.[159]| Inductee(s) | Role | Key WWE Achievements | Inductor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shawn Michaels | Wrestler | 4× WWE Champion; 2× Royal Rumble winner | Triple H |
| The Road Warriors & Paul Ellering | Tag Team & Manager | 2× World Tag Team Champions (as Legion of Doom) | Animal (for group) |
| Sunny | Manager | Managed 3 tag title teams; 2× Slammy winner | Unspecified in records |
2012 Class
The 2012 WWE Hall of Fame induction ceremony occurred on March 31, 2012, at the American Airlines Arena in Miami, Florida, the evening before WrestleMania XXVIII.[165] [166] Hosted by Jerry Lawler, the event honored six inductees: professional wrestlers Edge, Mil Máscaras, Ron Simmons, and Yokozuna; celebrity Mike Tyson; and the wrestling stable The Four Horsemen as a group.[167] [168] The selections reflected WWE's recognition of performers who contributed significantly to professional wrestling, though the Hall's criteria emphasize WWE-affiliated achievements alongside broader industry impact.[168] Edge (Adam Copeland), inducted by longtime tag team partner Christian, was celebrated for his 15-year WWE tenure from 1998 to 2011, during which he captured 11 world championships, including four WWE Championships and seven World Heavyweight Championships, and pioneered the "Rated-R Superstar" persona with TLC matches and main-event feuds.[169] His induction followed a forced retirement due to cervical spine stenosis, diagnosed after accumulating over a dozen concussions and spinal surgeries from high-risk maneuvers.[170] Mil Máscaras, a pioneering luchador inducted by nephew Alberto Del Rio, was recognized for his 1960s-1980s career blending Mexican wrestling traditions with international tours, including WWWF appearances in 1976 where he competed against top talent without submitting to defeats, influencing global high-flying styles.[167] Ron Simmons, inducted by John Bradshaw Layfield, earned honors for his 1992 WCW World Heavyweight Championship win—the first by an African American in a major promotion—and his WWE run as part of The Godfather and APA stable, amassing over 20 years of power-based performances.[167] [171] Yokozuna (Rodney Anoaʻi), posthumously inducted by family members including Rikishi, was lauded for his 1993-1997 WWE stint as a dominant sumo-inspired heel, securing two WWE Championships via count-out and disqualification victories, drawing on his 500+ pound frame for 300+ matches before health issues led to his 2000 death at age 34 from pulmonary edema linked to obesity and heart strain.[172] [171] Mike Tyson, the boxing heavyweight champion with a 50-6 record who held titles from 1986 to 1990, received a celebrity wing induction for his 1998-2009 WWE appearances, including refereeing the Shawn Michaels vs. Steve Austin match at WrestleMania XIV, which boosted mainstream crossover appeal despite controversies like his 1997 ear-biting incident against Evander Holyfield.[168] The Four Horsemen stable—comprising Ric Flair, Arn Anderson, Barry Windham, Tully Blanchard, and manager J.J. Dillon—was inducted by Dusty Rhodes for revolutionizing tag and faction warfare in the 1980s NWA/WCW territories, winning multiple NWA World Tag Team Championships and embodying elite arrogance through promos and in-ring precision, with Flair's 16 world titles underscoring their legacy before WWE acquisitions integrated their influence.[169] [172] The ceremony drew approximately 6,000 attendees and aired edited highlights on WWE Network, emphasizing the group's internal dynamics and rivalries with figures like Rhodes.[173]2013 Class
The 2013 WWE Hall of Fame induction ceremony took place on April 6, 2013, at Madison Square Garden in New York City, the night before WrestleMania 29.[174] The class featured five wrestlers—Bruno Sammartino, Bob Backlund, Mick Foley, Trish Stratus, and Booker T—along with celebrity inductee Donald Trump, marking a lineup recognized for its depth of accomplished performers spanning multiple eras.[175] [176] Bruno Sammartino, inducted by Arnold Schwarzenegger, was honored for his record-setting tenure as WWWF Champion from 1963 to 1971, holding the title for 2,803 consecutive days and drawing unprecedented crowds, including sellouts at Madison Square Garden over 200 times.[177] His induction, after years of reluctance due to disputes with Vince McMahon Sr., symbolized reconciliation and highlighted his status as a foundational figure in professional wrestling's mainstream appeal.[178] Bob Backlund, presented by Maria Menounos, earned recognition as a two-time WWF Champion with reigns totaling over 6,000 days, emphasizing his amateur wrestling background and clean, technical style that contrasted with the era's flashier competitors.[179] Mick Foley, inducted by Terry Funk, was celebrated for his hardcore wrestling innovations across personas like Mankind, Cactus Jack, and Dude Love, including three WWF Championship wins and high-profile Hell in a Cell matches that pushed physical limits.[177] Trish Stratus, inducted by Stephanie McMahon, stood out as a seven-time WWE Women's Champion who elevated the division through athleticism and charisma, retiring undefeated in 2006 after pioneering storylines blending athletic and entertainment elements.[179] [180] Booker T, the first WCW World Heavyweight Champion to join the WWE Hall, was acknowledged for his multi-time world title reigns in WCW and WWE, versatile career as both singles star and tag team specialist with Harlem Heat.[175] Donald Trump received the celebrity wing induction for his role in hosting WrestleMania IV in 1988 at Trump Plaza and the iconic "Battle of the Billionaires" storyline culminating at WrestleMania 23, where he "bodyslammed" Vince McMahon, underscoring his contributions to WWE's crossover into business and entertainment spheres.[181] The ceremony, hosted by Jerry Lawler, aired edited highlights on WWE Network and was praised for emotional speeches, particularly Sammartino's, reinforcing the event's prestige amid WWE's expansion.[179][182]2014 Class
The WWE Hall of Fame Class of 2014 consisted of seven inductees: wrestlers Ultimate Warrior, Razor Ramon, Jake "The Snake" Roberts, Lita, and Carlos Colón; manager Paul Bearer (posthumous); and celebrity Mr. T.[10][183] The induction ceremony occurred on April 5, 2014, at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans, Louisiana, the evening prior to WrestleMania XXX, and was broadcast live on the WWE Network.[184] Ultimate Warrior (James Brian Hellwig), the headlining inductee, was recognized for his brief but intense WWF tenure from 1987 to 1992, during which he defeated Hulk Hogan for the WWF Championship on April 1, 1990, at WrestleMania VI in a title-for-title match, holding the belt for 293 days.[183] His induction speech focused on themes of endurance, invoking deceased wrestlers and urging the audience to continue WWE's legacy despite personal or professional battles.[185] Warrior appeared on the April 7, 2014, episode of Raw, delivering a farewell-style promo that referenced mortality and his recent family burial plot purchase, but he suffered a heart attack and died on April 8, 2014, at age 54 in Scottsdale, Arizona.[186] Razor Ramon, the WWE ring name for Scott Hall, was honored for his portrayal of a Cuban-American tough guy from 1991 to 1996 and 1999 to 2000, highlighted by his four Intercontinental Championships and iconic ladder match against Shawn Michaels at WrestleMania X on March 20, 1994.[10] Jake "The Snake" Roberts earned induction for his WWF run from 1986 to 1992, noted for psychological match tactics and entrance with a python named Damien, amassing over 500 career victories across territories.[183] Lita (Amy Dumas) was inducted for her contributions to women's wrestling from 1999 to 2006, including four Women's Championships and pioneering high-risk dives like the moonsault.[10] Carlos Colón, a territorial star primarily in Puerto Rico's World Wrestling Council (which he co-founded in 1973), received recognition for his 52-year career with over 100 documented defenses of the WWC Universal Championship and rare WWF appearances in the 1980s and 1990s.[187] Paul Bearer (William Moody), posthumously inducted after his 2013 death from congestive heart failure, was celebrated as a manager from 1990 to 2000 and beyond, managing The Undertaker to multiple world titles and creating the iconic urn gimmick.[10] Mr. T (Laurence Tureaud), the celebrity wing inductee, was acknowledged for his role in the main event of the inaugural WrestleMania on March 31, 1985, teaming with Hulk Hogan against Roddy Piper and Paul Orndorff.[183] The ceremony emphasized reconciliation and legacy, with multiple inductees delivering speeches reflecting on career hardships and industry impacts.[188]2015 Class
The 2015 WWE Hall of Fame induction ceremony occurred on March 28, 2015, at the SAP Center in San Jose, California, the evening prior to WrestleMania 31, and was streamed live on the WWE Network.[189][190] The class comprised eight inductees across wrestling, international, and celebrity categories, reflecting WWE's recognition of performers who contributed to its history and broader entertainment impact.[191][192] Key wrestling inductees included "Macho Man" Randy Savage, a posthumous honoree represented by his brother Lanny Poffo and inducted by Hulk Hogan; Savage held the WWF Championship twice (1988 and 1989) and WWF Intercontinental Championship once (1986), known for high-profile feuds and matches against Hogan at WrestleMania V and Ultimate Warrior at WrestleMania VII.[193][194] Kevin Nash, inducted by Shawn Michaels, was a three-time WWF Champion (once as Diesel in 1994–1995) and co-founder of the nWo faction, which influenced wrestling storylines into the Attitude Era.[190][194] Rikishi, inducted by his sons The Usos, competed as a WWF Tag Team Champion (2000) and WWF Intercontinental Champion (2000), central to the Anoa'i family legacy with over 100 matches in WWF from 1999–2004.[195][191] Additional wrestlers honored were Larry Zbyszko, inducted by Bruno Sammartino, a former AWA World Heavyweight Champion (1978) who wrestled in WWF from 1980–1981 and managed heels in the 1990s; Alundra Blayze (aka Madusa), inducted by Natalya, the inaugural WWF Women's Champion (1993–1995) who defended the title in 23 matches before departing amid controversy over dropping the belt on ECW television; and The Bushwhackers (Luke Williams and Butch Miller), inducted by John Laurinaitis, a New Zealand tag team active in WWF from 1989–1996 known for comedic sheep-herding gimmick and 400+ matches, including house show bouts against teams like The Hart Foundation.[195][194][192] Tatsumi Fujinami represented the international wing, inducted by Ric Flair; a Japanese wrestling pioneer with New Japan Pro-Wrestling, he won the NWA World Heavyweight Championship (1989) in a rare cross-promotion match against Flair and held IWGP Heavyweight Championship three times (1987–1990).[190][194] Arnold Schwarzenegger entered the celebrity wing, inducted by Triple H; the actor and former California governor appeared in WWF's The Running Man promotional tie-in (1987) and provided mainstream crossover appeal through bodybuilding fame and film roles like The Terminator series, though his wrestling involvement was limited to non-competitive segments.[193][191] The selections emphasized longevity, championships, and entertainment value, with Savage's induction resolving prior WWE hesitancy due to his WCW tenure.[195]2016 Class
The 2016 class of the WWE Hall of Fame was inducted during a ceremony held on April 2, 2016, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas, the evening preceding WrestleMania 32.[196] The inductees comprised six principal figures: Sting, Stan Hansen, Jacqueline, The Godfather, Big Boss Man (posthumously), and The Fabulous Freebirds as a faction.[197] WWE additionally introduced its Legacy wing for the first time, honoring three pre-television era pioneers: Frank Gotch, George Hackenschmidt, and Ed "Strangler" Lewis, recognizing their foundational contributions to professional wrestling's catch-as-catch-can style and world championships in the early 1900s through 1920s.[198] Sting (Steve Borden), the headliner, was inducted by Ric Flair and used his speech to announce his in-ring retirement after a career spanning over three decades, primarily as WCW's face-painted vigilante character who headlined multiple events against rivals like Flair and Hulk Hogan; his WWE tenure began in 2014 with a WrestleMania 31 match against The Undertaker.[199] [200] Stan Hansen, known for his stiff lariat strikes and brawling style, had intermittent WWF runs in 1980–1981 and 1990–1991, where he infamously broke Bruno Sammartino's neck in a 1981 match due to a botched clothesline and later feuded with André the Giant.[201] Jacqueline (Jacqueline Moore) earned recognition for reviving the WWF Women's Championship in 1998 as its inaugural post-revival holder and the first African American woman to win it, alongside a historic stint as the sole female WWE Cruiserweight Champion after defeating Chavo Guerrero in 1998; she also managed Marc Mero and competed in intergender matches.[202] The Godfather (Charles Wright) portrayed the hospitality-oriented pimp gimmick from 1997 onward, building on prior roles like the voodoo-practicing Papa Shango, and formed the faction Right to Censor in 2000.[203] Big Boss Man (Ray Traylor), inducted posthumously following his 2004 death from a heart attack, embodied the corrections officer persona in WWF from 1988 to 1993 and a 1999 return, capturing the Hardcore Championship four times and a Tag Team Championship with One Man Gang (Akeem).[204] The Fabulous Freebirds—comprising Michael Hayes (who accepted on behalf of the group), the late Terry Gordy, Buddy Roberts, and Jimmy Garvin—were enshrined for their innovative faction dynamics, rock 'n' roll entrance themes like "Badstreet U.S.A.," and high-profile feuds originating in Mid-South Wrestling before limited WWF appearances in the 1980s; inducted by The New Day, they influenced tag team warfare despite visa issues curtailing a planned 1984 WWF invasion.[205] The Legacy inductees represented wrestling's formative years: Gotch, a two-time world heavyweight champion (1908–1913), dominated catch wrestling with submission holds; Hackenschmidt, the inaugural recognized world champion (1905), bridged Greco-Roman and catch styles across Europe and America; Lewis held the world title five times (1920–1935), pioneering the headlock and double wristlock in over 6,000 matches.[198]2017 Class
The WWE Hall of Fame Class of 2017 induction ceremony occurred on March 31, 2017, at the Amway Center in Orlando, Florida, the evening prior to WrestleMania 33.[206] The class comprised six inductees: Olympic gold medalist and multi-time world champion Kurt Angle as the headliner, former WWE Women's Champion Beth Phoenix, yoga and wellness advocate Diamond Dallas Page, longtime WWE ring announcer Teddy Long, posthumous honoree "Ravishing" Rick Rude, and tag team The Rock 'n' Roll Express (Ricky Morton and Robert Gibson).[207] Additionally, former Rutgers football player Eric LeGrand received the Warrior Award for his perseverance following a paralyzing spinal cord injury sustained in 2010.[208] The selections emphasized performers with significant WWE ties, including Angle's technical wrestling dominance, Rude's heel charisma during the 1980s and 1990s, and Phoenix's power-based style in the women's division.[209] Kurt Angle, who won a freestyle wrestling gold medal with a broken neck at the 1996 Summer Olympics, debuted in the WWF (WWE's predecessor) in 1999 and captured the WWF Championship in his debut pay-per-view match at Survivor Series that year, a feat underscoring his amateur pedigree and rapid adaptation to professional wrestling.[210] Over his initial WWE run through 2006, Angle secured four WWE Championships, a King of the Ring victory in 2000, and multiple tag team titles, blending suplexes, ankle locks, and comedic promos into a versatile career that bridged athletic legitimacy and entertainment.[211] Inducted by John Cena, Angle's speech highlighted his gratitude to WWE for elevating his post-Olympic path, though his returns in 2017 and beyond reflected ongoing physical tolls from the industry. "Ravishing" Rick Rude, who died of heart failure on April 20, 1999, at age 40, was posthumously inducted by Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat, recognizing Rude's role as a premier mid-card heel in WWF from 1987 to 1990.[212] Rude held the WWF Intercontinental Championship for 70 days in 1989 and feuded with top stars like Steamboat and Ultimate Warrior, employing a signature robe-entrance routine and microphone taunts that amplified his arrogant persona.[213] His family delivered an acceptance tribute reciting Rude's classic "Cut the music!" promo, emphasizing his influence on grooming and presentation in wrestling.[214] Beth Phoenix, whose real name is Elizabeth Kocianski, joined the class as the fifth woman inducted overall, honored for her nine-year WWE tenure from 2006 to 2012 and 2017 return stint.[215] As a dominant "Glamazon," she won the WWE Divas Championship once and Women's Championship three times, pioneering a strength-focused archetype with moves like the glam slam, and headlined events amid a division transitioning from smaller competitors.[216] During her speech, Phoenix surprised husband Edge (then retired due to neck injuries) by announcing his potential return, a moment tying her induction to family resilience in the high-injury profession.[217] Diamond Dallas Page (DDP), a WCW executive turned wrestler, earned induction for his late-career WWE appearances and broader contributions, including developing DDP Yoga, which aided rehabilitations of figures like Jake Roberts and Scott Hall.[218] In WWE from 2001 to 2002 and sporadic returns, Page won the European and Tag Team Championships, leveraging his Diamond Cutter finisher and motivational persona post-WCW's peak.[219] His enshrinement highlighted crossover appeal from rival promotions, with speeches crediting WWE for platforming his wellness innovations.[220] Teddy Long, a WWE employee since 1985, was inducted for over two decades as a referee, authority figure, and on-screen general manager, particularly his "Ladies and gentlemen, this match is a..." catchphrase preceding impromptu tag bouts on SmackDown.[218] Long officiated thousands of matches and managed SmackDown from 2004 to 2013, influencing storylines with his hip-hop flair and dance celebrations, though his role drew from traditional authority archetypes rather than in-ring prowess.[221] The Rock 'n' Roll Express—Morton and Gibson—represented tag team legacy, inducted by Jim Cornette for their high-energy style originating in the 1980s NWA territories but with WWE cameos in the 1990s and 2010s.[222] Known for mullets, double drops, and fan frenzies against heels like the Midnight Express, they held NWA tag titles multiple times but had limited WWE exposure until later house show runs, underscoring territorial roots in the induction.[223] Eric LeGrand, paralyzed from the neck down after a 2010 college football collision, received the Warrior Award for founding the Eric LeGrand Foundation, which raised over $1 million for spinal cord research by 2017, and broadcasting Rutgers games from a custom setup.[224] His honor, the third annual, aligned with WWE's post-Ultimate Warrior tribute to non-wrestlers exemplifying courage, as LeGrand walked short distances via exoskeleton by the ceremony.[208]2018 Class
The 2018 WWE Hall of Fame induction ceremony occurred on April 6, 2018, at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans, Louisiana, the evening before WrestleMania 34.[225] Hosted by Jerry Lawler, it streamed live on WWE Network with a condensed version airing the following night on USA Network.[226] The class highlighted wrestlers from WWE's Attitude and Ruthless Aggression eras alongside earlier contributors, emphasizing tag team excellence, athletic dominance, and entertainment impact.[227] Goldberg, inducted by Paul Heyman, earned recognition for his WCW undefeated streak of 173 matches from 1997 to 1998, during which he captured the WCW World Heavyweight Championship, and his 2016 WWE return that culminated in defeating Brock Lesnar for the Universal Championship.[227] The Dudley Boyz—Bubba Ray Dudley and D-Von Dudley—inducted by Edge and Christian, were honored as ECW originals who revolutionized hardcore tag team wrestling, amassing 11 world tag team titles across promotions including eight in WWE/ECW invasions.[227] Ivory, inducted by Molly Holly, stood out for pioneering women's wrestling with three WWF Women's Championships between 1999 and 2001, blending technical skill with character depth amid limited opportunities.[227] Jeff Jarrett, inducted by Road Dogg, received acclaim for his guitar-wielding heel persona and ladder match innovations, including a 1998 clash with Shawn Michaels that popularized the stipulation in WWE.[227] Mark Henry, inducted by Big Show, was celebrated for his 2011 World Heavyweight Championship reign and strongman feats, transitioning from Olympic weightlifter to versatile performer with the "Sexual Chocolate" gimmick.[227] Hillbilly Jim, inducted by Jimmy Hart, contributed as a 1980s babyface entertainer who drew crowds with his Appalachian persona and supported undercard talent.[227] Kid Rock entered the celebrity wing, inducted by Triple H, for his Attitude Era ties including entrance themes and WrestleMania performances that bridged music and wrestling.[227] The Warrior Award went to Jarrius "J.J." Robertson, a double liver transplant survivor and WWE fan advocate for organ donation, presented by Dana Warrior.[228] Ten legacy inductees were announced separately: Boris Malenko, Cora Combs, Dara Singh, El Santo, Hiro Matsuda, Jim Londos, Lord Alfred Hayes, Rufus R. Jones, Sputnik Monroe, and Stan Stasiak, acknowledging historical figures from territorial and international wrestling.[229]| Inductee | Category | Inductor | Key WWE/ECW Achievements |
|---|---|---|---|
| Goldberg | Wrestler | Paul Heyman | Universal Champion (2016); WCW dominance integrated into WWE storyline |
| The Dudley Boyz | Tag Team | Edge & Christian | 8 WWE/ECW Tag Titles; tables, ladders, and chairs innovation |
| Ivory | Wrestler | Molly Holly | 3 WWF Women's Titles; foundational women's division competitor |
| Jeff Jarrett | Wrestler | Road Dogg | Ladder match pioneer; Intercontinental Title contender |
| Mark Henry | Wrestler | Big Show | World Heavyweight Champion (2011); powerlifting-to-wrestling transition |
| Hillbilly Jim | Wrestler | Jimmy Hart | Midcard draw; managerial alliances in 1980s |
| Kid Rock | Celebrity | Triple H | Theme music provider; event performer |
2019 Class
The 2019 WWE Hall of Fame class featured a mix of group and individual inductees recognized for their contributions to professional wrestling, primarily within WWE and its predecessor promotions. The induction ceremony occurred on April 6, 2019, at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, as part of WrestleMania 35 weekend, and was broadcast live on the WWE Network.[230][231] Among the headliners was D-Generation X, a influential stable known for its rebellious attitude and impact on WWE's Attitude Era in the late 1990s and early 2000s.[230] D-Generation X's induction included core members Shawn Michaels, Triple H, and Chyna, alongside later additions Road Dogg, Billy Gunn (collectively the New Age Outlaws), and X-Pac; the group was presented by Sean Waltman (X-Pac) and emphasized their role in pushing creative boundaries, including crotch-chopping gestures and parody segments that drew mainstream attention.[230] The Hart Foundation, comprising Bret Hart and the late Jim Neidhart, was inducted for their dominance as WWE Tag Team Champions in the 1980s, winning titles twice (April 1987 and August 1990) and pioneering technical precision in tag team wrestling; Natalya inducted them, highlighting family legacy and Neidhart's passing in August 2018.[232] Individual honorees included The Honky Tonk Man, recognized for holding the Intercontinental Championship for a record 454 days from June 1987 to August 1988, and Torrie Wilson, noted for her role in WWE's women's division during the early 2000s, including multiple Playboy appearances that boosted her visibility.[233] The class also included the Warrior Award recipient, Sue Aitchison, WWE's long-serving Make-A-Wish liaison since 1987, who facilitated over 10,000 wishes for critically ill children through wrestling-themed experiences.[230] Legacy inductees, announced posthumously or for historical significance without ceremony appearances, encompassed Bruiser Brody (for his territorial hardcore style), Luna Vachon (for her unique gothic persona in the 1990s), Wahoo McDaniel (for NWA contributions), S.D. Jones, Professor Toro, Betty Mae England, and Duke Keomuka; these selections focused on pre-WWE eras to broaden the hall's scope.[234] The ceremony drew approximately 15,000 attendees and featured musical performances, underscoring WWE's emphasis on entertainment alongside athletic recognition.[231]2020 Class (virtual ceremony)
The WWE Hall of Fame Class of 2020 consisted of five inductees in the main categories, including the group New World Order (comprising Hulk Hogan, Kevin Nash, Scott Hall, and Sean Waltman, also known as X-Pac), wrestler Dave Bautista (known professionally as Batista), the tag team The Bella Twins (Nikki Bella and Brie Bella), the late wrestler Davey Boy Smith (known as British Bulldog, inducted posthumously), and Japanese wrestler Jushin Thunder Liger.[235][236] Additionally, actor William Shatner was inducted in the celebrity wing by wrestler Drew McIntyre, recognizing Shatner's appearances at WWE events such as WrestleMania 23 in 2007.[237] The Legacy wing added five members: Brickhouse Brown, Gary Hart, Baron Michele Leone, Ray Stevens, and Steve Williams (known as "Dr. Death" Steve Williams).[238] Originally scheduled for April 2, 2020, in Tampa, Florida, ahead of WrestleMania 36, the induction ceremony was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which led WWE to relocate WrestleMania to the Performance Center without live audiences.[239] The Class of 2020 was instead inducted during a combined ceremony with the Class of 2021 on April 6, 2021, at the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Florida, utilizing the ThunderDome production setup.[37] This format featured large LED screens displaying video feeds from thousands of fans attending virtually from home, simulating audience presence amid ongoing pandemic restrictions that prohibited in-person crowds.[240] Hosted by Jerry Lawler for the 2020 segment, the event was pre-taped and streamed exclusively on Peacock in the United States and WWE Network internationally, following the 2021 class inductions earlier in the evening.[37][241] Key highlights included the nWo's group induction speech, delivered in character with Hogan, Nash, Hall, and Waltman emphasizing their faction's disruptive impact on WCW and WWE storylines during the Monday Night Wars era, marking multiple inductions for each member (Hogan in 2005, Nash in 2015 as part of nWo wolfpac, Hall in 2014, Waltman in 2019 as X-Pac).[242] Batista's induction acknowledged his evolution from tag team competitor to multi-time world champion, spanning WWE, OVW developmental, and his 2014 return.[239] The Bella Twins' speech focused on their pioneering role in WWE's women's division and transition to media entrepreneurship, while Liger's honored his influence on high-flying and masked wrestling styles across promotions.[243] British Bulldog's posthumous induction was accepted by family members, highlighting his strength-based persona and Intercontinental Championship reign.[236] Legacy inductees were recognized via video packages without live speeches.[238]| Category | Inductee(s) | Notable Achievements |
|---|---|---|
| Group | New World Order (Hulk Hogan, Kevin Nash, Scott Hall, X-Pac) | Revolutionized wrestling factions; key to WCW's dominance in ratings during 1996–2002; multiple prior individual inductions.[235] |
| Individual Wrestler | Batista | Six world titles across WWE and other promotions; headlined WrestleMania 30; transitioned to Hollywood acting.[239] |
| Individual Wrestler | The Bella Twins (Nikki & Brie) | Divas Champions; elevated women's tag team wrestling; post-WWE ventures in reality TV and business.[236] |
| Individual Wrestler (Posthumous) | British Bulldog | Intercontinental Champion; European Champion; represented Hart family lineage in WWE.[236] |
| Individual Wrestler | Jushin Thunder Liger | NJPW junior heavyweight icon; influenced global cruiserweight style; rare WWE appearances in 1990s.[236] |
| Celebrity | William Shatner | Star Trek actor; participated in WWE segments including Cyber Sunday 2006 and WrestleMania 23.[237] |
| Legacy | Brickhouse Brown, Gary Hart, Baron Michele Leone, Ray Stevens, "Dr. Death" Steve Williams | Territorial era contributors; recognized for pre-WWF careers in promotions like AWA, Mid-South, and NWA territories.[238] |
2021 Class
The WWE Hall of Fame Class of 2021 was announced in stages leading up to WrestleMania 37, with inductees revealed via WWE programming and social media starting in March 2021.[244] The induction ceremony took place on April 6, 2021, at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida, produced in the WWE ThunderDome format without a live audience due to COVID-19 restrictions.[245] Corey Graves and Kayla Braxton hosted the 2021 portion of the event, which also incorporated the delayed 2020 class.[246] Key inductees included Rob Van Dam, a high-flying ECW and WWE champion known for his tenure as WWE Intercontinental Champion in 2006, where he held the title for a record 231 days as part of the longest-reigning champion streak in the title's history.[244] Molly Holly, a multi-time WWE Women's Champion, was recognized for her versatile performances across singles and tag team divisions from 2000 to 2005.[244] Eric Bischoff, former WCW executive vice president, received induction for his role in the Monday Night Wars, where WCW Nitro ratings peaked at 6.0 in 1997, surpassing WWE Raw viewership during the period.[244] Kane, portrayed by Glenn Jacobs, was honored for his 25-year career, including two WWE World Heavyweight Championship reigns and over 1,000 matches in WWE.[244] The Great Khali, Dalip Singh, earned recognition for his 7-foot-1 stature and 2007 World Heavyweight Championship win, WWE's first by an Indian wrestler.[244]| Inductee | Category | Notable Contributions |
|---|---|---|
| Rob Van Dam | Wrestler | ECW Original; WWE Intercontinental Champion (2006, 231-day reign) |
| Molly Holly | Wrestler | Three-time WWE Women's Champion; inaugural WWE Women's Hardcore Champion |
| Eric Bischoff | Non-Wrestler | WCW executive; created nWo storyline that drew peak ratings of 6.0 |
| Kane | Wrestler | Two-time World Heavyweight Champion; Hell in a Cell match participant (1998) |
| The Great Khali | Wrestler | World Heavyweight Champion (2007); first Indian WWE world champion |
