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In fact, The Undertaker's tombstone piledriver continued to be his finishing move until his retirement in 2020. [8] The piledriver is also banned in many other promotions and certain cities. It is also considered an automatic disqualification in professional wrestling matches held in Tennessee, as the move is banned in that state.
Upon his repackaging as Kane in 1997, Jacobs proceeded to utilize the chokeslam and the tombstone piledriver as finishers, taking after his older half-brother in storyline, The Undertaker. In 2001, Jacobs adopted a falling powerbomb as a finisher, reminiscent of The Undertaker's " Last Ride ".
Kane then made he made his entrance and when he got to the ring, Kane hit Rose with a tombstone piledriver in one of the most iconic wrestling moments involving a celebrity.
Moxley delivered a suicide dive to Takeshita and a lariat in the ring. Takeshita performed an overhook tombstone piledriver followed by a wheelbarrow suplex and then attempted the Powerdrive Knee, but Moxley impeded with the Paradigm Shift. Takeshita delivered a pair of elbow strikes and the Powerdrive Knee for a two-count.
In the wrestling world, the move is known as a “tombstone piledriver.” That wrestler, Glenn Jacobs, eventually made a foray into politics, too, and is now the mayor of Knox County in Tennessee.
After Undertaker attacked Chavo, Vickie pleaded with Undertaker for forgiveness for her actions. Undertaker, however, once again hit her with a Tombstone Piledriver, forcing Vickie to rely on both a neckbrace and a wheelchair again. Over the following weeks, Vickie put the Undertaker in matches against the Big Show that seemed impossible for ...
After suffering a Pedigree, a Sweet Chin Music, and multiple chair and sledgehammer shots, Undertaker came back and executed a Tombstone Piledriver; however, Triple H kicked out. Triple H delivered one more Pedigree before The Undertaker kicked out, took back control, performed another Tombstone , and won the match to extend his undefeated ...
In Your House was a series of monthly professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) events first produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) in May 1995. They aired when the promotion was not holding one of its then-five major PPVs (WrestleMania, King of the Ring, SummerSlam, Survivor Series, and Royal Rumble), and were sold at a lower cost.