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The Undertaker then chokeslammed A-Train and, since the referee had recuperated, covered his opponent for the pinfall. After the match, Sable tried to seduce The Undertaker, but was grabbed by the throat and then was attacked by a returning Stephanie McMahon. [29] The third match Shane McMahon against Eric Bischoff.
The Undertaker after his match. In the next match, The Undertaker and Nathan Jones faced Big Show and A-Train in a tag team match. Earlier in the night on Sunday Night Heat, Jones was attacked and beaten down by the FBI. It was then announced that The Undertaker would have to face both Big Show and A-Train in a handicap match.
Vengeance was an annual pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) since 2001. [1] While the 2002 event had featured wrestlers from both the Raw and SmackDown! brands, [2] the 2003 event, however, was promoted as a SmackDown!-exclusive PPV, only featuring wrestlers from that brand.
Jones helped The Undertaker win by delivering kicks to both Big Show and A-Train, and allowing The Undertaker to hit a Tombstone Piledriver on A-Train to get the pinfall win. This bout at WrestleMania XIX would be the final match The Undertaker would have under the "American Badass" persona. [48]
The Undertaker put Lesnar in a dragon sleeper. After getting out of the hold, Lesnar executed a F-5 to The Undertaker. Lesnar made an attempt to go for the chain, but The Undertaker performed a chokeslam off the top rope. Following this, The Full Blooded Italians interfered in the match, trying to
A-Train continued the feud with The Undertaker by costing him a match against John Cena on the August 7 episode of SmackDown!. This culminated in a match between A-Train and The Undertaker at SummerSlam , which A-Train lost.
A-Train entered the storyline by attempting to attack The Undertaker after the match, but Nathan Jones came to his aid. [134] The storyline resumed as The Undertaker began to train Jones to wrestle and the two were scheduled to fight Big Show and A-Train in a tag team match at WrestleMania XIX on March 30. [56]
Survivor Series is an annual gimmick pay-per-view (PPV), produced every November by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) since 1987. In what has become the second longest running pay-per-view event in history (behind WWE's WrestleMania), it is one of the promotion's original four pay-per-views, along with WrestleMania, Royal Rumble, and SummerSlam, referred to as the "Big Four". [2]