While many pro wrestlers find a successful [[TheGimmick gimmick]] (if they're lucky) and use it for the duration of their career (if they're not Wrestling/MickFoley) there is such a phenomenon as a [[StarMakingRole star-making match.]] A sub-trope, but probably not enough of one for its own page.

'''A Administrivia/{{No Recent Examples|please}} rule applies to this trope'''. To avoid any knee-jerk reactions, examples shouldn't be added until '''six months''' after the performer first appears in the role, or after the match that boosts their career to stardom (whichever comes later).
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* Wrestling/HulkHogan: He was already a big-time wrestling star for the Midwest-based Wrestling/AmericanWrestlingAssociation, thanks to his prolific role in the movie ''Film/RockyIII''. But the match that catapulted him into superstardom was his legendary match January 23, 1984, at New York's Madison Square Garden, where he defeated [[{{Heel}} hated]] Iranian wrestler Wrestling/TheIronSheik to win the WWF World Heavyweight Championship. The match broadcast live on the [=USA=] Network, allowing the nation to witness the birth of Hulkamania and see an American capture a huge victory over someone from one of the United States' most hated enemies, Iran.
** If that wasn't big, then his ''Wrestling/{{WrestleMania}} III'' bout with Wrestling/AndreTheGiant would be the one that catapulted him, and pro wrestling in general, to international stardom.
** Also from ''[=WrestleMania=] III'': Wrestling/RickySteamboat and the late Wrestling/RandySavage's [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/ic.html WWE Intercontinental Heavyweight Title]] match was a landmark for both competitors, showcasing that smaller wrestlers with tight work could steal the show and carry a crowd. It's frequently cited as one of the greatest matches of all time, and some aficionados say it's better than Hogan/Andre.
* For Wrestling/{{Sting}}, it's generally agreed to be his match against Ric Flair at the very first ''Clash of the Champions'' in 1988 that lasted 45 minutes and ended in a time limit draw.
* Though a regional and territorial star for years, Wrestling/RicFlair's breakout match on the national stage was the legendary "I Quit" match against Wrestling/TerryFunk at ''Wrestling/{{N|ationalWrestlingAlliance}}WA Clash of the Champions IX'' in November 1989. Because fans hadn't evolved to the "[[SmartMark smark]]" stage yet and weren't entirely in on the choreographed nature of the sport, Funk didn't come out of this match looking as good as Flair did with the fans. However, it got him over with other wrestlers and many cite this as one of their favorite matches.
* Wrestling/TheUndertaker had three: His debut at Wrestling/SurvivorSeries 1990, him defeating Wrestling/HulkHogan for the WWE title a year later or beating Wrestling/JimmySnuka at Wrestling/WrestleMania VII to start a historic streak.
* Wrestling/ShawnMichaels' ''Wrestling/{{Wrestlemania}} X'' effort in a Ladder Match against [[Wrestling/ScottHall Razor Ramon (Scott Hall)]], who sadly could never quite capitalize on his own momentum largely due to personal problems, or this might have been a double-sided SMR.
* Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin first got over with his ''King of the Ring'' win in 1996, but it was his submission match at ''Wrestling/{{WrestleMania}} 13'' with Wrestling/BretHart and subsequent HeelFaceTurn that solidified his standing.
* Wrestling/DiamondDallasPage started off as a generic midcard heel that few, if any people cared about. Then he made a HeelFaceTurn in January 1997 by standing up to the [[Wrestling/NewWorldOrder nWo]] and feuding with Randy Savage, which was voted "Feud of the Year" by PWI and cemented Page as the company's 3rd biggest babyface (behind Sting and Goldberg).
* For [[Wrestling/DwayneJohnson The Rock]], it's either his RealitySubtext fueled TakeThatAudience promo right after his initial FaceHeelTurn of 97 or his "I Quit" match against [[Wrestling/MickFoley Mankind]] in Wrestling/RoyalRumble 1999.
* Wrestling/{{Goldberg}}'s career STARTED this way. After having worked some non-televised matches, he made his surprise TV debut on the September 22, 1997 episode of ''Wrestling/WCWMondayNitro'' against [[Wrestling/BillDeMott Hugh Morrus]], where he became the first wrestler to kick out of Morrus' FinishingMove No Laughing Matter en route to winning the match. EVERYBODY was talking about Goldberg after that.
* For Wrestling/{{Kane}}, it's either his debut when he interfered in the match between Taker and HBK, his [[GimmickMatches Inferno match]] with Taker, or winning the WWE title from Stone Cold at King of the Ring 1998.
* Wrestling/MickFoley's [[GimmickMatches Hell In A Cell]] match with Wrestling/TheUndertaker at ''King of the Ring 1998'', possibly for all the wrong reasons.
** Though it was Mr. Socko that helped solidify Mankind as the CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass we know and Foley himself to superstardom.
* Speaking of double-sided Star Making Matches and ladders, The [[Wrestling/MattHardy Hardy]] [[Wrestling/JeffHardy Boyz]] and Wrestling/{{Edge|Wrestler}} and Wrestling/{{Christian}} broke out over a series of Ladder Matches against one another, started by an outstanding effort at ''No Mercy 1999''. The whole Hardyz/E&C feud is a [[SugarWiki/AwesomeMoments Crowning Series of Awesome]] for all four men.
** Wrestling/TheDudleyBoys became stars by making it a MeleeATrois with the above and adding tables as the first letter in TLC.
* Wrestling/TripleH escaped his past as Wrestling/ShawnMichaels' sidekick after his feud with and retiring of Wrestling/MickFoley in 2000. If you're looking for a ''specific'' match, it was the street fight at the Royal Rumble, still to this day considered by many to be the best match Triple H has ever been in.
* In October of 2001, All Pro Wrestling held its second "King of Indies" tournament, which ended up not only being a star making role for the winner, [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson American Dragon]], but for the US independent circuit as a whole, which for most of its history following the death of the territorial system, had been increasingly ignored. Granted, "star making" meant "look at all that talent I can take" rather than business booming for said independent promotions but the resulting success of most who were simply associated with the event such as Wrestling/SamoaJoe, Wrestling/LowKi, Bison Smith, Wrestling/AJStyles, [[Wrestling/LondonAndKendrick Spanky]], Donovan Morgan, Doug Williams, Adam Pearce, Scoot Andrews, Wrestling/FrankieKazarian and Super Dragon is still something to behold. The founding fathers of Wrestling/RingOfHonor, of Wrestling/{{TNA}}'s X Division, title runs in the Japanese majors of the time (Wrestling/NewJapanProWrestling, Wrestling/{{All Japan|ProWrestling}}, Wrestling/ProWrestlingNOAH, Wrestling/ProWrestlingZero1), helped bring life back into the NWA, etc. American Dragon himself would become the most over wrestler of the US since Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin to the point WWE couldn't successfully bury him. Wrestling/ChristopherDaniels, who already kind of was a star thanks to Wrestling/{{ECW}} and Wrestling/{{WCW}}, raised his profile in the previous KOI.
* Wrestling/JeffHardy became more of a legitimate Single Eventer after his praised ladder match with Wrestling/TheUndertaker in 2002. Later in 2008, his feud with Wrestling/TripleH cemented his new found Main Event Status.
* Wrestling/BrockLesnar pretty much became a legend after defeating Wrestling/TheRock at Wrestling/SummerSlam 2002 to be the then youngest WWE Champion in history.
* Wrestling/{{John Cena}} had two: His TV debut on Smackdown against Wrestling/KurtAngle and his Parking Lot Brawl against Wrestling/EddieGuerrero.
* The purpose of Wrestling/{{CMLL}}'s "Torneo Gran Alternativa" has always been to create a new star by pairing them alongside an established one and they really hit gold in 2004, or rather, silver and gold, when El Hijo del Santo won the event with Wrestling/{{Mistico}}, who would become not only the company's top draw, not only Mexico's biggest box office draw, but the most consistent draw of the decade.
* [[Wrestling/SarahStock Dark Angel]] relocated to Monterrey for the purpose of becoming a better wrestler and initially struggled with Mexico's style of lucha libre but in 2004 it paid off in a 45 minute mask vs mask match against Pricesa Sugehit that left her barefaced and bloody but started her on the road to stardom when CMLL decided was going to revive it's women's division and wanted them both to be a part of it. The match undoubtedly helped Sugehit too but she had been on Wrestling/{{AAA}} cards for years while Stock's bookings there had taken a nosedive after one, making her benefit a lot more obvious.
* Dru Onyx and Wrestling/FergalDevitt established themselves as stars after their championship match for the British Commonwealth belt at the 57th Wrestling/{{N|ationalWrestlingAlliance}}WA anniversary show in October of 2005, which earned both an invitation to the [[Wrestling/AntonioInoki Inoki]] Dojo. Wrestling/{{New Japan|ProWrestling}} ended up not signing Onyx but Devitt would establish two successful {{tag team}}s in the junior heavyweight division with Minoru Tanaka and Ryusuke Taguchi, as well as found Wrestling/BulletClub.
* Wrestling/{{Edge|Wrestler}} had already built up quite the midcard following thanks to the above mentioned three-way feud between him and Christian, the Hardy Boys, and the Dudley Boys in the early 2000s, but most people didn't take him seriously as a main event talent, even after winning his first WWE title at Wrestling/NewYearsRevolution 2006. He didn't get his big break as a singles competitor until he and Mick Foley put on a brutal hardcore match at Wrestling/WrestleMania 22.
* Wrestling/CMPunk had been an indy darling for years (mostly known for his "UsefulNotes/StraightEdge" gimmick being unique in the pro wrestling landscape) but stagnated in Wrestling/{{WWE}}. Towards the end of a six year contract, facing an uncertain future, Punk grabbed a microphone and dropped a legendary worked shoot promo three weeks before ''Money in the Bank 2011''. He went on to win the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-h.html WWE Championship Title]] from Wrestling/JohnCena at the event and solidified himself as a major star. (He probably would have left the company for real had he not cut that promo.) Nearly a year later, after several high-profile matches with some of WWE's top stars, a lengthy WWE title reign, a stellar program with the legendary Wrestling/ChrisJericho, and a ''[=WrestleMania=]'' main event match one could argue he became one of the the biggest stars in the business.
* Wrestling/RingOfHonor had been uncharacteristically pushing Michael Elgin as increasingly NobleTopEnforcer for the House Of Truth, generally squashing most of their "opposition"(hopeless locals not even expecting to see him due to Truth Martini [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney paying off their opponents to let Elgin take their place]]) but then in early 2012 came a joint venture with Wrestling/DragonGate USA and Ring Warriors where Elgin and Davey Richards unexpectedly tore the house down and stole the show, catapulting Elgin into the main event. He'd have another at the 2015 [[TournamentArc G1 Climax]] against Wrestling/KazuchikaOkada, which established him as a star in Wrestling/{{New Japan|ProWrestling}} and lead to him being picked up by Liga Elite and Wrestling/{{CMLL}} the next year.
* Sometimes, ''losing'' a match could be the best thing to ever happen to your career, as [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson Daniel Bryan]] found out at ''Wrestling/WrestleMania 28'' after an 18-second loss against Sheamus. While he was an independent legend beforehand and his NXT angle was very well-received, after that squashing, he quickly became one of the most popular wrestlers on the roster.
* Wrestling/AJLee's big star-making moment was, well, her being Daniel Bryan's valet during his World Heavyweight Championship run.
* Wrestling/PaulHeyman had been a wrestling reporter creative personality and an announcer for years, but he credits the Dangerous Alliance with putting him on the map.
* Wrestling/LuchaUnderground has had a few:
** Mil Muertes was already a made man from his debut, but when he feuded with Fenix over the affections of Catrina, culminating in the literally ''murderous'' Grave Consequences match, it raised his stock considerably (or at least raised anticipation for his return) and made Fenix one of the top stars in the promotion. And when his return led to a death match where he ''destroyed'' Fenix, he solidified himself as one of the most terrifying men in all of wrestling.
** Pentagon Jr. started out as just one of multiple masked wrestlers and fell into being a flunky for Wrestling/ChavoGuerreroJr, but after Chavo turned on him at Aztec Warfare he found a "Master" and started breaking the arms of jobbers, causing people to really sit up and start to take notice. His subsequent feud culminating in a ''brutal'' hardcore match against wrestling legend Vampiro at Ultima Lucha made him for life, particularly with TheReveal that [[MagnificentBastard Vampiro]] was his master all along. Now he's LU champion.
** Drago's five match series with Aerostar for the first of Dario Cueto's "unique opportunities" put both men on the map, for Aerostar's incredible high-flying ability and Drago's peerless psychology.
** Matanza's shocking debut as the 21st man in Aztec Warfare 2 was instantly hailed as the greatest WrestlingMonster debut since Wrestling/{{Kane}}. With the ring still full of competitors, they all tried to [[EnemyMine gang up on the monstrous newcomer]] and [[DogPileOfDoom bury him at once]], but instead he [[OneManArmy single-handedly]] destroyed '' everyone,'' starting by eliminating then-champion Fenix with one move, and finishing by annihilating the legendary and also-debuting Wrestling/ReyMysterioJr to win the Lucha Underground Championship in his first match, which still didn't feel rushed because it was obvious he was '''that''' devastating.
** Marty "the Moth" Martinez had faced a slow climb from JokeCharacter to a heel that people could take seriously during his Season 2 feud with his sister [[Wrestling/CheerleaderMelissa Mariposa]] against the pair of Sexy Star and The Mack, but it was when he moved on to feud with [[Wrestling/SwerveStrickland Killshot]] that he ''really'' proved his mettle. The Weapons of Mass Destruction match early in Season 3 guaranteed that ''nobody'' would think of the Moth as a joke ever again, and it made a star out of Killshot too.
** Speaking of Killshot, he came out of his feud with Marty looking great, but his subsequent feud with debuting embittered former friend Dante Fox elevated him to the next level. But that's nothing compared to how it made ''Fox'' look. The culmination of the feud at Ultima Lucha Tres stole not only the show but almost the entire ''season,'' and made Fox in particular look like the next big thing. Indeed, both men joined with The Mack to capture the Trios belts only two weeks later.
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