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The screwjob actually qualifies as HilariousInHindsight when you consider how Hart ''won'' his first title in the WWF. The Hart Foundation (Hart and brother-in-law Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, w/non-relative manager [[Wrestling/JimmyHart "The Mouth of the South" Jimmy Hart]]) defeated the British Bulldogs (The Dynamite Kid and cousin Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith- another brother-in-law, though not acknowledged as such at the time) for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-t.html WWF World Tag Team Titles]] on the February 7, 1987 (taped January 26) episode of ''WWF Superstars'' due to referee Danny Davis generally ignoring the Harts' constant double-teaming and spending most of the time checking on the injured Dynamite Kid. After the Harts won the match, Davis left with them.

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The screwjob actually qualifies as HilariousInHindsight when you consider how Hart ''won'' his first title in the WWF. The Hart Foundation (Hart and brother-in-law Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, w/non-relative manager [[Wrestling/JimmyHart "The Mouth of the South" Jimmy Hart]]) defeated the British Bulldogs (The ([[Wrestling/DynamiteKid The Dynamite Kid Kid]] and cousin Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith- another brother-in-law, though not acknowledged as such at the time) for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-t.html WWF World Tag Team Titles]] on the February 7, 1987 (taped January 26) episode of ''WWF Superstars'' due to referee Danny Davis generally ignoring the Harts' constant double-teaming and spending most of the time checking on the injured Dynamite Kid. After the Harts won the match, Davis left with them.
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The screwjob actually qualifies as HilariousInHindsight when you consider how Hart ''won'' his first title in the WWF. The Hart Foundation (Hart and brother-in-law Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, w/non-relative manager "The Mouth of the South" Jimmy Hart) defeated the British Bulldogs (The Dynamite Kid and cousin Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith- another brother-in-law, though not acknowledged as such at the time) for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-t.html WWF World Tag Team Titles]] on the February 7, 1987 (taped January 26) episode of ''WWF Superstars'' due to referee Danny Davis generally ignoring the Harts' constant double-teaming and spending most of the time checking on the injured Dynamite Kid. After the Harts won the match, Davis left with them.

to:

The screwjob actually qualifies as HilariousInHindsight when you consider how Hart ''won'' his first title in the WWF. The Hart Foundation (Hart and brother-in-law Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, w/non-relative manager [[Wrestling/JimmyHart "The Mouth of the South" Jimmy Hart) Hart]]) defeated the British Bulldogs (The Dynamite Kid and cousin Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith- another brother-in-law, though not acknowledged as such at the time) for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-t.html WWF World Tag Team Titles]] on the February 7, 1987 (taped January 26) episode of ''WWF Superstars'' due to referee Danny Davis generally ignoring the Harts' constant double-teaming and spending most of the time checking on the injured Dynamite Kid. After the Harts won the match, Davis left with them.
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Even before it became a running gag, other promotions were ''already'' parodying it. At ''Wrestling/{{ECW}} November to Remember '97'' PPV, held a mere ''three weeks'' later, Al Snow, in the early months of his carrying around a mannequin head [[TheGimmick gimmick]], cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!" Even ''Creator/ScottKeith'' thought it was funny.

to:

Even before it became a running gag, other promotions were ''already'' parodying it. At ''Wrestling/{{ECW}} November to Remember '97'' PPV, held a mere ''three weeks'' later, Al Snow, Wrestling/AlSnow, in the early months of his carrying around a mannequin head [[TheGimmick gimmick]], cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!" Even ''Creator/ScottKeith'' thought it was funny.
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** [[Wrestling/ShaneMcMahon Shane [=McMahon=]]] defeated Michaels the the March 18, 2006 ''Saturday Night's Main Event'' when he put an unconscious Michaels in the Sharpshooter, and Vince ordered the bell to be rung, and Shane to be announced as winner by submission.

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** [[Wrestling/ShaneMcMahon Shane [=McMahon=]]] defeated Michaels the on the March 18, 2006 ''Saturday Night's Main Event'' when he put an unconscious Michaels in the Sharpshooter, and Vince ordered the bell to be rung, and Shane to be announced as winner by submission.
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* [[FountainOfExpies Iconic Moment]] The screwjob itself, obviously. However, a little over 12 years later, on January 4 2010, Hart finally returned to the WWE as one of many ''Raw'' guest hosts. His first order of business was to call out Michaels. The pair of them traded stories back and forth, finally apologized and hugged it out. Though they'll never be close friends, they're able to stand the site of one another now. They even chronicled their rivalry in a DVD hosted by Jim Ross.

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* [[FountainOfExpies Iconic Moment]] The screwjob itself, obviously. However, a little over 12 years later, on January 4 4, 2010, Hart finally returned to the WWE as one of many ''Raw'' guest hosts. His first order of business was to call out Michaels. The pair of them traded stories back and forth, finally apologized and hugged it out. Though they'll never be close friends, they're able to stand the site of one another now. They even chronicled their rivalry in a DVD hosted by Jim Ross.
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** ''Breaking Point 2009'' had Wrestling/CMPunk lock The Undertaker in the Anaconda Vice. Despite Undertaker ''escaping the hold'', Theodore Long rang the bell and declared Punk the winner by submission. This match was actually a ''double'' screwjob. A few minutes earlier, Undertaker made Punk tap out with Hell's Gate, but Long declared that it didn't count and ordered the match to continue.

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** ''Breaking Point 2009'' 2009''[[note]]That was coincidentally held in Montreal[[/note]] had Wrestling/CMPunk lock The Undertaker in the Anaconda Vice. Despite Undertaker ''escaping the hold'', Theodore Long rang the bell and declared Punk the winner by submission. This match was actually a ''double'' screwjob. A few minutes earlier, Undertaker made Punk tap out with Hell's Gate, but Long declared that it didn't count and ordered the match to continue.
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Even before it became a running gag, other promotions were ''already'' parodying it. At ''Wrestling/{{ECW}} November to Remember '97'' PPV, held a mere ''three weeks'' later, Al Snow, in the early months of his carrying around a mannequin head [[TheGimmick gimmick]], cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!" Even ''ScottKeith'' thought it was funny.

to:

Even before it became a running gag, other promotions were ''already'' parodying it. At ''Wrestling/{{ECW}} November to Remember '97'' PPV, held a mere ''three weeks'' later, Al Snow, in the early months of his carrying around a mannequin head [[TheGimmick gimmick]], cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!" Even ''ScottKeith'' ''Creator/ScottKeith'' thought it was funny.
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In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the World Wrestling Federation]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of [[Wrestling/{{WCW}} World Championship Wrestling]]. The Wrestling/MondayNightWars were in full swing and the Wrestling/NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[Wrestling/{{VinceMcMahon}} Vince [=McMahon=]]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and [McMahon=] himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].

to:

In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the World Wrestling Federation]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of [[Wrestling/{{WCW}} World Championship Wrestling]]. The Wrestling/MondayNightWars were in full swing and the Wrestling/NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[Wrestling/{{VinceMcMahon}} Vince [=McMahon=]]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and [McMahon=] [=McMahon=] himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].

Changed: 1009

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'''''The Montreal Screwjob''''' is one of the most important events in the history of ProfessionalWrestling.

In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the WWF]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of Wrestling/{{WCW}}. The Wrestling/MondayNightWars were in full swing and the Wrestling/NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[Wrestling/{{VinceMcMahon}} Vince [=McMahon=]]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and Vince himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].

In 1996, Bret had signed an unprecedented twenty-year deal with the WWF for a considerable amount of money -- but with Vince losing his shirt thanks to WCW, he felt that he would have to breach Bret's contract in order to keep the company alive; [=McMahon=] has been accused by Hart and others of exaggerating his financial situation at the time. Backstage tension between Hart and fellow performer Wrestling/ShawnMichaels were also reaching a boiling point around this time, and the fiscal security that the WCW contract offered was enough to get Bret to jump ship: in November 1997, Hart -- then the reigning WWF Champion -- signed a contract with WCW for a guaranteed ''three million dollars per year''.

Hart's last appearance on WWF programming would be ''Wrestling/SurvivorSeries 1997'' (taking place in Montreal), where he faced Shawn Michaels in the main event for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-h.html WWE Championship Title]]. The event was not scheduled to be Bret's last booking with the WWF, as his working agreement ran for three weeks after the pay-per-view, and he had received verbal approval from WCW to work another PPV in early December where he likely would have dropped the title in a four-way match to either Shawn Michaels (if Michaels agreed to lose at Montreal) or another wrestler who would later lose to Shawn (if Michaels refused to job). Michaels refused to lose the ''Survivor Series'' match to Hart under any circumstances, and Bret made it clear that he would not lose to Michaels in Montreal. The exit clause in Hart's aforementioned contract required that Bret and Vince come to an agreement regarding any booking decisions regarding Hart, leaving him with all the cards. The pair's mutual stubbornness placed Vince between the proverbial rock and a hard place.

The original plan for the match's finish (according to Bret) was for Shawn to use Bret's famous Sharpshooter submission hold against him while the referee was down. After Shawn applied the hold, Bret would reverse it, and feuding factions [[Wrestling/{{DGenerationX}} DeGeneration X]] (which Michaels was a part of) and the Hart Foundation (which Bret led) would run in and cause the match to be tossed out, leaving Bret open to drop the title at the four-way match the next month (Bret briefly discussed simply giving up the title on TV, but at that point, Vince was committed to the Screwjob, and he agreed to nearly anything Bret said in order to get Hart to perform at ''Survivor Series'').

Vince was still angry over then-[[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwf-wm.html WWE Women's Champion]] [[Characters/WWEDivas Alundra Blayze]] tossing the WWF Women's Championship belt in the trash live on WCW's ''Nitro'', and he was afraid Bret would show up on WCW programming with the WWF Championship and toss that belt in the trash (or worse) --despite the fact that multiple lawsuits had been filed regarding the Blayze incident (and an earlier incident with Wrestling/RicFlair taking WCW's World Championship belt with him to the WWF). Since Bret refused to drop the belt to Shawn in Canada, Vince was worried about the possibility of Bret jumping ship with the championship belt.

Well, that was ''Vince's'' story, anyway. More recent analyses by wrestling critics/historians says that the people pressuring Bischoff to sign Hart didn't want him to get over -- Bret was kept on the WCW shelf for over a month before popping a buyrate with the then-considered-washed-up Flair and being buried in pointless US Title feuds -- and the real reason for the Screwjob on Vince's end was the fact Bret was earning just shy of two million dollars per year [compared to Shawn's $750,000 per year]. Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin and Wrestling/TheUndertaker were negotiating new contracts at this point; when they compared themselves to the highest paid guy -- Bret Hart -- Vince got ''really'' scared.

A plot was hatched and carried out the night of ''Survivor Series'': when Bret was caught in the Sharpshooter by Michaels, Vince ran down to the ring and ordered the referee (Earl Hebner) to ring the bell as if Bret had submitted to the hold (despite Bret clearly not submitting in any fashion). This singular moment -- known today as the "Montreal Screwjob" -- was one of the most controversial and shocking events in the history of ''the entire pro wrestling industry''. The Screwjob not only sent Bret packing to WCW without a real sendoff, but it also had a hand in destroying {{kayfabe}} for many fans around the world, and it served as the launching pad for the [[CorruptCorporateExecutive "Mr. [=McMahon=]" character]], which was played full hilt by Vince -- who famously said the next night on ''Raw'' that "Bret screwed Bret" -- as he feuded with [[{{Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin}} "Stone Cold" Steve Austin]] during the Attitude Era.

The screwjob actually qualifies as HilariousInHindsight when you consider how Bret ''won'' his first title in WWE. The Hart Foundation (Bret and brother-in-law Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, w/non-relative manager "The Mouth of the South" Jimmy Hart) defeated the British Bulldogs (The Dynamite Kid and cousin Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith- another brother-in-law, though not acknowledged as such at the time) for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-t.html WWE World Tag Team Titles]] on the February 7, 1987 (taped January 26) episode of ''WWF Superstars'' due to referee Danny Davis generally ignoring the Harts' constant double-teaming and spending most of the time checking on the injured Dynamite Kid. After the Harts won the match, Davis left with them.

Even before it became a running gag, other promotions were ''already'' parodying it. At ''Wrestling/{{ECW}} November to Remember '97'' PPV, held a mere ''three weeks'' later, Al Snow, in the early months of his carrying around a mannequin head [[TheGimmick gimmick]], cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!" Even '''ScottKeith''' thought it was funny.

Bret left the WWF and spent three years [[DemotedToExtra floundering around in WCW]] thanks to crappy booking and nobody really knowing what to do with someone who was -- at the time -- ''the hottest free agent in ProfessionalWrestling'' (something that ''Vince himself'' predicted would happen). Thanks to an errant kick by Goldberg during a match, Hart suffered a career-ending concussion and has been retired from in-ring action ever since (a stroke suffered after his retirement has ensured that, save for special circumstances where he doesn't have to take a bump, he'll never be able to perform in the ring again). Following his retirement, Bret had very little love lost for WWE -- thanks both to the Screwjob and the death of his brother [[Wrestling/OwenHart Owen]] in 1999 -- but managed to put his animosity aside to help preserve his legacy, working with WWE to produce a DVD set that was widely acclaimed as being a great retrospective on his career ([[WhatCouldHaveBeen it was initially going to be a smearjob set called "Screwed"]] until Bret heard about the plans). In 2006, Bret accepted induction into the WWE Hall of Fame, making his first appearance on WWE programming of any kind in nearly a decade to accept the honor. A few years later, Bret signed up again with the WWE to ensure that he got a proper and honorable exit from the business (see below).

Shawn spent the next few months as the WWF Champion, but back injuries suffered during a Casket Match with The Undertaker at ''Wrestling/RoyalRumble 1998'' eventually caught up to him. Following his loss to Steve Austin at ''WrestleMania 14'' (where he performed despite his injury causing him severe pain), Michaels spent the next four years on the shelf, making sporadic appearances for WWE while he slowly healed up. In this interim, Shawn not only admitted that he was aware of the plan to screw over Bret, but he became a born-again Christian. Shawn made his return to active competition in 2002; he remained one of WWE's most popular and skilled performers until his retirement at ''[=WrestleMania=] 26''.

In December 2009, Bret confirmed that he would return to WWE in 2010 to guest host the first ''Raw'' of the year (his first appearance on ''Raw'' in over twelve years), and during that show's opening segment, [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments Bret made his peace with Shawn in the middle of the ring]] in one of the most surreal moments in wrestling history. He was (kayfabe) attacked by Vince at the end of the show, which set up an angle that led up to ''[=WrestleMania=] 26'', where Vince faced Bret in a "No Holds Barred" Match. Although Vince tried to bribe the rest of the Hart family into screwing Bret over again, they knew it was coming and double-crossed [=McMahon=], allowing Bret to finally make Vince pay for Montreal (via thirteen chairshots and The Sharpshooter) and get the full closure he'd been looking for. (As part of the angle, Bret's father -- legendary Canadian wrestling promoter/trainer and patriarch of the Hart family, the late Stu Hart -- was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame.) After ''[=WrestleMania=]'', he appeared sporadically to help put over The Hart Dynasty (David Hart Smith, Tyson Kidd, and [[Wrestling/NatalyaNeidheart Natalya]]) and serve as ''Raw's'' General Manager for a brief period (he was eventually taken out by Wrestling/TheNexus). Both Bret and Shawn continue to make special "cameo" appearances at WWE events to this day.

In late 2011, WWE released ''Greatest Rivalries: Shawn Michaels vs. Bret Hart'' on DVD and BluRay; the set -- a first-of-its-kind release for WWE -- was dedicated to the long rivalry between Hart and Michaels, which stretched back all the way to the feud between The Rockers and The Hart Foundation. The real meat of the DVD was Wrestling/JimRoss' sitdown interview with both Hart and Michaels, who discussed their careers and their rivalry -- including the Screwjob -- at length. The DVD pretty firmly backs Bret Hart's side of the story, with Ross conceding that no one in the WWE had any fear of Bret pulling a Ric Flair with the belt, and that he had acted reasonably regarding the Survivor Series finish. The set was generally regarded as being one of WWE's best in years.

to:

'''''The Montreal Screwjob''''' The '''Montreal Screwjob''' is one of the most important events in the history of ProfessionalWrestling.

[[ProfessionalWrestling professional wrestling]].

In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the WWF]] World Wrestling Federation]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of Wrestling/{{WCW}}.[[Wrestling/{{WCW}} World Championship Wrestling]]. The Wrestling/MondayNightWars were in full swing and the Wrestling/NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[Wrestling/{{VinceMcMahon}} Vince [=McMahon=]]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and Vince [McMahon=] himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].

In 1996, Bret Hart had signed an unprecedented twenty-year deal with the WWF for a considerable amount of money -- but with Vince [=McMahon=] losing his shirt thanks to WCW, he felt that he would have to breach Bret's Hart's contract in order to keep the company alive; [=McMahon=] has been accused by Hart and others of exaggerating his financial situation at the time. Backstage tension between Hart and fellow performer Wrestling/ShawnMichaels were also reaching a boiling point around this time, and the fiscal security that the WCW contract offered was enough to get Bret to jump ship: in November 1997, Hart -- then the reigning WWF Champion -- signed a contract with WCW for a guaranteed ''three million dollars per year''.

Hart's last appearance on WWF programming would be ''Wrestling/SurvivorSeries 1997'' (taking place in Montreal), where he faced Shawn Michaels in the main event for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-h.html WWE Championship Title]]. WWF Championship]]. The event was not scheduled to be Bret's Hart's last booking with the WWF, as his working agreement ran for three weeks after the pay-per-view, and he had received verbal approval from WCW to work another PPV in early December where he likely would have dropped the title in a four-way match to either Shawn Michaels (if Michaels agreed to lose at Montreal) or another wrestler who would later lose to Shawn Michaels (if Michaels refused to job). Michaels refused to lose the ''Survivor Series'' match to Hart under any circumstances, and Bret Hart made it clear that he would not lose to Michaels in Montreal. The exit clause in Hart's aforementioned contract required that Bret Hart and Vince [=McMahon=] come to an agreement regarding any booking decisions regarding Hart, leaving him with all the cards. The pair's mutual stubbornness placed Vince [=McMahon=] between the proverbial rock and a hard place.

The original plan for the match's finish (according to Bret) Hart) was for Shawn Michaels to use Bret's Hart's famous Sharpshooter submission hold against him while the referee was down. After Shawn Michaels applied the hold, Bret Hart would reverse it, and feuding factions [[Wrestling/{{DGenerationX}} DeGeneration D-Generation X]] (which Michaels was a part of) and the Hart Foundation (which Bret Hart led) would run in and cause the match to be tossed out, leaving Bret Hart open to drop the title at the four-way match the next month (Bret (Hart briefly discussed simply giving up the title on TV, but at that point, Vince [=McMahon=] was committed to the Screwjob, and he agreed to nearly anything Bret Hart said in order to get Hart to perform at ''Survivor Series'').

Vince [=McMahon=] was still angry over then-[[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwf-wm.html WWE WWF Women's Champion]] [[Characters/WWEDivas Alundra Blayze]] tossing the WWF Women's Championship belt in the trash live on WCW's ''Nitro'', and he was afraid Bret Hart would show up on WCW programming with the WWF Championship and toss that belt in the trash (or worse) --despite the fact that multiple lawsuits had been filed regarding the Blayze incident (and an earlier incident with Wrestling/RicFlair taking WCW's World Championship belt with him to the WWF). Since Bret Hart refused to drop the belt to Shawn Michaels in Canada, Vince [=McMahon=] was worried about the possibility of Bret jumping ship with the championship belt.

Well, that was ''Vince's'' ''[=McMahon=]'s'' story, anyway. More recent analyses by wrestling critics/historians says that the people pressuring Bischoff to sign Hart didn't want him to get over -- Bret Hart was kept on the WCW shelf for over a month before popping a buyrate with the then-considered-washed-up Flair and being buried in pointless US United States Title feuds -- and the real reason for the Screwjob on Vince's [=McMahon=]'s end was the fact Bret Hart was earning just shy of two million dollars per year [compared to Shawn's Michaels' $750,000 per year]. Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin and Wrestling/TheUndertaker were negotiating new contracts at this point; when they compared themselves to the highest paid guy -- Bret Hart -- Vince [=McMahon=] got ''really'' scared.

A plot was hatched and carried out the night of ''Survivor Series'': when Bret Hart was caught in the Sharpshooter by Michaels, Vince ran down to the ring and ordered the referee (Earl Hebner) to ring the bell as if Bret had submitted to the hold (despite Bret Hart clearly not submitting in any fashion). This singular moment -- known today as the "Montreal Screwjob" -- was one of the most controversial and shocking events in the history of ''the entire pro wrestling industry''. The Screwjob not only sent Bret Hart packing to WCW without a real sendoff, but it also had a hand in destroying {{kayfabe}} for many fans around the world, and it served as the launching pad for the [[CorruptCorporateExecutive "Mr. [=McMahon=]" character]], which was played full hilt by Vince [=McMahon=] -- who famously said the next night on ''Raw'' that "Bret screwed Bret" -- as he feuded with [[{{Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin}} "Stone Cold" Steve Austin]] during the Attitude Era.

The screwjob actually qualifies as HilariousInHindsight when you consider how Bret Hart ''won'' his first title in WWE. the WWF. The Hart Foundation (Bret (Hart and brother-in-law Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, w/non-relative manager "The Mouth of the South" Jimmy Hart) defeated the British Bulldogs (The Dynamite Kid and cousin Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith- another brother-in-law, though not acknowledged as such at the time) for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-t.html WWE WWF World Tag Team Titles]] on the February 7, 1987 (taped January 26) episode of ''WWF Superstars'' due to referee Danny Davis generally ignoring the Harts' constant double-teaming and spending most of the time checking on the injured Dynamite Kid. After the Harts won the match, Davis left with them.

Even before it became a running gag, other promotions were ''already'' parodying it. At ''Wrestling/{{ECW}} November to Remember '97'' PPV, held a mere ''three weeks'' later, Al Snow, in the early months of his carrying around a mannequin head [[TheGimmick gimmick]], cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!" Even '''ScottKeith''' ''ScottKeith'' thought it was funny.

Bret Hart left the WWF and spent three years [[DemotedToExtra floundering around in WCW]] thanks to crappy booking and nobody really knowing what to do with someone who was -- at the time -- ''the hottest free agent in ProfessionalWrestling'' professional wrestling'' (something that ''Vince ''[=McMahon=] himself'' predicted would happen). Thanks to an errant kick by Goldberg during a match, Hart suffered a career-ending concussion and has been retired from in-ring action ever since (a stroke suffered after his retirement has ensured that, save for special circumstances where he doesn't have to take a bump, he'll never be able to perform in the ring again). Following his retirement, Bret Hart had very little love lost for WWE WWF -- thanks both to the Screwjob and the death of his brother [[Wrestling/OwenHart Owen]] in 1999 -- but managed to put his animosity aside to help preserve his legacy, working with WWE to produce a DVD set that was widely acclaimed as being a great retrospective on his career ([[WhatCouldHaveBeen it was initially going to be a smearjob set called "Screwed"]] ''Screwed'']] until Bret Hart heard about the plans). In 2006, Bret Hart accepted induction into the WWE Hall of Fame, making his first appearance on WWE programming of any kind in nearly a decade to accept the honor. A few years later, Bret Hart signed up again with the WWE to ensure that he got a proper and honorable exit from the business (see below).

Shawn Michaels spent the next few months as the WWF Champion, but back injuries suffered during a Casket Match with The Undertaker at ''Wrestling/RoyalRumble 1998'' eventually caught up to him. Following his loss to Steve Austin at ''WrestleMania 14'' ''[[WrestleMania WrestleMania 14]]'' (where he performed despite his injury causing him severe pain), Michaels spent the next four years on the shelf, making sporadic appearances for WWE while he slowly healed up. In this interim, Shawn Michaels not only admitted that he was aware of the plan to screw over Bret, Hart, but he became a born-again Christian. Shawn Michaels made his return to active competition in 2002; he remained one of WWE's most popular and skilled performers until his retirement at ''[=WrestleMania=] 26''.

In December 2009, Bret Hart confirmed that he would return to WWE in 2010 to guest host the first ''Raw'' of the year (his first appearance on ''Raw'' in over twelve years), and during that show's opening segment, [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments Bret Hart made his peace with Shawn Michaels in the middle of the ring]] in one of the most surreal moments in wrestling history. He was (kayfabe) attacked by Vince [=McMahon=] at the end of the show, which set up an angle that led up to ''[=WrestleMania=] 26'', where Vince [=McMahon=] faced Bret Hart in a "No Holds Barred" Match. Although Vince [=McMahon=] tried to bribe the rest of the Hart family into screwing Bret Hart over again, they knew it was coming and double-crossed [=McMahon=], allowing Bret Hart to finally make Vince [=McMahon=] pay for Montreal (via thirteen chairshots and The the Sharpshooter) and get the full closure he'd been looking for. (As for (as part of the angle, Bret's Hart's father -- legendary Canadian wrestling promoter/trainer and patriarch of the Hart family, the late Stu Hart -- was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame.) Fame). After ''[=WrestleMania=]'', he appeared sporadically to help put over The Hart Dynasty (David Hart Smith, Tyson Kidd, and [[Wrestling/NatalyaNeidheart Natalya]]) and serve as ''Raw's'' ''Raw'''s General Manager for a brief period (he was eventually taken out by Wrestling/TheNexus). Both Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels continue to make special "cameo" appearances at WWE events to this day.

In late 2011, WWE released ''Greatest Rivalries: Shawn Michaels vs. Bret Hart'' on DVD and BluRay; [[BluRay Blu-ray]]; the set -- a first-of-its-kind release for WWE -- was dedicated to the long rivalry between Hart and Michaels, which stretched back all the way to the feud between The Rockers and The Hart Foundation. The real meat of the DVD was Wrestling/JimRoss' sitdown interview with both Hart and Michaels, who discussed their careers and their rivalry -- including the Screwjob -- at length. The DVD pretty firmly backs Bret Hart's side of the story, with Ross conceding that no one in the WWE had any fear of Bret pulling a Ric Flair with the belt, and that he had acted reasonably regarding the Survivor Series finish. The set was generally regarded as being one of WWE's best in years.



* BigDamnHeroes: Mark Calaway (Wrestling/TheUndertaker) put his career on the line to force Vince to apologize, likely saving the WWF from imploding and the number of wrestlers upset from walking out.
* BlatantLies: Wrestling/MichaelCole interviewed [[Wrestling/VinceMcMahon Vince [=McMahon=]]] before the event and when asked who will win, he replied, "I don't know." Wrestling/ShawnMichaels suggested a screwjob to Vince when Wrestling/BretHart refused to lose several weeks before, and Vince had said they needed to do it because he couldn't talk Bret around.
* ContinuityNod: The ending was recycled a year later for the purpose of turning [[Wrestling/DwayneJohnson the Rock]] {{Heel}}, and several other companies have used the Screwjob as a template for screwy endings:
** When Wrestling/RickRude jumped to WCW he called out Vince for the screwjob and used it as his reasoning why Bret and other wrestlers should jump ship.
** RunningGag: The main event of WCW's ''Starrcade 1997'', one month later - Wrestling/{{Sting}} was pinned by [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wcw/wcw-h.html WCW World Heavyweight Champion]] [[Wrestling/HulkHogan "Hollywood" Hogan]] via a "fast" three-count, but before the bell could be rung, Bret Hart (a special referee during an earlier match) stopped the timekeeper from ringing it, knocked out the ref, and tossed Hogan back into the ring, where he eventually tapped to the Scorpion Deathlock (which coincidentally is Sting's version of the Sharpshooter) while Bret acted as the ref. (This was made worse by the fact that the "fast" three-count wasn't really "fast", and it's long rumored that Hogan called for the screwy finish so as not to lose clean to Sting.)
*** The Screwjob also became a running gag on parody wrestling news site ScoopThis, as "Shootin' Vince [=McMahon=]" was said to call for screwy finishes at wildly inappropriate times; one such article had a submission victory due to a "devastating pre-match handshake", at Vince's behest.
** The Rock vs [[Wrestling/MickFoley Mankind]] at Survivor Series 1998 was the original Screwjob copycat with Rock playing Michaels, Mankind playing Bret and Vince betraying Mankind.
** On the May 28, 2001 edition of [[Wrestling/WWERaw Raw is War]] held in Calgary, Alberta (Wrestling/BretHart's hometown), Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin (the then-WWF Champion) put Wrestling/ChrisBenoit (a long-time friend of the Hart family) in the Crippler Crossface, and Vince ordered the bell rung. As if recreating the Screwjob in Bret's hometown wasn't bad enough, Bret's father Stu was sitting at ringside.
** ''Backlash 2004'' played with the Screwjob by having Michaels put fellow Hart's fellow Canadian (and then-[[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-h.html WWE World Heavyweight Champion]]) Wrestling/ChrisBenoit in the Sharpshooter, then having Earl Hebner rush down to the ring to call the submission (the first ref had been knocked out). This time, Earl plays the referee job straight, and Benoit never taps; in fact, he later wins by making Michaels tap out to the Sharpshooter, WWE offering up a symbolic apology for the Screwjob.
** Earl Hebner made his Wrestling/{{TNA}} debut at ''Against All Odds 2006'', and was about to call for the bell when Wrestling/JeffJarrett had [[Wrestling/{{Christian}} Christian Cage]] in the Sharpshooter, but Cage stopped him and went on to win the match.
** [[Wrestling/ShaneMcMahon Shane [=McMahon=]]] defeated Wrestling/ShawnMichaels the the March 18, 2006 ''Saturday Night's Main Event'' when he put an unconscious Michaels in the Sharpshooter, and Vince ordered the bell to be rung, and Shane to be announced as winner by submission.
** ''Breaking Point 2009'' had Wrestling/CMPunk lock Wrestling/TheUndertaker in the Anaconda Vice. Despite Undertaker ''escaping the hold'', Theodore Long rang the bell and declared Punk the winner by submission. This match was actually a ''double'' screwjob. A few minutes earlier, Undertaker made Punk tap out with Hell's Gate, but Long declared that it didn't count and ordered the match to continue.
*** In a ContinuityNod of its own, the Hell's Gate had been ruled to be an illegal hold by previous Smackdown GM Wrestling/VickieGuerrero, and Teddy Long had never rescinded the ban.

to:

* BigDamnHeroes: Mark Calaway (Wrestling/TheUndertaker) put his career on the line to force Vince [=McMahon=] to apologize, likely saving the WWF from imploding and the number of wrestlers upset from walking out.
* BlatantLies: Wrestling/MichaelCole interviewed [[Wrestling/VinceMcMahon Vince [=McMahon=]]] [=McMahon=] before the event and when asked who will win, he replied, "I don't know." Wrestling/ShawnMichaels Michaels suggested a screwjob to Vince [=McMahon=] when Wrestling/BretHart Hart refused to lose several weeks before, and Vince [=McMahon=] had said they needed to do it because he couldn't talk Bret Hart around.
* ContinuityNod: The ending was recycled a year later for the purpose of turning [[Wrestling/DwayneJohnson the Rock]] {{Heel}}, {{heel}}, and several other companies have used the Screwjob as a template for screwy endings:
** When Wrestling/RickRude jumped to WCW he called out Vince [=McMahon=] for the screwjob and used it as his reasoning why Bret Hart and other wrestlers should jump ship.
** RunningGag: The main event of WCW's ''Starrcade 1997'', one month later - Wrestling/{{Sting}} was pinned by [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wcw/wcw-h.html WCW World Heavyweight Champion]] [[Wrestling/HulkHogan "Hollywood" Hogan]] via a "fast" three-count, but before the bell could be rung, Bret Hart (a special referee during an earlier match) stopped the timekeeper from ringing it, knocked out the ref, and tossed Hogan back into the ring, where he eventually tapped to the Scorpion Deathlock (which coincidentally is Sting's version of the Sharpshooter) while Bret acted as the ref. (This ref (this was made worse by the fact that the "fast" three-count wasn't really "fast", and it's long rumored that Hogan called for the screwy finish so as not to lose clean to Sting.)
Sting).
*** The Screwjob also became a running gag on parody wrestling news site ScoopThis, as "Shootin' Vince [=McMahon=]" was said to call for screwy finishes at wildly inappropriate times; one such article had a submission victory due to a "devastating pre-match handshake", at Vince's [=McMahon=]'s behest.
** The Rock vs [[Wrestling/MickFoley Mankind]] at Survivor Series 1998 was the original Screwjob copycat with Rock playing Michaels, Mankind playing Bret Hart and Vince [=McMahon=] betraying Mankind.
** On the May 28, 2001 edition of [[Wrestling/WWERaw ''[[Wrestling/WWERaw Raw is War]] War]]'' held in Calgary, Alberta (Wrestling/BretHart's (Hart's hometown), Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin (the then-WWF Champion) put Wrestling/ChrisBenoit (a long-time friend of the Hart family) in the Crippler Crossface, and Vince [=McMahon=] ordered the bell rung. As if recreating the Screwjob in Bret's Hart's hometown wasn't bad enough, Bret's Hart's father Stu was sitting at ringside.
** ''Backlash 2004'' played with the Screwjob by having Michaels put fellow Hart's fellow Canadian (and then-[[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-h.html WWE World Heavyweight Champion]]) Wrestling/ChrisBenoit Chris Benoit in the Sharpshooter, then having Earl Hebner rush down to the ring to call the submission (the first ref had been knocked out). This time, Earl Hebner plays the referee job straight, and Benoit never taps; in fact, he later wins by making Michaels tap out to the Sharpshooter, WWE offering up a symbolic apology for the Screwjob.
** Earl Hebner made his Wrestling/{{TNA}} debut at ''Against All Odds 2006'', and was about to call for the bell when Wrestling/JeffJarrett had [[Wrestling/{{Christian}} Christian Cage]] in the Sharpshooter, but Cage stopped him and went on to win the match.
** [[Wrestling/ShaneMcMahon Shane [=McMahon=]]] defeated Wrestling/ShawnMichaels Michaels the the March 18, 2006 ''Saturday Night's Main Event'' when he put an unconscious Michaels in the Sharpshooter, and Vince ordered the bell to be rung, and Shane to be announced as winner by submission.
** ''Breaking Point 2009'' had Wrestling/CMPunk lock Wrestling/TheUndertaker The Undertaker in the Anaconda Vice. Despite Undertaker ''escaping the hold'', Theodore Long rang the bell and declared Punk the winner by submission. This match was actually a ''double'' screwjob. A few minutes earlier, Undertaker made Punk tap out with Hell's Gate, but Long declared that it didn't count and ordered the match to continue.
*** In a ContinuityNod of its own, the Hell's Gate had been ruled to be an illegal hold by previous Smackdown [=SmackDown=] GM Wrestling/VickieGuerrero, and Teddy Long had never rescinded the ban.



** The July 17, 2011 match between Wrestling/CMPunk VS Wrestling/JohnCena was eerily similar till Cena, who locked Punk in a STF, ''knocks out Wrestling/JohnLaurinaitis, who was gonna ring the bell!'' Cena then tells Vince that this match is his match and that he finishes it his way, comes back to the ring and gets hit with a GTS by Punk! Wrestling/CMPunk wins the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-h.html WWE Championship]] belt with the stipulation that he leaves WWE and Cena gets fired if he loses.
*** On the July 18, 2011 edition of ''[[Wrestling/{{WWERaw}} Raw]], Cena outright calls Vince out on trying to recreate this incident and on what it had done to Shawn's career as part of TheReasonYouSuckSpeech.
** [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson Daniel Bryan]] locked Wrestling/TheBigShow in the Yes Lock on the May 11, 2012 edition of ''Smackdown'' and Wrestling/JohnLaurinaitis immediately rang the bell and declared Bryan the winner by submission.

to:

** The July 17, 2011 match between Wrestling/CMPunk VS Wrestling/JohnCena was eerily similar till Cena, who locked Punk in a STF, ''knocks out Wrestling/JohnLaurinaitis, who was gonna ring the bell!'' Cena then tells Vince [=McMahon=] that this match is his match and that he finishes it his way, comes back to the ring and gets hit with a GTS by Punk! Wrestling/CMPunk CM Punk wins the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-h.html WWE Championship]] belt with the stipulation that he leaves WWE and Cena gets fired if he loses.
*** On the July 18, 2011 edition of ''[[Wrestling/{{WWERaw}} Raw]], Cena outright calls Vince [=McMahon=] out on trying to recreate this incident and on what it had done to Shawn's Michaels' career as part of TheReasonYouSuckSpeech.
** [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson Daniel Bryan]] locked Wrestling/TheBigShow in the Yes Lock on the May 11, 2012 edition of ''Smackdown'' ''[=SmackDown=]'' and Wrestling/JohnLaurinaitis John Laurinaitis immediately rang the bell and declared Bryan the winner by submission.



* [[FountainOfExpies Iconic Moment]] The screwjob itself, obviously. However, a little over 12 years later, on January 4 2010, Bret Hart finally returned to the WWE as one of many Raw guest hosts. His first order of business was to call out Shawn Michaels. The pair of them traded stories back and forth, finally apologized and hugged it out. Though they'll never be close friends, they're able to stand the site of one another now. They even chronicled their rivalry in a DVD hosted by Jim Ross.

to:

* [[FountainOfExpies Iconic Moment]] The screwjob itself, obviously. However, a little over 12 years later, on January 4 2010, Bret Hart finally returned to the WWE as one of many Raw ''Raw'' guest hosts. His first order of business was to call out Shawn Michaels. The pair of them traded stories back and forth, finally apologized and hugged it out. Though they'll never be close friends, they're able to stand the site of one another now. They even chronicled their rivalry in a DVD hosted by Jim Ross.



* ShootTheDog: How Vince [=McMahon=] views the Montreal Screwjob, he had to do what he had to do.
** Shawn Michaels feels this way as well.

to:

* ShootTheDog: How Vince [=McMahon=] views the Montreal Screwjob, he had to do what he had to do.
** Shawn Michaels feels this way as well.
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Even before it became a running gag, other promotions were ''already'' parodying it. At ''Wrestling/{{ECW}} November to Remember '97'' PPV, held a mere ''three weeks'' later, Al Snow, in the early months of his carrying around a mannequin head [[TheGimmick gimmick]], cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!"

to:

Even before it became a running gag, other promotions were ''already'' parodying it. At ''Wrestling/{{ECW}} November to Remember '97'' PPV, held a mere ''three weeks'' later, Al Snow, in the early months of his carrying around a mannequin head [[TheGimmick gimmick]], cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!"
HEAD!" Even '''ScottKeith''' thought it was funny.



* [[IconicCharacters Iconic Moment]] The screwjob itself, obviously. However, a little over 12 years later, on January 4 2010, Bret Hart finally returned to the WWE as one of many Raw guest hosts. His first order of business was to call out Shawn Michaels. The pair of them traded stories back and forth, finally apologized and hugged it out. Though they'll never be close friends, they're able to stand the site of one another now. They even chronicled their rivalry in a DVD hosted by Jim Ross.

to:

* [[IconicCharacters [[FountainOfExpies Iconic Moment]] The screwjob itself, obviously. However, a little over 12 years later, on January 4 2010, Bret Hart finally returned to the WWE as one of many Raw guest hosts. His first order of business was to call out Shawn Michaels. The pair of them traded stories back and forth, finally apologized and hugged it out. Though they'll never be close friends, they're able to stand the site of one another now. They even chronicled their rivalry in a DVD hosted by Jim Ross.
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* {{Documentary}}: ''Hitman Hart: Wrestling with Shadows''

to:

* {{Documentary}}: ''Hitman Hart: Wrestling with Shadows''Shadows'' and ''[[http://sorgatronmedia.com/montrealtheory/ The Montreal Theory]]''
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In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the WWF]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of Wrestling/{{WCW}}. The Wrestling/MondayNightWars were in full swing and the NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[{{VinceMcmahon}} Vince McMahon]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and Vince himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].

to:

In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the WWF]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of Wrestling/{{WCW}}. The Wrestling/MondayNightWars were in full swing and the NewWorldOrder Wrestling/NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[{{VinceMcmahon}} [[Wrestling/{{VinceMcMahon}} Vince McMahon]]'s [=McMahon=]]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and Vince himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].
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Added DiffLines:

* {{Documentary}}: ''Hitman Hart: Wrestling with Shadows''
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*** The Screwjob also became a running gag on parody wrestling news site ScoopThis, as "Shootin' Vince [=McMahon=]" was said to call for screwy finishes at wildly inappropriate times; one such article had a submission victory due to a "devastating pre-match handshake", at Vince's behest.
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** Earl Hebner made his Wrestling/{{TNA}} debut at ''Against All Odds 2006'', and was about to call for the bell when Wrestling/JeffJarrett had [[Wrestling/}}Christian}} Christian Cage]] in the Sharpshooter, but Cage stopped him and went on to win the match.

to:

** Earl Hebner made his Wrestling/{{TNA}} debut at ''Against All Odds 2006'', and was about to call for the bell when Wrestling/JeffJarrett had [[Wrestling/}}Christian}} [[Wrestling/{{Christian}} Christian Cage]] in the Sharpshooter, but Cage stopped him and went on to win the match.
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** The July 17, 2011 match between Wrestling/CMPunk VS Wrestling/JohnCena was eerily similar till Cena, who locked Punk in a STF, ''knocks out Wrestling/JohnLaurinaitis, who was gonna ring the bell!'' Cena then tells Vince that this match is his match and that he finishes it his way, comes back to the ring and gets hit with a GTS by Punk! Wrestling/CMPunk wins the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-h.html WWE World Heavyweight Championship]] belt with the stipulation that he leaves WWE and Cena gets fired if he loses.

to:

** The July 17, 2011 match between Wrestling/CMPunk VS Wrestling/JohnCena was eerily similar till Cena, who locked Punk in a STF, ''knocks out Wrestling/JohnLaurinaitis, who was gonna ring the bell!'' Cena then tells Vince that this match is his match and that he finishes it his way, comes back to the ring and gets hit with a GTS by Punk! Wrestling/CMPunk wins the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-h.html WWE World Heavyweight Championship]] belt with the stipulation that he leaves WWE and Cena gets fired if he loses.
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Hart's last appearance on WWF programming would be ''Wrestling/SurvivorSeries 1997'' (taking place in Montreal), where he faced Shawn Michaels in the main event for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-h.html WWE World Heavyweight Title]]. The event was not scheduled to be Bret's last booking with the WWF, as his working agreement ran for three weeks after the pay-per-view, and he had received verbal approval from WCW to work another PPV in early December where he likely would have dropped the title in a four-way match to either Shawn Michaels (if Michaels agreed to lose at Montreal) or another wrestler who would later lose to Shawn (if Michaels refused to job). Michaels refused to lose the ''Survivor Series'' match to Hart under any circumstances, and Bret made it clear that he would not lose to Michaels in Montreal. The exit clause in Hart's aforementioned contract required that Bret and Vince come to an agreement regarding any booking decisions regarding Hart, leaving him with all the cards. The pair's mutual stubbornness placed Vince between the proverbial rock and a hard place.

to:

Hart's last appearance on WWF programming would be ''Wrestling/SurvivorSeries 1997'' (taking place in Montreal), where he faced Shawn Michaels in the main event for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-h.html WWE World Heavyweight Championship Title]]. The event was not scheduled to be Bret's last booking with the WWF, as his working agreement ran for three weeks after the pay-per-view, and he had received verbal approval from WCW to work another PPV in early December where he likely would have dropped the title in a four-way match to either Shawn Michaels (if Michaels agreed to lose at Montreal) or another wrestler who would later lose to Shawn (if Michaels refused to job). Michaels refused to lose the ''Survivor Series'' match to Hart under any circumstances, and Bret made it clear that he would not lose to Michaels in Montreal. The exit clause in Hart's aforementioned contract required that Bret and Vince come to an agreement regarding any booking decisions regarding Hart, leaving him with all the cards. The pair's mutual stubbornness placed Vince between the proverbial rock and a hard place.



Vince was still angry over then-[[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwf-wm.html WWE Women's Champion]] [[Characters/WWEDivas Alundra Blayze]] tossing the WWF Women's Championship belt in the trash live on WCW's ''Nitro'', and he was afraid Bret would show up on WCW programming with the WWF Championship and toss that belt in the trash (or worse) --despite the fact that multiple lawsuits had been filed regarding the Blayze incident (and an earlier incident with Wrestling/RicFlair taking WCW's world championship belt with him to the WWF). Since Bret refused to drop the belt to Shawn in Canada, Vince was worried about the possibility of Bret jumping ship with the championship belt.

to:

Vince was still angry over then-[[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwf-wm.html WWE Women's Champion]] [[Characters/WWEDivas Alundra Blayze]] tossing the WWF Women's Championship belt in the trash live on WCW's ''Nitro'', and he was afraid Bret would show up on WCW programming with the WWF Championship and toss that belt in the trash (or worse) --despite the fact that multiple lawsuits had been filed regarding the Blayze incident (and an earlier incident with Wrestling/RicFlair taking WCW's world championship World Championship belt with him to the WWF). Since Bret refused to drop the belt to Shawn in Canada, Vince was worried about the possibility of Bret jumping ship with the championship belt.



** ''Backlash 2004'' played with the Screwjob by having Michaels put fellow Hart's fellow Canadian (and then-[[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-h.html WWE Raw World Heavyweight Champion]]) Wrestling/ChrisBenoit in the Sharpshooter, then having Earl Hebner rush down to the ring to call the submission (the first ref had been knocked out). This time, Earl plays the referee job straight, and Benoit never taps; in fact, he later wins by making Michaels tap out to the Sharpshooter, WWE offering up a symbolic apology for the Screwjob.

to:

** ''Backlash 2004'' played with the Screwjob by having Michaels put fellow Hart's fellow Canadian (and then-[[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-h.html WWE Raw World Heavyweight Champion]]) Wrestling/ChrisBenoit in the Sharpshooter, then having Earl Hebner rush down to the ring to call the submission (the first ref had been knocked out). This time, Earl plays the referee job straight, and Benoit never taps; in fact, he later wins by making Michaels tap out to the Sharpshooter, WWE offering up a symbolic apology for the Screwjob.

Changed: 139

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In December 2009, Bret confirmed that he would return to WWE in 2010 to guest host the first ''Raw'' of the year (his first appearance on ''Raw'' in over twelve years), and during that show's opening segment, [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming Bret made his peace with Shawn in the middle of the ring]] in one of the most surreal moments in wrestling history. He was (kayfabe) attacked by Vince at the end of the show, which set up an angle that led up to ''WrestleMania 26'', where Vince faced Bret in a "No Holds Barred" Match. Although Vince tried to bribe the rest of the Hart family into screwing Bret over again, they knew it was coming and double-crossed [=McMahon=], allowing Bret to finally make Vince pay for Montreal (via thirteen chairshots and The Sharpshooter) and get the full closure he'd been looking for. (As part of the angle, Bret's father -- legendary Canadian wrestling promoter/trainer and patriarch of the Hart family, the late Stu Hart -- was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame.) After ''[=WrestleMania=]'', he appeared sporadically to help put over The Hart Dynasty (David Hart Smith, Tyson Kidd, and Natalya) and serve as ''Raw's'' General Manager for a brief period (he was eventually taken out by TheNexus). Both Bret and Shawn continue to make special "cameo" appearances at WWE events to this day.

In late 2011, WWE released ''Greatest Rivalries: Shawn Michaels vs. Bret Hart'' on DVD and BluRay; the set -- a first-of-its-kind release for WWE -- was dedicated to the long rivalry between Hart and Michaels, which stretched back all the way to the feud between The Rockers and The Hart Foundation. The real meat of the DVD was JimRoss' sitdown interview with both Hart and Michaels, who discussed their careers and their rivalry -- including the Screwjob -- at length. The DVD pretty firmly backs Bret Hart's side of the story, with Ross conceding that no one in the WWE had any fear of Bret pulling a Ric Flair with the belt, and that he had acted reasonably regarding the Survivor Series finish. The set was generally regarded as being one of WWE's best in years.

to:

In December 2009, Bret confirmed that he would return to WWE in 2010 to guest host the first ''Raw'' of the year (his first appearance on ''Raw'' in over twelve years), and during that show's opening segment, [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments Bret made his peace with Shawn in the middle of the ring]] in one of the most surreal moments in wrestling history. He was (kayfabe) attacked by Vince at the end of the show, which set up an angle that led up to ''WrestleMania ''[=WrestleMania=] 26'', where Vince faced Bret in a "No Holds Barred" Match. Although Vince tried to bribe the rest of the Hart family into screwing Bret over again, they knew it was coming and double-crossed [=McMahon=], allowing Bret to finally make Vince pay for Montreal (via thirteen chairshots and The Sharpshooter) and get the full closure he'd been looking for. (As part of the angle, Bret's father -- legendary Canadian wrestling promoter/trainer and patriarch of the Hart family, the late Stu Hart -- was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame.) After ''[=WrestleMania=]'', he appeared sporadically to help put over The Hart Dynasty (David Hart Smith, Tyson Kidd, and Natalya) [[Wrestling/NatalyaNeidheart Natalya]]) and serve as ''Raw's'' General Manager for a brief period (he was eventually taken out by TheNexus).Wrestling/TheNexus). Both Bret and Shawn continue to make special "cameo" appearances at WWE events to this day.

In late 2011, WWE released ''Greatest Rivalries: Shawn Michaels vs. Bret Hart'' on DVD and BluRay; the set -- a first-of-its-kind release for WWE -- was dedicated to the long rivalry between Hart and Michaels, which stretched back all the way to the feud between The Rockers and The Hart Foundation. The real meat of the DVD was JimRoss' Wrestling/JimRoss' sitdown interview with both Hart and Michaels, who discussed their careers and their rivalry -- including the Screwjob -- at length. The DVD pretty firmly backs Bret Hart's side of the story, with Ross conceding that no one in the WWE had any fear of Bret pulling a Ric Flair with the belt, and that he had acted reasonably regarding the Survivor Series finish. The set was generally regarded as being one of WWE's best in years.



* BlatantLies: Wrestling/MichaelCole interviewed [[Wrestling/VinceMcMahon Vince [=McMahon=]]] before the event and when asked who will win, he replied, "I don't know." Wrestling/ShawnMichaels suggested a screwjob to Vince when BretHart refused to lose several weeks before, and Vince had said they needed to do it because he couldn't talk Bret around.

to:

* BlatantLies: Wrestling/MichaelCole interviewed [[Wrestling/VinceMcMahon Vince [=McMahon=]]] before the event and when asked who will win, he replied, "I don't know." Wrestling/ShawnMichaels suggested a screwjob to Vince when BretHart Wrestling/BretHart refused to lose several weeks before, and Vince had said they needed to do it because he couldn't talk Bret around.



** RunningGag: The main event of WCW's ''Starrcade 1997'', one month later - Wrestling/{{Sting}} was pinned by [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wcw/wcw-h.html WCW World Heavyweight Champion]] [[HulkHogan "Hollywood" Hogan]] via a "fast" three-count, but before the bell could be rung, Bret Hart (a special referee during an earlier match) stopped the timekeeper from ringing it, knocked out the ref, and tossed Hogan back into the ring, where he eventually tapped to the Scorpion Deathlock (which coincidentally is Sting's version of the Sharpshooter) while Bret acted as the ref. (This was made worse by the fact that the "fast" three-count wasn't really "fast", and it's long rumored that Hogan called for the screwy finish so as not to lose clean to Sting.)
** The Rock vs Mankind at Survivor Series 1998 was the original Screwjob copycat with Rock playing Michaels, Mankind playing Bret and Vince betraying Mankind.

to:

** RunningGag: The main event of WCW's ''Starrcade 1997'', one month later - Wrestling/{{Sting}} was pinned by [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wcw/wcw-h.html WCW World Heavyweight Champion]] [[HulkHogan [[Wrestling/HulkHogan "Hollywood" Hogan]] via a "fast" three-count, but before the bell could be rung, Bret Hart (a special referee during an earlier match) stopped the timekeeper from ringing it, knocked out the ref, and tossed Hogan back into the ring, where he eventually tapped to the Scorpion Deathlock (which coincidentally is Sting's version of the Sharpshooter) while Bret acted as the ref. (This was made worse by the fact that the "fast" three-count wasn't really "fast", and it's long rumored that Hogan called for the screwy finish so as not to lose clean to Sting.)
** The Rock vs Mankind [[Wrestling/MickFoley Mankind]] at Survivor Series 1998 was the original Screwjob copycat with Rock playing Michaels, Mankind playing Bret and Vince betraying Mankind.



** [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson Daniel Bryan]] locked Wrestling/TheBigShow in the Yes Lock on the May 11, 2012 edition of ''Smackdown'' and John Laurinaitis immediately rang the bell and declared Bryan the winner by submission.

to:

** [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson Daniel Bryan]] locked Wrestling/TheBigShow in the Yes Lock on the May 11, 2012 edition of ''Smackdown'' and John Laurinaitis Wrestling/JohnLaurinaitis immediately rang the bell and declared Bryan the winner by submission.
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* BigDamnHeroes: Mark Calaway (TheUndertaker) put his career on the line to force Vince to apologize, likely saving the WWF from imploding and the number of wrestlers upset from walking out.
* BlatantLies: Wrestling/MichaelCole interviewed [[Wrestling/VinceMcMahon Vince [=McMahon=]]] before the event and when asked who will win, he replied, "I don't know." ShawnMichaels suggested a screwjob to Vince when BretHart refused to lose several weeks before, and Vince had said they needed to do it because he couldn't talk Bret around.

to:

* BigDamnHeroes: Mark Calaway (TheUndertaker) (Wrestling/TheUndertaker) put his career on the line to force Vince to apologize, likely saving the WWF from imploding and the number of wrestlers upset from walking out.
* BlatantLies: Wrestling/MichaelCole interviewed [[Wrestling/VinceMcMahon Vince [=McMahon=]]] before the event and when asked who will win, he replied, "I don't know." ShawnMichaels Wrestling/ShawnMichaels suggested a screwjob to Vince when BretHart refused to lose several weeks before, and Vince had said they needed to do it because he couldn't talk Bret around.



** When Rick Rude jumped to WCW he called out Vince for the screwjob and used it as his reasoning why Bret and other wrestlers should jump ship.
** The main event of WCW's ''Starrcade 1997'', one month later - Wrestling/{{Sting}} was pinned by [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wcw/wcw-h.html WCW World Heavyweight Champion]] [[HulkHogan "Hollywood" Hogan]] via a "fast" three-count, but before the bell could be rung, Bret Hart (a special referee during an earlier match) stopped the timekeeper from ringing it, knocked out the ref, and tossed Hogan back into the ring, where he eventually tapped to the Scorpion Deathlock (which coincidentally is Sting's version of the Sharpshooter) while Bret acted as the ref. (This was made worse by the fact that the "fast" three-count wasn't really "fast", and it's long rumored that Hogan called for the screwy finish so as not to lose clean to Sting.)

to:

** When Rick Rude Wrestling/RickRude jumped to WCW he called out Vince for the screwjob and used it as his reasoning why Bret and other wrestlers should jump ship.
** RunningGag: The main event of WCW's ''Starrcade 1997'', one month later - Wrestling/{{Sting}} was pinned by [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wcw/wcw-h.html WCW World Heavyweight Champion]] [[HulkHogan "Hollywood" Hogan]] via a "fast" three-count, but before the bell could be rung, Bret Hart (a special referee during an earlier match) stopped the timekeeper from ringing it, knocked out the ref, and tossed Hogan back into the ring, where he eventually tapped to the Scorpion Deathlock (which coincidentally is Sting's version of the Sharpshooter) while Bret acted as the ref. (This was made worse by the fact that the "fast" three-count wasn't really "fast", and it's long rumored that Hogan called for the screwy finish so as not to lose clean to Sting.)



** Earl Hebner made his Wrestling/{{TNA}} debut at ''Against All Odds 2006'', and was about to call for the bell when Wrestling/JeffJarrett had Wrestling/ChristianCage in the Sharpshooter, but Cage stopped him and went on to win the match.

to:

** Earl Hebner made his Wrestling/{{TNA}} debut at ''Against All Odds 2006'', and was about to call for the bell when Wrestling/JeffJarrett had Wrestling/ChristianCage [[Wrestling/}}Christian}} Christian Cage]] in the Sharpshooter, but Cage stopped him and went on to win the match.



*** In a ContinuityNod of its own, the Hell's Gate had been ruled to be an illegal hold by previous Smackdown GM VickieGuerrero, and Teddy Long had never rescinded the ban.

to:

*** In a ContinuityNod of its own, the Hell's Gate had been ruled to be an illegal hold by previous Smackdown GM VickieGuerrero, Wrestling/VickieGuerrero, and Teddy Long had never rescinded the ban.
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In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the WWF]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of Wrestling/{{WCW}}. The Wrestling/MondayNightWars were in full swing and the NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[{{VinceMcmahon}} ViFcontnce McMahon]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and Vince himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].

to:

In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the WWF]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of Wrestling/{{WCW}}. The Wrestling/MondayNightWars were in full swing and the NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[{{VinceMcmahon}} ViFcontnce Vince McMahon]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and Vince himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].
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* [[IconicCharacters Iconic Moment]]

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* [[IconicCharacters Iconic Moment]]Moment]] The screwjob itself, obviously. However, a little over 12 years later, on January 4 2010, Bret Hart finally returned to the WWE as one of many Raw guest hosts. His first order of business was to call out Shawn Michaels. The pair of them traded stories back and forth, finally apologized and hugged it out. Though they'll never be close friends, they're able to stand the site of one another now. They even chronicled their rivalry in a DVD hosted by Jim Ross.
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* BigDamnHeroes: Mark Calaway (TheUndertaker) put his career on the line to force Vince to apologize, likely saving the WWF from imploding and the number of wrestlers upset from walking out.


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** When Rick Rude jumped to WCW he called out Vince for the screwjob and used it as his reasoning why Bret and other wrestlers should jump ship.
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** Wrestling/DanielBryan locked Wrestling/TheBigShow in the Yes Lock on the May 11, 2012 edition of ''Smackdown'' and John Laurinaitis immediately rang the bell and declared Bryan the winner by submission.

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** Wrestling/DanielBryan [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson Daniel Bryan]] locked Wrestling/TheBigShow in the Yes Lock on the May 11, 2012 edition of ''Smackdown'' and John Laurinaitis immediately rang the bell and declared Bryan the winner by submission.

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In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the WWF]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of Wrestling/{{WCW}}. The Wrestling/MondayNightWars were in full swing and the NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[{{VinceMcmahon}} Vince McMahon]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and Vince himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].

to:

In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the WWF]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of Wrestling/{{WCW}}. The Wrestling/MondayNightWars were in full swing and the NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[{{VinceMcmahon}} Vince ViFcontnce McMahon]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and Vince himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].


Added DiffLines:

*** In a ContinuityNod of its own, the Hell's Gate had been ruled to be an illegal hold by previous Smackdown GM VickieGuerrero, and Teddy Long had never rescinded the ban.
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** ''Breaking Point 2009'' had Wrestling/CMPunk lock Wrestling/TheUndertaker in the Anaconda Vice. Despite Undertaker ''escaping the hold'', Theodore Long rang the bell and declared Punk the winner by submission. This match was actually a ''double'' screwjob. A few minutes earlier, Undertaker made Punk tap out with Hell's Gate, but Theodore declared that it didn't count and ordered the match to continue.

to:

** ''Breaking Point 2009'' had Wrestling/CMPunk lock Wrestling/TheUndertaker in the Anaconda Vice. Despite Undertaker ''escaping the hold'', Theodore Long rang the bell and declared Punk the winner by submission. This match was actually a ''double'' screwjob. A few minutes earlier, Undertaker made Punk tap out with Hell's Gate, but Theodore Long declared that it didn't count and ordered the match to continue.



* IDidWhatIHadToDo: Even after Michael's RealLife HeelFaithTurn, this has been his stance regarding the screw job.

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* IDidWhatIHadToDo: Even after Michael's Michaels' RealLife HeelFaithTurn, this has been his stance regarding the screw job.screwjob.

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In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the WWF]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of [[{{Wrestling/WCW}} WCW]]. The MondayNightWars were in full swing and the NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[{{VinceMcmahon}} Vince McMahon]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and Vince himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].

In 1996, Bret had signed an unprecedented twenty-year deal with the WWF for a considerable amount of money -- but with Vince losing his shirt thanks to WCW, he felt that he would have to breach Bret's contract in order to keep the company alive; [=McMahon=] has been accused by Hart and others of exaggerating his financial situation at the time. Backstage tension between Hart and fellow performer ShawnMichaels were also reaching a boiling point around this time, and the fiscal security that the WCW contract offered was enough to get Bret to jump ship: in November 1997, Hart -- then the reigning WWF Champion -- signed a contract with WCW for a guaranteed ''three million dollars per year''.

Hart's last appearance on WWF programming would be ''SurvivorSeries 1997'' (taking place in Montreal), where he faced Shawn Michaels in the main event for the WWF Championship. The event was not scheduled to be Bret's last booking with the WWF, as his working agreement ran for three weeks after the pay-per-view, and he had received verbal approval from WCW to work another PPV in early December where he likely would have dropped the title in a four-way match to either Shawn Michaels (if Michaels agreed to lose at Montreal) or another wrestler who would later lose to Shawn (if Michaels refused to job). Michaels refused to lose the ''Survivor Series'' match to Hart under any circumstances, and Bret made it clear that he would not lose to Michaels in Montreal. The exit clause in Hart's aforementioned contract required that Bret and Vince come to an agreement regarding any booking decisions regarding Hart, leaving him with all the cards. The pair's mutual stubbornness placed Vince between the proverbial rock and a hard place.

The original plan for the match's finish (according to Bret) was for Shawn to use Bret's famous Sharpshooter submission hold against him while the referee was down. After Shawn applied the hold, Bret would reverse it, and feuding factions D-Generation X (which Michaels was a part of) and the Hart Foundation (which Bret led) would run in and cause the match to be tossed out, leaving Bret open to drop the title at the four-way match the next month (Bret briefly discussed simply giving up the title on TV, but at that point, Vince was committed to the Screwjob, and he agreed to nearly anything Bret said in order to get Hart to perform at ''Survivor Series'').

Vince was still angry over then-WWF Women's Champion Alundra Blayze tossing the WWF Women's Championship belt in the trash live on WCW's ''Nitro'', and he was afraid Bret would show up on WCW programming with the WWF Championship and toss that belt in the trash (or worse) -- despite the fact that multiple lawsuits had been filed regarding the Blayze incident (and an earlier incident with RicFlair taking WCW's world championship belt with him to the WWF). Since Bret refused to drop the belt to Shawn in Canada, Vince was worried about the possibility of Bret jumping ship with the championship belt.

Well, that was ''Vince's'' story, anyway. More recent analyses by wrestling critics/historians says that the people pressuring Bischoff to sign Hart didn't want him to get over -- Bret was kept on the WCW shelf for over a month before popping a buyrate with the then-considered-washed-up Flair and being buried in pointless US Title feuds -- and the real reason for the Screwjob on Vince's end was the fact Bret was earning just shy of two million dollars per year [compared to Shawn's $750,000 per year]. StoneColdSteveAustin and TheUndertaker were negotiating new contracts at this point; when they compared themselves to the highest paid guy -- Bret Hart -- Vince got ''really'' scared.

to:

In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the WWF]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of [[{{Wrestling/WCW}} WCW]]. Wrestling/{{WCW}}. The MondayNightWars Wrestling/MondayNightWars were in full swing and the NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[{{VinceMcmahon}} Vince McMahon]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and Vince himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[BretHart [[Wrestling/BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].

In 1996, Bret had signed an unprecedented twenty-year deal with the WWF for a considerable amount of money -- but with Vince losing his shirt thanks to WCW, he felt that he would have to breach Bret's contract in order to keep the company alive; [=McMahon=] has been accused by Hart and others of exaggerating his financial situation at the time. Backstage tension between Hart and fellow performer ShawnMichaels Wrestling/ShawnMichaels were also reaching a boiling point around this time, and the fiscal security that the WCW contract offered was enough to get Bret to jump ship: in November 1997, Hart -- then the reigning WWF Champion -- signed a contract with WCW for a guaranteed ''three million dollars per year''.

Hart's last appearance on WWF programming would be ''SurvivorSeries ''Wrestling/SurvivorSeries 1997'' (taking place in Montreal), where he faced Shawn Michaels in the main event for the WWF Championship.[[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-h.html WWE World Heavyweight Title]]. The event was not scheduled to be Bret's last booking with the WWF, as his working agreement ran for three weeks after the pay-per-view, and he had received verbal approval from WCW to work another PPV in early December where he likely would have dropped the title in a four-way match to either Shawn Michaels (if Michaels agreed to lose at Montreal) or another wrestler who would later lose to Shawn (if Michaels refused to job). Michaels refused to lose the ''Survivor Series'' match to Hart under any circumstances, and Bret made it clear that he would not lose to Michaels in Montreal. The exit clause in Hart's aforementioned contract required that Bret and Vince come to an agreement regarding any booking decisions regarding Hart, leaving him with all the cards. The pair's mutual stubbornness placed Vince between the proverbial rock and a hard place.

The original plan for the match's finish (according to Bret) was for Shawn to use Bret's famous Sharpshooter submission hold against him while the referee was down. After Shawn applied the hold, Bret would reverse it, and feuding factions D-Generation X [[Wrestling/{{DGenerationX}} DeGeneration X]] (which Michaels was a part of) and the Hart Foundation (which Bret led) would run in and cause the match to be tossed out, leaving Bret open to drop the title at the four-way match the next month (Bret briefly discussed simply giving up the title on TV, but at that point, Vince was committed to the Screwjob, and he agreed to nearly anything Bret said in order to get Hart to perform at ''Survivor Series'').

Vince was still angry over then-WWF then-[[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwf-wm.html WWE Women's Champion Champion]] [[Characters/WWEDivas Alundra Blayze Blayze]] tossing the WWF Women's Championship belt in the trash live on WCW's ''Nitro'', and he was afraid Bret would show up on WCW programming with the WWF Championship and toss that belt in the trash (or worse) -- despite --despite the fact that multiple lawsuits had been filed regarding the Blayze incident (and an earlier incident with RicFlair Wrestling/RicFlair taking WCW's world championship belt with him to the WWF). Since Bret refused to drop the belt to Shawn in Canada, Vince was worried about the possibility of Bret jumping ship with the championship belt.

Well, that was ''Vince's'' story, anyway. More recent analyses by wrestling critics/historians says that the people pressuring Bischoff to sign Hart didn't want him to get over -- Bret was kept on the WCW shelf for over a month before popping a buyrate with the then-considered-washed-up Flair and being buried in pointless US Title feuds -- and the real reason for the Screwjob on Vince's end was the fact Bret was earning just shy of two million dollars per year [compared to Shawn's $750,000 per year]. StoneColdSteveAustin Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin and TheUndertaker Wrestling/TheUndertaker were negotiating new contracts at this point; when they compared themselves to the highest paid guy -- Bret Hart -- Vince got ''really'' scared.



The screwjob actually qualifies as [[{{HilariousInHindsight}} Hilarious in Hindsight]] when you consider how Bret ''won'' his first title in WWE. The Hart Foundation (Bret and brother-in-law Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, w/non-relative manager "The Mouth of the South" Jimmy Hart) defeated the British Bulldogs (The Dynamite Kid and cousin [[{{Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith}} Davey Boy Smith]]- another brother-in-law, though not acknowledged as such at the time) for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-t.html WWE World Tag Team Titles]] on the February 7, 1987 (taped January 26) episode of ''WWF Superstars'' due to referee Danny Davis generally ignoring the Harts' constant double-teaming and spending most of the time checking on the injured Dynamite Kid. After the Harts won the match, Davis left with them.

Even before it became a running gag, other promotions were ''already'' parodying it. At [[{{Wrestling/ECW}} ECW]]'s November to Remember '97 PPV, held a mere ''three weeks'' later, Al Snow, in the early months of his carrying around a mannequin head {{gimmick}}, cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!"

Bret left the WWF and spent three years [[DemotedToExtra floundering around in WCW]] thanks to crappy booking and nobody really knowing what to do with someone who was -- at the time -- ''the hottest free agent in ProfessionalWrestling'' (something that ''Vince himself'' predicted would happen). Thanks to an errant kick by Goldberg during a match, Hart suffered a career-ending concussion and has been retired from in-ring action ever since (a stroke suffered after his retirement has ensured that, save for special circumstances where he doesn't have to take a bump, he'll never be able to perform in the ring again). Following his retirement, Bret had very little love lost for WWE -- thanks both to the Screwjob and the death of his brother [[OwenHart Owen]] in 1999 -- but managed to put his animosity aside to help preserve his legacy, working with WWE to produce a DVD set that was widely acclaimed as being a great retrospective on his career ([[WhatCouldHaveBeen it was initially going to be a smearjob set called "Screwed"]] until Bret heard about the plans). In 2006, Bret accepted induction into the WWE Hall of Fame, making his first appearance on WWE programming of any kind in nearly a decade to accept the honor. A few years later, Bret signed up again with the WWE to ensure that he got a proper and honorable exit from the business (see below).

Shawn spent the next few months as the WWF Champion, but back injuries suffered during a Casket Match with The Undertaker at ''Royal Rumble 1998'' eventually caught up to him. Following his loss to Steve Austin at ''WrestleMania 14'' (where he performed despite his injury causing him severe pain), Michaels spent the next four years on the shelf, making sporadic appearances for WWE while he slowly healed up. In this interim, Shawn not only admitted that he was aware of the plan to screw over Bret, but he became a born-again Christian. Shawn made his return to active competition in 2002; he remained one of WWE's most popular and skilled performers until his retirement at ''[=WrestleMania=] 26''.

to:

The screwjob actually qualifies as [[{{HilariousInHindsight}} Hilarious in Hindsight]] HilariousInHindsight when you consider how Bret ''won'' his first title in WWE. The Hart Foundation (Bret and brother-in-law Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, w/non-relative manager "The Mouth of the South" Jimmy Hart) defeated the British Bulldogs (The Dynamite Kid and cousin [[{{Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith}} Davey Boy Smith]]- Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith- another brother-in-law, though not acknowledged as such at the time) for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-t.html WWE World Tag Team Titles]] on the February 7, 1987 (taped January 26) episode of ''WWF Superstars'' due to referee Danny Davis generally ignoring the Harts' constant double-teaming and spending most of the time checking on the injured Dynamite Kid. After the Harts won the match, Davis left with them.

Even before it became a running gag, other promotions were ''already'' parodying it. At [[{{Wrestling/ECW}} ECW]]'s ''Wrestling/{{ECW}} November to Remember '97 '97'' PPV, held a mere ''three weeks'' later, Al Snow, in the early months of his carrying around a mannequin head {{gimmick}}, [[TheGimmick gimmick]], cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!"

Bret left the WWF and spent three years [[DemotedToExtra floundering around in WCW]] thanks to crappy booking and nobody really knowing what to do with someone who was -- at the time -- ''the hottest free agent in ProfessionalWrestling'' (something that ''Vince himself'' predicted would happen). Thanks to an errant kick by Goldberg during a match, Hart suffered a career-ending concussion and has been retired from in-ring action ever since (a stroke suffered after his retirement has ensured that, save for special circumstances where he doesn't have to take a bump, he'll never be able to perform in the ring again). Following his retirement, Bret had very little love lost for WWE -- thanks both to the Screwjob and the death of his brother [[OwenHart [[Wrestling/OwenHart Owen]] in 1999 -- but managed to put his animosity aside to help preserve his legacy, working with WWE to produce a DVD set that was widely acclaimed as being a great retrospective on his career ([[WhatCouldHaveBeen it was initially going to be a smearjob set called "Screwed"]] until Bret heard about the plans). In 2006, Bret accepted induction into the WWE Hall of Fame, making his first appearance on WWE programming of any kind in nearly a decade to accept the honor. A few years later, Bret signed up again with the WWE to ensure that he got a proper and honorable exit from the business (see below).

Shawn spent the next few months as the WWF Champion, but back injuries suffered during a Casket Match with The Undertaker at ''Royal Rumble ''Wrestling/RoyalRumble 1998'' eventually caught up to him. Following his loss to Steve Austin at ''WrestleMania 14'' (where he performed despite his injury causing him severe pain), Michaels spent the next four years on the shelf, making sporadic appearances for WWE while he slowly healed up. In this interim, Shawn not only admitted that he was aware of the plan to screw over Bret, but he became a born-again Christian. Shawn made his return to active competition in 2002; he remained one of WWE's most popular and skilled performers until his retirement at ''[=WrestleMania=] 26''.



* BlatantLies: MichaelCole interviewed VinceMcmahon before the event and when asked who will win, he replied, "I don't know." ShawnMichaels suggested a screwjob to Vince when BretHart refused to lose several weeks before, and Vince had said they needed to do it because he couldn't talk Bret around.
* ContinuityNod: It became almost an annual tradition for the ''Survivor Series'' event to feature one high-profile screwjob, and several other companies have used the Screwjob as a template for screwy endings:
** The main event of WCW's ''Starrcade 1997'' - Wrestler/{{Sting}} was pinned by WCW Champion [[HulkHogan "Hollywood" Hogan]] via a "fast" three-count, but before the bell could be rung, Bret Hart (a special referee during an earlier match) stopped the timekeeper from ringing it, knocked out the ref, and tossed Hogan back into the ring, where he eventually tapped to the Scorpion Deathlock (which coincidentally is Sting's version of the Sharpshooter) while Bret acted as the ref. (This was made worse by the fact that the "fast" three-count wasn't really "fast", and it's long rumored that Hogan called for the screwy finish so as not to lose clean to Sting.)

to:

* BlatantLies: MichaelCole Wrestling/MichaelCole interviewed VinceMcmahon [[Wrestling/VinceMcMahon Vince [=McMahon=]]] before the event and when asked who will win, he replied, "I don't know." ShawnMichaels suggested a screwjob to Vince when BretHart refused to lose several weeks before, and Vince had said they needed to do it because he couldn't talk Bret around.
* ContinuityNod: It became almost an annual tradition The ending was recycled a year later for the ''Survivor Series'' event to feature one high-profile screwjob, purpose of turning [[Wrestling/DwayneJohnson the Rock]] {{Heel}}, and several other companies have used the Screwjob as a template for screwy endings:
** The main event of WCW's ''Starrcade 1997'' 1997'', one month later - Wrestler/{{Sting}} Wrestling/{{Sting}} was pinned by [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wcw/wcw-h.html WCW Champion World Heavyweight Champion]] [[HulkHogan "Hollywood" Hogan]] via a "fast" three-count, but before the bell could be rung, Bret Hart (a special referee during an earlier match) stopped the timekeeper from ringing it, knocked out the ref, and tossed Hogan back into the ring, where he eventually tapped to the Scorpion Deathlock (which coincidentally is Sting's version of the Sharpshooter) while Bret acted as the ref. (This was made worse by the fact that the "fast" three-count wasn't really "fast", and it's long rumored that Hogan called for the screwy finish so as not to lose clean to Sting.)



** On the May 28, 2001 edition of [[WWERaw Raw is War]] held in Calgary, Alberta (BretHart's hometown), StoneColdSteveAustin (the then-WWF Champion) put ChrisBenoit (a long-time friend of the Hart family) in the Crippler Crossface, and Vince ordered the bell rung. As if recreating the Screwjob in Bret's hometown wasn't bad enough, Bret's father Stu was sitting at ringside.
** ''Backlash 2004'' played with the Screwjob by having Michaels put fellow Hart's fellow Canadian (and then-World Heavyweight Champion) ChrisBenoit in the Sharpshooter, then having Earl Hebner rush down to the ring to call the submission (the first ref had been knocked out). This time, Earl plays the referee job straight, and Benoit never taps; in fact, he later wins by making Michaels tap out to the Sharpshooter, WWE offering up a symbolic apology for the Screwjob.
** Earl Hebner made his {{TNA}} debut at ''Against All Odds 2006'', and was about to call for the bell when Jeff Jarrett had Christian Cage in the Sharpshooter, but Cage stopped him and went on to win the match.
** ShaneMcMahon defeated ShawnMichaels the the March 18, 2006 ''Saturday Night's Main Event'' when he put an unconscious Michaels in the Sharpshooter, and Vince ordered the bell to be rung, and Shane to be announced as winner by submission.
** ''Breaking Point 2009'' had CMPunk lock TheUndertaker in the Anaconda Vice. Despite Undertaker ''escaping the hold'', Theodore Long rang the bell and declared Punk the winner by submission. This match was actually a ''double'' screwjob. A few minutes earlier, Undertaker made Punk tap out with Hell's Gate, but Theodore declared that it didn't count and ordered the match to continue.
** The January 21, 2010 edition of ''{{TNA}} Impact'' featured a damn-near recreation of the Screwjob; this time, however, the screwjob was in favor of the champion (AJ Styles) rather than the challenger (KurtAngle).
** The July 17, 2011 match between CMPunk VS JohnCena was eerily similar till Cena, who locked Punk in a STF, ''knocks out John Laurinaitis, who was gonna ring the bell!'' Cena then tells Vince that this match is his match and that he finishes it his way, comes back to the ring and gets hit with a GTS by Punk! CMPunk wins the WWE Championship belt with the stipulation that he leaves WWE and Cena gets fired if he loses.
*** On the July 18, 2011 edition of WWERaw, Cena outright calls Vince out on trying to recreate this incident and on what it had done to Shawn's career as part of TheReasonYouSuckSpeech.
** DanielBryan locked TheBigShow in the Yes Lock on the May 11, 2012 edition of ''Smackdown'' and John Laurinaitis immediately rang the bell and declared Bryan the winner by submission.

to:

** On the May 28, 2001 edition of [[WWERaw [[Wrestling/WWERaw Raw is War]] held in Calgary, Alberta (BretHart's (Wrestling/BretHart's hometown), StoneColdSteveAustin Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin (the then-WWF Champion) put ChrisBenoit Wrestling/ChrisBenoit (a long-time friend of the Hart family) in the Crippler Crossface, and Vince ordered the bell rung. As if recreating the Screwjob in Bret's hometown wasn't bad enough, Bret's father Stu was sitting at ringside.
** ''Backlash 2004'' played with the Screwjob by having Michaels put fellow Hart's fellow Canadian (and then-World then-[[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-h.html WWE Raw World Heavyweight Champion) ChrisBenoit Champion]]) Wrestling/ChrisBenoit in the Sharpshooter, then having Earl Hebner rush down to the ring to call the submission (the first ref had been knocked out). This time, Earl plays the referee job straight, and Benoit never taps; in fact, he later wins by making Michaels tap out to the Sharpshooter, WWE offering up a symbolic apology for the Screwjob.
** Earl Hebner made his {{TNA}} Wrestling/{{TNA}} debut at ''Against All Odds 2006'', and was about to call for the bell when Jeff Jarrett Wrestling/JeffJarrett had Christian Cage Wrestling/ChristianCage in the Sharpshooter, but Cage stopped him and went on to win the match.
** ShaneMcMahon [[Wrestling/ShaneMcMahon Shane [=McMahon=]]] defeated ShawnMichaels Wrestling/ShawnMichaels the the March 18, 2006 ''Saturday Night's Main Event'' when he put an unconscious Michaels in the Sharpshooter, and Vince ordered the bell to be rung, and Shane to be announced as winner by submission.
** ''Breaking Point 2009'' had CMPunk Wrestling/CMPunk lock TheUndertaker Wrestling/TheUndertaker in the Anaconda Vice. Despite Undertaker ''escaping the hold'', Theodore Long rang the bell and declared Punk the winner by submission. This match was actually a ''double'' screwjob. A few minutes earlier, Undertaker made Punk tap out with Hell's Gate, but Theodore declared that it didn't count and ordered the match to continue.
** The January 21, 2010 edition of ''{{TNA}} ''Wrestling/{{TNA}} Impact'' featured a damn-near recreation of the Screwjob; this time, however, the screwjob was in favor of the champion (AJ Styles) [[http:/www.wrestling-titles.com/us/tna/tna-h.html TNA World Heavyweight Champion]] (Wrestling/AJStyles) rather than the challenger (KurtAngle).
(Wrestling/KurtAngle).
** The July 17, 2011 match between CMPunk Wrestling/CMPunk VS JohnCena Wrestling/JohnCena was eerily similar till Cena, who locked Punk in a STF, ''knocks out John Laurinaitis, Wrestling/JohnLaurinaitis, who was gonna ring the bell!'' Cena then tells Vince that this match is his match and that he finishes it his way, comes back to the ring and gets hit with a GTS by Punk! CMPunk Wrestling/CMPunk wins the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-h.html WWE Championship World Heavyweight Championship]] belt with the stipulation that he leaves WWE and Cena gets fired if he loses.
*** On the July 18, 2011 edition of WWERaw, ''[[Wrestling/{{WWERaw}} Raw]], Cena outright calls Vince out on trying to recreate this incident and on what it had done to Shawn's career as part of TheReasonYouSuckSpeech.
** DanielBryan Wrestling/DanielBryan locked TheBigShow Wrestling/TheBigShow in the Yes Lock on the May 11, 2012 edition of ''Smackdown'' and John Laurinaitis immediately rang the bell and declared Bryan the winner by submission.
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A. It was a work. B. It would have been a double-cross, not a shoot.


** Shawn Michaels feels this way as well.
* WorkedShoot: Subverted, as the Montreal Screwjob is very well known to be a legitimate shoot (despite some people believing otherwise).

to:

** Shawn Michaels feels this way as well.
* WorkedShoot: Subverted, as the Montreal Screwjob is very well known to be a legitimate shoot (despite some people believing otherwise).
well.
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* IDidWhatIHadToDo: Even after Michael's RealLife HeelFaithTurn, this is his stance regarding the screw job.

to:

* IDidWhatIHadToDo: Even after Michael's RealLife HeelFaithTurn, this is has been his stance regarding the screw job.
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* IDidWhatIHadToDo: Even after Michael's RealLife HeelFaithTurn, this is his stance regarding the screw job.

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[[quoteright:325:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/montreal-screwjob_5557.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:325: Ring the bell!]]

'''''The Montreal Screwjob''''' is one of the most important events in the history of ProfessionalWrestling.

In 1997, [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} the WWF]] was facing its most heated competition ever in the form of [[{{Wrestling/WCW}} WCW]]. The MondayNightWars were in full swing and the NewWorldOrder angle was giving WCW better ratings than the WWF. [[{{VinceMcmahon}} Vince McMahon]]'s promotion was looking at some seriously hard times, and Vince himself was being forced to make some tough decisions. One of these decisions involved [[BretHart Bret "The Hitman" Hart]].

In 1996, Bret had signed an unprecedented twenty-year deal with the WWF for a considerable amount of money -- but with Vince losing his shirt thanks to WCW, he felt that he would have to breach Bret's contract in order to keep the company alive; [=McMahon=] has been accused by Hart and others of exaggerating his financial situation at the time. Backstage tension between Hart and fellow performer ShawnMichaels were also reaching a boiling point around this time, and the fiscal security that the WCW contract offered was enough to get Bret to jump ship: in November 1997, Hart -- then the reigning WWF Champion -- signed a contract with WCW for a guaranteed ''three million dollars per year''.

Hart's last appearance on WWF programming would be ''SurvivorSeries 1997'' (taking place in Montreal), where he faced Shawn Michaels in the main event for the WWF Championship. The event was not scheduled to be Bret's last booking with the WWF, as his working agreement ran for three weeks after the pay-per-view, and he had received verbal approval from WCW to work another PPV in early December where he likely would have dropped the title in a four-way match to either Shawn Michaels (if Michaels agreed to lose at Montreal) or another wrestler who would later lose to Shawn (if Michaels refused to job). Michaels refused to lose the ''Survivor Series'' match to Hart under any circumstances, and Bret made it clear that he would not lose to Michaels in Montreal. The exit clause in Hart's aforementioned contract required that Bret and Vince come to an agreement regarding any booking decisions regarding Hart, leaving him with all the cards. The pair's mutual stubbornness placed Vince between the proverbial rock and a hard place.

The original plan for the match's finish (according to Bret) was for Shawn to use Bret's famous Sharpshooter submission hold against him while the referee was down. After Shawn applied the hold, Bret would reverse it, and feuding factions D-Generation X (which Michaels was a part of) and the Hart Foundation (which Bret led) would run in and cause the match to be tossed out, leaving Bret open to drop the title at the four-way match the next month (Bret briefly discussed simply giving up the title on TV, but at that point, Vince was committed to the Screwjob, and he agreed to nearly anything Bret said in order to get Hart to perform at ''Survivor Series'').

Vince was still angry over then-WWF Women's Champion Alundra Blayze tossing the WWF Women's Championship belt in the trash live on WCW's ''Nitro'', and he was afraid Bret would show up on WCW programming with the WWF Championship and toss that belt in the trash (or worse) -- despite the fact that multiple lawsuits had been filed regarding the Blayze incident (and an earlier incident with RicFlair taking WCW's world championship belt with him to the WWF). Since Bret refused to drop the belt to Shawn in Canada, Vince was worried about the possibility of Bret jumping ship with the championship belt.

Well, that was ''Vince's'' story, anyway. More recent analyses by wrestling critics/historians says that the people pressuring Bischoff to sign Hart didn't want him to get over -- Bret was kept on the WCW shelf for over a month before popping a buyrate with the then-considered-washed-up Flair and being buried in pointless US Title feuds -- and the real reason for the Screwjob on Vince's end was the fact Bret was earning just shy of two million dollars per year [compared to Shawn's $750,000 per year]. StoneColdSteveAustin and TheUndertaker were negotiating new contracts at this point; when they compared themselves to the highest paid guy -- Bret Hart -- Vince got ''really'' scared.

A plot was hatched and carried out the night of ''Survivor Series'': when Bret was caught in the Sharpshooter by Michaels, Vince ran down to the ring and ordered the referee (Earl Hebner) to ring the bell as if Bret had submitted to the hold (despite Bret clearly not submitting in any fashion). This singular moment -- known today as the "Montreal Screwjob" -- was one of the most controversial and shocking events in the history of ''the entire pro wrestling industry''. The Screwjob not only sent Bret packing to WCW without a real sendoff, but it also had a hand in destroying {{kayfabe}} for many fans around the world, and it served as the launching pad for the [[CorruptCorporateExecutive "Mr. [=McMahon=]" character]], which was played full hilt by Vince -- who famously said the next night on ''Raw'' that "Bret screwed Bret" -- as he feuded with [[{{Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin}} "Stone Cold" Steve Austin]] during the Attitude Era.

The screwjob actually qualifies as [[{{HilariousInHindsight}} Hilarious in Hindsight]] when you consider how Bret ''won'' his first title in WWE. The Hart Foundation (Bret and brother-in-law Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, w/non-relative manager "The Mouth of the South" Jimmy Hart) defeated the British Bulldogs (The Dynamite Kid and cousin [[{{Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith}} Davey Boy Smith]]- another brother-in-law, though not acknowledged as such at the time) for the [[http://www.wrestling-titles.com/wwe/wwe-world-t.html WWE World Tag Team Titles]] on the February 7, 1987 (taped January 26) episode of ''WWF Superstars'' due to referee Danny Davis generally ignoring the Harts' constant double-teaming and spending most of the time checking on the injured Dynamite Kid. After the Harts won the match, Davis left with them.

Even before it became a running gag, other promotions were ''already'' parodying it. At [[{{Wrestling/ECW}} ECW]]'s November to Remember '97 PPV, held a mere ''three weeks'' later, Al Snow, in the early months of his carrying around a mannequin head {{gimmick}}, cut a promo where he said, "I didn't screw the Head. The HEAD SCREWED THE HEAD!"

Bret left the WWF and spent three years [[DemotedToExtra floundering around in WCW]] thanks to crappy booking and nobody really knowing what to do with someone who was -- at the time -- ''the hottest free agent in ProfessionalWrestling'' (something that ''Vince himself'' predicted would happen). Thanks to an errant kick by Goldberg during a match, Hart suffered a career-ending concussion and has been retired from in-ring action ever since (a stroke suffered after his retirement has ensured that, save for special circumstances where he doesn't have to take a bump, he'll never be able to perform in the ring again). Following his retirement, Bret had very little love lost for WWE -- thanks both to the Screwjob and the death of his brother [[OwenHart Owen]] in 1999 -- but managed to put his animosity aside to help preserve his legacy, working with WWE to produce a DVD set that was widely acclaimed as being a great retrospective on his career ([[WhatCouldHaveBeen it was initially going to be a smearjob set called "Screwed"]] until Bret heard about the plans). In 2006, Bret accepted induction into the WWE Hall of Fame, making his first appearance on WWE programming of any kind in nearly a decade to accept the honor. A few years later, Bret signed up again with the WWE to ensure that he got a proper and honorable exit from the business (see below).

Shawn spent the next few months as the WWF Champion, but back injuries suffered during a Casket Match with The Undertaker at ''Royal Rumble 1998'' eventually caught up to him. Following his loss to Steve Austin at ''WrestleMania 14'' (where he performed despite his injury causing him severe pain), Michaels spent the next four years on the shelf, making sporadic appearances for WWE while he slowly healed up. In this interim, Shawn not only admitted that he was aware of the plan to screw over Bret, but he became a born-again Christian. Shawn made his return to active competition in 2002; he remained one of WWE's most popular and skilled performers until his retirement at ''[=WrestleMania=] 26''.

In December 2009, Bret confirmed that he would return to WWE in 2010 to guest host the first ''Raw'' of the year (his first appearance on ''Raw'' in over twelve years), and during that show's opening segment, [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming Bret made his peace with Shawn in the middle of the ring]] in one of the most surreal moments in wrestling history. He was (kayfabe) attacked by Vince at the end of the show, which set up an angle that led up to ''WrestleMania 26'', where Vince faced Bret in a "No Holds Barred" Match. Although Vince tried to bribe the rest of the Hart family into screwing Bret over again, they knew it was coming and double-crossed [=McMahon=], allowing Bret to finally make Vince pay for Montreal (via thirteen chairshots and The Sharpshooter) and get the full closure he'd been looking for. (As part of the angle, Bret's father -- legendary Canadian wrestling promoter/trainer and patriarch of the Hart family, the late Stu Hart -- was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame.) After ''[=WrestleMania=]'', he appeared sporadically to help put over The Hart Dynasty (David Hart Smith, Tyson Kidd, and Natalya) and serve as ''Raw's'' General Manager for a brief period (he was eventually taken out by TheNexus). Both Bret and Shawn continue to make special "cameo" appearances at WWE events to this day.

In late 2011, WWE released ''Greatest Rivalries: Shawn Michaels vs. Bret Hart'' on DVD and BluRay; the set -- a first-of-its-kind release for WWE -- was dedicated to the long rivalry between Hart and Michaels, which stretched back all the way to the feud between The Rockers and The Hart Foundation. The real meat of the DVD was JimRoss' sitdown interview with both Hart and Michaels, who discussed their careers and their rivalry -- including the Screwjob -- at length. The DVD pretty firmly backs Bret Hart's side of the story, with Ross conceding that no one in the WWE had any fear of Bret pulling a Ric Flair with the belt, and that he had acted reasonably regarding the Survivor Series finish. The set was generally regarded as being one of WWE's best in years.

Along with the extensive article on ThatOtherWiki, [[http://www.411mania.com/wrestling/columns/125208/ this 411mania column]] is a good rundown of the events leading up to and surrounding the Screwjob.
----
! Tropes associated with the Montreal Screwjob include:

* BlatantLies: MichaelCole interviewed VinceMcmahon before the event and when asked who will win, he replied, "I don't know." ShawnMichaels suggested a screwjob to Vince when BretHart refused to lose several weeks before, and Vince had said they needed to do it because he couldn't talk Bret around.
* ContinuityNod: It became almost an annual tradition for the ''Survivor Series'' event to feature one high-profile screwjob, and several other companies have used the Screwjob as a template for screwy endings:
** The main event of WCW's ''Starrcade 1997'' - Wrestler/{{Sting}} was pinned by WCW Champion [[HulkHogan "Hollywood" Hogan]] via a "fast" three-count, but before the bell could be rung, Bret Hart (a special referee during an earlier match) stopped the timekeeper from ringing it, knocked out the ref, and tossed Hogan back into the ring, where he eventually tapped to the Scorpion Deathlock (which coincidentally is Sting's version of the Sharpshooter) while Bret acted as the ref. (This was made worse by the fact that the "fast" three-count wasn't really "fast", and it's long rumored that Hogan called for the screwy finish so as not to lose clean to Sting.)
** The Rock vs Mankind at Survivor Series 1998 was the original Screwjob copycat with Rock playing Michaels, Mankind playing Bret and Vince betraying Mankind.
** On the May 28, 2001 edition of [[WWERaw Raw is War]] held in Calgary, Alberta (BretHart's hometown), StoneColdSteveAustin (the then-WWF Champion) put ChrisBenoit (a long-time friend of the Hart family) in the Crippler Crossface, and Vince ordered the bell rung. As if recreating the Screwjob in Bret's hometown wasn't bad enough, Bret's father Stu was sitting at ringside.
** ''Backlash 2004'' played with the Screwjob by having Michaels put fellow Hart's fellow Canadian (and then-World Heavyweight Champion) ChrisBenoit in the Sharpshooter, then having Earl Hebner rush down to the ring to call the submission (the first ref had been knocked out). This time, Earl plays the referee job straight, and Benoit never taps; in fact, he later wins by making Michaels tap out to the Sharpshooter, WWE offering up a symbolic apology for the Screwjob.
** Earl Hebner made his {{TNA}} debut at ''Against All Odds 2006'', and was about to call for the bell when Jeff Jarrett had Christian Cage in the Sharpshooter, but Cage stopped him and went on to win the match.
** ShaneMcMahon defeated ShawnMichaels the the March 18, 2006 ''Saturday Night's Main Event'' when he put an unconscious Michaels in the Sharpshooter, and Vince ordered the bell to be rung, and Shane to be announced as winner by submission.
** ''Breaking Point 2009'' had CMPunk lock TheUndertaker in the Anaconda Vice. Despite Undertaker ''escaping the hold'', Theodore Long rang the bell and declared Punk the winner by submission. This match was actually a ''double'' screwjob. A few minutes earlier, Undertaker made Punk tap out with Hell's Gate, but Theodore declared that it didn't count and ordered the match to continue.
** The January 21, 2010 edition of ''{{TNA}} Impact'' featured a damn-near recreation of the Screwjob; this time, however, the screwjob was in favor of the champion (AJ Styles) rather than the challenger (KurtAngle).
** The July 17, 2011 match between CMPunk VS JohnCena was eerily similar till Cena, who locked Punk in a STF, ''knocks out John Laurinaitis, who was gonna ring the bell!'' Cena then tells Vince that this match is his match and that he finishes it his way, comes back to the ring and gets hit with a GTS by Punk! CMPunk wins the WWE Championship belt with the stipulation that he leaves WWE and Cena gets fired if he loses.
*** On the July 18, 2011 edition of WWERaw, Cena outright calls Vince out on trying to recreate this incident and on what it had done to Shawn's career as part of TheReasonYouSuckSpeech.
** DanielBryan locked TheBigShow in the Yes Lock on the May 11, 2012 edition of ''Smackdown'' and John Laurinaitis immediately rang the bell and declared Bryan the winner by submission.
* [[IconicCharacters Iconic Moment]]
* [[Memes/ProfessionalWrestling Memetic Mutation]]: "Bret screwed Bret".
** "Ring the fucking bell!"
* RealLifeWritesThePlot
* ShootTheDog: How Vince [=McMahon=] views the Montreal Screwjob, he had to do what he had to do.
** Shawn Michaels feels this way as well.
* WorkedShoot: Subverted, as the Montreal Screwjob is very well known to be a legitimate shoot (despite some people believing otherwise).

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