Ric Flair, one of the greatest in the history of professional wrestling, steps into the ring one last time Sunday, July 31, against Jeff Jarrett in ...
FITE is the premier global streaming platform for sports and entertainment with more than 1,000 pay-per-view events per year. “The Last Match” will be live streamed on FITE TV for $34.99. Ric Flair, one of the greatest in the history of professional wrestling, steps into the ring one last time Sunday, July 31, against Jeff Jarrett in Nashville. “The Last Match” will be live streamed on FITE TV.
Wrestling legend Ric Flair will wrestle his last match on Sunday, July 31 exclusively on FITE TV pay-per-view.
Coverage starts with a pre-show at 6:05 p.m. followed by actual wrestling at 7 p.m. Footage of Flair training for his final match surfaced this past spring. For a while there, it seemed like the 73-year-old wrestling legend would never hang up his boots.
Universally recognized as one of the greatest professional wrestlers in WWE history, Ric Flair has earned the title of World Heavyweight Champion an impressive ...
Split between a group of friends, you can watch Ric Flair’s last bout in the ring for only a few dollars, which is seriously a small price to pay to be part of this special event. For just $35, Pay Per View gives you access to the entire event, which you can watch from home with a group of friends for an even better price. Ric Flair is a household name for WWE fans, and at 73 years old, he is making history by stepping into the ring one last time.
Ric Flair is still being that "stylin', profilin', limousine riding, jet flying, kiss-stealing, wheelin' and dealin' son of a gun,"
Instead, he’s focusing on being “100 percent of what I could be now.” Then they thought I had COVID … Yesterday, everything was A-OK. 5 days out, I’m good to go, man,” Ric told “ TMZ Sports.” “In the last couple of weeks, I don’t know if it’s psychological or what, but I thought I had pneumonia.
Follow along with the show as it happens live tonight (Sun., July 31, 2022) at 7 pm ET from Nashville, Tennessee.
The babyfaces recovered for Fatu to hit a superkick on Myers and for Alexander to plant Sterling on a spike piledriver. A close finish came on a sequence of Grace hitting a spinebuster to Ellering then Purrazzo jumping in for a whirling armbar to Grace. Ellering came over for the break, but Purrazzo snatched her arm instead. Since Jarrett’s shoulders were on the mat, the ref counted three awarding the victory to Flair and Andrade. A Saito suplex led the way for a running forearm blow to the back of the head for victory. Lawler advised Jeff to humiliate Flair and do the strut while Flair is flat on his back. Angels hit a C4 to Wayne. Angels attacked Gresham with a suicide dive on the outside and a discus lariat on the inside. Gresham scored a rolling cutter to Takeshita. Gresham then hit a springboard moonsault to Wayne. Gresham continued his attack with a suicide dive to Angels. Inside the ring, Gresham and Angels traded roll-ups. The match progressed into a chess match on the mat. Frank the Clown stole the microphone and stormed the ring to insult Flair. Jacob Fatu came in to shut him up. Tony Schiavone and David Crockett welcomed us to the broadcast to tunes of a snazzy disco funk tune. Near pinfalls were a bulldog from Uemura and a bridging German suplex from Narita. Both men exchanged blows in the center of the ring. Flair teams with Andrade to fight the duo of Jay Lethal and Jeff Jarrett.
Ric Flair's Retirement Match: Ric Flair and Andrade El Idolo vs. Jay Lethal and Jeff Jarrett; Impact World Championship Match: Josh Alexander vs. Jacob Fatu ...
Komander vs. Crowbar vs. Crimson vs. Konosuke Takeshita vs. Rey Fénix vs. Deonna Purrazzo vs.
IF FLAIR DEBUTS WITH AEW WWE Hall of Famer and pro wrestling legend Ric Flair made his All Elite Wrestling...
Flair's final on-screen work in WWE saw him get involved in a storyline with Charlotte and Lacey Evans early last year. The celebration is complete! FITE @FiteTV FITE @FiteTV FITE @FiteTV FITE @FiteTV FITE @FiteTV FITE @FiteTV The legend brought out some of his trademark moves and celebrations, which delighted the crowd. FITE @FiteTV FITE @FiteTV FITE @FiteTV
Ric Flair was victorious in his retirement match at the Ric Flair's Last Match event on Sunday inside Nashville Municipal Auditorium, defeating both Jeff ...
Kelly (Brewster) and I worked together, as partners in this (his upcoming comic book series) but she also trains with me and it's a lot of hard work. Flair spoke with ComicBook leading up to Sunday's match, saying he would consider the tag team match a fitting finale for his career if it exceeded everything he had done following his original retirement at WrestleMania XXIV in 2008. He popped Jarrett square in the face, then applied the Figure Four Leglock. Referee Dave Miller then ran down and counted the pinfall, awarding "The Nature Boy" his final victory inside the squared circle.
This is Wrestling INC.'s official results for Ric Flair's Last Match on July 31, 2022, featuring Flair & Andrade vs. Lethal and Jarrett!
Andrade sends Lethal to the outside, then delivers a chop to Flair. Andrade hits Jarrett with a DDT off the top rope, then goes for a pin but Lethal breaks it up. Jerry Jarrett answers the door and Jerry Lawler says he can’t get a word with Jeff, but he can get a word with him. He delivers a split leg moonsault, then goes for a pin but Alexander kicks out. He goes for a pin but Alexander kicks out. All four men are down before Kid hits a Crucifix Bomb on Taurus. Fenix takes Bandido out with a crossbody on the outside before Kid hits a Tornado to Kid and Bandido. Kid tosses Fenix back in the ring before Bandido stops him. He goes for a pin but Alexander kicks out. He delivers a power slam to Bandido as he flies off the top rope, then goes for a pin but Fenix and Kid break it up. Taurus tosses Fenix back into the ring, but Fenix delivers a kick to Taurus’ head. Sabin hits a cutter on Edwards as Shelley delivers the Facial. The Guns hit the Skull and Crossbones on Edwards for the win. The bell rings and Fenix charges at Kid. The four men start rolling one another up before Taurus delivers a head butt to Kid. He sends Bandido and Fenix over the top rope, before Kid delivers a slingshot drop kick. Sabin tries to break the hold, but Edwards comes in and locks in a Boston Crab. Sabin manages to break up both submissions by kicking Edwards into Shelley and Richards. Richards delivers a Dragon Screw to Shelley, but Shelley fires back with a DDT. The crowd rallies behind Shelley as he makes the hit tag to Sabin. We’re now down to the final two: Ray and Warner. Ray delivers a forearm to Mance, then goes through the middle rope to grab a table from under the ring.
Like only he could, Ric Flair, 73, authored his trademark strut and legendary "Woo!" chant before winning the final wrestling match of a storied career -- a ...
Lethal said Flair doing that was his biggest concern, because of the unpredictability of how a septuagenarian Flair would react to a cut. "It's his last one," said the 55-year-old Jarrett, a WWE Hall of Famer who works as an executive in WWE. "If anything goes wrong, it's on me. Flair had been incredibly appreciative -- and trusting -- of Lethal to get him ring-ready for his final match. "I said, 'I f---ing love you, you're the f---ing man, I'm trying to be like you when I grow up, because you're f---ing great. Many of his catchphrases -- and of course, the classic "Woo!" -- are still repeated today. He was the leader of the influential Four Horsemen faction in wrestling, and his matches and work on the microphone are iconic. Midway through the match, Flair took a razor blade to his forehead to cause bleeding, a pro-wrestling technique to add intensity to a match. "This match is the most important of my career," said Andrade, an AEW star who is married to Flair's daughter and WWE standout Charlotte. "... This is unbelievable. The finish came when Jarrett, a legend in his own right performing in his hometown, landed his signature guitar shot on Lethal accidentally when Andrade pulled Flair away. The only thing I can't foresee is how much he will bleed, is it controllable? Flair wore a robe that was estimated at nearly $40,000 to the ring Sunday night. He landed chops and punches, his donkey kick low blow and even took a vertical suplex from Lethal, with whom he trained for this match to get ring-ready.
Who won Ric Flair's Last Match? The Nature Boy & his son-in-law Andrade El Idolo teamed up in a match against Jeff Jarrett & Jay Lethal.
The Nature Boy had originally retired in 2008 in a classic bout against Shawn Micheals at WrestleMania 24. Motor City Machine Guns (Alex Shelley and Chris Sabin), Killer Kross (w/ Scarlett Bordeaux) vs. After the match, confetti fell off the air as Flair celebrated with Andrade, Charlotte Flair and the rest of his family.
Ric Flair came away with the win at 'Ric Flair's Last Match' on Sunday in Nashville, Tennessee. The 16-time world champion emerged victorious alongside ...
Flair then revealed in a post-match interview with Tony Schiavone that he was planning to go party with Kid Rock. Flair previously retired at WWE WrestleMania 24 in 2008 in a match with Shawn Michaels but he came out of retirement one year later, performing on a Hulkamania tour before signing with TNA Wrestling. His final match prior to Sunday's event was a loss to Sting on a September 2011 episode of IMPACT. A big win in Ric Flair's last match
There wasn't much fake about the risk of 73-year-old Ric Flair putting himself through an ordeal in his final match. But that's what made it so good.
From the moment Flair arrived in his standard, showy robe, onlookers were firmly backing him and his wrestling son-in-law partner. And the WWE is in town. That’s what made this tribute so enticing for thousands who’ll always remember the excitement and emotion of being there in person. When pro wrestling took off in the 1980s and early 1990s, it seemed everyone – even its top performers – had a gimmick. It's how a “bad guy” attained unprecedented popularity and a pop culture impact that persists to this day. The line between sports and entertainment gets blurred with pro wrestling. “There's nobody from the WWE here,” Flair said. That wasn’t necessarily a great idea, but the limelight is tough to relinquish. Of the WWE wrestlers at Saturday night’s Summerslam at Nissan Stadium, I might have known a few names. A new referee sprints out and is authorized to officially close a legendary career in glory. Purple confetti – see, Flair was wearing purple – sails through a raucous Municipal Auditorium. Flair, face bloodied earlier during a nasty sequence outside the ring, is honored by family and friends. He walks off and blows kisses to an adoring public and then exits, bound for Kid Rock’s bar, he tells the crowd.
He did his iconic strut down to the ring, led the sold out crowd in his "Woo!" chant, and his face was covered in blood to end the match as it often was in ...
“This match is the most important of my career,” said Andrade, who is married to Flair’s daughter and WWE star, Charlotte. “… This is unbelievable. Flair lead the Four Horsemen faction and his classic “Woo!” will be echoed forever. The finish came when Jarrett accidentally landed his guitar shot on Lethal when Andrade pulled Flair out of the way. The match was nearly 30 minutes and the WCW and WWE legend was clearly laboring at points. The 73-year-old Flair also faked a heart attack at one point and was visibly exhausted at other points. Flair’s first match since 2011 ended the only way it could: with his signature figure-four leglock.
Those in live attendance didn't pay much attention to the Jim Ross tribute video to Ric Flair before the Impact Championship match. They were, instead, focused ...
Immediately after the ring cleared from the Bunkhouse Stampede, the ring crew went to work. The fans in live attendance didn’t need much encouragement to give the match between Rey Fenix, Bandido, Taurus, and Laredo Kid a big reaction. In an interesting moment fans would only know about live, the announcer addressed the crowd before the pre-show began. Fenix briefly tried to address fans on the mic before deferring to JR’s comments. They were, instead, focused on saluting the efforts of Rey Fenix, Bandido, Taurus, and Laredo Kid after their barn burner of a lucha libre match. There’s no legend in wrestling quite like Ric Flair. In the 1980s he may have been the wrestler’s wrestler—the technical master hardcore fans recognized as the greatest.
Ric Flair headlined one final main event on Sunday in a tag-team match with his son-in-law, and AEW star, Andrade to go against Jeff Jarrett and Jay Lethal.
He wraps up his in-ring career as a 16-time world champion and two-time WWE Hall of Famer. Flair would put Jarrett in the figure-four leglock. Flair last performed in 2011. Jarrett would try to hit Flair with his signature cheat code – a guitar shot – but missed and hit his partner instead. "I had one of my best matches of my career here with Ricky Steamboat," the 73-year-old said afterward, via ESPN. "All my family is here. Flair was passed brass knuckles and delivered a shot to Jarrett.
For some, Ric Flair & Andrade El Ídolo's victory over Jeff Jarrett & Jay Lethal was the kind of spectacle they want from professional wrestling, and a ...
But it’s not going to lead to him being in better shape for Ric Flair’s Last Match II next year. PWInsider.comis told that Ric Flair was checked out by two doctors backstage in Nashville after his PPV bout and we are told he is “great”, according to someone who spoke with him after the show. Some of that may just be maintaining the legend of Ric Flair, something Richard Fliehr has long struggled with. As was thoroughly documented in the build up to Sunday’s show, Flair’s medical history makes something like that 25 minute match a scary proposition. For others, it was a shameless money grab that diminished Flair’s legacy and reinforced the general public’s worst conceptions of wrestling. He’s shown no signs of slowing down outside the ring.
The wrestler returned to the ring for the first time in more than a decade at age 73 and with a pacemaker in his chest.
"The people around Ric Flair should have did something to prevent that match because that was horrific. The brutal match left man fans happy that Flair survived. I can't fault him for wanting to feel alive one last time. "Ric Flair is an incredibly flawed human being, but as a wrestler, I'm suffering no slander. Pro wrestling legend Ric Flair returned to the ring Sunday night for what was billed as his final match. Flair is a two-time WWE Hall of Famer, and he's become a pop culture phenomenon unto himself, as has his signature "Wooo!" call.
Ric Flair was a beaten, bloody, trembling mess at the end of his finale match on Sunday night at the Nashville Municipal Auditorium.
Kelly (Brewster) and I worked together, as partners in this (his upcoming comic book series) but she also trains with me and it's a lot of hard work. PWInsider's Mike Johnson provided an update of his own by writing, "PWInsider.com is told that Ric Flair was checked out by two doctors backstage in Nashville after his PPV bout and we are told he is 'great', according to someone who spoke with him after the show. Back then, at that time, I was still having self-confidence issues and I was paying out (for his divorces) more to three people and had to go to work.