second that tiny. Perfect example of "oh shit" moments would be the well documented Mick Foley's book "Have a Nice Day" Especially the one fight the Undertaker. Read this story:
Hell in a Cell - Undertaker vs. Mankind The Hell in a Cell match at the 1998 King of the Ring between The Undertaker and Mankind (Mick Foley) has since become one of the most famous professional wrestling matches in history. In preparing for the match Mick Foley asked longtime mentor and friend Terry Funk for his advice on how to top the first Hell in the Cell, which Foley considered a great match. Funk's fateful advice was to start the match on top of the cage.
When the match started, both men climbed on top of the cage before the bell had even rung. After a short battle the Undertaker threw Mankind off the top of the cage through the Spanish announcers' table 16 feet below, narrowly avoiding monitors and other A/V equipment. Emergency medical technicians and other staff quickly rushed to his aid, while announcer Jim Ross screamed "Good God almighty, good God almighty, that killed him! With God as my witness, he is broken in half!" Foley was strapped to a gurney, and the technicians started to carry him up the entrance ramp. Meanwhile, Undertaker remained atop the cage, which had begun to rise back towards the ceiling to allow room for the EMTs to wheel Mankind away on a gurney. Even though the fall from the cage was planned and well executed, Terry Funk and Vince McMahon broke kayfabe - at the time, both were involved in feuds with Mankind - to come down ringside and check on Foley's condition. Later Foley would claim that he had introduced the idea of the throw from the top of the cage earlier in the day; Calaway at first resisted, asking him, "Mick, do you want to die?", but eventually agreed.
As he was being wheeled up the aisle, Mankind got off of the gurney, and, despite a dislocated shoulder, walked back towards the ring and climbed back on top of the cage. The match continued, even though the roof of the cage was buckling under both of them with every step they took. During the ensuing fight Undertaker chokeslammed Mankind; unfortunately and unexpectedly, a section of the cage roof gave way and Mankind fell through and into the ring where he suffered a concussion and was knocked out cold for the first and only time in his career. (At this point, Ross can be heard screaming "For God's sake, will somebody stop the damn match!"). In addition to the fall, a steel chair lying on the roof of the cage fell through with Mankind and struck him in the face from a height of thirteen feet, dislocating his jaw and knocking out one and a half teeth as well as creating a large cut beneath his lip which he was able to stick his tongue through.
A famous picture taken a few minutes after the fall through the cage depicts Mick Foley apparently smiling and licking his lips while one of his broken teeth, which he had aspirated into his sinus cavity, protrudes from his nostril. For his part, Foley claims that he was using his tongue to check and see how many teeth he had broken, and that he was in a stupor from the immense pain that was inflicted upon him.
The Undertaker jumped down through the new hole in the cage roof (despite a broken foot which he suffered before the match) and improvised some spots with Funk to give Foley a few minutes to recover. Despite suffering from a head injury, Foley was able to continue and finish the match, which ended when The Undertaker backdropped and chokeslammed Mankind onto a pile of thumbtacks and followed up with a Tombstone Piledriver, winning by pinfall. Despite his injuries Mankind managed to go ahead with his planned interference in the main event later that evening, a first blood match between Kane and Stone Cold Steve Austin.
In the end, the match left Foley with a dislocated jaw, a dislocated shoulder, a bruised kidney, bruised ribs, one and a half missing teeth, a concussion and 14 stitches for the cut beneath his lip. He took 2 months to fully recover, but the match almost certainly helped shorten his active wrestling career.
Many elements of this match, including the fall through the roof of the cage, were reused in Mick Foley's retirement match against Triple H at No Way Out. Video clips of the two brutal falls have been some of the most replayed clips on WWE television.
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