The career of Mick Foley is filled with matches that are defined by gory spectacle. Whether you're awestruck by Foley's audacity or horrified at all the bloodshed and mangled limbs, there's no way that you can look away once the high spots happen.

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Though the Mickster's extreme stunts are all out in the open—immortalized in video clips on YouTube and the WWE Network—there are a lot of fascinating details about his matches that remained hidden for quite some time. With a little help from his friends, the passionate storyteller Foley has now pulled back the curtain on some memorable encounters.

10 Cactus Jack Vs. Eddie Gilbert: A Hospital Trip For The Ref

Usually, it's the competitors in need of a medical facility

Cactus Jack locking Eddie Gilbert in the Figure Four

Ring Name

Eddie Gilbert

Nickname

Hot Stuff

Billed Height

5'10"

Billed Weight

222 lbs.

Before Mick Foley became a cult favorite in ECW, he wrestled for the promotion's precursor Tri-State Wrestling Alliance. As Cactus Jack, he wrestled "Hot Stuff" Eddie Gilbert on several occasions. One of these matches—held on May 18, 1991—was so intense that the referee got caught up in the physicality and was rushed to the hospital after the match.

The trip to the hospital, however, was all part of the performers' commitment to their craft. In reality, the referee suffered no serious injuries when he took his bump and was simply working the medics.

9 Cactus Jack Vs. Sabu: Little Dewey Was In Attendance

It wasn't "Take Your Child to Work Day"

Cactus Jack and Sabu outside the ring

Sabu's Career Matches in ECW

Wins

Losses

Draws

Win Percentage

366

276

58

32

75.4%

In no way, shape, or form could ECW be described as a child-friendly product or workplace. For reasons known only to him, Foley decided to bring his three-year-old son Dewey to the September 30, 1994 ECW event.

That night, Cactus Jack went toe-to-toe with Sabu in a match that was most certainly not PG-13. During the match, Sabu broke his ribs on the guardrails after a moonsault attempt and Jack took several blows on the head from a soda bottle that was oddly durable. Meanwhile, Dewey—who probably should have been left at home—was crying in the locker room.

8 Cactus Jack Vs. Terry Funk: Inadequate Bomb Explosions

Chainsaw Charlie, bless him, was insane

Cactus Jack and Terry Funk backstage

Terry Funk's Career Matches

Wins

Losses

Draws

Win Percentage

2,549

1,346

890

313

52.8%

At some point, wrestlers who are passionate about the hardcore style need to be restrained from themselves. Case in point: when Terry Funk and Mick Foley were putting together their death match for IWA Kawasaki Dream in 1995, Funk wanted to retool a specific detail.

After seeing a demonstration of the explosions that would go off on the barbed wire boards, Funk decided that the C4 explosions couldn't just be four strong. They had to be six strong. Artistic decisions like these set Funk and Foley apart from lesser mortals who can't even fathom the concept of an explosion within a wrestling match.

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7 Cactus Jack Vs. Shane Douglas: The Story Behind The Suit

Vicious competitor? Yes. Good friend? You bet.

jack-douglas-ecw

ECW Title won by Douglas

No. of Reigns

Cumulative No. of Days as Champion

ECW World Heavyweight Title

4

874 days

ECW World Television Title

2

350 days

Though wrestlers adopt in-ring personas that are fictitious in nature, glimpses of their personal lives can be caught from time to time. When Cactus Jack stepped into the ring at ECW CyberSlam 1996, he was clad not in his typical wrestling gear, but in a pretty nice suit meant for formal events. As it turned out, Mick Foley had attended a special occasion earlier that day.

Foley was at a friend's wedding, and apparently, he saw no need to change his attire for his match against Shane Douglas. (It's possible, of course, that he had no time to put on his wrestling tights after arriving at the venue.) There was nothing elegeant or formal, though, about the way that Douglas handcuffed Cactus Jack and inflicted chair shot after chair shot. As dangerous as that sounds, this wouldn't be the last time that Mick Foley would be cuffed and repeatedly blasted on the head.

6 Boiler Room Brawl: Continuity At The Expense Of Well-Being

Somehow, someway... The Undertaker's legend continues to grow

Date of 1996 PPV Match

Result

Notes

November 17, 1996

Undertaker def. Mankind

Singles match at Survivor Series

October 20, 1996

Undertaker def. Mankind

Buried Alive Match at In Your House: Buried Alive

August 18, 1996

Mankind def. Undertaker

Boiler Room Brawl at SummerSlam

June 23, 1996

Mankind def. Undertaker

Singles match at King of the Ring

What do Mick Foley and Mark Calaway have in common? They've both shunned their physical health in favor of putting on a memorable performance. Such was the case when they taped the first half of their Boiler Room Brawl for SummerSlam 1996.

As they slugged it out in a boiler room the day before SummerSlam, Undertaker sustained an elbow injury that led to a significant amount of bleeding. Though medical staff offered to sew up the wound, 'Taker refused because it would hurt the continuity of the match's second half, which would take place in front of the live SummerSlam audience. On the day of the PPV, the bleeding on Undertaker's elbow would persist, even causing Terri Runnels to have a word with him regarding the unpleasant sight.

5 King Of The Ring 1998:Not-So-White Lies

Mick Foley lied to Vince McMahon, not once but twice

Superstar

No. of Hell in a Cell Matches

Wins

Losses

Draws/No Contests

Mick Foley

3

0

3

1

Undertaker

9

6

3

0

Just hours before the infamous Hell in a Cell Match at King of the Ring 1998, Mick Foley knew that McMahon had misgivings about the spot where Undertaker would throw Mankind off the top of the Cell. So, Foley assured McMahon that he had already managed to climb to the top of the structure beforehand; and that he was actually comfortable standing several feet above the ring.

Both these claims, however, were outright lies. McMahon nevertheless agreed, which meant that Foley now had the boss's approval to create an immortal moment.

4 "I Quit" Match: The Finish That Would Have Been

Could this have caused less distress to the Mickster's family?

Superstar

No. of WWE Title Reigns

Cumulative No. of Days as Champion

Mick Foley

3

47 days

The Rock

8

367 days

During their "I Quit" Match for the WWE Title at Royal Rumble 1999, The Rock mercilessly delivered 11 chair shots to the head of Mankind. It was a gruesome sight to say the least, but apparently, this carnage was not part of the original plan for the match.

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On his podcast Foley is Pod, the Hardcore Legend said that the planned finish was going to be his actual utterance of the words "I quit" after looking out into the crowd and seeing the distress on his children's faces. Bizarrely, Foley second-guessed this finish because he thought that his kids—confident in their dad's resilience—might not have a look of concern when the time came.

3 Mankind Vs. Triple H: An Act Of Insubordination

Once again, Foley didn't listen to the Chairman

Superstar

No. of Matches in 2000

Wins

Losses

Draws

Win Percentage

Mick Foley

14

7

6

1

50%

Triple H

137

57

70

10

41.6%

Shortly before Royal Rumble 2000, Vince McMahon had a very specific edict for the Triple H vs. Cactus Jack street fight. His edict: "No thumb tacks." The two competitors, hell-bent on putting on a match for the ages, did anything but comply with McMahon's mandate.

In an episode of Hot Ones, Foley narrated how he and his dance partner were of the same mind. "As soon as Mr. McMahon walked away, Triple H goes, 'You put them under the ring already?' And I said, 'Yeah, I got it taken care of.'" And so it was that the Chairman of the WWE was overruled.

2 Backlash 2004: The Rib Before The Rampage

Amidst the brutality that night, there was a lighthearted moment

Date of 2004 PPV Match

Result

Notes

April 18, 2004

Randy Orton def. Cactus Jack

No Holds Barred Match for the IC Title at Backlash

March 14, 2004

Evolution (Randy Orton, Batista, and Ric Flair) def. The Rock and Mick Foley

Handicap tag team match at WrestleMania XX

At Backlash 2004, Randy Orton had his baptism of fire when he went up against Cactus Jack in a No Holds Barred match. The first blow he had to endure, however, wasn't a steel chair to the head but an affront to his integrity.

That night, Michael Hayes told Orton that, per orders of Vince McMahon, Orton had to wear a hockey helmet during his entrance. Orton, who was barely two years into his main roster run, obliged. Mercifully, Hayes told him that Orton it was a rib right before he came out for the match.

1 Mick Foley Vs. Edge: Sign Here, Please

Edge had some paperwork to fill before the Showcase of the Immortals

Edge's Matches in 2006

Wins

Losses

Draws

Win Percentage

157

37

119

1

23.6%

Waivers aren't usually associated with pro wrestling performances, but there was one involved for a certain match at WrestleMania 22. Before the Street Fight between Mick Foley and Edge took place, Edge was made to sign a waiver declaring that WWE would not be liable for what he'd do in the ring.

"That was a lot of stupidity on my part," said Edge on the Brotherly Love podcast. "I always say that I'm probably missing a chip." Of course, if Edge hadn't signed that waiver, the unforgettable image of him spearing Foley through a flaming table might have never happened.