WWE: Chris Jericho's Jacket and the 7 Best Entrance Attires of All-Time
Chris Jericho's entrance jacket is a party in itself—with flashing lights serving as the bells and whistles, its visual awesomeness makes this piece one of the best of all-time.
Entrance attire has to be something physically worn.
I don't think any of us will soon forget The Godfather's famous entrances, accompanied by a train of women.
But it isn't attire.
Others show up in unique dress but never take it off. That doesn't count, either.
The WWE Universe has seen many additions to costumes come through the curtain—from headgear to flash, cultural pieces to amped-up robes.
These are the best of each.
Best Entrance Costume: Papa Shango
1 of 7An entrance costume is an entire getup separate from ring attire.
Take Papa Shango for example: The guy walked into the ring with a flat-brim hat, huge, multi-colored jacket and a necklace made of bones while carrying a smoking skull.
It was freaky and cool all wrapped in one.
Another considered: The Mountie—mostly the hat, but the entire Canadian law getup was cool.
Best Cultural Ode: Rey Mysterio
2 of 7Rey Mysterio is known for his ever-changing, colorful masks.
Every once in a while, he provides an ode to his peers by walking down to the ring in their mask, then removing it to wrestle in his own.
At WrestleMania 22, Mysterio outdid himself.
After leaping onto the stage, he disappeared before returning with a large warrior headdress. The piece might have been taller than him.
Others considered: Tito Santana, Yoshi Tatsu's mask and The British Bulldog's flag cape.
Best Flash: Hulk Hogan
3 of 7Many a wrestler has entered an arena decked out in bright colors, over-the-top designs and wild accessories.
Hulk Hogan was one of them.
The difference between Hogan's boas, bandannas and shades that lands him on this list, was the addition of the T-shirt.
The patented holes in the back and the ripping it to pieces gives Hogan the nod as one of the coolest entrance attires.
Others considered: "Macho Man" Randy Savage and "Superstar" Billy Graham
Best Showmanship: Shawn Michaels
4 of 7Much like Rey Mysterio and his mask, it was always an intriguing question of what Shawn Michaels would arrive in.
He took an already done-up pants design and dressed it up further with color-coordinated chaps and a vest.
He's shown up in a diamond-studded version, in animal print and dozens of leather versions.
Michaels is the only man in the WWE who can show up in chaps with "I'm just a sexy boy" blaring over the loud speakers and have full-grown men still go berserk.
Others considered: The Godfather's hat with feather and airbrushed vest and The Honkey Tonk Man
Best Jacket: Chris Jericho
5 of 7Bling, bling. Every time Chris Jericho comes around your city, it's bling bling.
The lights go out and then suddenly there's an overwhelmingly bright twinkle at the top of the stage.
Fans know it before the music even sounds.
Boom goes the dynamite, and Jericho is here to perform.
There have been dozens of awesome jackets in the WWE, but what sets Jericho's ahead of the rest is simply the lights.
They're a cool touch without making him look like a Christmas tree.
Others considered: Bret Hart—he made jackets cool in the first place and did so rocking hot pink. Daniel Bryan's and Cody Rhodes' sleeveless version.
Best Robe: The Undertaker
6 of 7Like leather jackets, several wrestlers have chosen to enter the ring in robes.
Ric Flair is probably most famous for his flashy robes, color-coordinated to the color of his trunks on any given night.
Undertaker's robe wins because it wasn't a flashy robe—it wasn't the kind you show off in, put on after a shower or distract fans into forgetting you're only wearing small tights.
His robe looked half like a boxer's, half like it masked a man on his way to steal someone's soul.
Others considered: Ric Flair, of course.
Best Accessory: The Road Warriors' Spiked Shoulder Pads
7 of 7Is there a better entrance attire than the Road Warriors' spiked shoulder pads?
I think not.
They were so wildly different from jackets and robes.
At the same time, they added fear to opponents and maniacal smirks to fans' faces.
When you see a guy with a mohawk, face paint and spikes walking down the street, you don't cross the street. You cross, turn around and run until you find a bush to jump in.
Others considered: D'Lo Brown's bullet proof vest and Val Venis' towel (the one we hoped he would keep on).
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