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Hulk Hogan’s “Trinket” Comment, and the Art of Wrestling Hype

In 1993, Hulk Hogan sat before Japanese media ahead of a match with The Great Muta for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship. In a moment that has lived in infamy, Hogan gestured to the WWF World Heavyweight Title belt — the iconic Winged Eagle — and called it a “toy” and a “trinket.” He then pointed to the IWGP belt and praised it instead.

For decades, fans have debated: Was this a careless slip, a mistranslation, or a calculated shot at Vince McMahon? In truth, it was all of those things — and a perfect example of Hogan’s career-long pattern of manipulating perception to suit his next move.


WWF’s Position in 1993

By 1993, the WWF was struggling. Business had cooled dramatically since the boom of Hulkamania in the 1980s. The steroid scandal loomed over Vince McMahon, ratings were down, and Hogan himself had taken long breaks from the spotlight.

When he returned in 1993, Hogan looked less like the unstoppable hero of WrestleMania III and more like a star past his peak. His victory over Yokozuna at WrestleMania IX was met with confusion, and by King of the Ring that summer, he was booed in U.S. arenas. Within weeks, Hogan was gone from WWF television.

Against this backdrop, Hogan’s downplaying of the WWF belt feels less like betrayal and more like a recognition of reality: in Japan, the WWF title didn’t hold the same prestige it once had.


NJPW and the IWGP Belt

If Hogan was going to sell his Tokyo Dome match, he needed to elevate the IWGP Heavyweight Championship. Unlike the WWF’s “sports entertainment” presentation, New Japan’s belt was treated like a legitimate sporting title — defended in high-profile matches with athletes presented as fighters.

For Japanese media, Hogan calling their championship more important was a savvy move. It played into cultural pride, built anticipation, and made his challenge to Muta feel monumental.


The Infamous Quote

Hogan’s exact words were:

“This is a toy… a trinket… something you hang on the Christmas tree.”

He contrasted this with the IWGP belt, which he described as an “ornament.”

On its face, it sounded like he was belittling the belt that had made him famous. But context matters. Hogan was not speaking to U.S. fans; he was speaking through a translator to Japanese media.

Two readings make sense:

  1. The Ornament as History – Hogan may have meant the WWF belt was already part of his past, a trophy he’d won and placed on the shelf. His eyes were on the IWGP title — his next mountain to climb.
  2. Clumsy Language – In 1993, the word “oriental” was still commonly (and problematically) used in English. Hogan may have avoided anything that sounded similar, landing instead on “ornament” as an awkward way to contrast the belts.

Was It a Calculated Jab?

Still, Hogan’s career shows a pattern of carefully timed exits and provocative statements. The “trinket” line might have been another example. By mid-1993, Hogan’s relationship with Vince McMahon was deteriorating. Vince wanted Bret Hart and Lex Luger to carry the company, while Hogan still saw himself as the star.

Calling the WWF title a trinket could have been:

Hogan was always a master of hedging his bets — never fully closing the door on the past, but always teasing something bigger on the horizon.


The Pattern of Hogan’s Career

The “trinket” controversy fits into a larger pattern of Hogan’s career:

Hogan always knew when to exit, when to reinvent, and when to resurface. The “trinket” line looks less like an accident and more like another chapter in his strategy of self-preservation.


Comparisons in Wrestling

Hogan wasn’t the only wrestler to downplay one belt to elevate another. Ric Flair, for years, talked about the NWA’s “Ten Pounds of Gold” as the only true world title. In WCW, wrestlers routinely mocked WWF’s belts, and vice versa.

Wrestlers protect the title that benefits them most at the time. Hogan was simply playing the same game.


Reaction Then vs. Now

At the time, the comment barely made waves. Wrestling magazines noted it, but without social media, it fizzled quickly. In today’s viral culture, a WWE champion calling his own belt a “toy” would dominate headlines and podcasts for weeks. The lack of outrage in 1993 is part of why the clip now feels so jarring when revisited.


Irony in Retrospect

The biggest irony is that the Winged Eagle belt Hogan dismissed as a trinket is now inseparable from his image. To many fans, that belt is the Hulk Hogan belt, immortalised in posters, action figures, and video packages.

Calling it a toy feels absurd in hindsight — because Hogan helped make it iconic.


Hogan’s “Trinket” in 2025

Today, fans interpret Hogan’s comment through hindsight:

In truth, it was probably a mix of all three. The “trinket” remark remains a perfect Hogan-ism: brash, ambiguous, and endlessly debatable. It reminds us that in wrestling, the truth is always secondary to the sell. Hogan wasn’t insulting the belt so much as hyping the next prize. And in the process, he created one more controversial soundbite to keep his name in the headlines.


Final Word

Was Hogan burying the WWF Championship? Not really. He was doing what wrestlers always do — selling the next big fight. But like much of Hogan’s career, the line has lived on because it was delivered with just enough ambiguity to keep people guessing.

Thirty years later, that single word — “trinket” — tells us everything about Hulk Hogan: a master promoter, a controversial figure, and a man who always knew that hype matters more than history.

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