
Dwayne Johnson and Hulk Hogan (Image Credit: X) Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson mourned on Friday over the loss of his child’s hero and close friend Hulk Hogan. The day after Hogan’s browsing, Johnson married Instagram to honor the match legend – the real name of Terry Bolle – with a sincere post and a clip from one of their most famous moments in the ring. The video was the main points from their unforgettable clearing in the Wrestlemania X8 in 2002, which is widely considered one of the biggest matches in Wrestling history.Hogan died on July 24th after suffering a sudden cardiac arrest in Clearwater, Florida. He was 71 years old.In a long emotional headline, Johnson looked back not only at their historical match, but also to the special connection he shared with Hogan growing up. He remembered participation in Hogan’s match against Paul “Mr. Wonderful” Orndorff in Madison Square Garden in 1984. After the match, Johnson tried to return and share a short but meaningful exchange with his idol.“You were shocked and so happy after the match, because you told me it was your last headband, and if it wasn’t for me, you shouldn’t have the accurate to make it again,” Johnson wrote. “You promised me to make more and give me your own headband of Hulkster as a gift of thanks.“A month later you did it in Madison Square Garden,” Johnson added. “You kept your word, with your hand and“ thanks to the child ”. And that meant the world to this little 12 -year -old boy. ”Fast move forward to 2002, Johnson, now 29, he found himself to face Hogan at the main event Wrestlemania X8 in Toronto.“I stand in the middle of the ring and face you – one of my match heroes in the main event of Wrestlemania,” Johnson wrote. “The match was to decide who would go down in history, as the biggest of all time. When you jump out of my finisher Rock Bottom – just listen and feel the crowd goes electrically … everything for you.”“I’ve never felt anything like that in my whole wrestling career. Tango takes two, but the historical reaction of the crowd was everything for you,” he added. “Maybe you” handed the torch “that night, but you, my friend … … you drew the house.” ““From the deep bones and the name of this wild and mad world of the professional wrestling that we love, I tell you now and forever… Thank you for the house, brother… Thank you, for the house.