Later, he would preface his matches by dedicating his impending finishing move, the piledriver, to either the heel commentator or whomever he was feuding with at the time.
He used a piledriver as one of his ring moves, in which he would hold his opponents upside-down and then drop them head-first to the ring floor.
Chris was attempting to block the second piledriver, and injured his hand in the process.
Piledriver's power augmented his entire body, strengthening his bone, muscle, and flesh.
Rude followed with a back to belly piledriver and got a near-fall on the champion.
The attraction was named after a professional wrestling move known as the piledriver.
At that time, the piledriver was banned in most federations and treated as a move that could potentially paralyze a wrestler.
The "act" of performing a piledriver is called piledriving.