You're Going Down


"You're Going Down" is the lead single from Sick Puppies' third album Tri-Polar.
"You're Going Down" was used by WWE to represent their Extreme Rules pay-per-view event as its official theme song. The wrestling promotion also used the song by making it part of the soundtrack to their video game SmackDown vs. Raw 2010. It was also used in a pre-game video package for the Montreal Alouettes at the 96th Grey Cup and the opening theme for the 2010 live-action film adaptation of Tekken.
The official release date was 2 June 2009 but the band had already begun streaming the song through their Myspace page.
It is also the part of the trailer for My Soul to Take.
When Moore was asked how he wrote the song his answer was, "I asked myself, when you're getting pumped up to get into the ring, what would you want to hear? And that's what came out."

Music video

The full video for "You're Going Down" premiered on 11 August 2009 on both MTV2 and mtvU, as well as the . The next day, it became available for viewing on Sick Puppies Myspace page, as well as their YouTube channel.
To contrast the heavy, aggressive sound of the song, the video features small children throwing water balloons at each other and shooting each other with water guns. The main humor comes from the fact that it is shot in a very serious way, similar to Saving Private Ryan, so that it appears to be a real war. The kids talk on walkie talkies and appear to die as if fighting with real weapons. The video cuts back and forth between this story and scenes of the band performing the song. Unlike most videos that are part story and part performance, this video has much more of the band performing than of the kids fighting.

Track listing

Charts

"You're Going Down" is the most successful single of the band on the Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, debuting at number 38 and peaking at number two, making it their first top-five single. On the Alternative Songs chart, the song debuted at number 36, peaking at number 11. It also peaked at number-one on the Active Rock charts. It became the last Australian song to top an American music chart for the 2000s;.
Chart Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks2
U.S. Billboard Alternative Songs11
U.S. Billboard Rock Songs8
U.S. Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles8
U.S. Billboard Heatseekers Songs12

Certifications