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- Live from Miami, Florida, bastion of Americana and/or
old people. - Your hosts are Gorilla Monsoon and
Roddy Piper.
- This show is, of course, in the thick of the Gulf War
and the Sgt. Slaughter storyline, and hence the crowd is in full xenophobic form.
- Opening match: The Rockers v. The New Orient Express.
This is the PPV debut of Paul Diamond as the masked Kato, thus reuniting the awesome Badd
Company too late to do any good. Rockers start out with a double pescado and then Jannetty
and Diamond show off a wrestling sequence. Michaels tags in and wallops on Tanaka for a
while, but he goes for the sleeper, which never leads to anything good this early in the
match. Sure enough, Kato comes in and nails Michaels, turning the tide. Then a terrific,
luchaesque sequence erupts as the four guys do a complex bit with a double whip, dosee-do,
and double atomic drop. The Orients escape and the Rockers follow with stereo topes. Great
stuff. Some putz yells "boring" as Shawn takes a 5 second rest with a headlock.
Shawn goes for the TEN PUNCHES OF DOOM on Kato but Tanaka pulls him down from the outside
and clotheslines him on the top rope, then whacks him with the cane for good measure. Big
heat for that. Shawn assumes the Ricky Morton role. Neat sequence as Shawn does a Flair
flip and then gets kicked by Tanaka on the outside and flips back into the ring. he works
in the triple somersault clothesline sell, of course. Marty gets the hot tag and gets
several two counts on Kato. Tanaka kicks Marty in the face to give Kato a backslide
two-count. Kato slingshots Jannetty into a Tanaka chop, then in a spectacular ending, Kato
slingshots Jannetty again, but Shawn hits Tanaka in the gut to bend him over and Jannetty
goes with the momentum and sunset flips Tanaka for the pin. Has to be seen to be
appreciated. ****
- Macho Man wants a title shot, so he sends Sherri out to
announce that Sgt. Slaughter has agreed to give him a title shot when he wins the title.
But to cover their bases, she calls out Ultimate Warrior to challenge him to a title match
in case *he* wins. She proceeds to seduce him (with Terri Runnels-level acting) and beg
for a Macho Man title match. The thought of Sherri on her knees almost makes me vomit my
Rolo. Warrior yells "Noooooooooooo" to her request, and Savage flips out in the
back. This becomes important later.
- The Mountie v. The Brooklyn Brawler. Le Squash with the
shock stick, serving to introduce Rougeau's new gimmick. I want a Scott Hall v. Jacques
Rougeau "dueling cattle prod" match now, dammit!
- Big Bossman v. The Barbarian. This would be the middle
of Bossman's peak period in the WWF, as he systemically hunted down and destroyed all the
Heenan family members (over comments made by Rick Rude about his mother) en route to an
Intercontinental title match against Curt Hennig at Wrestlemania VII. This is a nothing
match with a foregone conclusion that is about 7 minutes too long. Barbarian controls most
of the match with his shitty offense and bearhugs, but inevitably makes the mistake of
holding Bossman's foot, triggering the enzuigiri. Barbarian with a cradle out of nowhere
for two. Bossman with a stungun for two. Double knockout. This is actually picking up.
Barbarian hits the top rope clothesline for two, but Bossman has his foot on the rope.
Bossman slam, but Barbarian grabs the ropes at two. Eye poke and piledriver, sold with
zeal by Bossman. Barbarian goes for a cross-body off the top (!) but Bossman rolls through
for the pin. This didn't suck! **1/2
- Comments from rubes about Warrior. Why, there's little
kids painted like him, he *must* be over.
- Sgt. Slobber offers some words of wisdom for the
Ultimate Puke.
- The Ulimate Puke responds.
- WWF title match: The Ultimate Puke v. Sgt. Slobber.
Big-time heel heat for Sarge. Warrior cleans house on Sarge and Adnan to start and then
rips up the Iraqi flag for some cheap heat. Slaughter gets to eat the flag for good
measure. Warrior absolutely kicks Slaughter's ass from one side of the ring to the other
until Sherri comes down and the storyline kicks in. Warrior chases her down the aisle and
Savage clobbers him from behind and smashes a light standard on his head. Warrior
resolutely crawls back down the aisle while the fans chant "USA" extremely
loudly. Slaughter keeps stopping the count. I've gotta say those pointy boots look really
cheesy. The heel heat here is amazing. The BEARHUG OF DOOM kills the crowd pretty quick.
Slaughter drops some elbows and applies the CAMEL CLUTCH OF HIDEOUS FESTERING DEATH but
Warrior is in the ropes. Warrior with the supermaniac comeback and the SHITTY CLOTHESLINES
OF DOOM, followed by the shoulderblock, but heeeeeeeeeeeeere's Sherri. Crowd is going
bonkos. Warrior smacks Sherri around and tosses her out into Macho's arms, but Slaughter
knees Warrior in the back and drapes him on the ropes. Savage nails the prone Warrior with
the TIN-FOIL COVERED SCEPTRE OF DOOM and Slaughter drops an elbow for the pin and the WWF
title. The announcers are in shock and the audience chants "Bullshit" as the
Warrior retreats to the dressing room. Watching this match in 1991, I was in absolute
disbelief that they'd actually put the title on Slaughter. Looking back, Vince should have
put the belt on him sooner and then had Warrior regain it here. They could have done the
money match, Hogan-Warrior II, at WM7. *
- Dusty and Dustin Rhodes v. Ted Dibiase & Virgil.
After 4 years of waiting, this was the match where it finally happened. This was Dustin's
PPV debut, just before he and his father retreated back to WCW a few weeks later. Dibiase
slapped Dustin around (who was sitting in the front row watching his dad wrestle) on an
episode of SNME to set this up. Virgil gets beat up by Dustin here to start, and Dibiase
bitches him out about it. Dibiase tags in and takes Dustin to school. Dusty gets in and we
get tag team bionic elbows. Dusty has ditched the polka dots by this point. Dustin comes
in and blows out his knee on a missed charge. The heels work on the knee, but Virgil
accidentally clotheslines Dibiase and he flips out and tosses his bodyguard out of the
ring. Dusty gets the hot tag in the meantime and quickly gets rolled up by Dibiase for the
pin. The Rhodes' were clearly on the JOB Squad by that point. **
- Dibiase gets on the mic and kisses off the Rhodes, then
tells off Virgil and orders him to retrieve his million dollar belt. In a great moment,
Dibiase tries to blackmail Virgil into subservience...and turns his back on him. Oops.
KA-POW! The crowd (and Roddy Piper) goes apeshit. Thus endeth the long relationship...
- Assorted comments from the Rumble entrants, and of
course the Orange Goblin. I'd do a transcript of Tugboat's ridiculous bit, but it wouldn't
be fair to subject people to that. Let's just say it's really bad.
- Royal Rumble: Bret Hart gets #1, in order to showcase
him in preparation for his singles push. Dino Bravo gets #2 and we're underway. Hey,
there's Shane McMahon again! Not much notable here. Greg Valentine is #3, and he goes
right after ex-partner Bravo, to the shock of Jimmy Hart. Valentine ends up dumping Bravo
in short order. Bret Hart plays possum while this is going on, and ambushes Greg when he
turns around. Paul Roma is #4, and a three-way breaks out. Kerry Von Erich is #5 and he
cleans house on the heels. Rick Martel is #6 and there's still nothing terribly notable
going on. Martel and Roma seem to have an issue here for some reason. Saba Simba (Luckily
Roddy Piper doesn't yell out "Hey, it's Tony Atlas" this time) is #7 and he
takes out pretty much everyone in sight. If you've never heard of Simba, there's a reason.
Everyone pairs off. Butch is #8 as Simba tosses Martel...but Martel hangs onto the top
rope and Simba's momentum carries HIM out. Jake Roberts is #9 and he goes after Martel, of
course. This was during the infamous "blindfold match" period, another one I
forgot about when compiling Netcop Busts. Martel teases falling out of the ring several
times, drawing a great reaction from the crowd. Hercules is #10 and he hooks up with Roma
immediately so they can work as a team. Tito Santana is #11 as Roma misses a cross-body
and eliminates himself. Santana and Martel of course are at each other. Undertaker (still
with Brother Love) is #12 and he casually dumps Hart right away. Undertaker no-sells
everything as the crowd watches his every move in fascination. I think that was the sign
that Vince had something special here. Jimmy Snuka is #13 as UT tosses Butch. DBS is #14.
Damn, there's a lot of guys in there right now. Smash gets #15, but the heat is gone by
this point so the crowd doesn't care about him anymore. They need to clear out some
deadwood -- it's getting too hard to follow. Martel teases another elimination, but gets
back again...but not before pulling Roberts out. Road Warrior Hawk is #16, and everyone
gangs up on him right away. Here's one for the X-Files: Shane Douglas is #17, post-Dynamic
Dudes but pre-credibility. UT tosses Snuka and Kerry Von Erich. Did you know that Douglas
was actually a de facto Rocker in late 1990 during Shawn Michaels' first big knee injury?
He teamed with Marty Jannetty as the "New" Rockers until Shawn came back. Irony
can be so ironic sometimes. The buzzer sounds for #18, but no one comes out. I forget if
this was explained. I think it was supposed to be Randy Savage. Anyway, Animal is #19, and
he does come out. The LOD double-clotheslines Undertaker out, and then Martel clotheslines
Hawk out. Martel is teetering again, but rolls back in. We're down a manageable number
again. Crush is #20, and the Demos go after Bulldog. Martel is hanging by a thread again.
Some dipshit in a khaki shirt keeps walking past the main camera, presumably to be cool.
Here's a quarter to buy a hint, guy. Hacksaw Duggan is #21 and gets a big pop. Martel
teases another elimination. Earthquake is #22 and sends Animal packing. There's 11 guys in
there right now, way too much. Mr. Perfect is #23, and he takes his time getting down. He
dumps Duggan once he's in, however. He gets beat up by a variety of people, showcasing his
selling. The Orange Goblin is #24, knocking out Smash right away. Crowd is nuts for Hogan.
Haku is #25 as Valentine is finally eliminated after 45 minutes. Douglas is still in
there, oddly enough, although he's not doing too well. Neidhart is #26, to a big pop.
Earthquake tosses Santana like yesterday's garbage. Luke is #27, and coincidentally he
gets knocked out 2.7 seconds after he gets in. Well, it's easy money, I guess. More
near-eliminations with Martel. Brian Knobs is #28 and no one cares. Everyone gangs up on
him, however, for some reason. Tugboat and the Warlord are the only ones left in the draw
so it must have been Randy Savage who missed his chance at #18 because of the Warrior
thing earlier. Knobs dumps Hercules. Warlord is #29. Crush does the 10 PUNCHES OF DOOM on
Hulk and gets dumped over the top for his troubles. That was a pretty dumb thing to do.
Hulk clotheslines the Warlord out soon after. Tugboat is #30, as Douglas gets tossed. Our
suspects are Hogan, Neidhart, Tugboat, Hennig, Haku, Knobs, Martel, Bulldog and
Earthquake. Not a very impressive field, to be sure. Hennig is really taking a licking.
Tugboat and Hogan end up fighting in the corner, and Tugboat actually dumps Hogan, but he
lands on the apron, then comes back in and knocks Tugboat out. Bulldog dropkicks Hennig
out. Martel bids adieu to Jim Neidhart. Bulldog backdrops Haku out. Martel makes Dumb
Mistake #1 by going to the top, and Bulldog crotches him and knocks him out after a record
53 minutes. The final four: Bulldog, Earthquake, Knobs and Hulk. There goes Bulldog. Why
is Knobs in there this close to the end? They proceed to squash Hulk. Earthquake hits the
FAT-ASSED BUTT SPLASH OF DEATH, but Hulk makes the comeback. Big Boot sends Knobs over the
top, the three punches and big boot put Earthquake down. But Hogan falls back on the slam
attempt and Quake drops some elbows. Powerslam, but Hulk makes comeback #2 and hulks up.
Big boot, and this time the bodyslam works. A clothesline later and Hulk wins the Rumble
for the second year in a row. An okay, but unspectacular, Rumble. *** Not enough star
power to really draw interest of the casual viewer.
The Bottom Line: It had to be done, honest. After
basically butt-fucking the fans with a spiked dildo in the form of the title change
earlier, the WWF had to do something to send the fans home happy, and this was as good as
anything. The WWF was in a serious funk at this point, however, creatively and monetarily,
and it shows with blase shows like this. Fear not, however, The Man was on his way.
Neutral feelings on this one. |