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- There was a really good episode of WCW Saturday Night
this week, featuring a couple of young guys in a good match for the point theyre at,
along with a rockin little match between Chris Adams and Dean Malenko, and Kanyon
was there, and Devon Storm and Booker T ripped it up. The point? No matter how badly the
Powers That Be try to kill the wrestling, the good will always catch up. So lets see
how they can screw this one up. - Live from
Washington, DC
- Your hosts are Tony Schiavone, Bobby Heenan & Scott
Hudson.
- Opening match: Disco Inferno & Lash LeRoux v. Vito
Legrasso & Johnny The Bull. Lash has his own Cajun-themed music now. Brawl to start.
Lash takes some punishment from Vito, who is the member of the Goon Squad that
DOESNT suck. Lash tags in and takes over on Johnny, who is completely useless. Well,
hes got a good range of punching and chinlocks, I suppose, but I cant really
think of anything else that WCW might see in this guy. Vito has some good personality,
however. Disco plays face-in-peril before Vito misses a ridiculously overblown move off
the second rope and Lash gets the hot tag. He gets press-slammed by Johnny, who proceeds
to blow a standing leap to the top, then misses the move. Disco hits a frog splash for
two, but Lash makes the save. Several non-dramatic two counts later, Lash collides with
Disco by mistake and takes the Last Dance, allowing Vito to hit an Implant on Lash and pin
him at 9:38. Ive seen worse, but Johnny is no great shakes. *1/2 Disco gets
chloroformed and carried off in a body bag. Then, once they get backstage, they let him
out and dump him in the trunk of their car and drive off. Knowing Russo, hell return
to Nitro tomorrow as the newest member of the team.
- Benoit comes out to formally accept Scott Halls
forfeited US title, and issues an open challenge. Not a good idea when Russo is booking,
Chris.
- Cruiserweight title: Evan Karagias v. Madusa. Evan the
Backside Boy has Spice with him. At least this doesnt break Standards &
Practices "Man v. woman" rules. That would require a man in the match, see.
Brawl to start. Evan misses one of those moonsaults where it wouldnt have hit even
if the opponent had stayed exactly where they were. Madusa gets a dropkick off the second
rope, and Madusa leads him through a sloppy pinning sequence and then nearly breaks his
neck on a piledriver/powerbomb
something. Well, better luck next time. Spice calls
him over for some advice, then turns on him and Madusa hits the GERMAN SUPLEX OF DOOM for
the pin and title at 3:30. I dont even want to start listing the reasons why this
could compete for worst match, angle, feud and promotional move of the year, because
Id go on all day about it. On the bright side, confining Evan to under 5 minutes per
match is always a smart idea, and if were lucky itll lead to a lesbian angle
with Madusa and Spice. DUD
- Hardcore title: Norman Smiley v. Meng. We head
immediately to the back for some exciting running-away by Norman. Fit Finlay and trainee
Brian Knobbs attack Meng and thats the bulk of the "match", as they wear
him down and finally knock him out with a lead pipe to the head. Norman emerges from his
hiding place and pins him at 4:30. DUD
- Backstage, the Misfits kidnap Oklahoma.
- The Revolution v. Jim Duggan & His mystery
partners. As everyone already knows, its the Varsity Club, along with Kimona as a
cheerleader. I think we can already safely declare the group a failure. I guess its
4-on-3 because Shane is at ringside doing commentary, although since the Varsity Club were
heels for their run in 1987-89, theyre probably turning on Duggan here anyway. And
sure enough, Duggan wants to handle things himself while the announcers yell about how
hes not making the tag to them. Yup, its the dreaded Sledgehammer of Plot
rearing its ugly head again. Duggan cleans house by himself for a bit but gets
caught in the corner. He keeps refusing to tag his partners, and finally they run-in for a
pier-six brawl, and then, duh, turn on Duggan. Shane leaves the commentary position and
pins Duggan at 4:48, and he has to renounce his citizenship on Nitro. Thats a shame.
¼* Im pretty sure almost no one in the crowd knew who the Varsity Club was,
especially with Tony pointing out that we hadnt seen them in more than a decade. Way
to keep the product fresh and hip, guys. On the upside, Rotunda looked to be in a really
good shape.
- Vampiro v. Dr. Death. Oklahoma is locked in the cage at
ringside, courtesy of the Misfits. Brawl on the floor to start. Okie has a headset so he
can continue his one joke at ringside. ONE JOKE! ONE JOKE! ONE JOKE! Back in the ring for
some punching. Doc clips him a couple of times. They fight for a superplex, which Doc wins
and nearly kills Vampiro in the process. The Misfits run in and get tossed out, but that
allows Vamp to get a spin kick on Doc. Doc comes back with some punching, then shoves the
ref away for the lame DQ at 5:10. Bleh. ½* Vamp gets 5 minutes with Oklahoma as a result,
although he didnt really do anything to earn it.
- Vampiro v. Oklahoma. Oklahoma provides his own
commentary as he hits a DDT right away and executes the "Oklahoma Stomp". Hey,
nice to see the booker giving himself a good portion of offense like that. Fear not,
because soon all of the Misfits run in and Vampiro is able to eke out a close win over a
fat, out-of-shape writer at 5:00 with the Michinoku Driver. Whew, I know Id have
trouble when faced with the awesome power of Oklahoma. Hey, whats that flying away
out there? Oh, its just Vampiros heat. Bye bye, heat, fare thee well. DUD
- Creative Control & Curt Hennig v. Harlem Heat &
Midnight. Stevie Ray decided to stay in the back because hes got issues or
something. Maybe he just thinks its 1998 again, which was of course the last time we
saw this angle. Now if only Creative Control had stayed in the back, the match might not
suck. The heels control the match without too much trouble. Booker T hot tags Midnight and
a brawl erupts. Midnight plays face-in-peril for a bit, as Stevie Ray joins us at ringside
but doesnt join in. Booker tags in and cleans house, but Hennig hits him with an
international object for the pin at 7:52. The ending was such a clusterfuck that I
dont think anyone in the audience caught the shenanigans from Hennig. Creative
Control is thus the #1 contenders to the tag titles, which is kind of like being the
assistant hall monitor in school and means just as much. ¾*
- Dustin Rhodes v. Jeff Jarrett. Hey look, its
Overs cousin Not Over. This is a bunkhouse match, which is name #1593 that
Russo has for a hardcore match. JJ jumps Dustin during the pre-matc interview and
were underway. Dustin pounds on Jarrett with some decently stiff shots for a while,
then duct-tapes the ref to the ropes and the silliness starts, as Curt Hennig comes down
to the ringside and its basically 2-on-1. Dustin manages to hit Shattered Dreams on
Jarrett, but Hennig breaks up the count. They fight to the back, where Jarrett comes off
the ladder with a guitar shot for the pin at 11:18. Way too long for the screwiness
involved. *1/2
- Diamond Dallas Page v. David Flair. Flair jumps Page
with a gold crowbar before the match. David actually looks halfway competent thanks to
DDPs meticulous match-planning and over-the-top selling of his lame offense. A low
blow leads to the figure-four, and David gets the crowbar off the pole and takes a mighty
swing, but DDP ducks and hits the Diamond Cutter for the pin at 3:53. Wow, I bet hes
thinking "I just beat DAVID FLAIR, Im going to Disneyland!" I know I would
be. *
- Sting v. Lex Luger. They should probably just turn Liz
before the match even starts, just to get it out of the way. Sting gives Liz a "super
high-octane" can of mace to use, which probably means hell be getting it. Luger
attacks fast, or at least as fast as Luger moves these days. Sting comes back with the
help of some slaps by Liz. She grabs the "mace" and of course turns on Sting,
but its silly string! OH MY GOD, STING HAS A BRAIN! This is the first time in his
life hes actually out-smarted someone! Sting proceeds to destroy Luger, getting a
flying splash for two. Two stinger splashes draw Liz in for the DQ at 5:22. ¼* Lex &
Liz do bad things to Sting, giving him some time off to shoot movies or whatever.
- Kevin Nash v. Sid. First powerbomb wins. Sid controls
with some brawling and a wussy chairshot. Whats the point of having a ref, anyway?
How much skill does it take to call a powerbomb? And mere SECONDS after I write that, the
ref gets bumped, thus fulfilling his purpose for being there. Sid then hits the worst
powerbomb Ive seen
since the Cruiserweight title match. But of course, the ref
is out. Jarrett runs in and blasts Sid with the guitar, and Nash tries to powerbomb
him
and cant, because his he has a bad back. You dont think it has
anything to do with the fact that both guys are immensely lazy, do you? He wakes up the
ref, tells him about the phantom powerbomb, and is declared the winner at 6:58. Okay, let
me get this straight: They specifically booked a match where neither man would have to lay
down for the other, and even THAT wasnt good enough, so we get a finish where Sid
wont even take Nashs finisher? Good lord. DUD
- US title match: Chris Benoit v. The Mystery Opponent.
And that opponent is
Jeff Jarrett. Thats a "suitable replacement" for
Scott Hall? Jarrett might be getting a little over due to sheer force of willpower, but
oversaturation is going to bite him in the ass sooner rather than later. At least the
match shouldnt suck. Benoit chops away to start. Superplex, and Benoit just walks
over and retrieves the ladder. Thats a big mistake right there the drama of
fighting to get the ladder is one of the things that defines these matches. Jarrett
baseball slides it and busts Benoits nose open. Ouch. They trade shots into the
ladder. Benoit gets his leg caught in it and Jarrett pulls it down to the mat. Jarrett
climbs up, but gets caught in the Ladder of Woe. Jarrett wiggles free and pushes Benoit
off of the ladder. They fight on top and Benoit shoves Jarrett off. Jarrett pushes it
over. Benoit does the same. Jarrett dropkicks the ladder from underneath Benoit, which is
a pretty crazy bump. Benoit does a nice roll under the ladder and nails Jarrett with it,
then climbs to the top
and decides to drop the headbutt off the top on him.
Thats enough punishment, so he climbs back up and claims the US title at 10:12. Some
nice bumps, but there was no drama, the ending was anticlimactic, and the match was too
short. Still, match of the night so far. **3/4
- WCW World title: Bret Hart v. Goldberg. Wasnt
Roddy Piper supposed to be reffing this thing? Lockup and headlock sequence to start.
Goldberg hits the snap powerslam pretty quick to take over. Bret counters the anklelock
into the Sharpshooter, but Goldberg breaks it. They fight onto the floor and the ref gets
bumped. Sigh. Another one takes his place. And gets bumped a minute later. Oh, COME ON.
Just bring out Piper already. Goldberg misses the spear and Bret gets the ringpost
figure-four as a third ref takes over. Bret works the knee. Figure-four, reversed by
Goldberg. Crowd starts chanting "Goldberg sucks" as Bret continues on the knee.
Ref #3 gets bumped as Goldberg comes back with a superkick and a spear. And heres
Roddy Piper, to screw Goldberg
.er, ref the match. Bret suddenly gets the
Sharpshooter out of nowhere and Piper half-heartedly calls for the bell before the move is
even applied at 12:10. Wow, yet another reference to Montreal, what creativity. I think it
was done better the first 15 or so times we saw it in the WWF, though. Okay match but the
ending was horrible. **1/2
The Bottom Line: If THAT was the big angle thats
supposed to fuel the promotion for the next 6 months, then theyre in BIG trouble.
Remember: April 1, 2000, Vinnie Roo gets the pink slip.
Thats still my official prediction.
Meanwhile, this show gets no love from me, as it was not
afraid to suck the meat missile with gusto. When a journeyman jobber like Vito LaGrasso
held match of the night honors for a good two hours, theres a problem. But then you
probably knew that.
Thumbs down. |