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by "Netcop"
Scott Keith
The Revenge of Hyperfighting Netcop Coliseum Video Fighting Action Rant III:
Hyperfighting Action, Fight Fight Fight!
Only a 3-in-1 rant today, because this was to entail Best
of WWF #2,3,4 and 5, but I did the first three and then realized I already have #5 buried
somewhere else in my tape collection and I didn't feel like watching it again.
So it's the Best of the WWF #2, 3 and 4!
Best of the WWF, #2.
- Opening match, WWF tag titles: Tony Atlas & Rocky
Johnson v. Adrian Adonis & Dick Murdoch. Rocky is, of course, the proud papa of the
current People's Champion. Remember when Adonis used to be a tough guy? Johnson does all
the goofy babyface stuff that Maivia tried and failed to use as a babyface. The heels beat
on Atlas for a few minutes until Rocky cleans house, but gets rolled up in a melee by
Adonis for a three count. New champions. This was major, Nitro level shock booking in it's
time. 1 for 1.
- Intercontinental title match: Pedro Morales v.
Magnificent Muraco. Pedro was I-C champ, but was pretty much past his prime. Morales just
beats the hell out of Muraco until a well-placed low blow turns the tide. Morales retuns
the favor. What is this, a Kevin Sullivan match? Pedro bungs up his knee on a charge to
the corner. Idiotic move as he gives Muraco a backbreaker on his own bad knee. He tries a
slam but the knee caves and Muraco regains the title. Two title changes to start, not bad.
2 for 2.
- Pedro Morales v. Killer Kowalski. More old-school
stuff, with a capital O. Kowalski is the guy who trained both HHH and Chyna. This is
mainly Killer working on Pedro's leg and stomach with the claw. I still don't get what was
so great about Pedro. Things get a wee bit out of control and the ref calls a no-contest.
Bleh. 2 for 3.
- MIDGET MADNESS!! Hey, I don't write these titles, the
WWF does. Jamaica Kid & Billy The Kid v. Sky Lowlow & Little Brutus. It's a damn
midget match, close your eyes and pick any four midgets and it's the same damn match. 2
for 4.
- MIDGET DEMENTIA!! Okay, I wrote that one. Sky Lowlow
& Little Brutus v. Joey Russel & Sunny Boy Hayes. When you're watching midget
jobbers, it's time to fast forward. 2 for 5.
- Chief Jay Strongbow v. Professor Toru Tanaka. Clash of
the racial stereotypes, yikes. How did fat-ass Strongbow ever get over or pushed? I'll
never forgive the WWF for making me sit through, like, 4 matches featuring the flabby
indians on the tag title video. Strongbow with the devastating big chop. Sigh. 2 for 6.
- Mean Gene sings "Tutti Frutti" with Hulk on
bass. This was from the original Wrestling Album, and I GUARANTEE you that this goes on
Netcop Busts Vol. II.
- Intercontintal title: Tito Santana v. Paul Orndorff.
People were actually doing the Paula chant in 84, cool. Gorilla hypes this as a classic,
but it's a classic in the same sense as most Nitros are the greatest in the history of our
sport. 4 minutes of stalling and a 5-minute armbar to start. Must be a draw. Orndorff
spends way too much time standing around in between spots. Good hot ending saves it as
they trade near falls with a slow referee, and sure enough Orndorff gets one last two
count before the time runs out. It was decent enough. 3 for 7.
- A quick collection of "surprise endings."
Included are Rocky Johnson getting DQ'd against Don Muraco for popping the referee,
Freddie Blassie getting caught in the ropes and counted out against Bobo Brazil, Andre
getting pissed at a masked jobber and unmasking him, and Tony Garea/Rick Martel going over
the Moondogs when special ref Gorilla Monsoon takes out a Moondog.
- WWF tag title match: Tony Garea & Rick Martel v.
Mr. Fuji & Mr. Saito. Good match in a bad period for the WWF. Very back and forth and
quick pace, until Martel comes off the top rope and Fuji tosses salt in his face mid-air,
rolling through the bodypress attempt to win the tag titles. 4 for 8.
Bottom Line #1: Hey, if you like old school, this is it.
Post-Sammartino (76ish) to Pre-Hogan (83ish) was the WWF equivalent to WCW's 1991-1996
era, but Garea and Martel were terrific.
The Best of the WWF, #3.
- Opening match: Rowdy Roddy Piper v. Jimmy Snuka. This
is a strap match. A really thin strap that looks like it hurts. The usual good match
between these two, it looks like the dark match for an old Superstars taping. Snuka
actually dominates and wins with a flying bodypress. 1 for 1.
- Ricky Steamboat v. Bob Orton. I covered this one in my
"High Flyers" review. Basically, it's really good and Dragon wins by DQ. 2 for
2.
- The British Bulldogs v. Rene Goulet & Johnny Rodz.
Total squash, and the Bulldogs just look AWESOME and draw a standing ovation from the
crowd. That never happens anymore, thanks to overexposure and repetition. The Bulldogs
were truly something *different*, and the fans could appreciate that. Davey Boy powerslams
Rodz, and Goulet runs in, but Davey Boy catches him in a fireman's carry, then Dynamite
goes to the top, climbs on the back of Goulet (who is on Smith's shoulders) and dives off
with a headbutt onto Rodz. Now that is some fucking incredible spot-making. 3 for 3.
- The British Bulldogs v. The Hart Foundation. More
spunky goodness from the Bulldogs. Bret Hart looked so pudgy and innocuous as a greasy
heel here. These teams had a such a great groove from 1985-1988. No one is really in
control, and they're trading double-teams when the bell rings for curfew. Damn, I would
have liked to see the ending. 4 for 4.
- Someone e-mailed me recently about including the George
Steele shock therapy spot on another volume of the Netcop Busts, but I didn't have a copy.
Until now.
- From TNT: Lou Albano takes George "The
Animal" Steele for psychiatric treatment, beginning with hypnosis. That doesn't work,
so they decide to try shock treatments. No, really, Vince used to *pay* people to think
this stuff up. A few thousand volts (give or take) and he's able to recite "How now
brown cow?" in an educated voice. Alas, more voltage reverses the effects. I hope if
Eric is indeed shooting for his own talk show, I pray someone will send Turner execs a
copy of "The Best of Tuesday Night Titans" so they can see what the WWF did with
theirs and NOT do the same...
- George Steele, Barry Windham & Mike Rotundo v. John
Studd, Adrian Adonis & Bobby Heenan. A nothing match. Steele chases Heenan around a
lot until finally tossing a chair in the ring for the DQ. Not much good happened in
between. 4 for 5.
- David Sammartino v. Brutus Beefcake. From the first
Wrestlemania. David is an untalented sack of shit, so the match is booked to be about 30
seconds long before Daddy Sammartino and Johnny V run in and start a big brawl. 4 for 6.
- Bruno & David Sammartino v. Brutus Beefcake &
Johnny V. Here's the match: Bruno comes in and does a spot to Beefcake to the delight of
the MSG crowd, then David comes in and repeats the same spot, just like his father, except
worse. Repeat for ten minutes, then David gets a cradle on Johnny V out of nowhere for the
pin. 4 for 7. I'm very relieved we never, ever saw David again after 1985.
- King Kong Bundy models potential wigs on TNT.
- King Kong Bundy v. Tony Garea. Why did they give this
10 minutes? Incredibly boring, as Bundy finally hits the Avalanche for the pin. 4 for 8.
- 18 man battle royale. Hulk and Andre are both in it.
Jobber Bob Boyer gets crushed in an attempted pile-on on Andre. The ending is an exact
repeat (preview?) of Royal Rumble 1992, with Hulk playing Hulk, Andre playing Sid, and
John Studd playing Ric Flair. Studd dumps both guys and wins the thing, and Hulk throws a
hissy fit. 4 for 9.
The Bottom Line: Starts really good, goes downhill very
fast. Take a pass on this one.
Best of the WWF #4.
- Opening match: Rowdy Roddy Piper v. Paul Orndorff. This
is the result of Orndorff blowing the match at Wrestlemania and Piper blaming him. Super
hot crowd, and Orndorff looks great. Piper is a genius at always working the eye poke in
somewhere. Orndorff is just beating the snot out of Piper when Piper's boy-toy Bob Orton
runs in and causes the DQ. The heels destroy Orndorff (with the crowd screaming for Hogan)
but Hogan's not there so the Bulldogs make the save. 1 for 1.
- Hulk Hogan & Jimmy Snuka v. Orton & Muraco.
When Hogan dogs it, then it gets really bad. Hogan is indestructable for a few minutes,
before (I swear) a single knee to the gut suddenly has Hogan writhing in pain and agony on
the mat. Ugh. Snuka gets tagged in and gets tagged in the other sense, with Orton's
ever-present cast. He must have hit an artery or something on his forehead, because
Orton's cast is covered in Snuka's blood after one shot. Hogan eventually tags back in,
and a big brawl erupts and the heels get DQ'd. 1 for 2.
- 20 man battle royale. You may have heard of this one,
it's a pretty famous ending. Basically a parade of jobbers. A more impressive parade
you'll never see, however -- SD Jones, Jose Estrada, Johnny Rodz, Tiger Chung Lee, Swede
Hanson, they're all here. Greg Valentine blades for no readily apparent reason. Adrian
Adonis and Tony Atlas eventually start tossing jobbers until it's just them, SD Jones and
Greg Valentine. Atlas and Jones form a coalition and eventually toss the heels. So what do
we do now? Flip a coin, of course. Atlas calls heads and wins the battle royale. 1 for 3.
- Special segment with clips of wrestlers' specialties.
If you don't blink, you'll catch a young, blond, Stan Hansen taking out Bruno and a
younger, mop-topped Larry Zbyszko taking on Bruno. I'll give that alone a point. 2 for 4.
- Stretcher match: Andre the Giant v. Killer Khan.
Another famous match that isn't all that good. Khan broke Andre's ankle a couple of months
previous and the big guy is kinda pissed. Khan gets his token offense in, then the Giant
completely obliterates him, with something like 10 buttdrops and a big splash before
finally the ref calls for the stretcher to end the match. 2 for 5.
- Steel cage: Andre the Giant v. John Studd. Clipped.
Andre slams Studd and then does a buttdrop off the top rope! This was a 500 pound guy
we're talking about here. Andre wins, of course. 3 for 6 for the buttdrop alone.
- Andre the Giant v. King Kong Bundy. This was dubbed the
"Colossal Jossle" by someone with more drug problems than I. Long, boring match.
Studd runs in at some predetermined but still nonsensicle point to draw the DQ. 3 for 7.
- Greg Valentine & Brutus Beefcake v. Ricky Steamboat
& Tito Santana. I always thought that Santana and Steamboat would have made a perfect
team, and this bears me out. Beefcake sucks as always. Santana & Valentine had the
issue over the I-C title at this point. A few hot tags, with Santana evenutally becoming
the House O' Fire and hitting the Flying Jalapeno on Valentine. Beefcake makes the save
and tosses Steamboat, but the referee escorts him out. Valentine was holding Santana from
behind in a waistlock, waiting for Beefcake, and Santana hooks a leg, takes him down, and
slaps on the figure-four in one motion. Now that was nifty. Valentine submits. 4 for 8.
The Bottom Line: This was pretty okay. The ending tag
match was great, everything else was pretty much hit-or-miss.
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