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by "Netcop"
Scott Keith
- It's too friggin' hot here tonight (30 degrees is a lot in Canada, you know) so I'm
up until 2 in the morning doing yet another 3-in-1 Coliseum video review. This week's
victims: Best of the WWF #8, #9 and #13.
Best of the WWF #8.
- Opening match: Hart Foundation v. Killer Bees. Well,
this is pretty much an automatic point. They work very, very well together and did so
approximately 10,000 times between 1985 and 1988. Brunzell plays Ricky Morton. At this
point, Neidhart's suckiness is covered by quick tags to Bret. Hitman works mighty stiff
here, drawing lots of "oohs" and "aahs" for every shot that looks like
it *really* hurt. Blair gets the hot tag and is a house o fire. The crowd is seriously
getting into this as the Bees keep pressing. Blair goes for the pin...and the time limit
expires. Crap, it was getting really good. 1 for 1.
- Let the parade of crap begin!
- "Newcomer" spotlight: Dan Spivey v. Terry
Gibbs. Gibbs dominates Spivey, who is a dead ringer for Barry Windham. But without the
talent. Spivey makes the superman comeback and hits a bulldog. 1 for 2.
- "Newcomer" spotlight: Billy Jack Haynes v.
Moondog Rex. Rex is Randy Culley, aka the original Smash, aka Deadeye Dick of the
Desperadoes. A very, very loud "Boring!" chant is barely edited out by the
production crew. Repeat formula: Rex dominates Haynes, who makes the superman comeback and
wins with the full-nelson. 1 for 3.
- Junkfood Dog v. King Kong Bundy. Yeah, like I'm even
gonna stop fast-forwarding to watch the ending. JYD wins, who cares how. 1 for 4.
- "Newcomer" spotlight: Jimmy Jack Funk v. Tony
Garea. This tape is going downhill faster than Dusty Rhodes on a trip to Wong Foo's All
U-Can-Eat $4.99 Buffet. Funk wins with something lame. 1 for 5.
- "Newcomer" spolight: Harley Race v. Lanny
Poffo. It's absolutely laughable to hear them shill Race as a "newcomer" and
Poffo as a "young kid". Race had zero heat because he...moves....very....slowly.
No King title at this juncture, either. Poffo tries a comeback, but Race can't sell the
high-flying stuff properly and ends up with a cradle suplex for the pin. 1 for 6.
- John Studd's bodyslam challenge match, v. Jim
Powers/Rick Hunter. If either of the jobbers can slam Studd, they get $15,000. Studd
manhandles them and gets the pin, but Haku storms the ring and of course slams Studd. 1
for 7. This is all setting up...
- John Studd v. Haku (King Tonga). Call him what you
want, he still sucks here. Kick and punch, then they fight outside the ring for the DCOR.
1 for 8.
- "Newcomer" spotlight: Ted Arcidi v. Terry
Gibbs. Total squash as Arcidi kills Gibbs and gets the submission with a bearhug. 1 for 9.
- "Newcomer" spotlight: Hercules Hernandez v.
Cousin Junior. A FUCKING HILLBILLY! That's just what I wanted to see. A spectacularly
horrible match which Hercules wins with a reverse rollup. 1 for 10.
- "From the archives": Pedro Morales v. Adrian
Adonis. Why? Kick and punch, then they do the ol' double-bridge-pin ending, giving Pedro
the win. 1 for 11.
- "From the archives": Pat Patterson v. Lou
Albano. Albano pulls something out of his tights and Patterson grabs it and uses it on him
until he bleeds.
- Let's try that one again, and this time GET YOUR MIND
OUT OF THE GUTTER!
- "From the archives": Pat Patterson v. Lou
Albano. Albano removes a foreign object, but Patterson knocks it out of his hands and
grabs it himself, poking Albano in the eye and drawing blood. Albano runs about a minute
in for the countout. 1 for 12.
- Jake Roberts v. Ricky Steamboat. Finally, something
good. Both guys are in their prime here. This is right after the DDT on the concrete that
started the whole blood feud. Steamboat is, of course, a god. Roberts is gloriously evil.
Jake just beats the hell out of Steamboat but Ricky blocks the DDT and begins the
comeback. Jake juices. The idiot ref keeps preventing Steamboat from hitting Roberts, and
there's some great sequences which incorporate the idiot ref. Finally, Steamboat just
tosses the moron for the DQ (justifiably). 2 for 13.
The Bottom Line: 2 for 13? Take a pass.
Best of the WWF #9.
- Opening match: I-C title: Randy Savage v. Ricky
Steamboat. From Toronto, late 1986. Savage and Steamboat take to battering each other
without the cool connecting sequences that made WMIII so damn great. Savage bleeds a
gusher. Steamboat with the KARATE CHOP OF DOOM for 2, then Savage "trips" and
rams the Dragon into the ref. Clumsy Macho. Steamboat with a small package for 2.
Backslide for 2. Steamboat argues the point, giving Savage a chance to whip out his trusty
knuckle dusters and jam it into the Dragon's eyes. Savage then ends up taking a hellacious
HOLY SHIT bump over the top to the floor via a blinded Steamboat. Finally, they're going
to a double-countout, but Steamboat suddenly regains his sight and rolls back in for the
win. Awesome match. 1 for 1.
- The Hart Foundation v. Iron Sheik & Nikolai
Volkoff. Someone must have missed their flight to set up this one. Harts get the face pop.
Volkoff does the Chris Sheppard Pirate Radio Session Extended Russian National Anthem Mix,
prompting the Harts to attack. Nothing match. Neidhart tries to slam Volkoff but Sheik
hooks the leg and the heels get the win. 1 for 2.
- Boot camp match: Cpl. Kirschner v. Nikolai Volkoff.
Both guys suck big greasy penises. The Corporal bleeds. He hits Volkoff with his boot and
gets the pin. Hardcore it ain't. 1 for 3.
- JYD / Andre / Superfly v. Studd / Patera / Ventura. 50%
of the participants here are dead. The rest just suck. 1 for 4.
- Studd & Bundy v. King Tonga & Siva Afi. I think
Bundy ate Afi for dinner one night and that's why we haven't seen him in 10 years. King
Tonga is of course the "wrestler" currently sucking in WCW under the name of
Meng. Squash-a-go-go. 1 for 5.
- Cowbody Lang v. Lord Littlebrook. It's a damn midget
match. 1 for 6.
- $50,000 battle royale: Everyone one gangs up on Studd
and Bundy and knocks them out right away. This is the infamous battle royale where...well,
I won't spoil it for you if you haven't heard of it. The proceedings pare down to Junkfood
Dog fighting Greg Valentine for the win...but wait, someone's been hiding under the ring
the whole time. It's Jimmy Hart, who rolls into the ring and waits until they knock each
other over the top rope...and is declared the winner! The loudest BULLSHIT chant you'll
EVER hear ensues. Good for a laugh, however. 2 for 7.
The Bottom Line: Great Savage-Steamboat match and nothing
else of note.
Best of the WWF #12.
- Opening match: Honky Tonk Man & Kamala v. Hulk
Hogan & Koko B. Ware. If you think WCW serves up shit as the main event *now*, take a
look at what the WWF used to give us. 10 minutes of terrible wrestling, and if you can't
guess the ending and who gets the pin then you have no business reading this review. 0 for
1.
- I-C title match: Ricky Steamboat v. The Honky Tonk Man.
Yes, *that* match. Steamboat destroys HTM, but Jimmy Hart is on the apron at the critical
moment, and when Steamboat goes for the small package, HTM hooks the bottom rope and rolls
them over for the pin (actually it was only a two-count...the first count was for
*Steamboat*) and the I-C title! Not half bad, actually, and it was quite possibly the
biggest upset of the modern era. 1 for 2.
- Women's title: Fabulous Moolah v. Debbie Combs. Moolah
still calls Terry Funk "that young punk", or so I heard. 1 for 3.
- From the archives: Fabulous Moolah v. Joyce Graible. If
you look carefully, a 5-year old George Hackenschmidt can be seen in the front row. 1 for
4.
- Halloween at Roddy Piper's house. He wraps bricks as
chocolate bars and bowling balls as candy apples. Delightfully twisted. 2 for 5.
- The Islanders v. Demolition. This is either one of the
last appearances of Randy Culley or one of the first appearances of Barry Darsow, it's
hard to tell. It's around the time when both were playing Smash, at any rate. The Demos
stunk as wrestlers, sure, but they had such an awesome ring presence that they were
completely over by the end of the match. Demos with the Demolition Decapitation. 3 for 6.
- The Islanders v. Powers & Roma. This match is to
mark the transition from the "good" Islanders to the "bad" Islanders.
The main difference is that Tama screams a lot more here. Tama with the big splash for the
pin. 3 for 7.
- Bret Hart v. Raymond Rougeau. From 1986 no less. Sorry,
but it sounds better on paper than it actually is. Hart lures Rougeau into the corner and
pins him ala Flair. Still good enough for a point. 4 for 8.
- I-C Title match: Randy Savage v. Tito Santana. Stall
fest. Both guys are busy playing ring-around-the-rosy outside the ring and Savage beats
the count. Yawn. 4 for 9.
The Bottom Line: Could have been full points if the
mediocre stuff had been just a *touch* better. As it is, still recommended for what did
work.
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