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PeteF3

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Everything posted by PeteF3

  1. Diesel's great here, calling out Shawn for going down the same road he did as WWF Champion--"worst year of my life." Both guys take some personal shots at each other's WWF careers.
  2. Did Vince sign off on this? This is about as southern wrasslin' as it gets.
  3. The story here is that Zouev is effective for quick bursts--quick strikes, sudden takedowns--but Han owns him the longer things stay on the mat. Zouev gets a *yellow card*, which adds a point to his total, which I don't think I've seen in RINGS or any other shootstyle promotion. It's a cool, legit-looking gimmick, though. At the end they turn things on their head, as Han takes Zouev down but Zouev reverses into a form of twister to get an upset(?) tapout. Watching Han is always a treat, and this felt more fulfilling than the Yamamoto/Kohsaka match.
  4. I don't have a lot to add to this, other than it was fine.
  5. CM Punk last year was pretty similar, albeit it later in the match. He had been in there for fifty minutes or so and his elimination had no build or drama and was treated as a nonevent. He was eliminated by Kane in screwjob fashion. It was supposed to set up Punk-Kane at Wrestlemania. Bryan's elimination sets up nothing. They also had to "go home" with Punk early due to a concussion.
  6. Just in comparison to recent Yearbook segments, Missy is way overshadowed by Marlena, and Woman, and Kimona, and Beulah, to say nothing of Sunny.
  7. Little Guido's cheesesteak is merely "all right," to the astonishment of JT Smith. He doesn't want Guido to ruin his chances of being grand marshal for the Italian Day parade, so Guido quickly changes his tune.
  8. World Commitment Wrestling! Start of the big GAB push as Flair hits on Debra McMichael sitting at ringside. Then Savage runs in again and again gets handcuffed and hauled out by security. The match is pretty standard but is helped greatly by a LOUD Albany, Georgia crowd. Compare and contrast with that JWP tag. Really cool moment as Giant locks Luger in a choke and Sting goes nuts with dives off the top to his knee, then with strikes to the arm, trying to get him to break it. Flair is apparently disqualified for hitting his own partner in the face with a cup of coffee, a finish lifted from the famous Thesz/Gotch tag bouts of yore. Giant turns into a quasi-babyface for the second time in a month.
  9. Bischoff with some really badly done sarcasm.
  10. Vega looks good again in limited action. Steve Austin costs him the match by whacking him with the Million Dollar belt.
  11. It sounded like Savage even realized how weird that line sounded as he rather quickly shifted to talking about nights in jail. Pretty boilerplate promo--kind of disappointing considering the intensely personal nature of the feud. Savage could have been talking about anybody or any program.
  12. Douglas is pretty frisky for most of this, busting out two big dives to the floor. They brawl outside and back in, and then it's run-in city. Brian Lee! Dreamer! Meanie! Richards! A Bruise Brother! Raven clobbers Douglas with the loaded orthopedic boot to escape with the title. God help me but I liked this better than RVD/Sabu. The number of run-ins were excessive but at least they were well-timed, and it was a high-energy match. I just wish Styles, to repeat myself, would STOP FUCKING TELEGRAPHING ALL THE KICKOUTS. Douglas missed Brian Lee's interference and only saw Dreamer distracting the ref earlier, so he took Tommy out to cement the heel turn that everyone knew was coming. At least they didn't try to cover for or hide it--he was still the same Franchise the whole time. It barely even qualifies as a turn. Afterward, Douglas laments that the only belt that means anything to him is still in Raven's hands, which draws out Scorpio. Douglas tries to back off, then clobbers Scorp from behind and whips both him and Sandman with the TV belt. Good segue of an angle.
  13. Well, this was the main event of the first ECW TV show I taped off SportsChannel Ohio, and 1996 Pete thought it was the coolest thing he'd ever seen in wrestling. Now, it's sloppy as all hell with a few cool spots and Van Dam being Van Dam, without having established himself as a star yet. I'll never be able to truly dislike this but yeah, it definitely hasn't aged well. It is impressive how much heat they were able to get just for RVD blowing off a handshake.
  14. There are better studio matches on the Yearbooks but this is a very good one--I loved Lance's little breakdown of just why Lawler's punches are so effective. Very Mid-South-ian set-up here, with the "special TV time" and "standby matches." The finish isn't quite as Mid-South-ian but pure Memphis instead, as longtime referee Frank Morrell starts a heel turn by helping Jarrett regain the Unified title with a conveniently timed heart attack.
  15. Awesome highlights of the Bill Dundee vs. Randy Hales/Cyberpunks feud--Dundee brawls with Wolfie D in the locker room and then jumps Randy Hales and then Jesse James Armstrong with a chair for good measure. Then Samantha Pain comes out claiming a "bus load" of Dundee supporters is out in the parking lot protesting for Bill's return, but it's all a trap so Dundee can attack Hales again. Then wild clips from Louisville of Dundee vs. Cyberpunk Fire. The Cyberpunks get an ECW lights-out entrance into the studio and an Ole Anderson voicebox promo--silly, but this is carried off much better here than in WCW. Good on them for making a stronger effort than usual to conceal who the Cyberpunks are, even if everyone knows what's up.
  16. Takako, Ozaki, Kansai...so much raging bitch in one match. 'Course, Kyoko pretty much breaks the pattern, but oh well. This had a few hot stretches but was another joshi match that was too long and too clever by half. All the kickouts and saves got to be eye-rolling rather than taking me (and the crowd) to a fever pitch--it sort of made Kansai & Takako look stupid for not even trying to accomodate for Kyoko while they were killing Oz. The Splash Mountain/Takako Panic really should have been the finish. Instead they top it with *another* sick double-team, and Kyoko saves off THAT, and Ozaki rather anticlimactically goes down to a simple chop instead, though she was already pretty much doomed. Takako presents Ozaki with a pair of wrestling boots after the match, in what is undoubtedly the finest Hulk Hogan-Evad Sullivan tribute angle in the entire history of joshi.
  17. Doc hasn't missed a beat, or at least it doesn't seem like it here. Taue was the better worker of the two and really was the glue of this, but Williams put in a fine performance back in the spotlight. Both guys hit their big Moves of Death--the nodowa off the apron and the dangerous backdrop--and came back from the other, which really ramped up the drama factor. And Doc had beaten Misawa *and* Kawada in the round-robin stage so he was pushed hard from the start, which makes Taue's victory, the biggest of his career to this point, all the sweeter. Terrific match to wrap up the Carnival and possibly a dark-horse top-10 MOTY.
  18. Shorter than most of the early-'90s six-man classics, but this adequately takes its place amongst them. I dug Kawada heeling it up some, walking away from a confrontation with Jun and repeatedly kicking a downed Kobashi. Albright and Jun have some terrific sequences and exchanges. More great build to the full nelson suplex, and this time Albright hits it.
  19. I continue to be underwhelmed by this series. Actually I was secretly hoping, upon hearing the meathead members of the crowd yelling "bo-ring" 30 seconds in, that these guys would stay on the mat for the entire 20 minutes (I know before this even started it was going to a draw, which meant it had two strikes against it already). Also, nothing seemed like it had any consequence in this match--Scorpio takes a huracanrana through a table and a Frankensteiner off the turnbuckle and is the first guy up both times. The only real attempts at psychology are Scorpio's awesome superkick as a cutoff move and Sabu using a knee injury as an excuse to be late on covers.
  20. Santo's insane comeback on Felino after getting low-blowed is the definite highlight, as he drops him with an incredible huracanrana off the apron and then just beats the shit out of him on the floor. This is really good action, with Felino being all over the place and Satanico providing his usual awesomeness, though it ends rather anticlimactically.
  21. UWF/UWFI had some TKO finishes, but they were very rare. The best were when Vader showed up in UWFI, and he would just bulldoze his way through the opponent's points in 5 minutes.
  22. Also, that Hogan-Wall Nitro came after Russo & Bischoff were known to be coming back. It was nothing more than a throwaway one-night program, because Sullivan knew the reset button was coming anyway.
  23. Koko, Dusty, Boss Man, Slick (I think), and Demolition all got cut from the WM Anthology--I suspect it was strictly because of an overzealous editor who thought they were "real" (non-WWF-produced) songs, just because they had vocals.
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