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PeteF3

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Everything posted by PeteF3

  1. I continue not to be a fan of Hansen as the cartoon character who appears to be getting direction from higher-up to make his tobacco use as disgusting as possible.
  2. Crowd isn't quite sure how to react to this with Doom working as babyfaces, but...well, every tag match on this show has topped the last one. Yes, I liked this better than Steiners/Nasties and I REALLY liked that match. Teddy Long gets a nice moment to shine earlier when he slaps Flair in a classic "Oh no you DIDN'T" moment even if it's a heelish act that undermines the attempted story of the match. Simmons works a surprisingly good FIP that makes me at least understand the decision to push him as a babyface even if the consensus is that Doom was broken up prematurely. Ric and Arn are awesome at cut-offs and working around the referee, and the finishing stretch is super-hot with a stunning array of false finishes. The DCOR...eh. The U.S. tag title bout proved that you can build anticipation to a rematch even with a clean pinfall, but it does set up the Street Fight stip nicely. Easily the best Doom match on the Yearbook.
  3. This was very much organized chaos if you want to describe it as such. Not to go all Ross here but he and Paul E. did a great job of getting over their "game plan"--isolate Scott and work over the back that got slammed onto the table. Scott works a pretty impressively long FIP with some teases and cut-offs before making the hot tag and then we get several more minutes of action after that. One thing that must be said in credit to both teams is that for their sloppy, bullying tendencies, neither team at least at this point was remotely concerned about taking everything in return that they dished out. Both teams brutalize the other with chairshots and Knobbs almost dies on a scary ending Frankensteiner. The other thing that jumps out watching this is just how much offense the Nasties were capable of, Saggs in particular. Without noting everything I counted a pumphandle slam, a gutwrench, a Boston crab, an attempted superplex, and a Cactus Jack-esque kneedrop to the floor. And the "restholds" were all consistent with working over the back. Honestly, give full credit to the Nasty Boys for structuring this properly...not something many match reviewers have ever said, I'm sure. The Nasties get pushed hard after the match. Rick gets destroyed immediately after the match and then later Scott is cutting a promo when he's leveled by the tray of a snack vendor who turns out to be Jerry Sags. Did they have a fake vendor costume that they brought with him knowing that this situation was a possibility? Seems like a fairly well-laid-out plan by the Nasties' standards. Knobbs promises that the war is not over. I would fully approve of this, but sadly WCW's shortage on guaranteed contracts would mean that it pretty much was.
  4. Horsemen by numbers, which of course is still really good. Sid included.
  5. Sting legitimately sounds like he's on something--indeed, the precise opposite of the "tunnel vision" he talks about. Scorpion does a birthday party-level magic trick with a female crew member and sets off a random fireworks display. An absolutely asinine segment on every conceivable level.
  6. Gibson is still being acknowledged on the pre-match interview, having been allegedly put out of action by the Freebirds. Between Rich & Morton here and seemingly everyone decked out in the stuff on USWA television, leather jackets were apparently the ultimate "in" thing in October of 1990. This show is notable in my mind for having probably the ugliest ring ever put together for a major promotion. Morton works the whole first portion of the match, taking on both Midnights before an awkward turnaround moment on the floor where everyone looks uncharacteristically lost. Paul E. covers by noting Rich and Morton's lack of experience as a team. Eaton continues to be an absolute terror, doing a Rocket Launcher onto the ramp and busting out a DIAMOND CUTTER of all things. Then he launches himself into the ringpost and takes a huracanrana on the floor. Cornette absolutely murders Rich with a racket shot, but the Southern Boys dressed as nerdier versions of Cornette allow Rich to recover the racket and clobber Lane with it for the pin. Have to say that for all the talk about this being the "final chapter" in the feud, however ill-fated it may have been by the Gibson injury, you'd think they could at least allow Morton to get the winning fall. Not quite as good as the other two big-show matches between the MX and R'nRs, but a worthy final chapter for the Midnights in general, as sad as it will be to bid them farewell. Part of me is starting to wish that, however watered down they may have ended up, the WWF had gone after them instead of the Nasty Boys.
  7. Next to "guy leaving ring meets guy approaching ring in aisleway," the old Unannounced Random Award Ceremony is probably my least-favorite angle set-up in wrestling. Dennis Brent stiffly talks about the Southern Boys' popularity and hospital visits. By this point even the densest mark has to be able to see what's coming. First we get extended clips of the Southern Boys upsetting the Midnights on television months earlier. Cornette comes out to rant, but successfully talks Steve out of clocking him--not befitting of a "good citizen," and besides he's wearing glasses! Steve settles for pushing Cornette on his "big fat ass" instead. Cornette was good as usual but this was overall pretty lame. I suppose this served as a distraction from the fact that Robert Gibson was out and we wouldn't be getting MX/R'nRs at Havoc.
  8. I kind of want to see that Murdoch/Samurai bout. Sadly there's no real classic footage to draw from because Murdoch was pretty much never in the area in his prime.
  9. Scientific match, as Ken Wayne sits in on commentary. He calls it fairly straight-laced but takes some passive-aggressive shots at Davis a few times, saying he taught him certain things and saying Joey Maggs "needs all the help he can get." Some fun perfunctory scientific work until Davis is jumped by Doug Gilbert, while Jarrett is beaten down by Eddie & Lowe, and he gets yellow spraypainted down his back. Ken Wayne sadly has to make an emergency bathroom run and is unable to intervene. Jarrett has improved on the mic but clearly isn't on the level of the best talkers in the territory, which are numerous. Ken can just barely be seen in camera range pointing and laughing at Jarrett's paint job while his promo is going on.
  10. SHEIK FABIANO. Fabulous. Jamie already has a nifty finish in his holster, using Bill's aid to climb down Fabiano's back from a fireman's carry and sunset flipping him for the pinfall. But the babyfaces pay for it afterward. Bill gets handcuffed to the ropes while Jamie gets busted open and salt/powder thrown into his eyes. We even get video distortion on Jamie's face to sell this further. Dundee introduces a home video and Jamie either authentically had the shit beaten out of him or has a great make-up job, as he looks like he's been through a car wreck as he barely is able to mouth words of revenge through a swollen jaw. Bill goes from somber to fired-up and furious. The Internationals will be taking on Bill Dundee, Chris Champion, and Dick Murdoch! A babyface dream team...er, of sorts. Dundee continues to rant and the studio is EERILY silent.
  11. Gilbert vs. Jarrett from the MSC ends in a bloody pull-apart, and this week Gilbert is, for the first time in his career, putting his hair on the line vs. Jarrett's Southern title. Gilbert says that with the new decade, he'll be the new King of Memphis by taking the Southern title, long thought to be Jerry Lawler's belt. Then he accuses Dave Brown of getting extra pay-offs from Jerry Jarrett for toeing the company line about Jeff Jarrett and Jerry Lawler, and Brown yanks the mic away and actually cuts a killer promo of his own describing the difference in how Jarrett and Gilbert both grew up. Dave is awesome.
  12. Travel can grind on Jerry Lawler, but as long as the wrestling is fun he's going to hang in there as long as he can. I wonder if he had 2012-13 in mind at the time. Lawler hypes up a wrestling hotline--get his thoughts on Ric Flair and Hulk Hogan! Leave messages! Wrestling hotlines weren't the scam of the year, ALL hotlines were the scam of the year. I remember them being absolutely ubiquitous at this time, wrestling-related or not. Thank God for the interwebs. Sadly we don't get to see Lawler take on M.C. Slammer.
  13. In light of the insidious and inflammatory remarks and unmentionable actions of Bobby "The Brain" Heenan and Ravishing Rick Rude, it is Tunney's decision to indefinitely suspend Rude from active participation in the WWF, and to censor Heenan from any and all remarks directed towards the Big Boss Man's mother. In addition, Bobby Heenan must fulfill all of Rick Rude's contractual single-match obligations against the Big Boss Man. Failure to comply with this order will result in a lifetime suspension. Heenan tries to laugh off his comments and pleads for mercy from Tunney, but immediately packs up and goes when he thinks the cameras are off in a cute moment. Another great performance from Heenan but this is all as lame as it sounds. Rude was deserving of getting handcuffed and beaten down with a nightstick until he was taken out on a stretcher as a way of getting written out.
  14. Lawler or Jarrett, if they really wanted to push either the hot sauce or fireball angles harder than they did. Eric Embry, as we see in '92. Martel apologizes for Jake being a blundering fool who "stepped into the smell of Arrogance," but produces a white cane as a gift for Jake anyway. Vince's reaction is awesome. Jake, sporting the most badass Cosby sweater of all-time has to be led out to the set by Tony Garea. Brother Love uses the word "see" as often as he can as he walks around Jake belittling him. Once Jake realizes he has a white cane he takes a swing at Brother Love with it, then cuts a killer promo on Martel. Martel comes out and he and Brother Love and play keep away until Martel slaps Jake's sunglasses off. Brother Love cackles but leaves himself open to a DDT. That leaves the cameras open to get a shot of Jake's messed-up eyes and it's still a chilling sight now. In reality this is every bit as over-the-top and cartoony as any other WWF angle this year, but it's as impactful as almost any other angle executed this year in any promotion. The idea of being blinded in an accident is a real-life event that I would guess resonates deeply with a lot of people. Jake again gets most of the kudos but everyone--Love, Martel, Vince, and Piper--was great here.
  15. I'm saddened as we are rapidly approaching Jim Cornette's farewell to the NWA and as a regular on this Yearbook. The Nasties were never great interviews but they were usually decent, and this comes through here. They're really pushing the New Yorker angle with them, which would play fairly well in the South and was an aspect that the WWF would drop. There's a definite difference in production values in the Big Two's respective PPV reports that's evident here. Good-looking top of the card but holy fuck did WCW's undercard go to hell over the course of the year. J.W. Storm, Wildcat Wendell Cooley, the Master Blasters, and a Moondog all get PPV time. Let's not even discuss this time period in that big JTTS thread.
  16. Kung Fu really isn't very good and I think his heyday as a star was in the earlier part of the decade, but this is a famous historical piece and is Yearbook-worthy. The match itself is pretty well-laid out, at least in the fall we see, though it comes off as a real Atlantis carry-job.
  17. A beginning-to-end process of making a mask with an interview in-between. Stuff like this and the commentary of Dr. Morales (not to mention some of the 6-man clusters of everyone turning on each other) really makes me wish I understood Spanish as well as I used to.
  18. The contract signing really gets the importance of this bout over--even with the language barrier Satanico comes off as a confident, proud motherfucker. You get a little bit of everything here. Dandy continues his run as the most versatile man in wrestling in 1990 by adding sympathy babyface to his repertoire of roles. Just when Dandy starts to make a comeback, he has to shove the referee out of position and Satanico takes the opportunity to fake a blow to the groin and that draws a DQ for the first fall. The second fall goes all blood-like as at the opening, the technical stuff is tossed out the window. In addition to the brawling and mat skills you probably have the two best guys in the country at throwing big bombs at each other, as both guys try to figure new ways to pick the opponent and drop him. Great payback spot finish as Satanico casually throws Dandy's arm over his head for a suplex and pokes the referee in the eye, and that's enough to draw another cheap DQ. Dandy manages to weather the storm from an angry Satanico in the third fall and gets in a Dandina Cradle for the victory, but nothing really seems settled. The DQ finishes were cheap but brilliant at the same time as now we're all left wanting another match.
  19. I have nothing substantial to add except that I really should have listed Harley Race in my Bubbling Under list. He might be at the top of that particular list, in fact.
  20. Don't ask me to think about order: - Terry Funk - Ric Flair - Nick Bockwinkel - Stan Hansen - Rey Misterio, Jr. - Jerry Lawler - Randy Savage - Vader - Tully Blanchard - Eddie Guerrero Guys Bubbling Under or Whom I Could Be Swayed On, or Could Otherwise Get There in the Future: Buddy Rose, Ronnie Garvin, Ricky Morton, Bobby Eaton, Ricky Steamboat, Barry Windham, Bob Backlund, Dick Murdoch, Terry Gordy, CM Punk, Destroyer, Daniel Bryan. I suspect Garvin would vault into the top 10 if we had more Knoxville or '70s footage in general--from what little we see he looks like an absolute tornado. This brings up another point in that I'm a little uncomfortable declaring "all-time" to mean "late 1970's to the present," as is the case for the lists here including mine. There's some token love to the Destroyer and that's it. Yes, footage is an issue, and this is a group that relies on what can be seen first. There aren't records and stats like there are for real sports where it's (somewhat) easier to evaluate Johnny Unitas against Drew Brees. Still, I have a hard time believing the 10 greatest (unmasked) workers of all-time all had their peaks after 1970. Having said THAT I'm equally as lost as to who to actually nominate from the pre-'70s era. Actually I think Pat O'Connor would probably make a personal top 10 GOAT because he looks better than Thesz in contemporary footage, had awesome stuff from 1975, and he looked pretty spry all the way up to the Bockwinkel match in 1981 or so. But...he isn't "U.S." If Regal doesn't fit the criteria then neither can Pat. Thesz will be a hard one to evaluate because there's a temptation to backlash against the deification he receives at places like Classics. I think he's a worthy contender at least. Buddy Rogers' career came to a rather sudden halt in 1963 and primo footage is spotty--honestly, I didn't much care for the Comiskey title change last time I saw it. Verne Gagne is another guy who strikes me as being better than Thesz at the same time period and was also a high-quality worker into the early '80s even with (or because of) a greatly reduced schedule.
  21. Or Los Angeles the very next year and Macaulay Caulkin, at the height of his fame, was there. He got shown on camera but wasn't hyped, in lieu of much hipper names like Regis Philbin and Paul Maguire.
  22. Good match for what it is, though I thought the Maeda/Nakano match was more to-the-point as far as Maeda vs. young up-and-comer matches go.
  23. This is definitely one of the all-time great Fujiwara performances, as his opening punches in the corner followed by the headbutts are absolutely awesome. And the grin on his face after every Takada flurry makes him look like the toughest, most masochistic motherfucker in history. A really clever finish too--Fujiwara does his punch-and-headbutt-in-the-corner flurry for a 9.9 count on Takada, but gets a little too complacent with that sequence and when he does it again, Takada's ready for it and floors him with a kick for (what I think is) a rare TKO. This was one of those Ted DiBiase matches with the great opening and maybe a good finish, but with a middle that may as well have been cut out for how boring it was.
  24. As I understand it, Andre basically asked Vince to go back on the road and said/threatened that he'd go work for Herb Abrams if he didn't. Wrestling was the only life that Andre really knew.
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