Jump to content
Pro Wrestling Only

PeteF3

Members
  • Posts

    10287
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by PeteF3

  1. This show pretty much gave birth to the term WSEF, though it had been well on its way really since December of '97. Vince is mic'd, for some reason (making movies!) but is really good here. Can't say the same for the other performances or the booking.
  2. Bart's reaction to the very first punch of the match indicates just how much he's in over his head. According to Dave Meltzer, both in the WONs of the time and his appearance on the Lapsed Fan, the WWF really did think Gunn could win this.
  3. Good heat for okay but marginal action. I'm not sure I get the logic of your Tokyo Dome challenger pinning the champion in advance of the big show--on the other hand, I wouldn't have gotten the logic of your Triple Crown champion stampeding through the Carnival, either. On the other hand, if Kawada wasn't out then they might have been able to hold off on Misawa vs. Vader one-on-one until the Dome.
  4. Seeing as how this entire motley crew looks indistinguishable from the heroin-ravaged small town residents of my home state I daresay KAW is 18 years ahead of its time.
  5. P-O-B! P-O-B! Don't know what it stands for, gonna chant it anyway. KAW even springs for a limo which I'm sure Sid insisted on.
  6. I have to agree, the old-timers are the best things about PPW--both Michael Hayes and this feud.
  7. Yeah, Big Show isn't ready for prime time yet. His whole presentation is off--he's not carrying himself as a monster (other than the spot where he no-sells the posting), he's overweight, and the ring gear isn't all that flattering. Which is not to say he should have been doing the job here by any means. They try to save him somewhat by having him pop up from the Stunner after the 3-count, but too little, too late. Rock manages to lay out Stone Cold as we close out another pre-WrestleMania build-up that, strong go-home Raw notwithstanding, wasn't half as effective as the build to WM14. Just too many moving parts in the main event and not enough focus on the mid-card.
  8. I didn't mind this, it was a payback (of sorts) for the previous week where it was someone disguised as Kane, unrelated though that angle was. I have to admit, both of these fooled me. Triple H pulled this off well.
  9. Shouldn't it be ROSS IS WAR? And yes, Hardcore Holly showed up after this (JR calls him out in this segment for breaking his table the previous week) to brawl with Doc.
  10. A money segment for sure and one of the iconic moments of the era. Maybe the strongest overall WWF segment of 1999, since the Russo-ism is minimized to the finagling over the referees and the rest is about all these incredible dynamic personalities showing off. Austin cuts one of his best promos in months--checking into the Smackdown Hotel and BURNING THAT SUMBITCH TO THE GROUND. Everything is focused on what's going to happen at WrestleMania and we close out with an indelible image that Vince puts over beautifully.
  11. I have to admit I enjoyed this quite a bit. Maybe because it looks so good by comparison to what else is going on in WCW and the work is better than most WWF matches by this point. Flair doesn't mesh with Rey perfectly but he does it a lot better than one might expect, and other than Flair-Goldberg this is the first Nitro main event in months to carry some "what exactly is going to happen?" intrigue to it. Better than some other "yes, this match really happened" matches of the decade.
  12. ...but he's not really wrong, is he? This, incredibly, is one of the first things on Nitro in months to tease and build to something happening next week.
  13. God knows what the point of this was, since they're still half-assing this supposed Hogan and Nash babyface turn. Nash says something to Sable in a desperate attempt to be cool. Hogan's equally desperate attempts to get "YOU DID *NOT* JUST SAY THAT!" over the live mic is another demonstration of how far he's fallen.
  14. Good finish to a total snoozefest of a match. Kanehara offered nothing and Tamura didn't seem to want to drag anything out of him.
  15. So, so glad to see this show crop up (or return)--especially because there's probably a *million* weird forgotten things in WCW that are far weirder and far more forgotten than WWF stuff like Battle Kat or Friar Ferguson. Just spitballing about the Underdog Challenge here--maybe Watts was trying to create "pushed jobbers" like the Sal Sincere/TL Hopper types brought in by the WWF in 1996? That is, give some guys a few wins just to add a bit more intrigue to squash matches, only in a far more Watts-ian way than the WWF did?
  16. Jerry also described Man-Hands, "It's like dating George 'The Animal' Steele."
  17. Pretty good action considering one of these teams I'm slightly more excited to see as Tag Champs than I was the Jurassic Powers. Sasaki and Koshinaka can do sprints if they can do nothing else (and indeed they can't).
  18. Another Taz-Sabu match that fails to live up to the hype. Hopefully this is done with, but if it is Taz is rather disturbingly out of fresh challengers already. And come on--on the same show in 1999 ECW we're teasing a "referee's decision" finish *and* a towel throw-in finish? No Heyman worshipper should ever complain about ether again with these false finishes out of 1965. I'm not opposed to the idea of any of those finishes, but they only work in a promotion and an environment where they're put over as actually having a chance of happening.
  19. I enjoyed parts of this just because the elaborate spots they do are, well, elaborate. And well-executed, and creative. But that's all this is--I know it's easy to get snarky and sarcastic about the phrase "self-conscious epic" but that term could have been invented for matches like these. The teased draw and the "referee's decision" which makes no sense on any level sure don't help this. Of note for historical purposes considering this series' reputation, and it's not like I felt like my time was wasted, but absolutely nothing that you really need to see for actual good wrestling. This is the type of match that would look like a classic in music video or highlight form.
  20. ECW has the audacity to hype this as a "unification" match. Get the fuck outta here--the same belt that Taz willingly gave up a few months ago? Taz talks about how ECW is trying to "cover up" Sabu's broken jaw even though he was wrestling with white tape all over it during the match we just saw with Styles telling us that his jaw was, in fact, broken. Then he cuts promos on Ric Flair and the top WWF guys because ECW has in no way gone from being an innovator to being a clinging hanger-on, no sir.
  21. Kaz, in full Glacier gear, decides to brutalize himself on a low-level syndie show, God bless 'im.
  22. Way too many people involved here, and Justin Credible gets put over yet again at the finish. In theory it's not an awful go-home angle for Living Dangerously but Sabu vs. Taz is too played out by this point.
  23. More Stacy/Lawler intrigue. Utilizing Lawler's visit to the Playboy Mansion for a little boost to MPPW booking was clever. Not sure a dream tag match like this actually *needs* the Stacy drama, though.
  24. Angle's look definitely changed for the better. Plain black trunks is one thing but I have no idea what the black leather vest is about. He'll come a long, long way.
  25. Stasiak is history, on to bigger and brighter (?) things. That finish was certainly an eyebrow-raiser. It's probably a few years too late to really make money out of the Fabs vs. Lawler & Dundee, but I can get behind this match myself even in 1999, especially if what Lawler says is true, that they never ran the match before.
×
×
  • Create New...