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PeteF3

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Everything posted by PeteF3

  1. Another match with cognitive dissonance between the storyline and the match layout. Austin's going from not giving a shit and not wanting to crown a new champion, to checking for submissions. Austin should be seated in a ringside chair downing Steveweisers and letting these two beat each other up. In the end, this is yet another proof that it isn't the title that's over, it is (or *should* be) the guy that's holding it. Paul Bearer comes out and we get maybe the first instance of the "guy prepares to hit somebody with an object, then turns around and shockingly hits the other guy" spot in the Russo Era that we'd see a million more times. It doesn't lead to much except it seems to officially put Undertaker and Bearer back together as full-fledged heels and set up Kane as a sympathetic babyface going forward. Austin hunts Vince down backstage, unsuccessfully, though he does run into Owen Hart in an amusing moment ("I don't know, I'm retired.") McMahon then orders the video screen to be pulled up, and finally fires Austin. Huge heat for this, and Vince hesitates a bit before launching into his famous soundbite, which a creative person *might* be able to interpret as regret and a possible explanation for Shane re-hiring Austin only to screw him--but, we're getting ahead of ourselves, aren't we?
  2. Yeah, even by Attitude Era standards the face-heel dynamics are all screwed up. Val was getting monster pops for weeks on end and Ross was justifying Terri's behavior by harkening back to that interview the previous November, but now that Goldust is back, JR is getting on Terri's case and lamenting how broken poor Dustin's heart must be. Oh well, it's good to have Goldust back and it's great to see Venis' shitty character get some comeuppance. There's some really solid work here and I think they really wanted to have a good match, but the lack of heat until the comeback as well as the weird stop-start nature of the match hurt it. It started off really strong with some intense brawling and then got bogged down in body part work when that wasn't entirely called for. Then we get the same finish we just saw with Felino and Santo! I love it when that happens, and I think this is the second time a Felino/Santo Yearbook match has been followed by a WWF undercard match with the same ending. Terri looked fantastic here, for the record.
  3. Man, '98 seems like it's been the quietest year for lucha so far in the '90s. Even reading along in the Observers, there have been a few apuestas matches that drew big gates, namely La Parka vs. Pierroth Jr., but very little that had me thinking, "Man, I wish the Yearbook had included that." But I love these two and I love this match-up. I think I liked the '97 matches a bit better, but this certainly did a great job of building to some huge moves, whereas in '97 the matches were more bombfests, as if the masks and outfits had been donned by the Steiner Brothers. This has some really cool technical wrestling to go along with that and a really well-done finish that Santo sells like death. Definitely a lucha MOTYC if possibly not one on a worldwide level.
  4. I actually thought the match was a ton of fun--I hate Koshinaka and he didn't bother me at all here, and Tenryu continued to look good in a strong comeback year for him. It ain't no Kandori/Hokuto tag as far as dissenting-partners matches go but the action and the crowd are hot and it had me guessing a few times. My only complaint is that Tenzan went down awfully easily as soon as Koshinaka made his comeback. I agree on the who-gives-a-fuck nature of the post-match angle, though.
  5. Hales apparently made some sort of off-color remark around Brandon Baxter's father, who was killed when he was 2, as part of this babyface turn. That might be a tad over-the-top, but it's nothing new for Memphis, I guess.
  6. Francine dares anyone to try to strip her in the ring. Presumably this sets up a Francine/Tammy or Francine/Dawn Marie catfight in the near future.
  7. Now I ask you: how *else* would Dreamer vs. Credible end besides Spike Dudley pinning the One Man Gang? Question #2: is that actually Rod Price or is it G. Gordon Liddy having fallen on hard times? Yeah, this was yet another ECW match where you could call out every spot before it happened. OMG cutting off the attempted low kick was the only semi-novel part of the match, but you still knew he was going to be the one to go through the table in the end.
  8. Gertner strolls through the toughest part of Buffalo at 3:30 in the morning with a $100 bill taped to his head--but he's not afraid, because he has the Dudley Boyz with him. Buh Buh Ray practically spells out that he's going to try to incite a riot at the upcoming show, daring the toughest people in Buffalo to take a shot at him.
  9. Good point--no reason not to run a 6- or 8-man tag between the Horsemen and 4 random NWO guys at Havoc.
  10. Nitro made a gallant effort, for the most part, but it just couldn't compare to this. This isn't a spectacular match, but it is well-worked and the insane crowd elevates it to something special, almost like the famous Dallas 10-man tag a year and a half after this. Rock looks good at FIP and his comebacks are strong, especially when he gets Kane up in the Samoan drop which looks like and is sold as a great feat of strength. The masked SWAT officer reappears, as Vince had warned Austin earlier that he would need eyes in the back of his head. Austin takes a nightstick shot and gets worked over, and Vince is happy as we go off the air, once again counting the minutes until next Monday night.
  11. Rock isn't glossing over his past with Austin, and he's not happy about their partnership tonight. But not as unhappy as Mark Henry and D'Lo, it seems.
  12. "Just LEAVE THE DAMN THING ALONE--you've got what??" These little Foley cameos are some great blink-and-you'll-miss-it goodness. Subtlety, in wrestling? In Russo-land? We're seeing it.
  13. Austin wreaking in havoc in various vehicles seems like something that should get old, but it never, ever does. Everyone sells the angle great--Lawler's squealing is for once a perfectly appropriate reaction. Austin comes out and basically tells us that he won't declare a winner at Judgment Day. McMahon is out in a motorized cart, flanked by a big dude in a mask and SWAT uniform, and I think I know where this is leading. Vince cuts Austin off with a flank of guard dogs--"You were saying...?" Vince makes the main event, and it's a big one, with Austin and Rock teaming up for the first time. Vince tries to continue and you can barely hear him over the "ASSHOLE" chants--wild. Chicago was a pretty hot Nitro crowd but it pales in comparison to this. Vince laments what has happened in his life over the past few weeks--due to his crushed ankle, he may never play polo again! This is hot hot HOT.
  14. Heartwarming, but the excess amount of slant rhymes puts Henry behind Lanny Poffo for me.
  15. Buffer speaks of the Warrior/Sting team as being "for the first time in professional wrestling history," even though Warrior made vague reference to their past earlier, and then Tenay makes a more explicit reference after the intros. Oh, that WCW quality control. The match is pretty hot as Warrior is wisely kept from doing anything more than the bare minimum. Predictable finish but you knew you were in for gaga to start with, I guess. Sting makes his own save with two baseball bats as the Wolfpack is rendered even more superfluous. I wonder if this is the only time Warrior ever wrestled Bret? In an alternate universe that match was scheduled to main event the '93 Royal Rumble.
  16. Bischoff tries to take some cheap shots as McArthur's parents, but then makes the mistake of shoving him in trying to get into the suite. He's swarmed by security in an awesome scene. Flair is out and is as giddy as ever. The Last Great WCW Angle continues in strong fashion.
  17. A prelude to Positively Kanyon.
  18. Well, it's a year and a half later, but...I don't know about Sabu, but the Sandman thing was pure speculation, just based on the fact that the laughing started right as Sandman signed with the company, so people figured there'd be a connection. Okerlund gamely attempts to lend some gravity to this situation, trying to make this brother vs. brother match something other than a routine mid-card feud, but that goes out the window after about 8 seconds. "GET THAT DUMMY OUTTA HERE!" Chucky actually draws a big pop for telling Okerlund to shut the hell up, but that quickly turns when he transparently begs us to go see his new movie, complete with opening date.
  19. McArthur is shockingly pretty good here going toe-to-toe with Bischoff--he has the make-up of a true fan getting the chance to cut a real promo. Really cool Crash TV-style layout here as we go from the Hogan promo directly into a gearshift angle.
  20. Hogan Wood by numbers. Intrigue at the end of the segment, as Bischoff is informed that the Horsemen are outside.
  21. Sting cuts a decent fiery promo but Warrior then shows up to grind this segment to a halt. This crowd is NOT impressed. Sting just leaves and it's assumed, I guess, that the tag match is on.
  22. I have no idea what JR is even trying to say. Why is the matter a "non-issue"? The last sentence doesn't explain.
  23. I'm between Loss and Zenjo here. It's a good match with some good spots near the finish, and some neat sequences like Akiyama and Taue dueling it out on the apron, but "good" is all it is. The Holy Demon Army's control segments in the first half are shockingly below-par and this sort of feels like a reset button is being hit on Akiyama's push.
  24. Yeah, not good timing with that cover. It's not really my scene either but that's a good collection of heavy metal talent, though the songs all look like covers.
  25. Jericho has sincere words for Brian Hildebrand, who went back into the hospital being unable to keep food down this week due what was initially believed to be leftover scar tissue from his previous stomach cancer operation, but as we know now, turned out to be something much worse. Jericho has words for Greenberg and convinces Nick Patrick to count him out when he doesn't show up.
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