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WCW Head Bookers


JerryvonKramer

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One thing I've been trying to put together for years now is a definitive list of who the main WCW booker was and when. Here's as far as I've got, help me out here:

 

Executive VP

 

pre-88: Jim Crockett

 

1988-92: Jim Herd

 

Early-1992: Kip Allen Frey

 

Mid-1992-3: Bill Watts

 

1993: Bill Shaw

 

1993-1999: Eric Bischoff

 

Late 1999: Bill Busch (Time Warner man)

 

2000-1: Brad Siegel (Time Warner man)

 

Head booker:

 

85-8: Dusty Rhodes

 

1988: Jim Crockett Jr. (Dec only)

 

1989: George Scott

 

1989-90: Booking comittee (Ric Flair, Jim Cornette, Jim Ross, Kevin Sullivan and Eddie Gilbert)

 

1990: Ole Anderson

 

1991-4: Dusty Rhodes (& Ole Anderson with Jim Ross)

 

1994-5: Ric Flair

 

1995-8: Kevin Sullivan (with Terry Taylor)

 

1998-99: Kevin Nash

 

1999: Kevin Sullivan and Terry Taylor (+ committee)

 

1999-00: Vince Russo and Ed Ferrara

 

2000: Kevin Sullivan, Terry Taylor and Ed Ferrara (+ committee which included JJ Dillon)

 

2000: Vince Russo and Eric Bischoff

 

2000-01: Terry Taylor, Johnny Ace and Ed Ferrara

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Not sure exactly what the timeline was for Herd leaving. I had always heard it happened in the fallout to the Flair firing, but I've also heard it happened months later. So I'm not sure if it was '91 or '92. Frey definitely didn't come on until Jan of '92, but I'm not sure if there was a transition period where there was no Executive VP or not.

 

I want to say there was a transition period between Watts and Bischoff too. Bischoff gained power when Watts left, but wasn't The Man In Charge immediately. Bill Shaw ran things during the interim I think, but I'm not sure how long of a time period that was.

 

As far as head bookers go, Flair controlled the world title as part of his deal with Turner, but I'm not sure if he was actually booking the shows at this point. I've heard everyone from Cornette to Sullivan to Gilbert to Jim Ross as part of the mix. I know Cornette and Sullivan were assistants to Flair, but I also know Jim Ross and Eddie Gilbert had a say in the direction at certain points throughout the year and I'm not sure if they reported to Flair or not. I know Flair and Ross supposedly butted heads a few times during this time period, and before Flair returned to the WWF and had to make amends, he went on a rant once on the old WCW Live show where he said Ross was constantly burying him to Herd, and saying Flair was too old to be on top. That seems to have been forgotten.

 

Not sure if Ole was on through '94 or not. Flair was actually on as head booker through the first half of '95 and seemed to clash with Hogan and Savage quite a bit. I think at some point in July, he was swapped out for Sullivan, who initially wanted there to be "two WCWs" -- one focused on the Hogan/main event stuff, and one focused on the in-ring guys like Benoit and Malenko. I could never figure out if that was literal or figurative.

 

The Sullivan run lasted through the end of '98. Terry Taylor was a co-head booker during that time, but Sullivan tends to get credited more for most of the big ideas that were successful.

 

Nash was head booker from the end of '98 (Right after Hogan left following Havoc, although to hear Nash it didn't happen until after he ended the streak ... he's lying) through the summer of '99 in one of the worst booking runs of all time, only surpassed with the ones that followed it. Nash didn't book in 2000.

 

In late '99 through 2000, Russo and Ferrara were in, then in January they were replaced with Sullivan and JJ Dillon. A few months later, Russo was back in with Bischoff, then Bischoff left with Hogan. Russo was in charge through the end of the year and Johnny Ace closed up shop. Sullivan didn't book in 2001.

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4/10/00 - a week after Halloween Havoc (I think) - Russo/Bischoff

Russo was in a strange roll prior to that as he did a lot of work at home selling PCS while being worried about his job. He was officially out at the 10/23 Nitro/Thunder tapings when Terry & Ace took over.

 

Eric... he wasn't really involved a ton for quite a while prior to that. Eric had some big picture stuff, but I suspect by the time of the Bash (i.e. shoot on Hogan), he was fading and instead was focusing on lining up money marks to buy WCW.

 

I would tag it as "Russo" through all of that period.

 

John

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1989 after Dusty Rhodes left is kind of hard to pinpoint, but I do know Sullivan and Ross were both part of the mix.

 

Rhodes came back in 1991 and was the main booker under Frye.

 

There was a transitional period between Watts and Bischoff with Shaw in charge and Ole booking along with Rhodes.

 

Bob Mould did come on board in 1999 and left shortly after Russo and Ferrara arrived, but Mould was part of a committee that included Rhodes, Sullivan and Taylor.

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1989 after Dusty Rhodes left is kind of hard to pinpoint, but I do know Sullivan and Ross were both part of the mix.

 

This is a kind of a tricky timeline. I thought at the Clash with Flair/Steamboat Scott was fired. A committee was put together. With Flair as the head along with Ross,Gilbert, and Sullivan. Eventually, Ross and Gilbert were either pushed out or quit and Terry Funk and Cornette joined the team. At or a little after GAB 89 Flair wanted control and the commitie was resolved. Though you could still see people having involvement in the booking. For example, Cornette was booking the MX and Dudes stuff. Sullivan was booking his programs with Cactus Jack and Buzz Sawyer etc. Eventually Flair resigned at Wrestlewar 90.

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I want to say there was a transition period between Watts and Bischoff too. Bischoff gained power when Watts left, but wasn't The Man In Charge immediately. Bill Shaw ran things during the interim I think, but I'm not sure how long of a time period that was.

 

 

Not sure if Ole was on through '94 or not. Flair was actually on as head booker through the first half of '95 and seemed to clash with Hogan and Savage quite a bit. I think at some point in July, he was swapped out for Sullivan, who initially wanted there to be "two WCWs" -- one focused on the Hogan/main event stuff, and one focused on the in-ring guys like Benoit and Malenko. I could never figure out if that was literal or figurative.

I think Bischoff became The Man in Charge after Clash 24, which drew a decent crowd and rating for the time.

 

I thought Flair was the head booker throughout '94, with guys like Fuller and Dundee helping him. Didn't Bischoff make Flair the head booker after the meeting the guys had with Turner and Ric was the only guy that Ted actually knew ?

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I think at some point in July, he was swapped out for Sullivan, who initially wanted there to be "two WCWs" -- one focused on the Hogan/main event stuff, and one focused on the in-ring guys like Benoit and Malenko. I could never figure out if that was literal or figurative.

Does anyone know exactly when Sullivan became the booker in 1995 ?

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Ok, thanks.

I'll never understand the relationship between Hogan and Savage at this point. There was some hostility dating back from his divorce with Liz which he partially blamed on Hogan and Linda, et Savage seemed to align with Hogan no matter what in WCW, and ended up playing the role of his bitch like he always has before. Why wouldn't Savage support a guy like Flair who was just much closer to himself in term of work ethic ? Savage vs Flair was the best thing Savage did in WCW next to his program with DDP. It's just bizarre to me why Savage would follow Hogan's lead, he was a big enough star on his own. Insecurity maybe.

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Ok, thanks.

I'll never understand the relationship between Hogan and Savage at this point. There was some hostility dating back from his divorce with Liz which he partially blamed on Hogan and Linda, et Savage seemed to align with Hogan no matter what in WCW, and ended up playing the role of his bitch like he always has before. Why wouldn't Savage support a guy like Flair who was just much closer to himself in term of work ethic ? Savage vs Flair was the best thing Savage did in WCW next to his program with DDP. It's just bizarre to me why Savage would follow Hogan's lead, he was a big enough star on his own. Insecurity maybe.

Money. Savage knew being programmed opposite Hogan he was going to get more money. Being Hogan's partner means a good pay day. Politically opposing Hulk would have cost him money.
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This came up reading the Observers for the podcasts but in December 88 after Dusty was fired but before the booking committee headed by Flair took over, JIM CROCKETT JR. HIMSELF was booking. He was the booker for Clash 4 and Starrcade 88. The committee took over after that.

 

I literally had no idea at all that Crockett ever booked any shows himself.

 

ALSO, Jim Herd had quite an extensive wrestling background pre-Pizza Hut that is never ever and I mean EVER discussed, mainly in St. Louis but also working for Vince Sr. for a while too. The WONs from around November and December of 88 are a real goldmine of info I've never seen anyone else.

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