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Post by codystarbuck on Jun 5, 2024 21:03:20 GMT -5
everything about Mae Young around then was embarassing. I feel bad she felt the need to do that...WWE should have just paid her to be a back stage person if she needed it. She loved doing that stuff, though. Mae was pure carny and you couldn't embarrass her, according to people who knew her. I thought it was tasteless and there were more respectful ways to use her; but, she was having a ball, according to interviews and eyewitnesses. You won't find it in her Wikipedia page and I suspect not in her WWE bio; but, in 1949, she was arrested (not sure about convicted) for luring men to her hotel room and then mugging them and taking their money. She had two female accomplices in the scheme. She didn't need to do that; she lived with Moolah, who was loaded and trained girls for her, for a long time and also trained wrestlers, in California, in the 70s, including Ric Drasin. She wanted to be part of the show. If you've never seen the documentary Lipstick & Dynamite, Piss & Vinegar, check it out. She and Moolah are features, as are Gladys "Kill 'Em" Gillem (BEST WRESTLING NAME EVER!), Ella Waldek, Penny Banner, and Ida Mae Martinez. Banner tells the story of coming to train at Billy Wolfe's camp and was met by Mae, wearing men's pants and shirt, smoking a cigar, greeting her with "Hello, F@#$-face!" Lot of great stories and footage, though Gillem is really the only one to break kayfabe, saying it was her job to lose to the babyfaces. The rest act like their matches were real. Now, from what little footage I have seen, they did more actual wrestling than the usual Moolah spots you saw from her girls, in the WWF, in the mid-80s. Waldek was a top draw and regular contender for the women's title and held women's titles in Florida. Penny Banner was the AWA Women's champion and was married, for a time, to Johnny Weaver and they were known for violent fights. There was an interesting development as a result of the filming. Neko Case was asked to contribute to the soundtrack, doing a cover of Nick Lowe's "Ragin' Eyes," and she was watching some footage. She saw Waldek talking about being from Washington state, from a Russian immigrant family of beet farmers, with the birth name of Elsie Shevchenko. Case's family was from that area and the only Russian family she knew of, in that region. She called her grandmother and asked her about it and she said, "Oh, yes, you have an aunt who was a famous lady wrestler." The director hooked them up and they met at a film festival and exchanged holiday cards, after that, though they weren't close. It's a pretty cool documentary and, at one point, they follow Gillem to the Gulf Coast Wrestling Reunion, where there are a bunch of veterans wrestlers, including Gillem, Moolah, and Young, plus severl 70s and 80s era women and men. She mostly looks forward to seeing Mae, as she helped train her and they were old friends, She didn't care for Moolah. She was an interesting character, later working in a circus as a trapeze artist, lion tamer and she also wrestled alligators. Her husband also worked the circus and on Broadway, as a stagehand and was killed when a 500 lb box fell on him. She was quite a character; and, like I said, the only one to fully dispense with kayfabe, as far as matches went. Penny Banner was instrumental in helping the director meet the women, via Cauliflower Alley Club and the LIWA.
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Post by driver1980 on Jun 6, 2024 6:03:14 GMT -5
I revisited World Tour 89/90 last night: The tape begins with a profile of Superfly Jimmy Snuka. He wrestles Boris Zhukov (New York) in a so-so match, and then wrestles Honky Tonk Man (New York) in an okay bout, but the match is nothing to write home about. Superfly wins both bouts via pinfall. Match of the tape is Bret Hart vs. Dino Bravo (London, UK). It was supposedly chosen by a fan. It’s a great bout as it shows the technical wrestler trying to slowly break down the man of strength, which is often a good way of booking a match. Surprisingly for me, Bravo wins via pinfall - which I did not expect as Bret put up a real good fight. Lord Alfred Hayes talks about various European landmarks. The Rockers took on The Fabulous Rougeas (Paris, France) in a match that I expected to be better. These teams had better bouts at other times. In what felt like an extended squash match, Ultimate Warrior pinned Ted DiBiase (Tokyo, Japan). It seemed like it was over before it really began. These two had a better match in late 1990, on Saturday Night’s Main Event. Honky Tonk Man features again, battling King Duggan (London, England). Nothing really memorable happened here. Duggan wins by pinfall. (Oh, and “USA” chants are odd because both men are American) We return to Paris as Hogan defends his WWF Championship against Macho Man. I believe this is the best match the two had, even superior to their WM V bout. As you no doubt know, Hogan won after the Legdrop of Doom. The tape is passable - at best. I can’t help but think other matches could have been included. I’d recommend it for Bret/Dino and Hogan/Savage, though.
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Post by dbutler69 on Jun 6, 2024 16:25:53 GMT -5
I recently watched WCW Clash of Champions 29 from November 1994. First match is for the Tag Team Championship: Pretty Wonderful (champs, Pauls Orndorff & Roma) vs. Stars & Stripes (Marcus Bagwell & the Patriot).
Before this match the announced that the winner would have to face Col. Parker’s team of Bunkhouse Buck & Arn Anderson. So right off that bat you already know who’s going to win this match. Good job, WCW. Couldn’t you have made that announcement after the match?? Also, in addition to Pretty Wonderful’s tag team belts being up for grabs, if Stars & Stripes lose, the Patriot has to unmask, and I figure that’s not going to happen so yet another reason to be sure that Stars & Stripes will win. Anyway, in spite of the WCW stupidity, this was a good match. Yet another messy WCW ending, however. Orndorff suplexes Bagwell and Roma gets on the rope to elbow/knee drop (I assume) onto the prostrate Bagwell but Patriot knocks him off the rope and both Bagwell and Orndorff are lying there as the ref counts to three but Bagwell gets his should up in time while Orndorff looks like an idiot just lying there and not lifting his shoulder until after three, and S&S win the belts at a little over the 10 minute mark. Again, weird, kinda dumb ending but otherwise, these two teams seem to have good chemistry which is probably why they have been trading the tag team belts back and forth for the past several months. As an aside, prior to this match they showed a clip of the WCW Saturday Night match that led to this rematch, and it was a typically dumb WCW booking. Next match is for the World TV title: Johnny B. Badd (champ) v. Honky Tonk Man
It would be nice if this is better than their last match, but I’m not hopeful. Badd wins by DQ in a little over 6 minutes when, after yet another WCW ref bump (!), Honkey gets his guitar and smashes it over Badd’s head, but the ref recovers just in time to see this and give a DQ win to Badd. These two were supposed to have et another rematch in Starrcade but Honkey got fired for being just too ridiculous even for Bischoff. So somehow, one of Hogan’s buddies didn’t win a championship after all. We get a very generic heel promo from the new stable, the Three Faces of Fear (Brutus, Kevin Sullivan, and Earthquake/Avalanche) threatening Hogan. Good luck, boys. Next match is the Nasty Boys vs. Harlem Heat.
There was supposed to be some big secret as to who Harlem Heat’s manager was, which was supposed to be revealed at the end of the match (as we’ll see) but WCW ruined the surprise by having the graphic during introductions say “Harlem Heat w/ Sensual Sherri”. Just mindblowing stupidity here, even for WCW. I have no idea how this company stayed in business so long. Good thing Ted Turner had such deep pockets. I pick on a lot of the WCW entrance music, but I really like both teams’ music here. We haven’t seen Harlem Heat in a PPV/Clash of Champions in quite a few months. Their names have changed from Kole and Kane to Booker T and Stevie Ray, and they claim to be brothers, and apparently they’ve got some kind of a phone gimmick which involves calling their (not so) mysterious manager towards the end of their matches. The match was just okay. Booker T looked good but not much else to see here. Mostly a brawl, of course. The ending, besides being unoriginal and way overused by WCW (face pinning heel but other heel comes off tope rope with elbow to allow first heel to get the pin) was totally botched by WCW. As the finish happened, the camera was focused elsewhere and we really couldn’t even see the finish, except for when they showed it on replay. Typical WCW. Anyway, Harlem Heat get the win. I think this might be their first win in a big show, as it seems like the used to lose a lot, but they’re push starts now! Oh, and the guy who made the pin wasn’t the legal man, but this is WCW so that doesn’t matter. Next match is Vader vs. Dustin Rhodes.
Vader spit in Distin’s face in this match, and we got a great camera angle of it, from right behind Dustin’s head. Nasty! Yet another ref bump. Seriously, does every big WCW match need a ref bump? Rhodes goes after Race on the apron and gets splashed from behind, then Vader follows it up with a wheelbarrow face buster (don’t know if I’ve ever seen that before) and rolls Dustin over for the win in a little under 12 minutes. This was an excellent match. I’ve been watching WCW content from 1992 up to now and all of Vader’s matches have been good, and Dustin looked really good here too. After the match, Vader is going to splash Dustin again when Jim Duggan runs out with his 2x4 and makes the save. This sets up a Duggan-Vader match for the future, which I think will happen at Starrcade. Next match is for the US Title: Hacksaw Jim Duggan (champ) vs. Stunning Steve Austin. Basically, about 30 seconds into the match, Vader runs in an attacks Duggan and the match ends in a DQ. I thought maybe they were short on time, but I’ve read that Austin was hurt and that’s why they did this. Makes sense. I’d also heard (this is perhaps more dubious) that he’d been promised getting his title back here but the injury prevented that. For the main event, we get Hulk Hogan, Sting & Dave Sullivan v. Kevin Sullivan, The Butcher & Avalanche (the Three Faces of Fear).
Mr. T is the guest referee. He’s wearing a black & white striped zebra shirt with a matching nightcap, which looks ridiculous. Luckily the nightcap comes off a few minutes into the match. The face team all has yellow & red face paint. Looks kinda cool, actually. Dave Sullivan gets an arm injury shortly into this match and it becomes a de facto handicap match was Evad goes back to the locker room with the inury. Just as well. This is a Hogan match, and against a big guy no less (Avalanche) so of course we MUST have a long bearhug spot. Oh brother. Kevin Sullivan takes the megaphone from Jimmy Hart and tries to hit Hogan with it, but Mr T takes the megaphone from him. Then I guess Mr T hit Sullivan with the megaphone which is what allowed Hogan to pin him for the win (after about 11 minutes) but to be honest, I couldn’t even see it. More terrible camerawork and overall production values from WCW as I really couldn’t see the finish clearly at all and had to look it up to see what the heck happened! Pathetic job, WCW. After the match, Sullivan takes the megaphone, and hit Mr T over the head with it, and T goes down. The then hits Hogan with the megaphone, but it takes 3 shots before Hogan goes down because he’s Hogan and he’s superhuman, brother. The Butcher gets Hogan in a sleeper and holds him in it for quite a while. A bunch of officials and also wrestlers (Stars & Stripes and some jobbers) come in to break it up, but the 3 heels manage to hold them off until Butcher decides to release it and they go. Not a good match. Pretty bad, actually, and also very chaotic. Typical WCW tag match in that regard, though. Overall, the only matches here worth watching were the opener (Stars & Stripes vs. Pretty Wonderful) and Vader vs. Dustin Rhodes. The rest of it I would highly recommend skipping. LOL, back in the day, because WCW didn’t care about its UK fans, I had to watch this in German on a satellite channel that aired WCW programming. So I didn’t hear the original commentary until years later. I thought this was okay, if I’m honest. I knew The Patriot wouldn’t unmask, and given some promotions’ adherence to face vs. heel dynamics only, I knew Pretty Wonderful weren’t gonna be facing Arn Anderson and Bunkhouse Buck (imagine Anderson trading moves with Orndorff?). I did like the chemistry between these teams, which you mentioned. Why was Honky fired? I wonder if that rumoured “no pinfall losses on PPV/televised wrestling” policy of his, if it existed, had anything to do with it. He seemed out of place in WCW. You’re right about the spoilers and nonsense in the tag match, but like Pretty Wonderful and Stars & Stripes, I did feel that Harlem Heat and the Nasty Boys had great chemistry. As for WCW chaos and spoilers, be thankful they weren’t the video distributor for The Sixth Sense, they’d have probably plastered the ending all over the video sleeve! You can rarely go wrong with an underdog/monster bout, and I felt Rhodes and Vader worked well together. I really felt for Dustin after that wheelbarrow facebuster. Wow. Hacksaw/Austin was a waste of airtime. Oh, and other than a TV match or two, this marked Austin’s final appearance on a Clash or PPV (dark matches aside, I believe he had a couple of those). Not a great ending, really. The main event was okay in a cartoony way, I guess. Always nice to see Mr. T. I’m sure you know who’s gonna be feuding at the next event, Starrcade. Incidentally, had Austin been healthy, I think a good match would have been him versus Vader, based on the storyline of Austin being pissed at Vader’s interference. I've ready that Honky's demands were too outrageous, even for Eric Bischoff, who pretty much gave carte blanche and a blank check to every former WWF star. Hmm, Vader-Austin would have been interesting, but that would most likely mean a face turn for somebody.
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Post by driver1980 on Jun 6, 2024 18:16:15 GMT -5
Vader and Austin had a match in the WWF, circa 1996, but by that time, Austin had developed into the brawler.
A WCW bout would have intrigued me because some of my favourite bouts have been about the technical wrestler trying to break down the monster.
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Post by driver1980 on Jun 7, 2024 4:22:15 GMT -5
Invasion ‘92 is hosted by Sean Mooney and others dressed in Star Trek-style uniforms. I’m not sure why. I’m also not sure why the tape is invasion-themed. Who was invading who? No-one. Hulk Hogan begins by battling Typhoon. Due to the history of these two, it was heated, and was a typically fun Hogan bout, which I liked. Interestingly, Lord Alfred Hayes, commentating with Sean Mooney, mentions that Hogan should take some responsiblity for falling out with Typhoon. Hmmm, I remember Tugboat simply turning heel on the Bushwhackers and aligning with Jimmy Hart during a six-man bout against Earthquake and the Nasty Boys. However, I believe Hayes is making a kayfabe point about how Hogan keeps losing friends, LOL. (Oh, Hogan wins via pinfall) From November 1991, we get IC Champion Bret Hart wrestling Ric Flair. Well, Hart couldn’t lose that belt, nor could he really get a pin over Flair given they were building up to Flair being WWF World Champion, so we got Flair winning by count out. Despite the count out ending, this is a superb bout which showcases the best of both men. Match of the tape. In a contender for match of the tape, Shawn Michaels, still with The Rockers, battles Ric Flair. Flair wins by pinfall and there’s some dissension between Michaels and Jannetty. These men deserved more time, but it was a great match. Also, how come commentators didn’t mind babyfaces having an associate or partner ringside, but God forbid DiBiase should bring his bodyguard or something? WWF Tag Team Champions The LOD take on The Beverly Brothers, who do put up a convincing resistance against Hawk and Animal. But who can beat the LOD? Hawk pins Blake here. A fun segment involving the Nasty Boys follows. They trash a video store. They then work in a video store - and mock a customer who asks if they have any ballet videos. Ted DiBiase takes on El Matador in a bout where Sherri’s microphone is on - so we hear her every word. It’s quite annoying (as it was when Jimmy Hart did it on another tape). So the focus is on her rather than the in-ring action. Shame. Both men get counted out. The Big Boss Man pins Hercules in a reasonable match. Virgil defends his Million Dollar Championship against Ted DiBiase - and adding to the fun is the temporarily “retired” Randy Savage as the special referee. It’s a decent bout. DiBiase attacks Savage and throws him outside, but Savage responds with a double ax-handle and counts Virgil’s pin. (Now, imagine if a heel special referee had hit Virgil, I bet Jack Tunney or a senior referee would have come running to the ring) Strange bedfelllows is the theme of the final match: Hacksaw Jim Duggan and Randy Savage, who once fought over the WWF Crown, team up against Jake Roberts and The Undertaker, who are evil personified. There’s nothing really memorable here, and it ends with a DQ win for the heels. As much as I like the Coliseum era, so many tapes featured inconclusive endings. All in all, though, there’s enough here to have made this a worthy purchase back in the day, particularly the Flair bouts.
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Post by commond on Jun 8, 2024 15:42:57 GMT -5
I watched an excellent Killer Bees vs. Demolition match from Houston. It was 2/3 falls and aired on Prime Time Wrestling as part of the build up to the tag team elimination match at Survivor Series '87. I'm a big believer that you have to ignore the major shows from late 80s WWF and search for the house show matches instead. The WWF roster was stacked at the time and it's no surprise that every once and a while the wrestlers bring their working boots.
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Post by driver1980 on Jun 9, 2024 6:29:50 GMT -5
Thirty years ago today, the first official WWF Hall of Fame ceremony took place in Baltimore’s Omni Hotel. Inductees were Fred Blassie, Chief Jay Strongbow, Bobo Brazil, Buddy Rogers, Arnold Skaaland, Gorilla Monsoon, and James Dudley, the limo driver of Vince McMahon Sr.
James Dudley did a bit more than limo driving, didn’t he?
As for the Hall of Fame, I wish it was an event that took place every 4 years with just a few inductees; it just feels like (and is) something akin to the Hasbro toyline. It seems like everyone will be in it eventually.
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Post by dbutler69 on Jun 9, 2024 8:24:30 GMT -5
I watched an excellent Killer Bees vs. Demolition match from Houston. It was 2/3 falls and aired on Prime Time Wrestling as part of the build up to the tag team elimination match at Survivor Series '87. I'm a big believer that you have to ignore the major shows from late 80s WWF and search for the house show matches instead. The WWF roster was stacked at the time and it's no surprise that every once and a while the wrestlers bring their working boots. I hereby nominate the Killer Bees as the most underrated tag team of all time. By the way, do you happen to have a link to that match?
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Post by dbutler69 on Jun 9, 2024 8:25:39 GMT -5
Thirty years ago today, the first official WWF Hall of Fame ceremony took place in Baltimore’s Omni Hotel. Inductees were Fred Blassie, Chief Jay Strongbow, Bobo Brazil, Buddy Rogers, Arnold Skaaland, Gorilla Monsoon, and James Dudley, the limo driver of Vince McMahon Sr. James Dudley did a bit more than limo driving, didn’t he? As for the Hall of Fame, I wish it was an event that took place every 4 years with just a few inductees; it just feels like (and is) something akin to the Hasbro toyline. It seems like everyone will be in it eventually.I agree. When you start letting jobbers in, then what's the point?
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Post by dbutler69 on Jun 9, 2024 8:27:28 GMT -5
I recently rewatched Battle Royal at Albert Hall from 1991. Was this a PPV in the UK?
First, it’s good to see Gorilla Monsoon and Bobby Heenan on commentary. It’s been a little while since I’ve seen these two at this point.
I see a lot of Legion of Doom shoulder pads in the crowd.
The first match is the Nasty Boys w/ Jimmy Hart vs. The Rockers.
The Rockers seemed to open for a lot of big events in 1991.
There’s a LOT of stalling to begin. The Rockers are mostly in control until the Nasties low-bridge Michaels and he goes spilling out onto the floor. The Nasties take control for quite a while after that, with Michaels playing the face in peril. Jimmy Hart gets on the apron and distracts the ref, then tosses his megaphone to Knobbs, who uses it to club Marty (who’s in the process of pinning Sags) on the back of the head, allowing Sags to instead pin Marty for the win. It seems like the Rockers had more than their fair share of losses, for a team that was so over.
This was a fun match, mostly because of the Rockers. The match was over 17 minutes, which is longer than you’d really like to see the Nasty Boys go, which is probably why there were some slow dull stretches. Anyway, the Rockers were probably my favorite tag team to watch. So exciting and also such good teamwork. There was a lot of playing to the crowd in this match, and there was a cute spot where the Rockers had an arm stretcher (or whatever you call that move) on one of the Nasties, and kept making illegal switches behind the refs back (who was getting distracted by the other Nasty) and the ref would ask the crowd if the tag was legal and of course they responded in the affirmative. Also, the crowd was really into this, which helped.
Next we get Gene Okerlund interviewing Roc Flair. This is when Flair first joined the WWF and was going around with his NWA World Championship belt claiming to be the “real world champion”. This must have been one of his first WWF matches.
Next match is Tito Santana vs. Ric Flair.
This should be a good one.
This is shortly before Tito became el Matador. This was a good, solid match. Basically what you’d expect in a Flair-Tito match. I thought Tito looked really good here. Probably not the best match either guy has ever had, but certainly good, and the crowd was hot for it, which helped a lot. After just over 16 minutes, Flair reverses Tito’s rollup and grabs a LOT of Tito’s tight (exposing a full moon over Tecula!) for the win. We are 2 for 2 so far.
Next match is the Big Boss Man vs. Earthquake, w. Jimmy Hart.
Sorry, but not a very good match, overall. Kinda boring. Bossman looked pretty good, though, but this match was slow with not a lot of good spots (except a Boss Man enziguri) and, at nearly 16 minutes, was way too long for these two guys. I don’t know whose idea that was. Flair-Santana going 16 minutes is totally fine, but Earthquake-Boss Man going 16 minutes? Uh, no.
Anyway, after Earthquake accidentally knocks Hart off the apron, the Mountie comes out, helps up his manager, then trips up Boss Man, allowing Earthquake to get the elbow drop for the win. Mountie and Earthquake had been feuding, that that feud was done at this point.
The heels have won all 3 matches so far!
Next match is the Mountie, w. Jimmy Hart, vs. Kerry Von Erich.
Not a very good match. Pretty boring. The Mountie wins when he blocks a monkey flip attempt and puts his feet on the ropes for leverage during the pin. The ref announces him the winner, and he goes onto the floor to have garbage thrown on him, then he goes back in the ring as it appears that the ref is asking him if he has his foot on the ropes. The announcers say the ref is restarting the match but after about 20 seconds Mountie just up and leaves, so I’m not really sure what happened or who the official winner was, but I think it was the Mountie, since I didn’t hear a bell ring for a countout after he left. The best part of this match is hearing Monsoon and Heenan bicker. The crowd also started a jailbird chant, as the Mountie had lost that match against the Boss Man at one of the PPV’s where the loser had to spend a night in jail.
Next match is The Undertaker w/ Paul Bearer vs. Hacksaw Jim Duggan.
I am NOT optimistic about this one. Duggan is just about my least favorite wrestler. I find him insufferable. Also, while Undertaker had very good presence, his in ring work wasn’t that great at this point.
Anyway, the moron Duggan comes out with an American flag, and actually gets a good response. Also, about halfway through the match, he starts a USA chant, which actually has some success.
We get a long (well, over 6 minutes but it seemed longer) boring match with a lot of choking. In the end, moron Duggan gets DQ’d by hitting Undertaker with a 2x4 within plain sight of the ref. Give me a break.
We get a bunch of wrestler interviews with Gene Okerlund, some of which (like Roddy Piper and Legion of Doom) are rather amusing.
Next match is for the WWF Tag Team Titles: The Legion of Doom vs. Power & Glory.
This was a decent match. LOD win it in a little over 9 minutes when Roma comes off the top rope but Animal catches then powerslams him for the win. Animal was face in peril for a good chunk of the match. Overall pretty good. There was one botched spot I noticed where Animal was supposed to throw Hercules over the top rope but one of them messed something up so Hercules fell on the mat and just slid out under the bottom rope. That looked so weird.
Next match is The British Bulldog vs. The Barbarian.
The “hometown” boy gets his match!
This was a decent match. It ends with a Davey Boy win when Barbarian misses a corner charge and Bulldog scoops him up for the power slam, in a little over 10 minutes. Obviously, a huge pop for this one as the local guy gets the win, but then the crowd has been into everything in this show!
Finally, we get the Battle Royal, with 20 guys. Lord Alfred Hayes joins Gorilla and Bobby on commentary for this one.
As with any battle royal, it starts off slowly and you don’t know where to look. It gets more interesting as we get down to about 8 guys. Duggan gets cleanly eliminated by Earthquake, but because he’s a dick, he goes and gets his 2x4, gets back in the ring, and hits Earthquake with it a few times, knocking him out. Have I mentioned that I can’t stand Jim Duggan? There’s a cute spot where Piper knocks Knobbs over the top rope onto the apron, and Knobbs is standing there, losing his balance, not trying to fall off, and Piper pushes him off with one finger. Then waves bye-bye to him. Piper also got to eliminate Flair (much to Heenan’s consternation) who was his big rival at the time. The crowd loved that. The Undertaker also followed Duggan’s example and eliminated the guy (Piper) who had eliminated him rather than just leaving. But then, Undertaker is a heel at this point, so I would expect that of him.
The final 4 are: Typhoon, Mountie (both Jimmy Hart guys), Big Boss Man, and local boy Davey Boy Smith! Boss Man gets eliminated, then some heel miscommunication leads to Typhoon knocking the Mountie out (imagine that!) then Davey Boy eliminated Typhoon by ducking a Typhoon charge in a very sloppy looking finish that made Typhoon look pretty dumb.
The winner is the British Bulldog, Davey Boy Smith! Of course, this was to be expected, but it was still cool to see. As he lay there, exhausted, Earthquake and Typhoon come in and start beating on him. Davey Boy eventually rolls out of the ring just before the earthquake flop (or whatever it’s called) but is still laying on the floor and the heels come out to beat on him some more. Isn’t anybody going to come help him? Well, who should come to the rescue but…Andre the Giant! It was really cool to see him make the save, though also a bit sad to see him with a walking stick (though he did manage to use that as a weapon). So, a happy ending for all except the Jimmy Hart Foundation.
I thought the battle royal, and the extracurricular activity afterwards, enjoyable, though the final elimination, of Typhoon, didn’t look very convincing, so that hurt things a bit.
Overall, I thought this was a solid event. There were a couple of bad matches, but most of the matches were enjoyable, though certainly no 5 star matches here.
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Post by dbutler69 on Jun 9, 2024 8:50:21 GMT -5
Invasion ‘92 is hosted by Sean Mooney and others dressed in Star Trek-style uniforms. I’m not sure why. I’m also not sure why the tape is invasion-themed. Who was invading who? No-one. Hulk Hogan begins by battling Typhoon. Due to the history of these two, it was heated, and was a typically fun Hogan bout, which I liked. Interestingly, Lord Alfred Hayes, commentating with Sean Mooney, mentions that Hogan should take some responsiblity for falling out with Typhoon. Hmmm, I remember Tugboat simply turning heel on the Bushwhackers and aligning with Jimmy Hart during a six-man bout against Earthquake and the Nasty Boys. However, I believe Hayes is making a kayfabe point about how Hogan keeps losing friends, LOL. (Oh, Hogan wins via pinfall) From November 1991, we get IC Champion Bret Hart wrestling Ric Flair. Well, Hart couldn’t lose that belt, nor could he really get a pin over Flair given they were building up to Flair being WWF World Champion, so we got Flair winning by count out. Despite the count out ending, this is a superb bout which showcases the best of both men. Match of the tape. In a contender for match of the tape, Shawn Michaels, still with The Rockers, battles Ric Flair. Flair wins by pinfall and there’s some dissension between Michaels and Jannetty. These men deserved more time, but it was a great match. Also, how come commentators didn’t mind babyfaces having an associate or partner ringside, but God forbid DiBiase should bring his bodyguard or something? WWF Tag Team Champions The LOD take on The Beverly Brothers, who do put up a convincing resistance against Hawk and Animal. But who can beat the LOD? Hawk pins Blake here. A fun segment involving the Nasty Boys follows. They trash a video store. They then work in a video store - and mock a customer who asks if they have any ballet videos. Ted DiBiase takes on El Matador in a bout where Sherri’s microphone is on - so we hear her every word. It’s quite annoying (as it was when Jimmy Hart did it on another tape). So the focus is on her rather than the in-ring action. Shame. Both men get counted out. The Big Boss Man pins Hercules in a reasonable match. Virgil defends his Million Dollar Championship against Ted DiBiase - and adding to the fun is the temporarily “retired” Randy Savage as the special referee. It’s a decent bout. DiBiase attacks Savage and throws him outside, but Savage responds with a double ax-handle and counts Virgil’s pin. (Now, imagine if a heel special referee had hit Virgil, I bet Jack Tunney or a senior referee would have come running to the ring) Strange bedfelllows is the theme of the final match: Hacksaw Jim Duggan and Randy Savage, who once fought over the WWF Crown, team up against Jake Roberts and The Undertaker, who are evil personified. There’s nothing really memorable here, and it ends with a DQ win for the heels. As much as I like the Coliseum era, so many tapes featured inconclusive endings. All in all, though, there’s enough here to have made this a worthy purchase back in the day, particularly the Flair bouts. It looks like Peacock has this one, so now I'll have to check it out!
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Post by driver1980 on Jun 9, 2024 11:58:14 GMT -5
I recently rewatched Battle Royal at Albert Hall from 1991. Was this a PPV in the UK? First, it’s good to see Gorilla Monsoon and Bobby Heenan on commentary. It’s been a little while since I’ve seen these two at this point. I see a lot of Legion of Doom shoulder pads in the crowd. The first match is the Nasty Boys w/ Jimmy Hart vs. The Rockers.The Rockers seemed to open for a lot of big events in 1991. There’s a LOT of stalling to begin. The Rockers are mostly in control until the Nasties low-bridge Michaels and he goes spilling out onto the floor. The Nasties take control for quite a while after that, with Michaels playing the face in peril. Jimmy Hart gets on the apron and distracts the ref, then tosses his megaphone to Knobbs, who uses it to club Marty (who’s in the process of pinning Sags) on the back of the head, allowing Sags to instead pin Marty for the win. It seems like the Rockers had more than their fair share of losses, for a team that was so over. This was a fun match, mostly because of the Rockers. The match was over 17 minutes, which is longer than you’d really like to see the Nasty Boys go, which is probably why there were some slow dull stretches. Anyway, the Rockers were probably my favorite tag team to watch. So exciting and also such good teamwork. There was a lot of playing to the crowd in this match, and there was a cute spot where the Rockers had an arm stretcher (or whatever you call that move) on one of the Nasties, and kept making illegal switches behind the refs back (who was getting distracted by the other Nasty) and the ref would ask the crowd if the tag was legal and of course they responded in the affirmative. Also, the crowd was really into this, which helped. Next we get Gene Okerlund interviewing Roc Flair. This is when Flair first joined the WWF and was going around with his NWA World Championship belt claiming to be the “real world champion”. This must have been one of his first WWF matches. Next match is Tito Santana vs. Ric Flair.This should be a good one. This is shortly before Tito became el Matador. This was a good, solid match. Basically what you’d expect in a Flair-Tito match. I thought Tito looked really good here. Probably not the best match either guy has ever had, but certainly good, and the crowd was hot for it, which helped a lot. After just over 16 minutes, Flair reverses Tito’s rollup and grabs a LOT of Tito’s tight (exposing a full moon over Tecula!) for the win. We are 2 for 2 so far. Next match is the Big Boss Man vs. Earthquake, w. Jimmy Hart. Sorry, but not a very good match, overall. Kinda boring. Bossman looked pretty good, though, but this match was slow with not a lot of good spots (except a Boss Man enziguri) and, at nearly 16 minutes, was way too long for these two guys. I don’t know whose idea that was. Flair-Santana going 16 minutes is totally fine, but Earthquake-Boss Man going 16 minutes? Uh, no. Anyway, after Earthquake accidentally knocks Hart off the apron, the Mountie comes out, helps up his manager, then trips up Boss Man, allowing Earthquake to get the elbow drop for the win. Mountie and Earthquake had been feuding, that that feud was done at this point. The heels have won all 3 matches so far! Next match is the Mountie, w. Jimmy Hart, vs. Kerry Von Erich. Not a very good match. Pretty boring. The Mountie wins when he blocks a monkey flip attempt and puts his feet on the ropes for leverage during the pin. The ref announces him the winner, and he goes onto the floor to have garbage thrown on him, then he goes back in the ring as it appears that the ref is asking him if he has his foot on the ropes. The announcers say the ref is restarting the match but after about 20 seconds Mountie just up and leaves, so I’m not really sure what happened or who the official winner was, but I think it was the Mountie, since I didn’t hear a bell ring for a countout after he left. The best part of this match is hearing Monsoon and Heenan bicker. The crowd also started a jailbird chant, as the Mountie had lost that match against the Boss Man at one of the PPV’s where the loser had to spend a night in jail. Next match is The Undertaker w/ Paul Bearer vs. Hacksaw Jim Duggan. I am NOT optimistic about this one. Duggan is just about my least favorite wrestler. I find him insufferable. Also, while Undertaker had very good presence, his in ring work wasn’t that great at this point. Anyway, the moron Duggan comes out with an American flag, and actually gets a good response. Also, about halfway through the match, he starts a USA chant, which actually has some success. We get a long (well, over 6 minutes but it seemed longer) boring match with a lot of choking. In the end, moron Duggan gets DQ’d by hitting Undertaker with a 2x4 within plain sight of the ref. Give me a break. We get a bunch of wrestler interviews with Gene Okerlund, some of which (like Roddy Piper and Legion of Doom) are rather amusing. Next match is for the WWF Tag Team Titles: The Legion of Doom vs. Power & Glory. This was a decent match. LOD win it in a little over 9 minutes when Roma comes off the top rope but Animal catches then powerslams him for the win. Animal was face in peril for a good chunk of the match. Overall pretty good. There was one botched spot I noticed where Animal was supposed to throw Hercules over the top rope but one of them messed something up so Hercules fell on the mat and just slid out under the bottom rope. That looked so weird. Next match is The British Bulldog vs. The Barbarian. The “hometown” boy gets his match! This was a decent match. It ends with a Davey Boy win when Barbarian misses a corner charge and Bulldog scoops him up for the power slam, in a little over 10 minutes. Obviously, a huge pop for this one as the local guy gets the win, but then the crowd has been into everything in this show! Finally, we get the Battle Royal, with 20 guys. Lord Alfred Hayes joins Gorilla and Bobby on commentary for this one. As with any battle royal, it starts off slowly and you don’t know where to look. It gets more interesting as we get down to about 8 guys. Duggan gets cleanly eliminated by Earthquake, but because he’s a dick, he goes and gets his 2x4, gets back in the ring, and hits Earthquake with it a few times, knocking him out. Have I mentioned that I can’t stand Jim Duggan? There’s a cute spot where Piper knocks Knobbs over the top rope onto the apron, and Knobbs is standing there, losing his balance, not trying to fall off, and Piper pushes him off with one finger. Then waves bye-bye to him. Piper also got to eliminate Flair (much to Heenan’s consternation) who was his big rival at the time. The crowd loved that. The Undertaker also followed Duggan’s example and eliminated the guy (Piper) who had eliminated him rather than just leaving. But then, Undertaker is a heel at this point, so I would expect that of him. The final 4 are: Typhoon, Mountie (both Jimmy Hart guys), Big Boss Man, and local boy Davey Boy Smith! Boss Man gets eliminated, then some heel miscommunication leads to Typhoon knocking the Mountie out (imagine that!) then Davey Boy eliminated Typhoon by ducking a Typhoon charge in a very sloppy looking finish that made Typhoon look pretty dumb. The winner is the British Bulldog, Davey Boy Smith! Of course, this was to be expected, but it was still cool to see. As he lay there, exhausted, Earthquake and Typhoon come in and start beating on him. Davey Boy eventually rolls out of the ring just before the earthquake flop (or whatever it’s called) but is still laying on the floor and the heels come out to beat on him some more. Isn’t anybody going to come help him? Well, who should come to the rescue but…Andre the Giant! It was really cool to see him make the save, though also a bit sad to see him with a walking stick (though he did manage to use that as a weapon). So, a happy ending for all except the Jimmy Hart Foundation. I thought the battle royal, and the extracurricular activity afterwards, enjoyable, though the final elimination, of Typhoon, didn’t look very convincing, so that hurt things a bit. Overall, I thought this was a solid event. There were a couple of bad matches, but most of the matches were enjoyable, though certainly no 5 star matches here. To answer your question, it wasn’t on PPV in the UK, it no doubt aired on Sky Sports, as did most of the UK and European events. Are you sure Andre the Giant showed up at the end? Hogan claims Andre passed away a couple of days after WM III in 1987, so not sure how Andre could have been here. Unless Hogan lied again. I’m pretty much in agreement with your assessment of every match. There aren’t any classics here, as you said. I don’t think there’s anything bad here. I do like how convincing and underrated 90s WWF psychology is. I mean, I’ve seen criticism of The Barbarian (from pretentious wrestling ‘journalists’), but I feel he looked believable. He wrestled believably. When he hit an opponent with a big boot, you felt it. He looked like he wanted to brutalise his opponent. Ditto Earthquake. So I have little time for pretentious wrestling ‘journalists’ who often derided such men. Sorry, had to get that off my chest. I did feel sorry for Barbarian, wrestling in the battle royal minutes after getting his clock cleaned by Davey Boy (which was my match of the card). Was this Power and Glory’s last televised bout? It may have been, and Roma was gone shortly after. I wish that team had had more success. I like the commentary for the battle royal, e.g. Heenan asking why 20 guys were fighting over a teapot, Gorilla mentioning how Undertaker didn’t care about victory, only how many opponents he could stuff in a bodybag, and Heenan claiming Hogan was a coward and hadn’t come to the UK because Flair was there. I also enjoyed the entrances. Flair seemed to rattle people. The wrestlers seemed quite quiet and stoic when Undertaker entered. As a kid, I was disappointed Hogan hadn’t made the trip over the Atlantic, but I suppose his ego would have meant he’d win. The battle royal was fun, although it did seem to stick entirely to faces vs heels. Might have been interesting to see Undertaker go after, say, Earthquake, or Piper and Big Boss Man go at it. I’m not sure why any wrestler would hold another wrestler so that someone as large as Typhoon could clothesline them. I also don’t get how some wrestlers failed to realise that you should get the big guy out. Yes, Mountie and Typhoon were managed by Jimmy Hart, but didn’t Mountie realise that if he and Typhoon had eliminated Davey Boy, then Mountie would have to try to eliminate Typhoon all by himself? WWF logic, eh? This was often the way. In 1993, the WWF did a 20-man battle royal where the final two participants would challenge for the vacant IC championship. Razor Ramon, Rick Martel and The Quebecers were the final four. So what does Martel do? He and The Quebecers turn on Razor. Didn’t he realise that if they’d eliminated Ramon, the Quebecers would have turned their attention to him, leaving him at a 2-on-1 disadvantage? WWF logic, eh? I’m glad Andre appeared, and it ended the event on a feelgood note, with Andre attacking ‘Quake and Typhoon. (Andre also appeared in Davey Boy’s corner when the Bulldog had a solo bout against ‘Quake, shortly after this bout) Overall, a pretty good card, given the crap us Brits were often fed (don’t get me started on a crappy UK event WCW put on in 2000).
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Post by commond on Jun 9, 2024 15:30:18 GMT -5
I watched an excellent Killer Bees vs. Demolition match from Houston. It was 2/3 falls and aired on Prime Time Wrestling as part of the build up to the tag team elimination match at Survivor Series '87. I'm a big believer that you have to ignore the major shows from late 80s WWF and search for the house show matches instead. The WWF roster was stacked at the time and it's no surprise that every once and a while the wrestlers bring their working boots. I hereby nominate the Killer Bees as the most underrated tag team of all time. By the way, do you happen to have a link to that match? I thought it was on YouTube, but it's not. I'll let you know if I can find it.
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Post by driver1980 on Jun 9, 2024 16:46:07 GMT -5
I can’t speak for what superstars got tapes in the US, but in the UK, circa early 1990s, only Hulk Hogan and Ultimate Warrior got tapes devoted to their bouts. Then Bret Hart and Undertaker. And then, in 1994, Razor Ramon. So I revisited this earlier tonight: We begin with a solid bout featuring Razor vs. Bam Bam Bigelow, which the Bad Guy wins via pinfall. We see highlights of the 20-Man Battle Royal which earned the final two participants a shot at the vacant Intercontinental Championship. The Model Rick Martel, The Quebecers and Razor are the final four. As so often happens, the heel and heel team work together…which makes no sense. If the three had eliminated Ramon, then The Quebecers would surely have turned their attention to Martel. Logically, it would have made more sense for Martel and Ramon to quickly form an alliance, leaving them free to eliminate The Quebecers, right? I mean, that makes more sense, yes? Instead, we get the boring, old heel dynamic. In a storyline sense, The Quebecers would have eliminated Martel so that they could pursue the IC championship. (Razor and Martel win) WWF logic, eh? We move on to the IC championship bout between Razor and Martel, which is a good bout. Razor wins and becomes champion. Razor pins Crush in a mediocre bout. And then does the same to Adam Bomb. Neither of these matches are good or bad, they’re something in between. We then arrive at WM X for the Ladder Match between Razor and Shawn. Logically, this match belongs on the tape, but it was already on the WM X tape. Chances are, and I’ve said this a million times, buyers of this tape had seen and owned the WM X tape. Why not show us another bout? Still, it was a tremendous, riveting bout between the two, so for any who hadn’t seen it, it’s good that it’s here. Then it’s “back in time” for Ramon defending the IC title against IRS at Royal Rumble ‘94. It was an okay bout, but already on the PPV tape. Also, this match wasn’t even listed on the videotape sleeve, which proves how inconsequential Coliseum must have considered it. In a non-title match, Razor beat Jeff Jarrett via DQ in a reasonable bout due to interference by Diesel and Shawn Michaels. We end with a fun (but short) bout between Razor and Yokozuna, the highlight of which is Razor attempting the Razor’s Edge on Yoko. Crush inteferes, and then Lex Luger comes out to even the odds. It wouldn’t be a Coliseum Video release without an inconclusive ending, right? Oh, and throughout the tape, Ramon gives us his kayfabe thoughts on his WWF career. Duplication of matches aside, there’s nothing bad here, and most of it is brilliant, showing Razor’s dominance and ascent. One of the better profile tapes of the 90s.
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Post by codystarbuck on Jun 9, 2024 19:19:57 GMT -5
I recently rewatched Battle Royal at Albert Hall from 1991. Was this a PPV in the UK? First, it’s good to see Gorilla Monsoon and Bobby Heenan on commentary. It’s been a little while since I’ve seen these two at this point. I see a lot of Legion of Doom shoulder pads in the crowd. The first match is the Nasty Boys w/ Jimmy Hart vs. The Rockers.The Rockers seemed to open for a lot of big events in 1991. There’s a LOT of stalling to begin. The Rockers are mostly in control until the Nasties low-bridge Michaels and he goes spilling out onto the floor. The Nasties take control for quite a while after that, with Michaels playing the face in peril. Jimmy Hart gets on the apron and distracts the ref, then tosses his megaphone to Knobbs, who uses it to club Marty (who’s in the process of pinning Sags) on the back of the head, allowing Sags to instead pin Marty for the win. It seems like the Rockers had more than their fair share of losses, for a team that was so over. This was a fun match, mostly because of the Rockers. The match was over 17 minutes, which is longer than you’d really like to see the Nasty Boys go, which is probably why there were some slow dull stretches. Anyway, the Rockers were probably my favorite tag team to watch. So exciting and also such good teamwork. There was a lot of playing to the crowd in this match, and there was a cute spot where the Rockers had an arm stretcher (or whatever you call that move) on one of the Nasties, and kept making illegal switches behind the refs back (who was getting distracted by the other Nasty) and the ref would ask the crowd if the tag was legal and of course they responded in the affirmative. Also, the crowd was really into this, which helped. Next we get Gene Okerlund interviewing Roc Flair. This is when Flair first joined the WWF and was going around with his NWA World Championship belt claiming to be the “real world champion”. This must have been one of his first WWF matches. Next match is Tito Santana vs. Ric Flair.This should be a good one. This is shortly before Tito became el Matador. This was a good, solid match. Basically what you’d expect in a Flair-Tito match. I thought Tito looked really good here. Probably not the best match either guy has ever had, but certainly good, and the crowd was hot for it, which helped a lot. After just over 16 minutes, Flair reverses Tito’s rollup and grabs a LOT of Tito’s tight (exposing a full moon over Tecula!) for the win. We are 2 for 2 so far. Next match is the Big Boss Man vs. Earthquake, w. Jimmy Hart. Sorry, but not a very good match, overall. Kinda boring. Bossman looked pretty good, though, but this match was slow with not a lot of good spots (except a Boss Man enziguri) and, at nearly 16 minutes, was way too long for these two guys. I don’t know whose idea that was. Flair-Santana going 16 minutes is totally fine, but Earthquake-Boss Man going 16 minutes? Uh, no. Anyway, after Earthquake accidentally knocks Hart off the apron, the Mountie comes out, helps up his manager, then trips up Boss Man, allowing Earthquake to get the elbow drop for the win. Mountie and Earthquake had been feuding, that that feud was done at this point. The heels have won all 3 matches so far! Next match is the Mountie, w. Jimmy Hart, vs. Kerry Von Erich. Not a very good match. Pretty boring. The Mountie wins when he blocks a monkey flip attempt and puts his feet on the ropes for leverage during the pin. The ref announces him the winner, and he goes onto the floor to have garbage thrown on him, then he goes back in the ring as it appears that the ref is asking him if he has his foot on the ropes. The announcers say the ref is restarting the match but after about 20 seconds Mountie just up and leaves, so I’m not really sure what happened or who the official winner was, but I think it was the Mountie, since I didn’t hear a bell ring for a countout after he left. The best part of this match is hearing Monsoon and Heenan bicker. The crowd also started a jailbird chant, as the Mountie had lost that match against the Boss Man at one of the PPV’s where the loser had to spend a night in jail. Next match is The Undertaker w/ Paul Bearer vs. Hacksaw Jim Duggan. I am NOT optimistic about this one. Duggan is just about my least favorite wrestler. I find him insufferable. Also, while Undertaker had very good presence, his in ring work wasn’t that great at this point. Anyway, the moron Duggan comes out with an American flag, and actually gets a good response. Also, about halfway through the match, he starts a USA chant, which actually has some success. We get a long (well, over 6 minutes but it seemed longer) boring match with a lot of choking. In the end, moron Duggan gets DQ’d by hitting Undertaker with a 2x4 within plain sight of the ref. Give me a break. We get a bunch of wrestler interviews with Gene Okerlund, some of which (like Roddy Piper and Legion of Doom) are rather amusing. Next match is for the WWF Tag Team Titles: The Legion of Doom vs. Power & Glory. This was a decent match. LOD win it in a little over 9 minutes when Roma comes off the top rope but Animal catches then powerslams him for the win. Animal was face in peril for a good chunk of the match. Overall pretty good. There was one botched spot I noticed where Animal was supposed to throw Hercules over the top rope but one of them messed something up so Hercules fell on the mat and just slid out under the bottom rope. That looked so weird. Next match is The British Bulldog vs. The Barbarian. The “hometown” boy gets his match! This was a decent match. It ends with a Davey Boy win when Barbarian misses a corner charge and Bulldog scoops him up for the power slam, in a little over 10 minutes. Obviously, a huge pop for this one as the local guy gets the win, but then the crowd has been into everything in this show! Finally, we get the Battle Royal, with 20 guys. Lord Alfred Hayes joins Gorilla and Bobby on commentary for this one. As with any battle royal, it starts off slowly and you don’t know where to look. It gets more interesting as we get down to about 8 guys. Duggan gets cleanly eliminated by Earthquake, but because he’s a dick, he goes and gets his 2x4, gets back in the ring, and hits Earthquake with it a few times, knocking him out. Have I mentioned that I can’t stand Jim Duggan? There’s a cute spot where Piper knocks Knobbs over the top rope onto the apron, and Knobbs is standing there, losing his balance, not trying to fall off, and Piper pushes him off with one finger. Then waves bye-bye to him. Piper also got to eliminate Flair (much to Heenan’s consternation) who was his big rival at the time. The crowd loved that. The Undertaker also followed Duggan’s example and eliminated the guy (Piper) who had eliminated him rather than just leaving. But then, Undertaker is a heel at this point, so I would expect that of him. The final 4 are: Typhoon, Mountie (both Jimmy Hart guys), Big Boss Man, and local boy Davey Boy Smith! Boss Man gets eliminated, then some heel miscommunication leads to Typhoon knocking the Mountie out (imagine that!) then Davey Boy eliminated Typhoon by ducking a Typhoon charge in a very sloppy looking finish that made Typhoon look pretty dumb. The winner is the British Bulldog, Davey Boy Smith! Of course, this was to be expected, but it was still cool to see. As he lay there, exhausted, Earthquake and Typhoon come in and start beating on him. Davey Boy eventually rolls out of the ring just before the earthquake flop (or whatever it’s called) but is still laying on the floor and the heels come out to beat on him some more. Isn’t anybody going to come help him? Well, who should come to the rescue but…Andre the Giant! It was really cool to see him make the save, though also a bit sad to see him with a walking stick (though he did manage to use that as a weapon). So, a happy ending for all except the Jimmy Hart Foundation. I thought the battle royal, and the extracurricular activity afterwards, enjoyable, though the final elimination, of Typhoon, didn’t look very convincing, so that hurt things a bit. Overall, I thought this was a solid event. There were a couple of bad matches, but most of the matches were enjoyable, though certainly no 5 star matches here. A blocked monkey flip in the Mountie/Von Erich match makes sense, as there is no way Kerry could act as a stable base to bump Jacques. I watched a little of Kerry, in the WWF and it was amazing how well he got around, all things considered; but, losing the foot did take out several things in his repertoire, which kind of dulled his matches. Even the Discus Punch was effected, as he usually had to keep near the ropes, to maintain balance. He didn't make it obvious; but, if you saw him in World Class and then the WWF, you knew something was wrong. I chalked it up to the "leg brace" that his family claimed he had to wear, after they "fused his ankle". Quite frankly, I think they could have done more with the truth, from a business standpoint; but, Kerry wasn't reliable before the accident (which is why he only got 3 weeks with the NWA title) and was worse, after. I still recall reading accounts of the match he had with Col DeBeers and he yanked the boot of, revealing the stump and the crowd at ringside just went silent, while DeBeers stood there stunned. Von Erich grabbed the boot, rolled under the ring and re-attached it and tried to act like everyone hadn't seen the truth. Not sure on the chronology; but I don't think it was that long before he took his own life. Of course, the movie ignored that, too. I'd have to go back and look; but, I don't think they even mentioned the arrest for false prescriptions.
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