Monday, May 20, 2019

Great American Bash '91

Legacy Review

Great American Bash '91

July 14, 1991 from the Baltimore Arena in Baltimore, MD

Commentary: Jim Ross and Tony Schiavone

Welcome to the nadir of the Jim Herd era. The originally advertised main event for this show was Flair vs Luger. However Flair, sick of Herd's constant mismanagement and horrible ideas (he wanted Flair to shave his head, wear an earring, and be a gladiator named Spartacus), finally took Vince's longstanding offer to jump ship up north. And to stick it to Herd even more, he took the Big Gold Belt, still in his physical possession, with him. He even had legal cover for doing so, as Herd refused to pay back Flair's belt deposit. With Flair gone, the logical thing to do would be get your other most popular wrestler, Sting, into the world title match and get the belt on him and try to do something to send your upset fans home as happy as possible, right? No! Instead, Herd put Luger into a completely heatless match with Barry Windham for the vacant world title. And that's only the beginning of the screwy....

It's strange right off the bat as the show opens with a POV tracking shot entering the arena. Some fans are less enthusiastic than others. The guy that you're presumably supposed to be asks for two tickets at the booth. Mistake one, as this shows the show is not sold out if you can walk up and buy a ticket 30 seconds after advertised bell time. But then, the ticket worker hands him the tickets without taking any money. This guy just walked up and got two free tickets! Insert your own jokes about the show being papered here. We continue through more crowd and a way over the top ticket taker shouting at everyone 50 feet away to enjoy the show. Personally I'm disappointed we didn't spend the first 15 minutes of the show with this guy waiting in line at a concession stand, going to the bathroom, etc.

Commentary doesn't kick in right away and there's no ballyhoo. Instead, Gary Michael Capetta welcomes us to the show and jumps right in to intros for the first match. 

Scaffold Match: PN News & "Beautiful" Bobby Eaton def WCW World Television Champion "Stunning" Steve Austin & Terrance Taylor (w/Lady Blossom) in 6:19- I couldn't tell you why these random guys are teaming with each other. The rules here are capture the opponent's flag or knock someone off the scaffold and 20 feet down to the ring. The entire scaffold structure doesn't exactly look stable. In fact, it wobbles noticeably from as far back as the hard camera view anytime anyone so much as moves on it. While the heels stall climbing News walks to the middle to play to the crowd and amazingly the whole thing doesn't break and come crashing down. He's not a small guy. Eaton and Taylor start, and Taylor backs off right away, crawling back on all fours. JR whips out his "this is a unique match to open with", his code for this is going to suck big time. Tony talks about the wrestlers "trying to find a balance". Yeah! Hard to walk when the floor keeps sliding back and forth underneath you. Austin and Eaton try to work and don't get very far. Austin teases falling off. The big guy News takes the lead and the heels back off. News pushes Taylor back onto his side and the heel flag almost falls off. They break off and try to do some weak brawling on both ends of the structure. News squashes both heels into a corner, allowing Eaton to get the flag and end the misery. After the bell Austin gives the faces two squirts of Lady Blossom's Farrah Fawcett. Taylor takes a bump from about a quarter of the way up the structure down to the ring. Not exactly the fall the crowd was hoping for. They should get used to disappointment, there's going to be a lot of it tonight. What a waste of three of the best wrestlers on the roster. DUD

JR & Tony do a belated stand up intro. JR says that Flair is "no longer considered the world champion". That's what happens when incompetent management finally runs you out of town. Tony claims that Flair was made a final offer and turned it down, and we're now in a "new era" of WCW. They cut to Bischoff with Paul E and Arn Anderson. Those two are both so good on the mic that they almost make the mixed tag match sound like something you need to see. Arn promises "criminal acts" and that given the chance he'll make a woman out of Missy Hyatt. That ship sailed so long ago it's been decommissioned and tuned into a museum. JR & Tony kill time talking about the rest of the card while the scaffold is taken down. 

The Diamond Studd (w/Diamond Dallas Page) def "The Z Man" Tom Zenk in 9:00- Scott Hall is only about a month into the Studd gimmick, which is more or less Rick Rude lite. DDP invites a "random girl" from the audience to come out and pull Hall's pants off. Hall does already have the toothpick flick to the camera down. For some reason, Zenk comes out with Godfather's Ho Train. I guess he's trying to upstage Hall. Zenk hits a flying double clothesline over the top on both guys before the bell. In revenge DDP pulls the top rope down the first time Zenk hits the ropes. This would be a time where a Jesse Ventura-like "Zenk started it!" would be absolutely correct. Hall rams Zenk all over the barricades. Zenk tries to come back multiple times in the ring, but every time Hall says "screw that" and goes right back on offense. His punchy kicky not much else offense. There is a choke slam. DDP distracts Zenk, allowing Hall to get a bridged Saito suplex for the 3. A major PPV and Hall doesn't even get to do the Diamond Death Drop, the early version of the Razor's Edge, even after Tony hyped it up for half the match. * 

Ron Simmons def Oz (w/The Grand Wizard) in 7:55- Super "special" entrance for Oz, with a castle backdrop and green lighting. Oz was basically WCW trying to get some mileage out of Turner buying the rights to show The Wizard of Oz on cable for the first time, which was a big deal back then. Even with VHS tapes becoming more readily available in the '80s, yearly showings of the movie always got big ratings on CBS. It was a sign that cable was becoming a major player next to the broadcast networks. One of the biggest problems with it is they picked a completely wrong guy to run with said gimmick, Kevin Nash. The Grand Wizard is Kevin Sullivan in a mask and an attempt at an old man walk. A rubber old guy with a beard mask, not a lucha mask. This is near the beginning of Simmons' long singles push that would culminate with him winning the world title in the fall of '92. JR hits the Florida State football factoids early (by the way I looked it up, and Simmons legitimately did finish 8th in the Heisman voting his last year). Long lockup spots to start, and dueling shoulder blocks where neither guy budges. Simmons tries to liven it up, but it's mostly punchy kicky from Nash. You can hear a guy in the crowd loudly yelling BORING! Simmons takes three tries to clothesline Nash over the top, When he finally does, Nash spills some poor guys' drink at ringside. (Punk: "He spilled my diet soda!" That's how his whole feud with Cena got started, don't you know) Nash has been limping a bit this whole match. He looks like he's nursing something, which could be one reason why so little is happening. Simmons is thrown out and the Wizard gets a kick in. You can see he's wearing grey sweats and a black t shirt under his robes. That's not very wizard like. Might as well have a fanny pack on too. Simmons hits some football tackles to win. You know, you put 1995ish Nash in the ring with '92 Simmons, you'd probably get a really good power match out of it. Assuming you could motivate Nash to work hard with someone outside the Kliq or Bret Hart at least. 1/2* 

Richard Morton (w/Alexandria York) def Robert Gibson in 17:03- The Rock 'N' Roll Express explodes! This is one of the oddest big tag team breakups there's ever been. It just.....happened. And most people don't even remember it happening. Morton is still wearing his usual gear. Gibson jumps him on his entrance and they brawl on the ramp. Once they get back in there's a long run of counter wrestling sequences that are pretty good and pacey. Much more high tempo than anything on the show so far. Gibson takes multiple powders to consult the computer. He stalls for a while, pulls Gibson face first into the middle turnbuckle, then posts Gibson's recently surgically repaired knee. Gibson blurts out "Oh shit!". I'd complain about non-PG, but Arn's already more or less threatened to rape Missy Hyatt tonight. Morton tears a hole in Gibson's tights to expose his knee brace, and we're going to school. Not Ric Flair level knee working school. If Flair is the graduate course, this is like...middle school. The guys are showing decent fire, but the crowd is completely dead apart from some small and sporadic "Morton sucks" chants. Gibson tries to get some quick pins, but Morton goes right back to the knee. Long figure four sequence, with yet more knee work after. Gibson keeps trying to come back but his knee keeps giving out. He's selling it, I'll give him that. Gibson gets a DDT outta nowhere. Morton does a full front flip sell of an enziguri. Back out on the ramp, and they do a double dropkick spot. The crowd starts booing. York distracts the ref, allowing Morton to hit Gibson with the computer off the ropes and get the pin. Really, after all that knee work they go for the heel cheap win finish? Bleh. It started promising but got worse and worse as it went on. *3/4 

Elimination Tag Team Match: "The Natural" Dustin Rhodes & The Young Pistols def WCW United States and Six Man Tag Team Champions The Fabulous Freebirds (w/Bid Daddy Dink) in 17:10- Dustin looks like he's wearing the same USA bomber jacket that Warrior had at the '91 Rumble. Badstreet USA is still awesome entrance music. "Big Daddy Dink" is Oliver Humperdink. Badstreet is Brad Armstrong with a mask and a bodysuit. And his son is Young Pistol Steve Armstrong. You also may have heard of Steve's brothers: former WWE referee and current producer Scott Armstrong, and the Road Dogg Jesse (Armstrong) James. There's a small but animated "Freebirds suck!" contingent on the floor opposite hard camera. JR: "People keep filing into the building". Uh huh. Way to try to explain all those empty seats by the entrance ramp. I bet ticket sales went in the toilet after people found out about Flair leaving. The Freebirds stall and Hayes does his strut, which is then mocked by Dustin. Hayes unloads with some chops, but Dustin fights him and all the Freebirds off with the Rhodes elbows. It breaks down into a 3 on 3, with the Pistols coming off the top rope. Once it settles down there's more stalling by the Freebirds, this time with posing. Commentary gets all over Smothers for standing there and letting it happen instead of attacking. The Freebirds take control. Badstreet and Dink work Smothers over outside. Smothers goes full face in peril. The wrestling in this match is just fine, but for some reason it feels off and disjointed. After long spell as the FIP Smothers backdrops out of a DDT and gets the hot tag to Armstrong. I say hot, but there's zero crowd reaction. It becomes Donnybrook II: Return of the Donnybrook. The crowd finally wakes up when Armstrong tries to get Badstreet's mask off. Hayes clotheslines him from behind and he and Badstreet give him a very badly timed double DDT. Armstrong went down twice as fast as the other two guys did. Armstrong is eliminated. Hayes then throws Armstrong's carcass over the top, and gets DQ'd for it! That's dumb on multiple levels, and again makes me glad that WWE never played around with a stupid over the top rope DQ rule. The ref doesn't see a tag to Dustin, and as the ref is getting him out Badstreet and Garvin hit Smothers with a double DDT, eliminating him. Dustin flies in and nails Garvin with a lariat, eliminating him. Dustin and Badstreet have a decent sequence. Badstreet is about the only guy on the show so far that's giving any visible serious effort. Dink distracts the ref after another Dustin lariat, so Dustin bulldogs Badstreet and while he's in the air dropkicks Dink, and gets the 3 to win. **

The Yellow Dog def Johnny B Badd (w/Teddy Long) by DQ in 6:00- The Yellow Dog is Brian Pillman running with Dusty's favorite angle, the "guy who lost a loser leaves town match coming back as a masked wrestler" angle. Pillman is introduced as from "The Kennel Club". This is Badd's PPV debut, and he is in full on no holds barred camp mode here. Makeup, facial expressions, everything. JR talks about Badd's (legit) boxing background and tries to argue that because Badd once beat someone that also once lost to Mike Tyson, that's somehow a positive for Badd. I'm trying to follow the logic train on that one but I think it's on the other side of the country. With Ric Flair. JR then directly calls the Dog Flyin' Brian. Well, there goes the fourth wall *and* kayfabe. He quickly tries to walk it back. For the second of three matches in a row, the most used move is the chop. Pillman unloads with some stiff ones. He goes out to go after Long and Badd ambushes him. More chops. It's a chopfest. I love some good, stiff chops but this is a bit much. Can we do something else? Pillman hits a crossbody off the top and while he's covering Badd Long comes in and tries to take his mask off, getting DQ'd. Woof. Awful finish. Badd hits Pillman after the bell with the Tutti Frutti I'm So Pretty Punch and walks off like he won. Badd's inexperience showed several times in this match, from some poorly timed spots to times when they visibly stop to communicate. Pillman also cut his moveset down hard, either to realistically play the Dog or just out of Herd spite like everyone else tonight. *1/4

JR says Bischoff is a "brave man" because he's about to go into Missy Hyatt's locker room. Oh, Captain Subtext, what to make of that one? 

Lumberjack Match: Big Josh def Black Blood (w/Kevin Sullivan) in 5:39- It's a lumberjack match because Josh is a lumberjack, see? For reason even more unclear than with Tom Zenk, Josh also comes out with a bunch of women. Black Blood is Billy Jack Haynes with a mask and executioner gimmick. He's billed as from "a little village in France". Of all the slight references I've heard to the French Revolution, Reign of Terror and Madame Guillotine, that was the worst. They say Sullivan is out with Blood, but I never see him. It's a pretty typical lumberjack match. The heels beat up Josh and try to give Blood a breather. The face lumberjacks try to play it straight. For the third match in a row, the in ring action is 75% chops. This is ridiculous. Eventually, to the shock of no one the lumberjacks end up fighting. While the ref is messing with them Blood tries to hit (decapitate?) Josh with his ax, but Dustin whacks him in his knee with Josh's ax handle. Josh gets a Paul Smackage to win. Bleh. 1/2* 

El Gigante def One Man Gang (w/Kevin Sullivan) in 6:13- As if this show hasn't sucked enough already. This is billed as "The Battle of the Giants". Bischoff interviews Sullivan during the entrance. Sullivan's look is at its peak creepiness, but his promo sounds like someone took The Ultimate Warrior's and Bray Wyatt's weirdest promos and stuck them in a blender. Gigante is out with a bunch of midgets. Don't ask me why. Gang tries to chase the midgets but they run circles around him. Gang tries to shoulderblock Gigante and loses. Everything Giagnte does makes you think that the video is only playing at 50% speed. It's like he's permanently moving underwater. Plus his selling is some of the worst you'll ever see, but at the same time somehow perversely entertaining. Gang gets an international wrench from Sullivan and works Gigante over with it. That's a new one. It was One Man Gang in the hall with the wrench. Gang works the knee but Gigante comes back. Gang tries to use powder but Gigante kicks it back in his face, hits a clothesline, and kind of flops half on top of Gang to pin him. 1/4*

Video recap of Koloff attacking Sting multiple times with his chain.

Russian Chain Match: Nikita Koloff def Sting in 11:38- What makes a chain a "Russian" chain anyway? Was it forged in vodka-fuled fires and blessed by the leaders of the Party? The crowd's been beaten into submission so bad by this time that Sting's pop barely registers. Think hour 3 of Raw in a non-hardcore fan town. Sting busts out hot. He drops Koloff on the barricade outside and is almost dragged down himself by the chain. Commentary hasn't even said what the rules of this match are. Sting starts touching the top turnbuckles. Oh, it's touch all four corners rules. Well, those hardly ever turn out good. Commentary finally catches up and gets into the rules. Sting gets two but Koloff clotheslines him with the chain and they go outside again, the third time in the match. Sting yanks the chain to post Koloff. Back in, Koloff wraps the chain around his elbow for an elbow drop. That's using your noggin. Sting yanks the chain up right into Koloff's crotch, but he only sells it for about ten seconds. Koloff gets up to three buckles but Sting fights him off. Koloff gets Sting into a bear hug and they roll around the ropes into two corners, and the ref says that they have two buckles each. I call that a loose interpretation of the rules. Now they exchange low blows! Both guys are down but the ref says they're still at two each. JR says it's a "judgement call". They get up and both dive for the 3rd buckle and get it, now the ref says it's three each. Sting tries to get to the last one but Koloff holds him back by the wrist strap and beats him down. Koloff stalls forever then finally goes for the last one. Sting leaps up and tries to jump over him, but Koloff's momentum lets him hit first and he's declared the winner. I appreciate that they tried to do some innovation with the format, even if it stretches the boundaries of the established rules a bit much. **

Hype video for the world title match, desperately trying to make it sound like something worth watching. They butter up Luger and Windham like crazy. As the cage is set up we get the first "WE WANT FLAIR!" chant. 

Steel Cage Match for the vacant WCW World Heavyweight Championship: WCW United States Champion Lex Luger def Barry Windham in 12:25- Capetta introduces this as a "historic" confrontation. During Windham's entrance for some reason they decide to show a close up of the *snicker* "world title" belt. Seriously, look at this thing:



That right there is one of Dusty's old Florida belts with a bunch of plaques hastily stuck on. See, when Flair left with Big Gold they didn't have time to make a replacement for this show. Doing it this way is one thing, but don't show it in full frame on TV for everyone to see! As soon as Luger's music stops we get another "WE WANT FLAIR!" chant. Let me sum up the first 7-8 minutes of this match quickly for you: circle, lockup, quick basic sequence, stop, circle, repeat. After about 5 of these exchanges the crowd gets restless and there's another "WE WANT FLAIR" chant. Finally they decide they might as well do something, they're out there anyway, and we get an exchange of sleeperholds. Windham misses an elbow off the top. Luger gets a few near falls then puts Windham in the Rack. Windham uses his long legs and the top rope to suplex his way out of it. Windham fights off a superplex attempt then gets his own set of near falls. Harley Race and Mr. Hughes make their way down to the ring. Race goes up to Luger and says "now's the time" and makes a piledriver motion. Luger grabs Windham, hits the piledriver and wins. Decent sized pop at first, but as Race and Hughes come in to celebrate with Luger the crowd realizes what's happening and starts booing. It's bad enough they didn't try to salvage the Flair situation by getting the belt on their most popular guy (Sting) and running with it, they took another popular guy (Luger) and turned him heel. Pissing off fans that are already legitimately pissed off at you, great business strategery. The only way WCW survived the Jim Herd era was Ted Turner's money. This would kick off Luger's horrible zero effort zero f**ks given first world title reign before heading off to WWF. Also, they could have had that exact same match without the cage and it wouldn't have made a bit of difference. *1/2

And....we're not done, folks.

Mixed Tag Team Steel Cage Match: Rick Steiner & Missy Hyatt def Arn Anderson & Paul E Dangerously in 2:08- As the faces enter the cage the Hardliners come out and kidnap Hyatt. Murdoch takes a legit swing at a fan that tries to reach in and stop them. Rick is unconcerned. He doesn't even notice she's gone. Paul E tries to hide in the corner. Rick gets Arn in a bearhug and Arn signals Paul E to come off the top and hit Steiner with the phone. They try to double team Rick but he shrugs them off, kills Arn with a Steinerline, and murders Paul E to win. I guess that's their attempt to send the crowd home happy. Barely even a match, and a strange and flat ending to the whole show. NR

Tony: "WCW has made a statement going into the 1990s!". Yup, but not in the way you're trying to portray.

OVERALL SHOW THOUGHTS- An abject disaster from start to finish. I can't imagine the show as a whole would have been much better with Flair, but at least the cloud wouldn't be hanging over it, and there might have been a bit more effort from everyone involved. The good news is things would slowly get better from here, if for no other reason that's the only direction it can go.

OVERALL SHOW GRADE: F

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Royal Rumble '91

Legacy Review

Royal Rumble '91

January 19. 1991 from the Miami Arena in Miami, FL

Commentary: Gorilla Monsoon and "Rowdy" Roddy Piper. I mentioned before that Piper is either really good or really bad in the booth, no in between. Fortunately tonight it's Good Piper.

This show takes places just two days after the start of Operation Desert Storm, kicking the patriotic fervor into an ever higher gear than shows like the '90 Survivor Series that took place during Desert Shield. Against this backdrop, we have the Iraqi sympathizing Sgt. Slaughter challenging for the WWF title.

Soft open with the American flag, the National Anthem, and lots of shots of kids in the crowd, many of whom are being told by their parents how to behave during the National Anthem. There's no shot of the arena at large or the ring until the anthem is almost over.

The Rockers def The Orient Express (w/Mr. Fuji) in 19:15- This is the Kato and Tanaka version of the Express. The Express pull a Suzuki-Gun before the bell, sending Marty out and letting Shawn get his HUGE 30ft in the air backdrop in early. The Rockers double team back, knocking the Express outside. DOUBLE tope suicidas! You didn't see that every day back then. That was mamma mia worthy. Kato and Janetty settle in. They pull the bridge up spot off on the first try. The Express try to double team but Janetty gets a leapfrog sequence going that ends with the Express crashing into each other. Nice. DEEP Steamboat-like armdrag by Janetty. The Express try to double team again but Shawn gets Tanaka to run and Kato to join him in dropping down to try to trip Tanaka. It almost ends with another Express crash, but they remember last time and stop just in time. Shawn comes up and gives them a double noggin knocker. Shawn gets on top to give the 10 punches to Tanaka, but sees Kato sneaking up on him and steps up to the top and hits him with a moonsault! The Express try double atomic drops but the Rockers flip out of them and hit double dropkicks. Then both Rockers go up top and hit dives all the way down to the floor! For 1991, this match is absolutely nuts. Shawn goes for a monkey flip, but Kato blocks it and Tanaka comes in a hot shots Shawn over the top rope. The Express drag him to the apron and Fuji whacks Shawn with the cane right in the throat. Shawn is now officially face in peril. Tanaka locks in the mandatory rest hold for Japanese wrestlers in the US at the time, the Oriental Nerve Hold of Extreme Pinching +2. Shawn does a Flair Flip over the top at about 100 MPH, then Tanaka superkicks him off the apron back in! Shawn does a full 360 degree sell to a double clothesline. The Express try to double clothesline him again, this time with Kato's belt, but Shawn ducks it, then dives on top of it to cause the Express to crash into each other again! Physics FTW! Hot tag! The Express try to come back on Janetty so Shawn says enough of this crap and blatantly cheats by tripping Kato from the outside. The Rockers go for a rocket launcher, but Tanaka pushes Shawn off the top rope and sends him crashing straight down onto the floor. Kato tries to slingshot Janetty into a chop from Tanaka, but Shawn comes in and hits Tanaka, allowing Janetty to use the slingshot to sunset flip Tanaka into the pin! Great finish. What a match. It's got crazy dives, some extremely creative and innovative spots, and good psychology to boot. Tag team wrestling at its finest. ****1/2

Sean Mooney is with Savage backstage. Savage says that Slaughter has promised him a title match should he win. He wants the same promise from the Warrior and he's sent Sherri to bait him into giving it. Cut to the arena and Sherri is on the interview podium with Mean Gene. She says that Slaughter is an "honorable man" that will keep his word (guffaws from commentary), and she calls out Warrior. Warrior comes out wearing his famous red, white and blue ring gear and face paint (as seen in the recent 2K games) and a USA bomber jacket. Tonight's WWF Championship Warrior belt strap color is light purple. Warrior refuses to answer, so Sherri turns on the charm with some very PG sex appeal, even giving Warrior a light kiss. Sherri gets to her knees, and judging by the reaction of the adult males right behind them it's pretty obvious what she's offering. Warrior is still unmoved and says no in the most over the top Warrior way possible. Savage is furious and storms out to berate Sherri. Time for Plan B. 

The Big Boss Man def The Barbarian (w/Bobby Heenan) in 14:15- This is the early part of the Boss Man vs Heenan feud that will culminate at Wrestlemania VII. Heenan's been insulting Boss Man's mamma, so Boss Man is going to tear through the entire Heenan Family (which, this being towards the end of Heenan's managerial career, is only three guys). Barbarian stalls for a while before getting in and sucker punching Boss Man. Boss Man throws him out and goes after him, during which Heenan tries to hide behind the opposite ring post. Cactus clothesline from Boss Man! I've seen it a bunch, but I'm still surprised how quick and agile Boss Man was at his peak. He was really good. Boss Man gets his foot caught in the ropes and dangles outside, letting Barbarian get some shots in. Barbarian then rams his back into the ring post. While Boss Man is down Heenan takes his opportunity to get a kick in. It's the bear hug! Boss Man fights and bites his way out, then hits an enzuguri for a 2 count. Barbarian rolls him up for 2. Boss Man hotshots Barbarian over the top rope, but Barbarian grabs the bottom rope for 2. Barbarian his his clothesline off the top rope finisher but Boss Man gets his foot on the ropes for 2. Boss Man hits the Boss Man Slam (Rock Bottom), but Barbarian *just* gets a knuckle on the rope for 2. Very Knuckle of Owens there. Great series of near falls. Barbarian goes up top again and hits a crossbody, but Boss Man reverses it and gets the 3! Living proof that Boss Man was good enough to carry someone at his peak to a good match. Barbarian held his end up well too. The crowd was also into the whole thing. Way better than you'd ever expect it to be going in. ***

WWF Championship: Sgt. Slaughter (w/General Adnan) def The Ultimate Warrior (c) in 12:47- Slaughter and Adnan try to clothesline Warrior with the flagpole as soon as he gets in, but he ducks it and then runs right through it, breaking the pole. Warrior picks the pole up, snaps it again, and tears up the Iraqi flag. During this Adnan went over the top and onto the floor, and he says "screw this" and goes back to the locker room. Surprised that didn't lead to anything. Warrior force feeds Slaughter part of the flag and chokes him with another piece, right in front of Hebner. Warrior beats Slaughter from pillar to post FOR AMERICA. Slaughter takes a Bret bump over the top and out. I've said it before, but Slaughter was one insane bumper. He was a human pinball. Sherri runs out and grabs Warrior's foot while he's running the ropes. Warrior takes the bait like an idiot and chases her all the way to the entrance area. Savage ambushes him and hits him in the back with some of the lighting rigging. As Warrior crawls back to the ring Slaughter stops the count so he doesn't win by countout, and drags Warrior back in. Slaughter works the now hurt back to set up the camel clutch. He locks the clutch in, but Warrior's feet are dangling off the apron and Hebner breaks it up. Warrior Warriors Up and starts hitting the running clotheslines and diving tackle. Sherri runs out again and gets on the apron. Warrior grabs her, pulls her in, and press slams her outside on top of Savage. Slaughter takes advantage and knees Warrior in the back. While Warrior is in the ropes and the ref is distracted, Savage smashes Warrior in the head with his scepter. I don't know what breakable material the scepter is made out of (sugar glass?) but it's a straight, hard shot and pieces go everywhere. An amazing visual. It's academic after that. Slaughter drags Warrior in, drops an elbow, and we get the super slow match ending 3 from Hebner. There's no announcement right away as Hebner checks on Warrior, and commentary holds out hope that there's been a DQ. Warrior runs to the back after Savage. Finally Finkel announces the AND NEWWWWWWWWWWWWW. The crowd is extremely not happy and commentary is livid. Should have agreed to give Savage that title shot. Not much of a match, it was all about the run ins. *1/2

We get an ad for Wrestlemania VII, which is advertising it for the LA Coliseum and hints that there will be 100,000 people there. Yeah, it didn't work out that way.

The Mountie (w/Jimmy Hart) def Koko B Ware in 9:12- Commentary is still going on about Slaughter's win but, unlike today, they say explicitly that they should focus on the guys in the ring right now. Koko's win/loss record was never impressive to begin with, but at this point he's very much a jobber to the stars. Jacques Rougeau had just debuted the Mountie gimmick a few weeks before this. It's so early that the real Mounties hadn't caught wind and complained yet, so commentary talks about him going through actual Mountie training and using crowd control and pacification techniques that the real Mounties use. That wouldn't last long. Koko gets thrown out and as Hart distracts the ref Mountie gives him a shot with the cattle prod. Hart is cutting promos on Frankie outside. That's fantastic. Koko's comeback turns up the juice a bit, but Mountie catches him and hits a Boss Man Slam-ish type thing to win. **

Intermission time. Mooney is with Savage and Sherri. Savage: "no one says no to me!". They're interrupted by a loud pounding on the door and he and Sherri bail. Monsoon and Piper are still furious about Slaughter winning. We get the pre-Rumble promo montage, including Undertaker still being managed by Brother Love.

Piper talks about having dinner with Virgil and trying to give him some lessons in life. Mooney is with DiBiase and Virgil. DiBiase lists off various humiliations he makes Virgil do because MONEY. Virgil looks displeased. 

"The Million Dollar Man" Ted DiBiase & Virgil def "The American Dream" Dusty Rhodes & Dustin Rhodes in 9:57- Like Survivor Series '90, no polka dots for Dusty. This is Dustin's PPV debut. Dusty and DiBiase had been feuding since Summerslam '90, even after the initial catalyst for the feud (Sapphire) left WWF. Dustin came in a few months before this and beat DiBiase on weekly TV. The heels jump to start, but the Rhodeses fight them off with the Bionic Elbows. DiBiase orders Virgil to go in and teach them a lesson. Virgil gets taught by Dustin instead, and DiBiase goes off on him outside and demands to be tagged in. DiBiase works over Dustin for a bit, but the faces take back over and Virgil makes multiple saves. Dustin knees the top turnbuckle after a Virgil dodge. The heels work the knee over. DiBiase holds Dustin for Virgil to hit, but Dustin ducks and he hits DiBiase instead. A livid DiBiase lays into Virgil with punches and chops, which allows Dusty to tag in. Dusty cleans house, but DiBiase dodges a charge, rolls Dusty up, and gets a clean pin. This would be not only Dusty's last match in WWF, but his last as a full time wrestler. He would be back in WCW later in the month at the head of the booking committee under Jim Herd's awful management, and also do spot work as a manager and still wrestle the occasional special tag match. Dustin would go with him for his great early career run as The Natural before coming back to WWF in 1995 painted gold. **1/4

But the real money in this match is afterward. DiBiase gets on the mic and berates Virgil for his mistakes again, then demands that Virgil collect the Million Dollar Belt and put it around his waist. Piper begs Virgil not to on commentary, but Virgil gets the belt, gets in the ring....and drops it at DiBiase's feet. DiBiase lays into him some more, reminding him about his mother, and tells Virgil again to wrap the belt around his waist. Virgil gets on one knee, picks the belt up,.........and nails DiBiase in the head with it! Piper and the crowd go absolutely nuts. Virgil walks out a new man. A truly earned moment.

Mean Gene/Hogan promo. Hogan pays tribute to the troops, and Gene tells him that there's an "unconfirmed" report that Slaughter has defaced the American flag. I guess Hogan has to call the hotline to get confirmation. Hogan vows revenge and gets so worked up he loses his place in his promo.

Now, I don't want to say that this Rumble is predictable, but after Slaughter winning the title and that promo, there's amoebae on Saturn that know who's winning this match.

Royal Rumble- Standard two minute intervals. Managers are being allowed to stay ringside in this one. This is the last Rumble with no real stakes other than pride (and, presumably, a winner's purse). '92 was, of course, for the WWF Title, and '93 was the first year of the winner getting the world title shot at WM stip.

1 & 2. WWF Tag Team Champion Bret "Hitman" Hart and Dino Bravo- Bret is on the cusp of his singles breakout. Bravo is on the cusp of the end of his WWF career. Bret gets Bravo over the top but not all the way out.
3. Greg "The Hammer" Valentine- Technically Valentine is still a heel (his face turn hadn't been shown on TV yet), but he goes after Bravo, much to Jimmy Hart's consternation. Valentine eliminates Bravo.
4. Paul Roma- Roma and Valentine double team Hart for a bit, but Roma quickly turns on Valentine.
5. "The Texas Tornado" Kerry Von Erich- All four guys brawl with almost no pairing off.
6. "The Model" Rick Martel- Martel and Roma give us some more heel on heel action.
7. Samba Simba- aka Tony Atlas.
8. Butch- He marches around the ring until Valentine chops him. Martel eliminates Simba.
9. Jake "The Snake" Roberts- This is the middle of his big feud with Martel, and Martel meets him right as he gets in the ring. Roberts gets the upper hand and Martel bails, giving Valentine a shot at Roberts.
10. Hercules- Power & Glory team up on Butch. Martel ties Roberts up in the ropes.
11. Tito Santana- As is tradition, former tag partners Santana and Martel immediately find each other. Roberts eliminates Roma.
12. The Undertaker- Taker's been in WWF barely 3 months and he's already got megastar written all over him. Taker eliminates Hart. Taker no sells all of Tornado's best stuff.
13. "Superfly" Jimmy Snuka- Tornado and Valentine team up to try to get Taker to sell something. Doesn't work.
14. "The British Bulldog" Davey Boy Smith- Martel and Roberts are still going at it.
15. Smash- Martel has gotten on the apron, again. Roberts goes after him, but Martel facelocks him and uses the leverage to eliminate Roberts.
16. Hawk- Goes after everyone until the heels gang up to beat him down.
17. Shane Douglas- The future ECW legend in his short lived rookie run in WWF. Taker eliminates Tornado and Snuka. Martel and Santana are going at it again.
18. nobody- This was supposed to be Savage but he was too busy running away from Warrior, becoming the first man to forfeit his spot in a Rumble. Taker casually low blows Bulldog.
19. Animal- LOD team up on Taker and eliminate him. While they celebrate Hercules eliminates Hawk.
20. Crush
21. Duggan- The early 20s lull is worse than usual this year since there's been no big elimination runs.
22. Earthquake- The first "business is picking up" entry, as Quake was still one of the top heels after his long feud with Hogan. Quake eliminates Animal.
23. WWF Intercontinental Champion Mr. Perfect- He takes his time getting in. As soon as he does he flip sells a turnbuckle bump. Perfect eliminates Duggan.
24. Hulk Hogan- Business is here. Hogan eliminates Smash, then goes right for Quake.
25. Haku- Hogan eliminates Valentine.
26. WWF Tag Team Champion Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart- Quake eliminates Santana.
27. Luke- In probably the only truly memorable moment from this Rumble, Luke gets in, Quake immediately grabs him and throws him out the other side, Luke lands on his feet and doesn't even break stride as he walks right back to the locker room.
28. Brian Knobbs- Knobbs eliminates Hercules.
29. The Warlord- Hogan eliminates Crush. Perfect keeps rolling onto the apron to rest and consult with Heenan. Hogan eliminates Warlord.
30. Tugboat- Goes right after Quake. Knobbs eliminates Douglas. BFFs Hogan and Tugboat go at it. Tugboat gets Hogan over but only onto the apron. Hogan comes back and eliminates Tugboat. Martel eliminates Anvil. Bulldog eliminates Haku. Bulldog finally eliminates Martel, who set a new longevity record this year (that will be broken by Flair the next year).
Final Four- Bulldog, Earthquake, Hogan, and, er, Brian Knobbs. One of these things is not like the others, one of these things just doens't belong. Quake and Knobbs quickly eliminate Bulldog and turn their attention to Hogan. Lots of elbows, and Quake hits the Quake Splash. As the heels backs are turned, Hogan pops up. The Hulk Up Short Version. Hogan eliminates Knobbs. Hogan tries to slam Quake but can't. Quake drops more elbows and hits a powerslam, which leads to a Hulk Up Full Version. Punches, big boot, big man bodyslam, Hogan eliminates Earthquake.
WINNER- Hulk Hogan

Hogan becomes the first two time Rumble winner, and the first back to back winner. This is a very middle of the road Rumble. There's hardly anything in the way of memorable moments. No real big spots, elimination runs, huge showdowns, etc. The focus was clearly putting over the violent brawl aspect of the match, which was hammered home by commentary all match, as well as the "every man for himself" concept with all the heel vs heel and face vs face pairings. Not a bad Rumble, just not a particularly memorable one. And everyone knew who was winning. **3/4

OVERALL SHOW THOUGHTS- You've got an average Rumble, a red hot tag opener, a huge face turn, a better than expected midcard match, and a shocker world title change with not a very good match but some very entertaining overbooking. All in all, not a bad show, and a good lead in to a perennially underrated Wrestlemania.
OVERALL SHOW GRADE- B+

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