Everything posted by PeteF3
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Between the Sheets #18 (November 18-23, 1991) (Featuring Pete Stein)
That Onita crying story is hilarious knowing what was going on at Survivor Series, probably shortly after this show was taped. Wrestlingdata says the Shooter was Katsutoshi Niiyama/Great Punk. Verichev's partner was Boris Gogichashivili--yes, THE Boris Gogichashivili. Edit: Bix must have found an outdated site--Online Onslaught is still up-to-date and already has an update on Sheamus winning the WWE title, and Rick Scaia recapping the quarterfinals episode of Raw.
- Survivor Series 2015 thread
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[1997-08-03-WWF-Summerslam] Bret Hart vs The Undertaker
The best kind of heel turn! Michael Hayes was just trying to help Kerry Von Erich, too. Very well-booked finish--one might think the WWF would have painted themselves in a corner here, as Bret pretty much had to win, but him beating Undertaker had to be done very carefully to be believable.
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[1997-08-03-WWF-Summerslam] Steve Austin vs Owen Hart
This match deserves to be remembered for more than the closing spot, because it's high-energy, terrific, and full of great offense from Owen in particular. He goes all Aja Kong on Austin's hand and we get the rare middle-finger-based psychology for a bit, while then switching focus to Austin's neck, which in a way is serendipitious with what's to come. Lots of twists and turns and momentum shifts, and even the restholds are used effectively and with different variations. Then the sick tombstone spot and scary aftermath...watching Austin attempting to crawl around barely able to move is still frightening. I still don't know to this day what Owen was thinking--the kneel-down version of the tombstone was a semi-regular move of his.
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[1997-08-03-WWF-Summerslam] Mankind vs Hunter Hearst Helmsley (Cage)
Chyna's timing is pretty far off here at multiple spots--she also absolutely killed Mick with the door, hitting him with it so hard that he didn't grab his head, he grabbed his shoulder. Then of course her jumping into the cage too early and having to leave. The crowd picks up on things as soon as Mankind starts climbing the cage, dropping a "Su-per-fly" chant. Mankind takes off his mask and rips off his shirt to reveal what was supposed to be a Dude Love heart, but by this point is just a pink smudge. Fun follow-up to a pretty fun mid-card feud, and the Dude basically Hulking Up out of his coma afterward in time with the music is great.
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[1997-08-03-NJPW] Kensuke Sasaki vs Hiroyoshi Tenzan
This G1 was a single-elimination tournament and not a round-robin, so I could see why Kensuke's victory may ring a little hollow. That aside, we see a pretty good closing stretch in front of a jacked crowd. Tenzan has NWO Japan with him, including Vicious & Delicious, but can't follow up with his win over Hash.
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[1997-08-03-NJPW] Shinya Hashimoto vs Hiroyoshi Tenzan
Chono in the all-black casualwear and sunglasses is about the smoothest looking motherfucker in wrestling. Until he gets on the apron and changes the tide of the match, this is way more interesting with Hashimoto on top, as Tenzan for the bulk of this doesn't offer much more than chops and eye gouges. The closing stretch is a lot better, minus one of the weirder blown spots you'll ever see--Tenzan's foot getting caught in the turnbuckle like that seems so fluky and unlikely that one could swear it was a planned spot. They run through a quick Hashimoto comeback before going to what appeared to be the originally planned finish, with Tenzan picking up a big win. Not an overly impressive performance by Tenzan all in all, but Hash carries this to something pretty good.
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WWE Network... It's Here
Yes, that. And release the goddamned Money Inc.-Steiners title change already.
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[1997-08-02-ECW-Monaca, PA] Terry Funk vs Shane Douglas
A sampling of crowd chants: "NUR-SING-HOME!" "STEERS-AND-QUEERS!" "TEX-AS SUCKS!" And people think Full Sail can be annoying. Well, that aside, I was looking forward to this, with the Bizarro World crowd dynamic, but this ended up being pointless because of Shane's refusal to work as a babyface. He finally throws a few token attempts towards the end, like asking the crowd if they want one more belly-to-belly, but that's it. Sabu runs in for no reason other than Paul E. couldn't be bothered to book a sensible finish and Funk retains his title.
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[1997-08-02-NWA] Reckless Youth vs Devon Storm (Cage)
Bad stuff here--this was a very inauspicious first look at Youth and Storm worked kind of dumb too, though his actual move execution was fine, at least in comparison to the OMEGA stuff. The presence of the cage was dumb if they were going to brawl all over the building anyway. Lots of eye-rolling moments not just limited to the constant entering and exiting of the cage, like Youth's Asai moonsault to nowhere and the blown finish.
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Barry Horowitz and Steve Lombardi
I don't think they count as "MegaPowers"--two singles legends (in their own way) coming together as a unit. They're more like the Road Warriors, Demolition, and Rock 'n Roll Express of jobbers, respectively. Rodz and Scicluna have a much stronger argument.
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Observer HOF prediction/ballot question thread
WWE would be wise to skip the stage for WM--with that giant video board they don't need one.
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Between the Sheets #17 (Novemebr 10-16, 1996) (Featuring Dave Prazak)
'96 Cornette was evidently flashing back to the days of less quality control: there's a TBS interview where he makes the exact same burglar-rape joke, about Baby Doll.
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Between the Sheets #16 (November 3-9, 1994) (Featuring "Dr. Lucha" Steve Sims)
Edit: wrong thread.
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[1997-08-02-OMEGA] Surge vs Sweet Dreams
...or, with trash-throwing and heel turns signified by t-shirt changes, WCW. I do credit Surge for changing outfits for each round. Sweet Dreams is proud to be the first black champion in OMEGA history--eat your heart out, Jackie Robinson. Edit: I do see that Matt's sterling mic skills have fully arrived, though.
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[1997-08-02-OMEGA] Surge vs Cham Pain
Yes, the live play-by-play is Strike 1, right to begin with. Cham Pain has indeed recovered from the Pedigree Driver '97 to reach the semifinals of whatever the hell tournament this is. This could charitably be described as "raw," but it's an interesting enough time capsule. Matt Hardy already knows how to connect with an audience, and the audience themselves make for an interesting contrast to your typical American crowd of 1997--way more kids and families, no snark seen anywhere. In that sense, this was kind of refreshing. This would have been, all in all, a pleasant enough diversion but the use of the table at the end was pretty gratuitous.
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[1997-08-02-ECW-TV] Rick Rude promo
Ah, Ravishing Rick--back where he belongs, milking crowd reactions and playing fans like violins. Douglas was willing to trade Francine for one night to gain Rude as an ally, and we close out with a guitar version of Rude's old WWF theme.
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[1997-08-02-ECW-TV] Tommy Dreamer & The Sandman & Rick Rude vs Sabu & Rob Van Dam & Jerry Lawler (Cage)
Longer than even the longest MSC or Sportatorium beatdowns, it seems. First Dreamer and Sandman, then Funk, then Taz. There are some good moments here, like Lawler finally getting some payback, and Taz getting beer poured on him and Candido locking on the kata hajime, but they're more spread out than they really should be.
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[1997-08-02-USWA-TV] J.C. Ice promo
Still waiting for that PG-13 vs. FBI match. JC does a decent job of not projecting even a shred of sympathy as he cuts this promo from a hospital bed.
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[1997-08-02-USWA-TV] Interview: Rick Titan
Well, no beating around the bush from Mr. Titan here. "There you have it," indeed.
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[1997-08-02-FMW] Masato Tanaka vs W*ING Kanemura (No Rope Explosive Electrified Barbed Wire Death)
I had high expectations for these two to come through in a singles match after their work dominating 6-mans, and they didn't disappoint. They smartly worked around the explosions and made you wait for them, and they gave us a ton of dramatic kickouts but never crossed the line into self-indulgence. Tanaka doesn't have Onita's presence and charisma, but he's not far off in terms of fired-up comebacks and has way more athletic talent at this stage--it's a fairly even trade-off.
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[1997-08-02-NJPW] Kazayuki Fujita vs Don Frye
Our first look at Frye and man was he awesome, and I really wish a guy like him who was capable of believably heeling it up to a degree not seen in shootstyle could have had a run in UWFI or RINGS, just to see what it would have been like. This is all-action and ends before it can possibly wear out its welcome, but Frye is slow to break his winning hold and that draws in Naoya Ogawa and then Inoki himself.
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[1997-08-01-NJPW] Shinya Hashimoto vs Kazuo Yamazaki
Pretty good match with a borderline-nonsensical finish. It's OK if you want to establish "shit happens" and that refs can get bumped but it doesn't automatically mean a screwjob, but I don't know if that was really NJPW's intention or not. These two always have great chemistry but even ignoring the booking I thought their '96 matches were better and tighter.
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[1997-07-31-BJW] Gedo & Jado vs Yoshihiro Taijiri & Ryuji Yamakawa
Yeah, absolutely nothing of consequence happened here, and the idea of seeing this go 60 sounds excruciating--particularly since it seems that no team was ever really in danger, thus telegraphing the result badly even by the standards of many hour draws. Tajiri and Yamagawa's spunky underdog performances may have come off better in another setting but here they were crying out for more interesting opponents than Jado & Gedo.
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[1997-07-28-WCW-Nitro] Randy Savage vs Scott Steiner
Decent enough match and nice to see something different ending Nitro besides some combination of Hogan, Luger, and Sting. Credit to WCW: they did go out of their way to make Giant's chokeslam of Bischoff really feel like a big moment.