Monday
Nitro #98
Date: July 28, 1997
Location: Charleston
Civic Center, Charleston, West Virginia
Attendance: 9,575
Commentators: Mike
Tenay, Bobby Heenan, Larry Zbyszko, Tony Schiavone
Reviewed by Tommy Hall
Back on Monday here as
we're getting closer and closer to Road Wild. Hopefully we can
continue the roll they're on that started last week. The main
stories going are on what side is Hennig on and Luger vs. Hogan, both
of which should wind up being interesting ideas. Other than that
there are some decent stories going on and I'm enjoying this show
more lately. Let's get to it.
The Nitro Girls do
their thing.
Curt Hennig/Ric
Flair vs. Vicious and Delicious
Hennig (POP) starts
with Norton. Scott elbows Hennig down almost immediately and chops
him to the floor. We head inside for Hennig's arm work to go
nowhere, so here's Flair. Nice job of making your new guy look inept
there WCW. Norton runs Flair over and hits a big shoulder block to
take him down again. Off to Bagwell but his posing lets Hennig get
in a shot to the back of Buff's head to slow things down. Buff
pounds on Flair in the corner so Flair chops him down.
Bagwell misses a
dropkick and it's Figure Four time. Hennig and Norton get in a fight
and Flair lets the hold go for no apparent reason. We take a break
and come back with Norton choking Flair in the corner. Flair pounds
back at Norton but double teaming puts him down again. Norton and
Bagwell double team Flair for a bit but Bagwell gets chopped down,
allowing the hot tag to Hennig. House is cleaned and Syxx goes after
Flair. Flair pulls Norton. to the floor and the PerfectPlex pins
Bagwell.
Rating: C-.
Really basic match here which was designed to put Hennig over. It
did a better job at putting Norton over but at least they were
trying. Hennig would be the biggest story in the company for the
next few weeks, and unlike Jarrett a few months before, Hennig would
actually be OVER by the end of it. See what talent and charisma can
get you? Jarrett had talent but it wasn't the right character for
him at all.
Here's Luger for a
chat. By chat I mean strip session to show off how ripped he is.
Luger talks about how ready he is for Hogan. However, he mentions a
clause in Hogan's contract that says Hogan has to defend his title
every so often, so next week it's Hogan vs. Luger for the title.
TV Title: Prince
Iaukea vs. Ultimo Dragon
Dragon is defending and
runs the Prince over to start. The headstand in the corner
mesmerizes another opponent and the champ puts on a reverse chinlock.
The wide section of empty chairs that were full during the first
match is a telling sign about the interest in this match. Then
again, the people in the match could probably tell you the same
thing. Dragon loads up the super rana but Prince superplexes him
down instead. We get a pinfall reversal sequence before Iaukea
dropkicks the champ down for no cover. A superkick gets two and
Iaukea blocks the Dragon Sleeper. The second attempt works though
and Prince taps.
Rating: D+.
Dragon was good but man alive Iaukea wasn't interesting at all. The
problem with the TV Title is that it went on guys the fans were given
no reason to care about. Dragon is indeed very talented and can put
on entertaining matches, but his matches aren't great enough to make
people overlook his lack of personality. That's the problem with a
lot of the luchadores and other guys in WCW and there was no way
around it.
Here's Flair who says
that Hennig is officially the newest Horseman. Here's Hennig who
says he's not a Horseman but Flair says Hennig is just laying low.
Texas Hangmen vs.
Steve McMichael/Chris Benoit
The Hangmen are Mean
Mike and Tough Tom. They're masked guys who I have seen in Memphis
wrestling before. Benoit starts with let's say Tom and gets hit by
Mike in the back to give Tom the advantage. Off to Mongo who runs
over both Hangmen and powerslams Mike down. Some clotheslines do the
same thing and we've got a phone call for Tony from the Outsiders.
Hall tells Tony he better accepts the charges. Tony: “Well if it's
1-800 Collect I will.”
They were a sponsor at
the time, making that somewhere between clever and eye roll inducing.
The match gets ignored as the Hangmen take over on Mongo. Steve
comes back with a bulldog and there's the tag to Benoit. The call
finally ends as everything breaks down. Mongo can barely tombstone
Mike but it sets up the Crossface by Benoit for the win.
Rating: D.
Phone call aside, this wasn't very good. The Hangmen were jobbers
and that's fine, but the Horsemen looked to have a lot of trouble
with them which they shouldn't have had. Not a good match or
anything and it didn't showcase the Horsemen. The phone call didn't
help anything either, especially since it didn't accomplish anything
and it only said the Outsiders would be on the show next week.
Cruiserweight Title:
Chris Jericho vs. Alex Wright
Jericho is defending
here. The opening part of the match is ignored for the sake of house
show ads as Wright slaps Jericho in the corner. They fight for arm
control with the champion taking Alex to the mat. Those big
stretches of empty seats in the crowd are kind of distracting. A
spinwheel kick puts Wright down and out to the floor, causing the
match to come to a halt.
Jericho dives onto
Wright but gets suplexed down to change momentum. Wright stomps
Jericho down in the corner but misses a top rope knee drop. The
Lionsault hits Wright's back but Jericho doesn't cover. Wright goes
to the apron and gets put in a sleeper by Jericho who is in the ring.
Alex guillotines him down and hits a German suplex for the clean pin
and the title.
Rating: C.
This was an interesting match as you had Wright losing most of the
first few matches after his turn before winning the title completely
clean here. The fact that it was a clean pin helps, but I'm not
exactly sure what the point was in jobbing him out the last few weeks
to give him the belt here. Still though, not bad.
Here are Jarrett,
Malenko and Debra with something to say. Dean says he's in with
Jarrett and Debra is shaking hands with Wright as he walks up the
ramp. Apparently Jarrett was seen with Eddie Guerrero on Saturday
Night and Dean isn't cool with that. Jeff says people just want to
be with winners. Debra runs her mouth of course. Thank goodness
Jeff and Debra would leave in just a few months.
Hour #2 begins and the
pyro is back.
Syxx vs. Diamond
Dallas Page
They slug it out to
start until Page busts out a pumphandle backbreaker for two. That's
a new move for him I believe. A neckbreaker puts Syxx down as well,
followed by an elbow to put him on the floor. Syxx comes back with
some kicks in the corner and there's the Bronco Buster. Vincent
comes out but Page avoids the Buzzkill. He hits the Cutter on Syxx
but the Vincent distraction lets Hennig come in and blast Page with
something in the back of the head. Syxx gets the easy pin.
Rating: D+.
This didn't have the time to get anywhere but the match was more
about an angle than the wrestling. Page was on such a roll at this
point that seeing him lose was actually a shocking sight. Today, you
see people losing almost all the time, which makes wins and losses
mean very little.
Tony: “CLEARLY CURT
HENNIG IS PART OF THE NWO!” Very clearly indeed.
Dean Malenko vs.
Hector Guerrero
This should be good.
They head to the mat to start with both guys fighting for arm
control. Dean takes Hector down with a snap mare as we hear about a
Bobby Heenan personal appearance in Milwaukee. He says he's the
human being that made Milwaukee famous, which should get a chuckle
out of old school fans. Off to a headscissors on the mat by Malenko
but Hector escapes into a modified STF. They trade rollups out of
the corner followed by a sunset flip for two for Guerrero. Here are
Jarrett and Debra as Dean puts the Cloverleaf on for the tap out.
Rating: C-.
Technically fine but this Jarrett stuff is really dull. Allegedly
he's trying to form his own team to fight the Horsemen, but at the
end of the day it's Jeff Jarrett leading the charge. That makes it
pretty hard to get interested in the team at all, especially with
Debra getting to talk about them every week. Nothing special to see
here.
Chavo Guerrero comes
out to check on his uncle and gets beaten up as well.
Konnan speaks Spanish
and says he doesn't like Rey. Apparently Rey is filling an
Affirmative Action quota. Of Americans? Konnan vs. La Parka later.
Lee Marshall is in
Detroit.
Giant comes out for his
match but Savage is in the crowd with something to say to him.
They've got a match at Road Wild. Giant says what Savage is about to
see is just a preview.
Giant vs. Great Muta
The bell rings and
here's Eric Bischoff to commentary. Thankfully during his full
entrance and the walk to the desk, nothing happened in the ring.
Muta fires off some fast kicks but gets caught in the corner and
chopped a lot. Giant pounds away in the corner so Muta bails to the
floor. Back in and Muta goes to the eyes before firing off some
dropkicks. Some more shots to the knees take Giant down and there's
the Muta Elbow. Giant shoves him off of a cover and shrugs off some
top rope shots. He grabs Muta by the throat and after covering his
eyes from the Mist, the chokeslam gets the pin.
Rating: D+.
What did you expect from this match? There are only a handful of
ways to fight Giant and going after the knee is the mos common
answer. The covering of the eyes is one of those things that seems
to be common sense but no one ever does. Muta is a really talented
guy but he was basically a jobber in the NWO. Much like the rest of
the show, nothing of note to see here.
Post match Larry Z
comes to the announcers' desk and grabs Bischoff. He drags Eric to
the ring for a chokeslam to a good pop.
Konnan vs. La Parka
Konnan immediately
beats him down and hits his rolling clothesline. La Parka dropkicks
him out of the air and hits a legdrop for two. Tony of course is
gushing about the chokeslam. La Parka gets a chair with Konnan's
name on it but Konnan dropkicks it into his face. 187 and Tequila
Sunrise end La Parka. Quick match.
Psychosis comes out for
the save post match.
The announcers talk
about the world title match next week and we get a phone call from JJ
Dillon. Apparently he and the executive committee want Sting back in
the ring by September.
Randy Savage vs.
Scott Steiner
Savage slaps him in the
face to start before shoving referee Randy Anderson into Scott to
take him down. Steiner comes back with a gorilla press slam to send
Savage to the floor. Savage throws a chair into the ring and we take
a break. Back with Steiner hitting a belly to belly suplex, sending
Savage to the floor. Just like old times, Randy hides behind Liz and
sends Scott knees first into the steps.
They fight into the
crowd with Scott in trouble. Back to ringside and Steiner is rammed
into the barricade to keep Randy in control. We head back inside and
Scott catches Savage off the top in another belly to belly. Rick and
Liz get in an argument, allowing Steiner to backdrop Savage over the
top and out to the floor, which should be a DQ. Now Steiner throws
Savage into the crowd, possibly injuring Randy's shoulder.
Back to ringside and
they brawl a bit more with Scott maintaining control. Steiner gets
two on a small package followed by a butterfly powerbomb for no
cover. A Super Frankensteiner puts Savage down but Liz throws in her
shoe. Cue the Outsiders for the SHOCKING, yes SHOCKING I SAY, run-in
DQ.
Rating: C.
This wasn't bad but it was mainly brawling. Scott didn't know how to
wrestle a main event style match at this point but his singles push
was coming. Granted it was years before it actually worked but they
were trying at least. The ending was obvious because the announcers
were so sure that the Outsiders weren't there that they had to be
there. As usual, not much to see here.
Post match the
Outsiders beat down the Steiners until Giant makes the save. He
calls out Nash but Nash hides behind security. The security steps
aside and says go get him....but we're out of time. Well we could
see Nash get in, but we need to see Giant chokeslam Bischoff one more
time to end the show.
Overall Rating: D+.
The show wasn't terrible but this felt like a big commercial for next
week's show which in theory is a commercial for the PPV the following
Saturday. On top of that, considering there's a world title match
the next week, there wasn't a lot of focus on it. It seems more like
Giant vs. Savage is the world title match when you look at how much
hype they got. The matches here were nothing special either.
Remember to follow me on Twitter @kbreviews and check out my website at kbwrestlingreviews.com
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