Monday
Nitro #125
Date:
February 2, 1998
Location:
Alamodome, San Antonio, Texas
Commentators:
Mike Tenay, Bobby Heenan, Larry Zbyszko, Tony Schiavone
Reviewed by Tommy Hall
Much
to my surprise, this is the first time Nitro has ever been in Texas
if the announcers are to be believed. We're on the way to SuperBrawl
and Sting vs. Hogan II but the main story continues to be the NWO
falling apart. Savage is almost off the team due to fighting with
Hogan and Nash is being fined to death. Let's get to it.
We
open with a clip from the end of last week's show with the NWO
taunting Savage as he was in the Scorpion Deathlock.
The
Nitro Girls dance to open things up in the arena.
Tony
promises that the main event will be one of the biggest ever in our
sport: Sting vs. Savage
Juventud
Guerrera vs. Psychosis
Larry
says San Antonio is the home of the first luchador: Santa Anna, who
rode up and beat John Wayne and Richard Widmark. Psychosis armdrags
him down to start and here comes the Flock to their usual seats.
They're a very tardy bunch. Juvy takes it to the mat with a
headscissors and another to send Psychosis to the floor as we take a
break. Back with Psychosis in control and putting on a bearhug.
Psychosis
goes up but dives into an atomic drop, allowing Juvy to hit a
gorgeous top rope hurricanrana for two. A victory roll from the top
gets two for Guerrera and they trade pinfall reversals until
Psychosis hits a reverse suplex to take over. Juvy falls to the
floor but dropkicks Psychosis out of the air on a dive attempt. Back
in and the 450 is good for the pin by Guerrera.
Rating:
C. This was the usual WCW
formula for opening a show: take two cruiserweights and have them do
high spots for six minutes to fire up the crowd. Why WWE never used
this idea is beyond me because it's something that always worked.
The Texas crowd was very appreciative of this as well.
The
announcers talk about Page vs. Benoit for the US Title on this week's
Thunder.
Here's
Page with something to say. He sees Benoit as one of the most
underrated wrestlers on the planet and Page respects him. It's
because of Benoit's work ethic that Page waned to give him a title
shot. Gene asks if Page is worried about Benoit's history of
crippling people but Page isn't scared. Benoit deserves a shot at
the title and since the fans want to see it, Benoit gets a shot.
Video
on the Giant being injured. Nash has been fined $150,000 for the
powerbomb at Souled Out and each additional powerbomb will cost the
same.
Ultimo
Dragon vs. Kidman
Kidman
jumps him to start but Dragon does his handstand in the corner. The
masked man comes back with his hard kicks including a hard one to the
back. The Dragon Sleeper goes on but a Lodi distraction lets Saturn
break up the hold. Both guys get near falls but it's Kidman taking
over with a chinlock. Dragon jawbreaks his way out but gets kicked
right back down. They slug it out with Tony calling this a complete
match. That's an odd way to describe things but it's hard to tell
what Tony is thinking at times.
Dragon
gets a boot up in the corner and puts on a half crab but Kidman is
next to the ropes. With Kidman still down, Dragon puts on a
headscissors from behind and takes Kidman to the mat (they're both
face down) before reaching back to pull Kidman's arms forward while
holding his neck in place. Basically it's Cattle Mutilation but with
Dragon rolled forward 180 degrees and Kidman nearly standing on his
own head.
Kidman
rolls out of the hold and catches Dragon in a sitout spinebuster for
two. A springboard bulldog and a clothesline get the same on Dragon
but he's able to crotch Kidman on the top rope. The super
Frankensteiner sets up the Dragon Sleeper for the tap out by Kidman.
Rating:
B-. That submission hold alone
makes this a good match but they were both looking great out there.
I don't think I ever remember these two fighting before and that's a
shame given how good these two were together. Dragon has kind of
fallen off the planet in the last few months so it's nice to see him
around some more.
Post
match the Flock destroys Dragon with Saturn laying him out with a
German suplex.
Ad
for Monday Nitro on Playstation. If I remember correctly that game
SUCKED.
Here's
Nash to discuss the major fine announced earlier. He was sitting in
the back earlier tonight when he saw Kidman use a modified powerbomb
called a tiger bomb (“I'm not Tenay but I think that's what it's
called.”) and wants to know where Kidman's fine is. Kidman isn't
going to get a fine though because it's the man instead of the move
that gets fined.
Nash
doesn't really mind though because at Souled Out, he dropped Giant on
his skull and put him out. If WCW wants to fine him, he can pay
anything they ask for. Nash is going to keep using the powerbomb and
there's nothing WCW can do about it because he's just too sexy and
too sweet.
Hour
#2 begins.
Cruiserweight
Title: Chris Jericho vs. Super Calo
Before
the match Jericho gives himself a thank you for putting Mysterio on
the shelf. Feeling out process to start until Calo gets aggressive
and pounds Jericho against the ropes. Jericho comes right back with
a suplex and a chinlock as Calo's offense is already over. The
champion dropkicks the knee and hits a backbreaker for two before
chopping Calo in the corner.
A
hard clothesline looks to set up something off the top from Jericho,
but Calo shoves him down to the floor and hits a dive to take both
guys out. Calo suplexes the champion back in and gets two off a
springboard dropkick. He goes up again for the top rope headscissors
but Jericho rolls through and hooks the Liontamer to retain.
Rating:
C-. What's with the
cruiserweight showcase tonight? Calo was fine for a spot title match
like this as he was one of the resident jobbers of the division but
could still put on a decent match like this. Jericho is starting to
feel it in the ring to go along with the awesome character work at
the moment.
TV
Title: Booker T vs. Steven Regal
Booker
cranks on the arm to start before kicking Regal in the face to take
over. Regal realizes that going toe to toe won't work and grabs a
cross arm choke, only to have Booker roll out and connect with a
flying forearm. Regal ducks another shot and takes Booker down with
a European uppercut before getting two off a rollup. Back up and
Booker hits a spin kick to the face followed by the ax kick for two.
Another flying forearm misses but Booker suplexes him down and hits
the side kick to retain.
Rating:
D+. The match wasn't bad but
there wasn't any real flow to it. They didn't really click as Booker
was doing almost nothing but strikes while Regal was just doing
random moves. It wasn't boring but it came off as a series of moves
instead of a wrestling match if that makes sense.
Konnan
vs. Hugh Morrus
Hugh
is a face here in one of those turns that just kind of happened when
no one was watching. Morrus starts fast with a delayed gorilla press
slam and Konnan rolls to the outside. Back in and Konnan hits his
rolling clothesline and a low dropkick to put Morrus down.
They
actually get into a battle of leg trips with Morrus putting him down
and dropping some elbows for two. A powerslam puts Morrus down but a
Vincent distraction lets Konnan powerbomb him out of the corner.
That's another $150k assuming they actually remember one of the
biggest stories on the show. An armless Pedigree is enough to finish
Morrus.
Rating:
D. This is the problem with
having three hours to fill: you get to sit through matches like this
getting five minutes. Konnan was one of those guys who wasn't
interesting in the ring at all and Morrus was just enough of a star
that he wasn't squashed in quick fashion. The announcers didn't
react to the powerbomb at all.
Here
are Hall and Rhodes for the survey with WCW winning by a hair. Hall
says that we're coming up on SuperBrawl VIII so there have been seven
beforehand. Every year, the winner of the battle royal has gotten
his title shot (not exactly as 1995 was for the title and in 1996 the
winner got the shot at Souled Out) but this year Roddy Piper is
messing with the system. Dusty rants about how it doesn't matter who
Hall fights because the party never stops with the NWO.
Scott
Hall vs. Jim Neidhart
Before
the match, Louie Spicolli says he'll fight for Hall. Scott uses the
distraction to hit Neidhart with the mic and takes over early. He
pounds on Neidhart in the corner but Jim comes back with forearms to
the chest followed by a nerve hold which has Hall nearly out cold
inside of ten seconds. Dusty gets on the apron for a tag and the
distraction lets Hall hit the Edge for the pin.
Post
match the NWO beats down Neidhart until British Bulldog makes the
save.
Here's
Luger to talk about his No DQ match against Savage at SuperBrawl.
Luger is all fired up and that's about it. Seriously this was like
45 seconds long.
We
look at the Nitro Part Pack winner.
Goldberg
vs. Mark Starr
Quick
leg locks, gorilla press into a powerslam, spear, Jackhammer, Starr
is done.
Steve
McMichael vs. British Bulldog
This
is a rematch from last week. Before the match, Mongo says that we're
in his country of Texas tonight. They immediately brawl to the floor
with Bulldog in full control. Back in and Bulldog clotheslines him
back to the floor before throwing him into the steps. They fight up
the aisle for a double countout in about a minute.
The
brawl keeps going by the announcer booth with Mongo getting the
better of it.
Here
are Hogan and Bischoff to open the third hour. Bischoff says that he
goes berserk when he thinks about the fines. Hogan says that Nash
watches his back and the fines will be paid no matter what. He says
they're $50,000 each which goes against what Tony said earlier. As
for Savage, he's on his own against Sting tonight.
Hogan
brags about beating Sting twice despite the unfair treatment of the
referees. Why is Nick Patrick suspended when he's proven how skilled
he is over and over? Hogan wants Nick Patrick to referee the
SuperBrawl match because he was never found guilty of anything.
Hogan guarantees a win and that's that.
Disco
Inferno vs. Raven
Raven
says there are two rules: there are no rules, and give someone the
DDT. Disco is sent to the floor as the bell rings and Raven hits a
dive over the top. Back in and Raven armdrags and drop toeholds
Disco onto a chair before sitting in the chair for a rest. Disco
uses his brain and clotheslines the seated Raven for two. A swinging
neckbreaker and a belly to back suplex get the same as Heenan praises
Disco.
Raven
comes back with a belly to back of his own, followed by a third
straight belly to back from Disco. Raven tries a fourth in a row but
Disco falls on top of him for two. Inferno pounds him down in the
corner as Raven smiles some more. Back up and Disco ducks his head
and the Evenflow (now officially named that) is good for the pin.
Rating:
C. This was better than I
expected with Disco showing some good intensity out there. For a guy
who was a comedy character he did pretty well for himself over the
years. Raven is becoming more and more entertaining every time he's
out there and is so into the character it's unreal. This was a nice
surprise after a long stretch of dull and short ones.
More
Nitro Girls.
Buff
Bagwell/Kevin Nash vs. Steiner Brothers
Scott
and Buff get things going with Bagwell hooking an armdrag and posing
a lot. Scott runs him over with a shoulder and the release tiger
bomb for no cover. Rick comes in sans tag to make fun of Bagwell's
poses in a funny bit. Scott cranks on Bagwell's arm but Nash gets in
a cheap shot from the apron to take over. Nash comes in and chokes
away in the corner before it's back to Bagwell for a reverse
chinlock.
Kevin
hits the side slam for two and there's the big boot for good measure.
Back to Bagwell for another chinlock before Nash comes in to try the
powerbomb. Rick makes the save but Scott still can't/won't tag.
Scott knocks Buff down and looks at Rick but turns around and hits a
quick Frankensteiner on Bagwell for the pin.
Rating:
C. As is the case with most
Steiner matches around this time, this was almost all storytelling
instead of about the match itself. In a strange way, you could argue
Rick is the selfish one. The team wins when Scott won't tag out, so
isn't it best for the team that Rick gets to stand on the apron all
the time?
Rick
yells at Scott post match.
Randy
Savage vs. Sting
Michael
Buffer does part of his signature entrance in Spanish. Sting is
billed as being from Huntington Beach, California which is a first
for him I believe. Spotlights go up towards the ceiling as Sting
comes down. Why didn't they do that at Starrcade? Sting gets to the
ring and Savage immediately bails to the floor and the brawl starts
outside.
Sting's
attire is very weird looking here. He's wearing tights and a plain
black singlet top with nothing on his arms or hands. He looks like
he didn't get finished dressing. The Stinger Splash hits the
barricade and Savage rips the turnbuckle pad off. Back in and Sting
no sells a piledriver but the Stinger Splash hits the exposed buckle.
Randy drops the elbow but Hogan comes in to break up the pin for the
DQ.
Rating:
C-. This was more of a fight
instead of a match but it was still entertaining stuff. The style
fit Savage better at this point as he was a loose cannon and matches
meant nothing to him at all. The idea of having Sting beaten in the
middle of the ring is another dagger to his importance, but by this
point the moment is passed anyway.
Luger
comes out to make the save and stands tall with Sting to end the
show.
Overall
Rating: C+. This felt like a
modern day Raw. There's good stuff in there, but the extra hour of
filler stuff drags the good stuff down. The NWO falling apart is
interesting and the cruiserweight stuff at the beginning was more
than enough for good wrestling. Throw in Benoit getting a title shot
in a logical move and the show is good stuff. Again though, the
filler really drags this show down.
Remember to follow me on Twitter @kbreviews and check out my website at kbwrestlingreviews.com
Sting was always from Venice Beach...dunno why'd they make him from the OC instead.
ReplyDeleteThe powerbomb thing really shows just how dumb WCW was at the time. It would've been the simplest thing in the world to enforce, but instead it just made Nash look sympathetic when he pointed out that EVERYONE ELSE was powerbombing people left and right.
ReplyDelete(Also - why was Nash fined for powerbombing Giant in the first place? He tried to do a move on a guy in the middle of a match!)
Reminds me of how Bill Watts banned top rope moves, but then WCW had weeks of TV in the can that they couldn't re-shoot so JR said that the wrestlers were getting a few weeks to "get it out of their system." Jesse's rant when JR said that is up there with his best anti-Marella rants from the WWF.
"Ad for Monday Nitro on Playstation. If I remember correctly that game SUCKED."
ReplyDeleteI agree, worst video game EVER! the basic premise was kick punch than complicated button combos to do finishing moves when u kicked him enough.
Thank god world tour and Revenge were the ( . Y . ) for hte 64 at the same time.
Watching Bulldog & Neidhart basically die out there was always depressing. It's like the whole Montreal thing killed their talent as much as Bret's. The fact that they couldn't do the obvious thing and team them with the Hit Man only made things worse.
ReplyDeleteAnd like I said before, it's a brilliant bit of politics on DDP's part to "offer Benoit a Title Match" because suddenly he'll look even better in the ring (against an opponent that good), he'll get "online fan" cred for giving Benoit a push, look GREAT in an extended feud, looks brave and cool in a "mark" sense because he challenged a guy and gave him a chance, and then he'll just get the rub for winning. Didn't he segue the entire thing into a Raven feud anyways? HHH would be PROUD.
How is what DDP did a bad thing?
ReplyDeleteHe's a babyface coming up with a thing that made him look better? Isn't that their fucking job?
It was entertaining as hell, so more power to DDP's 'selfishness'
ReplyDeleteWell that's just it- it was brilliant overall. Makes the character look better, and the wrestler look better. Benoit even got a little bit of a rub just for hanging with the up & coming superstar. Of course, I don't think he ever beat DDP, but then, very few guys did.
ReplyDeleteI've heard other people talk about it and they use it to condemn DDP.
ReplyDelete"Much to my surprise, this is the first time Nitro has ever been in Texas if the announcers are to be believed."
ReplyDeleteI looked on historyofwwe.com and it's actually true. Nitro never came to Texas in 1995, 96, or 97. I don't know what percentage of house shows they have archived, but they only list one Texas show in all of 1997, This was the card:
WCW @ Houston, TX - Astroarena - October 18, 1997
The Ultimo Dragon defeated Juventud Guerrera via submission with the Dragon Sleeper
Alex Wright defeated Hector Garza
Chris Benoit & Steve McMichael (w/ Arn Anderson) defeated Scott Norton & Vincent
Eddie Guerrero defeated Dean Malenko
Rey Mysterio Jr. defeated Konnan; after the bout, Mysterio was attacked by the nWo
Lex Luger defeated Scott Hall via submission with the torture rack, despite interference from Curt Hennig
Harlem Heat defeated Public Enemy
They not only let Booker T go over in his hometown, but it was in the main event!