Thunder
Date:
February 5, 1998
Location:
Beaumont Civic Center, Beaumont, Texas
Attendance:
4,900
Commentators:
Tony Schiavone, Bobby Heenan, Lee Marshall
Reviewed by Tommy Hall
Tonight
the main event is the kind of match that Thunder needs to focus on:
the US Title match between Benoit and Diamond Dallas Page with Benoit
FINALLY getting the recognition he deserves. Other than that we have
the NWO in shambles with Savage and Hogan on the verge of coming to
blows. Let's get to it.
We
open with a recap of the Steiners arguing on Monday.
Hugh
Morrus vs. La Parka
Morrus
slugs him down but gets caught by a dropkick followed by the LA PARKA
DANCE! The fans are into it but Morrus comes back with a hard
clothesline to take over. Hugh charges into a pair of boots in the
corner but La Parka runs into a powerslam for two. Morrus chops him
down in the corner and hits a quick splash but La Parka comes back
with a spin kick Not that it matters as Morrus elbows him down and
hits No Laughing Matter to complete the squash.
Post
match La Parka hits Morrus with the chair and does the dance on top
of it. So why squash him?
Video
on Goldberg's dominance.
Jim
Powers vs. Bill Goldberg
Goldberg
takes him down with something like an STO followed by a quickly
broken leg lock. Powers' knee lift is no sold and it's the spear and
Jackhammer for the win.
Juventud
Guerrera vs. Kidman
Juvy
takes over with a quick headscissors but an attempt at a second is
countered into a reverse sitout powerbomb. The fans yell at Lodi as
Kidman stops Juvy's speed with shots to the back. Kidman reverse
supelxes Guerrera onto the apron but Juvy comes back with a
springboard missile dropkick to put Kidman on the floor. A rana
takes Kidman off the apron and back to the floor but Juvy might have
hurt his knee in the process.
The
knee is fine enough to try a springboard legdrop but Juvy only hits
canvas. Kidman goes to the middle rope but gets caught by a
Frankensteiner for two. A nothern light suplex gets the same for
Guerrera and the Juvy Driver looks to set up the 450. Juvy has to
dropkick Lodi down instead though and Kidman hits a quick bulldog and
the Shooting Star for the pin.
Rating:
B-. That's probably high but
given how fast paced this was in the short amount of time it's
impossible to not be impressed. Kidman was great in the ring when he
had someone who could go move for move with him and Juvy certainly
fits that bill. For five minutes this was some high level stuff.
DDP
is ready for Benoit and knows the fans are too.
Silver
King/Villano IV/Villano V vs. Super Calo/Lizmark Jr./Chavo Guerrero
Jr.
We
start with Lizmark vs. Villano IV in a nice technical sequence until
Lizmark hits a springboard missile dropkick to take over. The
Villanos switch but Calo gets a blind tag and comes in with a kind of
top rope Hart Attack for two. Back to IV but Calo sends him straight
to the outside so it's off to Chavo vs. Silver King. Chavo lands on
his feet out of a monkey flip and dropkicks King down for two.
V
comes back in with a DDT on Chavo but Guerrero rolls outside,
allowing Calo to walk into a superkick from King. Everything breaks
down and Lizmark hits a great dive to take out IV. Chavo hits the
tornado DDT on Silver but Psychosis sneaks in and hits the guillotine
legdrop on Chavo to give King the pin.
Rating:
C. This was a slower version of
the six man lucha formula and with far less time to develop. That
being said, the dives were very good and Lizmark looked good out
there. It's also nice to see Chavo have his first feud start up as
he's too talented to be stuck in these random six man tags.
Video
on Savage having problems with the NWO over the last few weeks.
Dusty
comes to the announcers' desk and throws out Lee Marshall. He yells
at Tony and Bobby about how he'll speak the truth. Heenan
immediately starts sucking up to him.
Buff
Bagwell/Konnan vs. Steiner Brothers
The
NWO jumps the Brothers as they come in but get caught in belly to
belly suplexes for their efforts. After a breather on the floor we
start with Rick vs. Konnan but Konnan tags out before there's any
contact. Buff tags right back out and we have Konnan vs. Rick for
real this time. Rick pounds away before we can get another tag and a
powerslam gets two on Konnan. Buff breaks up the pin and Rick is in
trouble.
Bagwell
comes in legally for a DDT, drawing in Scott which allows the NWO to
double team Rick. Buff sends him to the floor for a beating from
Konnan and Vincent. I'll give Vincent this: he was able to keep a
job for a long time despite being nothing more than a low level
enforcer. Back in and Buff's splash hits Rick's knees and it's
finally the hot tag to Scott. House is cleaned but Vincent and
DiBiase get in a fight on the floor as Hall comes in, drawing a DQ
win for the Steiners.
Rating:
D+. Not much to see here but
that's becoming the norm for Steiner Brothers matches. At least Hall
is getting involved in the story again though, meaning we could get
the Steiners back to the title scene very soon. Seeing DiBiase and
Vincent brawl always brings a nostalgic smile to my face as well.
Post
match Scott Steiner doesn't realize the match is over and loads up
the Steiner Bulldog. Hall shoves Rick off the top into Scott and the
Steiners are about to come to blows. Scott Steiner never saw Hall
get involved and thinks Rick either screwed up or jumped him.
Raven
vs. Marty Jannetty
Lee
Marshall is back on commentary as Heenan explains that he was sucking
up to Dusty to protect Tony and Lee. Raven comes through the
entrance and sits down on the set instead of walking to the ring.
Now he gets up and looks at his video as he walks towards the ring.
Jannetty is tired of waiting and jumps Raven in the aisle with
forearms to the back and a superkick. Lodi gets a superkick as well,
pops back up so he can raise the sign and gets superkicked again.
They
get in the ring as Tony rants about Dusty. Marty hits a dropkick for
three straight two counts but Raven comes back with a clothesline to
take over. Jannetty is sent back to the floor and Raven drops an
elbow off the apron to keep Marty down. Raven throws Marty and a
chair into the ring for the bulldog onto said chair.
Raven
puts Marty in the Crippler Crossface while shouting BEWARE OF THE
DDT. He lets the hold go and drives a knee into Marty's face but a
Vader Bomb onto a chair only hits steel. Raven gets crotched on the
top rope and dropkicked out to the floor as Lodi is still out cold in
the aisle. Marty sends Raven into the steps but back inside the
Rocker Dropper is countered into the Even Flow for the pin.
Rating:
C. Marty has been solid looking
in his few matches in WCW which is all you can expect from him at
this point. Raven continues to be bizarre in the ring and Heenan
freaking out over the odd things that he does is always good for a
laugh. This match was a way to set up Benoit vs. Raven II on
Saturday Night which is a setup for a later match in its own right.
Video
on Giant being injured at Souled Out.
Disco
Inferno vs. Perry Saturn
These
guys fought an awful lot. The announcers ignore the match to talk
about Hogan paying Nash's fines in the hopes that Nash will have his
back at Super Brawl. They trade basic holds for control to start but
Saturn takes it to the mat, sending Disco running to the floor. Back
in and Disco takes over with an armbar before they seem to screw up a
running the ropes sequence.
We
take a break and come back with Saturn pounding on Disco in the
corner. Saturn whips him across the ring and Disco seems ready to
jump over Perry but there's no one there. Saturn pounds him down
some more and whips him into the corner again so Disco can try to
jump over him, only to get crotched. Inferno comes back with a knee
lift and swinging neckbreaker for two but he dives into a Tazplex for
two. A Falcon's Arrow puts Disco down but a guillotine legdrop
misses.
Disco
hits the Chartbuster (Stunner) but can't immediately cover. After
the referee counts both guys to eight, Disco puts an arm over but
Kidman puts Saturn's foot on the rope. Saturn superkicks him down
for two but Disco counters a belly to back superplex into a cross
body for two. Kidman shoves Saturn into Disco, knocking both guys
out. Saturn is on Disco's back though and puts on the Rings of
Saturn for the submission.
Rating:
C+. I'm liking this serious
Disco Inferno. He's like a lower level Terry Taylor: a guy who is
only remembered for his gimmick, instead of how good he was in the
ring. Saturn was in a fight here and it made for an entertaining
match to continue a good trend tonight. Now can we please move these
two apart for a very long time?
Post
match Saturn won't let go until Booker T makes the save.
Here's
Nick Patrick who says he's ready for his second chance. He wants the
fans to look at the tape from Starrcade and see that he did nothing
wrong. He'll be back on Nitro because JJ Dillon has no leg to stand
on.
Raven
rants about Benoit, Woman and TBS being too corporate.
Scott
Hall vs. Jim Neidhart
Hall
and Spicolli come out out for the Survey with WCW winning by a mile.
He complains about not having the title shot at the PPV because of
Piper and says that the Steiners can have a title shot on Nitro. As
for Spicolli, tonight he gets to face Neidhart instead.
Jim
Neidhart vs. Louie Spicolli
Neidhart
destroys Louie as you would expect and knocks him out to the floor.
Louie is catapulted back into the ring and Hall gets blasted in the
face as well. Anvil puts the nerve hold on Spicolli but Hall comes
in for the DQ. This barely lasted a minute.
Davey
Boy Smith runs out for the save but Mongo comes out to go after him.
Due to Mongo's high levels of suck, Smith easily knocks him back to
the floor.
US
Title: Chris Benoit vs. Diamond Dallas Page
We
take a break before the bell and come back with Tony saying the bell
has sounded but no one has moved from the corners. The arena is full
of smoke from Page's entrance. They circle each other and have a
very rough tieup before falling to the floor for another staredown.
Back in and the champion takes Benoit down with a tilt-a-whirl side
slam for no cover. A gutbuster puts Benoit down again and Page
stomps away. Back up and Benoit snaps on the Crossface but Page is
next to the ropes.
A
belly to belly gets two on Benoit but he bails away from a Diamond
Cutter attempt. They stare each other down for the third time before
going face to face and slugging it out. Benoit gets in some forearms
to the kidneys and Page is in trouble. Lee Marshall takes the time
to tell us that the Crossface is a submission hold while the Cutter
is a move to knock you out. Benoit hits a snap suplex for two and
stomps on Page in the corner, only to have Page come back with right
hands. Page hits a running tornado DDT out of nowhere to put both
guys down but here's the Flock to jump both guys for the double DQ.
Rating:
C. This is one of those matches
that had a big fight feel but they only had six minutes. The Raven
run in sets up another match down the road between these two, likely
at Super Brawl where they'll have more time. It was nice to see
Benoit treated as an equal with a big name and hopefully he gets to
do this kind of thing more often.
Raven
hits the Even Flow on Benoit but Page Diamond Cuts every other member
of the Flock. Raven bails as Benoit and Page stare each other down
to end the show.
Overall
Rating: C+. Thunder continues
its roll with a solid string of matches tonight. The lack of big
stars is very refreshing as the show can breathe for a minute and not
subject us to a bunch of two minute nothing matches to fill time.
Good show this week as Super Brawl is taking shape and should be a
well built show.
Remember to follow me on Twitter @kbreviews and check out my website at kbwrestlingreviews.com
Jim Powers was one of my favorite early 90's WWF jobbers. He and Russ Greenberg used work together on TV sometimes as a jobber tag team that actually looked kinda decent.
ReplyDeleteNeidhart, in WCW, was one of the worst workers on the roster. He completely sucked there.
ReplyDeleteBill DeMott in '98 seemed like a guy with unrealized potential. Not as "Hugh Morrus" mind you, but I think he could have benefited from being part of Raven's flock as a darker character. Dude had some charisma and some impressive athleticism for a bigger guy
ReplyDeleteHe was Bret Hart without heat.
ReplyDeleteHe pretty much sucked everywhere.
ReplyDeleteTotally forgot about Louie Spicolli in WCW. What what even the point of signing him?
ReplyDeleteMy guess is to stick it to Heyman. I've wondered that myself.
ReplyDelete"Who is the Neidhart of the team"
ReplyDeleteYes, that's right.
Yeah, Powers also looked like a million bucks out there. I can't believe Vince never pushed him based off of that physique- he was easily the most ripped Jobber in wrestling. Even in WCW he was roided to shreds, yet never got anything close to a push.
ReplyDeleteYeah, they didn't exactly need ANOTHER flunky, what with Vincent already being there (and The Disciple joining eventually). That bit makes no real sense to me, aside from maybe wanting Hall to have a buddy to bounce ideas off of without Syxx being there.
ReplyDeleteAt least he was decent enough in the WWF.
ReplyDeleteNever got why he got anything in wcw. He was nearly useless in the 97 Hart Foundation
ReplyDeleteAnvil was really good in the first incarnation of the Hart Foundation with Bret. He did a lot of good power moves, could move pretty quickly, and he and Bret had some cool double team stuff.
ReplyDeleteNot a thing wrong with being a tag guy at all. I just see a lot more success and potential in Jannetty than Neidhart.
ReplyDeleteYou don't remember that one time the Young Stallions won a match?
ReplyDeleteLIES. Baseless, horrible LIES.
ReplyDeleteOh no! Not a "Pretty" Paul Roma reference! My eyes!
ReplyDelete