These will be posted on Saturday from now on.
Thunder
Date:
January 29, 1998
Location:
Mid-South Coliseum, Memphis, Tennessee
Commentators:
Tony Schiavone, Lee Marshall, Bobby Heenan
Reviewed by Tommy Hall
Back
to Thursday nights here with the fourth episode of the series. The
main story continues to be the destruction of the NWO as Nitro ended
with Hall and Hogan standing around while Sting beat up Savage. The
main event tonight is the Steiners challenging for the tag titles in
a match we haven't seen before. That shouldn't make sense so let's
get to it.
The
intro has changed to a thunderstorm theme which doesn't work as well.
The
set is now a traditional one with a regular entrance and the Thunder
logo on top of it.
US
Title: Diamond Dallas Page vs. Sick Boy
Page
takes it to the mat but gets caught in an armbar. Sick Boy bails to
the floor and the stalling begins. Back in and Page pulls him down
but Sick Boy nips up. The discus lariat misses so Page goes to a
tilt-a-whirl side slam for no cover. Sick Boy goes back to the apron
for a springboard missile dropkick to take over. A spinning belly to
belly suplex gets two on Page but Sick Boy misses a kick to the ribs.
The discus lariat looks to set up the Diamond Cutter but Sick Boy
takes out the knee. Not that it matters much as Page throws him up
for a flapjack but pulls him down into the Cutter for the pin.
Rating:
C+. This was much better than I
expected which is what I've said for both Sick Boy matches I've seen.
He looks good in the ring and can fly through the air for a guy of
his size. The Diamond Cutter to end it looked great as Sick Boy's
head bounced off the mat to knock him out cold.
The
Flock decides not to jump Page.
Here's
JJ Dillon with an announcement: Nash is being fined $50,000 for his
powerbomb on Monday and if he does it again, the fines will grow.
Meng
vs. Jim Duggan
Duggan
wins a quick slugout and takes it to the floor where he whips Meng
into the steps and beats on him with Jimmy Hart's jacket. Back
inside and Meng does what he does best: hit Duggan in the head. It
has little effect on the thickheaded Duggan so Meng keeps pounding
away. They slug it out until Duggan misses a charge into the corner,
allowing Meng to put on a nerve hold. Back up and a double
clothesline puts both guys down, allowing Hart to get up on the apron
with the 2x4. Duggan intercepts the throw and cracks it over Meng's
back but chases after Hart instead. Back in and the Tongan Death
Grip ends Jim.
Rating:
C. This was far better than I
was expecting it to be with Duggan looking much better than I would
have expected him to. Meng continues to get small pushes every now
and then, which is likely to build him up for a feeding to a bigger
name later on. Both guys were working hard here and it was better
than it should have been.
Raven
vs. Marty Jannetty
Anything
goes again and Marty's music still doesn't fit him at all. Jannetty
takes him into the corner to start and dropkicks Raven to the
outside. He pounds on Raven on the floor but gets sent hard into the
post to change momentum. Raven throws in a chair for the drop
toehold and Marty is in big trouble. Marty hits a quick bulldog and
slams Raven's head into the mat a few times for two but Raven is
smiling. A superkick puts Raven down and the top rope fist gets two,
but Raven dropkicks the chair into Marty's face to knock him silly.
The Evenflow DDT is good for the pin for Raven.
Rating:
C-. Another decent match here
with Marty looking decent in defeat. Raven smiling while he's in
pain is still very creepy and fits his character perfectly. The
Raven's Rules all the time stuff isn't a problem because the weapons
and violence aren't the focus of the matches. That DDT looked great
too.
Jerry
Lee Lewis is here.
Bill
Goldberg vs. Yuji Nagata
The
pops are getting louder and louder. Nagata goes straight at him but
Goldberg chokes him down. Goldberg takes him down with a quick
leglock but Nagata makes the ropes. Yuji's slam is countered into a
spinning neckbreaker and it's the spear and Jackhammer for another
fast pin.
Goldberg
vs. Meng is announced for Saturday Night. There's the bigger name
Meng was being set up for.
We
recap Savage's rant against Hogan, Bischoff and the rest of the NWO
from Nitro.
Here's
Hall for the survey with the NWO taking the crowd tonight. Hall
wants to know when he gets his title shot from World War III but now
it's time to bring out Dusty Rhodes. Dusty talks about corporate
America tearing down what he built in 1991 and taking away the
tradition of professional wrestling. He lived on the 12th
floor and got tired of dealing with the suits every day. Now he's
tired of carrying Tony Schiavone for the last four years.
Then
Dusty started hearing from Eric Bischoff and realized that the NWO is
why you're here tonight. Dusty says the NWO is the future and
they've gotten Dusty the biggest checks of his career. This time,
WCW isn't going to make any comeback with anybody because the NWO is
going to crush them all. “You hear that marks on the internet?”
Also, the powerbomb should be reinstated because a 500lb man
shouldn't be in the ring if he can't protect himself. Dusty Rhodes
ladies and gentlemen.
Scott
Hall vs. Disco Inferno
Hall
slaps Disco around to start and does the Giant mocking bit. A quick
attempt at the Outsider's Edge is countered and Disco hits the
Chartbuster out of nowhere. Dusty puts the foot on the ropes and
brings Hall out to the floor for a chat. Back in and Hall pounds
away on Disco before hitting the fallaway slam and the Edge for the
pin.
Here's
Nick Patrick for the first time since he was suspended. Patrick
insists that the count at Starrcade was a normal count and that Bret
should be suspended, not him. He's going to have his lawyers look
into this and wants to referee the rematch to prove how awesome he
is.
TV
Title: Booker T vs. Perry Saturn
Booker
is defending and is in blue Harlem Heat attire instead of his usual
singles tights. Saturn pounds him down in the corner to start but
Booker comes back with right hands of his own. Apparently Saturn is
getting this show because Martel has a concussion. A powerslam gets
two for the champion and they head to the outside with Saturn being
sent into the barricade. Back inside and Saturn gets two off a
brainbuster but crotches himself on the middle rope. Booker hits the
side kick and ax kick but has to fight off the Flock. Martel comes
out to help but Booker sends Saturn into him and rolls Saturn up to
retain.
Rating:
C. This was your usual fast
paced match between the two as the three way feud is starting to
develop. Booker is nailing the singles push now and has transitioned
from the tag team ranks with ease. I'm also surprised at how well
Martel has fit into this feud as I didn't remember him being anything
at all in his return push.
We
see the end of Nitro with Hall and Hogan turning their backs on
Savage.
Eddie
Guerrero/Chris Jericho vs. Dean Malenko/Chris Benoit
This
should be awesome. Jericho and Malenko get things going but the fans
are all over Eddie. Dean quickly takes him down to start but it's
off to Eddie to send Dean into the corner. A rollup gets two for
Eddie but he walks into a powerslam for two. Off to Benoit vs.
Jericho with Benoit hitting a hard clothesline to take over. Jericho
comes right back with a delayed vertical suplex and some chops in the
corner. You know Benoit is cool with that and takes over with chops
of his own.
Jericho
comes right back with a German suplex and the Lionsault for two
before Guerrero comes back in. Benoit tries the Crossface but
Jericho makes the save as everything breaks down. Dean throws
Guerrero into a northern lights suplex but Jericho breaks up the
Cloverleaf attempt. Jericho hits a missile dropkick on Dean but
Malenko reverses the Liontamer into a rollup for two. Dean hooks a
superplex on Jericho and Benoit adds the Swan Dive. Eddie tries a
Frog Splash on Malenko but only hits feet, allowing Benoit to hook
the Crossface on Jericho for the win.
Rating:
B. This was a six and a half
minute match with the action of a match twice that long. These guys
were arguably the most valuable guys in WCW for a long time as you
could just throw them out there in any combination and get a good
match. Benoit and Malenko looked very good together as a team.
Post
match Benoit says his chapter with Raven has come to an end. Tenay
asks Benoit why he's never had a title shot but Benoit says he
doesn't need one. DDP pops up in the crowd (Marshall: “is that
Scott Hall?”) and says that the promoters don't see Benoit as a
main eventer. They didn't see Page as a main eventer either, but
Page is interested in the idea. If Benoit wants a shot at the US
Title, all he has to do is ask. Benoit agrees to the title match a
week from tonight.
Tag
Titles: Steiner Brothers vs. Kevin Nash/Konnan
Konnan
gets to defend the belts because of Wolfpack Rules. Rick starts off
with Konnan with Steiner pounding him down into the mat and hooking
an STF of all things. Konnan makes the rope but gets caught in a
release German suplex to send him over to Nash. The Steiners knock
Nash to the floor and do their signature pose.
They
head back inside and Nash pounds on Rick in the corner with the knee
lifts and elbows to the head. Konnan comes in for a stump puller of
all things but Scott breaks it up. Kevin gets the tag and gets
caught by a Steiner Line but here's Buff Bagwell to challenge Scott
to a posedown. Back in the ring, Nash hits Rick with the belt for a
DQ.
Rating:
D. This didn't have time to go
anywhere and was mainly storyline stuff anyway. The Scott vs. Buff
posedown stuff is fine as a catalyst for the Steiner Brothers' split
which had to happen at some point. I'm not wild on the Wolfpack
Rules idea as those usually only work when there are two members of a
team, but the NWO could pretty much make up whatever rules they
wanted around this time.
Post
match Nash powerbombs the referee and is taken away by security.
Nash: “Make sure Jack Ruby isn't out there. That's how Oswald got
it.”
Overall
Rating: C+. This was the same
formula as last week and it still works quite well. They're using
Thunder to focus on the midcard and it offers a nice contrast to the
storyline heavy Nitro. The lack of Hogan and Sting allows the show
to build on other stories which makes for a more interesting show.
Good stuff again this week.
Remember to follow me on Twitter @kbreviews and check out my website at kbwrestlingreviews.com
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