Thunder
Date:
April 9, 1998
Location:
Leon County Civic Center, Tallahassee, Florida
Commentators:
Lee Marshall, Tony Schiavone, Bobby Heenan
Reviewed by Tommy Hall
We're
still rolling through NWO a-go-go here with Hogan, Savage and Nash in
a three way war for control of the team. Sting is still an
afterthought and the midcard guys are still stealing the show most of
the time. You can see them starting to be pulled down into the
downward spiral from here. Tonight's big draw is a major
announcement from Flair on his future in the sport. Let's get to it.
We
get the Savage parking lot video from Nitro.
Perry
Saturn vs. Tokyo Magnum
Saturn
takes him hard into the corner to start and slugs him down. A tiger
suplex sends Magnum flying and Saturn keeps pounding away. Saturn
kicks him in the head and puts on a quick Rings of Saturn, only to
let Tokyo go and put the hold on again for the win. Total squash.
Saturn
wants Goldberg so here's the undefeated one. The Flock pulls Saturn
to the floor so Goldberg beats up everyone else. Saturn and Hammer
are fighting up the ramp. Raven is in the crowd and doesn't seem to
care.
Prince
Iaukea vs. Yuji Nagata
Nagata
easily takes him down and pounds away with forearms. They trade some
quick belly to back suplexes and Nagata puts on a chinlock. Back up
and Prince goes after the leg as the announcers talk about how
awesome Nagata is. Nagata shrugs it off and kicks Prince's leg down
before working on the arm. Prince misses an enziguri and gets caught
in a cross armbreaker as the match continues to drag.
Prince
pops up with no sign of damage at all, dropkicking Yuji down for two.
Yuji sends him to the apron where Prince sells the leg for a bit
before coming back in with a Samoan Drop. The announcers aren't even
pretending to pay attention to the match anymore. Sonny Onoo
interferes so Prince dives on him as well, only to have to escape the
Nagata Lock. The northern lights suplex is enough for the pin by
Iaukea.
Rating:
D. Good grief these two are
boring. I have no idea what the company saw in either of them other
than maybe some of Nagata's Japan work. Iaukea has been around for
over a year now and is still the same uninteresting guy that he
always was, yet he's getting a title shot on PPV. Dull match.
Post
match Jericho comes out and declares Iaukea too fat to challenge for
the title. We could have spent the last six minutes listening to
Jericho jokes but we had to sit through the match instead. Lucky us.
We
get clips from weeks ago of Mortis trying to join the Flock but
losing his match to Diamond Dallas Page. Random but still more
interesting than what we've seen so far.
Here's
Raven with something to say. He talks about how Page was the hardest
working man in wrestling....and a fan pulls him out of the ring.
Ever the pro, Raven gets right back in the ring and talks, but his
mic doesn't work. He doesn't realize the mic isn't working but the
camera zooms in enough to hear him talking about wanting Page to get
Bischoff to hire him away from ECW. They finally swap out the mic
and Raven says Page isn't here to accept a challenge for Raven's US
Title. At Spring Stampede, Raven is going to kick out of the Diamond
Cutter and win the title with the Even Flow.
Buff
Bagwell hypes his match with Luger on Nitro. Somehow this takes
almost three minutes.
Konnan
vs. Chris Benoit
Benoit
shoves Konnan away to start before firing off chops. Konnan is
backed into the corner and chopped even more, only to have Vincent
interfere, earning him chops of his own. Konnan gets in some cheap
shots to take over but Benoit keeps chopping at Vincent. Finally
Konnan takes Benoit down but Chris chops away even more.
Vincent
interferes for the second time in a minute (how does the referee not
notice that?) and gets kicked in the head, followed by Benoit sending
Konnan to the floor. They chop it out on the floor before going back
inside for a failed Crossface attempt. Konnan hooks a quick DDT for
two but the 187 is countered into a German suplex for two. Benoit
slips around him and throws on the Crossface for the submission.
Rating:
C-. This was better than I
expected and it was very nice to see Benoit getting to look dominant.
One thing I've always wondered: why would the NWO keep paying
Vincent? Do they really think he's doing a good job? Come to think
of it, has he ever done anything right in the ten years he's been a
bodyguard? Anyway, nice little match here with Benoit getting to
show off.
Jim
Duggan vs. Curt Hennig
Well
at least it's not Neidhart. Duggan gets caught with a knee lift to
send him into the corner and there's the Hennig necksnap for a quick
two. Duggan fights up and pounds Hennig with the big lumbering right
hands followed by a few clotheslines. The Three Point Clothesline
connects but Rick Rude grabs Duggan's arm and cuffs him to the ropes
for a fast DQ.
The
beatdown ensues until Davey Boy and Neidhart make the save.
Lex
Luger vs. Glacier
Who
thought this was a good idea? They should be tied to a chair and
forced to watch this match over and over until dance craze sets in.
Luger easily runs him over before hiptossing Glacier down, setting up
the MUSCULAR POSE! Buff Bagwell is watching from the entrance,
likely trying to pick up tips on what not to do as a wrestler.
Glacier fires off kicks to the ribs and one to the head, sending
Luger down. More kicks set up a kick off the top, only to have Luger
punch him out of the air. The clotheslines set up the Rack for the
submission. More squashification.
Kidman
vs. Psychosis
This
should be good. Kidman takes over with some forearms to the back to
start but Psychosis slams the back of Kidman's head into the mat for
two. Psychosis sends him to the floor and hits a big dive over the
top rope which almost missed badly. Back in and Kidman hits the
sitout spinebuster but stops to scratch. A sunset flip gets two for
Psychosis but Kidman comes back with a bulldog while climbing the
corner.
Kidman
loads up a superplex and here's Chris Jericho of all people.
Psychosis shoves Kidman off and hits a spinwheel kick but there's no
referee. A victory roll still gets no count for Psychosis as Jericho
still has the referee. Psychosis loads up the guillotine legdrop but
here's La Parka with a weak chair shot to knock him to the mat.
Kidman hits the Seven Year Itch for the pin.
Rating:
C-. This didn't have time to go
anywhere and it could give Russo a run for his money with the
overbooking, but Psychosis continues to look good. It's nice to see
him get a story, even one as minor as the Flock fighting for Lodi's
honor. Nice little match here but the fans didn't care.
After
a break Jericho is still in the ring with a bathroom scale. Jericho
refuses to answer Schivaone's questions until Tony refers to him as
the Man of 1004 Holds. He tells Doug Dillinger (head of WCW
security) to keep the fans away from him as he proves that Prince
Mackamackey is over the 225lb Cruiserweight limit. Iaukea comes out
and weighs 218, so Jericho claims improper calibration. Jericho
blasts him in the head with the scale and puts him in the Liontamer.
Jericho continues to be the most entertaining thing in WCW.
Scott
Steiner vs. Disco Inferno
Steiner
dominates to start and shoves Disco around with ease. Disco is
choked against the ropes and an elbow drop gets two. Disco tries a
comeback with a neckbreaker but Steiner suplexes him down faster than
I can finish saying Disco is making a comeback. The Recliner ends
this quick.
TV
Title: Booker T. vs. Chris Jericho
Booker
hits a quick clothesline after a few lockups go nowhere at all. A
second clothesline gets two and Booker peppers him with forearms
before clotheslining Jericho to the floor. Jericho tries to bail but
gets pulled back in by the ponytail. Now that's just not nice. Back
in and Jericho scores with a quick hot shot before dropping Booker
crotch first on the top.
The
springboard dropkick puts Booker down and a suplex gets two via the
arrogant cover. The Lionsault misses and Booker hits that snap
spinebuster of his to get a breather. Booker hits the ax and side
kicks but the missile dropkick takes out the referee. The guys fight
a bit more until the referee gets up and DQ's Jericho for apparently
pulling him in front of the dropkick.
Rating:
C. This didn't have enough time
to go anywhere but it's nice to see Jericho doing something other
than just cruiserweight stuff. Also, how nice is it to see a
champion vs. champion match where neither guy gets pinned? It's like
they're trying to keep the champions looking strong instead of having
them lose half their matches.
Here's
Tony for the announcement from Flair....but Flair isn't here due to
“bad weather”, which translates to he's watching his son wrestle
in an amateur tournament. Instead here are Eric Bischoff and Scott
Steiner to run Flair down, saying that it was Hogan who built WCW.
Bischoff gives us a preview of Hogan's new Three Ninjas movie which
is as stupid looking as you would imagine it to be.
Steiner
and Bischoff run Flair down so much that Arn Anderson comes out to
defend his friend. Flair may not be a Hollywood actor or have arms
like Scott Steiner, but he left part of himself in every arena around
the country and he is wrestling. Bischoff calls Arn fat so here's
Lex Luger to defend Flair as well. Lex and Scott get into a brawl
and Rick Steiner comes out to suplex Bischoff.
Rick
Steiner vs. Kevin Nash
Nash
has something to say before the match. He's seen Hogan running his
mouth out here about how things are all under control. Kevin finds
it interesting that Hogan thinks everything is great when it's going
his way but loses his cool when he loses control. He had Sting
beaten on Monday but Hogan had to stick his nose into Nash's
business. At Spring Stampede, they might be in trouble because Piper
is the best switch hitter in the business. He'll take care of Giant
as well.
Rick
pounds away to start and takes Nash down to the ground for more right
hands. The NWO flunkies distract Rick (it's not that hard of a job)
and Nash takes over with a shot to the back of the head. There's the
foot choke in the corner but Nash charges into a boot to the jaw. A
clothesline sets up the Steiner Bulldog but Konnan comes in for the
DQ. Nothing match, as expected.
Post
match the NWO beats Rick down and the Giant makes the save to end the
show.
Overall
Rating: C+. As is almost always
the case with WCW, when the younger guys get to showcase themselves,
the shows are more entertaining. The stuff at the end with Nash and
Bischoff didn't do anything for either myself or the live crowd, but
they were WAY into the Jericho vs. Booker match. The signs are on
the wall for what the company should have done, but of course that
wasn't to be.
Remember to check out my website at kbwrestlingreviews.com and head over to my Amazon author page with wrestling books for just $4 at:
http://www.amazon.com/Thomas-Hall/e/B00E6282W6
WCW logic:
ReplyDeleteHave Nash need interference to avoid clean loss to Rick Steiner.
Have Sting need interference to avoid clean loss to Nash.