Monday
Nitro #161
Date:
November 2, 1998
Location: National Car Rental Center, Sunrise, Florida
Location: National Car Rental Center, Sunrise, Florida
Commentators:
Mike Tenay, Bobby Heenan, Tony Schiavone, Larry Zbyszko
Reviewed by Tommy Hall
Things
actually aren't that bad for WCW right now as we're heading into
World War 3 and then Starrcade. The main stories at the moment are
of course more Warrior vs. Hogan and Bret vs. Page for the US Title.
The execution of the stories last week wasn't horrible and the
episode was much easier to sit through than usual. Let's get to it.
We
open with a World War 3 ad, which I believe is the first mention of
the show.
Alex
Wright vs. Norman Smiley
Norman
gets caught in a wristlock and something resembling a northern lights
suplex for no cover. Smiley pops back up and gets one off a cross
body followed by a wind-up slam. Back up and Wright hits a nice
running forearm but stops to dance instead of following up. We get a
Tree of Woe from Alex so he can stomp at Norman's chest before
missing a charge into another corner. The announcers talk about
World War 3 as Norman hits a nice delayed butterfly suplex. A
legdrop gets two on Wright and Norman goes up, only to get
superplexed down. Wright adds a neckbreaker for the pin.
Rating:
D+. It's the same story we've
seen multiple times now and it's still going nowhere. At the end of
the day there are only about five European wrestlers on the WCW
roster at this point so beating them over and over again doesn't
really do much for Wright. Not a terrible match but it doesn't mean
anything.
Opening
sequence.
The
Nitro Girls dance with WCW Revenge boxes. That game rocked.
Disco
Inferno vs. Kaz Hayashi
Kaz
doesn't care for dancing and hammers away to start, only to have his
head taken off by a hard clothesline. Disco misses a charge in the
corner and gets taken outside by a nice headscissors followed by a
great looking dive. Back in and Kaz gets two off a high cross body,
only to walk into a suplex for two.
The
dancing elbow gets the same but a second attempt misses, allowing Kaz
to nail a dropkick followed by a moonsault for two. Sonny Onoo comes
down the aisle. Disco goes up top, only to get caught in a nice
superplex. Onoo distracts Kaz and gets chased, only to have Disco
catch him coming back in with the piledriver for the pin.
Rating:
C-. Far better match than I was
expecting here though I'm not sure why we're supposed to care about
Sonny Onoo. He's left Hayashi and is hanging out with Ernest Miller
at the moment, which doesn't exactly have me on the edge of my seat.
Hayashi's big dives looked good here though.
Gene
brings out the returning Booker T to a nice ovation. Booker is glad
to be back but needs to talk about Stevie Ray joining the NWO. He
loves his brother and respects his decision, but it's Stevie's
decision alone and Booker won't be joining. Booker calls out Scott
Hall for a match tonight, saying it was Hall that put him out of
action a few months ago. Actual continuity. I'm stunned.
Scott
Putski vs. Fit Finlay
Basic
stuff to start with Putski taking Finlay down with a hiptoss. Finlay
avoids an elbow and they head outside with the Irishman dropping
Scott with a clothesline. A knee drop keeps him in trouble and they
head back inside. Putski scores with some right hands and a
powerslam but he misses the Polish Hammer (double ax handle to the
chest). Finlay nails the rolling fireman's carry and the tombstone
is good for the pin on Putski.
Raven
whines about his losing streak when Kanyon comes in. He asks if
Raven is going to jump off a building but Raven sends him away.
We
get clips of Jericho beating “Goldberg” over the last few weeks.
Ernest
Miller, now with Sonny Onoo, comes out to make an open challenge to
anyone in the back.
Ernest
Miller vs. Scott Armstrong
Armstrong
jumps the Cat two seconds into Miller's five count and nails him with
a dropkick. Not that it matters as Miller whips him into the corner
and hits the Feliner for the pin at maybe 35 seconds.
Post
match Miller chokes even more until Steve Armstrong comes out for the
save, only to get kicked down as well.
Wrath
vs. Kendall Windham
I
don't picture this lasting long. Wrath takes him into the corner and
hammers away before no selling an elbow to the jaw. A side suplex
drops Kendall and Wrath no sells a neckbreaker. Wrath drills Kendall
with a shoulder block and the Meltdown is good for the pin.
Video
on Bret injuring DDP and Sting recently.
Here's
a limping Bret for a chat with Gene. He's had fun hurting people
lately but he's suffered a pulled groin and won't be able to fight
Luger tonight. Gene claims to have seen Bret moving around just fine
in the back but Bret cuts him off and calls this a blessing for
Luger. Lex himself comes out to the ring and calls Bret a liar
before clotheslining him out of the ring. Gene gets taken out as
well before Luger pulls Bret back in the ring for a Rack.
Tony
complains about having to see Flair humiliated last week. However,
Eric is making him show clips of Bash at the Beach 1994 with Hogan
beating Flair in a title vs. career match.
Here
are the Horsemen in the ring. Arn is tired of hearing Bischoff's
garbage and the NWO vs. Horsemen has to happen soon. Bischoff
wouldn't understand any of this because wrestling is a man's game.
Anderson wants to fight right now but first Ric has something to say.
Bischoff can play all the tapes he wants but Flair will get every
bit of the respect when he walks down that aisle. Malenko is in the
back getting ready for a match so Benoit and Mongo get in their own
jabs at Bischoff as well.
Hour
#2 begins.
Nitro
Girls video.
Nitro
Girls.
Nitro
Party winner.
Scott
Norton vs. Van Hammer
Norton
chops him into the corner and nails a splash before sending Van
Hammer to the floor with a splash. Back
in and Van Hammer grabs a quick Cobra Clutch slam, only to walk into
a Samoan drop and a powerbomb to give Norton the pin.
We
get a clip of JJ Dillon getting beaten up last week.
Bret
Hart gets his ribs taped up.
Back
in the arena with Saturn calling out Eddie Guerrero so
he can prove he can beat Eddie after last week.
Saturn
vs. Eddie Guerrero
Guerrero
comes out but gets stomped down into the corner. Saturn hits a face
first wheelbarrow slam as we have a referee in now. A quick
brainbuster drops Saturn but he's able to run up the ropes and suplex
Guerrero down for two. Saturn nails a top rope legdrop and a
falcon's arrow but the LWO runs in for a fast DQ.
Konnan
comes in to break up the fight but pulls Saturn back as well. He
says Eddie is just like Raven with the Flock and not worth it. Eddie
says he's Raza and calls out Konnan for hanging out with the Anglo
Wolfpack.
Scott
Steiner vs. Kenny Kaos
No
match as JJ comes out and says not so fast. Scott freaks out and
shoves him, sending JJ running to the back.
JJ
comes back out and says he has something to say.....and we
immediately go to a break. What the heck was that?
We
come back with a video on the Nitro Girls.
Psychosis
vs. Rey Mysterio Jr.
The
announcers talk about having to control Scott Steiner and
make no mention of what JJ was going to say.
They circle each other to start until Rey takes him down with a
wristlock. Psychosis comes back with a wrist drag until they slug it
out. Rey cartwheels onto Psychosis' shoulders and sends him outside
with a hurricanrana. Back in and Rey hammers on the horned
masked man in the corner but gets countered into a sitout powerbomb
to change control.
Rey
is sent outside and a BIG slingshot legdrop crushes him even more.
Back in and we hit the chinlock from Psychosis for a bit before he
throws Mysterio in the air for a big crash. Rey avoids a charge in
the corner and comes back with a springboard seated senton for two.
Psychosis nails a sitout front suplex for two of his own followed by
a top rope Frankensteiner for the same.
After
avoiding a dropkick, Rey ties Psychosis' legs into the ropes and
bounces off the top rope into a moonsault onto the elevated
Psychosis. Cool looking move. Psychosis tries to throw him into the
air again but gets pulled down into an X Factor. The LWO is in the
aisle for a distraction, allowing Psychosis to counter a middle rope
Frankensteiner into a powerbomb for the surprise pin.
Rating:
C+. This was your usual take
two cruiserweights and let them fly around for a few minutes. Both
guys were on their game out
there and the match worked very well. It's also nice to see the LWO
get a pin over a big name instead of just running in for a DQ like
they've been doing for the last few weeks.
Jericho
comes out to rant about Goldberg a bit. He respects the champion and
has a very successful football career of his own. Gene: “You do?”
Jericho: “Details later.” Jericho makes fun of Goldberg's
football career and wishes him the best in the future. Funny as
always.
Hour
#3 begins.
Raven
vs. Dean Malenko
The
announcers talk about Raven's losing streak as he allows Dean to hit
him in the face. You don't have to ask a Horsemen twice so Malenko
hammers him down into the corner. A low blow slows Dean down but he
drives Raven through the ropes to counter the Even Flow. Lodi comes
out to ringside but Mongo runs out to beat him with a belt and chase
him off. Back in and Raven hits the drop toehold into the chair for
a delayed two.
Raven
loads up the chair in the corner but Dean sends him into the corner
instead. Dean recovers but Raven doesn't seem interested in getting
up. Some suplexes put Raven down and a spinebuster breaks up another
Even Flow attempt. Kanyon comes out but Dean whips Raven into him
for two. Benoit comes out to chop Kanyon but the “injured” Bret
Hart comes out to beat up Benoit, allowing Kanyon to run in for the
DQ......in a Raven's Rules
match where a low blow and chair were legal just a few minutes
earlier.
Rating:
C-. The match wasn't bad and
Raven has some interesting stuff going on with the depression over
losing the Flock. Bret running in didn't help much but heels lying
in WCW is what you expect anymore. I'll give WCW credit for one
thing though: they managed to have four people run in during a six
minute match.
Bret
put Benoit in a hammerlock until Luger comes out for the save. Hart
immediately claims injured ribs but the Giant comes out to save Bret.
Giant says he'll fight Luger tonight.
TV
Title: Billy Kidman vs. Chris Jericho
Only
Jericho's title is on the line here so I'll only refer to Jericho as
the champion. Jericho takes
him into the corner to start and waves to the crowd before the trade
wristlocks. That goes nowhere so Kidman dropkicks him out to the
apron before cranking on the arm again. Jericho whips him out to the
floor and Kidman lands hard on his back. A suplex gets an Arrogant
two but Jericho is whipped hard into the corner and a clothesline
puts him down.
The
champion doesn't seem to mind as he throws Kidman into the air and
slams him face first onto the mat in a big crash. Jericho bends
Kidman's back across his knee before
nailing a running dropkick in the corner. Chris goes up but dives
onto Kidman's feet to give Billy control. A lifting powerbomb gets
two on Jericho but Chris counters a victory roll into a Liontamer
attempt.
That
doesn't work so Jericho catapults Kidman face first into the buckle.
Jericho's powerbomb is countered into a facebuster but the Shooting
Star mostly hits mat. Kidman comes right back with a rollup for two
before just pounding on Jericho's back. Chris bails to the floor but
gets caught with a plancha to put both guys down. Back in and Kidman
hits a high cross body as the time limit runs out at about eight and
a half minutes.
Rating:
B-. Another good match here as
you would expect from these two. Kidman is just awesome right now
and Jericho is Jericho. I'm not sure why only the TV Title was on
the line here but it let Kidman throw everything he had at Jericho
because he had nothing to lose. Fun stuff here but it's probably
just a one off match.
Here
are JJ Dillon and Kaos with something to say. JJ has fined Buff
$50,000 and Scott $100,000, which brings out an angry Scott. So how
can you tell if it affected him or not? Scott goes on a rant about
how no one can stop him and demands Kaos get out here right now.
Kaos comes down and Buff barely bothers with the sincerity nonsense
before the NWO lays him out. More WCW people looking stupid here.
Scott
Hall vs. Booker T.
This
is Booker's return after being out with a knee injury. Hall does the
survey and attacks Booker as he gets into the ring. Booker shrugs it
off and hits a quick forearm followed by a hot shot. A side kick
sends Hall to the floor but his eyes are clear this week. Back in
and Booker scores with a clothesline followed by a back elbow to the
jaw. Booker hits his hook kick out of a wristlock but walks into a
fall away slam.
They
head outside with Hall in control. He rams Booker back first into
the apron and they're quickly back inside. Booker's right hands
stagger Hall for a bit but he misses a dropkick to put Scott right
back in control. A sleeper goes nowhere so Hall clotheslines Booker
down, only to duck his head and get caught by an ax kick. Back up
and the side kick nails Hall again but he pulls the referee in the
way of the missile dropkick. The Outsider's Edge is countered but
another referee runs in to call for the DQ, giving Booker the win.
Rating:
C-. Not a horrible match and
it's nice to see Booker win, even if it's not by pin. The fact that
he came back and got a match with a big star like Hall instead of
dropping down the card is a really good sign for his future. The
match wasn't great or anything but it gives me hope for the future.
Giant
vs. Lex Luger
As
mentioned, Giant is substituting for an “injured” Bret Hart. We
open with a posedown before Giant takes him into the corner. Luger
avoids a chop and hammers away but Giant shoves him down and drops a
huge elbow. A Russian legsweep drops Luger, prompting Tony to talk
about what wrestlers think of Russian legsweeps. Is that something
wrestlers regularly talk about in the back?
Giant
stands on Luger's throat as the fans chant for Goldberg. Luger's
throat is snapped across the top rope as the match is in slow motion.
Giant shoves him around but Luger starts getting fired up. The
clotheslines stagger Giant and Luger slams him down. There's the
forearm but Bret runs in with a piece of barricade for the DQ.
Rating:
D. I didn't get into this one
as it felt like they were just filling in time. Based on everything
we've seen tonight it was obvious that Bret would be running in and
it didn't make for a good match to sit there waiting on the
interference. Luger didn't get to show off his power either which is
the best thing about his matches.
Post
match Bret puts Luger in the Sharpshooter but Goldberg comes out. He
spears Giant and loads up one on Bret but hits Luger instead to end
the show.
Overall
Rating: D+. There are some good
matches on here but the show felt like a filler episode. That's
likely going to be the case for the next few weeks as a battle royal
can only have so many stories during the buildup to the show. Hogan
and Warrior being gone was a nice break though and one that has been
needed for a long time.
Remember to check out my website at kbwrestlingreviews.com and pick up my new book of the History of Clash of the Champions from Amazon at:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00J58H5CY
As usual, the first 6 matches looked as if they were drawn out of a hat.
ReplyDeleteThe Raven losing streak angle was just horrible. He was one of the company's hottest heels at the time and should have been getting prepped for something bigger, but then he had to go and get a concussion from slamming into the glass ceiling so hard.
ReplyDeleteI really hated JJ Dillon.
ReplyDeleteNeeded more DQ finishes.
ReplyDeleteScott Steiner chasing off JJ Dillon in roid rage will NEVER not be funny to me!
ReplyDeleteThat's kind of what I liked about Nitro a lot of the time- they'd just kind of have MATCHES sometimes, and between the most odd pairings. Though having shows consisting of ONLY that is pretty bad, especially if so many are just squashes or with loser acts like Alex Wright.
ReplyDeletePsychosis getting a pin over Rey feels bizarre- he was basically used as Rey's own personal jobber for YEARS in WCW it seemed- he was a good enough worker to hang with any Cruiserweight, but since they already HAD a bunch of masked Mexicans, they didn't feel the need to give him a PUSH, and so there he was, jobbing.
ReplyDeleteMan, the wheels were just starting to come off at this point. We're getting into the era where they just kept hitting the reset button on things, and dropped any attempt at continuity. I point to the Wolfpack dissolving as the point where they just stopped even trying to do anything long term.
ReplyDeleteThe Horsemen got the big comeback with no blowoff to the nWo feud. Sting and Savage just disappear, Nash beats the one guy fans were still crazy for, Raven has character-destroying vignettes, Jericho leaves, etc.
God help Thomas Hall when we get to Crazy Flair, Vince Russo, the No Limit Soldiers, World Champion David Arquette, Jeff Jarrett treated as a main-eventer, and heel Goldberg.