Thunder
Date:
December 3, 1998
Location:
Mid-South Coliseum, Memphis, Tennessee
Commentators:
Mike Tenay, Bobby Heenan, Tony Schiavone, Lee Marshall
Reviewed by Tommy Hall
It's
the last month of 1998 and things are starting to pick up for
Starrcade. The main story coming out of Nitro is kind of hard to pin
down. Hall seems to be going to war against the NWO while Goldberg
vs. Nash is just kind of happening in the background despite being
allegedly the biggest match of the year. Let's get to it.
Tony
recaps some of the NWO stuff from Nitro and calls Dusty a great man
for swerving Bischoff. Flair vs. Easy E is set for Starrcade.
Since
Hogan has “officially retired”, we get a retrospective on his WCW
career. Looking back....Hogan wasn't all that good around this time.
We
see Scott Steiner challenging Scott Hall from Nitro.
Here's
Scott Steiner with something to say. Steiner talks about going to
Graceland and says he's getting more women than Elvis could ever
dream of now that he's the head of the NWO. After insulting the
fans, Steiner brags about Hogan passing the torch because they both
have big arms. This brings him to Scott Hall because Steiner wants
to hurt him. I'm assuming that's the main event tonight.
Eddie
Guerrero vs. Ciclope
Eddie
takes out the knee to start and nails the slingshot hilo before
sitting on the ropes to yell at the fans. Ciclope slides through the
legs to the floor before coming back in with a mostly missing missile
dropkick for two. Not that it matters as Eddie hits the
brainbuster....and asks for the match to be stopped. The bell rings
and we're done with I think a no contest.
The
LWO comes out and Eddie offers Ciclope a shirt, giving us a new
member of the LWO.
We
see Konnan winning the TV Title on Monday.
We
see Page losing the US Title back to Bret Hart.
Renegade
vs. Giant
Giant
shrugs him off, shrugs him off again and then chokeslams Renegade off
the top for the pin in a minute.
Post
match Giant talks about beating up two imposters in one week. This
brings DDP out through the crowd with a chair to lay out Giant. If
the Giant Scum wants some, come get some. I guess that's another
Starrcade match.
Mike
Enos vs. Chavo Guerrero Jr.
Chavo
has an early chat with Pepe before dodging a charging Enos and
nailing him with a dropkick. A gorilla press goes as badly as the
charge and Chavo dropkicks Enos to the floor, followed by a baseball
slide and plancha. Enos shrugs it off and whips him into the
barricade though before yelling at a fan about Goldberg. Back in and
Mike works over the arm for a bit but gets caught by yet another
dropkick.
Guerrero
takes him to top for a hurricanrana, only to have Enos counter into a
SWEET top rope powerbomb. That's not enough for a cover though so
Enos takes him up top again for a top rope fall away slam as Chavo is
in big trouble. Since Mike isn't that bright though, he picks Chavo
up at two. Enos goes over and grabs Pepe for no apparent reason and
lays him on the mat. He sets up a powerbomb onto the horse but
Guerrero rolls him up for the pin out of nowhere.
Rating:
C. Well this was a surprise.
Enos was a good choice for a power guy that throws small people all
over the place and then gets pinned because he's not all that bright.
Chavo actually looked like the weaker worker in the match which
isn't something you often have to say about him.
Konnan
music video.
Rey
Mysterio Jr. vs. Villano V
Rey
is sent into the corner to start but avoids a charge so Villano slaps
him in the mask. A dropkick
sends Villano out to the floor, setting up a great looking flip dive
to take him down again. It
works so well that Rey tries another one, only to be slammed down
onto the concrete. Back in and Villano hammers away with a knee to
the head and a backbreaker before slapping him in the face again.
Rey reverses a whip into the
corner but charges into the post. Villano's
top rope splash misses and
it's the Bronco Buster into the West Coast Pop for the pin for Rey.
Rating:
C. Take Rey and any other high
flier and let them fly around the ring for awhile. It's one of those
ideas that is always going to get a nice reaction and this one worked
almost as well as anything else. It's nice to have a match without
the LWO stuff getting in the way too.
Post
match Eddie comes out and says he's tired of Rey wanting the title.
It's Juvy that should be going after the Cruiserweight Title and
that's what the LWO is going to do, but Tony says it's Rey vs. Juvy
next week for a shot at Starrcade. Eddie freaks out of course. I
still have no idea what the idea of this story is supposed to be.
Eddie forces Rey into the group he formed to keep Eric from
controlling them and now Eric (or WCW in general) is giving Rey what
Eddie doesn't want. What does Eddie get out of keeping Rey on the
team here?
We
look at the contract signing from Nitro.
Chip
Minton vs. Wrath
Minton
was an Olympic bobsledder and wrestled a bit as well. Wrath easily
throws him into the corner and stomps away before throwing Minton out
to the floor. A suplex onto
the concrete keeps Chip in trouble and a slingshot clothesline gets
two. Minton comes back with a weak looking sunset flip for two and
that's about the extent of his offense. Wrath hammers away in the
corner even more and the Meltdown (BIG pop) is good for the pin.
Rating:
D. This was WAY longer than it
needed to be and most of it was spent talking about Minton's Olympic
background (nothing wrong with that) and Wrath bouncing back from his
loss. The whole appeal of Wrath was the undefeated streak and that
just went away a few days ago. There isn't much left to him now and
going back to the squashes isn't going to do much good.
We
recap the Flair/Bischoff/Malenko stuff from Nitro.
Chris
Benoit/Steve McMichael vs. Raven/Kanyon
Before
the match Raven sits in the corner while Kanyon grabs a mic. Kanyon
yells at him for putting his head through a window tonight and talks
about Raven's mother. The fans actually get tricked as Kanyon asks
who is NOT better than Kanyon before we go to Arn Anderson leading
the Horsemen to the ring. Benoit runs Kanyon over to start but gets
caught in a sweet rollup for twp. They trade wristlocks until Kanyon
takes him down and chokes away out of anger at Raven.
Kanyon
stops to call the depressed Raven an idiot, allowing Mongo to run him
over out of a three point stance. Steve misses a boot in the corner
though and gets caught in something like a neckbreaker. The Horsemen
take over with Benoit chopping the skin off Kanyon's chest before
stomping him down for good measure. Raven doesn't do much so Benoit
goes over to yell at him before Kanyon gets double teamed some more.
A
backbreaker gets two for Chris but he charges into a boot in the
corner. Not that it really matters as he takes Kanyon down with a
dragon screw leg whip, only to miss the Swan Dive. Raven still won't
tag so Kanyon hits a powerbomb into a faceplant for two as Raven
walks away after being tagged. That's a countout as Benoit puts
Kanyon in the Crossface.
Rating:
C+. The idea here worked pretty
well with Raven's downward spiral into depression continues with him
walking away from his only friend. Other than that the Benoit stuff
was very good, but Mongo just wasn't working out there for the most
part. Thankfully he won't be around much anymore.
We
see Konnan winning the title again for some reason.
TV
Title: Konnan vs. Disco Inferno
Before
Konnan comes out, Disco says tha the and Konnan should hook up to
make a music video of their own. Konnan comes out and does his
catchphrases in retaliation. Feeling out process to start with
neither guy being able to get the advantage. A fsuplex gets two for
Konnan and the seated dropkick sets up a pull of the champion's
pants.
Disco
gets back up and hammers away before getting knocked out of the air.
A DDT sends Disco to the floor but he snaps Konnan's throat across
the top rope. Back in and the piledriver is easily countered with a
backdrop, setting up the 1-8-7 for two on Disco. Konnan blocks the
Chartbuster and an X-Factor sets up the Tequila Sunrise to retain the
title.
Rating:
D+. The ending was never in
doubt but Disco was his
usual decent self. Konnan was there for little more than to give the
Wolfpack some popularity but he was only ok at best in the ring. The
match wasn't terrible but it was nothing I'm going to remember in
about five minutes.
Scott
Steiner vs. Scott Hall
The
NWO Referee is calling this one. Hall jumps Steiner during the
entrances to send him out to the floor. Back in and Hall stays on
offense but the NWO Referee grabs the leg to give Steiner control. A
takedown gives Steiner a few fast near falls before he just hammers
away on Hall in the corner. Hall takes a pumphandle
slam for two and the NWO
Referee keeps up with the fast counts.
Steiner
plants him with a tiger bomb for two with his foot on Hall's chest
before throwing on a sleeper. As expected Hall fights out of it and
grabs a sleeper of his own but gets countered into a belly to back
suplex. Both guys are down
but it's Hall up first and hammering away. The top rope bulldog gets
a very slow two and it's Outsider's Edge time. Not that it matters
though as the referee makes the save and takes the Edge in Steiner's
place. Steiner pops up and lays Hall out before putting on the
Recliner as we go off the air with no winner.
Rating:
D. This was more of a “we're
out of time so here's something we promised without either guy having
to do a televised job” thing than a main event. You knew something
was up as soon as you saw the NWO Referee out there so it wasn't like
the ending came as a big shock or anything.
Overall
Rating: C-. This was one of the
decent episodes but it means next week is probably going to be
horrible. The tag match was actually solid as they let the good
workers run the match and just had Mongo in there to do basic power
stuff and then leave. Not much to see here but it's a pretty weak
time for WCW.
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