Thunder
Date: July 8, 1999
Location: Jefferson
County Civic Center, Birmingham, Alabama
Commentators: Mike
Tenay, Larry Zbyszko
Reviewed by Tommy Hall
It's the last show
before Bash at the Beach and things have gone from boring to
completely insane. Thankfully this is one of the live shows which
are usually far better, especially than next week's episode where it
will have been taped before the PPV, meaning they can't spoil
anything. Let's get to it.
The announcers recap
Sunday's main event tag match.
Clips of the main event
stuff from Monday which is still disturbing.
Here's Big Kev with
something to say. He's been looking at the video from Nitro and is
now sure that Sting was in on it. Therefore, using his power as
champ, he's making Sunday's tag match a title match, meaning anyone,
including Sting, can pin him for the title. Why they don't just make
it a four way is beyond me but seeing how much they can screw this up
should be interesting.
Dean Malenko comes into
the Oval Office and yells at Flair for breaking up their PPV match
due to a bad back. Flair says it's from carrying this company for
the last twelve years. Anderson and Malenko bicker for a bit before
Flair says that Dean may be the Man of 1000 Holds, but he's not Ric
Flair. Point to the Nature Boy.
Clip from Nitro of
Eddie's hunt for a thief.
Lenny Lane vs. Eddie
Guerrero
Lodi's
sign: “If you can read this, you ARE NOT from Alabama.” They
lock up to start and Lenny bails to the corner for a hug. Back in
and Eddie fires off punches and uppercuts followed by a pair of
dropkicks. Eddie throws him into the corner but gets backdropped to
the apron, kicking the referee down in the process. With the referee
down, the luchadors Eddie forced to unmask on Monday come out to beat
Eddie down, giving Lenny the fluke pin.
Rating:
D+.
Thank goodness this is for a story, but you can see that Guerrero
isn't going to get any higher up the card than being the big star who
is stuck in the Cruiserweight division. The story is interesting and
ties back into the LWO stuff (in a way), but Eddie should be higher
up the card than he is and that's just not happening.
Jimmy Hart is in the
back and invites La Parka and Silver King to join the Hardcore
Invitational on Sunday.
Disco is in the ring
with Gene and talks about his match on Sunday with Ernest Miller.
Why they're fighting isn't made clear but Disco makes Mr. Miyagi and
Tae-Bo jokes before promising a Brooklyn, New York beating.
Van Hammer vs. Al
Green
They fight into the
corner to start until Green grabs a slap to take over. Hammer throws
him across the ring in response and clotheslines him out to the
floor. That goes nowhere so Hammer kicks him in the face for two.
The Alabama Slam and cobra clutch slam is good for the pin on Green.
This was nothing.
Rick Steiner runs in
and beats Hammer down post match.
Jimmy Hart tries to get
Horace into the junkyard as well.
We get the Bret video
from Monday.
Most of Bret's promo
from Monday.
Brian Knobbs vs. Fit
Finlay
Finlay jumps him to
start but is quickly sent to the floor and into the steps. Jimmy
Hart (he's a busy guy tonight) gets in a few cheap shots of his own
but Finlay is able to reverse a whip into the barricade. He sends
Brian into the post and goes for a table, drawing in Hugh Morrus and
Jerry Flynn for the DQ.
Regal, La Parka, Silver
King, Horace and Dave Taylor all come out to brawl. Remember people,
this is to preview a match in a junkyard. Like, a real junkyard.
Gene is in the ring
with Flair and all of his associates. Piper talks about Peter
McNeley (a guy Mike Tyson knocked out in 30 seconds) making Bagwell
look good this coming Sunday. Buff asked for the match (no he
didn't) because Piper would kill him in a wrestling match. Flair
talks about his match with Dean being canceled (despite it never
being announced on the main shows) so instead, Dean gets a US Title
shot. That's quite the punishment. If Dean loses on Sunday, Gene
gets a night with Asya. Ok then.
Rap Is Crap video.
This Week in WCW
Motorsports, now with Ricky Rachman.
Disco Inferno vs.
Kidman
Kidman scores with a
quick dropkick and clothesline. His Fameasser is countered though
and Disco nails a clothesline of his own. A wristlock goes nowhere
so they head outside as we hear that Regal is now in the junkyard
match. That match sounds like it could be so bad that it's amazing.
Kidman scores with a
dive but Disco grabs an atomic drop back inside, only to charge into
a boot. You know you would think a match with these two would be a
bit more entertaining. Kidman hits a high cross body and the Low
Down for two. Cue Sonny and the Cat as Kidman gets two off a top
rope bulldog. Not that it matters as Cat kicks Kidman with the red
shoe for the disqualification.
Rating:
D+.
Every time they get close to giving me something to care about, we
get something like Sonny Onoo to screw it up. What happened to
Kidman anyway? Oh that's right: this company is more about screaming
HOOTY HOO than having Rey and Kidman tear the house down every night.
Also, can we get a match to break five minutes tonight?
Disco lays out Cat post
match.
The Triad comes out and
says they'll win on Sunday because Benoit and Saturn have never come
close to beating them.
Chris Benoit vs.
Kanyon
This
HAS to be better. Kanyon goes after him in the corner but gets taken
down with chops. Benoit runs him over again but Kanyon rakes him in
the eyes. That's fine with Benoit who snaps off a suplex to send
Kanyon rolling out to the floor. We get a chase around the ring with
Kanyon getting in first and stomping on the Canadian, only to eat
more chops as a result.
They head outside again
but WAIT A MINUTE. Jimmy Hart has gotten Mikey Whipwreck into the
junkyard match. We're still not done with anything but the match as
Tenay talks about Team Madness going insane in the back because they
can't be on camera. Kanyon suplexes Benoit on the floor and takes
him back inside, only for Benoit to fire off more chops.
Back
up and Kanyon headbutts him down, setting up a middle rope Fameasser
for two. We hit the chinlock for a bit before Benoit fights up, only
to have his powerbomb countered into a sitout version from Kanyon for
another near fall. Kanyon heads up top, only to get caught in a
superplex to put both guys down. Back up and Benoit starts rolling
Germans, only to get drilled in the face with an elbow.
Cue Bigelow with a
title belt but Benoit whips Kanyon into the big guy to knock him off
the apron. Chris loads up the Swan Dive but gets shoved off by Bam
Bam. Now Saturn comes out to even things up but gets whipped into
the barricade. Benoit hooks the Crossface but has to avoid Bigelow's
flying headbutt. A dropkick puts the big man outside again and the
Crossface makes Kanyon tap.
Rating:
B-.
The interference was a bit much but they let two talented guys have a
good match for about ten minutes. It's not the best match in the
world or anything but after the hour and a half that I had to sit
through put this just a step below Steamboat vs. Flair. Kanyon
hasn't been busting out much new stuff lately but he's still
different enough to stand out in the sea of brawlers in WCW.
Page comes out and the
Triad lays out Benoit and Saturn to make sure they don't lose any
heat.
Here's Megadeth's
performance from Monday to waste about five minutes.
Curt Hennig vs.
Konnan
Konnan has to chase
Bobby off the apron to start before kicking Curt in the ribs to break
up a test of strength. A bulldog and dropkick put Hennig down as
well, meaning we at least get some great selling. The less famous
Windham interferes to give Curt control with all of his usual.
Konnan comes back with the rolling clothesline and X Factor, only to
have Hennig throw him outside. A huge brawl breaks out on the floor
as Konnan hooks the Tequila Sunrise, only to have Barry come in with
the cowbell to give Hennig a cheap win.
Overall
Rating: D-.
Well let's see. Eddie loses to Lenny Lane, one match broke five
minutes, the show long story was Jimmy Hart adding people to the
junkyard match, despite no affiliation with the guy running it,
multiple matches for Sunday were either added or changed, and about a
fourth of the show was spent on videos from Nitro. Someone remind me
why this show exists.
Remember to check out my website at kbwrestlingreviews.com and head over to my Amazon author page with wrestling books for under $4 at:
http://www.amazon.com/Thomas-Hall/e/B00E6282W6
You keep framing it like Punk showed up in an office every day and punched a timeclock. That's not how the business works--especially at the level guys like Punk, Cena & Lesnar are. And when did he "refuse" to come back? Vince "suspended" him while Punk was still recovering. They never called him, said he had to come back and do this, that or the other. He got one text from Vince a week or so after he left, and a call from Hunter 3 months later--just days before they FedExed his release papers. How was he not doing his job when they never contacted him to tell him what that would be?
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely. He was happy to be fired, but getting it on his wedding day was like "fuck ME? No... fuck YOU!"
ReplyDeleteFine, I'll give you an example. We contract to do a job that would normally take six months, and I finish up in four, everything complete to both parties' satisfaction. Should I still be showing up every day during those last two months, (not literally) spending the entire day yanking myself off?
ReplyDeleteIt'll be great if TNA can do it, but their new situation has huge hurdles independent of anything they do it how that company is even run.
ReplyDeleteBecause of something he said in a worked shoot and which was presumably run over the higher-ups before making it to TV?
ReplyDeleteThat's why I'm hoping GFW's first "show" (I know it's an NJPW show) succeeds, and they can get their own roster going. To me, TNA is dead, and is best left alone to muddle like they always will.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of the podcast, is anyone else still having a hell of a time trying to download it? I'm starting to wonder if I'm just a dumbass.
ReplyDeleteJust because Vince agrees to something doesn't mean the underlings have to like it... although saying so can be dangerous to their future prospects.
ReplyDeleteShawn is one of the lowest drawing top guys in company history. HHH was the second biggest star in the company (in Austin's absence) for the majority of its most successful year ever. Shawn's a better talent and more respected, but Trips is the bigger star, much as that fact might anger the anti-Hunter crowd.
ReplyDeleteHe was fine in '04. 02-03 was when he sucked.
ReplyDeleteHHH was far better than 'Taker at everything in that era.
ReplyDeleteAs good as the Rocky feud was, Jericho was already a joke of a champion before he faced Trips in '02. The Austin feud in between did him zero favours.
ReplyDeleteAlso, Orton was a failure right from the beginning in '04. I'd say if you want to pinpoint an "HHH buries Orton" moment, WrestleMania 25 would be a better choice.
Calling HHH an underling is pretty weird.
ReplyDeleteRemember, we're talking about VINCE MOTHERFUCKING MCMAHON. EVERYONE is an "underling", no matter their name or connections.
ReplyDeleteYes, Colt's site can't handle the traffic. Just watch the Youtube or torrent it
ReplyDeleteHey now Dave had some good matches and he was mega over from 05-08
ReplyDelete2 + 2 isn't quite adding up to 4 here. When this happened Punk said somewhere (please don't make me find it) that HHH was an advocate and even took over the Nash feud because he believed it was killing Punk's momentum. Now it's HHH was trying to bury him. It could be Punk feels different now that he looks back on it but that's not the impression I get from the interview.
ReplyDeleteI'm basically saying Taker could afford to put on shit matches ~2000 because his history afforded him to. Nobody hates that era of Taker more than me. Taker has more historical significance and is/was more over than HHH was, all I'm saying.
ReplyDeleteSo you are saying that Colt is just as out of touch as the McMahon regime? kidding
ReplyDeleteAnyone here reads the fantastic comic Superior Foes Of Spider-Man? Final issue is out right now and the final page is a goodbye from the comic's writer Nick Spencer. But CM Punk highjacks the page and posts his own little tribute the end of the book. It's fun little piece written by Punk and showing what a comics nerd he is. Also nice to see Punk not sounding angry and bitter and just having some fun.
ReplyDeleteBryan was the immensely popular people's choice and the fans would've been pissed at a perceived HHH buddy waltzing in and getting what he deserved no sweat, regardless of the movie being awesome or not, and like cult said, people had a pretty good idea already it'd be great.
ReplyDeleteOr he's a cheap dweeb.
ReplyDeletePunk's grousing about doing the European tour makes me think he's not doing the thirteen-hour flight.
ReplyDeleteOne thing I don't buy is that Punk quitting led to Daniel's main event spot. Cause the crowd had already super-hijacked the Rumble and turned on Batista BEFORE Punk quit. I have no doubt they would have put him into the main event regardless. He just wouldn't have faced HHH earlier on the show.
ReplyDeleteHe does say at the time he tried to talk himself into believing it made sense.
ReplyDeleteOne thing I'll give you credit for, you sure go down with the ship.
ReplyDeleteWhat "kool'aid-like" thing did I say there? What a dumb reply.
ReplyDeleteBeing a Bryan Truther at all at this point is nothing but Kool Aid.
ReplyDeleteThat doesn't even make sense.
ReplyDelete