Thunder
Date: September 30,
1999
Location:
UTC Arena, Chattanooga, Tennessee
Attendance: 2,411
Commentators: Mike
Tenay, Larry Zbyszko
Reviewed by Tommy Hall
Thankfully
this is another live Thunder (well liveish. It's airing at about
11pm due to a baseball game but at least it's not the second show of
a taping) which tends to be a lot easier to sit through (not good
mind you) than the dreaded taped versions. It's still about the old
guys fighting over backstabbing and lying or Goldberg crushing Sid's
car because Sid is still a major thing in WCW for whatever reason.
Let's get to it.
Long intro to start
with Tenay and Zbyszko talking about people who won't be appearing on
this show.
Psychosis/La
Parka/Juventud Guerrera vs. Villano IV/Villano V/Silver King
This
is Psychosis' first match since losing the mask. La Parka tells
Silver King to get out of his way so dance time but King channels his
inner villain from Footloose and kicks him in the face. An elbow to
the jaw staggers La Parka again but Silver King accidentally hits his
partners, causing a bit of a flare up. It's off to IV and Psychosis
with the unmasked one scoring with a dropkick.
There's no other way to
put this: Psychosis has a weird face. It looks like it needs to be
stretched another few inches to make it fit properly. Anyway he
rolls out of a tilt-a-whirl slam and chops away at IV before whipping
him into a springboard dropkick from Guerrera. A powerslam gets two
for Juvy before it's off to V for a dropkick. Not exactly the most
thrilling stuff at the moment.
King comes back in and
grabs a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker for two on Psychosis before just
kicking him in the face. Back to Five for a pretty sweet top rope
DDT before King comes back in for the same, only not from the top. A
double gutbuster has Psychosis in even more trouble but La Parka
comes in to take one of them out.
Everything breaks down
and La Parka hits a nice corkscrew dive over the top to take out the
Villanos and Juvy, leaving King to lay out Psychosis in the ring.
The Villanos come back in and accidentally nail King (never hire
villains to do a partner's job), allowing La Parka to take out IV.
Juvy Driver to V, setting up the guillotine legdrop from Psychosis
for the pin.
Rating:
C-.
Not bad here but at the end of the day, the Villanos and Silver King
aren't the most thrilling guys in the world. It's amazing how far
Guerrera has fallen in quality as he used to be right there with
Kidman and Mysterio but now he's just kind of there. The division
has fallen on hard times since Mysterio forgot he was a cruiserweight
and started hanging out with Konnan.
Adrian Byrd vs.
Norman Smiley
Smiley
easily wrestles him down to start but walks into a dropkick. A right
hand just gets on Norman's nerves so he hits the spinning slam and
loads up his dance. Not the Big Wiggle but it's better than nothing.
There's something hilarious about that move and I think it's due to
Norman's face as he does it.
Byrd
comes back with a series of punches and counters a monkey flip
attempt with a cradle for two. A suplex and slam get two each on
Norman and we hit the chinlock. This is more offense than I was
expecting from Byrd boy. Smiley easily fights up and hits a nice
butterfly suplex, followed by the Norman's Conquest for the win.
Rating:
D+.
Much like most matches like this one I'm not sure what there is to
say about it. Smiley got beaten up for a bit and then came back with
some implied male rape involved. I could have gone for a bigger push
for Norman as he was clearly over and talented but he got stuck in
the stupid hardcore thing soon after this.
Gene
brings out Mona for a chat. He praises her for her record in WCW,
which is something like 5-1 or so. Mona brings up all the people
she's fought and is looking forward to new competition. Yeah there
were some shenanigans last week, but you have to just keep going.
Brandi Alexander sneaks up on her and chokes Mona with a gown. A
suplex on the floor sets up a match that was scheduled for later in
the night.
Mona vs. Brandi
Alexander
Mona
is a bit shaken up but gets an early two off a cross body. A
jawbreaker drops her though and the fans aren't thrilled. Brandi
takes Mona's glove off for more choking, followed by some hair
pulling. Apparently there are some new matches for Halloween Havoc.
We won't be hearing what they are at the moment, but those matches
have indeed been set up. Brandi kicks her in the ribs before choking
and kicking at the ribs even more. I can see why she isn't exactly a
household name.
A bad looking backslide
gets two for Mona and she gets poked in the eye to put her right back
down. To give you an idea of her offensive skills, Brandi gets two
off a suplex and hiptoss. Brandi misses an enziguri but Mona can't
get an Indian deathlock. She can however hit a Thesz press and right
hands before a side slam gets two. Mona was even nice enough to get
off of her before Brandi rolled her shoulder up. A handspring elbow
crushes Alexander in the corner, setting up a top rope Frankensteiner
for the pin.
Rating:
D+.
Brandi is just not very good. It also doesn't help that she isn't
the best looking woman in the world and when you had Trish Stratus
debuting in the WWF a few months after this, there really was no
reason for this division to exist. I use the word division loosely
as I don't think there are more than three or four girls in the
company at the moment.
Ad
for Flair and Hogan VHS's.
Dean Roll vs.
Frankie Lancaster
You
probably know Roll better as Shark Boy. Feeling out process to start
with Frankie nailing a shoulder and grabbing a headlock. Frankie
easily takes him down and cranks on the leg before hitting a flip
splash to the knee. A legdrop gets two on Dean but here's Scott
Norton to beat up both guys for the no contest.
Norton
wants Goldberg and apparently we've flashed back to 1998.
After a break, Goldberg
comes out to accept the challenge and tells Sid that the clock is
ticking. Somehow this took nearly three minutes.
Hugh Morrus/Brian
Knobbs vs. Dave Taylor/Steven Regal
Finlay
is here with the Brits. Regal hammers on Morrus to start and fires
off some European uppercuts. Off to Knobbs for the Pit Stop and
Regal's face is one of the funniest things I've seen in years.
Taylor comes in due to Regal's stomach ailments but eats a bunch of
headbutts from Knobbs. Dave gets a Pit Stop of his own which ticks
him off so much that he stops a charging Knobbs with a boot in the
corner. Finlay tries to swing a chair at Knobbs but gets cut off by
security and ejected. Well there goes the best part of the match.
The
distraction lets Taylor get in a flag shot to Knobbs before sending
him into the steps. Regal gets in some knee lifts before Taylor
slaps on a front facelock. The Brits keep up the fast tags and
Taylor hammers away with uppercuts and right hands in the corner. A
chinlock has Knobbs in trouble but Regal runs into an elbow in the
corner. The hot tag brings in Morrus (are the First Family the faces
here?) and everything breaks down. Knobbs hits a kind of pumphandle
slam on Taylor, setting up No Laughing Matter for the pin.
Rating:
D+.
Who was I supposed to be cheering for in this match? The First
Family has never shown any reason for me to like them but they were
certainly acting like the faces in this match. Then again, Knobbs is
WCW's definition of a legend and therefore I'm sure we're supposed to
cheer for them.
Here's
the Revolution to talk about Shane cheating recently. Saturn tells
Douglas that this team lives by a code of ethics and if he tries that
one more time then he's out of the group. Douglas apologizes and
says you can't stop greatness.
Bobby
Eaton vs. Luther Biggs
They
bring someone as good as Eaton back for THIS? Luther is Coach Buzz
Sawyer's protege if you've blocked this out of your memory. Biggs
throws him out of the corner to start and drop toeholds him down into
a headlock. Back up and Bobby hiptosses him to the floor so Stern
can give him a pep talk. Back in and Biggs gets in a knee to the
ribs to take over again but takes WAY too long going to the middle
rope for a legdrop. Eaton hammers away but gets dropped by a
shoulder. The coach and student start jawing though, allowing Bobby
to ram them together and grab a quick neckbreaker for the pin.
Rating:
F.
THAT'S what I sat through all those stupid promos for? A four minute
match with Bobby Eaton getting the pin? Eaton is a great guy but was
there any real need for this match to take place? Biggs is a stupid
character and Sawyer isn't much better. Bad match, bad idea, bad
execution, bad use of someone as good as Eaton.
Stern
dives in post match, which makes me think he missed a cue. Stern
puts both of them in a full nelson and yells at Biggs as they leave.
Brad
Armstrong vs. Horace Hogan
I
can easily live with people like Eaton and Armstrong getting more TV
time, but could they be against each other instead of in these
matches? Brad takes Horace down with ease but gets thrown across the
ring and kicked in the gut. An armbar doesn't get Brad anywhere as
Horace kicks him down again, only to miss a running elbow. Brad
hammers away in the corner and dropkicks him out to the floor.
That
goes nowhere so Horace goes back to just kicking him before throwing
Brad outside. Tenay actually brings up one of the matches at
Halloween Havoc: Hart vs. Luger. Oh sorry I mean the Total Package,
who is totally different from the Total Package Lex Luger. Horace
keeps up the bad offense and drops Armstrong with a clothesline. A
suplex gets two on Brad but he avoids a charge in the corner and hits
the Russian legsweep for the pin.
Rating:
D.
Geez how did they manage to make Brad Armstrong and Bobby Eaton
boring in the same night? Horace is just a big lug who doesn't get
anywhere and this really didn't make me want to see Armstrong vs.
Berlyn. Then again, offering me a million bucks to sit through that
match wouldn't make me want to see it. I'd do it of course but I
wouldn't want to.
Kendall
Windham/Curly Bill vs. Rey Mysterio Jr./Kidman
Oh
come on now. Rey and Kendall get things going with Mysterio
hammering away but diving into a boot to the face. A springboard
seated senton gets two on Windham but he comes back with a kick to
the ribs and slam to put Rey back down. Kendall hits a few
clotheslines and slams him down one more time before getting two off
a belly to back suplex.
Off
to Curly (see it's funny because he's bald) for a suplex and some
elbow drops and a suplex before he throws Rey outside. Back in with
Rey hitting a springboard missile dropkick and making the tag to
Kidman, who is promptly nailed by a clothesline from Windham. A
belly to back superplex gets two on Kidman with Rey making the save
and it's back to the floor because the heels don't know how to keep a
match going for more than fifteen seconds.
Hennig
gets in some cheap shots before throwing him back inside for chops
from Kendall. We hit the chinlock for a bit until Kidman fights up
with a jawbreaker and Bodog, setting up the double tag. Rey cleans
house and Kidman just stops running to counter an Irish whip. So you
can't Irish whip Kidman either? Kidman launches Rey into a seated
senton to Kendall before Curly gets in some cheap shots. He goes up
top for no other reason than to have Rey nail him and hook a top rope
Frankensteiner for the pin, just like in the women's match.
Rating:
D.
Egads just disband the cowboys already. Without Hennig or Barry in
there to run things, the team is exposed for the horrible workers
they are and that's never a good thing. Bad match here with Kidman
and Rey being wasted on another horrible team, though to be fair
they're still light years ahead of the Clowns.
Goldberg vs. Scott
Norton
Norton
still has an NWO logo on his singlet. Goldberg wins a slugout to
start and punches him over the top rope. They hammer on each other
again with Norton chopping him backwards and sending Goldberg face
first into the post. Goldberg sends him right back into the post
before they get back in the ring to keep hitting each other very
hard. A hard short arm clothesline drops Goldberg again but both
guys try flying shoulders at the same time for an awkward looking
collision. Back up and it's spear into Jackhammer for the pin.
Rating:
D+.
This was Norton's last match in WCW and I can't say I'm going to miss
him. It's just a bunch of power brawling with limited selling and
you can only sacrifice small people to him to set up another Goldberg
loss so many times. Basically he's a short version of Sid with a
bigger chest and no one needs another Sid.
Overall
Rating: F.
Did I mention this show was on around midnight and WCW knew no one
was going to watch it? The wrestlers clearly didn't care and it's
very telling how bad these stories are as we head into Halloween
Havoc. It's also incredibly clear that this is the most top loaded
company in a long time as outside of the main event, there is NOTHING
interesting going on right now, and the main event is some of the
dullest stuff in years. Bad show that didn't need to exist, which is
the case with almost every episode of this show.
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
Ah, Norman Smiley! WCW's answer to Zack Ryder, 10 years before anyone even knew who Zack Ryder was.
ReplyDeleteGood lord this show sounds awful
ReplyDeleteHeaven help everyone when WCW had no motivation. It can get ugly in a hurry.
ReplyDelete2,411... unbelievable that was an attendance in 1999.
ReplyDelete