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SummerFest Countdown: 1989

(2012 Scott sez:  Another recent redo, so the added comments will likely be minimal.) 

The SmarK Retro Re-Rant for WWF Summerslam 89

- Live from Jersey.

- Your hosts are Tony Schiavone & Jesse Ventura.

The Brainbusters v. The Hart Foundation.

Tully & Arn were fresh off winning the tag titles. This is non-title for reasons that have always eluded me, and eluded Bret Hart as well according to his book. (In kayfabe terms it was nont-title because the match was signed before the Busters won the belts, but then why not just make it a title match?  Especially since the champs were going over anyway.)  Bret gets a pair of armdrags on Tully to start and goes to work on the arm, then does the same with Arn when he switches in. The Harts stay on Arn's arm and work him over in the corner, as Arn is unable to tag Tully due to double-teaming and legal reasons. Finally Tully comes in and immediately runs into trouble with Anvil, who rams him into the mat and goes back to the arm. Tully tries to beat on Neidhart in the corner to break, but Anvil no-sells and brings Bret back in for another hammerlock to keep Blanchard grounded. Tully reverses to a top wristlock, but Bret bridges to block it and powers into a reversal that sends the champs to the floor. Tully and Bret slug it out, but the champs smartly position Bret so that he doesn't notice Arn sneaking up from behind to clobber him. AA misses a pump splash and the Harts clean house again. Bret hauls Tully back in and the Harts keep working on him in the corner, and Anvil drives him into the turnbuckles off a bearhug. It's a pier-six brawl, but Arn pulls Tully out of the way of a charging Anvil and the tide is thus turned. The Busters go to work on the neck with double-teaming, and Tully goes to a rear chinlock. Over to Arn, who hits Neidhart in the gut for two, but gets tossed across the ring on the kick out. Nice touch. Anvil collides with Anderson, but Arn recovers first, so Bret gives him the cheapshot from the apron to mess him up. I loved that the Harts always cheated, even as babyfaces. It really gave them that edge that other teams like the Rockers were lacking. Bret gets the hot tag and slams everyone, then dropkicks Arn and hits Tully with the second rope elbow. Snap suplex gets two. Everyone is in and Bret collides with Tully while AA brawls with Anvil on the floor, and everyone seems a bit lost. Bret slingshots Anvil onto Tully once they get organized, and then Anvil slams Bret onto Tully, but Arn hits Bret behind the ref's back and Tully is on top for the pin at 15:55. This was one of those 80s dream matches that more than lived up to the pedigree, although there was nothing particularly distinguishing about the action or the finish. ***1/2

Dusty Rhodes v. The Honky Tonk Man.

We get the ass-shaking contest to start and Honky runs away from the Bionic Elbow. Back in, Dusty MESSES UP THE HAIR. What a cad. And now Dusty gets the elbow, and pounds away in the corner. Sadly, Jimmy Hart gets involved and breaks up the technical clinic, allowing Honky to nail Dusty with the megaphone and take over. We hit the chinlock and Dusty fights out quickly, but runs into a knee. Back to the chinlock and Honky slugs away in the corner, but falls victim to the Flip Flop and Fly. Ref is bumped (in THIS match?!) and Honky gets the guitar from Jimmy, but ends up taking it himself. Big fat elbow finishes at 9:38. Boring as hell, but Dusty is over like crazy here so it was watchable. *1/2

Mr. Perfect v. The Red Rooster.

Shoving match to start and Perfect hiptosses Rooster and mocks him in between takedowns. Rooster gets all riled up and they criss-cross, but his knee gives way on a slam attempt and Perfect gets two. Standing dropkick puts Rooster on the floor, and back in Perfect pounds away as Taylor's ankle is obviously wonky. They fight onto the floor and Perfect finishes quick with the Perfectplex at 3:20 with no offense evident from the Rooster. Pretty clear case of an early "go home" signal. Never had a chance to go anywhere thanks to the injury. *1/4

The Rockers & Tito Santana v. The Rougeaus & Rick Martel.

Jacques starts with Tito and offers a handshake, but Tito wisely declines. The Rockers quickly come in and help Tito triple-team him and the faces clean house off that. Jacques tries again with Marty and catches a cheapshot, then Ray comes in for the crescent kick to take over. Martel slugs away in the corner, but Marty manages to tag Tito in and Martel runs away. Tito grabs a headlock on Raymond and slugs him down for two. The heels double-team him, however, and Martel finally comes in and stomps his former partner down. Jacques gets the dropkick and they cut off the ring, holding Tito in the heel corner. Tito fights out with a sunset flip on Martel for two, but Rick chokes him down again. The Rougeaus switch in for some more double-teaming, into the abdominal stretch from Jacques (with an assist from Martel) as the crowd gets hotter and hotter. Tito fights out, but Martel drops an elbow on him to stop the tag. Martel slugs away and tries a rollup, but Tito blocks it and fights back. Jacques comes in and Tito gets a cross body for two on him, but Jacques suckers the Rockers in and the heels do more damage behind the ref's back. Raymond gets two, but Tito gets another sunset flip for two. Ray stomps him down again and goes to the chinlock as they're just putting heat on Tito like crazy. Finally, hot tag Shawn and the place EXPLODES. He slugs on Martel in the corner and backdrops him, and a vertical suplex allows him to go up with the fistdrop. He presses Marty onto Martel and it's BONZO GONZO as the place is just going nuts. Tito gets the forearm on Martel and knocks him out of the ring while the Rockers brawl with the Rougeaus. Marty reverses a rollup on Jacques, but Martel clobbers him and gets the pin at 15:14. Tremendous unsung classic six-man! Literally non-stop action here and hard work all around, back before Martel became a lazy bore in the ring. ****

- Sadly, even this version omits the pre-match promo with Rick Rude and Bobby Heenan where the sign fell down and Gene swears on camera. C'mon, it's nearly 20 years later, get over it production guys.

Intercontinental title: Ravishing Rick Rude v. Ultimate Warrior.

So of course Rude screwed Warrior out of the belt at Wrestlemania V, in what was Warrior's first good match, well, ever, so they had a lot to live up to here. Warrior was already starting to feud with Andre and Rude was programmed with Roddy Piper, so it was obvious that this feud was over one way or another after tonight. This matchup was kind of like the Batista-Undertaker of its time, as they just had freakish chemistry against each other for whatever reason. Rude tries slugging away to start, and gets nowhere. Warrior clotheslines him to the floor, but Rude comes back in with a sunset flip, which Warrior blocks by punching him. Gorilla press follows, and Warrior opts to dump Rude on the floor for a nice bump. They brawl outside and Warrior hits him with the belt, triggering a classic rant by Jesse Ventura about whether it's legal to shoot someone outside the ring and how Tony is even stupider than Gorilla Monsoon. But tell us what how you really feel, Jesse. Warrior brings him in, then changes his mind and tosses him again. Back in, Warrior goes up with a double axehandle for two. He whips Rude into opposite turnbuckles and slams him for two. Suplex gets two. Warrior gets an inverted atomic drop, giving Rude a chance to do his tailbone sell, and Warrior drops him on his ass for good measure. Back to the top for LUCHA WARRIOR~!, but Rude brings him down the hard way to take over. Rude starts working on the back and a suplex gets two, then he goes to the rear chinlock. He stomps the back and goes for the Rude Awakening, but Warrior powers out of it, so Rude goes with a rare sleeper instead. Criss-cross and the ref is bumped, but Heenan manages to shake Rude out of it first. Warrior hulks up and powerslams Rude after the three clotheslines, and of course there's no ref. Piledriver, and that gets two. Running powerslam sets up the big splash, but Rude gets the knees up to block. Rude gets his own piledriver, almost a powerbomb, for two. To the top for the fistdrop, and that gets two, but now Roddy Piper joins us. Another piledriver gets two and Rude gets all distracted by Piper, who moons him in response. And that was six years before Braveheart! Warrior suplexes the distracted Rude, and it's shoulderblock, gorilla press, big splash and we have a new champion at 16:03. The reaction for this was GIGANTIC and anyone who wouldn't have taken a shot with Warrior as World champion after seeing this is nuts. Even more than Warrior! And this one of the few times, I might add, where Rude got what was coming to him and did a clean job. Definitely one of the best matches of Warrior's career. ***1/2

Demolition & King Duggan v. Big Bossman, Akeem & Andre the Giant.

Again I ask: How can Duggan purport to be a true American and yet support a monarchy? Akeem gets worked over in the Demo corner to start and they work on the arm, and Ax elbows him out of the corner. Bossman comes in to try and gets pounded by Ax, then gets into a slugfest with Smash and loses. Ax comes in and gets caught in the heel corner, and that brings Andre in for a buttdrop to take over. Andre is looking positively svelte here, actually. He must have been on a two-bottle-a-day diet or something. Andre chokes Ax down and Bossman adds a headbutt, but Akeem misses a charge and hits the turnbuckles. Smash gets a hot tag and slams both Towers, which is pretty cool, but runs into Andre and goes down fast. Bossman drops an elbow for two. Everyone brawls and Andre headbutts Duggan down, but he recovers and hits Akeem with the board to give Smash the pin at 7:26. Short and inoffensive with no resting, so that's all you can ask. **

Hercules v. Greg Valentine.

Ronnie Garvin is your biased ring announcer. You know, given how much I'm digging his NWA run from 1985 on 24/7 right now, it's a real letdown watching him sleepwalk through his WWF stuff. Herc clotheslines Valentine for two and gets a slam for two. Valentine hits the floor to escape that awesome offensive onslaught, but Hercules gets a rollup for two. Valentine goes for the leg and heads up, but Herc catches him with a punch coming down and slugs away. Suplex and Hercules pounds away in the corner, but he gets taken down and pinned at 3:02. This went nowhere. 1/2* Ron Garvin decides to award the match to Hercules anyway. That's an abuse of his authority as ring announcer, and I hope he was stripped of his license.

Ted Dibiase v. Jimmy Snuka.

Yay, more time-filler. Dibiase tries attacking but gets chased off. Snuka goes after Virgil and then chops Dibiase and atomic drops him to the floor, and Dibiase regroups out there. Back in, they mistime a criss-cross and Snuka pounds him in the corner, but Dibiase slugs him down in turn. Snuka comes back with a backdrop out of the corner, but walks into a stungun as Dibiase takes over. Suplex gets two. Dibiase slams him and goes up for the elbow, which misses as usual. Snuka fights back with a flying headbutt from the middle rope, and he goes up to finish. Superfly splash is interrupted by Virgil, and Dibiase hits him from behind and sends him into the post for the countout win at 6:24. Ugh, two shitty finishes in a row. *1/2

Hulk Hogan & Brutus Beefcake v. Randy Savage & Zeus.

Y'all know what a trainwreck the Zeus thing was, like if say WCW made a movie with David Arquette as the star and then brought him in as a wrestler and even put the World title on him. Hogan slugs on Zeus to no effect, and immediately gets choked down. Beefcake breaks it up but gets caught in the bearhug, and then Hogan gets more of the same. Macho Man, in badass white tights, comes in with the double axehandle and knees Hogan into the corner to set up the hooking clothesline for two. We hit the chinlock already, wasting no time in sucking, but Hogan fights free, only to walk into a cheapshot from Zeus on the apron. Zeus comes back in with his one move, the bearhug, and it's looking bleak for Hulkamania. That lasts FOREVER before Savage interrupts the monotony and comes in with a backdrop suplex for two. Savage misses a charge and Hogan brings Beefcake in, and a high knee gets two on Savage. Sleeper follows and Savage is fading fast, but he manages to ram Beefcake into the top turnbuckle to break. And yay, it's back to Zeus, but Beefcake goes to his one weak spot: The crazy eye. Savage, however, uses Sherri's loaded purse to knock Beefcake out, and gets two. Beefcake is face-in-peril and Zeus adds another move to his repertoire by choking Brutus out in several different ways, looking about as menacing as Wayne Brady in the process. Savage comes in and collides with Beefcake for the double knockout. So it's hot tag to Hogan again and he suplexes Savage in from the apron, but Sherri hooks the leg and Macho gets two. Savage clotheslines him down again and goes up for the big elbow, but who's kidding who at this point? Hulk doesn't even take a count, hulking up right away to set up the big showdown with Zeus. Hulk finally knocks him down, and then gets the HANDBAG OF DEATH and slams Z to set up the legdrop and pin at 15:08. Crowd was hot for all of it, but it was all chinlocks and choking and bearhugs. **

The Pulse:

This show doesn't get much love, but although the main event sucked ass there was some really good stuff here, including the six-man match and the opening non-title tag match. A hot crowd helps a lot as well. Recommended.

Comments

  1. Any chance of you continuing your July PPV series of ScottSez, you stopped just before you got to the greatness that was the Fully Loaded PPVs

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  2. Can't with for the Road Wild PPVs, 2012 Scott should be a riot for those.

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  3. My favorite part of this show is Sherri acting batshit crazy while staring into her giant, smoky cauldron.  What a weird freaked out visual haha.  This show defenitely feels like a major show, unlike the 1988 version.  As I recall, this show did a quite a bit higher than expected buyrate, which probably gives legs to all the initial Hogan vs Zeus at WrestleMania VI rumors.  I'm pretty sure that idea was dead by Survivor Series though, since they went and blew the whole thing off a month later at the NHB PPV.

    This is the last of the shows to use the first part of the early Royal Rumble theme too as I recall, before they switched to the 1990-1994(?) classic theme, although as I recall they experimented a little with the Summer Slam theme in 1990 and had another one briefly at the start of the hype for the 1990 show.

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  4. My god the tag team division at this time was just loaded with some gun teams.
    These are just some good fun PPVs at the time.

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  5. I was the biggest Warrior fan at this time (I know, I know) and him winning back the I.C. title was one of my favorite moments. It's still a match that I like to watch from time to time. Scott's right, Warrior was so over that having him face Hogan was the only option. Who would've thought that a guy who talked about gods and the power of warriors would be a little unstable?

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  6. In terms of nostalgia, this is my all-time favorite wrestling show. We ordered it live at the time (a real rarity in my house) and taped it on BETA (what's that?) and I watched that tape so much that by the time we got rid of it, the tape was damn near unwatchable. I know a lot of it had to do with the fact that we watched it live, but I also really dug the six man tag (huge Rockers mark but even as a kid I loved the Rougeaus theme), the IC title match, and the main event. Zeus was obviously horrible in hindsight but I was such a fan at the time that I thought No Holds Barred was a great movie and that Zeus was a major asskicker.

    Also of note is that its shows like this that made me unable to ever hate on Schiavone, no matter what kind of a tool he was in WCW. I always thought that he was a great announcer and when he really got amped up, he was really fun to listen to. His chemistry with Jesse was great, though to be fair Jesse had great chemistry with just about everyone.

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  7. That Royal Rumble theme is SWANK~! I distinctly remember marking out in '96 when a segment on Raw featuring Ahmed and Double J led to a quick Rumble plug and they actually used that theme.

    Not to mention that I would kill for that to be a Rumble theme again with Vince doing the pre-show graphics intro. HAAAAKUUU!

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  8. I think the fact that Zeus saves all those people in Gotham City should exclude him from any ridicule.

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  9. You know I feel exactly the same way. Wrestlemania V and Summer Slam 89 were my first two ppv's. My parents let me have parties for them, which became a Mania/Summerslam tradition until WM 8 During the intermissions all out brawls would take place in the living room, (you put a bunch of 10-12 year old boys watching  wrestling in one room

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  10. I was never a huge Warrior fan, and in fact the only time watching wrestling I actually felt sick when when he beat Hogan at WMVI, (I was 11.) I will say this though. His match with Savage is a no doubt desert island match.

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  11. Same here, except for Summer Slam 1990 and WrestleMania 8.  Those were the only two PPVs I ordered growing up, but we watched most of them scrambled between 1990 and 1992 and had just as much fun.  Well during that time period where I lived, they weren't exactly scrambled, just black and white and sort of noisy with noisy audio.

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  12. Yeah, I remember them digging that Rumble theme out of the mothballs in 1996 too.  Usually on those Dok Hendrix segments for the Rumble.

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  13. I loved the slow paced booking of these "old school" years.  The WWF title didn't need to be defended every show.  Two years in a row, they featured a tag-team match in the main event. 

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  14. That sounds hella illegal. We had a "tocom" box that let us watch pay-per-views. We got it for Survivor Series 1990.

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  15. Me too.  Looking back, it's kind of crazy how just by renting the four or five videos for a particular year (as I did as a kid) how you could follow the entire trajectory of a storyline without having ever seen the TV of that particular era. 

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  16. He'll always be Deebo to me.

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  17. Your response wins the argument for today, friend.

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  18. I dunno, much like WWE I'm just kind of making it up as I go along.  I've also been working on some Kindle stuff now that my RAW archives are complete again, so we'll see what I can squeeze in by the end of the month.  

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  19. I always figured Zeus went back to his old neighborhood as Deebo, got locked up and was eventually transfered to Gotham...

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  20. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VCojia6LJ2c

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  21. Funny shit. I wonder what language the subtitles are in.

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  22. Lol @ hbk being in the best match at summerslam 19fucking89. That last match against taker (****3/4 IMO) was 21 years later. Guess he was a decent worker.

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  23. I got mind control over debo. When he come around I be quiet, but when he leave I be talking again.

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  24. He has a long, complicated road to the United Federation presidency in the mid-23rd century.

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  25. Just let it play out and see where it goes...

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  26. Yeah, but you still ain't gonna catch no crackhead.

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  27. Actually Scott, at the end of the Harts/Busters match, Arn rolls Tully out of the ring and pins Bret himself but hides his head so the ref doesn't know it's the illegal man.

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  28. Yeah...it's crazy to think he was absolutely killing it in in the ring in like 1987 and almost 25 years later.

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  29. lol Beta. People still buy that shit on EBay. haha

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  30. You can more or less do the same thing now with PPVs b/c of the constant video recaps. One of the best things about WWE. I find it almost impossible to watch an NWA show from the late-80s in a vacuum b/c they hadn't figured out the video recap thing yet so I don't have context for anything.

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  31. When I saw the Warrior/Rude SummerSlam match for the first time, my jaw hit the floor. I didn't expect it to be that good, with some sick moves thrown in. Great match.

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  32. Another great thing about eBay is the secondhand VCR market -- you can get just about every awesome professional deck ever sold or advertised for super cheap. Watching old tapes on one of those (or using one to feed into capture device or DVD recorder) is like night and day compared to most of the old consumer decks or the current craptacular VHS/DVD combos.

    I have picked up a few for under $50 and one deck for a bit more that once retailed for $5000+. It was sort of a one off specialty deck that could actually play and record an HD signal over component cables to special tapes -- but it also happens to have a great VHS / SVHS picture as well.

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  33. I remember before cable boxes became more modern and digital, I had to get one of those huge descrambler boxes just to subscribe to The Movie Channel! Oh well, Cannon Films exclusives and the awesomeness of Robert Osborne and Joe Bob Briggs made it well worth the extra hassle, although it sucked always having to walk up to the box to change the channel instead of being able to use a remote.

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  34.  I saw that match years later and, being familiar with the workers, was also totally mindblown. WIth classic Jesse commentary thrown in its a classic.

    I recall Scott originally giving the main 1/4* or something because of Hogan kicking ut of the flying elbows/no-selling them. Im glad it was ammended -- nobody was touching the all-around package Savage was in WWF at the time and he was on fire in this era. Brutus actually held his own fairly well too.

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  35. SIIID JUSTIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIICE!!

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  36. Just rewatched this; I have no memory of Rick Martel being managed by Slick. I don't think he was by WM6, or for the Jake feud.

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