This past summer, my
parents stayed with me for a few days. I was working nights at that point, so I
regularly slept until about noon or so.
I got up late one
morning, and of course both my parents were already up. My father, who has gone
every morning of his life that I can remember with a cup of coffee, was
complaining about my “future coffee machine” giving him a hard time. Now, I
have a Keurig, which of course is the easiest machine in the world to use. But
here he was, carrying on that it took him over 20 minutes to put it all
together and get a cup of coffee. I was nearly a point of hysteria when I
finally asked what took him the longest to figure out, how to put the cup
inside the machine, or how to push “brew”?
“No, it was getting that
piece of foil off the coffee pouch!”
Suddenly it wasn’t so
funny anymore. Lo and behold, there sat a K-Cup in my brewer, cap off, and
coffee grounds everywhere. And as I sit here, drinking my coffee before work,
prepping to write a Nitro-cap, I am STILL picking coffee grounds out of cup,
some 3 months later.
What does this have to do
with Nitro? The last couple of weeks have been rank with coffee grounds in my
cup, and hopefully now is the time we see something a little closer to the
wrestling that I love.
The ever familiar voice
of TONY SCHIAVONE is screaming about
the Big Boys playing, because we are LIVE SO VERY LIVE LIVE LIVE in Savannah,
Georgia. Tony declares WCW “red hot!” LARRY
ZBYSZKO would love to weigh in, but he’s too busy taking bows to the
legions of fans who live in his head. Tony demands to know the word on Liz?
Larryland declares her an obvious member of the “New World Odor”.
THE PUBLIC ENEMY vs. HARLEM HEAT (with Sista
Sherri and Colonel Robert Parker) (in a non-title Special Grudge match)
Well, I see WCW’s plan to
refuse tag-team title shots in order to rest their champs before Havoc is
working out. They also get the “Already In The Ring” routine usually reserved
for jobbers. WCW!!! NICK PATRICK is
your referee, and quite angry about being here. Tony figures the speed
advantage goes to Harlem Heat. Christ almighty, Stevie Ray is winning the
footrace in the wrestling ring of life. There’s no hope for the rest of us. The
Heat double team Rock with no regard for the rules of fair play. So Rock says
to hell with it, and rolls out making a play at attacking Sherri! Booker is
having none of that, and is on her like a steaming pot of neckbones. That
brings us to commercial.
Backstage, ELIZABETH is trying to get into the
dressing room of Randy Savage. Eventually she tries the handle, which works,
and he’s not there.
Back in the ring, Stevie
is slowing things down, as usual. He tags in Booker, who destroys Rock with a
Harlem sidekick. Stevie takes him to the floor, where Sherri gets in a free
shot in exchange for the earlier attack. Back in, Rock manages to work his way
back to the corner to tag in Grunge, but Stevie is distracting Patrick so it
doesn’t count. It doesn’t matter though, because…
THE NWO
has arrived at the top of the arena stairs. Hall has the stick, and calls
Harlem Heat a couple of hillbillies. “You want some of the Outsiders chico? You
gonna get it.” Nash vows to snap into the belts at Slim Jim’s Halloween Havoc. “I
know why they wear those things on their noses, I can smell the fear from here.”
Back in the ring, Rock is
put through the table, and Sherri issues a distraction to Patrick while the
Heat destroys the leg of Grunge. The announcers figure they’re trying to end
the career of TPE, and I’m cool with that. Heat get the easy win at 10:18. Long, extended squash, but at
the expense of a team I can’t stand, so kudos. *1/2
Meanwhile, a limo
arrives. Tony’s confused because the nWo is already here, but he reckons it’s
Hogan. However, nope, it’s JEFF JARRETT,
and he’s got something to say. We might find out what that is after a break.
Larry: “Is he with the nWo?” Tony (sputtering): “…YES!”
DIAMOND DALLAS PAGE vs. JIM POWERS (with Teddy
Long)
It should come as no
surprise to you that NICK PATRICK is
here, to oversee his life partner and soul mate, DDP. Before the match, Page
had some comments for Guerrero. He orders Burrito Boy to watch the ass-whoopin’
being handed out to Powers. I think that’s racist. Powers misses a dropkick,
but hits a crossbody for 2. Diamond Cutter hits from nowhere for the win at 2:35. DUD Page kicks Teddy Long after
the match, knocking him to the mat, and tells him to kiss his ass. Nick Patrick
looks on, staring wistfully at the love of his life. If DDP isn’t in the nWo, I’ll
high five a rabid pitbull. (Offer subject to change.)
MIKE TENAY welcomes RANDY SAVAGE,
who actually appears this week, with new bestie JASON KELLER who drives the Slim Jim Halloween Havoc race car.
Savage demands to know how the nWo car did at the race this weekend.
Thankfully, WCW has highlights of the car hitting the wall, while Scott Hall
and Ted DiBiase looked on. Savage celebrates because they not only finished in
the top 25, the top 20, the top 15, and even the top 12, finishing yes, 10th.
Then ELIZABETH shows up asking to
talk, and Savage tells her no to forget it and storms off. THIS ALL MAKES ME
WANT TO ORDER HALLOWEEN HAVOC.
HIGH VOLTAGE vs. THE FACES OF FEAR (with Jimmy
Hart)
I smell an ass-kicking!
Meng’s all kinds of fired up on his walk to the ring, spouting Savage Islander
speak, and flailing his arms around freely as if independent from the rest of
his body. Then the bell rings, and he chops the crap out of Kaos and lectures
him in his self-made language. Kaos charges with clotheslines and Meng ignores
it by just screaming and pounding his chest. They try a double dropkick but
even THAT doesn’t take my man down, as he bounces back into the ropes. In the
aisle, CHRIS BENOIT, MONGO MCMICHAEL, and DEBRA MCMICHAEL look on. Voltage is
busy trying to slam Meng’s head into the buckle, which is going nowhere, so
they use a missile dropkick and Rage gets 2. Meng pops up and gives him an
atomic drop, bringing in a fresh Barbarian. Pumphandle slam is delivered with a
little gusto, but he picks Rage up at 2 cuz he knows he’s winning and he wants
to deliver a little more pain. Back to Meng who brings a powerbomb. Barbarian
in again, and Rage hilariously tries to throw some punches into the stone
6-pack of Barbarian, who promptly powerbombs Rage and starts dancing in
happiness. Holy crap I didn’t think I could love them any more! Kaos saves the
pin, so Meng comes in and catapults Rage into the Kick of Fear, and Barbarian
gets an easy win at 3:43. I don’t
think I’ve ever loved a tag-team more than the late ’96 version of the Faces of
Fear. Brutally entertaining squash. **1/2
MIKE WENNER vs. GLACIER (with 300 year old helmet
passed down from Sensei to Sensei to this white guy)
What the hell is with
Nitro and destroying people’s last names? To be fair, Mike Winner has never
actually seen victory, so maybe this is apropos, but I get the feeling we’re
dealing with some Buddy Valentino levels of chicanery here. Glacier’s entrance
takes up most of the 1st and 2nd hours of Nitro. Once
again, he’s allowed to wrestle in the blue hue, but above that, it’s still
snowing. Honestly, this is a bigger threat to the company than the nWo. The nWo
might be commanding all the attention and threatening to destroy WCW, but they’re
doing it following the standard rules of professional wrestling. This guy? He’s
allowed to completely modify the previously understood setting that has been
used for 300 years, as old as the WCW title which was once held by Abe Lincoln,
and this simply isn’t ok. Anyway, Glacier dropkicks Wenner to the floor, as the
fans chant Boring. Going to the martial arts he learned in Japan, he hits a
plancha. You know, he could have gone to Mexico and learned that from anyone
under a hood. Cryonic Kick finishes at 2:26.
I long for the days when Glacier was coming. DUD
Hour #2 starts during
Glacier’s never-ending post-match display of Martial Arts. Honestly, they
should go all the way with him if this is the direction they want to take. When
he rolled Wenner back into the ring, he should have stood there staggering while
Dave Penzer screamed “FINISH HIM!” Then he would have turned him into a block
of ice and shattered him into a million pieces, kicking off the era of killing
off characters a good 7 years before we lost Al Wilson (may he rest in peace).
Oh yes, and our hosts are
ERIC BISCHOFF and “SOBER” BOBBY HEENAN. Bischoff declares
the nWo most definitely in the house.
HUGH MORRUS vs. JEFF JARRETT
Soooo … we got that
segment in the back with Jarrett’s limo, and the announcers sat around all
night questioning what was up, and it turned out Bischoff had simply signed him
and given him a match. Bischoff really needs to start sending out company-wide
memos to alert them of stuff like this. However, now he’s all paranoid he inadvertently
just brought in a new nWo guy, and thinks Jarrett’s going to make him a fool.
Oh, Jarrett would make WCW a fool, but it would take another 5 years. Jarrett
takes down Morrus with a drop toe hold, walks over his back, and struts. Morrus
pops up and clotheslines him to a MASSIVE pop. Bischoff’s given up any
objectivity at this point, declaring Jarrett the newest nWo member. Jarrett
misses an enzuigiri, but comes back with the “back leg round kick”. Swinging
neckbreaker nearly turns into a DDT, and it gets 2. A dropkick gets 2. Morrus
comes back with a powerslam, and heads upstairs. He flies, and misses a legdrop.
That smarts. Figure four gets a submission at 4:07. One match, and I’ve already had enough of Jeff Jarrett. *
TONY SCHIAVONE welcomes Jarrett to the company, but wants to know if he’s another
nWo vandal. Jarrett says he heard Hogan declare himself bigger than the
wrestling industry, and without him, there is no wrestling. He says Hogan didn’t
put food on his table when he was a kid, and reminds Hogan he started in
Tennessee working for his father. He figures history might not mean anything to
Hogan, but it means something to him. He tells the nWo to stick it. The fans
boo mercilessly.
THE RENEGADE vs. ARN ANDERSON (with Woman)
Tenay mulls over the fact
that Sting didn’t accept WCW’s peace offering last week of painting a race car in
his colors, because he’s not here. He wonders what else WCW needs to do. They
really were that stupid, weren’t they? Renegade holds a big win over Arn
Anderson, taking the TV title from him about 18 months earlier. Tenay actually
brings this up, figuring Arn’s learned since then that Renegade’s game is
bursts of offense, and all he needs to do is slow him down. Arn stomps him down
to the mat, and drops a knee. Renegade tries a sunset flip, but Arn chops him
in the face and gets 2. Fans start chanting for the DDT, cuz we’re a full heel
group tonight. Arn works a hammerlock for awhile, before releasing and stomping
Renegade in the face. Scoop slam sets up a Vaderbomb, but Renegade blocks it
with his knees. Handspring back elbow drops Anderson, and Renegade calls for
the finish. He goes for another handspring back elbow, and Anderson punches him
in the back of the head, finishing with the DDT at 7:07 to a loud reaction! LEX
LUGER hits the ring after the match, and chases Arn to the back. *1/2
DAVE TAYLOR (with Jeeves) vs. LEX LUGER
Taylor knocks Jeeves out
with a European Uppercut on the way to the ring, calling him a stupid little
person. Tenay reminds us that Steven Regal is the TV champion, taking it from
Luger over a month ago, and that we haven’t really seen him. He’s been overseas
defending it all over the world, in accordance with the name “WORLD’S
Television Title”. I’m good with that. Luger apparently wants the belt back,
which seems odd, the World Title would seem to be a more appropriate goal for a
guy at his level. Anyway, Taylor hits a couple of European uppercuts because he’s
going straight for the jugular tonight! Luger manages to live, and comes back
with a backslide for 2. The loaded forearm gives Luger the advantage, but
Taylor kicks him in the face and goes up! The elbowdrop misses, and damn it
all, Luger racks Taylor at 2:37. Not
cool WCW, not cool. *
On his way back up the
ramp, ARN ANDERSON attacks Luger
with a chair in hand, giving him the business until the referees break it up.
CHRIS BENOIT (with Mongo and Debra McMichael) vs.
RICK STEINER (with Scott Steiner)
NICK PATRICK referees. Rick hits a nasty looking powerslam to start, and he
pounds Benoit into the mat. The two start trading nasty punches to the head,
which Steiner wins. A belly to belly gets 2. Now Steiner hits a release German
suplex that drops Chris right on his head, and gets 2 as we head to a
commercial break.
Upon return, Chris is
delivering the chops, setting up a snap suplex for 2. Scott Steiner gets up on
the apron and rubs Patrick’s neck a little, which Patrick sells like death
because he’s still in the brace.
Meanwhile, an nWo limo
backs up into the building, and HOLLYWOOD
HOGAN and THE GIANT emerge.
Hogan tells the Giant to watch his back because he has business to do.
Back in the ring, Steiner
is pounding on the back of Benoit’s head, but Chris comes back with a scoop
slam. Backdrop suplex gets 2. Benoit nails a flying forearm, and slaps on a
headlock. They stand up, and Benoit hits a chop that echos into the rafters,
and he goes up. The Swandive connects, but it’s only 2. A second attempt finds
Chris in the arms of Steiner, and being thrown across the ring with an overhead
belly to belly. DDT gets a close 2. Rick hits the bulldog, driving Benoit face
first into the canvas, but it gets 2! Scott starts screaming that he counts too
slow, and Patrick orders him to shut up and stay on the floor. Double
clothesline spot knocks both guys down, and Debra hits the apron to talk to
Patrick. Mongo tries the Haliburton spot, but Scotty distracts him long enough
for Rick to steal it and waffle Benoit to get the pin at 12:59. ** Bischoff can’t figure out why Patrick made a normal
count. Let me spell it out for you, Eric: He’s in bed with the nWo, not the
Horsemen!
RANDY SAVAGE vs. RIC FLAIR
Flair never shows up,
because HOLLYWOOD HOGAN, THE NASTY BOYS, and TED DIBIASE are in the back. He asks
the Nastys to watch his back, and offers them “paperwork” with the “deal they
talked about”.
Elsewhere, THE OUTSIDERS, THE GIANT, NUMBER SIX, VINCENT and NWO STING are working over Flair. ELIZABETH hovers nearby, looking concerned. Giant sees her, and
backs Liz out to the live arena, where she hides behind Savage for safety, who’s
now wielding a chair. Hogan rushes Savage from behind with a clothesline, and
chokes him on the floor with a chair. Liz tries to pull Hogan off, but Hogan
reminds her “I own you!” Giant carries the limp carcass of Savage to the ring,
but trips on the ring steps and damn near kills Randy who falls with the small
of his back on the edge of the steps. Goddamn! He throws Savage in anyway, and
picks him up for the Chokeslam – but Hogan tells him not to, because he wants
Liz to watch himself beat on Savage. Giant holds Liz hostage, and does the
world’s slowest ground and pound. Hogan starts dropping one Atomic legdrop
after another, and spray paints an outline of Savage’s dead body, as Elizabeth
cries and cries. The fans litter the ring with trash, while Hogan trolls them
further by getting on the stick and telling Liz she belongs to him forever
because it’s been etched in stone. Really? Does the nWo have their own
etch-maker, armed with a rock hammer and stone tablet? Can I see it? Are they
forced to carry this through airports to ensure the agreement is legal from
state to state? Who does the grunt work? If it’s Vincent, I feel like that’s
racist.
Syxx drives a huge nWo
Monster Truck out on the staging area, making a bee line for the announcers
table, and WE ARE OUT OF TIME!
Really? We couldn’t stay
10 seconds more to watch Bischoff get run-over?
Prime is next, and if you
can’t wait to find out what happens next … don’t read that recap, because you’ll
be sorely let down when you find out it’s littered with far too many members of
the Dungeon of Doom, and Leroy Howard.
Edge is fine for the hall as far as I'm concerned, but he always seemed like a midcarder playing a main eventer to me. He was a part of quite a few good angles though.
ReplyDeleteMeekin?
ReplyDeleteI would say from 2002 til 2008
ReplyDeleteHHH made Cena for life at WM 22.
ReplyDeleteYou truly think it would have been better for relatively new main eventer Cena to beat a guy who had been in the mid-card for his entire career, and who just won a world title due to cashing in on an exhausted Cena, thus not even earning it? Seriously?
So the ratings went up a bit, due to the interest of the briefcase being cashed. It didn't mean "Edge = Automatic WM main eventer". Why do people not get this?
Shut up, Meekin.
ReplyDeleteI thought I was alone in my Faces of Fear fandom.
ReplyDeleteNope, I love me some Meng and Barbarian, too. They should have gotten a title run and said to the locker room, "You can have the titles back if you beat us in a shoot!"
ReplyDeleteWe are talking about the WON HOF, not the WWE'S.
ReplyDeleteChris has talent.
ReplyDeleteTop 10 ever? That's nuts. Savage, Flair, Bret, Hogan, Andre, Austin, Rock, HHH, Cena, Undertaker, Michaels, Angle, Dusty Rhodes, CM Punk, Sting, Jericho all had stronger careers. That's just off the top of my head. I'd even add the Big Show to the list too.
ReplyDeleteThey love to leave it on the table.
ReplyDeleteThey actually got really over in the second half of 96 based on their ring work. I was a pretty big fan of them to. They should have been tag champs, but the Outsiders had a strangle hold on the belts.
ReplyDeleteDel Rio would have probably still been in the company.
ReplyDeleteThe argument that HHH made Cena at WrestleMania 22 is revisionist history. Cena was already the center of the show before that match and he remained the center of the show after that match (when Cena went on to feud with, yep, Edge while Triple H moved onto the DX reunion). Was making Triple H tap out clean in the middle of the ring at WrestleMania a huge moment? Sure was. But it didn't NEED to happen.
ReplyDeleteDid you hear a poop, otter, Ebert, or DDP reference?
ReplyDeleteThey should have jumped to the WWE and destroyed those douchebag cowboys.
ReplyDeleteWas this the famous yellow line beatdown?
ReplyDeleteSo at Wrestlemania 15 Austin (who also won his first World title the year prior) should have gone over Undertaker or Foley instead of career mid carder Rocky who just happened to be champion because he joined the corporation who rigged a tournament for him? And then he lost the belt another 2 times before Wrestlemania anyway?
ReplyDeleteActually that worked out okay....
the mere thought of Barbarian stiff kicking Billy Gunn in the face made me smile. Thanks for that Cult.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the coffee story. It didn't outstay it's welcome. It wasn't 8,000 words long and accompanied by several photos of the writers face, which is important to me.
ReplyDeleteHow does Punk have a stronger career when his career was shorter than Edge's, he's held less titles than Edge's, he was in the main event for a shorter period of time than Edge, he's appeared in less legitimate main event matches (last match of the night) than Edge, he's never main evented WrestleMania, and he's had less classic/memorable moments?
ReplyDeleteNah, while Cena was already the center of the show, he was booked like a total chump up until the HHH match. He was basically a paper champion getting booed by the male audience and winning half of his matches by flukes against opponents whom WWE went out of their way to display the superiority of.
ReplyDeleteI think people tend to revise Edge's singles babyface turn at the beginning of the brand extension. He was super over as a face as part of the Smackdown Six and was seemingly going to be the one feuding with Brock Lesnar when he got injured. Then he was gone for a year (which severely hurt his momentum) and he returned on Raw, where he was put in a situation that was completely different than his rise on Smackdown. As a result, THAT face run struggled significantly and he was forced to turn heel (which was also one of my favorite heel turns ever -- like him reading passages from his book on the stage in the middle of a Christian match).
ReplyDeletePeople also seem to forget that the Raw/Smackdown writers were different and that the Raw/Smackdown audiences reacted to Superstars very differently. Perhaps the most extreme example is John Cena, who was universally loved on Smackdown before being drafted to Raw, when suddenly he was getting booed against big time heels like Chris Jericho and Kurt Angle.
They were great; Huge, legit tough dudes who were quick, agile, and pretty charismatic for neither speaking much.
ReplyDeletePlus, the double flying headbutt and backdrop into a powerbomb spots are kickass.
On this day, I see clearly, that Eeeeedge is a hall of famerrr
ReplyDeleteYeah, but keep in mind Cena's got another 20 years still of main eventing everything and cutting promos about how the kids have to take it from him because everyone else in the business before them wasn't good enough to be on his level, jack.
ReplyDeleteThose shows like Prime... It's one of the few things I agree with Vince Russo about, when he basically shut down Saturday Night because of the feeling that if someone turned on their TV at that time and saw these terrible jobber shows and thought that THAT was what WCW was all about they'd never tune in again. Not that HIS product was much better, but the lower shows were seriously unwatchable even when Nitro was good.
ReplyDeleteI admit I wasn't watching in 2006 , but I was watching in 2005 when Cena got drafted to Raw, Jericho blew his load flipping out that the great John Cena was on Raw, and then Cena crushed Jericho (which was fine, Jericho was leaving). That's right when I stopped watching for awhile...did they suddenly start treating Cena as a paper champion who only wins via flukes after he crushed Jericho and was treated as the biggest deal in the company? I honestly have no idea, it's a legit question.
ReplyDeleteI got teary eyed when Edge announced his retirement. I've cried more for wrestlers retiring than I have for deaths in my family.
ReplyDeleteBret was an active worker for 20 years, and Shawn, excluding his 4 year hiatus, 20 years. I don't think longevity needs to be a major factor, but it helps. Guys like Goldberg who worked regularly for no more than 5 years, should be excluded unless they were the second coming of Mid 80's Hulk Hogan.
ReplyDeleteI like Edge, but I totally fell out of watching WWE when he was given his biggest push at the top (of Smackdown). He was an above-average worker, but not elite. Trying to use the "he's a draw" argument is pointless since by the time he was on top, WWE's name was the sell, and one week of ratings pop isn't going to hold much water, unless it set an all-time record. He has a long list of Championship reigns, before the belts became a total joke.
ReplyDeleteThat's about how the angle feud went, yeah.
ReplyDeleteI don't agree with that at all. The B show was all about enhancing your top guys. Russo was just to stupid to understand that concept.
ReplyDeleteSo great. Easily one of the best beatdowns/segments in wrestling history.
ReplyDeleteEdge is a very good start, hampered by frequent, momentum-slowing injuries and a very clear sense of never being close to being the Number One guy. Every other contender should be thought of as being at that level for a portion of their career. Edge was always just "some guy" compared to that level.
ReplyDeletei loved saturday night! it was the only time i got to see barry "hole in one" darsow actually get tv time and win a few matches. also cant forget about nord and the leg lock sleeper he employed! and also the gambler who always had an ace up his sleeve!
ReplyDeleteI wonder if Meng puts anyone in the Tongan death grip if someone gives him the business at the toyota dealership he works at?
ReplyDeleteI remember being really excited when they were first gonna talk, as I always LOVED the Brood, then when it actually happened I thought "wow, they probably shouldn't let those guys talk ever again."
ReplyDeleteThere's no Sat afternoon thread. What are we supposed to doooooooooooooooo?
ReplyDeleteActually, they already changed his gimmick and he injured his leg at an nxt spot show
ReplyDeleteThey did, and he injured himself
ReplyDeleteIt started that way, but that was when the fans started booing him, so when he feuded with Kurt Angle, HBK, et al, they kinda stopped trying to make a concise effort at getting him over.
ReplyDeleteYou're entitled to your opinion, but I'd say Andre and Dusty are really only in on historical significance, but I don't wanna watch them work. Ditto SHow, and I'd rather watch an Edge match than a Sting match, or a Taker match, all other things being equal. He's also a better promo (in my opinion) than all but a couple of the guys on that list, and a more versatile (not better, just more versatile) worker than all of them except HBK and maybe Jericho. I'd take him in a cocaine heartbeat over HHH or Cent, too. He's about even with Punk at or near the bottom of my top ten list.
ReplyDeleteThis isn't a terribly serious list as I don't wanna spend all morning on it, but for me personally it goes roughly something like:
HBK
Flair
Savage
Rock
Angle
Austin
Bret
Jericho
Then Punk/Edge/Bryan/Foley all fighting over those last four spots. Honorable mentions to Rude and Perfect.
But it didn't. It was always entirely separate. And SN was a C show, if that. They already had too much TV, and putting Jim Duggan vs Barry Horowitz etc on national TV under the WCW name helped nobody.
ReplyDeleteThe HBK feud was after the HHH feud, at least. Though arguably it did even more to make him, and it's usually the match WWE brings up as Cena's big "he's here" moment.
ReplyDeleteI rank them about equal, but yeah, that's the argument against Punk. The argument for him is that he was probably a better worker and his peak was probably longer. Love both guys, wish they could have had a real feud.
ReplyDeleteThis is why we can't have nice things...
ReplyDelete