Thunder
Date: February 12, 1998
Location: Myriad Convention Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Commentators: Tony Schiavone, Lee Marshall, Bobby Heenan
Date: February 12, 1998
Location: Myriad Convention Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Commentators: Tony Schiavone, Lee Marshall, Bobby Heenan
Reviewed by Tommy Hall
We’re
closing in on SuperBrawl and things are getting very interesting in
WCW. Hogan and the NWO have basically thrown Savage out but Randy still
wants to fight. The NWO also got a rare jump on Sting with the help of a
net dropping from the ceiling. As for tonight Ric Flair is back and
he’s facing one of his most famous rivals in Lex Luger. Let’s get to it.
Here
are Hogan and Bischoff to open the show. Bischoff says it’s time to get
serious because things are getting out of control. The NWO is declaring
war on anyone associated with WCW. They’re going to start in
alphabetical order and go from Anyone associated with WCW, from Ted
Turner to the guys to mow the lawn at Turner headquarters. Hogan says
even the fans are fair game, but let’s get to the B’s (were any A’s
mentioned?). The number one B on Hogan’s list is Bret Hart, who is to
blame for Hogan not holding the belt. He doesn’t know where, but Hogan
is going to beat up Bret Hart somewhere.
On
a lighter note, Hogan wants to talk to Randy Savage face to face right
now. Macho comes out and Hogan says he knows when he’s right but he’s
wrong in this whole thing. It’s time to look Savage eye to eye and let
everyone know that an apology is necessary. Before we get to that
though, this coming Monday it’s going to be Hogan/Savage vs.
Luger/Sting. Hogan says Savage should thank Bischoff for the match but
now it’s time for the apology. However it’s Savage who needs to
apologize and that’s exactly what he does, right before decking Hogan
and Bischoff with right hands.
The announcers are thrilled.
We talk about WCW Motorsports for a few moments.
Kidman vs. Prince Iaukea
Louie
Spicolli has chased Lee Marshall off commentary. Kidman and Lodi taunt
Iaukea into a chase, allowing Kidman to get in a shot as they get back
inside. The Prince snapmares Kidman to the floor as Louie talks about
eating pizza with Larry Zbyszko. Kidman dropkicks Iaukea into the apron
but runs into a foot in the corner back inside. We cut to the back to
see Raven sending Riggs off to get Van Hammer. Mortis comes up to Raven,
apparently wanting to join the Flock. Raven asks why Mortis dresses in
these clown costumes and says if he wants to be in the Flock, Mortis has
to be himself. Oh and beat DDP as well.
Back
in the ring Iaukea breaks out of a chinlock but gets taken down by a
jawbreaker. A superkick doesn’t drop Kidman so Prince fires off some
chops. Kidman clotheslines him down and goes up but dives into a belly
to belly suplex for two. A guillotine legdrop misses and Kidman hits a
quick Shooting Star Press for the pin.
Rating: D+.
Based on what we saw this wasn’t much. Kidman was talented but he
needed someone better than Prince Iaukea to have a good match. The Raven
thing stopped the match in its tracks but that was a common idea for
WCW: make it look like anything could happen at anytime. There is
something to be said about that idea instead of having segments happen
right after a match ends.
Meng vs. Hugh Morrus
Hugh
jumps Meng before the bell and pounds on him in the corner but a splash
has no effect. Meng comes back with chops to the chest and punches to
the ribs followed by some choking on the ropes. A top rope splash gets
two for Meng as Louie asks if Heenan used to manage him which shocks the
Brain. Morrus comes back with a spinwheel kick and loads up No Laughing
Matter, but Jimmy Hart rolls Meng out of the way. Tony informs us that
we’ll have the Steiners vs. Outsiders again at SuperBrawl along with
Louie vs. Zbyszko. Meng kicks Morrus in the face and the Deathgrip ends
this pretty quickly.
Post match Barbarian comes down to break up the hold but gets put in the Deathgrip as well.
US Title: Diamond Dallas Page vs. Mortis
Vandenberg
shouts that he owns Mortis on the way to the ring. Mortis gets caught
in a quick tilt-a-whirl side slam but bails to the corner to avoid the
Diamond Cutter. Page misses a charge into the post and Mortis takes
over, allowing Vandenberg to choke in the corner. The champ pops up and
pounds away on Mortis, only to get kicked in the face and hits with a
neckbreaker out of the corner for two. We hit the chinlock as Tony
announces Page vs. Benoit II at SuperBrawl. Page suplexes his way to
freedom and hits a discus lariat followed by a running Diamond Cutter to
retain.
Rating: C-.
Just a simple title defense here with Page hitting another version of
the Diamond Cutter to fire up the crowd. Mortis’ offense continues to
change almost on a weekly basis with new moves coming out all the time. I
miss midcard champions having matches against some random opponent like
this. It doesn’t hurt Mortis to lose because he’s in over his head, so
why not do matches like this more often?
Post
match the Flock minus Raven comes out and carries Mortis from the ring
ala Riggs when he joined the team. Raven appears at the entrance and
DDTs Mortis on the ramp.
We recap British Bulldog vs. Steve McMichael. I keep forgetting this feud is happening.
Steve McMichael vs. Jim Neidhart
Neidhart
shoulder blocks him down to start and a forearm smash sends Mongo to
the floor. Mongo is sent into the steps but comes back with a three
point shoulder block inside to take over. McMichael goes to the floor
and picks up the steps, but the Bulldog runs in for the save and the DQ
win for Mongo.
After the break we get a video of them brawling through the commercial.
Chris Adams vs. Buff Bagwell
Adams
hits two quick slams to start but walks into a backdrop so Buff can
pose. They shove and slap each other a few times until Chris takes over
with some clotheslines. Adams misses a charge and clotheslines himself
on the ropes to give Bagwell control. Buff gets two off a neckbreaker
but a splash hits knees. Adams makes a comeback with basic stuff
followed by a terrible looking piledriver for two. Vincent gets
superkicked down but the distraction lets Bagwell drill Adams from
behind and finish him with the Blockbuster.
Rating: D.
This really didn’t work. Adams was trying but the lack of chemistry
crippled any chance they had. He was 43 years old at this point and long
past his best days but he could still do basic stuff well enough.
Bagwell never was much in the ring but the Blockbuster looked as good as
ever.
Video on Juventud Guerrera and how important his mask is to him.
Cruiserweight Title: Chris Jericho vs. Chavo Guerrero Jr.
Jericho
has to be threatened with a DQ to take the belt off. Chavo chops him
down but Jericho hits a running forearm to knock Chavo outside. A suplex
back in allows Jericho to pose for the crowd, only to be SHOCKED by the
booing. Jericho hits the butterfly backbreaker for the arrogant cover,
only to miss a charge in the corner a few seconds later. He jumps over
Chavo in the corner but gets caught by a back elbow to the face. Chavo’s
tornado DDT is easily countered into the Liontamer for the submission
to retain Jericho’s title.
Jericho
won’t let go of the hold so here’s Juvy for the save. Chris goes for
the mask but Juvy knocks him to the floor, sending the champion running
away.
British Bulldog vs. Sick Boy
What
an odd pairing. Eric Bischoff kicks Lee Marshall out of commentary and
wants to know who is behind the conspiracy against the NWO, namely
because They Live (a Roddy Piper movie) is playing right after Thunder.
Bulldog hits a powerslam (not the powerslam) sets up a delayed vertical
suplex but Sick Boy hits a springboard back elbow to take over. Sick Boy
pounds away and Bischoff storms off. We hit the chinlock as Tony says
They Live as many times as he can. Bulldog avoids a charge in the corner
and catches Sick Boy in the powerslam for the pin. This was a
commercial for the movie, not the match.
Post match Mongo hits the ring to attack Bulldog again.
Chris Benoit vs. Raven
Raven’s
Rules of course. Raven jumps Benoit on the way to the ring and sends
him head first into the steps. They head inside with a chair for the
drop toehold but Raven is sent twice into the chair wedged between the
top and middle rope. Benoit stomps a mudhole in the corner but Sick Boy
pulls Raven out of the way, sending Chris into the chair. Benoit comes
right back with rolling Germans but Kidman comes in for the save via a
springboard…..right into the Crossface for a tap out, which is good for
the submission win? I want to see a copy of Raven’s rules.
Rating: C.
This was intense while it lasted but they needed more time to make the
match work. The ending didn’t make a ton of sense but then again neither
did the Flock in general. Raven didn’t wrestle often in WCW but when he
did it was usually something good if not great.
The
Flock comes in for the post match beatdown but DDP comes in through the
crowd to make the save. He finally gets rid of Saturn to break up the
Rings of Saturn. Benoit insists he didn’t need Page’s help but Page
disagrees.
Glacier vs. Goldberg
Glacier’s
entrance nearly takes as long as the match. Goldberg does a standing
backflip to avoid a leg sweep, spear and Jackhammer make Goldberg
30something-0.
Ric Flair vs. Lex Luger
It’s
almost strange for this to not be for the world title. Luger starts
with a gorilla press and Flair begs off into the corner, only to come
out with the poke to the eye. Lex shoves him across the ring and flexes
before slamming Flair off the top rope. Flair rolls to the apron and
snaps Luger’s throat across the top rope followed by a low blow. The
chops have no effect on Luger so he comes back with a clothesline and a
superplex to put Flair down. Luger loads up the Rack but the referee
goes down, allowing Flair to hit a chop block to set up the Figure Four.
Luger turns it over but Savage runs in for the DQ.
Rating: C.
This was the abbreviated paint by numbers version of Luger vs. Flair,
which still makes it more entertaining than most matches you’ll find. At
this point these two could have a decent match just on muscle memory
alone. Savage running in makes sense given how insane he’s been lately,
plus it keeps either guy from having to job here.
Flair
tries to save Luger but Hogan comes in to take Savage out. The NWO
beats down everyone in sight but Sting runs in to clear the NWO out of
the ring to end the show.
Overall Rating: C+.
The show did a good job of setting up the PPV, but the focus was on the
main event stuff instead of the midcard like Thunder has been focusing
on so far. The Raven vs. Benoit vs. Page stuff is interesting and the
matches should be very fun. There’s also the Cruiserweight Title stuff
with Jericho being amazing at this point, so WCW continues to have a
bright future. Good show here but nothing memorable.
Remember to follow me on Twitter @kbreviews and check out my website at kbwrestlingreviews.com
I seem to recall the fledgling smark community loathing Lee Marshall around this time but I can't recall why.
ReplyDeleteSurprised you didn't mention that the Goldberg-Glacier match was one of the greatest squashes of all time.
ReplyDeleteI'll give Goldie this, a guy his size doing a standing backflip is impressive. I always wanted to see someone counter a Total Elimination that way.
ReplyDeleteBecause he was fucking horrible?
ReplyDelete