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Repost For Fun: Monday Nitro #1

The SmarK 24/7 Rant for Monday Nitro #1 (September 4 1995)

- Holy COW what a week of content. Why must I work for 8 hours a day?

- Live from the Mall of America

- Your hosts are Eric Bischoff & Steve McMichael & Bobby Heenan.

Brian Pillman v. Jushin Liger.

Liger catches a kick in the corner and a moonsault press gets two. Pillman takes him down with a headscissors for two. Rollup gets two. Liger comes back with a bow-and-arrow, but Pillman gets another headscissors before missing a charge and landing on the floor. Liger follows with a senton off the apron, but Pillman suplexes him off the apron and follows with a cross body to the floor. Back in, they fight on top and Liger superplexes him for two. Back up, but Pillman dropkicks him for two. Pillman comes back with a swinging DDT for two and reverses a suplex attempt into a victory roll for the, well, victory, at 6:42. Too short to be worth much, but it really kicked off the new era of cruiserweights on Monday nights. **1/2

- Meanwhile, Hulk Hogan shills Pastamania, as he proves that yes, marking up a can of Spaghettios to $6 CAN be a losing proposition. Whatcha gonna do when Chapter 11 runs wild on YOU, brother?

Sting v. Ric Flair.

It is of course fitting that this match bookended the history Monday Nitro, but this match is also historic for being the atomic bomb that launched the Monday Night Wars. Namely, Lex Luger, who walks down to ringside while supposedly being a part of the WWF at the time. I think that later he may have regretted that move. Lockup to start and Flair grabs the headlock, but Sting escapes and gets the military press. Another one for fun and he follows with the hiptoss and dropkick to put Flair on the floor. Back in, Flair goes for the eyes and throws the first chops of the Monday Night Wars, but Sting no-sells as we're apparently doing the abbreviated version of their matches. Another press slam, but Flair goes low and takes Sting to the floor with a bodypress. Flair takes a run at him on the floor, but Sting catches him in another press and dumps Flair back into the ring. Stinger splash misses, but Sting no-sells that too and keeps coming with a bulldog instead. Finally he runs into an elbow, and we have to take a break. Back with Flair going up, and Sting slamming him off for the first time on Nitro. Not the last. Yet another press slam (OK, you're strong, we get it), but he misses a flying splash while Arn Anderson wanders out. Flair with the delayed suplex, but Sting no-sells and comes back and sets up the Flair Flip before pounding away in the corner. They do a low-grade version of the pinfall reversal sequence and Sting puts Flair on the top for a superplex, but doesn't cover. Flair clips him while he's jawing at AA and gets the figure-four, but he uses the ropes and gets caught. Arn simply walks in and it's a DQ at 9:20. Arn attacks Flair to build towards the Horsemen reunion at Halloween Havoc, showing that Sting, as usual, is a moron for buying any of it. This was the Reader's Digest Condensed version of their usual match, but it's Flair v. Sting, so it's pretty much an automatic thumbs up. ***1/4

- And now, another huge shock, as Scott Norton invades WCW! Oddly, people don't still talk about that one today like they do with Luger. Randy Savage gets in his face to set up a feud that no one cared about anyway.

- Sabu: Coming soon to a do a quick job and then leave.

- Meanwhile, Michael Wallstreet returns to WCW. Don't know how they managed to screw up that gimmick. Take Ted Dibiase's just-as-talented former partner, give him Dibiase's gimmick, and then give him no more promo time and do nothing with him. OK, I guess I do know how they screwed it up.

WCW World title: Hulk Hogan v. Big Bubba Rogers. Bischoff announces that Norton v. Savage will be next week's main event. Whew, glad I don't have to sit through it. Bubba grabs the headlock to start, but Hogan shoulderblocks him down. Bubba slugs away in the corner and follows with an avalanche, then chokes him out in the corner. Hulk comes back and rams Bubba into the turnbuckle, but gets poked in the eye. Bubba pounds on the ribs in the corner, but walks into a boot, and Hogan pounds away on the mat. Bubba comes back with the running choke, but goes after Jimmy Hart and gets attacked by Hogan again as a result. Hulk throws punches in the corner and follows with the corner clothesline, and slams him to set up the elbow drops. It's interesting that after the initial star pop that Hogan got, the crowd is no longer interested in his act and really dies off, foreshadowing Hogan's future problems in that regard. Bossman Slam gets two, but it's time to hulk up. Big boot, legdrop, goodbye at 7:04. Short and pretty painless, although it felt like a Saturday morning cartoon at times. ** And speaking of cartoons, the Dungeon of Doom attacks Hulk afterwards, but Luger saves and teases a confrontation with Hulk. Sting and Randy Savage intercede to calm things down, and I'll say what I've said before again: Whoever couldn't put 2 and 2 together and book Sting & Lex Luger v. The Megapowers on PPV is a giant idiot and should be beaten with a large piece of wood. If they done a passing the torch deal with those guys at Starrcade 95 it would have drawn HUGE money.

- Next week: Hulk Hogan v. Lex Luger for the World title!

Well, this was pretty close to a perfect debut for Nitro, as they led off with a pair of good matches and dropped a huge surprise on the fans, then headlined with two of the bigger stars of the WWF's biggest era and set up a match for the next week that people wanted to see. Hell, I'd watch again. Thumbs way up for this show.

Comments

  1. But you had to keep Hogan strong for the angle that killed the company so he could be kept strong for the WM18 match and then kept stronger for a fizzled but profitable TNA jump!

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  2. WCW RUINS EVERYTH...


    Oh, wait. They didn't this time.

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  3. Aric Johnson, Ambrose FanaticJune 18, 2014 at 11:26 PM

    "This building is apropos... and I'm not talking about diggin' in the dirt with no farm implements baby" - pretty much the first words out of Mongo's mouth on this show.

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  4. "Namely, Lex Luger, who walks down to ringside while supposedly being a part of the WWF at the time. I think that later he may have regretted that move."

    What makes you believe that? You think that he wouldn't have had his spinal stroke if he had stayed in the WWE?

    Also, some interesting backstory on the opening Monday Nitro from wwe.com:

    http://www.wwe.com/classics/wcw/monday-nitro-debut-26145990

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  5. Aric Johnson, Ambrose FanaticJune 18, 2014 at 11:27 PM

    I've debated the meaning of this for YEARS.

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  6. Just fun how in '95, no one gave WCW a chance in hell against RAW but Bischoff came out hot with Luger and just better with giving away results and such. Yeah, NWO was key but WCW really set things more on fire with Nitro to rock the entire business forever.

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  7. I think what Mongo did here was confuse "apropos" with "agro grow." That's the only way I've managed to make sense of this without going insane.

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  8. Aric Johnson, Ambrose FanaticJune 18, 2014 at 11:30 PM

    I think he might just be saying random words. I mean most of the other shit he says on commentary during these early Nitros make about as little sense.

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  9. It's difficult to understate how important Luger's debut was here. Nitro instantly became a threat and their venture onto Monday nights was completely legitimized. TNA tried in 2010 but failed. If they'd found a way to get, say, Randy Orton to show up then maybe they would have hung around for a while.

    STUPID, STUPID, STUPID!

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  10. Luger would've been screwed either way really. WWF was phasing him out, and he didn't get as big a piece of the action in WCW that he could've. He was really cut off at the knees by that fucktarded title switch at Hog/Road/Shite Biker Show Wild.

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  11. Nice piece despite how you can't really say WWF was "in really great shape" in late 1995. But do like the bit of Luger admitting "back than, I was all about me."

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  12. If TNA had a better cable deal, they'd have had a better shot at it. They aren't going anywhere on Spike because Spike.

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  13. Luger showing up was a shock among shocks, even for me and my fledgling Prodigy account. There was still about a 3 or 4-day turnaround for news and things like this could still be kept under wraps in a pre-social media world.


    And then Hogan making a title match for NEXT WEEK was utterly mindblowing, in a way that I don't think younger viewers can comprehend. That type of shit just didn't happen. And for the first time in Hogan's WCW career, no one really knew what would happen in his match. A lot of very smart, very well-informed people on Prodigy truly thought they might change the title. Luger was instantly hot again after stagnating in the WWF, and the way he was initially booked was just brilliant.

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  14. Supposedly the WWF's next plan for Luger was for him to put over Triple H at the next In Your House. Yeah, not much of a future for him there.

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  15. Aric Johnson, Ambrose FanaticJune 18, 2014 at 11:34 PM

    I also can't get over how this Nitro is in a MALL.


    Like... you can see people just going about their shopping in the background and shit. "Where's the food court? Oh look there's a wrestling show going on over there." It's just bizarre to me.

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  16. "If you don't think WCW has the best wrestling in the world, then you got rocks in your head like Heenan" - Mongo, only moments after Bobby was talking about how impressive Benoit and Guerrero were

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  17. Bizarre,but I thought it looked cool. I'm a sucker for wrestling in odd venues and a mall looks better than some of the gyms and resort convention rooms the WWF was running Raw in.

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  18. Not sure if I agree there. In 1997 he's WCW's hottest act while Sting is in the rafters. And drawing big numbers to boot.

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  19. And he was making diddly-squat at the time, because Eric Bischoff low-balled Luger on account of not really wanting him.

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  20. How would you push a guy working on a handshake?

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  21. Opening match? Poor Ric.

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  22. How could anyone not want Luger? Honestly look at his run from when he came back in 1995 through that Nitro title win. Matches may not have been the best, but he was super over as a face and his tweener role was fantastic.

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  23. I don't see that happening. Luger working without a long-term contract, sure, I doubt he would've put over HHH in September.

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  24. Rotundo went back and forth from being a rich guy to being a tax collector.

    So why are all the IRS guys that I've talked with so unhappy?

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  25. Aric Johnson, Ambrose FanaticJune 18, 2014 at 11:47 PM

    Because everyone hates them?

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  26. Honestly, how much of that is Luger, and how much of that is the nWo?

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  27. Amsterdam_Adam_CurryJune 18, 2014 at 11:50 PM

    I love the shows at Club La Vela or wherever where the ring would be in a big pool. The outdoor ones at Universal Studios where there would be a huge palm tree in the isle (IIRC the Rey Rey lawn dart spot happened at one of those shows) were great too.


    But any show in Sturgis can eat a cargo plane of dicks.

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  28. They had Jeff Hardy debut on that first Monday Impact and he was arguably a bigger star than Orton at the time.

    But TNA managed to make it seem like a non event so they were always dead out of the gate really

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  29. Aric Johnson, Ambrose FanaticJune 18, 2014 at 11:50 PM

    Vroom! Vroom!

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  30. Aric Johnson, Ambrose FanaticJune 18, 2014 at 11:52 PM

    *boos at Harlem Heat just because they're black*

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  31. I could dry my tears with hundred dollar bills.

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  32. If you have read the article that I linked to above, now would be a good time to do so.

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  33. So Nitro's success was luck, as they could never have planned for a star like Luger to just fall into their laps in such a fashion.


    The only way TNA's war with WWE could have succeeded was if John Cena had shown up to give a ten-minute obscenity-laced promo against his former employer...only for CM Punk to show up and give a 20 minute obscenity-laced pipe bomb on Cena and the WWE...only for Shane McMahon to show up, give the finger to his dad, and announce that he was pouring $100 million of his own money into the promotion.

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  34. GOD that was uncomfortable to watch. Just a sea of white trash doing that utterly-fucking-retarded "come at me" pose with their hands circling around in an effeminate manner.

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  35. He was still better than Rob Bartlett.

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  36. I've always debated whether or not Andre the Giant REALLY surrendered his championship.

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  37. This comment will be scrubbed from the upcoming Blog of Doom Network.

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  38. Aric Johnson, Ambrose FanaticJune 19, 2014 at 2:05 AM

    "Whoever couldn't put 2 and 2 together and book Sting & Lex Luger v. The Megapowers on PPV is a giant idiot and should be beaten with a large piece of wood."

    Really, there's no need to get Duggan involved in this.

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  39. This is what gets me. WCW took WWF retreads and made them seem fresh. When guys go to TNA they look like even bigger retreads.

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  40. I don't think Luger regrets walking out on Vince. I think he regrets the years of drug abuse.

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  41. WWE should do another show at Penn Station, so someone else can get tombstoned down an escalator. Best visual of the late 90s!

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  42. Were you at Pastamania during the Pillman match?

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  43. Jeff Hardy was certainly a bigger star than Luger was in 1995 too. Ever see a Luger match in 1994/95 without canned heat? Nobody could have cared less about that guy.

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  44. Threadjackery,

    So, my wife watching General Hospital daily. This morning I'm sitting beside her and she's watching a pvr'd episode. It then occurs to me that of all the weird soap opera writer created crap that WWE has aired over the last decade, their main story is waaaaaay weirder.

    Currently, the main mob family is sharing ladies like it's the 90's, they're on a playground, and the ladies are pogs. The father, Sonny, is with this lady who may or may not be pregnant with his child. Which wouldn't be so weird except the other person that may be the father of this child is his son. Meanwhile, Sonny's other son is dating a girl that used to date the first son.

    So...I guess my point is that when storylines suck in wrestling we can always say things could be worse.

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  45. Didn't help that they never booked him to actually get a huge win. They really totally gave up on him, to the point where even his most loyal fans stopped Bo-Lieving in him. Sometimes, just being booked to win can make a big difference, wasn't really Lex's fault in this case.

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  46. He was involved in the main event at Summerslam 95, hinting at some kind of program with Diesel. Might not have happened, but he seemed to have been put back in the top mix.

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  47. I thought the plan was a program with Davey Boy. Didn't the Bulldog JUST turn heel? The Allied Powers were going to EXPLODE!

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  48. although that has nothing to do with the actual look of the Sturgis show.

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  49. Yeah, I totally agree with that. That Summerslam 1993 ending... it still boggles my mind. I was only 11, but I remember him celebrating his useless countout win and thinking "What is wrong with this idiot? He blew it!". I understand, in theory, them holding off his big win, but the way they did it just made him look stupid to me.

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  50. Yep, and maybe a tag match with Luger/Diesel vs Bulldog/Mabel. Meh, maybe WCW was a good idea. :)

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  51. I give Bischoff a lot of credit for realizing he wouldn't beat Raw by doing the same but instead pretty much the opposite. and giving away the results was genius.

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  52. After years of being booked like absolute shit, i can't imagine Lex regrets walking out on Vince. He got 5.5 years of highly paid time out of his 2nd WCW run. Considering he also didn't do anything until late 2002 it seems likely he got another 18 months of pay outta Time Warner for sitting on his ass too.


    So Lex Luger in 2003 WWE? Come on now, he'd be lucky to last 6 months and he'd be the first to admit it. So again what could he possibly regret about jumping ship?

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  53. Just a different era. I imagine it genuinely never occurred to Vince that Luger would actually go back on his word and jump.

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  54. Triple H did some jobs to Henry Godwin back in 1995 or 96. Doesn't mean H.O.G. was pegged for a top spot or anything.

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  55. Lex Luger had a great head of hair.

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  56. I heard that the terms of the contract were a little vague, and that Vince actually thought that it had rolled over or something, but Luger knew better. Vince was contemplating legal action until the lawyers realised that no, Luger could do what we wanted.

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  57. Sonny Corinthos is the soap opera version of John Cena, the top guy shoved down our throats as the "hero" despite being an annoying hypocrite.

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  58. I love that. And there's a guy in the audience right behind the commentators who makes this "Wait, what?" face as soon as he says it. Great stuff. I've probably seen this episode a dozen times.

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  59. Unless he didn't manage his money well, and needed a job in 2002/2003, nothing at all. He was one of the centerpieces of the promotion for the next four years.

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  60. I liked his clumsy fed line "Is this not the best wrestling you have EVER seen. On television. On Monday nights." Yeah, we get it. Reference to Raw, right?

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  61. I know I was just fourteen when the show debuted, but I was really excited for the show. I thought it would be a nice change from Raw, and I was right.

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  62. I agree. He could barely cut it in the ring in 1997, to be honest. Very basic and lazy. The idea he could have much to contribute to 2002/3 WWF with Brock, Edge, Angle et al at the top is absurd.

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  63. Oh come on. Vince McMahon is a wrestling promoter, not a naive little schoolgirl.

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  64. Looking back it doesn't make much sense why everyone counted WCW out, The WWF was doing horrid business at the time but still no one gave Nitro a chance.

    Even Paul E thought WCW was crazy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pLH0b5UO2lg



    Yet boom, Week 1 Ratings - Nitro - 2.9 Raw 2.2

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  65. Worst pin is, was, and always will be, the finally fall of Glamour Girls vs Jumping Bomb Angels at the first Royal Rumble.

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  66. Unique atmosphere, but booing great wrestlers while sitting on their bikes and waiting to see Hulk Hogan is probably not the best crowd to have...so of course, they did it for three years.

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  67. And on top of that, they held off on his big win... only to have him choke again!! (like Imagine if Daniel Bryan had lost at WM 30 to HHH, and never even made it to the final match. *THAT* is what happened to Lex!)

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  68. Yep, and even as a kid, before Luger jumped, I felt that WCW's roster could easily match the WWF's in terms of quality and star power. It wasn't *THAT* shocking.

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  69. Days Of Our Lives or GTFO.

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  70. So am I the only one who read:
    "- Holy COW what a week of content. Why must I work for 8 hours a day?"
    And thought it meant The Network started adding Nitro's?

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  71. There's always a good reason to involve Duggan. IN EVERYTHING.

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  72. Not coincidentally, his hair was at its worst in 1993.

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  73. Bischoff had said he wasn't that I highly paid.

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  74. My understanding was that he started out with a very low contract, but once he proved himself, his pay probably skyrocketed around 1997. that is my guess anyway.

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  75. Yeah plus i can't imagine Eric Bischoff signing him for more than 2 years when he's on record saying he wasn't that interested in him in the first place. So Lex puts in 2 years, gets a contract renewal at a inflated price and everyone's happy.

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  76. But Steve Austin DID have wonderful hair at one point. It isn't a necessity, but it certainly helps you get your foot in the door.

    Hulk was balding even at the start of Hulkamania, but it was still an interesting look and was really suited for those headbands he would wear.

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  77. Porn Peddlin' Jef VinsonJune 19, 2014 at 6:42 AM

    Is Pastamania that product his ex-wife told him to shill instead of that thing that eventually became the Forman Grill?
    (..hey, that rhymed.)

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  78. Well, heck....if we are dreaming here:

    Have Brock beat on Bray for 45 straight minutes. Hit him with every finisher all the way down to the Camel Clutch. Bray just wobbles away, but comes back smiling. Bray wins when a confused Brock punches himself out, and we get the Rocky III finish.

    Bray becomes the next Mankind overnight.

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  79. Most ANNOYING pin for me is Hogan vs Warrior at 6. Like Jesus Hulk, you really took "taking the 3 count" literally, as by 3.1 you were back up on your feet shaking your head in disbelief like you just got small packaged for the loss.

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  80. If things are really up in the air concerning Bryan's status, I'd have Cena take the belt at MitB, then get *demolished* by Brock at Summerslam (yeah yeah, I know). Brock holding the belt as a transitional champ gives you plenty of time to decide whether Reigns/Bryan/Cena is going to be the one you put over him to take the belt back.

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  81. No, the titles don't need to be split again. Less the better.

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  82. So was Kane.

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  83. I used to think the same thing but I've switched to the other side of the fence on this one. Remember, Hulk was in the middle of hulking-up when he missed the legdrop. If he completely no-sells punches and stuff like that when hulking-up, it's realistic (in a kayfabe-sense) that a finisher like Warrior's splash would just be enough to stun him for a bit, not knock him out.

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  84. If the end-game is facing Brock at "Summerslam", then I'm rooting for Sheamus to win the title at "MITB" - I've been wanting Brock/Sheamus for years, and they'd have a HELL of a match.

    #2 would be Cena, as their last match was awesome, and I'm all for a rematch with Brock getting his win back.

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  85. You know the split's coming eventually. Otherwise why would the champ keep carrying two belts instead of just merging them into one? I don't see the WWE selling so many replicas of each belt that they need to keep them both for merchandising purposes. And Vince doesn't give two shits about the historic lineage of each belt. So the only reason I can fathom for them keeping two belts is to eventually split them up again, and this seems to be the perfect opportunity to pull that trigger.

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  86. If Cena can pin Wyatt why can't Lesnar? That's my only problem with this.

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  87. Touché, but I wouldn't use Kane's completely impossible backstory as a comparison for anything. The WWE has demonstrated a remarkable lack of self-awareness over the years regarding their silly storylines and even they poke fun at Kane's backstory from time to time.

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  88. Oh, I'm not disagreeing, just saying that - like Kane - it may not be that Abigail is dead, just that Bray THINKS she's dead.

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  89. A lot depends on the end game. I truly feel Wyatt wins. This might indicate a Bryan return by Summerslam, for a Summerslam match.
    Unfortunately, the money match is Lesnar v Cena, which obviously would mean Cena wins.
    This is why I pick Bray, because I don't think WWE knows where they are going yet. The fans are turning the Wyatts, but they haven't turned yet. So Bray could still stay heel versus a returning Bryan, or he could gain some mega- face momentum as an underdog trying to take down the monster that is Lesnar.
    So until the E knows who they are going with at Summerfest, Bray could take them there and they could go in any direction thanks to his current tweener- role.
    And yes, whoever wins looks to be strictly transitional.

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