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The SmarK Rant for Monday Night RAW–12.12.94

The SmarK Rant for Monday Night RAW – 12.12.94

Yay, some terrible RAWs to cap off my marathon WWE Network day while my wife is out of town. Five SNMEs, a couple of RAW, and Summerslam 2002 on the live feed while I wrote the new Sporting News column. Quite the day for my $9.99.

LIVE from Liberty, NY.

Your hosts are Vince McMahon & Shawn Michaels.

Mr. Bob Backlund v. Doink the Clown

And what a way to start out a new taping cycle. I can only support Mr. Backlund in his plan to exterminate all clowns from the face of the earth, and hope he turns his attention to midgets next. Doink is back to the Matt Osborne gear, which at least doesn’t make him look like a prelim guy. And WHERE THE FUCK are they taping this show? It seriously looks like my high school gym. Not that I’d know what my gym looked like. There, saved you the snarky comeback. The History of WWE site reveals a sellout of 1400 people. World champion Diesel, ladies and gentlemen! The house shows with Diesel v. Bob on top were actually drawing so low at this point that they were cancelling entire tour legs. Very, very, long stall to start and they trade headlocks as we’re 5:00 in with absolutely nothing happening. They have literally only made contact twice, and finally Backlund puts him down with a forearm and goes to work on the arm. Doink with a sunset flip for two and we take a break. Back with Doink getting a small package for two, but Backlund goes back to the arm and works on that forever. Like, just minutes of laying on the mat with a hammerlock. Finally Doink comes back with a bodypress for two and backslide for two, but an elbow misses and Mr. Backlund finishes with the crossface chickenwing at 16:22. This was like watching an indy promotion from the time, with a tiny crowd in a high school gym and two washed up former stars having a boring match. -** This atrocity somehow qualified for the “Best of Season 1 and 2” DVD set a few years back.

We take a look at the upcoming tag title tournament on Superstars, with the actual winners of the titles nowhere to be found. I forget the circumstances that led to the switch from the Gunns to the Miracle Jobber Connection. A quick check of the Observer at the time reveals the answer is “Because Vince McMahon.” OK then.

Meanwhile, Jeff Jarrett is looking for a new hometown, starting in Vegas. As a note from last week’s show, my question about Brian Lee working as Jarrett’s roadie stems from a comment that Meltzer made in the Observer at the time, where someone heard the name “Lee Roadie” and confused it with Brian Armstrong, giving us Brian Lee by mistake. He actually posted a retraction in the next issue, so there you go.

Razor Ramon v. Mark Starr

Interestingly, Mark Starr and Chris Kanyon, who were enhancement guys here in 94, would jump to WCW as a moderately pushed tag team for a while. Starr, a pretty good longtime regional hand and brother of Chris Champion, goes after the knee and actually gets some offense in on Ramon until he gets waffled with a forearm. Razor with the top rope backdrop and Razor’s Edge to finish at 3:00. Starr is yet another guy where he had a good look, worked for cheap, and could have been packaged into at least a lower card gimmick guy to have good matches. But they just passed on all these guys for some reason and kept recycling the same goofs to lower and lower gates. Seriously, they are taping RAW in a fucking HIGH SCHOOL GYM, how much worse could it get if they gave Kanyon & Starr a try as a tag team, for example?

The King’s Court with IRS and his druids. They were just not going to give up on this dog of a program until it bankrupted the company. So next week it’s IRS v. Lex Luger.

Hakushi is coming!

Aldo Montoya v. Nick Barberri

Vince: “Aldo Montoya turned down the money from Ted Dibiase, wanting to make a name for himself in the WWF.” Shawn: “And the name he picked was Portuguese Man-O-War. Probably should have taken the money.” I would time travel back to 1994 to high five that shit. Aldo dumps the jobber and hits him with a dive, then works the arm before finishing with a bulldog at 2:30. Shawn Michaels notes that he had a mask just like Aldo’s hanging in his high school locker room. No wonder the gimmick died.

King Kong Bundy v. Bobby Knight

Bundy tosses the jobber and hauls him back in for the usual while Shawn is literally reading a magazine at the announce table. Can we just have Shawn on commentary forever? The yawn-inducing squash continues unabated until the Avalanche finishes at 4:00.

So yeah, this might have been one of the worst episodes of all time, in front of a tiny crowd that barely even made a noise all show.

Next week: Lex Luger v. IRS and Bushwackers v. Well Dunn part 2. I may have spoken too soon.

Comments

  1. Huh, I remember liking the Backlund/Doink match. Maybe nostalgia's blinding me.

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  2. I think early Raws would have benefitted from them throwing everything they had on them instead of splitting shit up between Raw, Action Zone, Superstars, and whatever other shitty shows they had at the time.

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  3. Shawn was on FIRE here.

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  4. This venue was so small that it wouldn't have been a stretch to see Linda making meatball subs for nostalgia.

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  5. A few excerpts from my old report on the match:

    "The match proceeds, and I thought I saw Yokozuna suppressing a yawn."
    "Backlund calmly walks into the ropes, and we're right back where we started. Welcome to Monday Night Raw."
    "We're back, so let's re-cap what's happened. Okay, back to the match."
    "And let's see, how long has this match gone, two hours now?"
    "McMahon mentions that by this point he'd consider stopping the match, if he were the referee. Oh, whatever for, Vince? At least half the crowd must still be awake yet."

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  6. "Shawn Michaels notes that he had a mask just like Aldo’s hanging in his high school locker room. No wonder the gimmick died."

    I'd like to think Shawn was trying to point out to Vince, who was RIGHT THERE, how dumb Polaco looked. Because although he was a dick back then, he knew what looked like bullshit.

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  7. CruelConnectionNumber2August 10, 2014 at 10:10 PM

    The Patriot and Nikolai Volkoff signed 8x10's at intermission for $10.

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  8. So CM Punk was the Shawn Michaels of commentary. Both great wrestlers and both awesome on the commentary booth. I just found weird that they didn't do much with Shawn at the time (aside from the breaking of his partnership with Diesel), they put him as a color commentator for a month, wins the Royal Rumble, and continued in the commentary booth for a couple of more weeks.

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  9. He had a broken hand and pins in it, which meant he couldn't do anything physical for weeks on end.

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  10. Wow never knew about the Best of Raw Seasons 1&2 set. Looking it over, that may be one of the best sets they've ever done.


    Now we get them all for 9.99 ALL DAY EVERY DAY!

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  11. Yeah, that's a set that never got much love, but it's really good. I picked it up a few years ago in a moment of "oh, what the hell," and it wound up getting a lot of time in my DVD player. Sometimes, you just never know.

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  12. Match sure sucked, but I enjoyed the excerpts.

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  13. How did WWF keep my interest at the time? I don't remember any of these episodes of Raw. The only thing I do remember is the Tag Tournament where Kid and Sparky went over JTTS teams to make it to the finals.

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  14. You know how sad the talent depth was? IRS v. Luger and Bushwhackers v. Well Dunn IS their idea of throwing everything they had.

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  15. I'd be willing to go all the way up to $19.99 a month for The Network if they hired Shawn and Kevin Nash to go back and re-do the commentary for all of these shows, just to hear them bury the shit out of everyone. That's a license to print money right there.

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  16. It's very confusing how every WWE "PPV" is now just a feature length advertisement for the next "PPV", which you can watch on the WWE Network for only 9.99 a month.

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  17. CruelConnectionNumber2August 10, 2014 at 11:40 PM

    It wasn't so much they attracted you as WCW repelled you with the hot main event build for Hogan vs The Butcher

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  18. Scanning over old Newsletters from this period, came across Dave's blurb about this particular episode. It was not a flattering paragraph.

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  19. CruelConnectionNumber2August 10, 2014 at 11:49 PM

    Flag match requires one of them to job. Winner gets to wave the flag.

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  20. I think it would be better in concept than reality. Nash would still bring the snark, but Shawn seems to be too relaxed and "over it" to get terribly worked up over bad gimmicks and booking from 20 years ago. On the other hand, if you had Nash, Road Dogg, and Puppet H... :)

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  21. Adam "Colorado" CurryAugust 10, 2014 at 11:51 PM

    Bring in the PWG guys and just let them go to town.

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  22. Was this still Matt Borne Doink? I couldn't imagine two pros like Bob and Matt putting on a war crime of a match like this one. This had to be Steve Keirn and Bob covering for him.

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  23. Raw wasn't really the "draw" at this point. It was basically just a goofy cable experiment until mid-1995.

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  24. Shawn has a great inside joke on commentary just a couple of shows later: "Diesel is nothing but a Cowardly Lion, and at WrestleMania I'm gonna send him back to Oz!"

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  25. Hold that 10 for Johnny B. BadAugust 10, 2014 at 11:59 PM

    That'd be a fun network concept: stars recording new commentary over old matches.

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  26. Between all their programs, Raw was the #1 show. superstars regressed, Action Zone had features that almost never meant anything to on-going storylines, and Challenge was dead.

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  27. Matt Borne was canned around October/November of 1993, this would have been Ray Liachelli under the gimmick.

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  28. The Doink character changed looks at Mania 10 because the guy working under the gimmick was considerably taller (around 6'4" or 6'5", I'd say), so they designed tights that would try and mask the difference.

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  29. Hold that 10 for Johnny B. BadAugust 11, 2014 at 12:08 AM

    I was so mad at that set. No Marty-Shawn 2, no Steiners-Quebeccors, no IC battle royal, no Yoko vs Crush, no Quebeccors vs Kid & Marty, no Savage empty arena interview following the Yoko match...great, but just a minor let down without some of those early fun moments.

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  30. I didn't know Matt was gone that early. Yeah the big Doink was awful.

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  31. I'm not sure if it's the same match, but I think you gave the Backlund-Doink match something like ***1/4 match from your Colosseum video rant.

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  32. Worked for Kennel from Hell.

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  33. I thought that, but Brock's going to wrestle on... what, two PPVs until WM? I don't get it.

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  34. Yeah, that Backlund/Doink match is like Alberto Del Rio's stuff for me- technically-competent, but super-dull.

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  35. I don't remember a big Doink at all- was he 6'4" at WMX?

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  36. It was like "The Best of Doink"- they had something like TEN Doink matches. Tons of jobber stuff on there as well, which was odd. You'd think they'd have just gone for the Main Events.

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  37. theoreticaly, but Steen as a very "look at me" presence.

    he LEADS groups well but it's hard to picture him as a a subordinate.

    (plus he's ten times better in the ring then Bray, so that could expose him Gangrel style)

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  38. For a really funny Face Doink match, pick Waylon Mercy against Doink. The crowd is just hostile against Doink. Makes for a fun match.

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  39. At least it made the PPVs more interesting. Even if it had Jerry Lawler and midgets vs Doink and midgets...;)

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  40. " The house shows with Diesel v. Bob on top were actually drawing so low
    at this point that they were cancelling entire tour legs."

    Mine was indeed cancelled. We found out literally 15 minutes before we were set to leave. As much as i sucked, it would have been even worse had we found out at the arena door after a 2,5 hour drive!!

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  41. Funny how Backlund and Doink had a very solid match in 1993, with the face/heel roles reversed. Doink actually outwrestled Backlund, and got a clean win.

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  42. I loved your old reports. That was some great writing. I remember looking for an online archive a while ago and not being able to find them.

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  43. Man, why would WWF think they could squash a guy in 8 seconds then put him out on the road as a challenger? That's madness.

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  44. Yep, and the rest of the card was incredibly weak too. I barely remember anything about it. And before the whole title change, it was Bret vs Backlund, and Shawn & Diesel vs 2 of the Headshrinkers. Even then, nothing special. But damn it, we were still going!!

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  45. When do they get rid of the goofy set?

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  46. The plot thickens. (dramatic music)

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  47. Bobby Knight could have taken down Bundy if he threw more chairs at him.

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  48. Sometimes I really think the "Vince is a genius" meme is overrated. He's hit plenty of home runs but my GOD was 1993-1997 just terrible! Its like he had no idea what to do.

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  49. I think Doink ws Matt Borne on that occasion, and it was someone else this time.

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  50. I basically didn't know anything that was going on from like, a little after WM 10 to right after WM 14, and finding out stuff like "Backlund turned heel and Bundy came back" was very, very surreal. I still haven't seen much of this time period (outside of Manias) and I don't think I shall. Backlund did rule until they did the Diesel switch though.

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  51. That's gotta be soon, right? Like another 2-3 weeks? Damn, I was a shaken up 10 year old watching Piper get decimated like that.

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  52. I thought the worst venue of this time period was the place they taped the March to WrestleMania special, which looked like an industrial basement. This gives it a run for its money, though.


    I'm all for intimate venues, by the way. If this were '80s Crockett I think it'd be great (plus the crowd would be electric, which overcomes a lot). But for the WWF, which had taped its TV from either big arenas or at least nice-looking venues like the Manhattan Center for the previous 8 years, it doesn't work.

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  53. Do you mean the one where they had the Bret-Owen no-holds-barred match?

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  54. I know you can't beat the King of Pop (Kevin Clash sure tried though...too soon?), but the original Superstars theme w/filmreel opening was still epic.

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  55. And more importantly...A WWE HALL OF FAMER.

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  56. ....parlez-vous francais?

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  57. And he acted like a face still!

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  58. Piper's face turn just felt unique in 1986 because he didn't just become a generic face. He still hated Hogan. He could have still been a heel, but instead he was now a good guy upon returning. Him and Savage (later in 87) turning face for the first time in the WWF seemed special and fans were red hot to cheer for them.

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  59. Wasn't he first the third member before Tama vanished and then didn't Haku just then become king within a span of weeks?

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