Of course, the release of the WWE Network in the UK has given me access to a whole history of shows, and this gave me the idea to embark upon a little project. I'm going to rewatch the era of pro-wrestling that started my obsession with the sport, 1992 WCW. Saturday afternoons were spent, without fail, in front of the TV watching Worldwide on ITV, and I thought it would help continue my wrestling/writing journey to watch it again. I'll still be reviewing other stuff as well, but expect a lot of Dangerous Alliance-era WCW over the coming months...
Vader & Mr Hughes vs the Steiner Brothers
This was a whole heap of fun, and following a token bit of
Scott Steiner using his mat skills to down Mr Hughes, a big man power-move spot
fest. Scotty hits a huge overhead belly-to-belly on Hughes to get the ball
rolling, and from that point on its just big hitting move after big hitting
move. Rick hitting his own overhead belly-to-belly on Vader was great, as was
Vader catching Rick on a dive from the ring and ramming him into the ring post.
We don’t really get a face-in-peril section, as Rick soon hits a belly-to-belly
on Vader off the top rope. There is a little bit of heat on Scotty until Hughes
misses an avalanche and gets planted with a big backdrop. A melee ensues, with
Vader accidently clotheslining his partner and Rick hitting the top rope
bulldog on Hughes for the win.
Brian Pillman & Marcus Alexander Bagwell vs Tracy
Smothers & the Taylor Made Man
Another tag sprint here, albeit with less emphasis on power
moves. This is pretty fast paced to start, until Taylor hits a backbreaker on
Pillman to stop him in his tracks. All four end up in the ring, with Pillman
and Bagwell dropkicking the heels out and nailing them with pescados. Bagwell
is still talked up as a rookie, and runs into a Smothers superkick following
distraction from Taylor. The heat on Bagwell is brief, and in fact Pillman
spends more time in peril, getting double teamed as Bagwell’s inexperience
distracts the referee. Pillman takes some big bumps, getting suplex straight out
of the ring and getting rammed off the apron into the railings. A hot tag to
Bagwell follows almost straight away though, and the end is pretty cool.
Bagwell hits a sunset flip on Smothers, but Taylor grabs his partner to stop
him going over. Pillman dropkicks Taylor, which sends Smothers over for the
three. Fun match.
Richard Morton vs Johnny B Badd
The announcers play up Badd’s size advantage, so I appreciated
Morton using a slightly vicious edge to take control, throwing Badd from the
ring and ramming him into the ringpost. Badd is occasionally able to come back
by overpowering Morton, so Morton makes his comebacks by cutting Badd off with
quick blows to the midsection. The end comes rather abruptly, Badd rolling
through a crossbody to win.
Diamond Dallas Page vs PN News
Very quick match. We start with DDP trying (and failing) to slam
News, which seems like a terrible plan. News uses his weight well here, hitting
two barrel rolls onto Page. A missed elbow gives DDP an opening, but he’s not
learnt from his earlier mistake, trying another slam. This times, he gets News
up, but collapses under the weight, and News wins with a belly-to-belly and a
top rope splash.
Cactus Jack vs Van Hammer
This was really fun, and I’m impressed at how good the
much-maligned Hammer looked. In many ways, a match like this played to his
strengths, as he only needed to hit a few good looking moves, and the rest of
the gaps were filled in my Cactus. Hammer was pretty agile, getting good height
on a legdrop and leaping over the top rope from the ramp to hit a clothesline.
They tumble outside, and Jack establishes the gimmick early with a quick
pinfall attempt. Cactus hits a sunset flip to the floor, typically taking
almost all the impact himself. He also lands with a horrible sounding thud when
Hammer hiptosses him off the ramp. They brawl to the back and the cameras find
them outside near a bullpen, which they end up fighting in. A rather large
cowboy is revealed to be Abdullah The Butcher, but his attempt to hit Jack with
a shovel fails and he nails Hammer instead, giving Cactus the win. Really fun,
energised brawl, probably the best Hammer ever looked.
Michael PS Hayes & Jimmy Garvin vs Brad Armstrong &
Big Josh
This was pretty brief, but man it felt like the Freebirds
had their working boots on here. This set off at a fair pace, and even an
awkward looking Garvin crossbody felt it like kinda fit. Josh and Armstrong
were a decent combo of power and speed, and I’d have liked to have seen more of
them as a team without Josh’s lumberjack gimmick. That said, I thought the log
roll he did on both Freebirds was a fun spot. Garvin stops Armstrong hitting a
suplex and the Birds hit a double DDT behind the refs back for the victory.
Vinnie Vegas vs Thomas Rich
Squash match. Vegas cheapshots Rich to start and hits the
snake eyes for the win.
Arn Anderson, Larry Zbyszko & Bobby Eaton vs Barry
Windham, Dustin Rhodes & Ron Simmons
Zbyszko broke Windham’s hand back in November, and Windham
is out for revenge. He’s so fired up that he no-sells an Eaton superplex before
the faces lock in stereo figure fours. Simmons and Dustin are both equally as
fired up, with Simmons looking great clearing the ring and Rhodes hitting a
flying clothesline over the top rope to the ramp. Rhodes soon ends up as
face-in-peril (albeit briefly), and a referee distraction allows Paul E Dangerously
to hit him with his phone. Arn gets two after hitting Dustin with the
spinebuster, and again following a nice DDT. The heat on Dustin is pretty
brief, and Arn only hits boot trying an ax handle from the top. A melee ensues,
during which Windham catches Eaton coming off the top rope with a big punch
from his cast-clad hand, and gets the win for the face team. Fun, but felt a
bit too rushed. You could easily add another ten minutes to this and have a
classic.
Sting & Ricky Steamboat vs Steve Austin & Rick Rude
The decision to have a lot of the upper-card revolve around
the Dangerous Alliance really helped with the match quality in this time period
for WCW. I love Steamboat trying a few quick roll-ups early on to look for the
quick victory. Rude wants a piece of Sting, so slaps him to lure him into the
ring. Sting has a gameplan here to work over Rude’s back, and him and Steamboat
trade Camel Clutches on Rude, taking a page from the Alliance playbook by
pretending to tag behind the referee’s back. Commentator Jesse Ventura is livid
at this. The Alliance briefly take over on Sting after a low blow by Rude, but
he swiftly makes the tag to Steamboat, who is in like a house on fire. Things
break down as Rude nails Steamboat whilst he pins Austin following a victory
roll, but the faces are able to pick up the win, Sting nailing a crossbody from
the top as Austin holds Steamboat, with both men controversially covering the
future Stone Cold for the three. Another match that was too short, but was fun.
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