HD Ryder vs Super Destroyer #3
SD3 is a barely
disguised Sal Bellomo, who even takes his mask off for breath throughout the
bout. This is played for comedy, which is about the best use of Sal. Bellomo’s
offence is super soft, the only highpoints being a decent standing dropkick and
Ryder selling an eyerake by wildly swinging at the air. A splash gives Bellomo
the win, at which point the real Super Destroyers come in and obliterate him.
Suicide Blondes vs Tony Stetson & Larry Winters
Good to see the Blondes rewarded for their clean loss in a
non-title match with a title shot. This isn’t great, though I really liked
Stetson’s full-force flying clothesline. Winters is briefly worked over as
face-in-peril, but when he hits a DDT, he opts not to tag out. This sets alarm
bells ringing, and Hotbody causing a ref bump moments later do nothing to silence
them (though Hotbody is dumb enough to try a small package on Winters, despite
knowing he caused the ref to be down). More shenanigans lead to Hotbody nailing
Winters with a chain to pick up the titles. Winters & Stetson being used as
transitional champs to transfer the belts to the Blondes makes sense, as
Hotbody and Candido are the best team in the company at this juncture.
Ernesto Benefico vs Don Muraco
Benefico is someone I’ve never seen look competitive and has
zero chance. Muraco knows it too, as he plays this for laughs, barely putting
any effort in. Muraco kind of awkwardly drops Ernesto over his head, then
catches him coming off the top rope with a piledriver for the win.
JT Smith & Tommy Cairo vs Max Thrasher & the
Canadian Wolfman
This was set up by Thrasher abandoning Smith the previous
week, though given that he’s now paired with the obese, slovenly Wolfman, it
looks a short-sighted decision. Enjoyed Cairo and Smith here, as they work as a
knock-off Steiner Brothers, even down to the colourful singlets and Stevie
Wonderful comparing Cairo to Rick Steiner on commentary. They both hits some
nice suplex variations on the shambolic Wolfman, with Thrasher deciding to stay
out of the match, before finishing with a nice Cairo powerslam and a Rocket
Launcher sending Smith on top for 3. This was pretty fun.
Jimmy Snuka vs Glen Osbourne
TV title defence, though given that Osbourne’s offence is
almost entirely monkey flips and snapmares, you don’t see the title changing
hands. Snuka sells a clothesline in an embarrassing manner, taking a soft limb
to the chest and turning to slowly leap over the top rope. An Osbourne roll up
after Snuka misses a corner charge is SO close and actually had me going for a
second. After Osbourne controls the bout, a soft Snuka backbreaker seems to put
him out of action, giving Snuka time to slowly climb the ropes and hit a
Superfly Splash for 3.
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