Category: WCW PPV Musings
WCW Great American Bash 1989
NWA Starrcade 1985
So Starrcade ’84 was a bust. Starrcade ’85, on the other hand… not so much. And only because it is the show that features perhaps the most famous and single greatest match in the history of Starrcade and certainly one of the all-time greatest wrestling matches ever conceived.
Tully Blanchard. Magnum TA. Steel Cage. I Quit Match. Nuff said.
NWA Starrcade 1984
If I could find a Cornette Face circa 1984, I would… because it’s the only thing that could justly depict my reaction to this show.
So once upon a time, there was a thing called Wrestlemania and it was touted as a big deal. The following year, they had a thing called Wrestlemania 2 and the only thing people remember about that one was that it was held in three arenas on the same night and the card was largely bad.
Going a bit further back, there was a thing called Starrcade and it was touted as a big deal… and it was, seeing Ric Flair defeated NWA World Champion Harley Race to win his seond world title. The following year, there was another Starrcade event… and the only good thing to come out of that show was a pretty good match between reigning TV champion Tully Blanchard and Ricky Steamboat.
Other than that, the show was complete and utter trash.
Rarely do I watch an old show from the WWE Network that I had to STRUGGLE with in order to keep going. There were multiple points where I just wanted to stop outright because the show was so BORING. A whole bunch of short, shitty matches with a lot of downer endings because it’s mostly heels winning. This isn’t a case of different times; Starrcade 83 had some downer stuff, but it also had some really good shit and there were a couple other shows from the early days that I thought were pretty good for the most part… if only because there was one or two matches that made the rest of the show worth sitting through.
Starrcade 84 is not one of those shows.
There’s a bunch of titles being defended; Junior Heavyweight, Florida Heavyweight, Brass Knuckles Heavyweight, Mid-Atlantic title, TV title, US title, World title… I think if you look hard enough, there might be a Coal Miner championship being defended somehwere on the card. Outside of the aforementioned TV title match, none of these are any good. Yes, the main event is Dusty Rhodes challenging Ric Flair for the World title, with the winner getting an additional one million dollars to sweeten the pot, but even that match sucks, with Flair punching Dusty a whole bunch of times before guest ref Joe Frazer stops the match. For fuck’s sake, the main event to your biggest event of the year – the Thanksgiving Day tradition at the time – and THAT’s the fucking finish you give the people?!
I could just find the results on some random Wikipedia page somwhere and copy-paste the bastard here to save some time… and I ended up doing just that. What the fuck can I say about each one other than some variation of “This was a thing that happened” or “This match sucked.” This is as bad as sitting through one of those AWA shows from the 80s, except those have slightly better production values – probably the only time I would say such a thing in regards to those PPVs.
I am only doing a write-up on this show to fill the gap and despite appearances, I really, REALLY wanted to give this show a fair shake… but something to consider here; anyone who says I am too harsh towards WWE in my various musings, at the very least, I’m willing to share some thoughts on the matches featured, even if it’s a quick blurb or two. I couldn’t even be bothered with this one. THAT’s how painfully dull this show was and that’s saying quite a bit.
So yeah, don’t watch this show, everyone. It sucks.
Results (courtesy of Pro Wrestling Wiki)
Denny Brown defeated NWA World Junior Heavyweight Champion Mike Davis to win the title (5:38)
Brian Adias defeated Mr. Ito (4:00)
NWA Florida Heavyweight Champion Jesse Barr defeated Mike Graham (11:43)
The Assassin and Buzz Tyler defeated The Zambuie Express (Elijah Akeem and Kareem Muhammed) (w/ Paul Jones) in a Tag Team Elimination Match (5:26)
Manny Fernandez defeated Black Bart (w/ James J. Dillon) to win the Brass Knuckles Heavyweight Championship (7:35)
Paul Jones defeated Jimmy Valiant in a Tuxedo Street Fight Loser-Leaves-Town match (4:35)
NWA Mid-Atlantic Heavyweight Champion Ron Bass (w/ James J. Dillon) defeated Dick Slater by disqualification (9:12)
Ivan Koloff and Nikita Koloff defeated Ole Anderson and Keith Larson (w/ Don Kernodle) (15:28)
NWA World Television Champion Tully Blanchard defeated Ricky Steamboat to retain the title and win $10,000 (13:17)
NWA United States Heavyweight Champion Wahoo McDaniel defeated Billy Graham (4:18)
NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair defeated Dusty Rhodes to retain the title and win $1 million (12:12)
WCW Slamboree 2000
For the uninitiated, this is the show that featured the sole main event of one-time WCW World Heavyweight Champion and once big-time Hollywood actor, David Arquette.
Some background is in order; once upon a time, World Championship Wrestling had a movie called Ready To Rumble, which starred David Arquette. Someone at WCW (not mentioning names) had the bright idea to have David Arquette win the World title in an effort to drum up some much needed good press. And so David Arquette won the title in a tag-team match on Thunder by pinning Eric Bischoff, who was not the champion, but rather the (now former) champion was David Arquette’s tag-team partner, Diamond Dallas Page.
Long story short – the move got one mention on some rag nobody cares about and the television ratings for Nitro continue their plummet into obscurity while the top prize in WCW – once something that mattered – meant a hell of a lot less… which, in the year 2000 where WCW was being overseen by the creative “genius” of Uncle Eric and Vinny Ru, wasn’t saying a whole lot.
A lot can be and has been said about the move and I will reserve my thought for another time down the road, but for now, we have ourselves a cage match between current champion Arquette, former champion DDP, and Jeff Jarrett.
WCW Wrestlewar 1992
Before anyone asks… yes, I somehow managed to finagle time to watch the Backlash show… no, I will not musing on it. I want to muse on something good. You’ll get your helping next week, so… that’s something, I guess.
So botched ending, that Blood & Guts match from AEW a couple weeks was pretty fun and prompted me to pop onto the WWE Network – because I can do that still here in Canada – and check out an old Wargames show. Didn’t want to watch any of the WCW/nWo shenanigans and I qasn’t feeling anything from the Crockett years… but there was one show I’ve heard good things about and that was Wrestlewar 1992, with the main event being the Wargames between Sting’s Squadron and the Dangerous Alliance.
You’ve got my attention with this one kids.
WCW Halloween Havoc 1993
So we have another Halloween Havoc PPV one year later, featuring the Spin The Wheel Make The Wheel concept. So let’s have a look at that before we dive into the NXT iteration… soon enough, I suppose.
Oh yeah, I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention the wonderful little opening mini-movie featuring a bunch of kids going to a creepy house and being greeted by a really creepy Tony Schiavone, who pulls off his face to reveal a much hairier face to scare off the kids. I’m amazed that in all the years of modern face technology, nobody bothered to replace the fake wolf mask thing with Tony Schiavone’s face circa 2020. Wouldn’t THAT be a hoot.
Anyway, on with the show…
WCW Halloween Havoc 1992
So… in preparation for this week’s NXT show – featuring another edition of Spin The Wheel Make the Deal – I decided to revisit the WCW show responsible for its infamous reputation and that is Halloween Havoc 1992. Tomorrow, we’ll be look at the 1993 edition that also featured the second ever STWMTD match before the concept was shelved forever and never seen again until a couple times when WWE would bring it back as RAW Roulette or whatever they used to call it.
Anyway, onwards with the show, as it were.
WCW Halloween Havoc 1997
Happy Halloween, ladies and gentlemen.
Fancy a wrestling show tomorrow, but don’t want to subject yourselves to WWE Blood Money IV or whatever the fuck it’s called? Well, I’ve got a treat for you, for today, we’ll be looking at a truly horrifying PPV event called Halloween Havoc, brought to you by our dearly departed friends at World Championship Wrestling. Today’s musings will be covering the 1997 iteration of the show, which features Roddy Piper and Hulk Hogan in a steel cage match.
Yes, kids. This show is home to the infamous AGE IN THE CAGE!
WCW Fall Brawl 2000
So after some period of inactivity and revisiting old Summerslam PPVs, we’re bringing back the wrestling PPV musings on Wednesday afternoons. And what better show to kick off this new session of weekly incoherent musings on old shows than to check out an old WCW PPV from the year 2000, built on the premise of Goldberg refusing to follow a script.
Good old WCW in the year 2000; an absolute clusterfuck of an era where nothing goes write and every week, a new contender for worst wrestling program on television is crowned.