Monday, October 22, 2012

CM Punk "Best in the World" (Blu-Ray Review)

[image]

OK finally got around to watching this on Blu-Ray. Wow another wrestling masterpiece. It sheds a lot of light on the character, the man - but more importantly - the business dynasty he works for. A slightly inside look at the arcs and angles that CM Punk was involved in - how they unfolded - and the backstage reactions of those it affected. It was great to see the early footage in the history, but it doesn’t make or break the project. Probably could have got the same effect with a few still photographs credited to PWI magazine. Still, it was cool - and it certainly does get you hype when they discuss his chapters with Chris Hero and Colt Cabana in particular. It also explains the Straight Edge origins very thoroughly - which was a movement I was completely unawares of until Punk started flaunting it. His ornery brash nature is kind of glossed over, although I’ve shared firsthand experience of his dickery. One of the reasons I can honestly say I’ve never been a *CM Punk guy* (like VKM Jr). I distinctly remember the first time I ever saw him was on a ROH show in Cambridge in 2003 during his war with Raven and it was so awesome to have that feud, and what it meant to his characters evolution, recapped on the disc. From the very beginning CM Punk struck me as a narcissistic heel character, despite being overwhelmingly cheered. I even wrote in article in 2006 or so calling him “Greatest Heel Never Booed”. The Original Summer of Punk run was one of the freshest, most exciting times in recent wrestling history. Sort of like when Biggie Smalls & 50 Cent were first coming up in the mixtape circuit (1992 and 2002 respectively).

Punks affiliation with Paul Heyman is thoroughly documented, and runs deeper than I ever knew. Those “I’m a Paul Heyman guy” comments in his famous rant (aired in its entirety during the show) were heavy foreshadowing for sure. It covers his aborted title runs (the first ended by a Randy Orton punt kick backstage) and the backstage reactions to that (CM Punk wasn’t told until day of, for example. But it also covers some very compelling personal ground as well, and his whole arc with Joey Mercury (and how it climaxed with his real life return to WWE under the SES banner) is told in gripping fashion. The interviews with Colt Cabana, Daniel Bryan, the Lars guy from Rancid, Kofi Kingston and even Curt Hawkins shed light not only on CM Punk the character and person - but themselves as pro wrestling fans and artists too. They showed CM Punk backstage chatting up some of the younger breed, including Dean Ambrose! But what the heck was up with that weird bathrobe outro?? Lol

So the main story is great, and climaxes with his run at MitB. But then you get the extras and it’s like a freakin sequel. Just great stuff - unbelievable stuff like the skull fracture story - or the sharing of girls clothes - etc is really illuminating and entertaining. ). It covers the December to Dismember scenario in agonizing detail. “The Conversation with Lars” and “OVW vs. Albright” were my favorite chapters here, and we even get one of those lost classics in the match extras. The only slightly corny thing to me was super long musical montage outro that reminds me of some CW, 90210, Dawsons Creek, I dunno-type shit like that. The matches are a good piece-by-piece look of his characters evolution (through his WWE career, starting with OVW - no full IWA or ROH matches) and my Blu-Ray extra match is the IC finals from Armageddon 2008. Overall, as a guy who’s not even (and still *isn’t*) a CM Punk guy, I can say this is a great story. Another home run for WWE video and I encourage all wrestling fans to check out the documentary portion at least. Even die hard CM Punk fans will learn something new.

10 out of 10.

peace,

MSD

[end transmission]


"WWE 50 Greatest Finishing Moves" (Blu-ray review)

Count down discs have become a staple of WWE Home Video releases in recent years. Whether it’s a countdown of “moments” (OMG Top 50 Incidents, Best of Smackdown 10th Anniversary), “superstars” (Top 50 Superstars of All Time) or “matches” (Starrcade) - countdown discs are a proven commodity… they spark discussion, imagination and cash registers… so it is with great aplomb and anticipation (by those of us who chart WWE Home Video releases months ahead of time) that the WWE has released “50 Greatest Finishing Moves in WWE History”. Classic material already. Or is it? Your faithful pro wrestling addict MSD sparks another Vanilla Dutchmaster and lets the thoughts burn… take a puff and walk with me.
[image]

Upon initial inspection, it fit’s the standard WWE meets VH1 countdown format - with talking heads like Wade Barrett, Matt Striker, Daniel Bryan, Kofi Kingston, JR, William Regal, Drew McIntyre and Dusty Rhodes providing the running narration… it even has the same replayed graphic (lottery balls) in between every vignette - similar to “OMG” amongst others - which can grow to be tiresome… Every move on the list gets a good 90 seconds or more of hype and action, and you can’t disagree too much with placement because watching it all in context it certainly makes sense.

[image]

Matt Striker provides a marks-eye view of each finishing moves efficiency

But it quickly becomes less about individual finishing *moves* as it is about individual finishing *moves of superstars*… you see this when the same *move* gets repeated multiple times (2 moonsaults, 2 frog splashes, 2 cobra clutches etc…) So it becomes less about the individual match-ending move, and more about the superstar who performed them… which isn’t such a bad thing either, if they didn’t just drop “Top 50 Superstars of All Time” so recently… to me a lot of this seems like rehash, or cutting room floor footage from that set - and maybe it’s only because I found “Top 50 Superstars of All Time” so great that I was disappointed to find “50 Greatest Finishing Moves” so… mediocre…

Seeing the same move over and over (and over and over) again can grow tiresome, though sometimes the dialogue of Striker & Regal (who both put all the moves over as shoot holds, just with different panache) helps elevate the segments… Barrett, Miz & Kofi provide fan-like recollections and Daniel Bryan is exuberant and passionate as usual… Just a few random observations about the set:

* People complain about Sting being included because he was strictly WCW - but you seem to forget WCW *is* WWE now… and not only did the Scorpion (not listed as “Death”) Drop get shine - native WCW finishers like the “Torture Rack”, “Diamond Cutter” and “Jackhammer” did as well…

* I never knew Yokozuna’s finisher was called the “Bonzai Drop”!?! I always thought it was spelled “BANZAI!” Who’s wrong??

* Weak questionable inclusions like Bam Bam Bigelow’s “Moonsault” (“impressive” for the size sure, but sloppy as hell) and even “Shake Rattle & Roll” could have been dropped for something (ANYTHING) else.

* Throwing guys like Vader and Hogan on the list just seems like a way of WWE trying to get some guys paid who need it right now (or piss them off in the case of Bruno Sammartino?).

* Anybody who has ever had a solo WWE Home Video release has been included on this list (except Roddy Piper, Ricky Steamboat, Ultimate Warrior and Chris Benoit)…


* Jack Swagger uses 2 of the greatest finishers ever (ankle lock & Vader bomb) but still can't buy a win.

* Love the inclusion of the old school finishers like the chickenwing, camel clutch and bear hug and when WWE Survey’s asked about interest in pre-1970s wrestling I checked “HIGHLY INTERESTED” a million times… here’s to my dream of getting a 3 disc Bruno Sammartino set and the long awaited Gorgeous George story…

* Including Billy Kidman’s Shooting Star Press and not Evan Bourne’s is troubling but certainly makes sense (one persona non grata - the other still employed somewhere behind the scenes) - but why do we ever need to see another stink face?

* The mix of matches is an odd and eclectic sort - which is typical of recent releases… which either means the producers are really mining the vaults for lost and hidden gems… or more likely are flat running out of worthy material… who would have thought with such a seemingly endless video library they would run the well dry so soon? Are we only a few years away from “The Greatest Preliminary Stars of the ‘80s”?

[image]

Duke of Dorchester!

OVERALL: I liked the disc, of course… but I didn’t LOVE it like I have some of the other recent ones… it’s somewhat repetitive, a little stereotypical and kind of puzzling… but it’s still a worthy buy (even for the match list alone)… I love wrestling presented in mixtape fashion and this fit’s the bill for me… fast, easily digestible blurbs that focus on the subject matter at hand without taking itself TOO seriously. But while I don’t consider “50 Greatest Finishing Moves“ a total loss, it is by far the weakest “countdown”-related disc WWE has ever released. So it earns a fat 2 grams out of 5 for your smoked out partner MSD. Holla at a duck and put it in the air. Peace.

[end transmission]

Disc 1

50. JBL – Clothesline
49. Vader – Vader Bomb
48. Dusty Rhodes – Bionic Elbow
47. Million Dollar Man – Million Dollar Dream
46. Kerry Von Erich – Iron Claw
45. Ravishing Rick Rude – Rude Awakening
44. Lex Luger – Torture Rack
43. Dudley Boyz – 3-D
42. Bam Bam Bigelow – Moonsault
41. DDP – Diamond Cutter
40. Mankind – Mandible Claw / Socko
39. Honky Tonk Man – Shake Rattle and Roll
38. Yokozuna – Bonzai Drop
37. Flash Funk – 450 Splash
36. Sting – Scorpion Lock
35. Lita – Moonsault
34. Kevin Nash – Jack-knife
33. Jerry The King Lawler – Piledriver
32. RVD – Five-Star Frog Splash
31. Big Show – Chokeslam
30. CM Punk – GTS
29. Brock Lesnar – F-5
28. Bob Backlund – Chicken Wing
27. Batista – Batista Bomb
26. Mr. Perfect – Perfect Plex
25. Kurt Angle – Ankle Lock
24. Chris Jericho – Lion Tamer / Walls of Jericho
23. Edge – Spear
22. Iron Sheik – Camel Clutch
21. John Cena – Attitude Adjustment
20. Scott Hall – Razors Edge
19. Goldberg – Jackhammer
18. Rey Mysterio – 6-1-9
17. Road Warriors – Doomsday Device
16. Bruno Sammartino – Bearhug
15. Sgt. Slaughter – Cobra Clutch
14. Jeff Hardy – Swanton Bomb
13. Eddie Guerrero – Frog Splash
12. Macho Man Randy Savage – Elbow off Top Rope
11. Randy Orton – RKO
10. Bret Hitman Hart – Sharpshooter
9. Jimmy Superfly Snuka – Superfly Splash
8. Nature Boy Ric Flair – Figure Four Leg Lock
7. Hulk Hogan – Leg Drop
6. Shawn Michaels – Sweet Chin Music
5. Jake The Snake Roberts – DDT
4. The Rock – Rock Bottom / Peoples Elbow
3. Triple H – Pedigree
2. Undertaker – Tombstone Piledriver
1. Stone Cold Steve Austin – Stunner

DVD Disc 1 Extras
Bonus: X-Pac – X-Factor
Bonus: Booker T – Spinarooni
Bonus: John Morrison – Starship Pain
Bonus: Scotty Too Hotty – The Worm
Bonus: Rikishi – Stinkface
Bonus: Shane McMahon – Coast to Coast
Bonus: Billy Kidman – Shooting Star Press

Disc 2
Sgt. Slaughter Demonstrates The Cobra Clutch on Tony Anthony
World Wide Wrestling – 10th December, 1981

DDT vs. Rude Awakening Match
Jake “The Snake” Roberts vs. “Ravishing” Rick Rude
Madison Square Garden – 24th October, 1988

WWE Intercontinental Championship Match
Mr. Perfect vs. Texas Tornado
Dayton, Ohio – 13th January, 1991

WWE Championship Match
Bret “Hitman” Hart vs. Bob Backlund
Superstars – 30th July, 1994

WCW World Tag Team Championship Match
Kevin Nash & Scott Hall vs. The Giant & Lex Luger
SuperBrawl VII – 23rd February, 1997

King of the Ring Semi-Final Match
Mankind vs. Jerry “The King” Lawler
King of the Ring – 8th June, 1997

Rob Van Dam vs. 2 Cold Scorpio
Living Dangerously – 1st March, 1998

Four Corners Match for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship
‘Nature Boy’ Ric Flair vs. Diamond Dallas Page vs. Hollywood Hogan vs. Sting
With Special Guest Referee “Macho Man” Randy Savage
Spring Stampede –11th April, 1999

Disc 3
Chris Jericho & The Rock vs. Kurt Angle & Stone Cold Steve Austin
SmackDown – 15th November, 2001

Rob Van Dam & Bubba Ray Dudley vs. Brock Lesnar & Eddie Guerrero
Raw – 3rd June, 2002

No Disqualification Tag Team Match
Shawn Michaels & Jeff Hardy vs. Chris Jericho & Christian
Raw – 17th February, 2003

The Rock vs. Goldberg
Backlash – 27th April, 2003

6-Man Elimination Match
Bubba Ray, DVon & Spike Dudley vs. Evolution (Triple H, ‘Nature Boy’ Ric Flair & Randy Orton)
Raw – 14th July, 2003

WWE Women’s Championship Match
Trish Stratus vs. Lita
Raw 6th December, 2004

Fatal 4-Way Elimination Match to become the Number One Contender for the World Heavyweight Championship
Shawn Michaels vs. Randy Orton vs. JBL vs. Chris Jericho
Raw – 29th December, 2008

Fatal 4-Way Match for the World Heavyweight Championship
Undertaker vs. Batista vs. Rey Mysterio vs. CM Punk
Bragging Rights – 25th October, 2009

Six Pack Challenge Elimination Match for the WWE Championship
Sheamus vs. John Cena vs. Randy Orton vs. Chris Jericho vs. Edge vs. Wade Barrett
Night of Champions – 9th September, 2010

Blu-ray Extras
Triple H & Undertaker vs. Big Show & Edge
SmackDown – 6th February, 2009

Rey Mysterio, Jeff Hardy & The Great Khali vs. Edge, Dolph Ziggler & Chris Jericho
Raw – 22nd June, 2009

No Disqualification, 6-Man Tag Team Match
Mr. McMahon & D-Generation X (Shawn Michaels & Triple H) vs. Randy Orton & Legacy (Cody Rhodes & Ted DiBiase)
Raw – 24th August, 2009

Traditional Survivor Series Elimination Match
Team Mysterio (Rey Mysterio, Big Show, Chris Masters, Kofi Kingston, & MVP) vs. Team Alberto (Alberto Del Rio, Cody Rhodes, Jack Swagger, Drew McIntyre, & Tyler Reks)
Survivor Series – 21st November, 2010

John Cena & Rey Mysterio vs. CM Punk & R-Truth
With Special Guest Referee Bret “Hitman” Hart
Raw – 23rd May, 2011
"The History of the
World Heavyweight Championship”



“The History of the World Heavyweight championship” is a beautifully-bound 3-disc set (released in 2009) designed to resemble a hardcover book. Opening it up reveals a table of contents for each disc printed directly on the backside - no slips or inserts here. The 1st disc contains the documentary and a handful of “NWA Matches”. Disc 2 represents WCW and Disc 3 is strictly WWE. There is a glossy track list stuck on the back of the box with a dollop of glue. It offers a product summary and a quick list of some of the matches you will find on this set. “Witness the epic battles for the glory on this 3-DVD set with over 20 championship matches”!!



THE DOCUMENTARY:
The meat and potatoes of the product rests with the documentary portion of the disc. A nice, succinct piece that chronicles the World championship (aka “WCW’s big gold belt”) and its dubious origins that reach all the way back to cavemen, Abraham Lincoln and Frank Gotch. It’s “Unreal Story of Pro Wrestling”-type historical revision that is surprising to see for longtime WWF fans who were used to pretending nothing else exists beyond the northeast. But as they say, “history is written by the winners” - and VKM Jr is the undisputed master & lord of all pro wrestling. Clocking in at under an hour (for over 100 years of supposed content) is a criminal offense, considering the ECW documentary ran for over 3 hours. But that goes to show the interest level of fans and business sense of the WWE when it comes to this kind of content - and probably why we’ll never see the long-rumored Gorgeous George or Bruno Sammartino DVD. Either the footage just doesn’t exist, isn’t properly licensed, is in really poor condition (sadly the state of some of these Disc One matches) or frankly just isn’t good enough to be captured on modern-day DVD releases. So on one hand it’s an honor that WWE even reached back into the archives for this (what amounts to an “enemy’) release to begin with, even if their version of events is a little sparse and twisted. Our boy (and wrestling historian) Mike Chapman offers insight on a lot of golden era wrestlers, but roughly 10 years after “Unreal Story of Pro Wrestling” was filmed we find him here repeating a lot of the same stuff he said there.



In this story, "Russian Lion" Georg Hackenschmidt is credited as being the first “world” champion after defeating American Tom Jenkins in an early “styles vs. styles” match (Greco vs. catch). Hackenschmidt easily beat Jenkins in both style matches and earned the distinction as champion - until finally being defeated by Frank Gotch. From there wrestling entered a boom era, and kept growing with the rise of Strangler Lewis in the 20s (who was comparable to any celebrity of the time, including Charlie Chaplin and Babe Ruth). They even allude to Strangler Lewis being the bridge between “real wrestling” and “sports entertainment” (an assessment that was spelled out in much greater detail in “Unreal Story”). The 1948 union of the NWA is covered, and the origins of their title (supposed to go to Orville Brown - car accident forced it onto Lou Thesz). Thesz gets some great coverage and props and is credited with the first $100,000k gate in wrestling history (a story covered in much greater detail in the book “NWA: the Monopoly that Strangled Pro Wrestling” by Tim Hornbaker). This segues into the title run of the great “Nature Boy” Buddy Rogers and the big record he set with his 1961 Comisky Park title victory (included in the match extras). This DVD claims that attendance record wasn’t broken until Wrestlemania III, but there are many that believe the record was broken sooner and by a non-WWE affiliated organization (which is why it’s been whitewashed from history). From there Gene Kiniski gets his run and jobs out to Dory Funk Jr, with a surreal worked-shoot explanation of how he lost the title (he thought it was a 2 out of 3 falls match, and submitted to Dory’s spinning toehold thinking he still had 2 more falls to go… he didn’t). We get some interesting stories from Jack Brisco on his reign, and the backstage drama between himself and Dory Funk Sr that resulted in Dory putting over Harley Race for the title and NOT Jack Brisco. Jack does get his time in the sun however, before putting over the other Funk (Terry) later on. The story explains how the champion was chosen by committee, and leads to the big Starrcade ’83 clash between Race & Flair - which led to the domination of Slick Ric. Dusty Rhodes gets some shine, as does the sale of Crockett promotions to Ted Turner (although Mike Graham RIP glosses over Sting’s contributions by saying he was “something temporary”). Don’t worry about Sting though, Big Show has some nice words to say about him as champion. Finally we make our way to WCW withdrawing from the NWA and burning the sports entertainment world up with Monday Nitro. Some “dubious” champions are referenced (Sid, Jeff Jarrett, David Arquette) and Hulk Hogan’s run as champion is heavily referenced. We finish with the end of Nitro into the undisputed championship - only to have it reborn on RAW by Eric Bischoff and Triple H.



THE MATCHES

Disc One
Disc one offers a nice variety of early-era NWA matches running all the way up to 1990. It opens with “Nature Boy” Buddy Rogers historic title victory over Pat O’Connor, a match that has been aired on WWE Classics on Demand in clipped fashion before. This was the highlight of my purchase and thus far the only Buddy Rogers match released on a WWE DVD or Blu-Ray product. Overall the matches offer a nice look at the lineage summarized over 5-10 year spans. We see Dory Funk Jr win the title from Gene Kiniski in Florida 1969 - fast forward 10 years and Harley Race & Dusty Rhodes are competing for the same piece of hardware in the same state. Jack Brisco vs. Terry Funk represents the best of 1975 - fast forward 10 years and there’s Ric Flair fighting Magnum TA for the NWA championship on an AWA Superclash card in 1985! We wrap it up in 1990 (when WCW was on verge of dropping NWA affiliation in favor of their own recognition) as Sting takes on perennial champion Ric Flair at “The Great American Bash”.

*Chicago 1961 - 2 out of 3 Falls: Pat O'Connor vs. Buddy Rogers
*Florida 2/11/69 - Gene Kiniski vs. Dory Funk Jr.
*Florida 12/10/75 - Jack Brisco vs. Terry Funk
*Florida 8/21/79 - Harley Race vs. Dusty Rhodes
*AWA SuperClash - Ric Flair vs. Magnum TA
*Great American Bash '90 - Ric Flair vs. Sting
 


Disc Two
This is the strictly WCW era - and for longtime northeast wrestling fans such as myself (bred to thumb our nose at anything non-WWF affiliated) this is the first time I saw most of these matches. I always kept abreast of WCW developments via the wrestling periodicals of the time (including a short stint of WCW magazines, of which I still have a few issues), and I remember reading about wrestling “classics” like Flair vs. Scott Steiner (the pre-Poppa Pump phenomenon) or Vader‘s early 90‘s championship run, so it’s good to see those moments represented on here. I was also excited to have the historic Ron Simmons vs. Vader title change on disc as well. One of the few WCW moments I do remember firsthand (and still get chills about to this day) was the incredible Hollywood Hogan vs. Goldberg match from Nitro. So much to say about this match (both negative and positive), but suffice to say it is still one of the most awe-inspiring audience reactions I’ve ever seen and I’m super glad to have it on disc (again and again, as this match has made it’s way onto numerous WWE DVD releases over the years). There’s also a sick match I never saw between Steamboat & Vader, but Jesse Ventura’s WCW commentary is edited out. This disc also includes the Booker T vs. Jeff Jarrett match that concluded the big “Russo shoots on Hulk Hogan live on PPV” angle earlier in the night (but that moment is not referenced). We finish Disc 2 in the blurry-era of 2001 WWF as The Rock & Chris Jericho battle for the big gold belt at No Mercy.

*Clash of Champions XIV - Ric Flair vs. Scott Steiner
*Great American Bash '91 - Lex Luger vs. Barry Windham
*Baltimore 8/2/92 - Vader vs. Ron Simmons
*WCW SaturdayNight 10/16/93 - Vader vs. Ricky Steamboat
*Halloween Havoc '94 - Career vs. Career Steel Cage Match: Hulk Hogan vs. Ric Flair
*SuperBrawl VIII - Sting vs. Hollywood Hogan
*Nitro 7/6/98 - Hollywood Hogan vs. Goldberg
*Bash at the Beach '00 - Jeff Jarrett vs. Booker T
*No Mercy '01 - The Rock vs. Chris Jericho


 
Disc 3
This is the WWE disc, and the one that could be termed “total blasphemy” to any non-WWF brainwashed fans of yesteryear. The time after WCW had been bought by WWF - the world title “merged” into the Undisputed championship - and then rekindled on Monday Night Raw (by Eric Bischoff) in response to the “brand split”. The belt was awarded to Triple H that night, even though I remember he wound up fighting Ric Flair in a really good match later on that should have just been a championship finale to begin with. That moment is not represented on the disc, but a Triple H match with Rob Van Dam from Unforgiven 2002 is. We trace the (now strictly known as) “World” championship through Shawn Michaels - to the match of the year candidate between Undertaker/Kurt Angle (No Way Out 2006) - Rey Mysterio - Batista - and John Cena (featuring his World title win over Jericho at Survivor Series 2008 in Boston that I was there live for). In a far cry from Hackenschmidt and his single leg trip/bear hug combo of 1908 - we wrap it all up with an Extreme Rules ladder match between new age daredevils Edge & Jeff Hardy from 2009. Another in a long line of their thrilling encounters - this one punctuated by the World title being at stake and Jeff Hardy‘s historic victory (then ruined by CM Punk‘s MitB cash-in). And there you have it. 100 years of history and evolution summarized within an approx. running time of 9 hours.

*Unforgiven '02 - Triple H vs. Rob Van Dam
*Taboo Tuesday '04 - Triple H vs. Shawn Michaels
*No Way Out '06 - Kurt Angle vs. The Undertaker
*SmackDown 4/7/06 - Rey Mysterio vs. Randy Orton
*Armageddon '07 - Batista vs. Undertaker vs. Edge
*Survivor Series '08 - John Cena vs. Chris Jericho
*Extreme Rules '09 - Ladder Match: Jeff Hardy vs. Edge

OVERALL:
This is the 3rd set of its kind (following the WWE and IC title compilations) and arguably the weakest of the three. The documentary is skimpy, some of the matches are clipped, cut or blurry and a lot of creative license is given to the titles evolution. On the plus side, very few of the matches have been re-released or included on prior DVD sets, so it’s a lot of *new* DVD content. Personally, I’m a huge fan of the retro stuff (that I watch with an MMA-eye) so to have an entire disc filled with material from the 60s-70s is awesome by my book. Most of the WCW disc was first time viewing for me, and the WWE disc brought back all kinds of sweet memories. As a story on the “World title” - for a diehard WWE guy like me, it’s cool to see this completely alternate universe actually get credit for existing. Props to VKM Jr for honoring the dead and remembering his enemies contributions, even if the overall story isn’t his to tell. I just wish the documentary portion had been 3x as long - but that’s just me. Overall, good stuff and I recommend it for the new school, WWE-bred wrestling historian.

8 out of 10

Peace,

MSD

[end transmission]

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

WWE's Top 50 Superstars of All Time

In honor of the upcoming WWE DVD release - "50 Greatest Superstars" - what better way to celebrate than by posting on a messageboard? I've caught some flak here for my affinity for Golden Era wrestlers, even though I didn't "live" in the golden era either (like the rest of you). But I wanted to drop this post and include some clips of my favorite old school heads. It's actually an interesting study in contrast between eras. Do you notice any similiarities? I think it's interesting because they use the same standard formulas/moves/psychology we see in wrestling today, but yet it's still different. It's pro wrestling while still maintaining a sense of realism (dare I say "MMA influences") that's rarely seen in today's game. Take a look for yourself


"Nature Boy" Buddy Rogers - check out those dropkicks!!!


Thesz versus Rikidozan - some of those scrambles on the mat look like something you would see in a UFC fight.


Top 50 Superstars of All Time

Eagerly awaited the release. Even debated the official list and contents online weeks before. Had a slightly harder than usual time finding it. Walmart didn't have/carry/care about it, Best Buy told me they're "getting out of the DVD/CD business, before I finally found a copy in FYE (For Your Entertainment music store). I completely forgot everything I wrote or read about it and honestly could not remember how the list went. My off the top guess was Stone Cold Steve Austin. But the main reason I was so amped to get this set was for the focus chapters on my dudes Lou Thesz and Buddy Rogers. O.G. kush. I was really hoping to get a match or two as well. So imagine my utter delight when I finally cracked the seal and saw a Lou Thesz versus Argentina Rocca match get top billing! Here's one thing I don't understand - this is the second DVD set I've bought recently ("Highflyers" being the other one) that doesn't come with a DVD insert. No track list, just a blank folder where a slip or cardboard insert SHOULD go.

THREE-DISC DVD set, Approx running time 9 hours

First impression of the disc was sheer elation. It's another slick, WWE-styled video countdown package with straight man Todd Grisham playing MC. Grisham has always been a fave of mine because he has a cooly detached persona that doesn't take himself or the more bizarre aspects of wrestling too serious. He's better than Todd Pettengill at least. Right away Grisham is warning us there will be controversy, this was intended, please don't shoot the messenger. The countdown opens with a throwback to Killer Kowalski and already things are exactly as I hoped for. This is the kind of stuff we don't see enough of on WWE Classics on demand. We mostly get stuff from the 80's and 90s. Very rarely from the late 70s but little else. And with Kowalski being recognized as the man who spawned the Triple H bloodline it's only right he open the disc. It's on from there.



The seamless transition between genres and eras continues with Batista bringing it to the new school, and then mixing the two when late 80s Rick Rude gets the nod for the 48th spot. Jeff Hardy was mixed up with Dory Funk Jr, Bob Backlund and Nick Bockwinkel, providing a very stark contrast. Seeing the WWE review of his career, it really seems to put over his TNA turn as the "Anti-Christ" of wrestling and keep it all in context (the sacrificing of his body for the fans, general insanity and whatnot). Very cool. In-studio comments are provided by a host of voices, but for the new school, John Cena, Kofi Kingston and the Miz provide soundbytes on almost all of the chapters. Santino provides some genuine laugh-out-loud comments as well. They pretty much put over what we suspected with the Kane push by admitting his latest title run is more of a tribute to his general long term reliability and durability than a surprising surge of talent or popularity. Kane gets #43 tonight.

Everybody gets their 60 to 90 second shine on this disc and watching the flow of the show it's hard to really dispute their claims. And it seems to be a really close family affair as well, as pretty much everybody that kept it real to the McMahon family through time continues to get their shine. Moolah, Blassie, Slaughter, Patterson and Gorilla Monsoon are all represented in some fashion. Even guys who are selling themselves elsewhere get love, as I thought Kurt Angle and Mick Foley were very well represented here. In context with the flow of the disc, it's even hard to disagree with inclusions like Randy Orton. He is only the second of 2010 WWE wrestlers to be included, even though he comes in at an extremely high #29 (after Big Show at #40). The chapters I was waiting most for were the Buddy Rogers, Thesz and Sammartino chapters and they did not disappoint. #35 (Rogers), #24 (Sammartino) and #21 (Thesz) is good honest placement too. But the "tie" rating for Flair/Rhodes was a little suspect. Are they giving Dusty his final "win" over Flair by putting them both on the same historical plateau? Or are they implying Flair damaged his legacy by overstaying his welcome? If time ended in the late 80s and you only had issues of PWI magazine to live by, Ric Flair would forever (and rightfully) have been considered the all time hands-down Greatest of All time. If he died in another plane crash crash or went out like Magnum TA, he would have been James Dean/Jimmy Hendrix/John Lennon. Now he's tied at #17 with his eternal arch nemesis. Sweet WWE vindication.



Another brief Todd Grisham interlude again warns the viewer about pending controversies regarding the listing, before throwing to Hulk Hogan at #23 (behind Savage, Piper, Andre, Hart and Race noticeably). Interesting. They focused mostly on his 80s run in the pure Red & Yellow. I was shocked to see Gorgeous George come in the Top 20 (#13) and he was the last of that real distant era to come in that high. Notable WWE mid-carders/vague main eventers Mr Perfect, Ted Dibiase and Ricky Steamboat all clocked in way higher than they should have while the Eddie Guerrero entry was more sentimental than anything. Yet his profound influence on the current wrestling hemisphere cannot be overstated and Guerreros inclusion (at #11 - just ahead of Triple H) makes as much sense as putting Harley Race (NWA champion 1970s version) at #6. Very high praise. Having The Rock, Bret Hart and Stone Cold at #5, 4 and 3 is really just the icing on the cake, and I'm thinking it makes perfect sense now to have Undertaker clock in at #1. Instead, the Dead Man comes in at #2 and suddenly it all makes sense - Shawn Michaels is the single greatest WWE Superstar of All Time.

It's not a popularity contest (see "Helms disses Shawn Michaels" with 10 pages of replies on any messageboard). It's not the 50 Greatest "Wrestlers" of all time (JYD and Gorgeous George have their own chapter). It's not the guy who sold the most (Austin), rocked the belt the longest (Sammartino, Moolah) or worked the hardest (Angle). As Todd Grisham stated many times - this was not "our" list - it was compiled by the hearts and minds of the WWE solar system. The stars of todays industry, the 2010 locker room. This is their list of 50 Names in this Business we Respect the Most. So it all makes sense. Seeing guys like Miz and Cena offering their insight on guys like Buddy Rogers and "Superstar" Billy Graham like they just watched them compete, reminds you who the real biggest WWE fans are. Overall I loved this show and I will definitely rewatch it again in the near future. It's like an ill wrestling mixtape you can just keep in your player all day.

The matches are awesome too. The Lou Thesz versus Argentina Rocca match is everything I was hoping for. I'd really like to hear what you think about watching stuff like this, if you even could. I just think it's an ill snapshot of a point in time when this thing of ours was at its purest peak. You really have to watch or understand amateur wrestling to grasp what they were trying to do with the pro wrestling product. It makes you remember or understand seemingly archaic rules like no striking or choke holds. It's an off shoot of amateur wrestling (hence the whole "lock-up" routine to begin with) and was more of an exhibition of a real physical fighting style. Like an elaborate sparring session between two high class grapplers. Which brings me to my point, the whole thing with that early-early era shit I'm always preaching, it's almost come full circle today. Rewatching this Thesz/Rocca match with a 2010 inside MMA viewers eye it's remarkably similar. Traditional pro wrestling fans may never grasp this kind of match, but an MMA aficionado may recognize it a little more. Like the front guillotine attempt by Rocca or Thesz slick scramble into a triangle arm lock spot. It all just seems much more factual, while still maintaining to sprinkle in a little razzle-dazzlin pro 'rasslin magic dust (like Rocca suddenly springing into a handstand neckscissor takedown ala Trish Stratus). Allot of current talent takes this thing into consideration as the popularity of MMA continues to infuse itself into todays pro wrestling product. Plus it was cool to see Lou Thesz playing the heel and winning the match with his Thesz press (the move Stone Cold emulates) after the only Irish-whip off the ropes spot of the entire match. And the added momentum from the pitch made sense in that context. Or is it just the SOUR DIESEL I'm smoking talking???



The rest of the matches are a blast too, going in nice chronological timeline order. Two Wrestlemania matches, Fabulous Moola from 1975, Hart beats Flair for the title in 92, Halftime Heat 99 and a few multi-man tag matches (where they can cram as many names off the list as possible in one match) fill it all out. Climaxes with Undertaker versus Michaels (#2 versus #1) from 2008. Here's the complete match breakdown as they run on the disc:
NWA World Heavyweight Championship Match
Lou Thesz vs Argentina Rocca
Buffalo, NY

NWA World Heavyweight Championship Match
Jack Briscoe vs Dory Funk Jr.
Championship Wrestling from Florida

Women's Championship Match
The Fabulous Moolah vs Susan Green
Madison Square Garden - June 16, 1975

Gorilla Monsoon vs Muhammad Ali
Philadelphia, PA - June 2, 1976

NWA World Heavyweight Championship Match
Harley Race vs Terry Funk
Championship Wrestling from Florida - February 6, 1977

Boxing Match
Gorilla Monsoon vs Andre The Giant
Puerto Rico - September 23, 1977

WWE Championship Match
"Superstar" Billy Graham vs "The American Dream" Dusty Rhodes
Madison Square Garden - September 26, 1977

WWE Championship Match
The Iron Sheik vs Hulk Hogan
Madison Square Garden - December 28, 1984

Six Man Tag Team Elimination Match
Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat, Rowdy Roddy Piper & Junkyard Dog vs Randy "Macho Man" Savage, "The King" Harley Race & Adrian Adonis
Madison Square Garden - February 23, 1987

"Ravishing" Rick Rude vs Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat
Madison Square Garden - December 26, 1987

AWA Heavyweight Championship
Jerry "The King" Lawler vs "Mr. Perfect" Curt Hennig
AWA - August 13, 1988

No Disqualification Match
Jake "The Snake" Roberts vs "Million Dollar Man" Ted DiBiase
Madison Square Garden - December 28, 1989

WWE Championship Match
Ric Flair vs Bret "Hit Man" Hart
Saskatoon, CN - October 12, 1992

Empty Arena Match for the WWE Championship Match
The Rock vs Mankind
Halftime Heat - January 31, 1999

Fatal 4-Way Match for the WWE Championship
Stone Cold Steve Austin vs The Rock vs Undertaker vs Kurt Angle
Smackdown - December 7, 2000

Eight-Man Tag Team Match
Undertaker, Kane, Matt Hardy & Jeff Hardy vs Stone Cold Steve Austin, Triple H, Edge & Christian
RAW - April 23, 2001

Edge & Triple H vs Kurt Angle & Chris Jericho
Smackdown - May 16, 2002

Eddie Guerrero vs Big Show
Smackdown - April 15, 2004

Triple Threat Match for the World Heavyweight Championship
Kurt Angle vs Rey Mysterio vs Randy Orton
WrestleMania 22 - April 2, 2006

John Cena & Shawn Michaels vs Undertaker & Batista
No Way Out - February 18, 2007

World Heavyweight Championship Match
Edge vs Undertaker
WrestleMania XXIV - March 30, 2008


Overall I give this Disc a 5 out of 5, I don't even care. We can argue placement and politics forever, but the fact is we can't dispute who THEY respect the most. I don't even know how long the thing runs, it felt like I could have watched it forever. Everybody had their little 60 to 90 second blurb that put them all over as potential #1 picks. Just superb production, ill throwbacks and interesting commentary. The only thing I hate is editing out "WWF" mentions or blurring the logo like in some of the early 2000's stuff. Just distracting. Other than than, highly enjoyable and I'm glad to own it.

Summer Slam 2005

WARNING! Unauthorized interception of this broadcast is illegal, and punishable by death!

We’re LIVE from Washington DC, and we open with Lillian Garcia singing the National Anthem (accapella). Various cuts to soldiers in the crowd, and fans waving American flags. I appreciate this. USA! USA! USA! Fade to black.

Summerslam intro, beginning with the Cena/Jericho recap and ending with the Hogan/Michaels summary. Hot intro and it really gives the show a big-event feel. This is Summerslam, baby! Whooo! Fireworks, screaming crowd and a spoken word introduction by Jim Ross, Jim Lawler and the Coach. Pass the mic to the Spanish guys, and finally we cut to Tazz and Michael Cole at the Smackdown table who formally introduce the event.




CHRIS BENOIT (introduced first) VS. US Champion ORLANDO JORDAN. Orlando has vowed to knock Benoit out, while Benoit promises to make Jordan tap. Immediately into the lockup, where Jordan forces Benoit back into the corner. OJ refuses to break clean and takes a swipe at Benoit. But Benoit is on him with a german suplex, into the crossface and…. Jordan taps out!? What the heck!? Even the announcers are incredulous! This match ended in record time! Are they protecting Benoit by having him kill Jordan with minimal effort? Because even with a brief United States title run, Jordan never was more than a highly-decorated jobber. Maybe they felt it would hurt Benoit’s credibility as a main eventer if he struggled against OJ. Or maybe they’re just preserving PPV time for the other matches this evening. But if this show ends at 10:30 pm EST I’ll be pretty pissed. Um, ** stars?

Backstage, Eddie is conferring with his wife (what’s-her-name). She reiterates my early theory about Eddie only using Dominick to psyche out Rey. But Eddie adamantly denies this! He says it IS all about Dominick! He needs an heir to pass on the Guerrero legacy to. The conversation quickly degenerates into an argument, and Eddie kicks her out of the locker room after interpreting her comments to mean she thinks he can’t beat Rey. Then, he quietly reassures himself that he CAN and WILL beat Rey tonight.


EDGE (w/ LITA) versus MATT HARDY

Recap of the Matt Hardy/Edge/Lita triangle. Does anybody still believe Hardy’s internet tirade was a shoot?

Edge is introduced first, accompanied by Lita (who wears a very revealing bikini top). King and Coach go wild on commentary. Brief moment of silence before Matt’s music starts and the arena pops huge. He runs to ringside and immediately the two mortal enemies engage in bare-fisted brawl. The ref is trying to get the two grapplers separated and into the ring, but Matt Hardy is relentless. Finally Edge crawls into the ring and the bell rings, officially starting the match.

Matt just tackles him and pounds him into the mat. When Edge tries to escape, Matt drags him down to the canvass with a chokehold. Edge can’t hide or buy a breather as Matt follows him outside, and then back in again. Matt is just socking away at Edge, who cowers in fear in the corner. Lita is concerned. Finally Edge responds with a headbutt to the bridge of Hardy’s nose, and now it’s his turn to take control. He tees off on a stunned and prone Matt Hardy, driving him onto the ring apron. Edge unleashes the early highlight of the evening by spearing Matt Hardy through the second rope and down to the concrete floor! Both wrestlers down, and the crowd is into it - counting right along with the referee. Finally Edge rolls Hardy back in, but Matt fights back. The talking heads were right, this isn’t a wrestling match – it’s a straight brawl.

Matt forces Edge into the corner and goes into the turnbuckle 10 punch, but Edge counters with a stun gun to the steel ring post. Matt tumbles hard down to ringside. Outside, Edge follows up with a few more punches before throwing a visibly concussed Matt Hardy back into the ring. The ring post shot busted Matt’s forehead wide open, and Edge eagerly licks his fingers. He’s down, and bloody but begging Edge to bring it on. Adam Copeland, better known as “Edge”, is just punishing Matt. About 7 minutes in and already it’s “the most brutal match” Coach has ever seen. What does he know, he only watches Heat. But wait! His comments hide a deeper meaning. Suddenly, referee Chad Patterson STOPS the match due to excessive blood loss on Matt Hardy’s behalf! Edge is the winner! BIG TIME boos! Wow, wicked anticlimactic! What tragedy! That was a blown call of Kerry von Erich proportions! Bad refeering! The crowd clearly wasn’t expecting that either, and don’t know how to react. Another clipped match, second one of the night. Now I’m thinking the ladder match is going to be a 45 minute contest. ** ½ .




REY MYSTERIO versus EDDIE GUERRERO for custody of Dominic.

Outside the MCI Center, Michael Cole goes over the attendance figures and Tazz plugs Day of Reckoning II. Segue into the Misterio/Guerrero recap. Not even the WWE hype machine can make this storyline look tight. It’s a stupid angle. Tazz breaks protocol and announces he is completely supports Rey in this match. .

Eddie is introduced first while Dominic watches on from ringside. Rey makes his SummerSlam 2005 debut, but is not his usual jovial self. A grave seriousness hangs over him as he passes the ladder in the aisle. He’s fighting for so much more than any paycheck, fame or title belt. Eddie opens with a cheap shot, before beating Rey with punches and a back suplex. But Rey quickly counters with a monkey flip, sending Eddie outside ring, where he elects to take a breather. Rey follows him outside but gets flung into the steel steps, and again into the ladder ominously perched at ringside. Eddie drags the ladder into the ring while the announcers remind us Eddie is 0-6 against Rey Misterio in career.

Inside the ring, Eddie sets up the ladder and scales it to the top. With the way things are going tonight, I wonder if the match is over already. I wouldn’t be surprised. But Rey quickly strickes back with a springboard dropkick that knocks Eddie off the ladder and outside the ring again. Now Eddie gets the 2nd ladder, and a tug of war breaks out as he tries to bring it inside the ring. Using his strength advantage, Eddie drives the metal ladder into Rey’s gut and enters the rings. But Rey won’t fold, and battles back. He sends Eddie to the floor and blasts him with a ladder kick to the face. Eddie staggers about, with the ladder still in his hands. Rey bounces out of the ring with a springboard sitting senton, sending the ladder clattering down upon both of them! Misterio is in the ring first, but slow to climb the ladder. This allows Eddie enough time to scale the other side, and the two engage in fisticuffs atop the ladder. Eddie attempts a sunset powerbomb on Rey, but they mess up! Eddie loses his grip and Rey just winds up falling backwards. And the WWE production team… replays it?

The feisty Eddie Guerrero runs the ladder into Rey a few times before driving him into the turnbuckle, and pinning him there with the ladder. Slides out and grabs the second ladder. Back in the ring, he dropkicks the 1st ladder into Rey again, before safely body slamming him onto the second one. He then sandwiches the diminutive Rey Misterio in between both ladders. Eddie teases a frog splash, before executing his slingshot somersault splash over the top rope onto Rey (still stuck between both ladders). Crowd chants for Eddie but this is far from an ECW caliber match. Clobbers Rey back into the corner, and pins him there again with the ladder. Eddie sets up the 2nd ladder and climbs to the top (after much delaying). But Rey suddenly bursts free from his temporary imprisonment in the corner, and lodges both ladders together. He uses that leverage to run up the ladder and prevent Eddie from grabbing the suitcase (which contain Dominic’s adoption papers, or something). He then carefully backdrops Eddie onto the leaning ladder, but the whole contraption collapses and Rey Misterio dies. Seriously, that was a sick unplanned bump and the replay reaffirms that.

Eventually, Rey sets the ladder up again and slowly begins his ascent. But he’s quickly dropkicked off by a recovered Eddie Guerrero. Eddie’s in charge and he lays one of the ladders atop the top turnbuckle like a Shawn Michaels pose. He retrieves Rey but Misterio fights back with firm kicks to the gut. It’s not enough though, as Eddie winds up bouncing Rey’s body off the steel ladder like a crash test dummy. Things are looking grim for Dominic’s adopted father. Eddie clearly has the advantage, and the crowd holds its breath as he…slowly… sets up… and climbs….the ladder. Suddenly, the crowd flares to life as little Dominic runs into the ring! Will he swerve Rey by helping Eddie like I predicted? NO! He shakes the ladder in a vain attempt to prevent Eddie from reaching the papers! But he’s too weak to knock Eddie down, and freezes in fear when Guerrero ice grills him.

Eddie descends and stalks Dominic, bullying him into the corner. He demands that Dominic hug him, shouting “you’re gonna love me!” Just then, Eddie rears back as if to slap little Dominic! But Rey Misterio interjects in the nick of time and drops Eddie like a bad habit. Eddie gets laid out over the second rope, with the ladder propped against his face. The crowd senses it, and Rey responds with a hard 619 onto the ladder. Eddie is out in the center of the ring, with the metal ladder still draped over him. Slingshot legdrop crushes Eddie between the ladder and the mat, with the crowd roaring their approval. Rey erects the ladder and begins his slow climb to the top. But Eddie staggers to his feet, and climbs up the ladder beneath Rey – putting him into an electric chair position. But drawing on nothing but blood and guts, Rey counters with a flawless sunset powerbomb that drives Eddie into the mat!

Rey climbs the ladder again. Cut to Dominic in the crowd, flashing the fakest smile you’ve ever seen. Rey gives him the “thumbs up” and continues his ascent. He’s got the briefcase in his hand! Crowd thinks it’s over! But Eddie knocks the ladder out from under him, and Rey is left dangling high about the canvas! Can he grab the bag! No! He loses his grip and plummets towards the mat, where Eddie catches him with a powerbomb! Crowd cheers for Eddie again! He’s getting Devils Rejects-type heat. Rey Misterio is laid out in the center of the ring, and is clearly beaten by Guerrero. But Eddie’s not through. He sets the ladder up right on top of Rey, pinning him beneath the bottom rung. Tazz makes the point that if Eddie just really wanted to beat Rey Misterio he would pin him but let him keep his head. But Eddie wants to destroy Rey’s entire family. In a sickening display of heelish behavior, Eddie taunts and teases the trapped Rey Misterio as he makes his way up the ladder and towards the adoption papers. But this only angers Rey, who muscles his way out and forces Eddie off the ladder hard onto the mat. Eddie is rightfully incensed (as well as injured) for not finishing Rey off. With that Latino Heat boiling within him, he snatches Rey into the three amigos, with the third one coming over the steel ladder. Rey is hurt. Eddie climbs up again, and surely THIS time it’s over!

But wait! Here’s Eddie Guerrero’s wife into the ring! She’s asking if Eddie really wants to go through with this. When it’s apparent he does, she recants her wedding vows and tosses her husband off the ladder! He lands hard on the ropes, and ricochets to the mat. She looks remorseful, but the announcers remind her she did the right thing. Rey looks utterly grateful as he picks himself up off the mat, and struggles up the ladder. Crowd is building to a crescendo. He’s almost to the top, when Eddie lunges off the mat to stop him. But his own wife seizes his legs and prevents the capture! Rey Misterio grabs the bag and good guys win! Crowd goes wild as Rey, Dominic AND Eddie’s wife all celebrate together. *** ½


Backstage, Chris Jericho is being interviewed live by Todd Grisham. What’s his mind state heading into this match? The time is now for Jericho to become the WWE Champion (pause for fan gauge). John Cena is just like David Cassidy, New Kids on the Block and Andrew Shoe. All flavors of the month. Y2J is still talking about his run as the first ever undisputed champ, a million years ago (in wrestling time). Y2J puts himself over as a legendary entertainer, cuz he knows he’s only a glorified jobber.




KURT ANGLE versus EUGENE
Cut to ringside, where Eugene is entering with Christy Hemme. Good reaction. Ref holds up the gold medals, reminding us what this match is all about. Kurt’s triumphant music hits and it’s all Angle! Angle! Even though it sounds more like “U Suck! U Suck!” Angle is resonating with fiery determination, as he literally walks right up to Eugene and punks him with a punch to the grill! He beats Eugene mercilessly with hard forearm shots and kicks into the corner. He goes for another clothesline, but Eugene learned! The wrestling idiot savant drops Angle and prepares for a Peoples elbow. But Angle’s not in the mood to play, and quickly responds with a series of rolling Germans. Eugene is just getting clobbered by Angle’s high impact suplexes and slams. JR puts Angle over as a “vicious human being”. But he goes to the well again once too often when he rams Eugene’s head into the turnbuckles.

Eugene hulks up! He rocks Angle with hard Hacksaw Jim Duggan punches finishes with a rock bottom! Close two, and the crowd thought it could’ve been over right there. Angry Eugene. He stomps around the ring, before setting Angle up for the stone cold stunner. But Angle reverses it into Angle Slam position, but can’t deliver. Eugene slips out the back door, and finally hits the stunner! Another close two count. Eugene knows how to count to two. Eugene thinks for a moment, before deciding to administer the Ankle lock! But our Olympic champion has that move WELL scouted, and winds up reversing it into an Angle slam. Whoo, down goes the strap! Now we get down to business! Like a pitbull, Kurt goes for Eugene’s leg and snaps on the real Angle Lock. Almost immediately Eugene taps out! Crippled him, I called it! But Kurt’s not through. He goes outside and gets the chair. Hemme throws herself upon Eugene to protect him but Angle scares her away. Then he tosses Eugene out of the ring like a piece of garbage not even worthy of a chair shot. Angle’s got the ring to himself. He sets the chair up in the center, and demands the announcer play his music. Kurt then stands on the chair to receive his gold medal in a traditional Olympic ceremony fashion! Brilliant! The gold medal is placed around his neck to a resounding chorus of “U Suck! U Suck!” from the fans. But Angle soaks it all up nonetheless, before proudly striding out of the MCI Center for good. As JR said, this was nothing but a demonstration of Angle’s “sadistic wrestling best”. *** ½

Wrestlemania 21 is available all month long on PPV.

Live car wash commercial, with the “Get It Poppin” song playing in background. Since we’re in Washington DC, the girls are washing and waxing a black limo adorned with the presidential seal. Is George Bush in the building? No, it’s Vince McMahon who appears to a big pop from the audience. The camera focuses on a bumper sticker that reads ”McMahon For President” (!?!?!?). Vince then utters his campaign tagline – “Why not”? Hell, I’ll vote for him! Why not?




UNDERTAKER versus RANDY ORTON
Cut back to live action, as a lightning bolt sparks a roaring fire at the top of the entrance ramp. It’s the Undertaker! The mistz of Ravenloft surround him as he makes his dramatic entrance. Randy Orton enters second through a rain of fire. No recap package.

In the early half of the match, Undertaker shows that he can clearly outmuscle Randy. But Orton has the speed advantage (IE: ability to dodge Undertakers plodding advances). Quick dodge into a long side headlock, but the power of the Undertaker strikes again. He drops Orton and goes for the pin. Taker then answers with his own headlock, but Orton quickly takes over with a hip toss and a clothesline. Not to be outdone, Taker answers with a strong one of his own. Taker has Orton down, and tortures his wrist on the map. The Undertaker knows submission wrestling, and further exhibits his UFC influences. Working on shoulder, slowly, methodically. Old school rope walk, but Orton’s speed allows him to counter with a top rope hip toss. But Randy’s still hurt, and can’t follow up. Michael Cole reminds us that Undertaker has been working on that shoulder – the same shoulder Chris Benoit went to school on last Thursday on Smackdown. Continuity! Randy tries to muscle the Undertaker around, but c’mon. He already proved he’s much stronger than you!

Soup bone punches, and he continues to whip Orton around the ring. Into the buckles, but Orton stuns him with a quick boot. Taker comes back with an even stronger one. Goes to work with forearm blows, and his vintage flying clothesline flip. But he can only get a 2 count. Taker looks uninspired as he hammers away at Orton in the corner. Stomps him into the mat, and then pauses to stare the ref down and intimidate him right out of the ring. Running knee lift to Orton in the corner, and the WWE’s golden boy is down again. Randy is just “being taken to school”, the announcers report. More 1950’s style pushing, shoving and referee frightening by the Undertaker. He goes for a big boot but gets hung up in the corner when he misses. But that minor mistake is still not enough for Orton to capitalize on, and Taker clocks him with an elbow as he climbs back up onto the apron. Slow to get back into the ring, Taker is easy prey for a quick-thinking Randy Orton, who catches him with a DDT before pillmanizng his ankle on the bottom rope.

Randy goes after the knee again, and the announcers applaud his sound strategy. Bounces Takers leg off the steel ringpost. Orton poses for the crowd, displaying his rampant arrogance. He keeps Taker down on the mat with kicks and stomps, before dragging him into the center of the ring for more punishment. He goes back to the brittle knees of the vintage Undertaker. Now Orton is firmly in control, but he can only keep the Deadman down for a two count. Crowd knows it’s not ending like this. Taker fights back, but the crowd expects this so there’s no reaction. Orton quickly takes over again, continuing to work Takers knee over the ropes. Taker.. fights.. back, but he’s struggling to just stand. Orton whips him off the rope and catches him with an impressive scoop powerslam. Still only two. Orton hooks in a vintage leglock, and the crowd starts buzzing for Takers eventual reversal. Taker is limping hard, but fights back valiantly. Misses a clothesline and Orton counters with a chopping block. Back to the knee, UFC style for Randy Orton. Working the knee on the ropes again, Orton miscalculates by taking time to gloat for the crowd. Taker uses his incredible leg strength to power Randy Orton up and out of the ring. Now Taker controls the match on the floor, but his knee is hurting. But he musters enough energy for a guillotine legdrop off the apron. Selling the knee, he goes for the rope walk again. Even Michael Cole questions if he can make it. Undertaker connects, and Cole notes how Taker’s knee buckled as it struck the canvass. But the Undertaker still can’t pin Randy Orton.

The slow, deliberate pace of this match favors the Undertaker (so say the announcers). Orton strikes with a textbook dropkick, and calls for the RKO (complete with goofy facial expressions). But he’s shoved off, and scooped up into the Tombstone! But wait, Orton is kicking and writing. He wriggles free, and reverses it into his own Tombstone – just like the Undertaker did to him at Wrestlemania! But he struggles to maintain his grip, and Undertaker reverses back into the Tombstone! Once MORE Orton wiggles free and catches Undertaker ina modified neck breaker. Slick series of reversals there. Now Randy’s in control with a few vicious forearm blows to the Undertakers chest. More taunting. Goes to the top rope and hits with a high cross body block. But Taker rolls through and pounds Orton relentlessly before dragging him to his feet and chokeslamming him to hell! Suddenly, a fan runs into the ring - complete with “serious silence” from the two announcers. But wait, it was a setup! As soon as the Undertaker’s back was turned, Orton struck from out of nowhere with the RKO – three count! Wow! It was Cowboy Bob Orton all along! He was providing a distraction for his son! The Undertaker’s legend has been slain! ***

JR, Coach and Lawler represent for the Democrats and Republicans in the house. Cut to Ken Methmen and Ed Gillespie (some politicians). Coach is forced to note how the crowd responds negatively to each man.

 

JOHN CENA versus CHRIS JERICHO for the WWE Championship.
Cena/Jericho history, all the way back to the day Y2J intro’d Cena as the #1 draft pick (complete with mock exultation on Jericho’s behalf).

Y2J emerges first to polite applause. The crowd knows what they came here to see. John Cena finally appears (repping MA in the intros) and the place goes crazy. He’s got “street smarts style” says JR. Nose to nose, the two enemies exhange some words before springing into action. The rivals exchange headlocks and shoulder tackles. They trade punches and chops. Back and forth they go, each man evenly matched. But as the announcers note, the longer this match goes the more beneficial it is to Jericho. They call out Rock and Austin by name as the two guys Y2J beat to win the undisputed title. Putting him over on commentary, Jericho takes over in the ring. But he soon misses a springboard dropkick that sends him crashing outside the ring. Cena tackles and pummels him into the ground. Cena drags him back in the ring, where he whips him around a bit more and continues to beat him – “street smarts style”. On the third turnbuckle whip, Cena runs into a boot to the face. Y2J returns fire with some of his own Canadian street fighting. Firmly in control now, he bounces Cena’s head off the turnbuckle and kicks him into the corner. Jericho drags him to the center of the ring and blasts him with a textbook vertical suplex. Two count, and Y2J strikes with a baseball dropkick before going into the illegal facelock.
They slug it out, and Cena wins that exchange. But he’s still groggy and Y2J has the presence of mind enough to hurl the champion out through the second rope. Dropkick off the apron by Jericho. Chokes Cena outside the ring with a television cable, and JR warns him not to get disqualified. Back in the ring, and Y2J is just punishing the champ with kicks to the ribs and chops to the chest. This all culminates in a huge superplex off the top rope by Jericho, that winds up hurting both grapplers. Y2J slowly goes for the cover, but can get only two. He goes for another quick pin, this time hooking the leg. Still no good. They’re fighting for the most prestigious title on Raw (and the money, reminds JR). Back and forth they go before Cena takes over again with high impact body drop and clotheslines. Cena gets visibly amped up, but Jericho remains calm and level headed. When Cena lunges at him, he dodges the spear and answers with modified bulldog of his own. He goes for the lionsault, but Cena rolls out of the way. Jericho lands on his feet, but may have tweaked his knee. Cena looks to wrap it up with the FU, but Jericho twists it into a victory roll, before coming out in position for the Walls of Jericho. Luckily for Cena, the champ is able to kick Y2J out of the ring before he cinched in his deadly maneuver.

Cue refs count. Both wrestlers don’t recover until the count of 7. Cena climbs to the top rope and catches Chris with a guillotine legdrop as Y2J enteres the ring. Another slow cover into a two count. Cena’ not a quote/unquote “high flyer” notes the Coach But it’s a testament what these men are willing to do to twin. Cena gets Jericho back into the FU position, but Y2J frees himself with a spinning DDT counter. Close two count. Chis takes over, working Cena’s kidneys with swift kicks, a backbreaker and multiple running elbow drops. The crowd is going ballistic with their “let’s go Cena!” chants. All the sudden, the crowd ERUPTS into dueling chants, Ring of Honor style! Awesome! Even the announcers must acknowledge it. And the chants keep going! These two wrestlers must be loving this. Y2J prances and preens, but runs into a hard clothesline. Crowd is really into this now, but both wrestlers are laid out on the mat. Gut check time cues JR. Slug fest, which Cena wins again with his street smarts style. Big right hand lais Chris out. Rocks him with clotheslines and a high impact hip toss. Spinning uranage, and the crowd is ready for the 5 knuckle shuffle. They pop, but when Jericho suddenly cinches in the Walls of Jericho out of nowhere, the crowd cheers even harder! The champ is in trouble!

Cena threatens to tap, and half the crowd cheers like rapid dogs. Marijuana smoke triggers long dormant memories, and I hear Gorilla Monsoon crying out “his place is going bananas!” Cena eventually gets to the ropes, and half the crowd boos! Dueling chants break out again. It’s the Chain Gang versus the Jericholics! Y2J goes for a top rope maneuver, but Cena counters it into position for a top rope FU. But he can’t complete it as Y2J suplexes him in the center of the ring… REAL close two count! Y2J argues with the ref, and loses sight of Cena. Bad move, Chris! Cena whirls him around into a quick FU – and hits the move with authority! Three seconds later and John Cena is the winner! Cena’s done it, the champ is still here! exclaims JR. But Cena is demure in his victory, as the Coach points out that a single second could have swung the match either way. Cena acts like it was a close call, but the crowd knows it never was. They got what they paid for. ****

Wrestlemania 22 is coming to Chicago, Sunday April 2nd. First time in almost a decade. Outside the MCI Center, it’s now dark out. Back to Michael Cole and Tazz at ringside as they hawk their Smackdown main event. JBL vs. Batista recap.
 

JOHN BRADSHAW LAYFIELD versus BATISTA for the World Heavyweight championship.

JBL enters first, then Batista to a big pop. They brawl all the way up the ramp and into the technical area. Batista bashes JBL with the fire extinguisher, and suddenly the World title is reminding me of the Hardcore championship. They whip each other around a bit, and JBL takes control. They continue to brawl ringside, with JBL taking it to the champion hard. Batista doesn’t stay down long though, and answers with a strong right hand. But crafty JBL comes up quick with a steel chair, and bangs it off Batista’s cranium. This only angers the beast, and Batista spears JBL THROUGH the ringside barricade! Spectacular visual!

But Batista ultimately winds up on the business end of the steel ring post and JBL is back in control. Center of the ring, where he hurts Batista with a stiff clothesline before stomping him like the animal he is. JBL is outside the ring, where he retrieves a thick leather strap. He takes it to the broad back of the man beast with sickening efficiency, welting his back with each blow. He taunts Batista, calling him an animal in between each vicious slap. “C’mon animal! This is no holds barred!” he bellows. He chokes Batista out with the strap, turning him purple. The World champion muscles his way into the center of the ring, but collapses from lack of oxyen and JBLs girth upon his back.

Center of the ring, Batista fights back up from one knee and answers with a desperate back body drop. Trying to catch his breath, he’s drags himself back to his feet. When Batista gets the leather strap in his hands, and is suddenly reinvigorated. He punishes JBL with the strap and plays to the crowd. Running shoulder thrusts in the corner. The crowd watches in anticipation for Batista’s next big move but he’s derailed by a boot to the face in the corner. JBL steals his thunder with a sick clothesline from hell! Only two! JBL is frustrated. He grabs the steel ring steps and brings them into the ring. JBL attempts to powerbomb Batista onto the steel steps, but is backdropped off at the last minute. JBL is still up first, and kicks Batista back down to the mat. But JBL is hurt. He staggers around the ring, before charging Batista. But he’s caught with the spinebuster! Batista violently shakes the ropes like the Ultimate Warrior and prepares to bring the pain. Thumbs up/down, followed by a big Batista Bomb. Crowd loved that. So much so, that they prevent Batista from going for the easy pin by chanting “one more time!” Another thunderous Batista Bomb, this one right on the steel ring steps in the center of the ring. Batista pins him and JBL has been legally murdered. Also what we all paid to see. *** ½




HULK HOGAN versus SHAWN MICHAELS

Recap. Revered silence befitting a PPV Main Event. The “Sexy Boy” theme splits the silence and we’re ready to start. Another long moment of silence before Hogan’s intro. And when the first chords of his theme blare through the speakers, the MCI Center explodes. Big pop for Hogan. A giant American flag unfurls behind as he does his flexing routing. JR says it’s the largest flag he’s ever seen.

The Icon and the Legend take their time locking up, building anticipation for their first contact to a feverish pitch. Hogan shows his raw power by tossing Michaels around like a rag doll and flexing in his face. But Michaels is undeterred. Instead, he uses his technical expertise to work Hogan over with arm and head locks. Shoulder block counter by the Hulkster sends Michaels out of the ring and Hogan throws his bandana at him. Michaels takes his time getting back in, urging for more crowd participation but they only watch on silently. The two wrestlers tease more contact, and the crowd is trying to get it going but no chants are catching on. Michaels begins chopping away at Hogan in the corner, eliciting Ric Flair’s trademarked “whoooo!”s with every strike. Michaels repeats the procedures three times, until Hogan throws him onto the top turnbuckle – bouncing him up and down with repeated kicks to the gut. The last of which straddles Michaels on the top rope in the most gentlest of areas.

Hogan’s back with more ‘80s punches as he wraps up Shawn in the corner. Hogan punches and Michaels bounces up and down off the mat. Is this a comedy match? Michaels counters the deadly main event eyepoke, and more Ric Flair chops. Is he doing this on purpose? Hogan returns with a back body drop, and clotheslines Michaels over the top ropes (complete with cartoonishly oversold bonus flip by Michaels at the end). Both wrestlers outside the ring, and Coach and Lawler are laughingly naming past Hulk Hogan nemesis (like Andre the Giant and Big John Studd). Michaels is back in for more punishment. Hogan is “very aggressive: with a couple of clotheslines, but the crowd’s not really feelin this. Michaels makes a comeback, but they’re sellin a 20 minute match at the 5 minute mark. Shawn rams Hogans head into the buckles, but Hogan hulks up! It appears Shawn doesn’t appreciate that very much, and he “shoots” on Hogan by breaking up his Hulkster routine with vicious chops! He bounces Hogan’s head off the turnbuckle again and this time Hogan sells it. But just as quick as that Hogan fires back with punches and Shawn winds up outside the ring.

Outside, Hogan stalks him and body slams him onto the announce table. Slings him headfirst into the steel ring post and again Michaels cartoonishly oversells it. Hogan goes for a javelin toss into the post, but Michaels reverses and Hogan winds up kissing the steel. Now Michaels has the advantage, as he runs Hogan into the post a second time. Shawn’s giving it all he has but he still can’t knock the Hulkster down (says the Coach). Back in the ring, Shawn goes for the 10 count punch, but Hogan doesn’t even let him get a single one off. He shoves Shawn to the mat. Second time around, Shawn gets up to four before Hulk throws him off again. Michaels tries for the Stinger splash, but Hogan catches him. He won’t sell for Shawn! Michaels awkwardly collapses on top of Hulk and peppers him with stiff right hands. It’s a shoot! They’re not cooperating! Shawn warned this might happen during his promo with all the insider lingo! Those shots by Shawn were so hard, unrestrained and legit that Hogan comes up bleeding profusely from his wrinkled forehead. Now Michaels is just dominating Hogan with punches, keeping him trained on the mat. He whips Hogan off the ropes for a climatic end-all-move main event move… a wraps him up in the sleeper hold. He’s choking out the bloody Hogan right in the center of the ring. Seriously, this is pretty gross. Hogan’s blood is cascading down Michael’s arm. Crowd buys it and a weak Hogan chant begins. Disgusting bladejob. Arm drops once. Arm drops twice. But wait, one finger waving in the air, saying no! It’s not over! Hulkster fights back and hits a desperation suplex. Both men are down. This is so old school. Hogan bounces Shawn off the ropes, but he ricochets back with the flying forearm and quickly kips up. Crowd is hot now, and Shawn is just strutting his stuff. He climbs the top rope, but misses the flying elbowdrop when Hogan dodges at the last possible second. Hogan sees his own blood pouring down his face, and Hulks up! YOU! Hogan punches, each with a resounding “OO! OO! OO!” from the crowd. He sends Shawn into the ropes in preparation for the big boot, but NO! Another flying forearm that collapses both Hogan AND the ref! All three men are down. Suddenly, Shawn kips up again and the crowd is clearly in his favor.

Coach says this is why Shawn is the best. He hesitates, should I drop another elbow? No, he decides to apply the Sharpshooter (gingerly) to Hogans stiff body! Hogan tapped out! But the ref didn’t see it, and he resists the urge to tap again when a second ref enters the fray. But JR calls out the date and says we just saw Hogan tap. Still trapped in the center of the ring, Hogan is pouring blood in a very Steve Austin-ish visual. Finally he gets to the rope and the crowd boos! Wow, JR tries to cover it by saying Michaels’ fans weren’t happy. But Lawler rightfully questions if Hogan really is immortal. He kicks Michaels off of him and the SECOND ref goes down. Hogan struggles to his feet. His “replaced hip” must be hurting, surmises JR. Lowblow and down goes the old man. Michaels goes outside to retrieve a steel chair. Hogan takes forever to turn around and get whacked. Michaels scales the turnbuckles and hits his tope rope flying elbow drop, ala Randy Savage. He preens for the crowd, before waking up the official. Then he sets up for the Sweet chin music. Slowly….slowly…. BOOM! Sweet Chin Music scores a direct hit and the crowd pops huge. It’s all over! The ref slowly crawls over to make the count. 1… 2… HUGE KICK OUT!

Hulk Up! Crowd is bugging out. Vintage Hulk Hogan. Shawn’s punches have NO affect. YOU! More patented Hogan punches, with the crowd following along on every one. Big boot finally hits, complete with another cartoonish oversell. Crowd laps it up regardless. Ear to the crowd, big leg drop. Happy ending. Match ends at 10:50 EST. This was the Hulksters night, so say the announcers. Hulkamania is alive and well. Shawn breaks up Hogan’s post match celebration. Center ring stare down. Shawn extends his hand in a show of mutual respect. . Hogan looks to the crowd for approval, and they like what they see. He accepts, and the two rivals shake hands like men. JR says “there’s a lot of class in that ring right now”. Signed off at 10:55 pm EST. ***

Wow, tough show. They completely destroyed a young up-and-comer in the opening match (Orlando Jordan) and didn’t leave much room for follow-up in the “Matt Hardy seeks revenge” story arc either. Why rush these promising matches to make more time for Hogan’s “straight out of the 1980’s” stalling tactics? The announcers DID say this night was all about Hogan, but he should NOT have been in the nights main event. A special attraction match, yeah. Like the Kurt Angle/Eugene encounter. But definitely not the main event! This match was all nostalgia, and even Shawn Michaels’ desperate attempt to keep things relevant couldn’t drag this match out of 1986. I had high hopes for the Eddie vs. Rey match, and although the right guy one – I’m finally realizing that ladder matches really ARE played out. But we all wanted to see Cena and Batista win in dominating fashion, which they did, so that was satisfying. Other than that, I actually feel slightly unfulfilled after tonight’s event. That’s a bummer, dude. But luckily for me, I won’t remember much about it after tomorrow anyway (so thank you Mary Jane for robbing me of my short term memory). Remember, kids – don’t do drugs! It just leaves more for me!

This is the MadStepDad signing off from another enriching edition of Elysian Fields. Peace!