Slobberknocker Central Monday Night Recap #108 December 8th, 1997 WCW Monday Nitro: Live/Taped: Live. Length: Two Hours+. Location: Buffalo, New York. HOUR ONE Hosted By: Tony Schiavone, Mike Tenay and Bobby "The Brain" Heenan. - A clip of J.J. Dillon telling Eric Bischoff that he'll have to face Larry Zbyszko at Starrcade gets the ball rolling this week. Larry is absent from the announcing booth this week so that he won't be a target for the NWO, according to Tony Schiavone. Massive crowd this week: over 19,000 according to Mike Tenay. Jim Kelly and a number of Buffalo Bills are reportedly in attendance (more on that later). - KONAN vs. RAY TRAYLOR Man, how I wish Konan would pull his pants up. The match starts off at about half speed, with both just kind of running into each other and laying in some fat punches. They briefly go to the floor, then back into the ring. The crowd is noisy, but really not that much into the match. The move of the match comes when Traylor whips Konan into the corner. Konan flips up and Traylor catches him. Konan then slides out of the grab, falling behind Traylor and applying an inverted DDT. Konan then starts whipping Traylor from corner to corner. Suddenly the lights go out! For very nearly a full minute (58 seconds by the counter on my VCR) the lights are out. Flashbulbs pop in the crowd, occasionally revealing that something is going on in the ring (which the crowd can see, but we at home really can't). When the lights come back on Konan is laid out in the center of the ring. Traylor looks around dumbly, then drops for the cover. The ref makes the three count. My assumption at this point was that the Steiner Brothers had lived up to their promise to help Traylor when he needed it. Poor match to warm up the crowd with, but the trickery with the lights did the job. - BARBARIAN (w/ Jimmy Hart) vs. STEVE "MONGO" MCMICHAEL Raven's Flock, minus Raven, arrive during this match. The fans seem more interested in this than the match itself. Slower than the last match, as well as shorter (I think), but somewhat more entertaining. The two are evenly matched, trading bodyslams and the like. McMichael catches the Barbarian off the second turnbuckle with a slap to the belly, then puts him away with a Tombstone Piledriver. Mongo then faces Jimmy Hart, who had jumped up on the apron. After teasing it a bit, Mongo knocks him to floor-except that Meng is now there to catch him. Meng enters the ring and takes Mongo down with the Tongan Death Grip. - Mean Gene Okerlund brings out Disco Inferno for an interview. Disco doesn't really seem to know why he's out there. Okerlund runs him down, pointing out his loss to Jacquelyn, and that the other wrestlers don't know which door he'll come out of when he goes to the bathroom. Disco nearly snaps, saying he's tired of this nonsense. He points out how the match with Jacquelyn was a "no win" situation. Disco says he's had enough. So have we all, Disco baby, so have we all! - Buff Bagwell, in comments given to Mean Gene, challenges Lex Luger to a match (rematch, actually, from their match last week). - DEAN MALENKO vs. PRINCE IAUKEA Eddie Guerrero comes to the desk to deliver color commentary, doing a much better job coming across as a "cool heel", instead of an "annoying heel" or "jerk heel" ... or "boring heel, as he was the last time out. Dean has little trouble getting Iaukea into position for the Texas Cloverleaf and the win. Okay match, but again really short. - Nitro Girls. - NWO promo, this time running down the Giant. I'm beginning to think that these things are setting up the fans for an increased NWO presence and style on Nitro. That probably says a lot about the upcoming Zbyszko/ Bischoff match for Starrcade. If Larry wins, he gets a match with Scott Hall next year. If Bischoff wins, the NWO gets Nitro. - Pretaped Kevin Nash comments are played. He says he and Hall have taken the Giant's chokeslam away (when they broke his hand), making him even less than one dimensional. Nash challenges the Giant to a match at Starrcade. - Mean Gene brings out the Giant, who in essence accepts the challenge. He says being one dimensional is all he needs, but that he'll bring the chokeslam with him to Starrcade. Tony Schiavone wets himself over how big Starrcade is shaping up to be. - They play the Starrcade promo where Sting walks through a ruined gothic cathedral, pulling his baseball bat out of a pile of NWO rubble. "Paybacks Are Hell!" is the slogan. I could make a "WCW PPV's Are Hell!" joke, but I won't. - Nitro Girls. - They replay the clip from last week of the Sting mannequin falling from the roof through the ring. - CHRIS BENOIT vs. RAVEN Doesn't happen. For the third week in a row (sounds familiar) Raven doesn't wrestle, even though he's scheduled to. This time he isn't even in the building. His Flock member with the blonde hair heads to the ring. Though he's been called "Skank" behind the scenes for almost a month, WCW finally gives him a name: "Lodi" (pronounced "Low-dee"). - CHRIS BENOIT vs. LODI Lodi displays no wrestling talent or ability whatsoever. He doesn't even perform any moves. Benoit just tosses him into anything buckled down at ringside, throws him in the ring, stomps on him, suplexes him off the turnbuckles, hits him with a headbutt off the top, and applies the Crippler Crossface for the submission. Total squash. Raven's Flock consider running in, but instead just stand around looking lost. Mike Tenay points out that the group has no direction without Raven. Benoit grabs a house mic and challenges Raven to come out and take a beating like a man. "You were abused as a child? Come see what 'abuse' really is!" (Or words to that effect). HOUR TWO Hosted By: Tony Schiavone, Mike Tenay and Bobby "The Brain" Heenan. - Mean Gene brings out the "Nature Boy", Ric Flair. Flair says he's got a few things on his mind about the whole NWO, as opposed to just Curt Hennig. He says he thinks Sting will beat Hogan. Showing he's not too up on the card he says Hall and Nash will lose to the Steiners. He admits that he doesn't know what Savage will be doing that night. He then, almost offhandedly, says he wants a cage match with Curt Hennig. Mean Gene then, for no apparent reason, brings up Bret Hart. Flair says Hart is wrong in calling himself the "best of all time". He says it's easy to get a newspaper column printed in your own hometown. He says if Hart comes to Charlotte, he'll see who really is "the Best There Is, the Best There Was, and the Best There Ever Will Be!" He talks about Hart as if he's joined the NWO, furthering the red herring WCW wants us to swallow on that account. The fans are less than 100% in support of Flair's anti-Hart comments. In case you didn't know, Hart and Flair have traded low key barbs at each other for the last few years. Hart has called Flair an "unoriginal" wrestler who uses the same moves every match. He's even gone so far as to not only insult Flair, but those fans who consider Flair the "greatest ever". Flair, on the other hand, has apparently said Hart has one of the biggest egos in the business: bigger even than Hulk Hogan's. I think it's fairly telling that Flair and Hogan have, for the most part, coexisted peacefully together in WCW for more than three years, while Flair and Hart couldn't stand to be near each other for more than a few months in the WWF. - The NWO promo of Sting being beaten up is shown. - HUGH MORRUS vs. RANDY SAVAGE Very early in the match (before it really starts) Savage goes over to the guard rail to badmouth Jim Kelly and Bruce Smith. Savage slaps Kelly's hat off his head. Morrus grabs him from behind, with Kelly and Smith laying in some laughably weak forearm and elbow shots (Smith laughing so hard that he can barely connect). Kelly has this goofy, determined look on his face (kind of like when Paul E. Dangerously gets in a fight). Savage gets away, but Morrus catches him and throws him back into the rail for more. (The crowd, as you'd guess, really eats this up). Once in the ring the match settles down to the usual back-and-forth affair. Savage hits an elbow off the top, but Morrus kicks out. He hits another, but this time picks Morrus up instead of taking the easy pin. He shoves aside the ref and climbs up for a third when ... Again the lights go out! More camera flashes and several figures can be barely made out in the ring. A loud, fake sounding electrical buzz noise arises. This time the lights are off for well over a minute. Once back up they reveal Savage, Morrus and the ref all laid out in the ring. Savage has a Sting mask on, which pretty much tells us who is doing all this. No finish to the match ... they just go to break showing the mess in the ring. - "Ravishing" Rick Rude and Eric Bischoff come to the announcer's desk. Rude grabs a mic and accuses Tony Schiavone of being in on everything that goes on in WCW, since it's WCW who not only pays his salary, but also the production crew and power bill. He calls Tony, Mike and Bobby the "Three Monkeys", and says if anything else funny happens he'll come out and take the three of them out. He then grabs Tenay's wrists and forces his hands over his eyes ("See No Evil"), and puts Tony's hands over his mouth ("Speak No Evil"). The Brain wisely covers his own ears ("Hear No Evil"). After they've left Bobby points out that he once managed Rude, yet he's never seen him fired up like that. Bobby threatens to walk. Schiavone announces a commercial break so that they can regroup. Classic Rude, but an obvious attempt on WCW's part to come up with something for him to do. - DISCO INFERNO vs. SATURN A terribly sloppy match, as the two blew several moves (such as a whip into the ropes). Still, a somewhat entertaining match. Disco displays his new "extreme" attitude, taking the match to the floor. Saturn whips him into the rail, where the Flock waits, but Disco gets in the first shot. Saturn charges and Disco backdrops him into the crowd. Disco nails one of the Flock with a Stone Col-err, "Chartbuster" on the guard rail. Back in the ring they go and after bumping into each other a bit more, plus some suplexes by Saturn, Disco nails the Chartbuster out of nowhere and covers for the upset pin. New WCW Television Champion! The Raven-less Flock (now 0 for 2 on the night) hit the ring, but Disco grabs the belt and heads for safer ground. Good ol' fashioned southern booking ... I guess. - The latest Nitro Party Video is another candidate for the worst yet. Once again a frat house full of slobs (this time in Illinois) make fools of themselves just to get on TV. This one includes a really embarrassing clip of one pinning another on their beer stained carpet. The air is thick with bong smoke as a pair of them mouth several NWO slogans. The rest stand around in the background looking pretty well baked. There's been a lot of talk lately by people "embarrassed" to be wrestling fans. It's stuff like this that embarrasses me. - Nitro Girls. - BUFF BAGWELL (w/ Vincent) vs. LEX LUGER Luger is just barely more over than Bagwell this time out. Of those fans even bothering to make noise, Luger leads something like 51% to 49%. Speaking of "annoying heels", Bagwell fits that mold nicely. Once again Luger lets himself get beat up for almost the whole match, then comes back with a series of clotheslines and the Bionic Forearm. Bagwell rolls to the floor. Luger follows and is met by Vincent and Scott Norton, who keep him occupied long enough for referee Nick Patrick (yeah ... THAT guy) to make the countout. Bagwell celebrates like he's just won a title match. Meanwhile the rumors of Nick Patrick turning NWO again continue. I'm going against the stream on this one, betting that WCW has you all suckered. - Another NWO promo: this time "Rowdy" Roddy Piper gets the black-and-white treatment. Coming back from the break they show a collection of Sting clips in black-and-white, set to moody, spooky music. - DIAMOND DALLAS PAGE vs. SCOTT HALL Hall conducts his weekly poll, designed to do no more than kill time and stay on the air against RAW. The Buffalo sheep chant "NWO" along with him, even though they'd just cheered loudly when he asked them if they were there to see WCW. You know what this reminds me of? WrestleMania XI, when they showed Bret Hart's kid singing along with Shawn Michaels' theme music. Some people just don't seem to realize how stupid they can come across. "The NWO sucks ... (pause) ... NWO rules!" Well, which is it?! Anyone who wears an NWO t-shirt, boos them when they come out, then yells "Too Sweet!" along with them should just be shot, you know? WCW then actually has the nerve to take a commercial break before Page comes out. A fan near ringside holds up a six foot tall cardboard cutout of the Undertaker. It's that kinda night. I have no idea what that means. Another in a string of not-bad-not-good-just-blah Nitro main events. Lots of rest holds. Page, wrestling with his ribs taped, nails Hall with a Pedigree (of sorts). In comes Curt Hennig, drawing the mandatory Nitro main event NWO run-in DQ. The rest of the NWO follows and Page soon resembles a speed bump on an off-ramp. Sting drops from the ceiling, again dropping through the ring. Yes, it's another dummy. The wiggling, twisting rope going into the hole immediately gives away what is happening under the ring. "Hollywood" Hogan takes the mic and says since Sting is so afraid to face him that the fans should just wait until he wrestles Scott Hall in February to see a real match. Hogan then says he wants to wrestle the Sting dummy and sends Hennig to pull it out of the hole. Hogan runs down Sting's track record as a non-main eventer as it takes three guys to pull the not-quite-as-limp-as-it-just-was-dummy out of the hole. The "dummy" is stood up against the ropes. Hogan says he's going to wipe the smile off the dummy's face. He walks over and tales a swipe at the mask and wig on the dummy, which fall away to reveal the real Sting. Several NWO members are sent packing by him as Hogan cowers in fear on the arena floor. - Next week: Nothing announced. Comments: C'mon! Do they really expect us to believe that Hennig, Norton and Bagwell pulled that "dummy" out of the hole and didn't realize it was really a person? They could have at least had whoever controls the rope rigging to tow the rope back up, bringing the "dummy" back out of the hole in the canvas. Then as they went over to it his head would snap up, the fans would have been fooled, etc. This is now the third time that they've dropped a Sting mannequin from the ceiling, and the second time that he's popped up from under the ring. Combining the two is only barely a new variation on the theme. The finish aside, this was an okay installment of Nitro. A lot happened, though not as much in the ring as usual. The lack of a strong cruiserweight match was very noticeable. Hell, if I didn't know better, I'd think I was watching RAW! All it was missing was a lot of cussing and bare asses! ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- WWF RAW is WAR: Live/Taped: Live. Length: Two Hours. Location: Portland, Maine. WWF RAW Hosted By: Jim Ross, Michael Cole and Kevin Kelly. - Still photos are shown from Steve Austin's victory over Rocky Maivia at the "DeGeneration X" PPV. Intro. Fireworks. An incredibly packed house, with at least one sign for every 2.3 people it would seem. - New announcing crew tonight. Cole actually isn't bad, having seamlessly replaced Todd Pettengill on the WWF's shows. I'll say this about Pettengill: he had one major plus and one major minus. The plus was that he was good behind the mic in terms of the quality of his voice and such. The minus was that he spent all of his time trying to get himself over as some kind of comic genius. Cole, who actually physically resembles Pettengill a little bit, just sticks to doing his job. - Vince McMahon heads to the ring. The crowd lets him know how little they they think of him. McMahon just smiles. He goes into a speech, saying that despite his overwhelming popularity, "Stone Cold" Steve Austin has crossed the line and gone too far. Vince says Austin endangered the safety of the fans by driving his truck all the way to the ring. Austin's abuse of referees is brought up, as well as the fact that Austin used his truck as a weapon in the match. Vince says the ref who Austin had Stunned was in the process of calling for a DQ when the second ref came in to make the three count in Austin's favor. McMahon says that because of this, he is ordering Austin to defend his Intercontinental Title in a rematch against the "People's Champion", Rocky Maivia. (Huh?) Katie bar the door, cuz ... *KEE-RASH!* Stone Cold doesn't look too happy (though frankly when does he ever?) He chucks the belt into the ring and gives Vince the cold shoulder as he plays to the crowd. McMahon contemplates making an exit, but decides to stay in the ring since Austin wants to speak. Austin says he wasn't sure if he heard him right because of all the explosions. A rematch? Tonight? Austin says he doesn't give a damn who McMahon is. "Who I am," says McMahon, "is the proud owner of the World Wrestling Federation. And furthermore, Mr. Austin, I'm your ... your boss!" Austin says he doesn't give a damn. He asks the fans if they'd like to see him whip McMahon's ass, then "Gimme a 'Hell yes!'" The crowd gives with a loud "Hell yes!" McMahon says he's been meaning to talk to him about his language also. Austin replies with something that gets edited out by the playing an audio clip of crowd noise over it. McMahon says if Austin doesn't defend the belt there'll be serious consequences. Austin says he'll go in the back, drink a beer, eat a hot dog and think over whether he'll defend the belt or not. Whatever he decides, if he comes back out, someone is getting their ass whipped. Either Cole or Kelly points out during this how many WWF officials and "agents" are around ringside. Calling this a "heel turn" on McMahon's part wouldn't be too far off the mark. I have a theory about this. It's a bit whacky. It's down in the "Bottom Line" section. - SUNNY vs. JERRY "THE KING" LAWLER It's the finals of the Karate Fighters Holiday Tournament. Lawler quickly wins, but a "Hidden Camera" instant replay shows that he used chewing gum to rig his fighter, used a Sable action figure to seduce the opposing fighter ... and paid off the ref. An announcer comes out and says that the "Tribunal" has stripped Lawler of the title and crowns Sunny the 1997 Karate Fighters Champion. A good angle, but the match itself sucked. - They show stills from the LOD/Dog & Gunn match. - LEGION OF DOOM vs. THE GODWINNS A total *ugh!* of a match. Road Dog and Bad Ass come to the ring to keep an eye on things. This actually wasn't too bad. Why? Because the first few minutes of an LOD match usually aren't too bad, since that's how long it takes for them to completely run out of gas. They're still going strong when ... Suddenly the lights go out! It's Kane ... again. Hawk is the only one left in the ring, Animal having been thrown into the ring steps. Everyone else hightails it out of there. Kane kicks him in the gut and piledrives him. Hawk stands right back up. Kane grabs him by the throat (instantly killing a huge cheer that had started to go up for Hawk) and chokeslams him. Hawk tries to get up again. Kane grabs him and hoists him into the Tombstone Piledriver, which finally puts him down for good. After Kane and Paul Bearer leave, Road Dog and Bad Ass sneak in to lay in a few shots of their own. Animal eventually chases them off with a chair. - Replay of Kane's attack. Gunn and Dog are still in the ring. Road Dog says that now that they've completely finished off all the tag teams in the WWF, he and Billy Gunn will start competing in singles competition, (but not until he and Gun do a chorus of the "Nah nah hey hey goodbye!" song, dedicated to the "OLD"). Road Dog challenges anyone to come out and face Billy Gunn in a singles match. - "BAD ASS" BILLY GUNN vs. ??? Dude Love comes out! "I said one guy, not three!" laments Road Dog. - "BAD ASS" BILLY GUNN vs. DUDE LOVE A surprisingly decent little match. They start off attacking Dude on the floor. Road Dog sits in for commentary as the match progresses. Nice back-and-forth action as Road Dog alternates between worry and confidence, based on Gunn's performance. Dude eventually gets Gunn set up for the "Sweet Shin Music", but Gunn avoids it and nails a standing Rocker Dropper a few moments later. Dude comes back with the "SSM" and double arm DDT. Dude covers and gets the surprisingly clean pin. Road Dog slides into the ring and pastes Dude Love with a steel chair. He and Gunn then set him up for shot off the top rope, Billy intending to drive a knee into Dude's head with both tag team belts placed on his face. The knee misses, though, but the crowd still pops for the insane move. - Rocky Maivia, in the back with the Nation of Domination, says there's no way Austin wants to face him again tonight. Rocky says he clearly kicked Austin's ass the night before, and is the "People's Champion". - Stills from the Taka Michinoku/Brian Christopher match are shown. They then show Christopher, after the match at the PPV, roaming the halls with a cupful of ice for his busted lip. Christopher says there's no way he's letting a "foreigner" come into this country and win HIS belt. Cut to a clip of Jim Ross teaching Taka some English. Ross tells him that a "knock down, drag out fight" is a "slobberknocker", which Taka is able to say on his second try. Cut back to the ring, where Jim Cornette is awaiting to do a special interview with Taka and his first challenger to the title. Taka comes out. Moments later Jerry Lawler comes out, interrupting Cornette's setup for the champion/challenger interview. Lawler does the usual anti-foreigner schtick, joking that every four seconds a woman in Japan gives birth and that he is going to track her down and make her stop. Lawler asks Taka if he even knows any English: a prerequisite, in his opinion, for someone to hold a title in this country. "You ... jack-ass!" replies Taka. "That's two!" exclaims Cornette. Out comes a masked wrestler, named "El Unico" by Cornette. Okay, I'll admit it: I fell for it. I looked this guy over and wondered "who's he?" My dad took one look at him and said "Ahhh ... that's Lawler's jerk of a kid!" Lawler, meanwhile, runs the "masked man" down as being another foreigner-"Still drippin' wet from swimming across the Rio Grande!". Lawler puts a finger in "El Unico's" face, prompting a shove in return. He and Taka then stand side-by-side, teasing a fight with Lawler ... until the masked man attacks Taka. Yes, it is Brian Christopher. He and Lawler proceed to destroy Taka, taking turns nailing him with THREE straight piledrivers! (If this was Memphis the ring doctor would have declared Taka legally dead). The usual host of referees arrive to break things up. Heading into the break they show Austin reclining in the back, scarfing down a hot dog. - In what is hopefully the final jab at Bret Hart, the WWF shows what they'd been hyping since the top of the show as the "Destruction of the Hart Foundation", which turns out to be a series of clips showing Shawn Michaels beating the British Bulldog in the U.K., Shawn beating Bret at the Survivor Series, Degeneration X turning on Jim Neidhart and Owen Hart attacking Shawn at the previous night's PPV. This last bit is played up as Owen getting "final revenge" on Michaels, settling the score for the Hart Foundation. The idea here is that Shawn rid the WWF of the Hart Foundation, but that Owen got in the final word and that we won't be seeing any more of him. Uh-huh. Yeah. - KURRGAN THE INTERROGATOR (w/ the Jackal) vs. FLASH FUNK Boy, am I glad there can be only one! Kurrgan, formerly the Interrogator, has a slightly more interesting ring outfit. He still can't wrestle a lick, with his performance in this match comparable to a tree being hit by lightning and slowly toppling over. I've seen a stack of cardboard boxes being knocked over display more wrestling acumen. The Jackal sits in for color commentary, playing up his generic cult leader gimmick. Kurrgan wins wit the lamest looking Iron Claw to the forehead I've ever seen. He then refuses to release the hold, causing the referee to reverse the decision and give Flash Funk the DQ win. Sniper and Recon from the Truth Commission come out, but they are unsuccessful in getting him to let go the hold. Finally the Jackal slaps Kurrgan's face, which cause the big man to let go and give him an evil stare. The two then trade a maniacal laugh as Recon and Sniper look on in the corner. I'd never have devoted this much text to the match, except that it seems to have signaled the end of the Truth Commission. Huzzah! - Stills from Michaels vs. Shamrock. They then show post-match comments from Shamrock, who essentially throws his hat into the ring as the first official entrant in the Royal Rumble. Hype for the "War Zone" closes out the first hour. WWF WAR ZONE Hosted By: Jim Ross and Jerry "The King" Lawler. - No fireworks for the second hour. DeGeneration X come out instead. Hunter gets on the mic first, taking another opportunity to run down Sgt. Slaughter and his "old lady". Shawn then takes over and says he "schooled" Ken Shamrock. He then moves on to the Hart family, which he claims to have destroyed. He calls them a "big, smoking, stinky, nasty turd!", which nearly gives Jim Ross a heart (Hart?) attack. Shawn says what you do to turds is flush them. They all go down, except for that last little nugget that just won't go. Owen is that nugget. Shawn closes by saying that he knows Owen isn't in the building, but nonetheless won't leave the ring until Owen-if he's anywhere in the state of Maine-comes out to face him. A card table is set up. Chyna whispers something to Shawn, who then says over the mic that he's going to live up to that old promise to walk naked on live TV. A deck of cards has appeared and what was going to be a game of poker is now a game of strip poker. The segment ends with the first hand being dealt ... and the DOA entering the ring area on their motorcycles. Back from the commercial they show a graphic for the Royal Rumble, which is being sponsored by 1-800-COLLECT. In case you're wondering about the WWF having advertiser problems, well, 1-800-COLLECT is also a sponsor of Nitro (or at least they used to be). - THE DOA vs. LOS BORICUAS The card table has been moved from the ring to ringside. The strip poker game progresses at the same time as the match (sort of. Other than Shawn and Hunter losing their shirts, nothing much seems to be happening-except for all three shielding their cards from the camera). Total yawner of a match. Los Boricuas-at full strength-get the win over just the two bald members of DOA. Someone uses a 2X4 and someone gets the pin-aw ... who cares! Los Boricuas win. DX, smoking stogies, tell Los Boricuas to beat it. The camera cuts to the back, where Rocky Maivia is pacing in anticipation of his possible match with Steve Austin later in the show. - The poker game has moved back into the ring. Even though Shawn is only holding maybe two cards, and doesn't pick up any of the ones he's dealt, he acts like he's lost another hand and "reluctantly" strips off his pants. The squeal from the women in the crowd is overwhelming, if not a bit embarrassing. Shawn strips to his jockeys as the Head Bangers come to the ring for their match. The two men in skirts politely ask for the card table to be removed from the ring. DX refuses. The Bangers flip over the card table. Shawn takes the glass he'd been drinking Jack Daniels from and smashes it over Mosh's heads (leaving several tiny cuts and scrapes). Shawn follows this with a swat from a steel chair. Thrasher is then triple-teamed, set up on Helmsley's shoulders on the top turnbuckle and powerbombed through the card table! The bottle of booze is dumped over Thrasher. Shawn struts about the ring as Hunter is shoving a chair into Mosh's throat. Shawn stops to plant a foot on Thrasher's chest and jiggles his jimmy. CUT THE F&@#ING MUSIC! I was into it up to this point, but really ... Shawn fidgeting with his Unit was just too much! Fortunately this spectacle is finally cut short when out of nowhere Owen Hart slides into the ring and attacks Shawn. Hunter quickly chases him off and Owen runs away through the crowd. - JEFF JARRETT vs. VADER Yes, the WWF may have completely botched Jarrett's return. The outfit is dumb, his entrance music is even dumber, and he's yet to do anything in the ring. This match is no exception. Before the two can even lock up Goldust's new music starts to play. Out he comes wearing a black robe, accompanied by Luna. Once he reaches the ring he opens the robe, flashing Vader. He and Luna split, with Vader in close pursuit. Jarrett earns a countout victory. Like Raven, this is the third week in a row that Jarrett has been announced in a match, but didn't wrestle. (At least to WCW's benefit they've provided one good match to take his place on one of those occasions). I simply don't understand where they're going with this one. Jarrett, although he technically has back-to-back wins over the Undertaker and Vader on successive nights, has absolutely no credibility built up whatsoever. What are they saving him for? The WWF has an overabundance of heels right now and frankly Jarrett is the least interesting of all of them. They seem to be portraying him as a "new age" Ric Flair. Having him wrestle as a face would probably be wise, but may not be doable given this stupid persona they've saddled him with. Jarrett came back and said the "Double J" gimmick McMahon made up for him was stupid. This is supposed to be better? We're SUPPOSED to think that Jarrett came up with this gimmick. I just don't get it. Now Goldust I understand. It seems that after he broke his hand several weeks back he was left with two courses of action: let the hand heal naturally and keep wrestling, which would almost guarantee the injury sticking around for the next half year, or he could get it operated on, which would put him out of action until January, but almost guaranteed a full recovery. Goldust chose the latter, which is why his match with Vader was scrapped from the PPV. Expect a lot more stuff like this over the next month. Thank God you couldn't actually see anything. Goldust was first shown from the side, then from across the ring, where he could only be seen from the chest up. I doubt seriously that he was actually totally nude under the coat as so many have assumed. I may not quite get what they're trying to do with him, but at least I understand why he isn't in the ring. - Stills from Marc Mero vs. Butterbean are shown. Butterbean, in post-match comments, says he's after Mero and that this isn't over. - SALVATORE SINCERE vs. "MARVELOUS" MARC MERO Mero comes to the ring and says he's the greatest wrestler and boxer in the world. He says he's annoyed that McMahon has sent him out to wrestle a jobber like Sal Sincere. Mero says it's a jobber's role to lose every match, and that Sincere-a "jobroni"-isn't even really named "Sal Sincere". Mero reveals the jobber's real name: Tom Brandi. Mero says the WWF gave him a stupid gimmick and that Brandi foolishly accepted it. He then brings out Sable, who he calls his "property". Sable comes down the ramp wearing a potato sack. Once in the ring he says he'll quickly finish of the jobber Brandi, but that Sable has to disrobe him first. As he stands there waiting for her to pull off his robe she stops, thinks it over, and removes her potato sack, revealing the skimpiest assortment of dental floss ever to be called a bikini. Mero turns to see what the crowd is going nuts over and quickly wraps his robe around her. Brandi seizes the opportunity to drop-kick him out of the ring. Mero, instead of continuing the match, hustles Sable out of the ring area. Sincere/Brandi wins the match by countout. You have to say this about the WWF: they're equal opportunists in their sexist ways. First we got Shawn's "oscar", then Sable's "golden globes". Ah, it's an award winning night all around! - You can win Steve Austin's "3:16" pickup yourself, simply by calling a special phone number and entering a contest. You can also enter by sending in a postcard to a certain address. If interested, I'm assuming all the details are on the WWF's website. The winner will be contacted during the Royal Rumble. Yes, they'll be fixing the damage Austin did to the truck first. - "THE ROCK" ROCKY MAIVIA (w/ the NOD) vs. "STONE COLD" STEVE AUSTIN Maivia comes to the ring first. The "Rocky sucks!" chant which accompanies him is louder than anything else heard on the show. *KEE-RASH!* Austin heads to the ring, though he's still dressed in street clothes. McMahon meets Austin in the ring and points out that he doesn't appear to be dressed to wrestle. Austin asks if he has to be dressed to wrestle just to wrestle? McMahon says if he wants to wear jeans in a match then he can, and that the match should start. Austin says it's not gonna be that way, as he sat in the back, drank a few "Steveweisers" and decided not to wrestle Maivia. He asks McMahon what he's going to do ... fire him? Maivia interjects, saying "Vince, 'The Rock' thinks you should fire him!" McMahon tells him to keep out of it, then warns Austin that he won't fire him, but that Austin is forcing him to strip him of the title and give it to "The Rock". Austin says if Vince strips him of the title he'll beat the hell out of him. Austin goes on to say that he's already been the Intercontinental Champion, as well as a Tag Team Champion (twice for both), and that there's only one title he's interested in: the World Heavyweight Title. Because Austin's got "bigger fish to fry" he forfeits the title, offering the belt to Maivia. "Take it!" says McMahon. Rocky snatches away the belt. Austin the offers Rocky his hand. Rocky shakes it and Austin holds his arm up as McMahon announces Maivia as the new WWF Intercontinental Champion. The celebration quickly ends as Austin kicks him in the gut and drops him with a Stone Cold Stunner. "There's your champion!" says Austin, who picks up the belt and tells McMahon that if he wants ratings, then everyone should tune in next week to see what plans Austin has for the belt. "Same 'Stone Cold' time ... same 'Stone Cold' channel!" He starts to leave, then comes back to the ring for one last hurrah as McMahon confers with his aides at ringside; McMahon himself standing on the apron. Austin suddenly decides to run the ropes. Hitting the ropes closest to the ramp, McMahon is propelled off the apron, slamming hard on the floor at the foot of the ramp! McMahon comes up cussing, calling Austin a name that had to be covered over with a crowd noise audio fill. Austin shows that he was just bouncing on the ropes and that it was an accident, but McMahon looks unconvinced. The show ends with a quick replay of Maivia getting stunned, then McMahon getting dumped. - Next week: Nothing announced. Comments: One of the weirdest RAW's I can ever remember. The poor match quality aside (with only one good match out of seven advertised-only four of which actually took place), this show was packed with surprises, some drama, and a ton of general strangeness. From an in-ring standpoint Nitro obviously won the night. RAW easily cleaned up in every other category though. I might have been more impressed with Nitro if I felt any of the matches actually meant anything. Even the Disco Inferno title win seemed pointless, since WCW's continuing fascination with him will obviously wane again in the next few weeks and he'll once again be relegated back to jobber status. (Hey, maybe I'm wrong on this one, but frankly I gave up on him long ago. He's yet another in a long string of wrestlers who everyone says is really good, yet never manages to show it in most of his matches). Too many people also overlook the fact that he really has one of the dumbest gimmicks in wrestling-if not THE dumbest. Drop the gimmick, have him go by his real name, let him turn up his in-ring performances and maybe, just maybe, I'll give a damn. Until then he's a comic relief wrestler who's been pushed and de-pushed too many times to even begin taking seriously. RAW delivered a show that kept my full attention for the two hours, yet it wasn't until it was all over that I realized they'd only delivered one decent match (and I bet I'm probably in slim company as one who enjoyed that match-Dude Love vs. Bad Ass). Still, it was enough for me to give the show the nod over Nitro, since despite the marginally better match quality this week, I can't even point to one Nitro match which really did anything for me. The Disco/Saturn match came the closest, but that involved a wrestler who means nothing to me (Saturn) and a wrestler I actively dislike (Disco). The bit with Shawn juggling his nutsack really was too much, though. I actually felt bile rise in my throat. I was really enjoying myself up until then. Fortunately Sable brought me out of that funk a few minutes later. Arrrooooooo! Rowf, rowf! Oink! ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Bottom Line: Suppose you're Vince McMahon and you'd like to downplay the whole Bret Hart situation. Most wrestling fans don't know all of what happened at Survivor Series, and it'd be difficult to find any two fans who agree on the "facts" of the story. The "smart" fans on the other hand have, for the most part, taken Bret Hart's side of the story. So, what's the best way to get the "smart" fans on your side? Make them think it's all a work. That's right, make them think McMahon has worked the "smart" fans again. Get enough fans to think it might all have been an elaborate angle and maybe, just maybe, some of this online hostility dies down a bit. Some might even go so far as to declare him a "genius" again. Could it work? Hell, the seeds of doubt are already there. Joey Styles has gone on the ECW hotline expressing his belief that the whole thing was a work. Jim Neidhart, a staunch defender of Bret Hart, allows himself to be humiliated two weeks in a row by DeGeneration X (when it would have been much simpler for him to just stay lost). Owen Hart, who we all believed had left the WWF, "suddenly" makes a return appearance at a PPV and on live on TV the following night. Some fans might even begin to doubt if Hart has even left the WWF (after all, it's been more than a month, yet he still hasn't appeared in WCW). So how do you go about doing it? First off you set up a scenario which, on the surface, bears a strong resemblance to what happened in the Bret Hart situation. Now obviously Steve Austin isn't planning on going to WCW, but this is a situation where, just like in the case of Bret Hart, a wrestler is refusing to follow one of McMahon's orders. What's more, it involves another title. Even more, it would seem that McMahon is maybe showing favoritism for one wrestler over the other (possibly referenced to by his "People's Champion" remark about Maivia). Austin refuses to do what he says, so McMahon takes the title away from him ... just like he did to Bret Hart. Throw in a bit of intrigue with an increase in the number of WWF officials at ringside ... just like at Survivor Series. Finally, maybe it wasn't a sock to the head, but knocking McMahon off the apron was a physical response ... just like after Survivor Series. So what next? Well, maybe McMahon does an interview saying he and Austin have had "differences of opinion over the direction of the WWF", with Vince blaming all the foul language in the WWF on Austin. Austin might even say he was asked to quit because of his injuries, which made him no longer worth the money he was being paid. Austin, though, says he's no Bret Hart and won't run away to WCW. He'll stick around and make McMahon's life a living hell. The WWF plays up the angle that Austin is too beat up and worn out to do much of anything. They could even bring up Austin's needing a doctor's waiver again, saying that they no longer want to take a risk with him getting hurt any more. Austin manages to get a doctor's release just on the eve of the Royal Rumble, much to the chagrin of McMahon. Austin then wins the Rumble. The angle then concludes after WrestleMania when Austin beats Michaels for the title. McMahon comes up to shake Austin's hand, saying he'd always believed in him. Austin says "Okay Vince," kicks him in the gut and lays him out with the Stone Cold Stunner. McMahon, instead of looking manipulative and evil, ends up looking just silly. Somewhere along the line most folks forget all about how he "screwed" Bret Hart. Could it happen? Probably not. Still, whatever McMahon is up to has succeeded in getting fans talking about him and the WWF in a slightly less negative light, making everyone forget about Bret Hart for a minute. Maybe that's all he's up to after all. What do I think? Ask me again after WrestleMania. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- This Week's Winner: RAW. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Slobberknocker Central" and "Monday Night Recap" are copyright 1997 by John Petrie, and all opinions expressed therein are his own, and not those of "Internet Access, Inc". Check the "Slobberknocker Central" main page for info on how to receive the "Recap" free via E-Mail every week. Volume One, Number 108 of the "Monday Night Recap", December 8th, 1997. John Petrie petrie@bji.net Slobberknocker Central http://www.bji.net/pages/petrie/index.html