Saturday 28 September 2013

WWE Superstars TV Report – 26th September 2013


A show that gave us two average tag matches, one that saw the debut of Tom Philips as an announcer on Superstars and the tease for a Great Khali and Big E Langston feud~! 

Tony Dawson was released by WWE this week and as the show opens up we hear Josh Matthews’ voice. He’s joined by Tom Philips who has worked for WWE over the last year – he and Renee cover the catch up show WWE Bottom Line in the UK. He’s fairly green, has that tone and patter of a generic sports caster and is accompanied by Matthews presumably to keep a check on him. Matthews hands most of the announcing over to him. All I will say, is at least he can call moves – Tony Dawson literally never did. I have no idea what this means for Alex Riley; he’ll probably be returning soon.

We’re given two tag matches tonight – out first is Zack Ryder and Justin Gabriel who get a fairly good reaction from the Chicago crowd though some post-production sweetening is definitely used. Their opponents are the ridiculous combination of Big E Langston and Damien Sandow.

Zack Ryder & Justin Gabriel v Big E Langston & Damien Sandow

Error number 1 – Tom Philips claims that Sandow having the briefcase doesn’t necessarily mean that he’s winning gold, noting that John Cena is the only superstar to not successfully cash in and win. Josh, without missing a beat, cuts in and explains that the only reason Cena lost was because he “gave CM Punk a week to prepare for that match so there was no element of surprise”. I’m guessing they’d prefer to bury that fact.

Sandow and Gabriel lock up and Sandow is taken down to the mat. “Let’s go Sandow” chants start up. Gabriel applies a wrist lock and Ryder is tagged in, hitting Sandow with a drop kick and gets a 2 count. He then re-applies the wrist lock and hip tosses Sandow keeping the lock in place. Gabriel comes in and hits Sandow’s locked arm with a double axe handle from the second turnbuckle. He then whips Sandow, barges him to the mat, catches him with a hip toss and reapplies another wrist lock. To end a dull opening chain, Langston is finally tagged in and cleans house as we go to the break.

When we return, Langston is dominating Ryder and tags in Sandow who hits a neat snap suplex onto Ryder for a 2 count. He then weakens his back with repeated knee drops and then applies the dread rear chin lock. Ryder tries to power out, but Sandow thwarts his attempts and postures for and hits his Cubito Aequet (the elbow of distain). As always this move has zero impact and Ryder kicks out of the cover.

Langston tags in and hits three back breakers in quick succession on Ryder but, again, Ryder kicks out at 2. Langston tags in Sandow who tries for another suplex. Ryder reverses it whilst in mid-air and turns it into a spinning neck-breaker and both are down for the referee’s count. Gabriel gets the hot tag and Langston, bizarrely, is the one who receives the heat. Gabriel hits him with spinning heel kicks and a Stinger splash into the corner. He finally knocks him down with a top rope springboard cross body and, stupidly, Sandow is the one to break the count. This doesn’t put Big E Langston over very big.

The finish sees Gabriel throw Sandow out of the ring; Ryder tries to hit a top rope springboard plancha onto him on the outside but misses as Sandow ducks. While inside the ring, Langston recovers to clothesline the hell out of Gabriel and hits him with the Big Ending for the pin in 8:32. A good finish to an otherwise slow, average match.

As the heels are celebrating, The Great Khali’s music hits and he and Hornswoggle appear. The announcers don’t question it and Khali gets to the ring and goes for Sandow. Langston wants nothing to do with it and rolls out of the ring and walks off. Khali chops Sandow dead and turns and points to Langston. This would be a horrible feud; I hope it gets forgotten about otherwise, poor Big E Langston.

The Raw Rebound is next – the Miz TV and Big Show segment is first and then we’re given that tremendous Punk promo from Monday, in full.

Out next on Superstars is Tons of Funk. I interviewed Brodus Clay on Thursday here, and he’s a real gent by the way. Out next, and thankfully sans Zeb promo, are The Real Americans.

Tons of Funk v The Real Americans

Tensai and Swagger lock up and Swagger hits him in the corner with knees to the midsection. Angry, Tensai reverses and hits Swagger, punching him to the floor. Tensai tags in Brodus and Swagger manages to get to Cesaro. Clay hits 4, yes 4, scoop slams in a row on Cesaro and tags in Tensai who finishes him off with an elbow drop for good measure. They get a 2 count.

Tensai then shows off how strong he is by putting Cesaro in a double underhook suplex, holding him up for 20 seconds. When he finally hits it, he covers him for a 2 count. Tensai and Brodus double team to barge Cesaro to the floor and then do the same on Swagger off the apron. Brodus then hits is Splat! splash into the corner on Cesaro.

The finish sees Swagger smash Clay’s head into the turnbuckle from the apron and so Cesaro is able to roll him up for a quick pin in 3:40. Tensai was shouting ‘kick out! Kick out!’ at the finish but Clay was selling that he was out cold.

For the third week running, we’re given a decidedly average edition of Superstars. We end with the 11-on-3 handicap from Raw.

Thursday 26 September 2013

Interview with George ‘Brodus Clay’ Murdoch



26th September 2013



Today sees the release of WWE film No One Lives on DVD, co-starring WWE Superstar, Brodus Clay, in his first feature film role. The film is a violent portrayal of a gang of ruthless highway killers who kidnap a wealthy couple travelling cross country only to shockingly discover that things are not what they seem.



I caught up with Brodus this morning and was given a 10 minute window. I began by asking him how the role had come about and how it had been proposed to him.



Well, it was actually right after a ppv. I was working with Alberto [Del Rio] at the time and had just been busted open so was coming backstage for treatment. John Laurantitis, who is head of talent relations, came up to me and said that they might have a project for me and I was just all over it from the word go. I didn’t really mind what the role was, I never saw a script or anything like that because I didn’t really matter – this was always a dream for me.



Given that you hadn’t seen a script, how did you feel about being involved in such a violent picture – were you nervous about playing a role that’s such a departure from your normal character?



Well at the time I wasn’t actually the Funkasaurus yet. I was playing a kind of monster anyway and was teaming with Alberto and we were feuding with Edge and Christian. So I was playing a villain on screen anyway and I didn’t think anything of it. It kind of only hit me after we made the movie and I kinda thought “wow, yeah I wonder how this is gonna go down.” But it’s been cool so far and people don’t seem to have a problem with the two roles.



Is this something that you can see yourself doing again, if it arose? Given your size, I guess you could easily become typecast?



Definitely. I want to do it again. Anything like this good for development and helps you to expand as a performer. If I get typecast, so be it! I mean there are plenty worse things in life than being typecast, “oh no, I gotta go and do another movie, ah man!”So, yeah I would love to do this again and we’ll see how it goes.



So, when you started with the company, what were your goals back in Deep South and FCW?



It was all about taking baby steps. To be honest, I just felt I had been on an amazing journey to even get to be with WWE. All I wanted to do was move up the card. I didn’t get ahead of myself – you start in developmental, then you get on roster, then you wanna try to get on TV and then you hope that you can work in a good feud and so on. It’s all about small steps at that stage.



And in 2008 – when you were released – did you kind of write it off, was there part of you that had given up on working with WWE again?



Well don’t get me wrong, I had no delusions of grandeur, I left and went back to being a bodyguard. I mean I knew I’d wrestle again with but I just had to work hard it and try again to work for them. I didn’t give up even though it was a setback. By 2010 I was back with the company.



What are your memories of NXT? It looked like a fun show to work on?



Oh yeah, NXT was a lot of fun. It gave us all the chance to expand. We’d get there and they’d say “so what are you going to do?” and we’d be like “we don’t know!” So there was a lot of room to be creative. I mean even though were competing with one another, everyone was really supportive of one another. It was a great group to work in.



So, I’m sure you’ve been asked this many times but how did the Funkasaurus character come about?



Well, the nickname was something that was invented by my trainer, Rob. We kind of played around with it and then I think it was Bill De Mott who came up with ‘Planet Funk’ and it kind of spiralled from there. The American Dream, Dusty Rhodes, worked on my entrance with me and then we realised that I couldn’t dance! He just said “one you hear that crowd, you’ll know what to do”



First time you did that entrance was live on Raw – that had to be nerve-wracking?



Oh yeah. I mean I was definitely nervous. I knew that as soon as you do something like this it’s replayed and it’s all over the internet. And I hadn’t done it in front of more than a few of the guys really before so it was new and was so different.



Fastforward to today; you’re really over at the live shows, you have a ton of merchandise, you have a tag partner (Tensai) and you’re a fan favourite – so what’s the next step for your character/for you as a performer?



Well erm… I think you always dream of that world championship, or that one moment that you will always remember or that WrestleMania moment – something that you can kind of come back to again and again. I mean it’s great right now, I’m obviously tagging with Tensai, which is a real honour, so who knows where that will lead. Maybe something will happen for me in the singles roster.





No One Lives is out on DVD today

Tuesday 24 September 2013

WWE: Triple H – Thy Kingdom Come DVD Review

Triple H’s autobiography would be a pretty remarkable read. Told through his voice, his stories of the road, wrestlers, wrestling, Vince and becoming COO would be an incredible tale. A DVD, then, told through his voice using footage, images and, crucially, the voices of those who were around when it all happened would be even more remarkable, right? Right. For the documentary alone, this collection is a must.

The tale of the boy from Nashua to two working class doting parents who would work hard every day of his life to eventually become the chief operating officer of a multi-million dollar organisation is told through the voices of literally everyone who is anyone from WWE in the last 25 years.

The plainest reason to invest in this collection isn’t just the wonderful insights we’re given into Paul Levesque’s journey as a WWE superstar but is the inclusion of The Undertaker as a talking head for the first time. He is incredibly articulate, measured and honest in his appraisal of his “friend”, Triple H; all the stories of Taker as the voice of the locker room make complete sense here – he comes across as exceptionally wise about wrestling, relationships and morality. His presence is unequivocally an utter treat.

Matches on this set are not just the standard ppv matches that are already in the public domain – many are taken from Raw or Smackdown and show Triple H as a performer who rises to the big occasion but who also can turn it on on weekly, episodic television “where more people will see it,” he notes.

Under Killer Kowalski, Paul Levesque, worked as Terra Rizing and was a 270lbs body builder with “terrible footwork”. William Regal would help iron that out in WCW at the Power Plant with the likes of Terry Taylor and DDP. The story of Levesque’s arrival at WCW is in itself interesting as was his approach to contract negotiations as revealed here. Like in so many areas of this documentary, the story is made even more rich and engaging by its narrators: the DVD’s spine is made up by the voices of Jim Ross, Shawn Michaels, Vince, Steph, The Rock, Steve Austin, Big Show, Dave Bautista, Ric Flair, John Cena, Randy Orton, Kevin Nash, Mick Foley, Sean Waltman, Brock Lesnar, both Paul’s parents and, of course, The Undertaker.

By the time he went to see Vince about the chance to work at WWE, Levesque had worked through two different gimmicks that he knew he had to work with despite finding them fairly clichéd. He told Vince that he wanted “to get great” and wanted to work “300 nights a year” and compete with the best. Vince respected that more than anything – WCW would have asked him to work half that by cutting out house shows. He was christened Hunter Hurst-Helmsley, the American elitist; “a horrible gimmick,” notes The Undertaker, and was“immediately gobbled up by ‘the clique’”.

Vince, Levesque, Waltman and Nash cover the infamous‘curtain call’ in great detail and put across just how awfully it was received backstage and in the office. In a wonderful paraphrase of Vince, Hunter tells us that he was told “you’re going to have to learn to eat s*** and like the taste”. While he also details his rise back to the upper echelons of the card, how he met Chyna and how his matches with Mick Foley made him relevant again, giving him an edge and a toughness that he hadn’t been afforded before.

His mother, it is revealed, was none too keen on some of the angles that DX would be involved in during the Monday Night Wars but it elevated Hunter to a new level as Shawn left and he was allowed to take centre stage. The story of DX is really well covered throughout and there is enjoyable footage of his semi shoot interview with Jim Ross from 1999 where he lets out all his built-up aggression about being the fall guy for the curtain call.

The focus for much of the middle of the documentary is his and Steph’s relationship, the reaction backstage and from Vince and Linda. Taker said that “it seemed like a recipe for disaster” but after a long time of back and forth and Vince’s approval and then disapproval, Hunter reveals how he went to Taker for advice and it was his words that ultimately encouraged him to just go for it. Vince, incidentally, describes their wedding day as “one of the greatest days of my life […] it was a magical day”

His injuries are covered with the first particularly given room. His comeback is and was remarkable and film of the doctors discussing him and operating on him is really well-placed. Upon his return, too, Flair, Orton and Bautista all praise not just his work ethic but his remarkable character and nature. Orton describes how patient his was with him in his younger days – “was like a fatherly figure or an older brother to me”.

The most revealing footage on the collection is in the final act where talking heads discuss his matches with The Undertaker at two consecutive WrestleManias. Taker talks candidly about how much those matches meant to him and shows how genuinely moved he is by the memories of the second match in Florida. According to him, they never planned to embrace at the top of the stage but “every year the pressure gets bigger and bigger” to top what he had done the year before. There is golden footage of them coming back to Gorilla after their second match that really capture Vince’s overwhelming emotions.

 Ultimately, we’re shown Paul Levesque the businessman, the family man and the all-round respected figure who has earned his place as a canonical wrestler and as a man who deserves to be where he is today. He clearly works extremely hard, as all who speak about him will attest, but he also clearly rolls with the punches and copes well with all that he has on his shoulders in 2013. “This is the hardest thing I’ve ever done” he states as the COO of WWE as Vince argues that “he is a great man” and “one of the best things that ever happened to me and to this company”.

Friday 20 September 2013

WWE Superstars TV Report - 19th September 2013


WWE Superstars TV Report – 19th September 2013
 
The show opens up with Santino Marella coming out! I have to see it’s great to see him. A few months away and I actually smiled as he came out doing his ridiculous power walk. He’s lost weight. Out next is JTG; I think he gets one outing per month on Superstars and that’s the only time he appears on any WWE content for another 30 days. Alex Riley is sporting the same awful red shirt he wore last week and again in his role on the panel on Sunday Night at Night of Champions.
 
Santino v JTG
 
They lock up and look to test each other’s strength. Marella puts JTG into a headlock and then whips him into the ropes and they collide in the middle of the ring and posture to the crowd. They do the same again and this time Santino threatens JTG with some kicks. JTG backs off and cowers so that Marella stops and then he takes the chance to take a cheap shot. JTG whips Marella but Santino dodges him and then does his goofy power walk to the delight of the crowd and the disgust of JTG. Santino hits him with a reverse atomic drop, JTG slaps him and this becomes all about comedy as JTG cowers behind the ref and Santino threatens the cobra.
 
JTG starts to dominate, punching Santino in the corner and beating him down. He chokes him out on the middle rope and then puts him in rear choke hold in the middle of the ring. He tries for a pin but only gets 2. JTG goes to the second turnbuckle, tries to hit him with a splash but takes too long and Santino rolls out the way. Marella then powers up using his patented hip toss and diving headbutt as he pulls out the cobra sock. JTG dodges and locks in a sleeper hold. Santino sells but the Cobra stays alive so that he can power out. He finally does hit the Cobra and pins JTG in 4:25.
 
This was a fun, short squash match that the crowd really enjoyed. Santino is looking really small, he must have lost 15-20lbs.
 
The Raw Rebound is next – the wonderful Bray Wyatt promo is first. Boy, has he found his feet with this character. We then get the Scott Armstrong firing and the Daniel Bryan title stripping from Monday. Included in all this is a video package re-telling the Dusty Rhodes segment from Raw.
 
Out next on Superstars is Kofi Kingston. Rumour has it, Vince isn’t happy with his tights. If I were Vince, I’d be more concerned with the weight and tone loss since his injury and the fact that he looks much less committed and impressive in the ring. 3MB come out next and thankfully its Drew in competition tonight; I feared it might be Jinder. 3MB are becoming regulars on this show.
 
Kofi Kingston v Drew McIntyre
 
As Slater and Mahal leave the apron, they lock up and Kofi immediately gets locked in an arm bar by Drew who then takes him down to the mat. Drew looks so much bigger and stronger the Kofi here. He whips Kofi into the corner, chases him and gets caught in a hurricanrana. He regains control putting him a headlock and then shoulder barges him out of an Irish whip. They botch the next move so they run the ropes again and Kofi hits him with a clothesline and then a neat drop kick. As Drew gets to his feet, Kofi mounts his shoulders and lands him with strikes. Drew escapes and rolls out the ring to get advice from Heath and Jinder, taking a breather. We go to a commercial break.
 
After the break, Kofi is whipped into the corner and is kicked and pushed up on to the turnbuckle where he is flipped off onto the mat. Alex Riley puts over Drew, saying he’s a star in the making while McIntyre beats him down. Dawson compares 3MB to The Fabulous Freebirds. Seriously. Drew puts Kingston in a rear choke hold but Kofi battles out and puts Drew into a small package out of nowhere for a 2 count. Angry, Drew gets up and lands a stiff clothesline on Kofi.
 
Drew kicks and punches Kofi in the corner, goes outside and continues to punish him. The crowd get behind Kofi as Drew sets him up and splashes him in the corner. He then climbs to the top rope and lands a flying clothesline. He gets another near fall and continues to get mad. He climbs the ropes again and this time poses to the crowd to a rain of boos. When he turns around, Kofi nails him with a frankensteiner which gets a nice pop.
 
The finish sees Kofi power up, hit a drop kick and the Boom Drop. He sets up for the Trouble in Paradise but Heath distracts Kofi and 3MB drag McIntyre outside to converse. As they do so, Kofi hits a baseball slide on Heath and Jinder, throws Drew back in the ring and this time hits the Trouble in Paradise for the pin in 9:35. This was a good TV match but nothing more. Normally 3MB are better heels than they showed here.
 
For the second week running, we’re given a decidedly average edition of Superstars. We end with the end of the Roman Reigns v Daniel Bryan match from Raw with the babyface faction of the locker room coming out in support of Bryan.

Thursday 19 September 2013

WWE: Legends of Mid-South Wrestling DVD Review

WWE has always been a company that has had peaks and troughs in terms of their ability to tell a good story. Right now we’re in the middle of a narrative arc that could culminate in a satisfying conclusion or could leave us underwhelmed, depending on how Orton and Bryan are booked. Whether or not they are booked well, they’ll probably deliver in the ring. But, ultimately, it will be what comes out this at the other end that we’ll remember. The same is true of TV and theatre – the French term ‘denouement’ is used – literally meaning ‘the untying of knots’: we’re presented with a tangle of storylines and we want to see how it gets untied. How we get to the ending is interesting and fun but it’s the ending that the majority are concerned with.
The same has always been true: tell a good story and people will come back for more. When Bill Watt’s took over Mid-South Wrestling from Leroy McGuirk, it was a territory that spanned a huge area and was internally in a state of disorder. What Watt’s did was attract talent; names migrated to Mid-South and Watt’s moulded starts out of green young potentials. He created an interesting, weekly, syndicated TV show and he taught the workers a great deal about the business. Fans watched every week as good booking saw slow-built feuds culminate in satisfying pay-offs over time.
This DVD collection doesn’t offer us the best in-ring action that we’ll ever see from a WWE release but it documents a time where storytelling was at the heart of an expanding promotion in a growing industry.
Disc 1
Disc 1 gives us a range of talking heads who comment on their experiences of Mid-South, starting in 1981. Ted DiBiase, who is always an engaging interview, tells of how he came in as a babyface but was quickly turned heel. His match against Paul Orndorff which is all pace and looks really stiff, culminates in a wonderful figure four battle. DiBiase sells beautifully in the final moments of the match when time is called. His stock rose hugely in the 80s and, as this set shows, he went on to become a perfect villain in this territory. His popularity when he eventually turned back to being a face, however, was nothing to rival that of Junk Yard Dog’s: JYD came in as green as anyone from Calgary “but just had it” as Bill Watts points out. Ross argues that “he was simply the biggest star in the history of Mid-South”. Watching JYD captivate crowds in Louisiana is a treat. He was an excellent promo but would largely be involved in squash matches early on. The match that he’s tied to here is not the best to showcase him – a 6-man tag that involved huge men like Andre, Dusty and Ernie Ladd.
DiBiase, Jim Duggan and Matt Borne as the Rat Pack are also profiled. Duggan is an articulate advocate for this period and talks about how much he learned under Watts. The Rat Pack were successful but internally didn’t click: Duggan notes, “DiBiase was the brains, I was the brawn and Borne was the jerk, so it turned out”. As a result, it was often DiBiase and Borne that would tag together. The late Matt Osrborne was a really good worker and this comes across in his No DQ tag match against JYD and Jerry Stubbs (Mr Olympia). Duggan interferes in a gorilla costume and DiBiase wins using a loaded glove. They were fun heels, great promos and would get up to lots of antics in order to ensure that they won. Jim Duggan laughs and points out that his feud with DiBiase to break them up was “the most gimmicked match of all time”. Yes, folks, this is the Coal Miner’s Glove Steel Cage Tuxedo Loser Leaves Town Match! The match is reasonable but is really a great battle that, crucially, is the culmination of a 2 year storyline where both men are covered in blood. It’s worth noting how awesome Jim Ross’ commentary is here and on the rest of the set - the irony is that the last released work of Jim Ross as an announcer for WWE was on this collection and it was released the day before his being let go.
The first disc also sets the scene for the difficulties that travelling around these states would cause. Highs and lows are described by many, particularly Dusty Rhodes who notes, “we would be driving 2000 plus miles per week”. Watts also insisted on a non-negotiable policy that saw heels ride with heels. Terry Taylor, who is phenomenal on this collection, describes (and not for the last time) what a machine Ric Flair was in those days. Flair was always first up, first to the car rental place, first in the gym and was always immaculately turned out.
Other than watching Tony Atlas bench 550lbs, the other highlight of disc one is the profile and footage of Magnum TA. Terry Allen would have been a huge star if he’d never been injured in the late 80s, I have no doubt about that. Brought in by Ernie Ladd, he commands a certain amount of cool and has a rugged believability about him. We’re shown his workouts when Mr Wrestling II took him on as a protégé in a coaching role. We’re also shown two good matches where he is portrayed as a sympathetic yet plucky and tough babyface: firstly when Mr Wrestling walks out on him leaving Magnum to be beaten in the middle of the ring against the Midnight Express and, lastly, when he won the North American title from Mr Wrestling, despite his best attempts to cheat, in 1984.
Disc 2
The territory was keen to push African American athletes, especially since JYD was so popular. ‘Hacksaw’ Butch Reed was a big, agile, charismatic athlete who assumed the role of the main event star well. Watts’ vision was to turn JYD and have him feud with Reed. On the way to their Ghetto Street Fight (!) we see JYD take Reed out in television segments, firstly to paint him yellow and secondly, to cover him in tar and feathers. Again, the story turns out to be better than the work in the ring but they have a slow, climactic epic that is worth watching.
Jim Ross notes that he has “never seen a greater tag team rivalry” in his whole career than that of the rivalry between the Midnight Express and the Rock n Roll Express. Their profile is a pleasure and arguably should be longer. Here, ring work and storylines combine – these were two teams who had great chemistry and in-ring psychology. Midnight Express were the country boys who people wanted to hate while Rock n Roll Express were the cute guys, adored by fans everywhere. Jim Cornette made this feud even stronger as the weasel heel manager who could cut a deadly promo. The two matches we’re given vary in quality. The No DQ match for the tag titles from May 1984 sees Cornette apply chloroform to Robert Gibson while the ref has taken a bump. When Eaton pins him for the win, the crowd are infuriated. It leads to Cornette being put in a straightjacket and raised above the ring, out of harm’s way but the footage of this match is really poor and less enjoyable as a result.
Even though he was an ‘enhancement’ guy (jobber) in Mid-South, Shawn Michaels discusses his work with Ted DiBiase next. He puts Ted over as a great teacher and says that in one match he taught him enough to last him a career. DiBiase had given Shawn the chance to look credible despite only being afforded the chance to hit a couple of moves in the match. Shawn says he has always taken on the advice that DiBiase gave him and, really, made a career out of it: being still in with a chance at all times, never quite looking beaten even if you don’t really belong in the frame. Their match is ok, but Michael’s insight is far more interesting.
As already noted, Terry Taylor is excellent on this collection. He is an erudite, cultured man who talks with great insight into the period, particularly here with his feud with Ric Flair. He says that he still felt new to the business at this point and was delighted to get his opportunity to wrestle Ric and he didn’t want to blow it. Taylor goes on to tell the story of the day that he wrestled Flair at the Superdome on June 1st 1985: he arrived at 2pm, way earlier than necessary; he worked out, did his hair several times and got ready for his match. By 7pm Flair was nowhere to be seen, same at 7:30, same at 8. Flair turns up at 8:30 “stinking of booze, looking like he was wearing the same clothes he’d warn for the past three days” and he tells them, “wake me up in an hour”. Worst still, he tells Terry, “bring me a coffee in an hour”. Taylor was mad to say the least and concerned that he’d have to try and carry Flair for a 12 minutes match, “which wasn’t something that I was sure I could do” he says. Anyway, 35 minutes into the match Taylor says, “I was begging him to pin me because I couldn’t breathe anymore; he was a machine”. As the match shows, Flair comes to ring looking immaculate and gives a pacey Ric Flair match with Terry to the fans for 39 straight minutes, when hours before he’d been plastered.
Disc 3
When JYD left, Watts searched for the next black star of the company. Ross claims that this idea was a mistake and that they had white talent that were just as strong. As they trialled Eddie Crawford as Mr Snowman, Jim Ross had a lot to do with bringing Muhammad Ali in to the company to be in his corner. Jake Roberts, who is also a talking head here (but frankly has looked better), is becoming the company’s top heel by 1985 and laughs off how he was so glad that at the finish of their match, Ali didn’t catch him with real punches, “I was so grateful that he didn’t knock the s*** out of me”. There’s also some nice footage of Ross interviewing Ali in the build up to the match and also tape of Ross and Ali at his mosque.
We then learn of how DiBiase was turned babyface “in one night” in November 1985. As a heel for 4 years now in the territory, they used Dick Murdoch (who had brought DiBiase in to the company in the first place) to turn DiBiase for his match against Ric Flair. We’re shown Murdoch ramming DiBiase into the ring post which causes him to bleed profusely from his forehead, squirting out blood in worrying amounts. As the perfect never-say-die babyface, he still comes out to fight Flair that same night after fans have seen him stretchered off. This is probably the finest match in the collection.
By 1986, Mid-South attempted to go national and, with it, would change to its name to the Universal Wrestling Federation. Ross and Watts were convinced that this was a feasible, viable option. However, due to the oil crisis that hit the Mid-South area and the resulting swell in unemployment in and around Watts’ territory, the average fan couldn’t afford to attend live shows anymore. Just when Watts assumed he would be able to build on his core audience, he couldn’t count on it. Just as TNA does today despite its money problems, television ratings were actually stable - it was live attendances that were down. Watts admits he was losing $50,000 a week at this time and being bought out by Crockett Promotions was unavoidable and in the end made fiscal sense.
As with many WWE releases, we’re told a version of the full story and so the light and shade of the deal is only mentioned, specifically that Watts exaggerated the WWF’s interest in his company to secure a deal with the NWA. Of course, later, the NWA would regret the deal, realizing that they could have waited and merely pinched the talent once UWF struggled.
Apart from the interest viewers may have in seeing figures such as Watts, Roberts and Duggan as talking heads on this DVD, there are certainly some matches that will pique interest, out of curiosity alone. Rick Steiner (Rob Ricksteiner at this point) and soon-to-be controversial referee Nick Patrick wrestling on Power Pro Wrestling in May of 1986 is one of those matches as is The Bladerunner’s match: watching Sting and Ultimate Warrior as green, young pretenders is fascinating in itself. In fact, as the company became UWF, the set becomes interesting in its showcasing of The Fabulous Freebirds, Dr Death Steve Williams, Terry Gordy and One Man Gang.
The Freebirds were awesome heels and great talkers, particularly Michael Hayes. Hayes as a talking head throughout this collection is very definitive in his views. He puts over the period as one that really helped a lot of workers in their careers but never quite says more than that personally. The Freebirds arguably, though, enjoyed even more success by the time the NWA took over. Buddy Roberts, it is explained, joined on Watts’ say so and was considered a great addition; Roberts feels he lived the gimmick anyway and provides insight in pre-recorded interviews carried out before his death in 2012. The match between DiBiase & Williams and Hayes & Buddy Roberts is fun because of the Lumberjack stipulation but you will find better Freebirds matches than this.
Terry Gordy is put over as being a complete natural by all who speak about him. DiBiase comments that you always felt safe in the ring with him and notes how smooth he was for such a big man. Hayes says that it was in the Fabulous Freebirds that Gordy received praise for being a good worker. Gordy’s match with Jim Duggan is very fine indeed and is probably one of the best Duggan matches you’ll find on tape. Gordy was known under the moniker of ‘bam bam’ at this point and had the body and attitude of the ‘enforcer’ in the Freebirds and as a singles star. His match with Dr Death Steve Williams is mouth-watering in prospect but writhes with a non-finish that isn’t clarified in the end.
There is short profile of One Man Gang in which Ross asserts his belief that he was a real star because of his desire to improve in the ring and because he was booked so well. Steve Williams, on the other hand (who is on this collection fleetingly, speaking before his death in 2009), is revealed to be “dangerous” in the ring in his early days. It is sad to hear him sound so hoarse but is only right that he should appear here. He wrestled between college terms initially and Terry Taylor notes that “he was just so strong; I don’t think words could do it justice”. His story is the one that ends this collection – humbly, Williams suggests that his title shot came about because the other stars had been picked up by Vince at this point which only left him to take the belt.
We’re given a bridging match between One Man Gang and Big Bubba Rogers (a slightly lither and younger Big Bossman) so that the culmination of the set can show us highlights of Williams’ title win against Roberts from July 1987. Williams laments the sale to the NWA and claims that he and Flair were to supposed to have a title unification match that would top the bill of a company-wide UWF and NWA feud but Flair didn’t like William’s style (so Steve claims, despite praising Flair as the “best ever”) and so he said that he would never face him again. The idea was buried, the rest is history and the collection ends there.
WWE have been careful in their treatment of this story. It is well-told, well-structured and well-balanced so that even the most casual fan, bringing no prior knowledge to the table, will enjoy the narrative of the rise and fall of Mid-South Wrestling. But in this case, to negate my opening sentiments, it is not the ending that is interesting; it’s how we get there. In-ring wrestling still needed the edges smoothing off back then but storylines were everything and everything was about storylines. Because Mid-South knew better than many, if you tell people a good story, they will come back wanting another.

Monday 16 September 2013

WWE Night of Champions 2013 Review

WWE Night of Champions 2013
Sunday 15th September
Detroit, MI
 
Curtis Axel (c) v Kofi Kingston for the IC Title
 
Not the ideal ppv opener. They had the pre-show match with the tag teams, so for the live crowd they had already had a gauntlet tag team opener. For us - if you didn’t watch the pre-show that is – this was the thing that set the pace for the show. It was generally well-wrestled throughout. Kofi is really safe pair of hands and Axel has certainly improved over time. They were given a really long time which was surprising, probably too long because you felt that they had run out of ideas as to how they should fill it by the end. The false finish after Kofi’s SOS was where the crowd really came alive and Axel’s finisher could do with some work. I can see Axel holding this title for a while now.
 
Divas Match – AJ (c) v Brie Bella v Natalya v Naomi for the Divas Title
 
AJ won with the Black Widow which is an excellent finisher and really suits her character. The match wasn’t as bad as expected and saw a really strong outing by Naomi who, once again, looked excellent. Total Divas has given them all a much needed platform and once they start to get given well-laid-out matches, they could really put together a division that has some matches worth watching.
The silly spot was the double sharpshooter by Natty on Brie and Naomi who sold it like it was killing her but AJ retaining was a shock and should build up a nice programme for the Divas over the coming month before Total Divas returns.
 
RVD v Del Rio (c) for the World Heavyweight Championship
 
Del Rio now gets zero reaction from the fans and it’s a real shame. The awful babyface turn and then immediate heel turn has made a mockery of his character and has confused the fans. He does tough and stiff well in the ring and is really at his best when he is giving a beat down to someone. RVD, on the other hand, is really beat up and produces some sloppy performances now. They had a good match – Del Rio taking a spin kick from Rob as he was draped over the dasher boards was a good spot as was the block that Del Rio gave for the frog splash which he turned into his arm bar. The horrible finish was only saved by RVD’s coast-to-coast with a chair.
 
They spent a lot of the match outside the ring, and with the chair shot and the doctor’s coming out to check on Del Rio at the end, it would make sense that they do a hardcore/no DQ match at the next ppv. However, if this feud doesn’t continue, I doubt many will be complaining.
 
Fandango v Miz
 
You have to feel sorry for Fandango. He shouldn’t be working with Miz, he is a much better in-ring competitor and needs to work with quality on house shows and TV if he is going to improve further. He should have beaten Miz here but for some reason Miz beat him clean with the figure four. I would turn Fandango babyface now and put him up against Curtis Axel or keep him heel and give him time with somebody like Ziggler or Kingston. This was a nothing match that took time away from the main card.
 
CM Punk v Curtis Axel and Paul Heyman – Handicap No DQ Match
 
There was a tremendous WWE video package that they used to introduce this match. It told the narrative really well leading into this, going all the way back to Money in the Bank. I have to say that when Axel and Heyman came out to the ring, they looked like a big deal but this whole feud’s reliance on the Kendo stick is really meaningless and has never been given a context.
 
Punk immediately injected pace into the match by suicide diving onto Heyman through the ropes. It was almost as if he could sense that the crowd needed something after what was, so far, a really average show. He then put on JBL’s hat and the crowd were given something to enjoy. That’s the thing with Punk, he always brings energy, anticipation and fun into his angles – here he was worker against a lower mid-carder but was making it seem relevant. Heyman, of course, was once again fantastic here. His facials were terrific.
 
Ryback as Heyman’s new protégé was no surprise. It brings the narrative full circle from when Punk was champion under Heyman and Heyman helped Punk beat Ryback a year ago at Hell in a Cell. I dread the thought of this feud again. Langston would have been a much more interesting choice.
 
Dean Ambrose (c) v Dolph Ziggler for the United States Championship
 
Poor Dolph Ziggler. I am a huge mark for Ziggler and I really wish I knew what he’s done to deserve this. When he cashed in his briefcase and finally became champion, I assumed that they would give him time to get into the mould and work on his promos. Instead, he lost to Del Rio in a heartbeat and is now languishing in the mid card for matches with zero build for an essentially meaningless title.
 
Given some build, these two could have had a great match. But the crowd were dead as this was used as a buffer match after Heyman and Punk. Ambrose will keep this until the decide its Fandango or Bray Wyatt’s turn to be given a title to make them meaningful but Dolph is better than this.
 
Rollins and Reigns (c) v The Prime Time Players for the Tag Team Titles
 
Titus O’Neil is a good worker and everyone says that he could be a big deal one day in this company. The truth is, he’s 36 and I just can’t see him going above this level any time soon. Darren Young is improving, however, and looked good here, as did Seth Rollins who continues to impress. Rollins is capable of main-eventing in the future, if he’s booked properly and Reigns could be booked as a monster a la Ryback and so will be fine.
 
This was an OK match with a good finish that saw the ref miss Roman Reign’s spear on Darren Young (which looked tremendous). I think we’re waiting on Big Show and Mark Henry to be healthy – or failing that A N Other in Henry’s place – before these titles go anywhere.
 
Daniel Bryan v Randy Orton (c) for the WWE Title – No Interference
 
Another fantastic video package preceded this match. They really do this so well for their ppvs and I think fans often take them for granted. There are few better production companies in the entertainment business at this. Cole in the sit-down interviewer role with HHH provided the perfect soundtrack to the story and, I guess with the Meyweather fight being just a matter of hours before this, was intended to look like a Show Time, big fight event.
 
These two worked a really good match. Orton is rarely poor. He is so smooth in the ring: he sells well, he’s quick, he’s powerful and he’s a fantastic heel. The sub plot to the match was the refereeing changes, culminating in Scot Armstrong returning towards the end of the match to give a fast count for Bryan’s win. This will obviously play out on Raw tomorrow but was no sold by the commentary team and so Daniel Bryan was given his win, clean with the Busaiku knee. I wouldn’t be surprised in the slightest if HHH voids the result because he just wanted Bryan to get this out of his system and will informs us that it was all a work. Notice, after the fast count, Orton stayed lying on the floor still selling as if knocked out. Why do the fast count then? It’s possible that Vince will return but I see this as a HHH screwjob that will play out on Raw.
 
A very average ppv that broke the streak of excellent ppvs for 2013. It was always a two match card and only one was really worth paying for.