DiscipleofWrestling
Getting Noticed By Management
I thought that this would be an interesting thing to put on this section of the WrestleZone Forums. I’m going to be going through my DVD binder, pulling out a random show, and posting a new PPV analysis every week or so. I have a unique grading system that I’ve included below.
*****- CLASSIC
****- GREAT
***- GOOD
**- Decent
*- Bad
No Stars= Stinks
The first show that I’m reviewing is…
No Way Out 2001
WrestleMania X-Seven is considered by many to be the best WrestleMania of all time, including myself. However, if you are to consider WrestleMania X-Seven the best, then applause needs to be given to the WWF for their build for the PPV as it was very compelling. No Way Out had always been a tough PPV to count on. Some years, it provided a very strong show to get people amped for WrestleMania. Other years, it contributed jack squat to the biggest show of the year. In 2001, many expected that Triple H and Steve Austin would headline WrestleMania. So, it became a shock when Triple H and Austin were booked in a feud-ending Three Stages of Hell match where the only thing on the line was kicking the other man’s ass. The other main event match featured Kurt Angle, who had been WWF Champion for about four months, taking on The Rock, who pronounced that Angle’s time “of being happy” was over. “Tick-tock, tick-tock, tick-tock” was The Rock’s catchphrase for this feud. With the momentum of the WWF machine heading towards WrestleMania, all eyes were on this night as by evening’s end, the main event of WrestleMania would be set in stone.
All right. Enough talk. More analysis.
Hardcore Championship Match
Raven vs. The Big Show
Thoughts: Does anybody know why this match was happening? I really don’t. Big Show had been back for a month after returning at the Royal Rumble. He then lost a number one contender’s match against The Rock a few weeks before this match. Anyway, for an opening contest, the match did its job in getting the crowd into it. Remember, the Hardcore Championship had the 24/7 rule. So, the obligatory interference shots happen with Billy Gunn becoming Hardcore Champion for 2 minutes. Steve Blackman, Crash Holly, Hardcore Holly, and others make an appearance. Raven wins the championship back only to fall victim to a Big Show chokeslam through the garbage can.
Match Rating: **. The 24/7 concept of the Hardcore title was a double-edged sword. It could help a match, or it could destroy a match. I think this was one of those times when the 24/7 gimmick hurt the match.
Intercontinental Championship/Fatal Four Way Match
Eddie Guerrero vs. Chris Benoit vs. X-Pac vs. Chris Jericho
Thoughts: This is the story of Chris Jericho. Eddie Guerrero and X-Pac were both injured in matches against Chris Jericho. So, both were out for vengeance against Y2J. Chris Benoit was after the Intercontinental Championship he lost at the Royal Rumble that year. So, Jericho put the championship on the line against all three men in this match.
This was a very solid match between the four wrestlers involved. Any match involving Benoit, Guerrero, and Jericho together would have a very hard time disappointing me as a wrestling fan. That being said, I did not, nor do I now, get the involvement of Justin Credible into this match. I know that Paul Heyman around this time was working for WWF after the untimely demise of ECW, and there was a sudden move of ECW talent into the WWF. He had just debuted on Raw a week or so before this, but I don’t get why they had him play such a major role in the match. Despite this flaw, the match was very good and added to the PPV as a whole.
Rating: ***1/2. While the match was very solid, I thought that it would have been better if X-Pac were not involved. However, it made sense for the storyline purpose of X-Pac getting revenge on Chris Jericho. All the same, while I know WWF was half-heartedly trying to promote the X-Factor group, Justin Credible’s interference wasn’t really needed.
Stephanie McMahon vs. Trish Stratus
Thoughts: Ok, here’s the story of this match. Linda McMahon was in a private nursing home in a catatonic state after being threatened with a divorce by Vince McMahon. Stephanie and Vince used this as a means to wrestle control of the company. Enter Trish Stratus who begins being “familiar” with Vince, getting fur coats, having bubble baths, and having “rendezvous” among other things. Stephanie wants Trish to know that she is the dominant female of the company and wants to beat her up in the only way acceptable in the WWF and Jerry Springer.
I know many people are going to disagree with my opinion of this match, but for me, it is one of the greatest women’s matches I’ve ever seen. Why? The intensity of this match was off the hook. If you are looking for a technical wrestling match, you are going to be disappointed. But if you are looking for two women to claw at each other and do hair-mares, you found the Flair-Steamboat of that type of women’s match. And with the build of this match, how could you expect any other type of match? Who’s fooling who if you expect much more in this situation? Trish and Stephanie went out in the match and performed admirably despite neither having great wrestling skills during this time. The end comes when William Regal, Vince’s assistant, comes down to the ring and doesn’t know who to help. He first helps Trish, but then he changes his mind. Trish slaps Regal, and Regal treats Trish like a tube of toothpaste.
Match Rating: ***. I won’t go so far to say that it is a GREAT match, but it is definitely a remarkable encounter all things considered. This match led to a tag match the next night on Raw between Regal and Stephanie vs. Vince and Trish. It was a trick as Vince turned on Trish, had Trish covered in sewage from a mop, and declared that while Trish had been his toy, “playtime’s over!”
Three Stages of Hell
1. Regular Match
2. Street Fight
3. Steel Cage Match
Triple H vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin
Story: Triple H and Austin were feuding over the WWF Championship in late 1999 until Stone Cold gets ran over by a car driven by? Flash forward to April 2000. Stone Cold costs Triple H the WWF Championship in the main event of the Backlash PPV. Austin returns in September in search of the man who ran him down. In a rather bizarre and unremarkable twist, the WWF puts the blame on Rikishi. Rikishi can’t hold the heat. So, WWF decides to make an “accomplice,” a mastermind to the whole conspiracy. That man was… Triple H. While this part of the story was unremarkable, the main part is the feud is on. Austin dumps Triple H 30 feet in a car, Triple H and Austin trade opportunities to screw the other out of the WWF Championship, and both beat the hell out of others to get to their opponent heading into No Way Out (Austin stuns Stephanie and Triple H pedigrees J.R.).
The match did its job in ending the feud. The problem I have with the match is that it feels like it is too long at times, and it is lacking something to really put it into the classic category. This isn’t a knock on what the two accomplished in their match. It survives today in my mind as a memorable encounter between the two, and I often remember the ending which made neither wrestler look weak. But when you watch the match, you just have the feeling that the match could achieve more than it could.
Match Rating: ****. Even though the match has its flaws, it is a very fulfilling conclusion to the feud. The ending of the match was perfect as again, it made neither one look weak and gave Triple H a big victory over another big name. I wouldn’t consider the match to be among the elite matches in WWF/E history, but it is one hell of a match and a fitting end of the Triple H/Austin rivalry.
Jerry Lawler vs. Stevie Richards
* If Lawler wins, The Kat gets to strip.
** If Richards wins, The Kat joins RTC.
Match Rating- No Stars. I’m sorry. I cannot rate this damn match. It was, is, and will probably always be a black stain on this show. There was no reason why this match could not have been on Monday Night Raw, especially since every fan knew what the end result was going to be. Lawler and Richards were terrible in this match, and the only reason I would ever recommend this match to anyone is to show how to kill a show’s momentum. Up until now, the show has been great. Two days later, Lawler and Kat would be gone, and Lawler would be divorcing yet another wife in a few months. Is there a state that doesn’t have a Lawler ex? Paul Heyman came in to take over Lawler’s announcing position for the better part of 2001. The RTC would continue to operate without The Kat until eventually breaking apart in the Spring of 2001.
Triangle Tag Team Title Table Match
Edge and Christian vs. Undertaker and Kane vs. The Dudley Boyz
Well, this wasn’t a complete bust unlike the last match. Undertaker and Kane are in this match because of some organized heat by Edge and Christian to draw the Dudleyz and the Brothers of Destruction into battle with the other. The match is pretty good as all of the teams hit their signature moves. The end comes with interference from Rikishi and Haku, who officially had the world’s funniest looking afro in history. A 3D on Christian later, and The Dudleyz retain their titles. By the way, Undertaker is PO’ed. In other news, the world is round.
Match Rating: ***. While the match was good, I still wonder why Matt and Jeff Hardy were not involved in this match as they could have really used a match like this to build up to the upcoming TLC II at WrestleMania X-Seven. Undertaker and Kane didn’t really have a shot in hell of winning this match from a booking standpoint. Undertaker and Kane would beat Rikishi and Haku beyond recognition in a TV match. From there, Undertaker would go on to face Triple H in an excellent brawl at WrestleMania, and Kane would go on to be involved in a Hardcore Title Match with Raven and The Big Show. The Dudleyz and Edge and Christian would be involved in TLC II at WrestleMania with some other tag team called The Hardy Boys.
WWF Championship Match
Kurt Angle vs. The Rock
What a match. And the funny thing about all of this is Kurt Angle was only a year and a half into his WWF career. Kurt was only going to get better as the years kept going, but his title reign provided SOLID matches against the likes of Undertaker, Triple H, Austin, and this match with The Rock. The Rock and Kurt Angle had good chemistry in this match. The interference by The Big Show was sort of random. However, he was involved in the Number One Contender’s match a few weeks before. So, there was some logic in there. The ending has been a point of contention to me as I’ve always wanted to know if Angle was supposed to kick out of the Rock Bottom and didn’t. When The Rock did the second Rock Bottom in a sort of random “Let’s just get this done” sort of way, it makes one wonder. Still, it didn’t hurt the overall match.
Match Rating: ****. It’s not quite a classic match, but it was definitely a great way to end the PPV. Both wrestlers came out of it better. Angle’s title run was solid as he had several championship defenses on PPV and put him over as a great heel for the company. This match set The Rock up for his epic encounter against Stone Cold Steve Austin at WrestleMania X-Seven and would be his last WWF Championship victory until Vengeance 2002. Angle would go on to have a great feud with Chris Benoit at both WrestleMania and a forgotten classic Ultimate Submission Match at Backlash.
Show Rating: ****- This was a great PPV. As a consumer, when I shelled out the $30 for it on PPV, I felt that I got my money’s worth at the end. The only thing that keeps this PPV from achieving true legendary status is the uselessness of the whole Right to Censor vs. Right to Nudity match between Lawler and Richards. Take this match out of the equation and add the Hardy Boyz to the Table Tag Team Title feud and match, you have a serious ***** PPV contender. Even with these flaws, it is still in my top five overall PPV events in the history of WWE. It will be forever remembered as the night Triple H and Austin settled their rivalry and when The Rock-Austin rematch at WrestleMania was solidified.
*****- CLASSIC
****- GREAT
***- GOOD
**- Decent
*- Bad
No Stars= Stinks
The first show that I’m reviewing is…
No Way Out 2001
WrestleMania X-Seven is considered by many to be the best WrestleMania of all time, including myself. However, if you are to consider WrestleMania X-Seven the best, then applause needs to be given to the WWF for their build for the PPV as it was very compelling. No Way Out had always been a tough PPV to count on. Some years, it provided a very strong show to get people amped for WrestleMania. Other years, it contributed jack squat to the biggest show of the year. In 2001, many expected that Triple H and Steve Austin would headline WrestleMania. So, it became a shock when Triple H and Austin were booked in a feud-ending Three Stages of Hell match where the only thing on the line was kicking the other man’s ass. The other main event match featured Kurt Angle, who had been WWF Champion for about four months, taking on The Rock, who pronounced that Angle’s time “of being happy” was over. “Tick-tock, tick-tock, tick-tock” was The Rock’s catchphrase for this feud. With the momentum of the WWF machine heading towards WrestleMania, all eyes were on this night as by evening’s end, the main event of WrestleMania would be set in stone.
All right. Enough talk. More analysis.
Hardcore Championship Match
Raven vs. The Big Show
Thoughts: Does anybody know why this match was happening? I really don’t. Big Show had been back for a month after returning at the Royal Rumble. He then lost a number one contender’s match against The Rock a few weeks before this match. Anyway, for an opening contest, the match did its job in getting the crowd into it. Remember, the Hardcore Championship had the 24/7 rule. So, the obligatory interference shots happen with Billy Gunn becoming Hardcore Champion for 2 minutes. Steve Blackman, Crash Holly, Hardcore Holly, and others make an appearance. Raven wins the championship back only to fall victim to a Big Show chokeslam through the garbage can.
Match Rating: **. The 24/7 concept of the Hardcore title was a double-edged sword. It could help a match, or it could destroy a match. I think this was one of those times when the 24/7 gimmick hurt the match.
Intercontinental Championship/Fatal Four Way Match
Eddie Guerrero vs. Chris Benoit vs. X-Pac vs. Chris Jericho
Thoughts: This is the story of Chris Jericho. Eddie Guerrero and X-Pac were both injured in matches against Chris Jericho. So, both were out for vengeance against Y2J. Chris Benoit was after the Intercontinental Championship he lost at the Royal Rumble that year. So, Jericho put the championship on the line against all three men in this match.
This was a very solid match between the four wrestlers involved. Any match involving Benoit, Guerrero, and Jericho together would have a very hard time disappointing me as a wrestling fan. That being said, I did not, nor do I now, get the involvement of Justin Credible into this match. I know that Paul Heyman around this time was working for WWF after the untimely demise of ECW, and there was a sudden move of ECW talent into the WWF. He had just debuted on Raw a week or so before this, but I don’t get why they had him play such a major role in the match. Despite this flaw, the match was very good and added to the PPV as a whole.
Rating: ***1/2. While the match was very solid, I thought that it would have been better if X-Pac were not involved. However, it made sense for the storyline purpose of X-Pac getting revenge on Chris Jericho. All the same, while I know WWF was half-heartedly trying to promote the X-Factor group, Justin Credible’s interference wasn’t really needed.
Stephanie McMahon vs. Trish Stratus
Thoughts: Ok, here’s the story of this match. Linda McMahon was in a private nursing home in a catatonic state after being threatened with a divorce by Vince McMahon. Stephanie and Vince used this as a means to wrestle control of the company. Enter Trish Stratus who begins being “familiar” with Vince, getting fur coats, having bubble baths, and having “rendezvous” among other things. Stephanie wants Trish to know that she is the dominant female of the company and wants to beat her up in the only way acceptable in the WWF and Jerry Springer.
I know many people are going to disagree with my opinion of this match, but for me, it is one of the greatest women’s matches I’ve ever seen. Why? The intensity of this match was off the hook. If you are looking for a technical wrestling match, you are going to be disappointed. But if you are looking for two women to claw at each other and do hair-mares, you found the Flair-Steamboat of that type of women’s match. And with the build of this match, how could you expect any other type of match? Who’s fooling who if you expect much more in this situation? Trish and Stephanie went out in the match and performed admirably despite neither having great wrestling skills during this time. The end comes when William Regal, Vince’s assistant, comes down to the ring and doesn’t know who to help. He first helps Trish, but then he changes his mind. Trish slaps Regal, and Regal treats Trish like a tube of toothpaste.
Match Rating: ***. I won’t go so far to say that it is a GREAT match, but it is definitely a remarkable encounter all things considered. This match led to a tag match the next night on Raw between Regal and Stephanie vs. Vince and Trish. It was a trick as Vince turned on Trish, had Trish covered in sewage from a mop, and declared that while Trish had been his toy, “playtime’s over!”
Three Stages of Hell
1. Regular Match
2. Street Fight
3. Steel Cage Match
Triple H vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin
Story: Triple H and Austin were feuding over the WWF Championship in late 1999 until Stone Cold gets ran over by a car driven by? Flash forward to April 2000. Stone Cold costs Triple H the WWF Championship in the main event of the Backlash PPV. Austin returns in September in search of the man who ran him down. In a rather bizarre and unremarkable twist, the WWF puts the blame on Rikishi. Rikishi can’t hold the heat. So, WWF decides to make an “accomplice,” a mastermind to the whole conspiracy. That man was… Triple H. While this part of the story was unremarkable, the main part is the feud is on. Austin dumps Triple H 30 feet in a car, Triple H and Austin trade opportunities to screw the other out of the WWF Championship, and both beat the hell out of others to get to their opponent heading into No Way Out (Austin stuns Stephanie and Triple H pedigrees J.R.).
The match did its job in ending the feud. The problem I have with the match is that it feels like it is too long at times, and it is lacking something to really put it into the classic category. This isn’t a knock on what the two accomplished in their match. It survives today in my mind as a memorable encounter between the two, and I often remember the ending which made neither wrestler look weak. But when you watch the match, you just have the feeling that the match could achieve more than it could.
Match Rating: ****. Even though the match has its flaws, it is a very fulfilling conclusion to the feud. The ending of the match was perfect as again, it made neither one look weak and gave Triple H a big victory over another big name. I wouldn’t consider the match to be among the elite matches in WWF/E history, but it is one hell of a match and a fitting end of the Triple H/Austin rivalry.
Jerry Lawler vs. Stevie Richards
* If Lawler wins, The Kat gets to strip.
** If Richards wins, The Kat joins RTC.
Match Rating- No Stars. I’m sorry. I cannot rate this damn match. It was, is, and will probably always be a black stain on this show. There was no reason why this match could not have been on Monday Night Raw, especially since every fan knew what the end result was going to be. Lawler and Richards were terrible in this match, and the only reason I would ever recommend this match to anyone is to show how to kill a show’s momentum. Up until now, the show has been great. Two days later, Lawler and Kat would be gone, and Lawler would be divorcing yet another wife in a few months. Is there a state that doesn’t have a Lawler ex? Paul Heyman came in to take over Lawler’s announcing position for the better part of 2001. The RTC would continue to operate without The Kat until eventually breaking apart in the Spring of 2001.
Triangle Tag Team Title Table Match
Edge and Christian vs. Undertaker and Kane vs. The Dudley Boyz
Well, this wasn’t a complete bust unlike the last match. Undertaker and Kane are in this match because of some organized heat by Edge and Christian to draw the Dudleyz and the Brothers of Destruction into battle with the other. The match is pretty good as all of the teams hit their signature moves. The end comes with interference from Rikishi and Haku, who officially had the world’s funniest looking afro in history. A 3D on Christian later, and The Dudleyz retain their titles. By the way, Undertaker is PO’ed. In other news, the world is round.
Match Rating: ***. While the match was good, I still wonder why Matt and Jeff Hardy were not involved in this match as they could have really used a match like this to build up to the upcoming TLC II at WrestleMania X-Seven. Undertaker and Kane didn’t really have a shot in hell of winning this match from a booking standpoint. Undertaker and Kane would beat Rikishi and Haku beyond recognition in a TV match. From there, Undertaker would go on to face Triple H in an excellent brawl at WrestleMania, and Kane would go on to be involved in a Hardcore Title Match with Raven and The Big Show. The Dudleyz and Edge and Christian would be involved in TLC II at WrestleMania with some other tag team called The Hardy Boys.
WWF Championship Match
Kurt Angle vs. The Rock
What a match. And the funny thing about all of this is Kurt Angle was only a year and a half into his WWF career. Kurt was only going to get better as the years kept going, but his title reign provided SOLID matches against the likes of Undertaker, Triple H, Austin, and this match with The Rock. The Rock and Kurt Angle had good chemistry in this match. The interference by The Big Show was sort of random. However, he was involved in the Number One Contender’s match a few weeks before. So, there was some logic in there. The ending has been a point of contention to me as I’ve always wanted to know if Angle was supposed to kick out of the Rock Bottom and didn’t. When The Rock did the second Rock Bottom in a sort of random “Let’s just get this done” sort of way, it makes one wonder. Still, it didn’t hurt the overall match.
Match Rating: ****. It’s not quite a classic match, but it was definitely a great way to end the PPV. Both wrestlers came out of it better. Angle’s title run was solid as he had several championship defenses on PPV and put him over as a great heel for the company. This match set The Rock up for his epic encounter against Stone Cold Steve Austin at WrestleMania X-Seven and would be his last WWF Championship victory until Vengeance 2002. Angle would go on to have a great feud with Chris Benoit at both WrestleMania and a forgotten classic Ultimate Submission Match at Backlash.
Show Rating: ****- This was a great PPV. As a consumer, when I shelled out the $30 for it on PPV, I felt that I got my money’s worth at the end. The only thing that keeps this PPV from achieving true legendary status is the uselessness of the whole Right to Censor vs. Right to Nudity match between Lawler and Richards. Take this match out of the equation and add the Hardy Boyz to the Table Tag Team Title feud and match, you have a serious ***** PPV contender. Even with these flaws, it is still in my top five overall PPV events in the history of WWE. It will be forever remembered as the night Triple H and Austin settled their rivalry and when The Rock-Austin rematch at WrestleMania was solidified.