Firstly, don’t blame me because you don’t know what a good wrestling match is.
Funny stuff, really. Clearly you don't know me. At all. Glad to see the first thing you've done in your post is insult me though, that's always a nice way to start off.
And just because I said ‘wrestling’ does not mean I said it was a pure mat technical classic. Wrestling encompasses a great deal of things and certainly not just technical moves (although there were definitely those in the match).
The fact that you emphasized the word "WRESTLING" match was clearly intending to imply that the match was a great technical match, don't pretend you weren't. When you think of a great brawl you don't emphasize the word "WRESTLING" as the emphasis and focus of the match was not on wrestling but rather brawling. I'm well aware that a match doesn't need to be a mat or technical classic to be good, I watch quite literally every style of professional wrestling from Memphis Moondog brawling to strong style to sports entertainment to lucha, joshi, deathmatches and beyond. Don't talk down to me like I don't know what a good wrestling match is bucko, sorry to burst your bubble, but the three way from The Night the Line Was Crossed was shit, and the majority of wrestling critics and fans alike would agree with me on that sentiment. I feel sad for anyone who actually thought that match was a classic. You were duped.
Secondly, this was the very first Three Way Dance and gave birth to what now is done fairly regularly and has been done thousands of times since.
First, it absolutely was not the first three-way match-up in wrestling, that's flat out incorrect, UWFi and FMW among other promotions had utilized three-way elimination matches for several years before ECW was created.
Secondly, just because it was the first mainstream three-way match of it's kind, it absolutely does not make it a good match.
At this time it was ground breaking
No it wasn't. It was the typical early 90s US indy promotion main event, 60 minutes of mostly garbage wrestling.
the spots were inventive and had never been done
Absolutely false, there was nothing groundbreaking about the match. What was ground-breaking? Breaking tables? Done many times before. The three-man sleeper? Done before. Aside from that, honestly, can't recall a single other spot from the match because it's such a dull, forgettable affair. Hardly one of the better ECW main events even in the early days, the Funk-Gilbert brawls were far more spirited and entertaining.
and the crowd ate it up.
You mean aside from half of the match when they're completely silent because they have no clue what's going on as Funk, Sabu, Douglas, and eventually the Rotten brothers all start brawling all around the arena? And then we get a time-limit draw. That crowd clearly doesn't know what a good wrestling match is if they thought that was a classic. It wasn't.
It’s also arguably the match that pushed ECW from a regional promotional to a cult phenomenon.
Which goes back to me saying it's one of the most overrated matches of all time. Then again if you actually seek out reviews for that show from ECW, the majority of them at MOST will give that match *** maybe, most of them however agree the match was a long ,dull affair.
Watching it sixteen years later when wrestling has evolved so incredibly much can certainly alter ones perspective.
Wasn't the first time I had watched the match either, had seen it several times before many years ago, the first time I saw it I believe was in 2001 on a shitty dubbed ECW comp from RF. I remember not being thrilled with it even than as a teenager and watching it again over the years it continues to remind me how bad of a match it is.
Thirdly, we’re talking about the Three Way Dance from ‘the Night the Line was Crossed’. I don’t know what the hell match you were watching.
That is absolutely the match I'm talking about. Clearly you're the one who needs a refresher on that match, as I described it accurately in my post, complete with references to the interference by the Bad Breed at the end of the match and the fact that it went 60 minutes. I know perfectly well what match we're discussing, and it's a terrible one.
No one claimed the NWA had the roster of a WWF or WCW at the time. But there was Terry Funk, 2 Cold Scorpio, Chris Benoit, Dean Malenko, and countless others.
First off Terry Funk was back in WCW during the fall of 1994, so no he was not an option. Secondly, Scorpio was still unknown outside of New Japan, as were both Benoit and Malenko, and Malenko was never going to be a "Heavyweight" champion for the NWA or really any promotion. Douglas was really their only choice. He had wrestled, partnered and feuded with the likes of Ricky Steamboat, the Hollywood Blondes and Barry Windham. He was the biggest name ECW had at that time. Really though, this is pretty irrelevant. It has nothing to do with my original point about the three way dance being horseshit.
They were on the same level if not higher as the top TNA stars when that company started with NWA or Ring of Honor right now, so you downplaying Shane Douglas being chosen as the best option isn’t exactly a true view of the landscape at that time.
Well that's ridiculous. TNA had a national PPV deal from day one, ECW was barely able to sell VHS of it's event to 500 people or get their TV aired on a channel that wasn't local access. ECW was the only option NWA had at that time.
I mean, it wasn’t like Shane Douglas was ranked 32 on the PWI top 500 in 1994 or anything.
Who the fuck cares? The PWI means jackshit to me, and it's irrelevant in a discussion about the quality of a match in question, which was my point. His 32 ranking didn't help him put on an entertaining match that night, sorry.
That’s your opinion, man. The fact that it’s remembered and talked about for the match it was in terms of ANY year by so many people and has over all these years, I think proves you wrong. Nice try, though.
Just because someone talks about a match years after it takes place doesn't mean it was a good match. People still constantly talk about the Lesnar-Goldberg match from Wrestlemania 20, and that's generally considered one of the worst matches of all time. People still remember Hogan vs. Warrior at Halloween Havoc 1998, same deal.
Sorry, but if you actually stopped and watched the match from an objective viewpoint, you'd see what I and most others did---an incredibly dull and poorly executed brawl that was nowhere near a match of the year candidate in any shape, way, or form.
Nice try though.
