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Slight drop in standard, but some good with the bad, 22 October 2012
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Author:
bh_tafe3 from Australia
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Austin lost the title to.... no one. The Rock won a No.1 contender's
match that was cancelled out by the end of the show, Vader wrestled his
final PPV match in the WWE, while Gangrel and Christian made their PPV
debuts on a decent show.
The night started off with a match that sounds good on paper: Owen Hart
vs Edge. But Edge in 1998 was not the Edge that would be arguably WWE's
best worker in later years. They go back and forth for most, but in the
end it's a random appearance at ringside by Edge's soon to be tag
partner Christian, making his first appearance in the WWE, that
distracts Edge and enables Owen to pin him.
Next up saw Al Snow, partnered by Scorpio, continue his rivalry with
Brian Christopher and Scott Taylor in a tag match. Snow is eventually
able to clobber Taylor with head in a low blow unseen by the ref and
get the pin. A bit of revenge for Too Much's astonishingly screwy
victory over Snow and head at an earlier PPV.
Our next match disappointingly didn't include Sable as Marc Mero,
accompanied by Jacqueline defeated Droz. Poor Droz, featured in the
1999 documentary "Under the Mat" as Puke, would go on to become a
quadriplegic after an horrendous in ring accident in a match with D Lo
Brown. Here he lost to an out of favour Marc Mero, a sure sign the WWE
had no big plans for him.
This was followed by the final chapter (to my knowledge) of Vader's
astonishing fall from prominence since headlining Summerslam just two
years prior as he lost to future WWE Champion, but current lower mid
carder Bradshaw in an uneventful Fall Count Anywhere match following a
clothesline from hell.
The next match saw D Lo Brown in action and defeating Gangrel in a poor
match. I could never get into Gangrel. D Lo had good nights and bad
nights, but needed a decent opponent to have a decent match.
After all of the filler, we now came to the first big match of the
night with The Rock, Ken Shamrock and Mankind going at it in a steel
cage match to determine the No.1 contendership. The match ends with the
Rock pinning Shamrock as Mankind attempts to climb out of the cage. The
Rock was still leader of the Nation of Domination at this stage, but
the crowd is clearly starting to get behind him. This was also the
match that more or less kicked off the Rock vs Mankind feud that would
dominate the summer months, make the WWE millions and millions of
dollars and pull some of the highest ratings in the so called Monday
Night War.
Nest match was another filler one as Dustin Runnels, with his preacher
gimmick fought Val Venis, accompanied by Runnels' wife Terri and lost.
This was not a particularly good match, but looking back on these,
Venis was a better worker than I remember him being. Not to say he was
great, or even good, but he knew what he was doing.
Next match saw DX defeat Jeff Jarrett and Southern Comfort in a six man
tag match. Nothing really memorable.
This left the main event in which Steve Austin put his WWE Title on the
line against his two biggest threats: Kane and the Undertaker. The
story here was that Kane and the Undertaker could only win by pinning
Austin, while Austin could pin either. Jim Ross called it a "glorified
handicap match." After stopping each other from pinning Austin several
times, and having Austin nearly beat them as a result, Kane and
Undertaker choke slammed Austin and pinned him simultaneously. McMahon
came to ringside and grabbed the belt, saying he didn't care who won,
Austin had lost and the belt was his. So how to sort out this mess.
Guess we'd wait until Judgment Day to find out.
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