A Brief History of the WWE: Random Thoughts on the "In Your House" PPV Series

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  • Bigpapa42
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2009
    • 3185

    #46
    IYH7.jpg
    In Your House 7: Good Friends, Better Enemies
    April 28, 1996
    Omaha, Nebraska

    -we are back and rolling. Sorry, been distracted by the on-going European championships.

    -the 7th iteration of In Your House has a reasonable looking card, headlined by a strong main event. Unfortunately, the Ultimate Warrior is also on the card. Fuck.

    -the version I have kicks off with the Free For All pre-show. Dox Hendrix is in front the live Nebraska crowd, running down the card. Then we get to a dark match.

    -the undercard match is The 1-2-3 Kid taking on “Wild Man” Marc Mero. Sable is accompanying Mero to the ring and my interest level in this match goes up several cup sizes. Triple H gets involved in the match as he introduced Sable at WM, which I straight up forgot until I watched WM prior to this one. The match itself is pretty solid, ending in a DQ when Trips gets directly involved. Not a bad match. Not PPV caliber but it would have made a pretty decent TV match. I tend to forget how well Waltman could work.

    -we are then treated to a backstage interview with the Ultimate Warrior which is typical intense nonsense from the man I adored as a Little Warrior. Don't judge me, I was a fucking kid. After the promo, Marlena and Goldust appear, giving the Warrior a face-full of cigar smoke and then gold dust, which apparent combine to turn the Warrior into an ape. I don't know is going on here so I'm just going to move along.

    -we reach the event itself, and the commentary is Vince McMahon and Jerry Lawler. Which probably means that at some point while watching this, I will be fighting the urge to stab myself in the ears with something really sharp. Luckily for both you and I, my self control is strong and I will use something dull for the ear-stabbing.

    -our opening match is The British Bulldog (with Owen Hart, Jim Cornette, and Clarence Mason) facing Jake Roberts (with snake). Lawler actually makes a good point about how everyone that Roberts faces is afraid of snakes. Instead of a match, we get a comedy segment (I think its supposed to be comedy) where Cornette faints from seeing the snake and Jake has to take the snake to the back, so he comes back out with a really oiled up big man, the incomparable Ahmed Johnson. Why does he always look like he's ready for an oil wrestling match? Has there ever been a more greased-up wrestler than Ahmed Johnson in 1995 and 1996? We get a tag team match. The first bit is relatively watchable, as Roberts does his thing, but things kinda tank from there. My interest wanes. Meh match.

    -now we get Goldust against the Ultimate Warrior. The thought of this one makes me cringe. Warrior chases the IC champion out of the ring and we don't really have a match at all. Warrior grabs Goldust's robe and sits in his chair in the center of the ring, smoking Marlena's cigar. Finally Goldust returns and they share a moment, then Warrior clotheslines Goldust out of the chair, andt hen the champ gets counted out. Wikipedia says it was a seven and a half minute match. Seven minutes and fifteen seconds of nothing, with fifteen seconds of action... I bet Warrior still gassed. You can't even consider this one a match. I'm not at all disappointing by that fact, considering it was the Ultimate Warrior involved.

    -its Vader time! He will face Razor Ramon is what could be a solid match. It turns out to be just that – solid. Not outstanding and not amongst the best of either man, but hard-fought and a tough win for Vader. Afterward, Vader is told he will face Yokozuna on the next In Your House. So I have that to look forward to.

    -Godwinns. Bodydonnas. Mother of gawd. Upon realization that Sunny is involved, my interest goes up. Significantly. I loved Sunny back in the day and unlike the Ultimate Warrior, I feel no shame for that. The match... is a match. Standard tag fare. Heels win cheap to retain the belts.

    -finally we get to the main event. Well, we get a lengthy recap of the whole story sequence going back a couple of years. But we're getting close. I know this is Diesel's final match in the WWF, so not much question on how it ends.

    The match is good. Really good. Great? Maybe. Diesel looks like a monster and Michaels sells his ass off, showing great resilience as he gets shit stomped for awhile. He blasts the challenger with a fire extinguisher to gain the advantage. In a crowning moment of awesome, Diesel takes the artificial leg from Mad Dog Vachon and attempts to use it as a weapon, but HBK gives him a nasty-looking low-blow and then wins with Sweet Chin Music.

    -according to Wikipedia, there were three dark matches – Savio Vega over Steve Austin, Triple H over Marc Mero, and The Undertaker over Mankind. Considering how much of a one-match card this really was, any of those would have made this potentially a much stronger PPV.

    -it intrigues me that Diesel's very last match in the WWF was one of his best. He takes a lot of flack – and rightfully so – for having a pretty terrible world title reign. Yet he was a very capable big man who could put on a solid match. With a good opponent and some motivation, he was as good as almost any other big man out there. Not on the level of The Undertaker at his best, but maybe not that far from 'Taker on his average night. Six weeks after this pay per view, Nash would debut on WCW Nitro to join Scott Hall. He and Hall had those lucrative, guaranteed contracts and I don't think he's ever been motivated since. Its a shame in a way.

    -this is pretty much a pure one-match card. There is the main event and the rest. Of the rest, only Razor versus Vader really even feels like a PPV-caliber match. Two of the matches are more angles than matches, and one of those wasn't actually a match at all. Nothing about it was particularly painful to watch or offensive to my sensibilities, but its was all rather forgettable outside of the main event.

    Results
    Owen Hart & The British Bulldog d. Jake Roberts & Ahmed Johnson

    The Ultimate Warrior d. Goldust

    Vader d. Razor Ramon

    The Bodydonnas © d. The Godwinns for the WWF Tag Team championships

    Shawn Michaels d. Diesel in a No Holds Barred Match for the WWE World Heavyweight championship

    Recommended
    Diesel versus Shawn Michaels

    Comment

    • EmpireWF
      Giants in the Super Bowl
      • Mar 2009
      • 24082

      #47
      Hell yeah the Shawn/Diesel main event was awesome. I'd say #2 on Nash's best matches ever list...

      #1 - Bret vs. Diesel - Survivor Series 1995
      #2 - HBK vs. Diesel - Good Friends, Better Enemies
      #3 - Taker vs. Diesel - WM 12

      Any other matches worth mentioning?


      Comment

      • Warner2BruceTD
        2011 Poster Of The Year
        • Mar 2009
        • 26142

        #48
        Originally posted by EmpireWF
        Hell yeah the Shawn/Diesel main event was awesome. I'd say #2 on Nash's best matches ever list...

        #1 - Bret vs. Diesel - Survivor Series 1995
        #2 - HBK vs. Diesel - Good Friends, Better Enemies
        #3 - Taker vs. Diesel - WM 12

        Any other matches worth mentioning?
         
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        Comment

        • Bigpapa42
          Junior Member
          • Feb 2009
          • 3185

          #49
          IYH8.jpg
          In Your House 8: Beware of Dog
          May 26, 1996 & May 28, 1996
          Florence, South Carolina & North Charleston, South Carolina

          -now that Euro 2012 is winding down, I was hoping to get back into the swing of things with this. Intended to have this one up late last week. But life decided to fuck with me a bit so there was a delay. It happens.

          -you may notice there are two different dates listed for In Your House 8, and two different locations. Its not a goofy gimmick pay per view but the WWF making up for a power outage in the May 26th event after just two matches. What I don't know is how the copy of the event I have presents it. So just rolling with it here.

          -we kick off directly into the Free For All. The Godwinns taking on the Smoking Guns, with Sunny as the Godwinn's new co-manager. But Sunny betrays the Godwinns and the Guns win the belts back. Pretty crap match, to be honest.

          -before the show kicks off, we get some feud recaps. WWF champion Shawn Michaels is feuding with The British Bulldog – hence the PPV subtitle – and it centers around Smith's wife, Diana Smith. Bret's sister has accused HBK of harassing her. Of lusting after her. Saucy. We also have Goldust and The Undertaker in a Casket Match for the Intercontinental championship... Whaaa? Taker is already feuding with Mankind to boot.

          -the pay per view kicks off properly. We do get Vince McMahon and Jerry Lawler in the commentary booth. Again. Fuck.

          -the show starts out with Marc Mero versus Triple H. You know, I never really felt like Mero was deserving of the “Wild Man” nickname. Not that its an amazing nickname, but it is a solid one. It still amazes me sometimes that Mero was apparently picked as a likely top star when he joined the WWF. Just never saw it. Maybe there are some Mero marks out there who can tell me all about how great he was.

          As for the for the match with Triple H, its solid. It feels like a pay per view caliber match moreso than much of what the previous IYH events have had. It would probably be the second (maybe third) best match on the IYH7 card. Mero wins.

          -we get a backstage interview with Camp Cornette about Bulldog's title match. Cornette has gotten a manager license for Owen Hart, so he joins the contingent at ringside for Bulldog. That's kinda awesome.

          The world title match is up next. Interesting card placement. But it delivers. Its obviously not on the level of HBK versus Diesel from IYH 7 but still a quality match. It would not have made a fantastic main event but it certainly would not have been entirely poor. Highlight of the match for me is Owen Hart being mouthy at ringside, yelling at Michaels that “he's a loser”. The match ends with some controversy over who won and who is the champion, as HBK delivered a suplex into a bridging pin but both men had their shoulders down. Gorilla Monsoon declares it a draw. Decently creative finish.

          -we now switch to In Your House 8: Beware of Dog 2, which is the second night. Its already an improvement, as the commentary team is now Jim Ross and Curt Hennig. Fuck yeah.

          -the Caribbean strap match between Savio Vega and Steve Austin is next. They show footage from the match from the match that took place in the powerless arena two nights before. That would be weird to sit through.

          The match has some interesting stipulations. If Austin wins, Vega must be the driver for DiBiase. If Vega wins, DiBiase will leave the WWF. The match is a solid brawl and uses the applicable strap match psycology. That might seem obvious, but it doesn't always happen. The match goes a full 20 minutes, too. Vega wins and DiBiase is gone.

          This match brings up a pet peeve of mine. Which I feel like sharing. Austin is just a WWF midcarder at this point. But its clear that he's more than solid in the ring. He is a good worker. You can see pieces of the “Stone Cold” persona coming through but even just in terms of what was definitely already there – the look, the size, the ability in the ring – he looked like he could go far. I've seen him called an “unlikely superstar” and such a number of times. That's bullshit. Unintended I would buy, but unintentional or unlikely overlooks all the pieces that Austin had. He may have ended up being tossed away by WCW, but he won every belt but the world title in his four years there. And while he didn't quite get pushed like Foley out of gates, he was given a chance in the E. Hardly “just another guy”.

          -the lack of transitions between matches on the “part 2” of the event is a bit jarring. As a viewer, you don't always realize how much such things are expected until they aren't there. The result is that it seems kind bush league.

          -the match order here is all messed up. The world title match is second match on the card, and the semi main event is Vader versus Yokozuna. The match isn't bad. Its not great, either, but Vader can work, Yokozuna seems kinda motivated, and its kept relatively short (under 10 minutes). Cornette is involved plenty, too, as he used to manage Yoko and now manages Vader. The big man goes over. Okay, I mean Vader.

          -without any real transition, we move into the main event. Its a casket match between Goldust and The Undertake for the WWF Intercontinental championship. This one seems a bit odd and not just because the casket is gold. While I love that the IC used to get much more respect, The Undertaker was going after the world title not that long ago and I don't know that there was that much of a feud between these two, as Taker is already feuding with Mankind.

          The match is solid. Fairly standard fare for a casket match, with Goldust getting to look fairly strong to allow the Taker's signature spots. After a Tombstone, Taker is about to put Goldust in the casket and the Intercontinental title, but when the casket is opened, Mankind comes out and drags Taker in. Goldust wins. That has to be the biggest win in the entire career of Dustin Rhodes aka Goldust.

          -overall, its a solid event. A bit off-kilter at times with the two shows making up one event aspect, and especially with the lesser production quality of the second part. There's nothing outstanding here but at the same time, its all pretty decent. Its one of the most solid overall events thus far out of the In Your House series. That said, the only match I'm going to recommend here is the Austin-Vega strap match, which is good but not fantastic. Its just interesting to see a pair of midcarders get a 20-minute brawl, and to see Austin in the WWF before the Stone Cold gimmick came about.


          Results
          Marc Mero d. Triple H
          Shawn Michaels draws The Britsh Bulldog
          Savio Vega d. Steve Austin in a Caribbean Strap Match
          Vader d. Yokozuna
          Goldust (c) d. The Undertaker in a Casket Match for the WWF Intercontinental championship

          Recommended
          Steve Austin vs Savio Vega – Caribbean Strap Match

          Comment

          • Warner2BruceTD
            2011 Poster Of The Year
            • Mar 2009
            • 26142

            #50
            -I believe Mero was the center of one of the early WWF/WCW pissing match contract warz, so because of that they felt the need to push him hard right out of the gate. His WCW rep was that of a guy more talented than his gimmick, but I don't think anybody ever saw him as a future star or anything.

            -Austin was almost immediately considered a future star when he was a rookie in Texas. He ended up in WCW something like one year into his career, and again, was seen almost immediately as a future star. He was progressing nicely in that regard, until Hogan and crew showed up, which coincided with some injury problems. So he ended up pushed down the card, to the point he was firmly planted in the lower mid card and asked to do TV jobs on the B-shows. He famously refused to job for Renegade at a WCW Saturday Night taping, and that was pretty much it for him.

            When he got to ECW, most felt WCW made a big mistake, and Heyman pushed him like a gigantic superstar..."Superstar" Steve Austin. If you want to see glipses of Stone Cold, watch those promos. This was clearly a grooming/trasition period. Heyman used him to put over Whipwreck and a others, and off to WWF he went.

            Proving Vince is just as dumb as he is smart, he stripped him down, gave him the Ringmaster gimmick, attached him to a manager and wouldn't let him talk. I remember at the time, people felt this was really dumb. And they were obviously right.

            Comment

            • Bigpapa42
              Junior Member
              • Feb 2009
              • 3185

              #51
              Yeah, good call on the Mero contract. I've also read a few times that McMahon was a Mero mark, so that probably played a role. The guy had some talent and charisma, but more like a quality midcard guy than a top star. This match might be his best I've seen, either in his WCW or WWF runs. There is a nice simple little story between Trips and Mero here and I probably could have gotten away with recommending that match too.

              Austin won rookie of the year from one of the main dirtsheets. He was moved along pretty quickly in WCW. I've seen his ECW stuff and its definitely the Stone Cold character coming through. Not saying anyone could have looked at him and predicted he would be as big as Hogan ever was. But whenever I read comments about him being an "unlikely star" and simply "in the right place at the right time", it makes me wonder. I've read it a few times, though typically not from fans.

              Comment

              • Bigpapa42
                Junior Member
                • Feb 2009
                • 3185

                #52
                In Your House 9: International Incident
                July 21, 1996
                Vancouver, British Columbia


                -and we're off again. To Vancouver, British Columbia for an... International Incident!

                -our commentary team is Vince McMahon, Jerry Lawler, and Jim Ross. Man, Ross must have loved calling these shows with Vince and Lawler, as he always seemed to take a backseat to Vinnie. And Ross had to recognize that Vince sucked ass at commentary.

                -the Free-for-All dark match is Savio Vega facing Justin “Hawk” Bradshaw. The future JBL is barely recognizable with long blond hair and some facial hair. He looks kinda like a bigger version of James Storm with less facial hair. Fucked up. He wins.

                -after some promo videos for the various on-going feuds, we get an in-ring debate between Jim Cornette and Jose Lothario. After Cornette threatens Lothario and swings with his tennis racket, he gets laid out. Vader appears, then Michaels arrives with the best slide into the ring I think I've ever seen (or at least specifically noticed).

                -before Free-for-All ends, we get an interview with “Stone Cold” Steve Austin. Ah, the era of Austin has begun. This is just following his King of the Ring 1996 win where he had the seminal “Austin 3:16” promo. Not the last promo, as Camp Cornette has a long one where he makes a “money back guarantee” of a win. Then another hype video. WTF? Finally we get to the end of the FFA and into the pay per view properly

                -the first match features Sunny, Sunny's breastages, and some schmucks in the ring. Bodydonnas. Smoking Gunns. Tag belts aren't even on the line. Now I'm a fan of tag team wrestling, and I love a fun manager like Sunny. So in theory, I should enjoy this match. But fuck theory. The match just doesn't offer anything that appeals besides Sunny. Neither team really stands out as having good teamwork. The in-ring highlight is probably a couple hard Irish whips. The Bodydonnas win. Very meh.

                -another interesting locker room promo from Camp Cornette, where the manager accuses Jose Lothario of pulling a switchblade earlier in the ring.

                -Mankind is facing Henry Godwinnn instead of Jake Roberts, as “The Snake” was hospitalized or something. The match is okay but mostly forgettable. At around six minutes, it feels like a filler or TV match at best. As one might expect, its not going to make any of “best ever” lists for a certain Mick Foley.

                -Steve Austin is now “Stone Cold” and he is up against Marc Mero. Austin has most of the mannerisms we recognize, as well a lot of the signature spots already. The match is solid. Not quite as good as Mero against Hunter from IYH8, but not far off. This would have to be up there with Mero's best work that I've seen.

                Probably the funniest part of the match is the commentary during the entrances. Ross talks up Austin hard, claiming he's going to be a star. Then Vince points out that Mero will, too. Sure Vince. You keep working on that one.

                -we get a “musical look at The Undertaker”, which is really just a hype video for the Dead Man. Decent work. The WWE always did have a handle on putting together a dramatic video. Not so much music, though.

                -the match between Goldust and The Undertaker starts slow. Taker dominates the early going, and threatens to use the heavy steel steps on Goldust, but Marlena throws herself in front of Goldie... Had the steps been picked up and used as a weapon in the E before this? Taker tries a quick roll up on Goldust at one point – that seemed... odd. After a Tombstone, Taker goes for the pin properly and is interrupted by Mankind emerging through the ring, then pulls Taker down. Several minutes later, Taker comes out the other side of the ring and he brawls with Mankind.

                Maybe its because I was in my mid-teens by this point, but the “emerging through the ring” spots have never been a favorite of mine. They just seem hokey to me.

                -the main event is a six man tag – the “Camp Cornette” trio of Vader, Owen Hart, and British Bulldog against “The People's Posse”, which is Shawn Michaels, Ahmed Johnson, and Sycho Sid. The third man on HBK's team was apparently supposed to be the Ultimate Warrior. Sid or Warrior...? Push.

                The match goes about 25 minutes before Vader eventually hits a Vader Bomb on Michaels and pins the champ. The babyfaces then do a beatdown on Camp Cornette, culminating in a really nice dive by Michaels to the outside onto Vader. The match builds the rivalry between Vader and Michaels, which lead into the SummerSlam match between the two. A match which effectively killed off the possibility of Vader becoming a dominant monster heel for the company.

                I actually quite enjoyed this match. My enjoyment probably exceeds the actual quality, and I'm a bit surprised as the make-up of the six wrestlers involved is a mix of guys I like and some I really don't. We even get the fun of a fan trying to jump in. Fun or not, I'm not sure it makes for a real solid PPV main event. It sets up the SS main event, but would have been a great TV main event or pretty good PPV semi-main event.

                -not a bad show. Not great, either. Despite enjoying the main event, I'm not really recommending anything on this one. The main event is more fun than good, and neither Taker-Goldust or Austin-Mero matches are really anything special. Both, especially Austin-Mero, are solid matches, but that's not really the point of making a “check this out” recommendation.

                Results
                The Bodydonnas d. The Smoking Gunns
                Mankind d. Henry Godwinn
                Stone Cold Steve Austin d. Marc Mero
                The Undertaker d. Goldust
                Camp Cornette d. The People's Posse

                Recommended
                None

                Comment

                • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
                  Highwayman
                  • Feb 2009
                  • 15429

                  #53
                  Originally posted by Warner2BruceTD
                  -I believe Mero was the center of one of the early WWF/WCW pissing match contract warz, so because of that they felt the need to push him hard right out of the gate. His WCW rep was that of a guy more talented than his gimmick, but I don't think anybody ever saw him as a future star or anything.

                  -Austin was almost immediately considered a future star when he was a rookie in Texas. He ended up in WCW something like one year into his career, and again, was seen almost immediately as a future star. He was progressing nicely in that regard, until Hogan and crew showed up, which coincided with some injury problems. So he ended up pushed down the card, to the point he was firmly planted in the lower mid card and asked to do TV jobs on the B-shows. He famously refused to job for Renegade at a WCW Saturday Night taping, and that was pretty much it for him.

                  When he got to ECW, most felt WCW made a big mistake, and Heyman pushed him like a gigantic superstar..."Superstar" Steve Austin. If you want to see glipses of Stone Cold, watch those promos. This was clearly a grooming/trasition period. Heyman used him to put over Whipwreck and a others, and off to WWF he went.

                  Proving Vince is just as dumb as he is smart, he stripped him down, gave him the Ringmaster gimmick, attached him to a manager and wouldn't let him talk. I remember at the time, people felt this was really dumb. And they were obviously right.
                  RE: Stone Cold...

                  If the Ringmaster gimmick is never given to him...he probably never becomes Stone Cold...if you recall, the Ringmaster gimmick developed into a bit of an "iceman" gimmick within six months and it was right around the IYH: Beware of Dog match that he really sheds the Ringmaster gimmick and continues his development...Dibiase leaves and in his next promo, Austin tells Michael Hayes that he meant to lose the match to get rid of Dibiase...the next PPV was King of the Ring and BOOM...ol boy is a star. Couple that bad gimmick with a lot of frustration by Austin and it fueled the fire for him to become Stone Cold within 6 months.

                  People always hate on the Ringmaster gimmick, but those people fail to realize he was "The Ringmaster" in its goofiest form for like two months, then four months later he was Stone Cold Steve Austin...and over that four months, basically evolved...it wasn't like it was a year or two of Ringmaster gimmick...

                  RE: Mero...

                  Like you said, he was one of the guys that the WWE spent money on...while WCW was taking Scott Hall, Kevin Nash, Ted Dibiase, and eventually others (after taking Hogan, Savage, Jimmy Hart, et al)...the WWE ended up with Mero, Austin, HHH, Pillman, Foley...basically, lots of WCW castaways...IIRC, Mero was one of the "gets" in that, they had to pay big money for him so he was immediately pushed to the moon. This was when Jim Ross was really on his game. He saw stardom in the young guys that WCW casted away...they didn't look like the stars Vince usually wanted, but Austin, H's, Foley, and obvious stars that JR got in like The Rock basically handed Vince billions.

                  Comment

                  • Bigpapa42
                    Junior Member
                    • Feb 2009
                    • 3185

                    #54
                    IYH10.jpg
                    In Your House 10: Mind Games
                    September 22, 1996
                    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

                    -we jump right into the show, with Jim Ross introducing the rest of the commentary team – Vince McMahon and Mr. Perfect. Marty Jannetty is already in the ring and his opponent, Savio Vega, soon arrives. WE're halfway through match – which is interrupted by a Bradshaw promo overlay – before they identify that this is actually the Free-For-All preshow. Which makes much more sense than this being the PPV proper. Savio wins and is then attacked by Bradshaw.

                    -after a hype video, we kick off the pay per view proper. The man graphic is a very basic animated laughing skull wearing the Mankind mask. Maybe that was cutting edge in 1996 but it looks like something my 5-year old nephew would make on MS Paint today.

                    -the show kicks off with an impromptu match between Justin Bradshaw and Savio Vega, based off of what happened on the Free-For-All. Its a Caribbean Strap Match. Vega wins right as Bradshaw looks like he's about to. Decent match and the strap stipulation makes some sense as its being pushed as Vega's specialty. He has now beaten Austin and JBL in it, so I guess so.

                    -notable is that before the match starts, there is a group of “local wrestlers” who are in the front row and forcibly removed. Hello ECW. I spotted Tommy Dreamer and Sandman. There is no further mention of them afterward.

                    -we cut backstage where Savio Vega is being assaulted at the far end of a hallway. Its Razor and Diesel! Its Razor and Diesel! OMG they're back. Or fake versions of them are. Great story idea, WWF. There is no way this fails!

                    -we go back to the match. Which is Jim Cornette against Jose Lothario. A non-wrestler against a 62-year old retired wrestler. So why exactly did the WWF fall behind WCW again? Lothario wins in a minute and let's move along.

                    -after a couple of segments, we get a couple more. Brian Pillman insults the fans, then brings out Owen Hart to talk about Bret. Owen ends up bringing out Steve Austin, proclaiming that Bret fears Austin. Good promo from Stone Cold. He is pretty close to the Stone Cold we know and love at this point, at least based on his promo work.

                    -next up is Owen Hart and the British Bulldog taking on The Smoking Gunns for the tag titles. Smoking Gunns means Sunny. I'm enticed. After a fairly solid match, the Hart-Bulldog pair win the belts when Sunny's attempted distraction backfires. Sunny freaks out after the match ends, which supersedes the celebration of the new champions. The match isn't great by any means, but its a step up from the entirely forgettable tag division matches that have populated some of the recent shows I have watched.

                    -we follow up with Jerry Lawler versus Mark Henry. The feud here is simply that Lawler made fun of Henry during his debut segment, and he mocks here again before the match for being green. Which he is, so Lawler is actually kinda right. Henry basically just uses his power here, as that seems to be all he really has just yet. He wins, then destroys a few folks after the match, including Triple H.

                    -our semi main event tonight is a “Last Curtain” match between Goldust and The Undertaker. Its a solid match but its one I've seen now in several different formats over the past few shows. Other than Goldust throwing gold dust into Taker's eyes to gain an advantage for awhile, there just isn't much here that's different. Taker wins and ends the feud.

                    -our main event is one that I'm looking forward to and I don't know that I've ever actually seen it before. Shawn “Magic Mike” Michaels defending the WWF World title against Mankind. Paul Bearer and the Taker's urn give Mankind power at this point in his career. Both guys are near their peak and they deliver in the ring. The match is a physical brawl and includes some nice spots, like HBK suplexing Mankind's knee into the steel ring steps, which leads to Michaels' working over the knee. Both guy sell their asses off here, which really makes things work. Late in the match they both go through the Spanish announcer's table.

                    Sadly, we don't really get a finish, as Vader interferes and that leads to a disqualification. After Michaels fights off Vader, Mankind attacks and gives him the claw, but Undertaker jumps out of the casket that's been at ringside, attacking Mankind. Fun sequence but an actual finish to what was a pretty damned great match would have been my preference. Someone mentioned the Foley picked out this match as one of his favorite WWE matches and I can understand why.

                    -overall, this is a reasonably solid show. It would be below average without the main event, but Michaels and Foley really deliver. The rest of the show is really just okay but there is nothing that's really poor. Even Henry and Lawler isn't that terrible (its almost more of angle than a proper match), and the “match” between Lothario and Cornette is very short so its kinda inoffensive as well. Maybe I was just in a good mood while watching it...?

                    -the main event gets a strong recommendation. One of the strongest thus far. Nothing else does.

                    Results
                    Savio Vega d. Justin Bradshaw in a Caribbean Strap Match
                    Jose Lothario d. Jim Cornette
                    Owen Hart & British Bulldog d. The Smoking Gunns (c) for the WWF World Tag Team titles
                    Mark Henry d. Jerry Lawler
                    The Undertaker d. Goldust
                    Shawn Michaels (c) d. Mankind via Disqualification for the WWF World Heavyweight title

                    Recommended
                    Shawn Michaels vs Mankind

                    Comment

                    • Bigpapa42
                      Junior Member
                      • Feb 2009
                      • 3185

                      #55
                      IYH11.jpg
                      In Your House 11: Buried Alive
                      October 20, 1996
                      Indianapolis, Indianapolis



                      -we start out with a hype video for the match between The Undertaker and Mankind. I'm going to wager a guess that its a Buried Alive match? When we cut to the arena, they are playing O Fortuna. Fucking awesome.

                      -once again our commentary team is Vince McMahon, Jerry Lawler, and Jim Ross. Vince and Ross get into a violent shoot fight over Ross' lack of a microphone. It would seem Jim Ross hasn't had his daily dose of BBQ sauce as he doesn't seem to be in a good mood.

                      -we start off with the Austin versus Triple H. More awesome. In between his microphone cutting out, Ross identifies both men as future WWF champion. Good call, Jim. Near the end of the match, Lawler calls out McMahon for his horrid commentary habits of calling out the pin attempts. That was fantastic – gonna be tough to top that as moment of the show.

                      The match itself is good. Not great but good. Its more technical in the early going that I expected. Hennig comes down to ringside after awhile, gets into it with Austin at ringside, then leaves with Triple H's lady-friend. This leads to more ringside shenanigans, and Austin finally wins after a Stone Cold Stunner. They got 15 minutes and deliver a quality opener.

                      -we get a quick promo from the Smoking Gunns, highlighting Billy Gunn's obsession with Sunny and his desire to win the belts back so she will return to the team. Aww, a cowboy in love. How sweet...

                      -the tag title match turns out to be fairly solid. Again, not great. But its better than a lot of the tag division I've seen on these events so far. Thank you Owen and Bulldog. The champions retain and its more problems between Billy and Bart.

                      -Jim Ross gets into the ring to complain about his microphone and hype the return of Bret Hart. So the microphone thing is just a work. It was kinda fun, as I've never seen Ross be so consistently unprofessional. Damn.

                      -next we have Marc Mero defending the Intercontinental championship against Goldust. Curt Hennig comes down for commentary now that Ross has left. The match is rather forgettable. Nothing terrible by any means but nothing special either.

                      -our next match is a “battle of the power bombs”. Vader versus Sycho Sid. Interesting. Winner becomes the number one contender for the WWF World title. I hold hopes that this one is fairly short. Shawn Michaels comes out to watch the match and do commentary. His long flowing locks of hair might be the most feminine hair I've ever noticed on a WWF star. The match is not the train-wreck I feared it might be. Guess I shouldn't underestimate Vader. Sid wins... with a choke-slam. The end came really quick and Vader seemed to be in control of things. Don't like the psychology of that.

                      -we get an interview backstage that is Dox Hendrix trying to interview Sycho Sid, but its interrupted by Jim Ross. He asks if Sid will do whatever it takes to win the title. Sid, in some indirect and nonsensical ways, says he will.

                      -if I wasn't lazy, I might research it to see if this is the first “Buried Alive” match the WWF ever did. Seems possible. The match itself is pretty much what you would expect out of these two – good, violent, and Taker seems to take undue pleasure in brutalizing Mick Foley. While its a good match, there is a “seem it before” feel to it for me. This would be not too long after their SummerSlam Boiler Room Brawl, which felt a bit more violent than this one. It lacks a “holy shit” moment like the obvious one from their Hell in a Cell. I also don't love the basic psychology of a “buried alive” match. I find this one seeming a bit mediocre in that context, but its hard to be sure without watching other matches between the two.

                      Taker wins but he is then attacked by The Executioner (Terry Gordy in an executioner mask), who helps Foley out of the grave and they throw Taker in. Foley, Terry, and Bearer start to bury The Undertaker. They are joined by other heels, including Bradshaw and Triple H. There is an irony in seeing Triple H literally learn to bury someone this early in his WWF career. The sequence is long and literally hard to watch – the strobing lights would be seizure-inducing for someone with epilepsy. Before show ends, The Undertaker's gloved hand punches through the dirt.

                      -”Buried Alive” is an entirely forgettable event. Not a bad one, as none of the matches are bad, let alone terrible. But nothing stands out. The main event is good but seems below other matches between the two. Austin-Helmsley is solid and interesting but again, they've done better. I might be selling Taker-Mankind short but I don't feel there's anything quite worth recommending here.


                      Results
                      Steve Austin d. Hunter Hearst Helmsley
                      Owen Hart & the British Bulldog d. The Smokings Gunns for the WWF Tag Team championships
                      Marc Mero (c) d. Goldust for the WWF Intercontinental championship
                      Sycho Sid d. Vader
                      The Undertaker d. Mankind in a Buried Alive match

                      Comment

                      • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
                        Highwayman
                        • Feb 2009
                        • 15429

                        #56
                        The Austin-H's match at Buried Alive was a good one.

                        Comment

                        • Bigpapa42
                          Junior Member
                          • Feb 2009
                          • 3185

                          #57
                          In Your House 12: It's Time
                          December 15, 1996
                          West Palm Beach, Florida


                          -I have to point out that "It's Time" is Vader's catch phrase and he isn't even on the show. I do not have high expectations here. We kick off directly into the Free-for-All... its Dox Hendrix shouting the card at the fans. Interesting way to start the show.

                          -then we cut quickly to Jim Ross who details an altercation that morning between champion Sycho Sid, Shawn Michaels, and Bret Hart. They show part of it, but not all of it.

                          -out first match is a dark match featuring Rocky Miavia. Who the fuck be this? He's wrestling Salvatore Sincere. OK seriously, who the fuck is this? A good portion of the match is a promo from Paul Bear, Mankind, and The Executioner. The match ends in a disqualification. Eh.

                          -we get some preview videos before the pay per view kicks off properly with Leif Cassidy versus Flash Funk. Apparently Funk is a pimp and he has a couple of dancing girls with him and they not only dance down to the ring, but spend some time dancing in the ring before the match starts. If 2 Cold Funk came out to “Somebody Call My Momma”, I would be quite confused. Nice to see that absolutely nothing about Brodus Clay is original.

                          The match is solid. Not spectacular, but a decent opener. I do end up wanting to throat-punch Vince as he goes into pure overkill on “1! 2! No!” mode near the finish. Fuck you, Vince McMahon.

                          -tag belts are up next. Owen and Bulldog will face Diesel and Razor Ramon. Or the fake versions of them. Fuck this. Fake Diesel is Glen Jacobs, aka Kane, while Razor is Rick Bogner. The match is interrupted by Pierroth and Cibernito from AAA coming down to ringside as hype for the Royal Rumble. Then Stone Cold comes down, as he's been feuding with The British Bulldog. Add in Jim Ross being a heel a commentary, as he is the man who brought in the Fakes, and this is basically a shit show. We do get some actual wrestling, the champions retain, then Austin shows up again to attack Bulldog.

                          -Ahmed Johnson comes out next for an interview with Vince, coming back from a layoff (kidney problems, I believe) and feuding with Farooq and the Nation of Domination. NoD is pretty white at this point. The promo skills of Ahmed are pretty near non-existent. So this was fun.

                          -Hunter Hearst Helmsley (who shall henceforth be simply Triple H or Trips because even my fingers are lazy) will put his Intercontinental title on the line against Marc Mero. We get another solid match between the two. Goldust gets involved and lays out both, with only Mero making it back into the ring in time, so he wins by count-out. No title change.

                          -replay of the shenanigans from that morning and then a promo from Sid. Gibberish. But its intense gibberish.

                          -we have an “Armageddon Match” between The Undertaker and Terry Gordy, who is wearing an executioner's mask and going by “The Executioner”. Despite the fancy name, the match basically seems to be a Last Man Standing affair. Mankind gets involved soon enough and its basically 2 against 1 but being a zombie mortician, Undertaker holds his own. They wreck the stage set (such as it was) and security comes out to grab Mankind, apparently “macing” him before he gets put in a straight-jacket. The match goes into the backstage area. Taker and Terry come back out and the Executioner gets executed. Eh. Not one of Taker's better matches, even from this period.

                          -we get another replay of the “incident” from that morning while Hart cuts a locker room promo, which is interrupted by HBK's music. Michaels comes down to the ring to do commentary for the match. It adds an interesting dynamic to the match but it gets be too much at times with four guys at the commentary table.

                          The match is what you would probably expect out of these two. Pretty good by Sid standards but really just average for Hart. The challenger controls the early going, then it changes up a bit, until Steve Austin attacks Hart at ringside and injures Hart's knee before being chased off by Owen and Bulldog. It becomes a matter of time, with Bret kicking out of a big chokeslam. Then it goes outside and HBK gets involved, leading to Hart getting power-bombed and then pinned.

                          -its a below average In Your House. The opener is okay, Mero vs Trips isn't bad but note quite as good as the same match-up from a few shows ago, and the main event isn't great. Not terrible but hardly high up on the scale of Bret Hart matches. Nothing worth recommending here unless you having a burning desire to see every decent Sid match or really want to see Terry Gordy in the WWF.

                          Results
                          Flash Funk d. Leaf Cassidy
                          Owen Hart & The British Bulldog (c) d. Fake Diesel and Fake Razor for the WWF Tag Team Championships
                          Marc Mero d. Hunter Hearst Helmsley (c) via Count Out
                          The Undertaker d. The Executioner
                          Sycho Sid (c) d. Bret Hart for the WWF World Heavyweight championship

                          Comment

                          • Bigpapa42
                            Junior Member
                            • Feb 2009
                            • 3185

                            #58
                            IYH13.jpg
                            In Your House 13: Final Four
                            February 16, 1997
                            Chattanooga, Tennessee

                            -pretty happy to be reaching 1997 in this project. Although there were some obvious “Attitude Era” pieces and elements present through 1996, its '97 and '98 that were moreso my “heyday” as a fan. It all just feels more familiar... which is kinda odd, since I've rewatched a lot of '96 stuff before...

                            -no pre show. Thankfully. We move right into the pay per view proper, with a promo about the four-way main event to crown a new world champion.

                            -the commentary team is Jim Ross and Jerry Lawler. Wait, no Vincent Kennedy McMahon? Holy fuck, yes! Happy Papa!

                            -the first match is Marc Mero vs Leaf Cassidy. Ah, the awesome debut gimmick of Al Snow. The most interesting aspect of this match up is that Sable is clearly entering her slutty phase, wearing a black latex outfit and sunglasses, getting involved in the action several times and even slapping Snow. Mero triumphs. Its actually a decent match. Not a fantastic opener but reasonable.

                            -we get a replay from the announcement that Shawn Michaels is vacating the world title due to a knee injury. He talks about having lost his smile. Its not his best promo. Its pretty honest but he meanders. The lead in to the promo was just odd, as Honky Tonk Man makes an appearance, they cut to the footage. When they come back, Flash Funk is making his lengthy dancing entrance. No idea why Honky Tonk man came out or where the fuck he went...

                            -Flash Funk is part of a six-man tag. He's on the same team as Goldust and Bart Gunn. The trio is taking on the Nation of Domination. The entrances take a ton of time and I have a feeling the match will be shorter than the combined entrances length. The match is messy but not terrible. Nothing better than what you could expect on TV, really, except for the long entrances.

                            -a backstage interview with Stone Cold Steve Austin, who bitches about a conspiracy against him in the WWF. Hmmm... this seems like it could seem lead somewhere, Steve...

                            -Hunter Hearst Helmsley takes on Rocky Maivia next for the WWF Intercontinental championship. My God, they both look so young. Dunno if its the novelty of them being both early in their WWF careers but I quite enjoy it. Its not a fantastic match and definitely not the best they had against each other by a long measure. But it does bode for well for the top level talent they will both become. Rocky wins with a bridging suplex after Goldust comes out and distracts Helmsley. After the match, a very muscular and dark-haired woman grabs Marlene at ringside. Hello Chyna.

                            -the tag belts are up next and the duo of Doug Furnas and Phil LaFon are getting a shot. They start out in the ring, so that's a bad sign. I have a soft spot for Furnas & LaFon cuz of their fantastic work in Japan through the early 90s. The match is also damned solid. The tension between Bulldog and Owen plays a major role, and the champs lose when Owen uses his Slammy award to attack one of the challengers right in front of the ref. Its a far cry from the best of what Furnas & LaFon did in Japan but its better than some of the tag team work on the recent In Your House shows.

                            -main event time. Its Bret Hart versus The Undertaker versus Steve Austin versus Vader in a Final Four match. The winner will be the new world champion after Michaels vacated the belt due to a knee injury. The four cross over a pair of feuds (Austin-Hart and Vader-Taker) and the final four in the controversial '97 Royal Rumble finish. Its a basic four-way elimination match with the added twist of a top-rope elimination counting. Vader gets bloody early when he tries to use a chair on Taker and it gets booted back into his face. They make liberal use of chairs and the stairs, fight out into the crowd a bit, and Vader gets even bloodier. To the point he's leaving blood smears at times. This feels like pure “Attitude Era”.

                            The first elimination is Austin. Hart delivers a top-rope suplex to Vader and gets the shart-shooter but Taker stop it. Austin then comes back out to attack Hart. Vader is eliminated by The Undertaker when he goes up for a Vader Bomb but gets a low-blow instead, toppling over the top rope. The Hitman gets Taker over the top rope to win it.

                            -this was the fourth world title reign for Bret Hart. It would last all of a day. He would lose the belt to Psycho Sid the next day on Raw. Fucking Sid. But it would set up Hart versus Austin in the epic WrestleMania match a month later.

                            -I have to admit that I enjoyed this one more than I expected. More than the line up would suggest for sure. Maybe I was just in a good mood while watching it. Or maybe it really helped that much that VMK was not on commentary...? It was definitely the first In Your House pay per view I've watched so far where, at the end of the 2 hour event, I wished it was longer – not just a match or two, but the show as a whole. I wanted more. It was definitely the first show which really felt like the Attitude Era was in full swing. Not quite as much as a year later, when DX would be in full swing, the Austin-McMahon would rage, The Rock would run The Nation with Owen Hart by his side, Val Venis would get his pee-pee chopped off, Sable would wear a painted-on bikini...

                            Results:
                            Marc Mero d. Leaf Cassidy
                            The Nation of Domination d. Bart Gunn, Goldust & Flash Funk
                            Rocky Maivia (c) d. Hunter Hearst Helmsley for the WWF Intercontinental championship
                            Furnas & LaFon d. Owen Hart & British Bulldog (c) via disqualification for the WWF Tag Team championships
                            Bret Hart d. Steve Austin, Vader & The Undertaker in a Final Four Match for WWF World Heavyweight championship

                            Recommended:
                            Final Four main event

                            Comment

                            • Bigpapa42
                              Junior Member
                              • Feb 2009
                              • 3185

                              #59

                              In Your House 14: Revenge of the Taker

                              May 20, 1997
                              Rochester, New York

                              -halfway! Woohoo!

                              -serious drop in video quality between this one and every other In Your House I've watched so far. Guess I can't complain too much – it could still be 1997 and I could still be having to pay $25 or whatever it was to watch these live.

                              -the show kicks off with the Legion of Doom. Sweet. Always an LOD mark. I realized Vince is back on commentary and any joy I felt for the start of this one is leeched out of me. Ignoring this travesty... the Legion of Doom have recently debuted, I believe, and are going for the tag team belts here. They are facing the tag champs Owen Hart and the British Bulldog. Love that trademark LOD physicality. Its a decent match but doesn't really stand out as anything special. The LOD win the match and the belts, but its announced they didn't pin the legal member of the tag team champions, so the match continues. When the action gets rolling, Bret runs in and interferes, causing a disqualification that allows the champs to keep the belts. I didn't enjoy this as much as I expected, given the two teams involved. Not a bad match but seemed pretty meh.

                              -we get a backstage segment with Sunny and Brian Pillman hyping a WWF hotline. They dry hump each other and Sunny strips naked. That's how I choose to remember the segment.

                              -the Nation of Domination comes out next with a pair of rappers rapping them out to the ring. White rappers. Its... uh... not awesome. Then a promo from Rocky Maivia, who shows a fair bit of the intensity we know from The Rock. The match is Savio Vega versus Rocky for the Intercontinental championship. The whole Nation is ringside for the match and there were a lot of them at this point. The match is basically waiting for them to interfere and they do, which ends up with Rocky losing via countout. Then he's gang-thumped by the Nation until Ahmed Johnson makes the save. I can't help but wonder if The Rock looks back on this moment as a career low point...

                              -there is a backstage interview of Sable and the injured Marc Mero by Dox Hendrix. This leads to something happening in the men's room. The something is apparently Owen Hart and The British Bulldog attacking Steve Austin. The Attitude Era... where a guy can't even take a dump in peace...

                              -we get Jesse James (aka Road Dogg) singing his way out to the ring. Then Honky Tonk Man comes out and introduces his protege... Rockabilly. The man previously known as Billy Gunn. Its a battle of the Outlaws! Given that its early 1997, that's not as exciting of a prospect as it might seem. The fans don't seem to care that much and they action doesn't really give them any reason to. James wins with a roll-up and I can't help but notice how much he looks like Jarrett in this get-up.

                              -Austin is recovering from the men's room attack and Gorilla Monsoon is rearranging the match-order, putting the Austin-Hart match on last. I wonder if Austin has managed to finish his “business” in the bathroom yet? Need to get that taken care of before you climb into the ring...

                              -so the semi main event is the world title match between The Undertaker and Mankind. We get an interesting hype video first. I feel like I've seen this match-up so many times, but a quick check says its only the second one on the In Your House series. I've been watching other Attitude Era stuff in the last while and there are a few others. Not really meant as a complaint as Taker and Foley tend to deliver the goods. The Undertaker really seems to enjoy physically destroying Mick Foley, with their infamous Hell in a Cell match the most notable example.

                              Late in the match, after a ref bump, Mankind brings the steps into the ring but Taker dropkicks them into his face and they basically land on Foley. Then he delivers a chair-shot, though it doesn't seem to be unprotected. Then Mankind goes through the Spanish announcer's table, basically face-first. So once again Taker just psychically destroys Foley through the match. Taker wins after delivering a Tombstone. After the match, we get a fireball right in Paul Bearer's face. Which is just plain rude. The match is good. Not their best but worth watching and therefore worth a recommendation.

                              -we get a short backstage interview with Hart before the main event. That short pre-match interview is a dead art. The match gets underway, and about five minutes in, the pictures goes to static and comes back with Spanish commentary. It only lasts a couple of minutes but I preferred it... despite not understanding any Spanish.

                              -the match is what you expect from these two, meaning its very good. Austin mostly brawls while Hart mixes brawling with some technical wrestling. The end is a bit disappointing, as the British Bulldog comes in and smokes Austin with a chair, which obviously results in a disqualification. Austin gets a bit of payback afterward but its still a disappointing finish. I presume the booking worked with the storyline, but this is the danger of only watching the pay per view events...

                              -overall, I enjoyed the event. The first half is nothing fantastic but nothing awful, either. The last two matches are both quite solid.

                              Results
                              The Legion of Doom d. Owen Hart & The British Bulldog
                              Savio Vega d. Rock Maivia (c) via Countout for the WWF Intercontinental championship
                              Jesse James d. Rockabilly
                              The Undertaker (c) d. Mankind for the WWF World Heavyweight championship
                              Stone Cold Steve Austin d. Bret Hart via Disqualification

                              Recommended:
                              Mankind versus The Undertaker
                              Steve Austin versus Bret Hart

                              Comment

                              • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
                                Highwayman
                                • Feb 2009
                                • 15429

                                #60
                                Was this the time when Road Dogg was singing "With My Baby Tonight?" on his way to the ring...

                                SPEND MY DAY WORKIN HARD ON THE GO
                                THE HANDS ON THE CLOCK KEEP SPINNIN TOO SLOW
                                CUZ I CAN'T WAIT TO BE ALONE WITH MY BABY TOOOOONIIIIIIIIGHHHHTTTTT

                                /oh lord that was awful.

                                Comment

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