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Nitro in Buffalo – Dec. 8, 1997 – viewed from above

BUFFALO — We didn’t get stung at WCW Nitro in Buffalo.

Instead, we got Sting. Three times.

That, more than anything else, helped the crowd leave the Marine Midland Arena happy. It wasn’t Buffalo Bill Bruce Smith or ex-Bill Jim Kelly. It wasn’t the Nitro Girls or WildCat Willie. It wasn’t Ric Flair or Chris Benoit, two of the most over wrestlers.

It was Sting. That guy who is finally going to step in the ring for an actual match again On Dec. 28 at Starrcade. Against Hulk Hogan even.

Being there live when they turn out the lights and start the flashes for Sting’s ‘surprise’ entrances is something special. First he floored the NWO’s Konnan in the first match. Then he showed for Randy Savage’s match against Hugh Morris. When the lights came on again, Savage was flat on his back, wearing a white Sting mask (retail price $10 US). A hot seller for the next couple of weeks to be sure. And in the finale, he was brought out from under the ring by the NWO (it’s a long story) and took on the whole gang. Even the Hulkster got the stuffing beat out of him. Much of this must have been after Nitro signed off, since the announcing desk was empty, with the TV monitors off. So we got a bonus. And Sting was over HUGE, without pandering to the crowd at all. Just standing there, he got reaction.

The rest of the Nitro show Monday night was average at best.

From near the top of the ‘Marina’ in Buffalo, we had a good view of the goings-on behind the scenes. It was fun to watch the little things, the things everyone else DIDN’T see on Nitro on TNT:

While I enjoyed going to Nitro live, I’d have to say that it’s not the best way to watch wrestling. There’s no flow. It’s always being interrupted by TV breaks. You also don’t get to see too many matches. We only had one dark match on top of what was on Nitro.

But on the other hand, your average house show doesn’t have fireworks, announcers, in and out-of-ring interviews, WildCat Willie or the Nitro Girls. (The latter two could be both pros or cons.)

In short, wrestling has developed more and more over the past few years into a TV product first, in-ring product second. Get used to it.

For the record, the results of the show.

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