Site icon Slam Wrestling

Super Brawl equals Super Bore

 

If you didn’t know better, you’d swear that someone was deliberately sabotaging World Championship Wrestling from the inside out. A spy working undercover for the WWF like something out of a Mission Impossible movie. How else could anyone explain the state WCW is in? Letting talent like the Radicals jump ship. Pushing people like David Flair, Tank Abbott, Kevin Nash, Jim Duggan, Brian Knobbs, The Demon, The Wall and Big T while burying Vampiro, Billy Kidman, The Maestro, Booker T and The Disco Inferno. Granted WCW has fallen on hard times as of late. Injuries to top stars like Goldberg, Bret Hart, Rey Mysterio Jr. and Diamond Dallas Page aren’t their fault. It’s hard to plan around that mess. Nevertheless, they could come up with something better than the snorefest that was Super Brawl 2000.

The multitude of injuries tested the WCW booking staff and they failed to meet the challenge. Super Brawl was the worst WCW pay-per-view since that infamous Souled Out card. The comparison between the kick ass Mayhem show a few short months ago shows just how far you can fall in a short period of time if you flub the important business decisions.

You know things are bad when an in-ring dance recital by James Brown and Ernest Miller gets a bigger pop than practically all of the matches you are presenting.

The undercard being a total write-off, WCW did hit their stride with the Super Brawl main events. The returning Hulk Hogan put on one of his better matches in recent years against Lex Luger. Appreciate them or not, Luger and Hogan did crank it up a notch although the match was a total throwback to when Hogan first stepped foot into WCW. Still, you gotta give credit where credit is due. The effort was there as was the fan’s support in the Cow Palace.

So too was the case with the three-way dance for the WCW World Heavyweight Title between Scott Hall, Jeff Jarrett and Sid Vicious. Hall and Jarrett took turns beating on big Sid, who took it to both men whenever he could. Jarrett’s game plan became apparent early on as he took out referee Billy Silverman and had the Harris Boys interfering as much as humanly possible. Subsequent officials Nick Patrick, Mickey Jay and Charles Robinson were each taken out by Jarrett so that Mark Johnson – an official in Jarrett’s pocket – could take over. Hall has the match won with an Outsider Edge on Jarrett. Johnson scrapped Hall’s chances at winning by feigning a suspect shoulder injury so he couldn’t slap the three count.

Dressed as a referee, Roddy Piper made it to ringside just as Jarrett clocked Hall with a guitar shot. Piper stopped Johnson from making the count and took him out. A furious Jeff Jarrett got in Piper’s face. Piper poked him in the eyes blinding him. Sid chokeslammed Jarrett and Power Bombed Hall to dodge the bullet and retain the WCW World Heavyweight Championship.

Exit mobile version