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Animal the mystery man at WCW Sin

 

Another pay-per-view. Another surprise. The thought on every fan’s mind going into the Sin broadcast — those still watching World Championship Wrestling anyway — was who would be the Mystery Man Ric Flair had signed into the Four Way Match for the WCW World Title.

With the other participants (champ Steiner and challengers Sid and Jarrett) in the ring, Flair came out to say he promised a Mystery Man but he never said when he would enter the match. Very bad plotting resulting in a very bad match. Flair’s decision to delay the entrance permitted Steiner and Jarrett to double-team Sid left, right and centre. Sid, apparently seriously injured during the course of the match, mounted some offence like a double clothesline and a poorly executed double suplex that dropped Steiner on his head otherwise Jarrett and Steiner stuck together, never once turning on each other in the heat of battle. The teammates even let each other go for the pin on occasion without interfering.

Flair leans into a limo telling Mystery Man, it was “showtime”. Decked out in the bargain basement white-black outfit on loan from The Black Scorpion, the mystery man stepped into the ring clocking a legitimately-injured Sid once in the skull. Steiner got the pin and retained his title. The Mystery Man took over his mask to reveal himself as Road Warrior Animal! Steiner and Animal hugged while the announcers inferred that Animal had struck a deal with Big Poppa Pump and betrayed Flair.

Was the Mystery Man angle a surprise? Sure. In this, the Internet news age, WCW kept a tight lid on the Mystery Man’s identity. Was it an event that will “change the wrestling world”? I don’t think so. Can Animal even “go” any more or was the WWF’s misuse of The Road Warriors not indicative of their current abilities? Is Animal’s appearance a hot-shot shocker (like Hawk’s short-lived return to WCW several years ago) just because anyone with an I.Q. above that of an empty milk carton guessed it was Rick Steiner under that mask and the stupid get-up on Nitro and Thunder? We’ll have to wait and see.

All in all, Sin came off like a live audition in which everyone was trying to prove themselves worthy to the new management, Fusient Media. That was a good thing. For the first time in a long time, everyone worked with enthusiasm and that enthusiasm spread quickly to the live crowd who were into every match until the main event left them scratching their heads. Even the Reno and Vito “brother versus brother” brawl was mildly entertaining.

To give you an idea how much the buyout has changed WCW’s attitude, the commentary by Tony Schiavone and Scott Hudson couldn’t have been better. After several years of sleepwalking through WCW’s product, Schiavone’s excitement about being a part of World Championship Wrestling was restored and Hudson proved that he can carry a show if he’s left to do his job without deadweight distractions like Stevie Ray or Mark Madden mucking around where they don’t belong.

Now that the Mystery Man has been unmasked, the real question wrestling fans have is will the new-found excitement in the locker room and management offices of WCW be perpetuated or like some many times before will the spark fizzle out long before the federation can catch fire. Again, we’ll have to wait and see.

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