Posts Tagged ‘Starrcade’

Goldust Down For Cody At Starrcade, Matt Hardy Invites The Young Bucks

On Monday, WWE announced that Starrcade is being revived for a special SmackDown live event from Greensboro, North Carolina on 11/25. Cody Rhodes tweeted to Michael Hayes saying that his brother Goldust should be booked for the show, in honor of his father, who created the event. Michael Hayes replied that Cody is also welcome and should team with Dustin at the event.

While that’s probably not happening, Goldust sounds intrigued – and suggested that he and Cody team up against North Carolina natives Matt and Jeff Hardy.

https://twitter.com/Goldust/status/909907245030187008

https://twitter.com/Goldust/status/909927392512057344

Meanwhile, Matt Hardy chimed in and said Cody should bring his fellow Bullet Club members, The Young Bucks. He’s got a few Hardy family members of his own that he’d bring to the event.

While Cody Rhodes and The Young Bucks at a WWE event isn’t happening any time soon (at least this year), stranger things have happened.

Michael Hayes Invites Cody Rhodes to Team With Goldust At WWE Starrcade

Well, this just got interesting. Earlier today, WWE announced that the November 25th SmackDown live event from Greensboro, North Carolina will be a special Starrcade event. Starrcade, of course, being the annual NWA/WCW pay-per-view that ran from 1983-2000.

Upon hearing the news of WWE resurrecting the event created by the late “American Dream” Dusty Rhodes, Dusty’s son and Ring of Honor Champion Cody Rhodes called upon WWE official Michael Hayes to honor Dusty by featuring Goldust on the card.

Michael Hayes has since responded to Cody, offering him an opportunity to team with his brother, Goldust. While it’s unlikely that Cody will be gracing a WWE ring any time soon, there would be some poetic justice to the Rhodes brothers teaming together one more time  in the venue that holds such rich history for their family.

Cody & Brandi Rhodes Comment On WWE Starrcade

On Monday, WWE announced the return of Starrcade, the annual NWA/WCW pay-per-view that ran from 1983-2000. WWE Starrcade will be a special SmackDown live event held on Saturday, November 25th from the Greensboro Coliseum in North Carolina.

The main event of the first Starrcade, which was held at the Greensboro Coliseum, featured Ric Flair vs. Harley Race inside a steel cage. As an homage to the first Starrcade, WWE Starrcade will feature two steel cage matches as well as appearances by NWA legends the Rock ‘n Roll Express and Ricky “The Dragon” Steamboat.

Cody and Brandi Rhodes have since reacted to the news of WWE reviving Starrcade, an event created by the late “American Dream” Dusty Rhodes. Cody has requested that WWE book his brother Goldust for the show, while Brandi took offense to the fact that WWE waited until Dusty passed before holding a Starrcade event and have yet to credit him for his contribution.

As noted earlier, WWE is reportedly considering bringing back several WCW-branded PPV events (More Details).

WWE Starrcade Announced With Two Steel Cage Main Events

Starrcade is back. North Carolina’s Greensboro Coliseum has announced a special WWE SmackDown brand live event is scheduled for Saturday night, November 25th. WWE.com has since confirmed the news.

The Greensboro Coliseum hosted the first-ever Starrcade back in 1983. As an homage to the main event of the first Starrcade (Flair vs. Harley Race in a steel cage), WWE Starrcade will feature two steel cage match main events:

  • WWE Champion Jinder Mahal vs. Shinsuke Nakamura
  • Smackdown Women’s Champion Natalya vs. Charlotte Flair

Also advertised for the show:

  • United States champion AJ Styles vs. Baron Corbin vs. Rusev
  • Grudge Match: Kevin Owens vs. Sami Zayn
  • Tag Team Champions The New Day vs. The Usos
  • Bobby Roode vs. Dolph Ziggler

Plus, there will be appearances from the Hardy Boys and WWE Hall of Famers The Rock N’ Roll Express and Ricky Steamboat.

WWE Considering Reviving WCW-Branded PPV Events (Report)

Could we see events like Halloween Havoc, War Games and Starrcade added to WWE’s monthly pay-per-view offerings?

According to a report by Ryan Satin over at Pro Wrestling Sheet, WWE officials are giving serious consideration to resurrecting several WCW-branded PPV events.

Ever since WCW closed down back in 2001, fans have considered the possibility of WWE adopting these beloved shows. With WWE presenting 16 pay-per-views in 2017 (not including the quarterly NXT Takeover specials), there’s certainly room on the calendar to replace some of the less popular shows like Great Balls of Fire, Fastlane and Road Block.

WWE used The Great American Bash as an annual event from 2004-2009 and last year rebranded Night of Champions with Clash of Champions.

Discussion: Which WCW pay-per-view would you like to see return?

WWE 2K16 Apparently Getting The Tokyo Dome In Next DLC Pack

At a couple different points tonight, the official WWE Games Twitter account tweeted these animated GIFs to hype Tuesday’s release of the Hall of Fame downloadable content pack for WWE 2K16, which is out this Tuesday:

It was already known that 1991 versions of Ric Flair and Tatsumi Fujinami plus a relevant match replay mode were in the Hall of Fame pack, but they had two matches that year. It seemed like it made more sense for 2K to base it off their match from Superbrawl in St. Petersburg, Florida, but from the above footage, it looks like they didn’t. Instead, 2K picked the OTHER Flair-Fujinami match, from the NJPW Tokyo Dome show that year, which is known as both WCW Japan Supershow and NJPW Starrcade ’91 In The Tokyo Dome. So that means that the arena that comes in the pack is an ersatz Tokyo Dome, faithfully recreated by 2K Sports. They can’t call it that (and I don’t believe WWE games ever name real venues), but 2K does a great job with the presentation of the arenas and this should be no exception.

Here’s the full lineup for the DLC pack, which, if this is any indication, should also include at least two more WCW arenas and some early ’90s WWF arenas along with period appropriate versions of the wrestlers:

  • “Macho Man” Randy Savage vs. Jake “The Snake” Roberts
  • Rikishi vs. The Rock
  • Alundra Blayze vs. Paige
  • Larry Zbyszko and Arn Anderson vs. Ricky “The Dragon” Steamboat and Dustin Rhodes
  • Tatsumi Fujinami vs. Ric Flair
  • The Bushwhackers (Butch Miller and Luke Williams) vs. The Natural Disasters (Typhoon and Earthquake)
  • The Outsiders (Kevin Nash and Scott Hall) vs. Harlem Heat (Booker T and Stevie Ray)

Top Five Biggest Stars In Wrestling Who Weren’t Good Workers

David Arquette is a former WCW World Heavyweight Champion. Being a World Champion normally means you’re a big star. Vince Russo was a former World Champion. The Great Khali is a former World Heavyweight Champion. Just so we understand each other, these guys, in my opinion, are not among the biggest stars in the history of pro wrestling.

Do we understand the formula?

Today, we are going to look at five legends of the ring who were without a doubt top stars in their prime. At one point or another, each person on this list could be considered “the guy” in the business. All were top stars who reached Championship-level success at one time or another, however they all shared one key factor in common — they pretty much sucked in the ring.

A lot of people have different ideas of what a “good worker” really is. Generally speaking, if you’re in the business, a good worker is someone who can take the live crowd on an emotional journey. Most of the people on this list were able to do that, however if you’re a die-hard fan of the sport, you have a different opinion of what a “good worker” is. To those people, a good worker is someone who took the time to perfect the craft, the art and skill of what goes on inside the squared circle. Guys who have matches that are considered “match of the year” candidates. Guys who could have what die-hard fans call “five-star matches.”

That is who we are looking at today. Guys who by die-hard fan standards would be considered god-awful workers. Guys who couldn’t have a classic, five-star match to save their life, even if they’re able — usually due to star power and enthusiasm — to pop a crowd during a match.

With all of thr explanation out of the way, let’s take a look at who made the list of the top five biggest stars who weren’t good workers.

#5. Hulk Hogan

The guy knows how to have a classic match. His WrestleMania VI clash with Ultimate Warrior, who we’ll be talking about later, surprised many. Still, if you examine the match with your “worker” glasses on you’ll notice that it wasn’t exactly a catch-as-catch-can classic by any means.

It was a great match though in the sense that the crowd was totally invested. A lot of that had to do with the promotional build-up to the match and the characters involved. The same can be said for Hogan vs. The Rock at WrestleMania X8.

A Ric Flair vs. Ricky Steamboat classic it was not.

But the response from the fans was about as passionate as things get. Hogan can have great matches when everything falls into place, but you can’t put just anybody in the ring with him and expect a great match. As far as his star-power is concerned, Hogan is one of — if not the biggest — stars in the history of the sport.

Hulk Hogan comes in at number five.

#4. Andre the Giant

Andre The Giant is one of the biggest and most recognizable stars in professional wrestling history. In his prime as a young wrestler he would come off of the top-rope, he could throw a pretty impressive dropkick and was a lot more agile than he became later in his career.

Most will remember the run Andre The Giant had in WWE in the 1980s, but prior to that he was actually a pretty solid in-ring worker. His most famous years, however, saw a number of rest-holds killing the majority of the time in his matches. It was almost a sure thing that there would be a few bear-hugs, nerve-grip holds and the ever-popular butt-smash in the corner spot.

So again, Andre wasn’t the best in-ring technician, but he was a huge star — literally — and could elicit a great reaction from the crowd from bell-to-bell when matched with the right guy.

Regardless, Andre comes in at number four.

#3. Kevin Nash

Outside of a few matches with Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels, Kevin Nash, better known to WWE-exclusive fans as “Diesel,” rarely had a match above a two-star rating. He was one of the first workers to be labeled as a guy with “five moves of doom,” long before that torch was passed to John Cena.

However, Nash was a big ingredient in the pro wrestling explosion of the late 1990s. His move to WCW, which led to the formation of the nWo, was arguably the jumping-off point of the Monday Night Wars, which ultimately led to WWE’s “Attitude Era.” WWE was forced to switch gears and change the way they do business, and Nash, along with Scott Hall, were two key players at the root of all of these changes.

Despite his importance level in the business, his work level earns him the bronze medal as one of the biggest stars who wasn’t a “good worker.”

Continued on page two …

WWE Survivor Series — Where Legends Are Born & Moments Are Made

In 1987, WWE presented their first ever “Survivor Series” event, the first non-WrestleMania pay-per-view event, originally designed to steal viewers away from their main competition at the time, NWA’s “Starrcade,” which was the south’s version of “WrestleMania” (even though Starrcade came first) and was WWE’s attempt to throw down the gauntlet to the pay-per-view industry.

Basically put, if you were a pay-per-view provider and you decided to carry Starrcade, you would not be able to carry WrestleMania, a proven success in the pay-per-view industry.

That was the beginning.

From there, throughout the years, a number of historical events would take place at a Survivor Series event.

In no particular order, you can point to single Superstar debuts such as The Undertaker in 1990, which was also the debut of the infamous Gobbeldy Gooker. Which was the more famous of the two, well, I’ll let you decide.

1996 saw the debut of “Rocky Maivia,” to this day arguably the biggest cross-over name to ever emanate from the world of sports entertainment. At the time, while he was touted as being the first-ever third generation performer, and as “Good Ole’ JR” would say, “that’s gonna be the man, right there! That’s blue-chipper, right there!” with all of the enthusiasm the only Jim Ross could muster, oh how true those words would come to be as time went on.

One year later, the most infamous moment perhaps in all of WWE would take place. A moment that certainly began the shift in the WWE vs. WCW “Monday Night Wars” would take place, as not only did Bret Hart get “screwed” in what would become known as “The Montreal Screwjob,” but in many ways, that became the birth of the “Mr. McMahon” character, one that without he, the “Stone Cold” Steve Austin character may have never reached the heights that he would go on to achieve throughout his illustrious career.

In 1999, WWE’s first ever Olympic gold medalist, Kurt Angle, made his official in-ring pay-per-view debut, defeating Shawn Stasiak in the second match on the card.

In 2002, the Survivor Series featured another “first,” as this would be the first time that we were treated to a new gimmick match known as the “Elimination Chamber.” A man notorious among the wrestlers within the profession, just a few months ago the match concept was thrown out, large in part — according to various rumors — because of how unforgiving the structure was for those who had to actually compete inside it.

Most recently, the big “debut” of a match, concept or character took place at the November 18, 2012 edition of the WWE Survivor Series pay-per-view, which took place in Indianapolis, Indiana, as three men who would become known as “The Shield” made their official WWE main roster debut. Those three men would become known as Roman Reigns, Seth Rollins and Dean Ambrose.

Just to show how important those three men are, one is involved (as a Team Captain, no less) in the main event of this year’s Survivor Series, which takes place tonight from the Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Missouri.

That man is Seth Rollins.

Another one of the former Shield members, Dean Ambrose, is in what is being billed as arguably the legitimate co-main event of the evening, as he collides with another rising up-and-comer, Bray Wyatt.

And that leaves Roman Reigns.

Well, while he’s not officially booked on the actual card for tonight’s show, let’s just say there are a lot of rumors going around that claim we just may see him involved on the show tonight in some form or fashion after all.

Finally, that leaves two other names.

First up, the hometown boy. St. Louis’ own “The Viper” Randy Orton is rumored to make his return to WWE, after taking a brief hiatus to film a WWE Studios project, “The Condemned 2.”

Last, and absolutely not least, is “The Icon.”

While yours truly is not holding his breath and is going to take a “wait and see” approach before getting overly excited, rumors on the internet over the past few days insist that a certain Crow-painted style performer will make his very, very highly-anticipated WWE pay-per-view debut tonight at the Scottrade Center.

That’s right, folks. “The man they call Sting” is rumored to make his WWE debut, after all these years, at the same show that has produced so many memorable debuts, characters, matches and moments. If, in fact, “The Stinger” does make his WWE debut on tonight’s show, this writer has his new favorite Survivor Series moment of all-time.

We’re just hours away! Make sure to keep it locked right here at SEScoops.com for the most extensive, in-depth, live results coverage of tonight’s WWE Survivor Series 2014 pay-per-view!

Until then, leave your feedback in the “Comments” section below, and don’t forget to add me as a friend on Facebook at Facebook.com/MattBooneWZR and/or follow me on Twitter @MBoone420.

Enjoy the show, everybody!

Harley Race Speaks On Confronting Hulk Hogan, His Last Conversation With Owen Hart

The following are highlights of a new WGD Weekly interview with WWE Hall Of Famer Harley Race:

The incident at Starrcade ’83, where it was in question as to whether he would show up for his match with Ric Flair: “The thing on me not being there, it was all just a big rib to start with. I just wanted everyone there to think that I wasn’t going to be there, because at that point in time, there was a board of directors, and the board had thought it was time to make a rotation with the title, and I just wanted everyone there to believe that maybe I wasn’t going to be there…truthfully, I don’t know if I told Ric or not, you can ask him. I’m sure have at some point in time, I couldn’t let that little lie rest still after all these years.”

Confronting Hulk Hogan backstage at an event as the WWF made the move “across territory lines” in the mid 1980’s: “In confronting the Hulkster, he was the type of guy, that he was being paid to do what he did, and that is how he looked at it. He didn’t look at it as though he was running roughshod over everyone else out there. I confronted him about all that garbage. There was no push come to shove or anything. We never got into anything that far into it. Talent wise, he was as good as there was out there in that era…I was a wrestling style champion, and the Hulkster was a talking style. That was the two sides of it.”

Going to work for Vince McMahon and the WWF and how the “King” gimmick came about: “When it first came up, I thought the easiest way out of this was just for me to come up with an idea that was so far out in one direction or the other that Vince and his group wouldn’t go along with it. So, I said, I want to be the King, I want to come in and win a big tournament, and I want the crown, and then that’s how it turned, with that, how could you not go on with it.”

Owen Hart’s passing, and a conversation he had with him while he was working backstage at that event: “Who the god knew it would be my last conversation with Owen. With him it was always about talking about his father and what they did up there in the Winnipeg area and me coming in and out of there. The Hart Family is as good of a family as there ever was on the face of the earth and they’ve got a lot of kids that were involved in the wrestling part of it. It is just a horrible, horrible thing when stuff like that happens… He didn’t mention (being uncomfortable), that was the amazing part of it. It could’ve been me, it could’ve been anyone else. No one knows when the man up above wants to call your name.”

Becoming a manager in WCW: “I had been as high or higher than almost anyone I think, even still today. It sounds like I’m blowing smoke, you know where, but I had done everything feasibly possible to do in wrestling and to be able to take another guy like Vader or Luger or whoever and be able to help move them up to that top position, it just continued the Harley race version of wrestling. It kept it alive, it kept me alive.”

Check out the complete interview above.

CM Punk Rumors Causes RAW Ticket Price Increase, WWE Network Note

– The curiosity over CM Punk possibly being at Monday’s WWE RAW show in his hometown of Chicago, Illinois has caused ticket prices on the resale market to go up. Originally, the ticket prices were somewhat weak, as you couldn’t get more than face value for them, however they are now up $20 across the board. There were 387 tickets on the secondary market.

– The Starrcade ’85 event on the WWE Network is listed as TV-MA due to excessive blood in several of the matches. The following two Starrcade events are listed as TV-14.

  • Major Changes To WMXXX Plans, New Eva Marie Photos + CM Punk At RAW?!