World Championship Wrestling

The SmarK 24/7 Rant for World Championship Wrestling - November 2 1985

- Unfortunately taking a week’s vacation meant no 24/7 for a week, leaving me with withdrawal. Some NWA should clear that right up!

- Highlights of a Magnum v. Tully match from October 18 are historic, because it’s the only time I’ve ever seen that the referee’s double count actually results in the end of the match, as they collide and neither guy makes it to their feet by 10.

- Manny Fernandez v. Tommy Lane. Criss-cross and Fernandez hiptosses Lane into the corner to start, but Lane grabs a headlock. Manny takes him down with an armdrag and works the arm, and finishes with the Flying Burrito at 1:40.

- Ric Flair offers his opinions on Dusty Rhodes, and adds that he’s a kiss-stealin’, wheelin’ dealin, you know the rest. The upshot is that Starrcade is too soon to come back, and Flair and the Andersons are gonna make him pay for it. The Andersons helpfully offer to re-break his leg if need be.

- Buddy Landel v. Tony Zane. Buddy gets a slam and kneedrop, and finishes with the corkscrew elbow and figure-four at 0:53.

- JJ and Buddy throw down the gauntlet to Terry Taylor: Put the National title on the line at Starrcade! Spoiler: Buddy won the title there.

- The Rock N Roll Express v. Mike Davis & George South. Gibson fucks up a leapfrog with South, but recovers with a clip instead and the RNR work on the leg. They switch off and stay on the leg, but Mike Davis tags in and it’s BONZO GONZO. That goes badly for the jobbers, as they flatten South with the double dropkick and finish at 2:32. Great sell from South on that.

- Tully Blanchard once again reiterates that Magnum already had his last shot at the US title, and he didn’t win. This sets up a piece of video from NWA President Bob Geigel, who was the TV figurehead with just slightly more competency than Jack Tunney as far as leaders go, who declares that there will be no I Quit match, because it’s just too violent.

- Billy Jack Haynes v. The Black Cat. The Cat tries throwing forearms and gets nowhere, as Billy Jack takes him down and hits the chinlock. That goes on for a while, so Tony takes the chance to explain why Starrcade is called “The Gathering”: Because it’s a gathering of all of Dusty’s friends, who have come to the NWA to be by his side against Flair. So there you go. Suplex by Haynes gets two and he goes back to the chinlock, then finishes with the full nelson at 4:25.

- Tony Schiavone interviews Dusty’s doctor and we meet Dusty’s new boots. As exciting as it sounds.

- Magnum TA v. Keith Erich. Another epic, as TA pins the jobber in 7 seconds with the belly to belly.

- Superstar Billy Graham v. Abdullah The Butcher. The idea here is that Abdullah is going after the arm so that Graham can’t arm-wrestle Barbarian. Big brawl to start and Graham chokes out Butcher with a TV cable on the floor, but Abby chokes him out on the ropes when they head back in. Paul Jones adds a shot to the head with his cane, but Superstar comes back with a bearhug. Now those are some big arms! Butcher goes to the eyes and tries the elbow, but misses and Graham hits his own. He chokes away and Barbarian runs in for the DQ at 3:38. Pretty fun brawl, actually. ** This apparently calls off the arm-wrestling match against Barbarian, but they would have it at Starrcade. Whew.

- Pez Whatley v. Benny Traylor. Whatley takes him down with a headlock to start and works on the arm, holding him on the mat with an armbar for a while. Side salto gets two. He goes to the chinlock and backdrops Traylor, and a snapmare gets two. Back to the arm, and he takes him down with a dropkick before going to the headlock again. Man, this thing just keeps going. Traylor backs off into the corner and tries a headlock to slow down the PEZ WHATLEY MACHINE, but Pez goes back to that armbar again. From there he goes to a boston crab, but Traylor makes the ropes. Pez headbutts him down and finishes with a flying headbutt at 7:54. That wasn’t a squash, it was an experiment in cruelty.

- Black Bart wants to talk about that daggum Ron Bass, who he will be facing in a daggum bullrope match at that daggum Starrcade! Bart was truly an hauteur of the crazy yelling wrestling interview.

- Next week in the increasingly-misnamed Championship Challenge series: Billy Jack Haynes v. Thunderfoot. Uh, okay.

- Let us take you back to October 22, as Baby Doll gets in Magnum’s face, and he practically rapes her. People have been sued for millions for less than kissing someone and then ripping her blouse off. And as a result, Jim Crockett steps in and overrules Bob Geigel, signing the I Quit match between Tully and Magnum after all.

- Tully Blanchard v. Denny Brown. People not to be right now: Denny Brown. Tully kicks his ass in frustration and takes him down with a knee to the gut, then tosses him and stomps him from the apron. Denny tries to fight back with a sunset flip that gets two, and manages to take Tully down with a back elbow. He slugs away in the corner, but Tully viciously snaps him into the turnbuckles. Denny keeps fighting and knocks Tully to the apron, and then blocks a charging Tully with a boot to the face. Tully takes him down, however, and drops elbows, as the power of anger is just too much, and the slingshot suplex finishes at 3:38. Terrific fun, as Tully is just awesome telling little stories like this one. **

- The Andersons return to protest Crockett’s decision, and boy is Ole pissed. He notes that Magnum should probably have 24 hour police protection, because otherwise they’re gonna kill him first chance they get. Charming.

- Nikita Koloff v. Mack Jeffers. How did Vince McMahon NOT just offer Nikita millions of dollars and all the steroids he could do in exchange for a main event run with Hulk Hogan? It boggles my mind, because Koloff was exactly what Vince was looking for in a Hogan foil. Hogan v. Koloff would have been EPIC, man. It was all there! The nephew of the former WWF champion, out to avenge the Koloff name by winning the title back and bringing it to Moscow in the heat of the Cold War! Anyway, Koloff completely destroys this poor guy and finishes with the Sickle at 1:54.

- The Russians pose and yell.

- Ivan Koloff & Khrusher Khruschev v. Ricky Reeves & Mike Garmon. There’s an inordinate number of black jobbers this week. Is this a southern thing? Ivan and Smashovich double-team Reeves, and then beat on Garmon, as Ivan drops a knee and knees him down. They choke him out with the tag rope and Ivan chokes him on the ropes, and Comrade Darsow finishes with a Minnesota Sickle at 3:11.

- Jimmy Valiant v. Jimmy Black. Jimmy Black appears to be another incarnation of then-jobber Jimmy “Del Ray” Backlund. Valiant applies a nerve hold to Black, but Miss Atlanta Lively heads into the ring and…kisses Valiant? Gross. Ronnie Garvin’s got ISSUES, man. Black uses the distraction and chokes Valiant out, but Miss Lively uses “her” Hands of Stone to KO Black and give Valiant the pin.

- Jim Cornette is OUTRAGED at this whole cross-dressing thing. I’m just weirded out. Jimmy Valiant chases Cornette away, and declares his love for Miss Atlanta Lively, the “toughest broad I’ve ever met”. Jimmy gives Tony a kiss to end the show.

Another great, fun show from the days when it truly was entertaining, without the company having to come up with a catchphrase to alert the media to how fun they are.

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13 Comments »

Comment by joepet
2007-07-19 12:36:08

“because it’s the only time I’ve ever seen that the referee’s double count actually results in the end of the match, as they collide and neither guy makes it to their feet by 10.”

So you didn’t watch Backlash yet?

Comment by Poopy Sean
2007-07-19 23:27:47

Briscoe V Briscoe as well

Poopy Sean
 
 
Comment by PJ
2007-07-19 12:44:03

You know, I totally forgot that whole aspect of Nikita being Ivan’s Nephew storyline wise. You could have even used Bruno (who was working in the WWF at the time) to further along the angle. Wow, that is disappointing to look back on. For the younger people who don’t remember, Nikita was an evil Russian Goldberg. He was so “over”.

 
Comment by bignasty96
2007-07-19 14:59:49

Hey, I wrote in the comments somewhere else that Nikita Koloff’s Wikipedia page says that McMahon DID offer him millions of dollars (no word on the steroids) to come to the WWF in 1986 to either win the IC Title or headline WrestleMania 2. Koloff stayed to try to leverage a better offer but life intervened w/ his wife’s illness. In retrospect, what a fool. Koloff/Hogan would have made BILLIONS!

The Tully/Magnum feud is about the greatest thing ever. I had only seen the actual I Quit match before 24/7 but this stuff is fantastic. I love Crockett yelling, as Magnum is kiss/raping her, “She likes it! She likes it!” Oh, and Arn Anderson is pimped out, the hat last week and the shades this week. I also enjoy the studio crowd giving face heat to the Andersons when they start talking…and then booing when they promise to kill Dusty and Magnum. Awesome, awesome stuff.

The Pez Whatley match felt like a 30 minute broadway. Truly awful.

Comment by 24_7
2007-07-19 17:11:31

I liked how they essentially apologized in advance for the Whatley match, noting that it was a standby match because the Graham match was so short. It’s interesting how most of the squash matches on the late ‘85 shows were a lot quicker than the ones the summer ‘85 shows.

Crockett yelling during the Magnum kiss was classic. I think I’d pay $7.99 a month for a channel that just showed the week-by-week NWA programming (syndicated shows as well as the TBS show) from that era.

Comment by bignasty96
2007-07-19 18:13:10

I really wanted to see Starrcade 85 now. They should put it up when the show gets to it. On the other hand, watching WCW I have ZERO interest in 1997’s SuperBrawl.

How hot was Sunny circa Feb. 1997?

 
 
Comment by samoaray25
2007-07-19 22:39:17

Please help me is this the same Whatley who was part of the most PIMP tag team ever…The Jive-Tones?? I believe it was Shaska Watley & Tiger Conway Jr.

samoaray25
Comment by Darryl The Hitman
2007-07-20 04:21:12

I believe it’s the same person, yes. I’ve never actually seen him wrestle but I’ve read about him.

If someone knows for sure, please say. :)

Darryl The Hitman
 
 
 
Comment by johnson316
2007-07-19 17:27:49

Anyone else think that the slingshot suplex should make a comeback? Don’t know if it’s credible enough to be a finisher anymore but I think it’d be a great set-up move for a guy like Nitro/Morrison who needs signature moves/spots. Maybe he could incorporate the spinning slingshot neckbreaker thing that Conway used to use.

Comment by crimsonjoe
2007-07-19 18:12:41

Hell, I’m still waiting for someone to try a slingshot-jackhammer. It seems to me that move could be done, and done properly it’d look effective.

Comment by CEOIII
2007-07-19 21:16:18

Eh. The slingshot suplex would be a great finish for Cody Rhodes (maybe even add a little friction for an eventual short feud with dad: “Why you usin a finisher that a guy I HATED used to use?”) but a slingshot jackhammer has a little too much headdrop possibility for WWE to let go.

 
Comment by Poopy Sean
2007-07-19 23:29:41

I think I saw Bob Orton do it in a match once or it was a super Jackhammer, I can’t remember.

Poopy Sean
 
 
 
Comment by DevastationInc
2007-07-20 00:23:43

I remember seeing Dean Malenko do a super-jackhammer during the ‘94 J-Cup. Great show, that one, by the way.

 
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