NWA/WCW Starrcade 1988
December 26, 1988
Norfolk, VA
Reviewed on June 21, 2014
A high point for the NWA. The NWA had tons of talent and while not drawing as well as the WWF, they were arguably putting on a better quality of shows. Earlier in 1988 WCW put on a Clash of the Champions PPV that hurt the WWF’s Wrestlemania IV, headlined by a Sting vs. Ric Flair classic.
Ric Flair was truly the man at this point. Flair and the Horsemen were the main event, and Flair was doing all he could to get Lex Luger over as a top face. At the time, Luger was a pretty solid wrestler and it worked out well, leading to the main event here. Unlike the main for Starrcade 1987 (Flair vs. Ronnie Garvin) this felt like one of the biggest matches the NWA could throw out there at the time. The NWA would continue the roll they were on through 1989 with the Flair-Steamboat series.
The Card
US Tag Team Championship
The Fantastics © vs. Steve Williams and Kevin Sullivan
The Fantastics are Tommy Rogers and Bobby Fulton. Williamd and Sullivan had a brighter future, even then.
Apparently the Bushwackers were supposed to be in this, but Vince signed them away.
Not sure if it’s supposed to be booked this way, but the champs are getting no offense in whatsoever.
JR is putting over Dr. Death like a million bucks…of course.
Williams and Sullivan win the title when Williams pins Fulton in 15:50. Hotshot for the win. Pretty solid hard hitting opener. Match was clear designed for Williamd and Sullivan to get over.
The Midnight Express vs. The Original Midnight Express
Jim Cornette’s Stan Lane and Bobby Eaton (the most popular version) against Paul E’s Dennis Condrey and Randy Rose.
Kinda amazing not only how long Paul Heyman has been around, but how many different things he’s done in wrestling.
The story is really a battle of managers. To be fair, this seems like the older teams comes back to take back their glory angle, but it seems quite well done here.
Referee asking the crowd if the Old Express cheated was interesting.
New Midnight Express wins when Lane pins Condrey in 17:46. After referee Teddy Long (playa!) determines the Originals used Paul E’s telephone as a weapon, the Express get the Goozie for the win. They get beat down afterwards. Pretty solid back and forth match, crowd was into it.
The Russian Assassins vs. Junkyard Dog and Ivan Koloff
If the Assassins lose their manager Paul Jones has to retire.
Pretty big downgrade from earlier.
The Assassins win when #1 pins Koloff in 6:47. Koloff has it won, but the #2 Assassin puts something in his mask and headbutts Koloff, leading to the win. A lot of whatever here. I don’t think the fans caught onto what happened in the finish.
NWA Television Championship
Mike Rotonda© vs. Rick Steiner
Sullivan is locked in a cage here. This is the big blowoff to all the Varsity Club stuff.
Rick Steiner could really go at this point.
Dr. Death comes down and rings the bell, confusing everyone…
Rick Steiner wins the title by pin in 17:59. The ref, Steiner and Rotunda are confused about the bell. Even the cage comes down and Sullivan gets on the apron. Steiner shoves Rotunda into Sullivan and gets the pin. Really fun finish and a good match here too. Rick Steiner was pretty good at one time for sure. Crowd pops huge for Steiner’s win.
NWA US Championship
Barry Windham © vs. Bam Bam Bigelow
Bam Bam looks like a star ahead of his time here…but interestingly by 1998 he would look behind the times.
Bam Bam was just coming off his first WWF stint, which had mixed results.
Windham is a Horseman here.
What’s weird about Bam Bam is that he doesn’t look like he ages.
Always thought it was crazy how aerial Bigelow was.
Seriously Barry Windham used a clawhold?
Barry Windham retains by countout in 16:17. Both men end up on the outside, and Bigelow misses a charge and slams into the post, allowing Windham to get back in. Pretty good back and forth match, Windham seemed like a good workhorse back in the day. Disappointing ending though.
Rick Steiner interview. Very happy about winning the TV title. Of course he is.
NWA World Tag Team Championship
The Road Warriors © vs. Sting and Dusty Rhodes
Fans are mega into Sting here. Sting gets a dropkick to stop the Warriors from attacking early, which is smart booking.
Pretty crazy dive from Sting off the top to the outside onto Animal!
Dusty’s no selling comeback is pretty entertaining to watch.
Dusty is the face in peril.
Sting is getting a huge reaction destroying The Warriors.
Sting and Dusty win by DQ in 11:20. Sting has it won, but Paul Ellering breaks up the count for the DQ. Pretty basic match and the crowd was hot. Sting stole the show and no wonder he was the future of the company. Of course, another non-finish is pretty lame.
NWA World Championship – If Ric Flair is DQed he loses the title
Ric Flair© vs. Lex Luger
Flair gets a huge reaction.
Flair knew how to make strong babyfaces look great, and this match is no exception.
It’s absolutely jarring seeing Luger as this good wrestler. Leapfrogs, great agility, just a lot of stuff from Luger you didn’t remotely see seven years later.
Luger amazingly no sells the Figure Four with some flexing.
The story has been working on the leg, and there’s some great psychology here as Luger keeps going for slams and such, but always tending to, or even further hurting, the leg.
Ric Flair retains by pin at 30:59. Luger gets on fire and totally no sells a big forearm from Flair. Big powerslam and then the Torture Rack…but the leg gives way! Flair gets the pin AND the feet on the ropes, and Flair gets the three! Great match, Luger looked like a million bucks and Flair showed he was the best in the world at the time. How the NWA didn’t ride the Luger gravy train is surprising to me, but some of that sounds like it’s on Flair since he wanted to work with Steamboat. To be fair, those are some of the best matches of all time.
A very good Starrcade with a great main event. So what’s wrong with this show? Absolutely no historical significance here. This wasn’t a really important card in the development of Sting, and Luger’s career ended up with a choker label that could actually be traced to this match. I’m not sure Flair winning was a good idea…even though he was the man. Everything else? I mean Rick Steiner got development here, but nothing else really mattered in the long run. Even early on, I thought Starrcade should make of solidify stars. Despite Luger looking like a million bucks, that didn’t happen here. The first few Starrcades made Ric Flair, but Flair was already made here. Maybe I am being too hard on this aspect of the show, but does anyone really remember Starrcade 1988?
Great card match quality wise though. Can’t deny that.
Final Grade: B+