October 1995 Background
WCW Nitro had come out and shockingly given Vince McMahon a run for his money. Still, it had to be a promising sign that the current WWF stars: Diesel, Bret, Undertaker, Shawn seemed to be drawing as well as Flair, Hogan, Luger, Savage, Sting on TV. Maybe Vince is right about all those guys (sans Sting) being washed up. Or maybe the WWF brand is really what matters.
Still, WCW had a really strong start. Vince still needed some time to build to one of his big events: Survivor Series. Could WCW put on the pressure with the Hogan vs. Giant feud? Could Vince make the October In Your House mean something?
Week 5
RAW: 10/2/95
Grand Rapids, MI
We get a recap of last week’s RAW, where the Smokin’ Gunns regained the Tag Titles.
Now we recap the history between Razor Ramon and The 1-2-3 Kid. It’s cool to see an angle referenced back to 1993. Kid beat Ramon twice now, once in 1993 and two weeks ago thanks to Dean Douglas. I don’t understand what Vince means by “will the third time be the charm for the Kid?” Um…he’s won both times!
Razor Ramon vs. 1-2-3 Kid
Hot start. Kid and Ramon waste no time and go back and forth until Ramon catches him for a fall away slam.
Dean Douglas is out here taking notes once again. Dean Douglas was not a bad character to be honest.
Razor Ramon pins the 1-2-3 Kid. Clothesline ends it. Surprising ending. But wait, the Kid wants to keep going…and the match continues?
During the break, the Kid gets driven hard by a Ramon powerbomb after Kid came off the top. Ramond got ANOTHER pin…but the Kid wanted a SECOND rematch.
Razor Ramon pins 1-2-3 Kid. Ramon teases the Razor’s Edge, but then beats the Kid with a small package. Ramon beats the Kid three times…but he didn’t go out to injure him. Ramon and Kid shake hands…then Kid tries a small package which Razor kicks out of. Razor actually smiles, showing admiration for the Kid. This is pretty great storytelling. The Kid was the youngster who felt like he needed to earn Razor’s respect and did so without having to win. Great start to RAW.
Hunter Hearst Helmsley vs. Barry Horowitz
Horowitz was actually pretty over after his upset of Skip at Summerslam.
Pretty cool armbar takedown leading to a shot to the face with the leg by HHH.
Last week was the most watched RAW ever. The Monday Night Wars really ejected an adrenaline shot into pro wrestling that WCW would take advantage of a lot better than the WWF would.
It’s amazing how over Horowitz was. He gets several creative near falls and the fans are with him at every turn.
HHH pins Horowitz. Horowitz makes one mistake though, as an attempted backdrop becomes the Pedigree and it’s over. Good match. HHH continues his undefeated streak and Horowitz keeps doing the underdog thing.
PG-13 vs. Al Brown and Sonny Rogers
PG-13 are the USWA World Tag Team Champions. They can be described as a cross between ECW and Too Cool.
Really don’t care about a jobber match. This is the stuff the WWF needed to get rid of when facing Nitro.
Gotta give credit where it is due though. Some great double team moves from PG-13. Dropkick + Russian Legsweep combo for example.
PG-13 wins by pin. Cool twisting slam by Wolfie D on JC Ice onto Green. I wonder why the WWF didn’t keep going with PG-13. They challenged the Gunns and everything!
Bret Hart vs. Jean Pierre-Lafitte
A rematch from In Your House a couple of weeks ago.
Early on Bret slams Lafitte into the ring steps. Seems pretty extreme for WWF 1995!
Lafitte eventually takes over and Bret makes him look like a million bucks.
Jerry Lawler’s anti-Bret commentary is pretty great here as well.
Bret Hart wins by submission. Superplex and Sharpshooter. Great main event, although I believe this was the end of Lafitte. Bret confronts Lawler and beats him up afterwards before Isaac Yankem shows up and attacks Bret. That’s the last midcard feud Bret would deal with before setting sight on the WWF Title again.
Vince hypes up next week’s RAW Main Event: Diesel, Shawn Michaels and Undertaker vs. Yokozuna, Owen Hart and the British Bulldog. To say that’s a huge main event is an understatement and it shows Vince was giving it a real shot against Nitro here.
Anyway, I enjoyed this show from top to bottom, even the PG-13 stuff. These 1995 RAWs are pretty good!
TV Rating: 2.5
Grade: B+
Nitro: 10/2/95
Denver, CO
Ric Flair with a crazy promo to kick things off. Nice. He’s coming for you Double A!
We kick it off with a match that feels like it should be on PPV, Lex Luger vs. Randy Savage with Luger’s WCW career on the line. While it feels like this is something that happened too fast, I guess this was definitely something you couldn’t miss.
Lex Luger vs. Randy Savage: If Luger loses he leaves WCW
Randy Savage wears the most ridiculous colors for his attire and it doesn’t matter one bit. Savage is so good.
The promo for the Monster Truck Match for Halloween Havoc is hilarious. Absolutely hilarious.
The match has had two spots where neither man got the advantage. It’s pretty well done. Luger eventually gets a neckbreaker on the floor and the advantage.
Ref is out and Savage hits the big elbow…and here comes The Giant!
Lex Luger wins when Randy Savage doesn’t respond to the referee in 12:30. Luger gets Savage up in the Rack and Savage is out from a Giant chokeslam, and Luger keeps his career. It’s oddly not treated as a huge deal that Luger just saved his career, but whatever. Pretty good match, a lot better than I was expecting. It went back and forth and it continues telling a great story about Luger (is he a good guy or bad?)
Disco Inferno! Eddy Guerrero interrupts Disco’s dancing (with Juvi‘s future music).
Dean Malenko vs. Eddy Guerrero
Basically ECW’s TV Title feud of 1995 here.
Malenko kips up from being pushed down, which was freakin’ awesome.
Just awesome sequences early on.
We get a side by side camera shot with the match…as Hulk Hogan shows up. Ah, the WCW tradition of ignoring the match in the ring for Hogan.
We don’t even see the match anymore. It’s all Hogan!
Back to the match, and Malenko and Guerrero are putting on a technical exhibition.
AWESOME top rope plancha from Guerrero to Malenko on the floor! He hit the aisleway!
Eddie Guerrero pins Dean Malenko in 5:41. Ending came out of nowhere where Eddie trapped Malenko on the mat, similar to Bret-Bulldog at Summerslam ’92. Shame it was so short as it was owning. Malenko says Guerrero got lucky and wants a rematch. Guerrero said any place any time.
Here comes Hogan in a neck brace. I am annoyed his stuff cut into the last match.
Generic promo where Hogan says he is going to get the Giant since he’s not out yet. Hogan decides to slap all the fans hands and is attacked by a random old woman (which Mean Gene hilariously calls). Of course, it’s Kevin Sullivan. Giant makes his way out and “breaks” Hogan’s neck. American Males and Nasty Boys run in but Giant and Zodiac Man take them out. The Dungeon of Doom shave Hogan’s mustache off. While Hogan’s promo was nothing to write home about, the attack was pretty brilliant and the Giant looks like a bad ass heel taking out everyone.
We get the Halloween Havoc promo again. Just hilarious.
Ric Flair vs. Arn Anderson
They just go at it right from the outset, knocking each other down with chops and hard shots.
A good back and forth that really showed Arn was at an elite level.
Ric Flair wins by DQ in 8:30. Flair has the Figure Four when Brian Pillman comes flying off the top to cause the DQ. Anderson and Pillman beat up Flair. Shame about the DQ. Solid match.
Apparently, we’re getting Flair vs. Arn Anderson in a cage on Nitro next week! Screw waiting for PPV!
WCW brought it this week, but I thought shortchanged two of their matches. Luger defeating Savage seemed like something that just happened, and Luger’s career hanging in the balance was an afterthought. Guerrero vs. Malenko was good but short, and overshadowed by Hogan. BUT, those matches and the main event were all solid, and the Hogan beat down was well done too. Another good Nitro. Best of all for Nitro, their rating has stabilized in the mid 2s.
TV Rating: 2.5
Grade: B+
Weekly Review
Both shows brought it this week once again. I think the WWF’s only real shot here is if the Hogan-Giant angle gets too hokey. I mean, a Monster Truck Match is pretty out there. Then again, we just had a pirate in the main event of RAW. The big victory for WCW is that Nitro is hanging tough with the WWF and even outshining them at some points (like Malenko vs. Guerrero).
A pure tie this week. Both shows brought it this week and it showed in TV Ratings. Hopefully both can keep the momentum. Hotshotting is becoming a bit of an issue, especially with career ending matches on Nitro (and a potential feud ending cage match next week).
TV Ratings Score: 2-1-1 RAW
Grade Score: 1-1-2