Showing posts with label TheDirtsheets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TheDirtsheets. Show all posts

Saturday, November 12, 2016

History of the WWF, 1984-1988: National Expansion, Death of the Regional Territories & The Rise of Hulk Hogan (April 21, 2003 Wrestling Observer Newsletter) (Part 2 of 3) TheDirtsheets

"The War to Settle the Score" between Hogan and Piper took place on February 18, 1985 at Madison Square Garden. Unlike Moolah-Richter, this was a major happening as a live event, selling out both the Garden and Felt Forum with more than 24,000 fans, and doing a 9.1 rating on MTV. It was the highest rated wrestling show ever on cable television, and it's doubtful that record will ever be broken. Lauper was involved again, attacked by Piper, until an enraged Mr. T made the save. In the days before there was a UFC, all the myths about bad ass fighters were prevalent. To the general public, there was nobody badder than Mr. T. He had been the star as lead heel in a box office smash movie with a storyline right out of pro wrestling, Rocky ill, as Sylvester Stallone's most dangerous opponent, a movie that saw Hogan gain his first mainstream exposure in as well. Mr. T had won a gimmicked contest as the world's toughest bouncer, to make a rep. He then became the big drawing card on one of the country's highest rated TV shows called "The A Team," the hottest drama series on the air. It would no, be much of an exaggeration to say Mr. T, at the time, was the biggest short-term TV star in the country. While Lauper garnered a lot of publicity for wrestling, it was nothing compared to what Mr. T doing a wrestling match would give, not to mention the rub McMahon Jr.'s biggest star, Hogan would get, by towering over the 5-foot-I0 inch man who everyone feared as supposedly the world's toughest. street fighter, because of both hype and because of how deceptively small Sylvester Stallone really was. In addition, his top heels, Piper and Orndorff, would get the rub of being in the match with him and standing up to him. Piper, in particular, verbally took the ball and ran for a touchdown, becoming a legend for his comedic and often racial remarks at the guy the public thought was the real deal. Well before that MTV special, the idea of Wrestlemania was born.

This was a huge gamble on a lot of levels. Even though WWF was winning on more fronts than it was losing in the wrestling war, the company was losing money in doing so. As much as live business falling, what did in nearly every promotion from the territorial days was the escalating cost of television, from the example McMahon set. Television stations saw wrestling as a product that would pay them big money to air, and when warring companies bid against each other, the rates quickly skyrocketed. It was the cost of maintaining TV exposure in the big markets that played a major part, although not the only part, in doing in both Watts and later Crockett, as well as, years later, both Jim Cornette's Smoky Mountain Wrestling and Paul Heyman's EC W. McMahon was way behind in paying his TV bills, and Wrestlemania was very close to a necessary gamble because he needed some major cash.

It was funny, because even though Mr. T was an actor, it was he who gave the event legitimacy. Even though he was smaller than his opponents, people believed he was the real tough guy in the match because he picked up such a reputation as a bouncer and bodyguard with his unique look and menacing scowl. They believed that while wrestling was fake, Mr. T was real, and many believed the match would be a shoot, especially because of how effectively Piper was riding him on his promos. It was funny, because wrestling fans at the time saw it exactly opposite. Within wrestling, Mr. T was heavily resented for walking in and getting a main event without earning his stripes, nor, at least being a football star, as pro wrestlers of the era saw NFL players as at least something real and felt they gave wrestling sports credibility. David Shults, a noted tough guy in pro wrestling, ended up losing his job in the WWF because he wanted to pick a fight with T, when he was making a promotional appearance at a house show in Los Angeles. A rival promoter made an offer to Bruiser Brody to hop the rail and try and take out Mr. T with a quick sucker blow as he came to the ring to ruin the show, which Brody never took seriously. They almost didn't need to do it, because Mr. T decided to back out the day of the show. At the same time, McMahon and Hogan had their hands full, because neither Piper nor Orndorff were willing to put over a non-wrestler, which was part of the agreement to get T to do the match. Hogan managed to convince Mr. T to come back, as he was scared to death, never having done pro wrestling and fearful something would go wrong and it would kill his reputation. Orndorff eventually agreed to do the job. But even though it was Mr. T who drew all the media attention and made it the event it was, it was clear, to the audience that paid that Hogan got an even bigger reaction. The fallout was that all questions were answered. Hogan was now the bigger star on the wrestling turf.

McMahon booked 200 arenas around North America for March 31, 1985. It was a given that Madison Square Garden would sellout, and it did, immediately, for Hogan & Mr. T, with Snuka in their corner, against Piper & Orndorff, with Bob Orton Jr. in their corner. The last attempt at closed circuit for pro wrestling, All vs. Inoki nine years earlier, was not a success, and All was far more of a proven fighting draw than Mr. T. McMahon went wild, bringing in Ali as a ref for the main event (in actuality, Pat Patterson was the ref to make sure the match stayed under control while All was outside the ring wearing a ref shirt and doing one planned spot), Billy Martin as ring announcer, Liberate and the Rockettes dancing. Still, with a week to go, the advances in most of the country were bad and it looked like a disaster. About 70 arenas were canceled because of poor sales. But the show picked up tremendous momentum in the last week, from Hogan & Mr. T doing Letterman and Saturday Night Live, and Hogan choking out talk show host Richard Belzer, which cost him several hundred grand, but also bought him and the show more than that in late publicity. It was a huge success—in most places, and clearly established McMahon as the greatest promoter in the business. It appeared the war was over—except, old-line promoters like Watts, Paul Boesch, Adkisson and Crockett took solace. Wrestlemania bombed in their territories, and with more publicity than any event in history had ever gotten. In St. Louis, the show drew about 3,000 fans and was not well received, and WWF had trouble drawing in that city for many years afterwards. This strengthened their belief that McMahon's style of wrestling wasn't going to work where fans were weaned on top quality in-ring wrestling.

But they were the kings of New York, and New York was where all the decision makers lived. Dick Ebersol convinced NBC to put a wrestling special on the Saturday Night Live time slot on May 11, 1985, and it drew an 8.8 rating a show where Hogan pinned Orton and Mr. T made an appearance, a little above what SNL was doing at the time. By October, they were running every month or two in the time slot, and beating SNL's ratings almost every time out. On January 4, 1986, a show headlined by Hogan vs. Terry Funk drew a 10.4 rating, the second highest rating for a television show in that time slot in the history of U.S. television. They created a merchandise empire, a television cable and syndicated package which when all the ratings of the different shows were combined for one week, using unique mathematics, was billed as one of the highest rated syndicated television shows in the country. Hogan was the star of a Saturday Morning cartoon on CBS. The NBC exposure put WWF so far ahead of the pack except with the pre-1984 fans, and with most of the top talent wanting to jump on board, the regional promotions were inevitably going to lose their top draws. The handwriting was on the wall, even though it took a few years before it came to fruition.

McMahon did suffer one significant loss, that of TBS. McMahon made no friends early when tapes of his matches took the place of the TV studio matches in Atlanta with the Georgia wrestlers. Ratings dropped, although not to nearly the level they would after he lost the time slot. With more than a thousand complaints after July 14, 1984, known at the time in wrestling as "Black Saturday," when McMahon took over the show with tapes of the same matches that were already airing on the USA Network , Turner immediately gave Ole Anderson a time slot at 7 a.m. to keep a local wrestling show with icon announcer Gordon Solie on and enabling Anderson to open up a new promotion, the short-lived Championship Wrestling from Georgia, Inc., infuriating McMahon who thought he had just purchased Georgia Championship Wrestling to legally shut it down. Worse, in early 1985, Turner made a verbal partnership with Watts, giving him a Sunday one hour time slot for Mid South Wrestling, which was to prelude the two becoming partners. Turner agreed to bankroll Watts to run nationally against McMahon. The Mid South show was an immediate embarrassment to McMahon. Watts' Mid South Wrestling was generally considered the best booked and most entertaining wrestling show at the time. But it was also a very regional looking show that ESPN turned down because of perceived lack of star power and production values, being taped at the Irish McNeill Boys Club in Shreveport, instead of a major arena. It was post produced in Bill's garage by his son Joel. Given a time slot not familiar to wrestling fans, Watts' show on TBS outrated both the McMahon shows on the station as well as his shows on the USA Network, averaging a 5.3 rating, and for the first 13 weeks, was the highest rated show in the country on cable television. Turner was about to throw McMahon off the station, give the prime slots to Watts, and work with him in going national. Jim Barnett, who knew Turner better than anyone in wrestling and who was a VP at the time for McMahon, became the intermediary in brokering a deal with McMahon and Crockett. Crockett paid McMahon $1 million for the rights to wrestling on the station and promised to tape weekly in the studio. Turner was happy to be rid of McMahon, and knew Crockett, with area favorites like Rhodes and Flair, had bigger stars than Watts. Watts, a public ally of Crockett as he used Flair and Rhodes often on his big shows, bowed out gracefully in public after losing the power play. On the final episode of Mid South Wrestling on TBS, he told fans it was their last episode on the station, but that you'd be seeing great wrestling on the station from the NWA from that point forward. Again, history was changed going forward in ways nobody will ever be able to truly ascertain.

Business fell off greatly after Wrestlemania, enough that McMahon was worried. Even though the event was very profitable and gave him incredible publicity, McMahon's opponents relished in the idea he'd done himself more harm than good and shot his wad. McMahon even got David Sammartino, who he was using as a prelim wrestler, to convince his father to come out of retirement to try and revitalize Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Boston and his other Northeast strongholds. Sammartino, who was 49, had settled his lawsuit against the company after Sr. passed away, and agreed to work for the company again as a television announcer alongside McMahon (later, Jesse Ventura was added to the team), working 17 dates per year, where he would do commentary on three shows per taping, for $100,000. Under the guise that it would be the boost to David's career that he needed, and as a way to try and make up because the two had a rocky relationship, he agreed to return as part of a father-and-son tag team. Sammartino proved the rules of a nostalgia act. He drew turn away crowds the first time in almost every arena that he had a history in (the exception being Madison Square Garden where even an appearance by Sammartino and a Hogan vs. Don Muraco match drew 15,000), better than Hogan was doing at the time. But repeat business fell off greatly, even more than it did with Hogan.

Hogan and Flair remained the top stars as the war continued on all fronts, with both groups drawing well, although McMahon may have been rockier with a higher payroll and higher television expense commitments. On July 6, 1985, at the Charlotte Baseball Stadium, Flair wrestled a muscle head stiff named Nikita Koloff, and sold the stadium out, drawing 27,000 fans and $300,000. The success of Koloff, whose main attributes were freaky shoulders and menacing eyes, was a tribute to Rhodes' character development. Koloff had never wrestled, and had barely been trained (he was in the same Minnesota group as the Road Warriors, Rick Rude and Barry Darsow, but was injured early in the camp and mainly just watched). Rhodes came up with the idea that he was a superheavyweight weightlifter from Russia, the nephew of veteran. heel Ivan Koloff, who was taking his grudges out on the Americans who he blamed politically for the Soviet boycott of the 1984 Olympic games. He was protected even more than the Road Warriors, who by the time Nikita had showed up were right at the top of the list of biggest stars in the game world wide. He sold for nobody, and they all sold for him. Probably the best equivalent was a Russian Bill Goldberg. When he attacked TV announcer and co-promoter David Crockett, Flair was put in the role of having to tame the beast for the U.S. on a show Rhodes named "The Great American Bash."

But the big money match was Flair vs. Rhodes, and eventually, one of them had to turn. Flair was more popular at the time and a bigger draw, but also more comfortable working heel, and outside the Carolinas was mainly a heel anyway. It was a hugely controversial decision within the Carolinas to turn their native son and biggest star heel, but at first, the Flair-Rhodes program paid huge dividends. Rhodes, as booker, turned Flair heel in late 1985 using the a reprise of a legendary angle he had done with Ole Anderson years earlier in Atlanta that had such impact that people were talking about for years (and students in OVW still have to study it). After Flair had beaten Nikita Koloff in a cage match, he was being ganged up on by a variety of heels. Rhodes saved Flair. Then everyone in the cage all turned on, and injured Rhodes, leaving him for dead and taking him out of action with a worked broken foot. It was even done in the same building, the Omni in Atlanta. The third Starrcade, an annual Thanksgiving night closed-circuit show with live events in both Atlanta and Greensboro, was headlined by their first big singles match. The differences between the third Starrcade and the first Wrestlemania were huge. This was faster paced, more heated and far bloodier wrestling, with nearly everyone on the show blading. Crockett did $936,000 at the show between the two live gates and closed-circuit. While that couldn't compare with the $4.3 million Wrestlemania had done, he did it on a far more regional basis, with 17 locations and 2 live spots ad opposed to 133 locations and one live spot, and with no mainstream media or celebrities. But Crockett got a huge slap in the face when at about the same time, Sports Illustrated did a monstrous story on the pro wrestling boom, and Hogan was put on the cover with photos of the wackiest and freakiest looking gimmick wrestlers of the time, like Kamala and the Missing Link. It was the highest profile mainstream exposure Hogan and wrestling had gotten. In the nearly 20-page story, neither Flair nor Rhodes' name were ever mentioned.

On August 13,1985, the WWF booked a live event as part of the Ohio State Fair in Columbus, OH. It was a free show with a $4 admission to the fair that night. Promoters of fairs around the country were stunned as more than 50,000 fans watched Hogan beat John Studd, breaking the all-time attendance record set on June 30, 1961 when Buddy Rogers won the NWA title from Pat O'Connor at Comiskey Park in Chicago. However, an attempt to capitalize on Wrestlemania, without celebrities, saw McMahon do a PPV show called "The Wrestling Classic" from Chicago on November 7, 1985 , headlined by Hogan vs. Piper in a singles match. Piper once again refusing to do the job, so it ended with a DQ finish on Piper. The show only drew about 12,000 paid, and flopped on PPV with 50,000 buys (which was actually a 2.5 percent buy rate, but they were expecting far more). The one-night tournament included classic (for the time) confrontations like Ricky Steamboat vs. Davey Boy Smith and Dynamite Kid vs. Randy Savage (where U.S. fans saw their first superplex off the top rope). Plans for running PPV shows every two or three months were dropped, and it wasn't until 1989 that the company ran four PPV events in the same year.

The second Wrestlemania was not the success of the first. This was an attempt to outdo Starrcade's two locations, running three, the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island, the Horizon in Chicago and the Los Angeles Sports Arena, each for one hour. Each city would get its own main event, with Mr. T vs. Piper in a boxing match in New York, Hogan vs. King Kong Bundy in a cage match in Los Angeles, and a Battle Royal in Chicago involving several NFL football players, including William "Refrigerator" Perry of the home town Bears, who had become the biggest media star in football that year.

Chicago only drew 9,000 fans, the weakest turnout ever for a Mania event. Nassau was sold out, and Los Angeles was close. Hogan and Bundy had shot an angle where Bundy squashed and injured Hogan on a Saturday Night's Main Event. Hogan came back going for revenge beating Bundy with TV star Robert Conrad as referee in a less than ordinary match. It was not a Wrestlemania dream match, nor anything mainstream media cared about, but with a slew of celebrities, Mr. T and Perry, they show got plenty of ink again that wrestling would not normally get. It was more than worthwhile in the end, even though business was down about 20% from the first Mania. T, who knew the truth of his facade as the baldest man on the planet, was supposed to train under Joe Frazier to get in shape for his worked boxing match. Piper himself had boxed as a teenager and was known in wrestling for his hand speed, and considered a tough guy even though he was a relatively small heavyweight at the time. T wouldn't train, feeling that if word got out of people seeing him train that he had no boxing ability, or worse, that he was getting handled by boxers in training, his entire rep would be shot. Piper and T had two secret training sessions, and those who saw them knew well in advance the match would be a disaster, because T had no stamina with the gloves on. Worse, the public had almost done a 180 on him over the course of the previous year. Piper, who taunted him with racial remarks became the babyface, which forced the promotions' hand in turning him. As the new face, Piper got bigger face pops than Hogan, but Hogan still remained the big drawing card over the summer and fall. The Battle Royal showcased Andre, who was far bigger than Perry, and Andre went over. The visual of Andre in there with several big football players including genuine stars like limbo Covert, Bill Fralic, Russ Francis (who himself wrestled years earlier and came from a wrestling family) and Ernie Holmes (who had retired and who very briefly tried pro wrestling in Georgia a few years earlier) and towering over them made newspapers around the country. The Battle Royal was also notable as the forgotten only in-ring Wrestlemania appearance of Sammartino.

It was funny, because even though Hogan had become the biggest mainstream name in U.S. pro wrestling since at least Gorgeous George, and maybe farther back than that, McMahon always had the feeling he wasn't going to have a long shelf life. And he wasn't alone. The fear was more that Hogan's receding hair line, which made him look older than he was really, would inevitably hurt his drawing power. It got to the point where both Piper and heel announcer Jesse Ventura were told in no uncertain terms that various criticisms of Hogan were not allowed on television, and the biggest one was about his hairline.

The first person McMahon considered as Hogan's eventual replacement was a story with almost comical ironies. Stu Hart had just started training one of the most unique athletic specimens anyone had ever seen. If you could tailor make a wrestler, the guy would almost be the prototype. Tom Magee was about 6-5 and 275 pounds. He was less than an inch shorter than Hogan, with movie star looks, had a competition bodybuilder physique that was even more impressive than Hogan's. He was nine years younger, just 24, but already had a versatile athletic resume like few in history. He was a World's Strongest Man contest winner. He had already won the Canadian national powerlifting championship four times in the superheavyweight division, with a 573 competition bench press and 860 squat and was a world champion in that sport and was among the strongest men in the world. Where he differed from other strongmen types is he wasn't nearly as heavy, and had a small waist with great muscular definition and proportions. He had won bodybuilding contests, and had a background in both boxing and gymnastics, as well as holt a black belt in karate. A movie had already been made about him called "Man Steel." He could do back flips in the ring, and land on his feet after taking a backdrop. His first pro match was a year earlier, a main event on a major All Japan show where he lost to Riki Choshu, a company where people in their first pro match aren't exactly considered for main events. Magee had many talking about him as the next big thing. He was the greatest combination of strength and agility the business had ever seen, and it was evident after only one pro match.

But as it turned out, there were a few "minor" flaws. He couldn't wrestle to save his life, although guys with great physiques were getting over in those days with minimal and in some cases no working ability. But worse, he had almost an amazing lack of charisma, and another even worse talent. The more he trained to wrestle, the worse he got. He also came off as almost effeminate in the ring, and his offense looked so horrible that fans trained to be marks for physiques wouldn't even get behind him. After three years in wrestling he had a match against an almost as untalented aging national sumo hero in Japan named Hiroshi Wajima that quickly became a classic as the measuring stick by which bad matches were judged.

But on October 6, 1986, those weaknesses weren't known. He was simply a green super athlete getting his first shot at the big time. McMahon brought Magee into Rochester, NY, for a television taping for a dark match try-out, figuring it was his first chance to see a future superstar live. The crowd saw this large, impressive looking unknown back flip into the ring on his ring entrance, and were immediately stunned. He was put in the ring with one of the company's solid mid-card heels who was expected to catty him, and kind of surprise people, when he beat the established star. The place went nuts, and the match blew away everything else on the show. The newcomer was far better than they hoped for, or thought possible. McMahon, watching the monitor, screamed loudly, so that everyone could hear, "That's my next champion." As he came through the curtain, McMahon and Pat Patterson fawned all over him. Everyone in the company was told about the guy who they had just signed up, who would be kept off television and working "C" team shows, always being put over, to gain experience for a megapush maybe a year down the line, and when the time w-right, the WWF title. They named him Tom "Megaman" Magee. McMahon Patterson were hardly the only ones fooled by the match. Bob Matthews, the sports columnist in the local newspaper in Rochester, who attended the show, also wrote that he had seen the most impressive newcomer he'd ever seen, and also pegged him as Hogan's inevitable replacement. As it turned out, they all had, in that match, seen Hogan's eventual replacement and the future WWF champion when McMahon decided Hogan's time was up. But it was the job guy who made one of the most untalented wrestlers to come along look like he was the second coming-Bret Hart. It was more than a year before McMahon and the rest of the company were able to figure out why Magee, who had looked so incredible, this giant doing Tiger Mask gymnastics, was having so many off nights in a row afterwards, and seemingly getting worse by the week.

But it may have subconsciously triggered something in McMahon. In May 1987, shortly after Wrestlemania III, after McMahon recognized Magee as a failed experiment, another huge bodybuilder came knocking. Jim Hettwig had already gained notice in wrestling as having just about the best physique and least ability in a business that was being more and more populated by guys with good physiques and little ability. The 29-year-old former Mr. Georgia, who had placed in the top six in his weight a few years earlier in the Mr. America contest, had, in 18 months, been fired by both Jerry Jarrett and later Bill Watts, after both had tried to push him to little or no avail. He wound up in Texas, given the name Dingo Warrior, where he didn't have good matches nor did he seem to have a grasp of what the business was about, balking at the idea of putting people over who didn't have a physique comparable to his, which basically meant, nobody. He also was terrible on interviews, but he did get over as a babyface. He left after a pay dispute, and at about the same time he was contacted by officials of New Japan Pro Wrestling, the company that first made Hogan into a bonafide superstar and major draw.

In an attempt to copy McMahon's star making formula, they enlisted the country's most famous late night talk show host, their version of Johnny Carson (or by today's terms, Jay Leno), to manage a huge American monster-the biggest bodybuilder to ever step foot in Japan. Remember, this was coming on the heels of the success of the Road Warriors, who were huge in Japan even though they were not great wrestlers. He would be wearing a mask, and have a futuristic ring costume complete with a headgear that blew some sort of steam out of large horns. The character would be named Big Van Vader.

But before he was to go, he was given a WWF tryout. After seeing him in the ring, he got what would be considered today something equivalent to a developmental contract.

After Magee, nobody was proclaiming the latest big bodybuilder of the month as Hogan's replacement. Hellwig was just told he would be given regular work on "C" shows, and put on television when he was ready. While terrible in the ring, that audience reacted to good physiques provided there was a modicum of charisma to go with them. Hellwig had learned that much in Texas, and he was getting tremendous reactions on the "C" shows. Just before he was scheduled to leave for Japan and become the newest foreign superstar, he was brought to television quicker than expected, and renamed The Ultimate Warrior, which was actually a nickname Calgary wrestler Badnews Allen coined for himself, and had used for years. The crowd reacted so well to him that before long, he was the next man on the list of "the guy to eventually replace Hogan." He backed out of his Japan deal, and scrambling, Masa Saito found a much bigger, but fatter, equally green ex-football player who had just debuted in the AWA named Leon White to take the costume.

Following on the success of the show a year earlier in Charlotte, Crockett tried his most ambitious promotion yet, "the Great American Bash on tour." Rhodes peaked a number of angles, with the idea that Flair would defend the title 17 times against 17 different opponents (although actually the latter wasn't the case) throughout July and early August of 1986. They also booked country music star David Allan Coe to perform at all the stops, but while to Rhodes, the mixing of pro wrestling and country music made sense, it didn't to wrestling fans, who treated Coe's performance like it was a long intermission. They also jacked up ticket prices to levels that WWF had never taken them, with $50 ringside, in a day when $12 or $15 was the norm for a big show. The tour started out as a disaster on July I in Philadelphia at Veterans Memorial Stadium. Flair vs. Hawk drew a little over 10,000 paid to the huge stadium, although they did break the city's all-time gate record at more than $212,000. But in their attempts to use blood to win Philadelphia, they were doing juice in just about every match. Midway through the show, after more than a half-dozen wrestlers had sliced their forehead, a razor blade got lodged into the forehead of Wahoo McDaniel. Commissioner James J. Bins was repulsed, and decided to cancel the show. A panicked Rhodes and Crockett, fearing it would kill them in Philadelphia, as none of the biggest stars had even come out, begged him to let them continue. He let the show go, but ruled there would be no more blood . Not just on the show, but in Pennsylvania, as blading would cause their promoter's license to be revoked and cause the wrestler doing it to be suspended. Maryland soon followed suit, and Crockett's big advantage over the bloodless McMahon shows was gone. The tour had its hits and misses. They drew 23,000 fans in Charlotte with Flair vs. Ricky Morton at the stadium. With jacked up prices, Rhodes beating Flair for a two-week title run nearly sold out Greensboro and did $260,000. A match with Flair vs. Rhodes at RFK Stadium in Washington, DC did well under 10,000. A match with Road Warrior Animal was a disaster at Riverfront Stadium, doing about 5,000, and a cage match with Rhodes at Fulton County Stadium did 10,000-all numbers they could have put into an arena.

WWF only tried one stadium show that summer, and it changed what everyone perceived was possible for a big match to draw. Orndorff, who was one of Hogan's early victims and a top heel through Mania, had turned face and formed a tag team with Hogan. A former college football star at University of Tampa, who had an NFL tryout and also played in the old WFL, he was considered one of the best athletes and toughest guys in the business. More importantly, the 36-year-old Orndorff was considered one of the best performers in the business at the time, a hard working and aggressive heel. Naturally, in McMahon family tradition, when the champion starts working tag team matches, in most cases it is an obvious build for a turn. It was Hogan's most successful house show run of his career, and probably the most successful in company's history until the real golden period under Austin. Hogan and Orndorff set attendance and gate records in their first meetings almost everywhere in the late summer and fall of 1986.

Their most famous match was August 28, 1986 at Exhibition Stadium in Toronto. It was known ahead of time this was going to be a hot feud, and Toronto had in the past drawn more than 20,000 fans for stadium shows involving Flair and Harley Race over the NWA title, and this was expected to break that city's all-time mark. But the demand was at unheard of levels on the first day, leaving everyone stunned. When all was said and done, they sold out the stadium with 61,470 paid (about 64,100 in the building, but reported as 69,300) and a gate of $1.1 million Canadian, destroying every North American record by a huge margin. Few took the Hogan-Studd record from the previous year that seriously, as it was really a free show. But this was the real deal and it was something no event in pro wrestling history in North America had ever approached. They did DQ finishes in all the first meetings, in all but a handful of cases with Orndorff getting his hand raised to set up title can change hands via DQ rematches. Two notable exceptions were the Toronto stadium show, where Hogan won via DQ, and sort of in their first Detroit meeting where they sold out Joe Louis Arena with more than 18,000 fans. The crowd was so hot that night that an audible was called, as fearing a riot if they did what was planned, they decided to raise Hogan's hand via DQ. Since interviews had already been cut for the market based on the planned finish, later in the show, when announcing a return match on the next show, it was announced the decision from earlier had been changed and Orndorff was ruled the winner via DQ.

Because the feud was expected to be so hot, they changed the normal booking pattern of Hogan being a two or three time a year attraction in the major market cities, and decided to send him on two, and in most cases, three consecutive shows with Orndorff, with the third meeting being cage matches, where Hogan would decisively win.

The first meeting drew well everywhere, and sold out in many markets that Hogan had never sold out in before, and set pro wrestling attendance and gate records in numerous cities. It is largely forgotten that the second meetings were down 40 percent across the board, and even the climactic cage matches didn't do much better.

It was also in the middle of this program, with Orndorff, earning $20,000 a week, an unheard of number in wrestling in those days, that he suffered a similar neck injury as many of the recent WWE wrestlers. He was told by doctors that he needed surgery and should retire. He didn't walk away from this kind of money, and the nerve damage caused his arm to atrophy. He was never the same in the ring, and was forced to retire for several years. He did make a comeback and wrestled well into his late 40s, but was never anywhere close to the same level of a star or performer, and became almost known for his disproportionate physique with the weak side. Probably the most famous thing he did after this program, was in a WCW dressing room while working as a road agent and getting into a heated argument with Vader about getting ready for a promo. In the melee, he clocked nearly 400-pound Vader with his weak arm in a brawl, knocking the big man down, and putting the boots to him, When the feud ran its course at the arenas, which at the time were still the key moneymakers for the company besides Mania, it ended with the final cage match, that aired on the January 3,1987 Saturday Night Main Event. This was the original cage match tie finish in getting out and hitting the floor though the magic of post-production. causing them to re-start. Hogan won one of his longest matches of the era, lasting 15:00. The show broke the previous ratings record with a 10.6. The company now, officially, had the highest rated show in the history of television in that time slot.

Still, drawing that kind of a crowd in Toronto led to the most ambitious plan of all and what is generally considered the high point of Hogan's reign as champion, and some say McMahon's as promoter (although I would heavily dispute that), Wrestlemania III at the Pontiac Silverdome.

From 1974, when he first started touring around the world, until probably 1982, when Hogan caught fire in the AWA, the biggest attraction in wrestling was Andre the Giant He was the biggest man in the profession, with freakish proportions, because his hands and head due to acromegaly were far larger than even a normal giant. But by that time ,Andre, who due to his disease, aged much faster than a normal man, was old and crippled. He was 40 years old, and was in excess of 515 pounds on his 6-10 frame.

When McMahon went national, the days of Andre touring the different circuits was over, and he became a regular. He had a successful program with John Studd as a battle of the giants, but he knew his career was aver. In 1984 and 1985, he did what he considered his farewell matches as a main event attraction, when he put over Canek clean in Mexico City after a bodyslam and Antonio Inoki clean in Japan by submission with an armbar. He had done few jobs during the previous 16 years since arriving in Montreal after being discovered while wrestling in Europe and Japan. He hadn't done any clean ones in more than a decade and most fans generally believed he had been undefeated for his entire career, as he was always promoted. But his last program in the U.S. where he donned as mask as Giant Machine, teaming with Super Machine (Bill Eadie, later Demolition Ax), against Bundy& Studd, was probably the worst drawing main event feud since the company went national. He had back surgery and considered retirement Although he ended up living six years longer, there was fear he wasn't long for the world. While physically he couldn't do a thing because of his back problems, if he was going to do what he did for Canek and Inoki in North America, it was clear this had to be the year.

Andre went heel, managed by Heenan. The match was made in January. Andre was kept out of the ring until a Battle Royal, in Detroit on February 21, 1987. Hogan and Andre were in it, and they only did a spot or two to tease. Andre, totally immobile in the ring, went over in the Battle Royal. The show aired on March 14, 1987 in the Saturday Night Live time slot, and drew what is still the largest rating in television history in that time slot, an 11.6. It is a record that, due to the changes in television with so much more competition, will also probably never be broken.

Still, this Mania was very different from the first two. The first two were built around celebrities and mainstream media coverage. While time has blurred memories and because of the size of the live crowd, people think it got mainstream attention like never before, the opposite was the case. Wrestlemania III got very little mainstream attention except Hogan and Andre going on with long-time wrestling fan Regis Philbin (where co-host Kathy Lee Gifford, having seen both, noted they looked to be about the same height and Regis, freaked out because of Andre's supposed 7-foot-4 myth, and said nervously that Andre was eight inches taller). But it was much bigger than the previous two. It was built around a simple pro wrestling angle and match. Two unbeatable forces were facing off (Hogan himself had stopped doing joTbs when he left the WWF in early 1981 and the new generation of fans was never even aware he had a first WWF run). Fans simply couldn't perceive of either of them losing. There were no celebrities in the ring, or even managing at ringside. Almost nobody had seen Andre ever lose, and the WWF, which was rewriting history far more in those days, claimed not only that it never happened, but that the two had never wrestled before (even though they had feuded from Alabama to Japan to WWF to Toronto to the Superdome in New Orleans, the Omni in Atlanta and the Los Angeles Sports Arena from 1978 through 1981 in very high profile matches). In Detroit, which was the major market near Pontiac, Andre had lost in his early U.S. days to The Sheik, but the fans of those days were long gone by 1987 and it was a totally different game.



Submitted November 12, 2016 at 05:32PM by DorkChopDX http://ift.tt/2fZLxVZ TheDirtsheets

Sunday, February 21, 2016

(Part 4) Tyson-Austin segment highest rated Raw segment in history, Wrestlemania press conference announces Tyson role in front of reporters from 27 countries. Wrestling Oberserver [Feb 09, 24 1998] TheDirtsheets

By Dave Meltzer Feb 09 1998

For 1/19, Monday Night Raw drew its largest rating since the Monday night wars began, doing a 4.00 rating (3.78 first hour; 4.23 second hour) and 6.04 share, peaking with a 4.7 rating (3,381,000 homes) for the final 15 minutes when Tyson and Austin, who had both been held off appearing except in teases up to that point, had their confrontation. Still, that figure wasn't enough to beat Nitro, which registered a 4.44 rating (4.95 first hour; 4.04 second hour) and 6.63 share. Nitro peaked before Raw got on the air drawing a 5.2 rating (Steiners vs. Bagwell & Konnan) from 8:45 to 9 p.m. The largest total audience watching American wrestling at one point in the history of Monday night wars and since WWF lost NBC was from 10-10:15 p.m. when WCW had the Hogan vs. Giant match do a 4.7 (3,413,000 homes) and WWF countered with DX roasting weenies getting a 4.1 rating (2,934,000 homes) or a combined 6,347,000 homes watching wrestling during that time period. In the 79 minutes the two shows went head-to-head, Nitro drew a 4.04 to Raw's 3.84, a very close margin, including having the advantage for the first 15 minutes head to head by a 4.1 to 3.5 margin which no doubt was over the curiosity revolving around Tyson. However, the second quarter saw WCW ahead 3.8 to 3.6 and it remained ahead the rest of the head-to-head slot. In addition, the WCW Nitro replay came just shy of its all-time record doing a 2.26 rating and 4.57 share.

While Tyson proved, in his WWF television debut when his novelty and curiosity value would be the highest, to be worth about .5 to the total rating, even the novelty of Tyson wasn't enough for Raw to beat Nitro. The truth was, that the Hogan vs. Giant singles match which went opposed by Raw had more viewers than the Tyson-Austin angle despite that going unopposed with Nitro already off the air. But both companies probably could make a strong case for being thrilled with the 1/19 numbers, WWF because they did show a strong increase and had their largest audience since the summer of 1995 and largest ever in a competitive situation on cable; WCW because even with Tyson on the other show, they still drew more viewers and drew a great rating both for the live show and the replay, prompting one WCW exec to say that if WWF couldn't win on that night, they'd never be able to win.

One side shouldn't have been happy on 1/26. The WWF. Coming off a week world wide publicity the likes of which the federation hasn't received in more than a decade and when it left the air with a cliffhanger of Tyson challenging Austin following what will go down as an all-time classic angle, its rating fell to a 3.48 rating (3.50 first hour; 3.45 second hour) and 5.25 share, a very good number on the surface, but actually lower than it did the week before the Tyson angle took place. This showed that all the publicity and the angle itself actually meant little or nothing when it comes to increasing mainstream curiosity in their product for more than a few days. This isn't to say the angle is dead or worthless or won't draw money at the end or anything of the sort, but it did not result in any increase in mainstream curiosity about seeing where the angle was going after a cliffhanger end of the show, let alone in the World Wrestling Federation seven days later. Nitro, increased to its now permanent three hour length, drew a record for an opposed time slot despite having its worst show of the new year, with a 4.66 rating (4.90 first hour; 4.83 second hour; 4.25 third hour) and a 6.88 share. The Nitro replay, moved back to a 1 a.m. to 4 a.m. time slot after the movie "Police Woman Centerfold," did an 0.8 rating and 3.5 share. The head-to-head two hours were 4.54 to 3.48, the first ever combined audience for a two-hour period to top an 8.0.

Individual quarters were 4.2 (Bloom vs. Neidhart, Guerrero Jr. vs. Psicosis) to 3.9 (Shamrock vs. Henry); 4.7 (Spicolli vs. Guerrera + NWO soap w/Savage) to 3.5 (LOD vs. Jarrett & Windham); 5.3 (NWO soap interview w/Savage) to 3.3 (DX interview) or the peak total audience period; 5.1 (Raven vs. Mortis; Wrath vs. Page) to 3.3 (Vader vs. Goldust and Kane angle); 4.2 (Bret Hart interview + Nitro party clips) to 3.8 (Funk & Cactus vs. Outlaws and Pantera vs. Christopher); 4.6 (Booker T vs. Saturn and Jericho interview) to 3.2 (Angle with DX - Funk & Cactus, Bangers vs. Quebecers); 4.3 (McMichael vs. Bulldog and Nash vs. Traylor) to 3.3 (Owen vs. Goldust) and 3.9 (Hall vs. Luger and typical Sting/Hogan finish) to 3.5 (Don King and Austin interviews).


By Dave Meltzer Feb 23 1998 So now that we have the answer to the big question on Mike Tyson, it brings up the next question.

Tyson's role, as announced by Vince McMahon at the beginning of a press conference at the Official All-Star Cafe in Manhattan on 2/5, would be as an outside the ring "enforcer," a second referee of sorts, for the Shawn Michaels vs. Steve Austin main event at Wrestlemania on 3/29 in Boston's Fleet Center.

The press conference was widely attended with some 27 television cameras and more than 100 reporters attending from all over the world, the timing of which was fortuitous for the WWF stemming from mainstream media reports nationwide coming the two days leading to the press conference of an apparent Mike Tyson-Don King business split over (what else?) King taking so much of Tyson's money and leaving him near broke with a $7 million income tax bill to pay, and this was Tyson's first public appearance since the news broke.

The press conference made virtually every major newspaper in the country, although most of the stories didn't focus much on pro wrestling other than the obligatory "just how far Tyson has fallen" comments and negative comments toward the wrestling industry and more on what the evil King did to a stupid Tyson once again. But the name "Wrestlemania" and the date did make a lot of mainstream press that under normal circumstances would never mention it, even if the mentions were virtually all with an unmistakably sarcastic smirk. The WWF got almost no positive press out of this aside from a Bob Raissman column in the New York Daily News headlined "Vince revels as King for a day." The story proclaimed McMahon as the big winner saying he's already gotten full return on his investment because signing Tyson has put the spotlight in wrestling back on the WWF from the WCW and the crossover publicity will bring new fans to their television sets and new fans to his arenas. Raissman at least understood the big picture as it related to wrestling, but the majority of coverage, besides the smirking talking heads on television, were proclaiming Tyson as one of the new Three Stooges, a phrase the WWF must have been particularly sensitive about since the New York Times three stooges headline actually aired on Raw on 2/9, however the word "stooges" was whitewashed out of the clipping. Presumably the other two stooges were Michaels and Austin, and not McMahon and King, who were knocked with lines like being either hair extensioned or steroid bloated phonies. There were the expected stories talking about how Tyson was sinking to a new low, actually quite similar to the news stories three years ago when Lawrence Taylor worked Wrestlemania. It's really quite shallow anyone saying or thinking that to believe doing a pro wrestling gig was lower than biting Evander's ear twice, being a street thug, an alleged wife beater or a convicted rapist. ESPN tuned out of the press conference within seconds realizing it was mainly a pro wrestling hype job. Others, like FoxSports and CNN-SI gave it coverage throughout the day, with wrestling mentioned as an afterthought to the King/Tyson split as the "real" story. As bad as pro wrestling can be and often is, its horror stories pale in comparison to those in the so-called sweet science where Tyson has been one of the few lucky ones to at least make large chunks of money on the way to every charismatic boxing champion's ultimate destination, being a special referee for pro wrestling, putting over a Japanese wrestler in a mixed match or sticking around longer than Giant Baba and either doing commercials for Meineke or showing up on Tuesday Night Fights against nobodies. The company reasonably couldn't and didn't expect a lot of positive press since the story combines pro wrestling, Don King, Mike Tyson and Vince McMahon. But the feeling is that Tyson's involvement would create a major awareness to the WWF and to the Wrestlemania show, which it has.

But for most wrestling fans, the announcement of Tyson as nothing more than an outside the ring sort-of ref was a huge letdown after the hype and the Fresno angle. TCI Cable, which last week had actually threatened not to carry Wrestlemania if Tyson's role would in any way adversely affect his boxing re-instatement, has agreed to carry the show now that Tyson's role was defined.

Despite speculation to the contrary, and even statements by McMahon at the press conference hinting otherwise, this role had been the plan from the start according to several who had been appraised of the conclusion of the story from the start. It appears that the belief originally was that they would tease an Austin vs. Tyson match after doing the angle in Fresno to gain tons of mainstream attention, which did work on a world-wide basis probably even greater than their most optimistic expectations. Then, to show deference to the Nevada State Athletic Commission and perhaps ease his transition back into boxing by showing that deference, use that as the excuse to only use Tyson in the outside the ring ref role (the reason he's not the ref inside the ring is so he doesn't get in the way of Michaels and Austin's spots due to inexperience). When the commission didn't come down hard on Tyson being a participant in the match in the first place and become the so-called heels to the wrestling fans in the story, a major piece of the storyline puzzle was thrown for a loop, and from a storyline standpoint, there was no explanation even attempted by the WWF as to why both Tyson and Austin wanted the match, that there was no reason given not to have it, but that Tyson was only going to wind up as an outside the ring referee. There had been recent discussions between McMahon and the Nevada State Athletic Commission regarding this storyline "snafu" but the commission wasn't willing to "play along" to that degree and be the so-called bad guys in this story. There was never any consideration given to Tyson being a participant in a match with Austin at Wrestlemania or even a tag team match, even under very controlled circumstances, let alone whatever else had been speculated here and elsewhere over the past few weeks.

No matter. From a wrestling standpoint the next question is: Will it all be worth it since the drawing power of Tyson as an outside the ring ref won't exactly be the same as Tyson being a participant?

Much of the New York media, which had been covering the story far closer than any other media in the country due to its long-term fascination with Tyson, had reported Tyson as receiving $3.5 million for the gig. At the press conference, Tyson claimed that figure was low, and the figure listed since that time has been $4 million. It is well known that Don King received $300,000 for the rights to Tyson's likeness, a fee which was said to have been the catalyst for the Tyson-King attempted split, and King was also paid by McMahon for helping promote the match and appearing on Raw. WWF sources claim that despite what Tyson said at the press conference, the $3.5 million figure is higher than the real number and that the company doesn't need a 2.0 buy rate to make a profit on the show. When WCW made attempts to sign Tyson, the total cost of everything which included a lot of paying off a lot of people, would wind up supposedly being $6 million for the deal, a figure they felt wasn't economically feasible and why they quickly chose to pass on the deal. The printed figures for celebrities at Wrestlemania have in the past been greatly inflated. William "Refrigerator" Perry was reported everywhere as getting $350,000 when the real figure was $135,000. Lawrence Taylor didn't receive the reported $1 million. And even Muhammad Ali, whose match with Antonio Inoki was back in the news due to Tyson, was reported in the New York media this past week as having received $6 million to do that 1976 match when he really received $1.8 million, although in his case he was really supposed to get $6 million for doing the job that he didn't do. One of the oldest tricks in boxing promoters dealing with boxers when it comes to big numbers is to give them a big hunk of cash up front immediately, which they understand and deal with from their upbringing in lieu of the check or in lieu delaying the payments for the promised amount of money which is why the boxers in most cases never get anywhere near the purses you read about them getting in the newspaper and why such a high percentage of them wind up broke. As it turns out, unlike McMahon, Ted Turner probably wouldn't have been thrilled with this kind of negative publicity for his wrestling company and even if WCW had agreed to terms with Tyson, there is no guarantee the higher-ups at Turner or Time-Warner wouldn't have nixed it due to the media reaction it was going to receive. Last year, when WWF planned on using Dennis Rodman as their major celebrity, WCW outbid WWF for his services and got a lot of media attention for the company in doing so. Nevertheless, the attention WCW got with Rodman will and already has paled in comparison. Since Tyson's name was brought up on Raw, WCW first attempted to use Oscar de la Hoya as a referee, but de la Hoya's people nixed that deal because they felt it would hurt his image being involved with pro wrestling. WCW also opened negotiations in a later virtually unpublicized effort that didn't come to fruition involved attempting to get Evander Holyfield to referee the Hogan-Sting Cow Palace match.

To answer the next question itself is complicated. First off, WWF has decided to raise the Wrestlemania price from $29.95 to $34.95, which only slightly changes the economics from the last time we looked at it. One has to figure Tyson was already worth $750,000 to the WWF just for his part in the Royal Rumble buy rate. How much he's worth to the company when it comes to whatever, if any, TV ratings increase he's responsible for is hard to ascertain. How much he's worth to the company in the long run for raising the visibility of the company's top star, Austin, is also hard to ascertain, and for raising the visibility of Michaels, as he'll no doubt do since there are more angles planned in this story leading up to the match. More people are attending WWF house shows, but more people are also attending WCW, ECW and independent house shows as well, and Tyson's involvement in pro wrestling has nothing to do with that. More people are watching wrestling on television as WWF ratings are up, but WCW is still winning the ratings battles by about the same margin as before this angle came about. Still, if we take the package as being $4 million, which may be a low figure for the total overall cost, and take off $750,000 for what he helped draw already at the Rumble, while they can turn a profit on less than a 2.0 buy rate, they still need no less than a 2.0 buy rate (567,000 buys) to make it worth while on the show itself, going under the impression that without Tyson's involvement that Michaels and Austin under the current boom economic conditions in wrestling were going to do a 1.2 on their own, and that may be a conservative assessment. Wrestlemanias have done figures in that range and quite a bit better in the past, although not in the last few years.

From a standpoint of the buy rates on the two PPV shows that Rodman did with WCW last year and how much he was paid ($750,000 per shot), it was really almost a wash, and generally speaking, the Lawrence Taylor angle was considered at the time a PPV flop even though both Rodman and Taylor in the ring did better than anyone had the right to expect from people going so long in their first professional match. Even with all the media pub, WCW with Rodman didn't do the buy rates (approximately 0.89 on both shows he worked) that the Hogan-Piper cage match did, it did maybe half of Hogan-Sting and for that matter, was actually less than even the recent Flair-Hart, and Rodman was a participant in a match on the second of the two shows, both of which got a ton of mainstream hype going in. Taylor's match with Bigelow in 1995's Wrestlemania, which was an excellent overall hype job going in and he was a participant in the main event, drew an estimated 1.4 buy rate. Of course, Tyson's name is bigger than either Rodman or Taylor's, even more so on an international basis, and Bigelow just didn't get over to the mainstream like at least Austin has the potential of doing, and certainly wasn't over to the wrestling audience anywhere close to where Austin or Michaels are today. Would WCW, turning back the clock one year, make the deal again? I'd guarantee the answer is yes, for the visibility it gave the company and ego gratification of those involved of being perceived as a big time business player and the fact that Rodman's first appearance last March, also in an out of the ring role, led to WCW's Uncensored beating out last year's Wrestlemania, which came one week later, when it came to PPV buys. And the huge increase in interest in WCW over the past year, while it can't be all or even majorly attributed to the fact Rodman was involved in two PPV shows and one Nitro, he was responsible for at least a small part in the company's overall growth last year.

According to an article by Wallace Matthews in the 2/4 New York Post, Tyson owes the government $7 million in taxes and is down to either $150,000 or $4 million in liquid assets which would mean that Wrestlemania payoff would come in handy, although it's 90 to 120 days after the event before he'll be getting whatever the money is that he's really getting. Tyson at the press conference naturally denied having any financial problems saying he has more money than anyone could ever spend, and claiming it could take him one year to earn $200 million. The truth of Tyson's money woes appear to have been exaggerated as between his three homes, his cars and trust funds for his wife and kids, his worth was estimated at between $70 million and $150 million.

King, who was originally scheduled to appear at the Wrestlemania press conference before his falling out with Tyson, was said to have been confronted by Tyson after Tyson's wife got information from the WWF that the WWF had paid King $300,000 for his likeness, which Tyson believed he himself owned. The Post story claimed that Tyson slapped and kicked King and banged him up pretty good in a confrontation outside the Hotel Bel Air in Los Angeles on 1/31, which Tyson sort of denied at the press conference saying "I would never strike anyone outside the paid profession. I won't even make a fist if they don't pay me." Reports indicated King paid the money back to Tyson, but that Tyson would rid himself of King and his co-managers, John Horne and Rory Holloway. At the press conference, McMahon told reporters that they were there to talk about Wrestlemania, not about Tyson's personal life, although virtually nobody was there to talk about wrestling. The press conference was almost taken over by Stuttering John Melendez of the Howard Stern show asking questions like, "What does an ear taste like?" and "Are you the first convicted rapist to appear in Wrestlemania?" At other points McMahon acted indignant when it became obvious the feeling in the room was that doing pro wrestling was beneath Tyson.

The actual figures for the sold out live house at the Fleet Center are 15,516 tickets, of which 14,758 were paid (they really limited comps this year as usually they have thousands of them since that's when they invite a lot of guests plus do a lot of media trades and the like) for a gate of $943,145, the latter figure naturally being an all-time record for Boston and the largest gate for U.S. pro wrestling in four years (since the 1994 Wrestlemania at Madison Square Garden, and when all is said and done this figure may end up topping that $960,000 figure). Mania will probably be an eight-match card with nothing that could be considered a surprise match-up based on the current storylines. The line-up itself isn't officially finalized but obviously Undertaker vs. Kane is the semifinal and you can easily figure what most of the matches are going to end up being based on current television with only one or two preliminary exceptions that aren't finalized but that also would not be considered major by any definition. The show will consist of mostly matches to climax the feuds that are going around the horn currently and the show itself will set up new feuds, rather than having a feud started in the next few weeks for Mania or having anyone not currently in the television storylines appearing in a participant role (with probably one exception in a preliminary role). The originally scheduled match between Marc Mero and pro boxer Eric "Butterbean" Esch with Butterbean "competing" as a pro wrestler has been postponed until a later PPV. The feeling is that with Tyson on the show, it makes no sense to use Butterbean. In real life, or at least as real life as the world of boxing is, there is also bad blood between the two. In addition, the working idea is to put on a good-to-great series of different style matches so that if Tyson brings some new curious people to the table, the WWF will be able to impress and entertain them and make new fans out of them. Michaels is being kept out of the ring to heal up and perform a match to impress whatever non-wrestling fans tune into the show, combined with Austin being in by far the biggest match of his life. The feeling is that if the two have a super match, and that Tyson gets maybe two or three spots in to make newscasts and the final spot to get a big pop, that all masters will be served. Obviously Mero vs. Butterbean wasn't going to be a good match and the feeling is it would be better saved for a different show. WWF is attempting to contact, through the William Morris Agency, a list of sleazy celebrities to appear on the show although the only name we know of that has confirmed at this point is Pete Rose and his role in the show hasn't been decided.

While Tyson's role in Mania is not expected to change, he is expected to be involved in one or possibly two more major angles that WWF is hoping to garner strong mainstream media attention out of, most likely taking place on live Raw shows on 3/2 in Cleveland and 3/16 in Phoenix, no doubt at least one involving Shawn Michaels and DX. WWF is also hopeful of Tyson appearing on the Raw shows taped on 3/3 in Wheeling, WV and 3/17 in Tucson, AZ. Tyson wasn't expected at press time to appear in Houston for the PPV on 2/15, and the decision was made not to use him at the Raw taping on 2/16 in Dallas because that show won't air until five days later and thus if they shot an angle, they'd either have to release the tape to the media before it airs, which USA network wouldn't like and would "expose" their Saturday Raw show as having been taped, or get little media play out of the angle because by the time it airs it would be five days old. From what we believe, there is no definite commitment by Tyson to the WWF after Mania, but that whatever is to happen at Mania will probably be an open-ended story allowing Tyson one more PPV appearance. Tyson's people for obvious reasons are very protective of his "baddest man on the planet" image that they want to use for merchandising and a phrase the WWF is repeating often on its television, and the WWF isn't allowed to do anything in its storyline to jeopardize that image, nor would the company do anything in its storyline to jeopardize the perception of Austin as the baddest man on their planet. A return appearance would all depend upon how well the angle at Mania comes off and how the buy rate comes in as to whether it would be worth everyone's while to bring him back since the cost would be considerable and the novelty may be gone by that point. WCW still has one more match with Rodman under contract and the feeling is at this point the novelty is gone and it would be hard to justify the price tag. Once Tyson returns to boxing (his re-instatement hearing is on 7/5), that would almost definitely spell the end of his involvement with the WWF. The WWF has three PPV shows, 4/26 in Greensboro, 5/31 in Milwaukee and 6/28 in Pittsburgh (King of the Ring) between Mania and Tyson's hearing, the latter would be the most likely to be the one if there would be a return appearance.

Michaels himself is going to be kept out of the ring until WM with the exception of the PPV match in Houston to avoid the possibility of aggravating one of his existing injuries, but will appear at all the television tapings and the plan at this point is for him to appear at a few arena shows, such as 3/22 Madison Square Garden, in Hunter Hearst Helmsley's corner for main events against Austin as they will be doing a storyline of Helmsley and DX attempting to injure Austin before the Mania match. Michaels repeated his line at the press conference about "not laying down for anyone," which should guarantee that he's begrudgingly going to put Austin over in the title match.

The Tyson-King split may not be as easy as has been indicated since King has Tyson under contract for four more fights. The Post story indicated Tyson might use documentation over his financial situation as leverage to get out of the deal since King himself has a re-trial scheduled for next month on mail fraud charges.

During the press conference, both Michaels and Austin made statements that basically challenged Tyson with Tyson, used to this sort of situation from boxing press conferences, not backing down. Michaels said that if Tyson got in his way he'd be glad to kick his teeth out while Austin said he'd put on the gloves and beat the hell out of Tyson and still hinted about a possible future confrontation, while many in the media smirked about the idea a fake wrestler could really win a fight against a ferocious warrior (even though, much to the chagrin of many of the reporters in attendance, the odds are great that at least one if not more of the current WWF stable would have to be favored in a legitimate confrontation with Tyson although Michaels certainly wouldn't be on that list). It built to Michaels and Austin challenging each other and looking as if they wanted to go at it, with Tyson and Shane McMahon (who is said to now be a close confidante of Tyson's) holding them apart. As this was going on, because Tyson had his back to the multitude of TV cameras during the key scene of the show, Vince McMahon screamed, "Ring the f---in bell," (whoops, wrong story). Actually he screamed, "Turn around, Mike."



Submitted February 21, 2016 at 10:55PM by GermanoMuricano117 http://ift.tt/1UgcLTM TheDirtsheets

Sunday, March 1, 2015

WWF Sign Mike Tyson to Referee Hogan/Savage on SNME/AJPW-NJPW to Work Joint Show (February 1, 1990 WON) TheDirtsheets


Titan Sports has signed World heavyweight pro boxing champion Mike Tyson to referee the Hulk Hogan vs. Randy Savage match on the NBC special on 2/23 eminating from Joe Louis Arena in Detroit. The official announcement was made at a press conference on Thursday (1/25) afternoon where Hogan and Gene Okerlund appeared and Okerlund read a "telegram just in" from Tyson, who is training in Tokyo for his fight in a couple of weeks at the Egg Dome. In the telegram, Tyson was quoted as saying how he's not afraid of either Hogan or Savage (should he be?). Hogan made several hints to spread rumors for a forthcoming confrontation with Tyson. No monetary figures have even been speculated on as to the cost of landing Tyson, which is a tremendous coup for Titan.


The biggest celebrity payoff Titan has done thus far was when William "Refrigerator" Perry worked a Battle Royal at Wrestlemania II for $150,000 (a figure exagerrated as around three times that much in the press). Being that Tyson is in an entirely different financial league, well above Perry (as hot as Perry was as a marketing commodity in 1986, he probably earned less money from his entire celebrity run the Tyson does in two fights), one would think the cost would be even higher. Since Titan chose to use Tyson on a free NBC special, rather than Wrestlemania, opens up more speculation. While things are being kept mum about Wrestlemania plans, I've got it on pretty good authority that Tyson won't be part of the show. Still, the prospective gross revenue that a Hogan vs. Tyson match, worked or otherwise, would generate is astronomical. It is far more than Tyson could generate against any of today's heavyweight boxers and certainly McMahon could never market an opponent to the extent that he could draw with Hogan the kind of money that Tyson would for so many reasons you can't list them all. It is the kind of a match that could do a 10 to 15 percent buy rate at $40 a pop, which by the spring of 1991, if the PPV universe is at 20 million, as it is expected to be, you are talking about a PPV gate of $80 million plus and that doesn't include a live gate which would no doubt be $5 to $10 million and at least double that on closed-circuit. The biggest hold-up to such a confrontation, and you know that is the single biggest event PPV could get until the days of Super Bowls and the like moving to PPV, is what do you do once you've got the match done? If the match is worked, like pro wrestling, Tyson will destroy his reputation. If it isn't, most likely Hogan will have his reputation destroyed within a minute or two (even though Hogan has told friends he thinks he could beat Tyson, realistically inside of a ring, it's doubtful he'd last past one good punch nor would he have the stamina to go past a round or two even without holding gloves up but his legs would give out and he'd be a sitting duck). Even if it is worked, aside from the fact it would be awful, unless it was heavily rehearsed (and it would still be bad then) and they couldn't possibly keep those rehearsals secret like they did with Mr. T and Piper (who rehearsed over and over and still had the worst fiasco ever), what do you do about a finish? First off, Tyson won't play heel because the boxing people are working hard to manipulate his image to being a face. Hogan won't be a heel, of course. Neither guy will do a job. Hogan can't go 15 rounds, even in a fake fight. The only finish I can come up with, which would be universally called a fiasco but it's the only logical way out, would be for then to run-in several heels who are great bump-takers (Hennig, DiBiase and Savage for example) and have the two guys team together to run them off and have Tyson throw KO punches and have the heels take the bumps of their lives and finish with no decision and have them pose together at the end. Still, having said all that, $100 million is an awful lot of money to work out compromises for. Realistically, that is so much money that Hogan could even put the guy over, get his mega-payday, and just disappear from wrestling and the spotlight. But McMahon would still be in a situation where boxing beat wrestling, which means nothing, but he wouldn't agree to it. The last time an attempt to do something on this magnitude was in 1976 when Muhammad Ali, who was heavyweight boxing champ at the time, faced Antonio Inoki in Tokyo. That match was supposed to be worked all along, at least in Inoki's eyes. Ali wouldn't do the finish and they nearly called the thing off at the last minute, but so much money was at stake that they decided to go ahead with it. They continued to try and work on a finish (and apparently All was willing to do a worked match, but not do the job) February 1, 1990 up until just a few minutes before match-time and never worked things out. The result was a real mixed match, in which almost no contact was made between the two of them because Inoki layed on his back and tried to throw kicks to Ali's legs to knock him off his feet where he theoretically could pounce on him and off his feet he could maneuver him into a pin. All simply stayed away from Inoki and threw something like six punches over 15 rounds. The event was universally considered a bomb, did bad business in the U.S. on closed-circuit even with Ali's name because the boxing public thought it would be fixed and didn't care and didn't take it seriously, and wrestling didn't have the popularity with the masses it has today to generate the neccessary interest, and Inoki had no name value in the U.S. Actually, the only place the show did good business was in the Northeast, and most credit that more to a Bruno Sammartino vs. Stan Hansen grudge match than to Ali vs. Inoki or Andre the Giant vs. boxer Chuck Wepner (a worked match which appeared on the undercard). The show did awesome business in Japan where Inoki was already a legend and Ali of course was on a global level probably the most famous athlete in the world. However the Japanese rioted after the match and it took years before the wrestling business fully recovered from the fiasco in Japan.


I don't know of any other heavyweight boxing champ who worked a wrestling match while champion, although many, like Archie Moore, Joe Louis, Jack Dempsey, Primo Carnera (who was a top drawing wrestler for many years after his boxing career ended, even though his ability would be comparable to today's Andre the Giant) worked matches after boxing title reigns and nearly every ex-champ has refereed wrestling somewhere along the way. I forgot Joe Frazier, who refereed a few times, was involved with Wrestlemania II, and worked a few mixed matches in Puerto Rico (and put over the wrestler in the process).


The complete card for the Detroit show underneath Hogan vs. Savage will be Anabolic Warrior vs. Dino Bravo for the Intercontinental title, Jake Roberts vs. Ted DiBiase, Roddy Piper vs. Rick Rude in a lumberjack match, Andre the Giant 6 Haku defend the WWF tag team titles against Demolition, Rick Martel vs. Brutus Beefcake, Dusty Rhodes vs. Mr. Perfect (Curt Hennig), Jimmy Snuka vs. Badnews Brown, Ron Garvin vs. Canadian Earthquake (John Tenta). The press conference didn't mention this was an NBC special, but instead talked of it like it was simply a live card for Detroit. When the question of NBC was brought up, the folks at Titan changed the subject without answering. I'm told this was because they don't want to announce the show as a live special locally until the building is sold out. Some Titan folks were talking that this would be a Maeda-like one-day sellout, but as it turned out, only the first four or five rows of ringside were sold by the time the box offices closed on Thursday (the day tickets went on sale) although a big run was expected on Friday when it would be more well-known about Tyson's involvement. Only two of the matches will be on NBC, most likely Hogan vs. Savage and Warrior vs. Bravo and some sort of angle has to be run to set up the Hogan vs. Warrior match at Wrestlemania


This whole thing is one of the biggest coups McMahon has pulled off as a promoter. One would think, coming off the relatively weak prime time ratings of the 1989 special, that he was on the hot seat with NBC when it comes to delivering competitive prime time network numbers this time or he wouldn't get a special next year to promote Wrestlemania. With Tyson, competitive ratings are guaranteed and they may even have strong ratings. With Tyson, they will get curiosity viewers from people who aren't even wrestling fans, and not even boxing fans, either. They will get mainstream outside media publicity. And they will most likely have the largest audience ever to watch pro wrestling in the United States right there when they shoot their big angle of the year.


The timing of all this isn't good for the NWA, which has its PPV card two nights later in Greensboro. While the shows aren't head-to-head-in which a viewer has to decide upon one and not the other, and the WWF show being free, in a tight budget the events aren't competition with one another, but where it hurts the NWA badly is the show that every wrestling fan is going to be talking about and thinking about in February is the WWF show. The NWA will still get its hardcores and probably put on a good show to boot, but it will be impossible no matter how hot the angles coming up at the Clash turn out to be to gain measurable new fan interest and strong interest from the casual viewer. The Greensboro line-up is strong, at press time with Ric Flair vs. Sting for the NWA title, Lex Luger vs. Steve Williams for the U.S. title, Steiners vs. Ole & Arn Anderson for the NWA tag team title (there was a lot of talk that Tully Blanchard would take Ole's place in this match and that Ric Flair wanted to debut Blanchard at this show but it appears management is still against Blanchard being hired), Road Warriors vs. Skyscrapers in a street fight, Tom Zenk & Brian Pillman vs. Freebirds (my own guess is that this will be a U.S. tag team title match), Midnight Express vs. Rock & Roll Express, Cactus Jack Manson vs. Norman and Buzz Sawyer & Great Muta vs. Dynamic Dudes. Overall it's a strong wrestling line-up, and the scenarios leading up to everything may be interesting as well, but the timing is going to make it hard for the NWA to gain any ground in February.


The Tyson signing knocks what would have been the biggest story thus far this year off the from page. For the first time in more than a decade, All Japan and New Japan will be working together to promote a card. These developments all took place in the last week and were finalized on Wednesday. Ironically, it was the NWA that brought the two sides together and will feature the best from both of the traditional style wrestling groups on the 2/10 card at the Tokyo Egg Dome. Originally, one of the feature matches at the Egg Dome was to be Ric Flair vs. Great Muta for the NWA title. Last week that match, which had been pushed in Japan for months, fell apart. Flair canceled the booking (which is not the first time Flair has canceled a Japanese tour at the last minute), with the given reason being that TBS was going to dock him one week's pay if he went to Japan for the show. Flair was to earn $15,000 for the Egg Dome match, but one week's pay for Flair is very close to that figure so as a business decision, he really wouldn't have come out much ahead by making the trip. In addition, the NWA is going to tape two or three sets of tapings during the five day period Flair would be gone, which would be the tapings one week before the PPV and Flair himself wanted to be there as booker to oversee and also to get everything neccessary accomplished in getting over his match with Sting. Another reason given is the Japan-phobia that many letters write and joke about in the NWA is no work, there was indeed a paranoia of a double-cross (although with Muta, who is an NWA wrestler, I'd be a whole lot less worried about that possibility) since New Japan did do that in 1979 with Bob Backlund when he was WWF champion. Anyway, with Flair canceling, this threw New Japan into a panic. While the debut of Koji Kitao was probably the biggest reason ticket sales were going well for the show, the most prestigious wrestler and most important acquisition to the New Japan line-up was considered to be Flair, who was considered the second most important person on the card and that match was considered the most important match. While tickets were not going at anywhere near a UWF pace, all the $350 ringside seats had been sold out by Jan. 1. This left New Japan with a huge advance for a main event that wasn't going to take place and put them in a major bind. New Japan President Seiji Sakaguchi opened up talks once again with All Japan's Giant Baba, who originally had said he wasn't going to help the opposition. With Sakaguchi desperate to pull a major promotional coup of his own, it put Baba in the stronger bargaining position and on Wednesday, an entirely new card was announced, featuring Genichiro Tenryu, Toshiaki Kawada, Stan Hansen, Jumbo Tsuruta and Yoshiaki Yatsu. The new Tokyo Dome line-up features Big Van Vader (Leon White) defending the IWGP World title against Hansen (which pits the biggest foreign draw of each promotion against one another), Larry Zbyszko defending the AWA title against Masa Saito (originally this was to be against Tatsumi Fujinami, however Fujinami's back still hasn't recovered and it's becoming more and more likely Fujinami won't be able to return to the ring Antonio Inoki & Seiji Sakaguchi come out of retirement against Masa Chono & Shinya Hashimoto (the two young New Japan stars who are actually in the middle of the group's biggest feud but team up against the two retired guys), Kitao vs. Bam Ham Bigelow, Riki Choshu & Kuniaki Kobayashi vs. Tenryu & Kawada, Tsuruta & Yatsu vs. Kengo Kimura & Osamu Kido, Steve Williams (who will be the only NWA wrestler to appear on the card as Sakaguchi decided it would be no value in bringing Muta in against any opponent besides Flair or Sting and they couldn't get Sting for the card either) vs. Salman Hashimikov, Naoki Sano defending the jr. heavyweight title against the current tournament winner (probably Jushin Riger) plus prelims. It has been widely speculated that the AWA title will change hands here. When Fujinami was the challenger, I pretty well expected that to be the case since if Fujinami couldn't beat Zbyszko (who isn't respected as a big name by the Japanese) than it would hurt him, however Saito, who isn't being pushed much in Japan anymore because of his age, can fail to beat Zbyszko and it's no big deal. I also don't see why New Japan would buy the AWA title from Verne Gagne and put it on a guy like Saito who they have no plans to push anymore instead of a guy like Hashimoto.







Submitted March 01, 2015 at 10:34PM by DorkChopDX http://ift.tt/1ArYEwq TheDirtsheets