THIS DAY IN HISTORY: A MATCH WITH A HUNDRED YEAR AGE DIFFERENCE TAKES PLACE, GOLDBERG WINS HIS LAST WORLD TITLE, GLOBAL SHUTS DOWN AND MORE
By Buck Woodward on 2009-09-21 08:00:00
September 21st
On this day in history in ....
1964 - Fred Blassie and Bobo Brazil took their famous feud to Madison
Square Garden in New York City, where the two battled to a draw. In the main
event, WWWF World Champion Bruno Sammartino defeated Waldo Von Erich via
countout.
1986 - Carlos Colon defeats Terry Funk in a tournament final for the WWC
Universal Heavyweight Title in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The belt had been vacated
on April 30th when Colon was injured. This began Colon's fifth reign with the
belt. On the same card, The Rock N' Roll RPM's (Mike Davia & Tommy Lane)
defeatThe Pastores (Luke Williams & Butch Miller) to win the WWC World Tag
Team Title, starting their second reign.
1981 - WWF World Champion Bob Backlund defeats Intercontinental Champion
Don Muraco in a Texas Death Match at Madison Square Garden in New York City.
1987 - Ted DiBiase made his return to Madison Square Garden after almost
eight years after his last Garden match (where he lost to a debuting Hulk
Hogan). In his Million Dollar Man persona, DiBiase offered Junkyard Dog $500 to
not wrestle him. JYD instead headbutted DiBiase, then gave out the money to the
crowd.
1989 - WWE taped Saturday Night's Main Event at the Riverfront Coliseum
in Cincinnati, Ohio. Here are the results, which aired on October 14, 1989 on
NBC:
- Randy Savage defeated Jimmy Snuka with a rollup after hitting him with
Sensational Sherri's loaded purse.
- WWF World Champion Hulk Hogan defeated Ted DiBiase with a small package. After
the match, DiBiase and Zeus attacked Hogan, but Jake Roberts made the save,
using Damien to run them off.
- Roddy Piper defeated Haku with a belly to belly suplex.
- Tito Santana vs. Rick Martel ended in a double disqualification when their
upcoming Survivor Series partners (Dusty Rhodes, Red Rooster, Brutus Beefcake,
Big Bossman, Akeem, Honky Tonk Man) all interfered and a huge brawl broke out.
- The Buskwackers defeated The Rougeau Brothers when Butch Miller pinned Jacques
after a double gutbuster.
1990 - Dustin Rhodes made his Madison Square Garden debut, defeating Paul
Diamond with an elbowdrop.
1992 - Barry Windham & Dustin Rhodes defeat Terry Gordy & Steve
Williams to win the WCW & NWA World Tag Team Championship in Atlanta,
Georgia.
1992 - Brian Christopher defeats Reno Riggins in Memphis, Tennessee to
win the vacant USWA Southern Heavyweight Title. The belt had been vacated after
a match between then-champion Riggins and Christopher on September 14th. With
this win, Christopher became the champion for the fifth time. On the same card,
Junkyard Dog defeated Eddie Gilbert for the USWA Unified Heavyweight Title,
ending Gilbert's second reign, and Moondog Fifi defeated Miss Texas for the USWA
Women's Title.
1994 - After just over three years of operations, the Global Wrestling
Federation closed down. The group, which had a television show on ESPN, had
attempted to fill the wrestling void left when Fritz Von Erich left the business
and Jerry Jarrett stopped promoting in Texas. This would pretty much mark the
end of any Dallas-based company as a national force on the wrestling scene. The
company is credited for helping to launch the careers of The Patriot, Jerry
Lynn, and Lightning Kid (Sean Waltman).
1994 - WWF ran Sayreville High School in Sayreville, NJ with the
following results: Nikolai Volkoff pinned PJ Walker (ECW's Justin Credible), WWF
Ladies champion Alundra Blayze (Madusa) pinned Bull Nakano, Kwang (Savio Vega
under a mask) pinned Jim Powers, Doink (Ray Apollo) pinned Jeff Jarrett, Thurman
"Sparky" Plugg (Bob Holly) pinned Abe"Knuckleball" Schwartz
(Brooklyn Brawler Steve Lombardi), The Heavenly Bodies defeated Well Dunn, Mabel
pinned Bam Bam Bigelow.
1998 - Masahiro Chono vacates the IWGP Heavyweight Title due to a severe
neck injury.
1999 - During a Smackdown taping in Dallas, Texas, Triple H wrestles five
times in order to earn a spot in the Six-Pack Challenge at Unforgiven. He loses
to Big Show in a Chokeslam match, defeats Kane in an Inferno match, loses to
Mideon & Viscera in a Casket Match, defeats Mankind in a Boiler Room Brawl,
and defeats the Rock in a Brahma Bullrope Match. Also on the show, Road Dogg
& Billy Gunn defeat The Rock & Mankind to win the WWF Tag Team
Championship and Ken Shamrock wrestles his final WWF match, losing to Chris
Jericho in a First Blood match when Jericho hits Shamrock with a hockey stick
and Shamrock "spits up" blood.
2002 - Xavier defeats Low Ki in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to become the
second ever Ring Of Honor champion.
2003 - WWE held their Unforgiven Pay-per-view in Hershey, Pennsylvania at
the Giant Center, headlined by Bill Goldberg defeating Triple H for the World
Heavyweight Title. This would be the final championship, to date, that Goldberg
would win. Here is
Tim Whitehead's original report on the show:
WWE's Unforgiven, a RAW brand PPV, aired live from Hershey, PA. I'm giving the
show a thumbs up, mainly for HHH finally dropping the world title and the fact
that everyone worked hard. Overall it was a somewhat mixed show, hot in spots,
cold in others.
THE DUDLEYS defeated LA RESISTANCE & ROB CONWAY in a handicap tables match
to capture the RAW World Tag Titles in 10:17. Earlier on HEAT it was announced
that Spike Dudley couldn't compete due to injury. Eric Bischoff made the match
into a handicap bout (it was originally a six man). Steve Austin then upped the
ante and declared that La Resistance's tag belts would be on the line. D-Von got
doubled on early. He fought back, and joined Bubba Ray in destroying Conway.
Bubba cleared the ring of all three heels to a good pop. D-Von tagged back in
and cleared the ring again with a ton of flying lariats. Bubba called for the
tables after a wazzup spot, and before you know it several tables materialized
in and around the ring. D-Von got sent through a table first (the rules were
that to win you had to put all of the opposing team through a table). Bubba
pounded Sylvan Grenier and put him through a table. D-Von moved a table to keep
Bubba from being smashed through it. The Dudleys then powerbombed Conway from
the ring through a table on the floor, and his head hit a second table next to
it in a manner similar to what happened to Spike two weeks ago. Finally they
3D'ed Rene Dupre through a table for the win. Decent opener, and the crowd was
into it.
TEST defeated SCOTT STEINER in 6:56. Jim Ross kept talking about how sweet Stacy
Keibler is, how she has a nice personality, etc., leading Jerry Lawler to say JR
probably goes to Hooter's and orders carry-out. Stacy kissed Steiner,
infuriating Test. Steiner hit a suplex, some chops, and an elbow. Test tried to
use Stacy as a shield and she slapped him. Test sent Steiner into the stairs and
then full nelson slammed him. Test came off the top but got caught and suplexed.
Test got powerbombed but didn't seem to go up right for it. Test tried to use
the ropes for a pin after a low blow on Steiner, but Stacy broke the pin up.
Test reached over the ropes to grab her, but she snapped his neck on the ropes
and Steiner almost scored the pin. Test hit the pump handle slam, but got
distracted by Stacy and chased her rather than going for the pin. There was a
badly mistimed spot where Stacy accidentally bumped into Steiner, leading to
Test booting him in the face. Test got a chair. Stacy took it from him and swung
it at him, but Test ducked and Steiner took the blow. Stacy looked like she was
about to cry. Steiner staggered back up, but caught the boot to the face and was
pinned. This was the usual cluster-type match we've been seeing on RAW. Test
dragged Stacy to the back afterward, as it was reported that Steiner, by losing,
now becomes Test's "property". We'll see the results of this tonight
on RAW.
RANDY ORTON defeated SHAWN MICHAELS in 19:20. Ric Flair came out with Orton.
Heartbreak Kid outwrestled Orton on the mat. Orton tried to match HBK move for
move but HBK kept outwitting him. Orton looked frustrated. HBK hurled Orton over
but he skinned the cat and nailed HBK with a dropkick. Orton put the boots to
HBK. Orton came off the top but caught a knee to the groin. HBK lariated Orton
over and skinned the cat himself. HBK nailed Orton on the floor with a flying
crossbody off the top. HBK dominated for a while, scoring some twos after
standard suplex and sunset flip moves. They traded fists and chops. HBK charged
at Orton, and ended up hitting the post when Orton sidestepped. Flair posted the
wounded HBK and gave him a low blow. Orton began working on HBK's shoulder,
which was sold as injured from the post shot. Orton scored several two counts
here. HBK came back with fists and chops, hitting a flying forearm. HBK did a
kip-up to show he was still in the game. He backdropped Orton and slugged Flair
off the apron. HBK hurled Orton over the top and sent him into the ring barrier.
Back in the ring, Orton recoverd and sent HBK crashing upside down into the
corner. Orton blocked the sweet chin music and hit the RKO, but only scored a
two. Orton came off the top with a crossbody. HBK sidestepped and Orton crashed
to the mat. HBK slugged Flair again. He hit an elbow off the top on Orton, but
hurt his own shoulder (still sore from the earlier posting) and couldn't follow
up with a pin. He kipped-up again. HBK hit the chin music and Orton went down
and was pinned, but Flair put Orton's foot on the rope right after the three
count. The ref saw it there and assumed it had been there during the count, so
he voided his count and the match continued. Flair got back on the apron, and
HBK nailed him with the chin music, but this gave Orton the opening to pull out
some brass knux. He KO'ed HBK with them and scored the pin. Very good match,
easily the best on the show.
Chris Jericho visited La Resistance & Conway. All three were nursing their
wounds from the tables match. Jericho said they were the latest victims of
Austin's abuses of power as general manager. He noted that their match wasn't
supposed to be for the tag titles but that Austin changed the rules just minutes
before the match. He vowed that he would stand up and fight Austin's tyranny.
TRISH STRATUS & LITA defeated MOLLY HOLLY & GAIL KIM in 6:45. Trish
& Lita cleaned house early. Lita nailed Gail with armdrags, backdrops, and
suplexes. Trish chopped the hell out of Gail. Molly enabled Gail to gain command
but Trish fought back and escaped Gail's choke-type hold. Trish got trapped in
the heel corner and beaten down. She escaped and tagged but the ref didn't see
it and disallowed it. As Gail stomped Trish, Molly caused Lita to bump off the
apron. It looked like Lita hit pretty hard and she split her lip open. Lita was
a little rusty here from being out of action for a year. Lita finally hot tagged
and threw lariats and fists like crazy. She hit a spinning headscissors on Molly
and Litabombed Gail. Trish gave Molly a huracanrana and Lita then hit her with a
twist of fate and moonsault for the pin. All action, and a solid match.
KANE defeated SHANE McMAHON in the Last Man Standing match in 19:52. Shane hit
Kane with a chair from behind during the intros. He nailed Kane with several
chairshots, including some to the knee. He wrapped Kane's knee around the
ringpost. He rammed Kane into the stairs. Kane juiced from the back, apparently
from a chairshot. Shane came off the ring barrier but Kane caught him and
slammed him on the floor. The ref counted but Shane got back up. Kane beat Shane
down and hit him with the stairs. Shane made it back up at the count of eight.
In the ring, Kane chokeslammed Shane, but Shane again got back up before the ten
count. The ref got bumped. Kane went for a tombstone piledriver, but decided to
do it on the stairs, so he dropped Shane and brought the stairs into the ring.
Shane recovered and bulldogged Kane on the stairs. Shane did a Van Terminator,
kicking the stairs into Kane's face. The ref was still out, and in fact he was
out for a ridiculously long time with no substitute ref coming in. He finally
revived just as both Kane and Shane went down after some brawling with the
stairs. Both beat the ten count. They left the ring and brawled up the aisle,
with Shane holding his own as he slugged it out with the alleged monster. Kane
rammed Shane over and over into the steel Unforgiven sign. Kane smashed Shane
into the Spanish announcers' desk, which was on an elevated platform, and then
tried to turn the desk over on Shane, but Shane rolled clear. Shane hit Kane
with a piece of metal and a boom camera (breaking the camera lens). Kane got
back up at the nine count. Shane used a cable to choke Kane and to drag him up
on a platform. He beat Kane down with a monitor and gave him a DDT. Shane then
went to the top of the big Unforgiven sign and came off, attempting to give Kane
an elbow smash. But Kane rolled clear and Shane crashed through the wooden
platform in a daredevil spot. JR & Lawler sold it like Shane was destroyed
and likely broke his neck. Shane stayed down and was ten counted, with Kane
winning. Shane did a full neck brace and stretcher job, and it was later
reported that he was hospitalized. I have mixed feelings about this match. On
the one hand, it's totally bizarre to push Shane as competitive with a guy
they're trying to promote as an unstoppable monster. On the other hand, they
were both good here and the crowd seemed to love it, and Shane clearly got over
doing that daredevil spot.
Jericho confronted Austin backstage. He blamed him for making Kane into a
monster and for screwing La Resistance out of their tag belts. Austin dared him
to take his best shot. But Jericho said he was too smart for that, and would
force Austin to crack by getting to him psychologically and avoiding any
physical provocation.
CHRISTIAN defeated CHRIS JERICHO and ROB VAN DAM in a three way match to retain
the IC Title in 19:02. The crowd was dead here after the Last Man Standing
spectacle and the earlier HBK vs. Orton bout. In addition, most of the match
didn't click. I've never been a fan of three way matches, which always have too
many broken up pin attempts. Most of the match was Jericho & Christian
doubling on RVD, but then being unable to pin him because neither wanted the
other to win. RVD rallied a few times but obviously couldn't score the pin
either. A lot of this was really sloppy and they seemed to not be on the same
page. Some early highlights were RVD moonsaulting both foes on the floor, RVD
hitting a somersault plancha on Christian, and Jericho hitting a springboard
dropkick on RVD. Jericho blocked an RVD huracanrana attempt and hooked the walls
hold, but Christian broke it up. Jericho and Christian went at it for a while.
RVD started a comeback and the crowd finally got into the match the last four
minutes or so. They did one great spot where RVD was setting Jericho up for a
move off the top, but Christian got underneath both and superplexed them. RVD
hit a frog splash on both foes at the same time. Christian brought the title
belt in. RVD sent Jericho from the ring and laid Christian out. He went up for
the frog splash but Christian got his knees up, with the title belt on his
knees, and RVD landed on the belt. Christian pinned RVD to retain the title. JR
said the match wasn't pretty, which was his way of saying it was disappointing,
which it was. But the last four minutes or so were good.
Triple H did a promo comparing Goldberg to a dragon-slaying knight in a fairy
tale who suddenly finds himself in the real world and gets his ass kicked. HHH
said he doesn't believe the hype.
AL SNOW & JONATHAN COACHMAN defeated JIM ROSS & JERRY LAWLER in 8:16. No
one did commentary here, since apparently no one realized it was necessary.
Actually, it wasn't. JR wore an Oklahoma jersey. Lawler and Snow started off,
doing some routine brawling and occasional pin attempts. Snow backdropped
Lawler. Coach, from the ring apron, told Snow to do another backdrop, but this
time Lawler blocked it and gave Snow a piledriver. Snow draped his leg across
the ropes to break the three count. Snow rallied and beat Lawler down. Coach
tagged himself in, against Snow's wishes. Coach stomped Lawler and went for the
bronco ride but got crotched when Lawler moved. Lawler bodyslammed Coach as the
crowd chanted for tables. Lawler hit Coach with a fistdrop. Snow broke up
Lawler's attempted pin. JR tagged in to a big pop. Snow confronted him like a
bully, and JR kicked him in the balls. JR then put the boots to Coach as if he
were nothing but a government mule. JR was pounding the hell out of Coach, and
seemed primed for victory. But, out of sight of the ref, Jericho ran in,
dropkicked JR, and rolled Coach on top of him. Lawler tried for the save but
Snow held him. JR was pinned. Jericho did a promo from ringside boasting that
this was the first stage in his plan to mentally break Austin, namely by costing
his boy JR his job, since the stips were that Snow & Coach would replace JR
& Lawler on RAW if victorious. The match itself was about what you'd expect,
but JR was great during the post-match, looking heartbroken at the loss, and
telling Lawler he let him down. He did a nice promo talking about how he'd
wanted to be in the wrestling business since he was a kid and said Lawler was
like a brother to him. He and Lawler vowed to go out on top like professionals
and to call their final match together (the main event) doing the best job of
the careers.
GOLDBERG defeated TRIPLE H to capture the RAW World Title in 14:57. The rules
were that the title could change hands on a DQ or count-out, and that Goldberg
would have to retire if he lost. The crowd was hot at first but soon cooled,
though they popped at the finish. Goldberg press slammed HHH early and HHH
bailed out. They slugged it out, followed by a backdrop from Goldberg, and HHH
bailed again. HHH snapped Goldberg's throat on the ropes. HHH got back in the
ring, but Goldberg caught him with a suplex. Goldberg went for a spear. However,
HHH nailed Goldberg with a knee to the head, so the spear move backfired. HHH
lariated Goldberg out and posted him. HHH hit a chop block and wrapped
Goldberg's leg around the post. He kept working over Goldberg's leg, including
hooking the figure four. Goldberg reversed it, but HHH escaped. HHH hit a knee
drop. He went for another one but Goldberg blocked it and hit a powerslam. HHH
bumped out, where Goldberg rammed him into the stairs. HHH juiced. Back in the
ring, there was the mandatory ref bump. HHH hit Goldberg with a low blow and a
DDT. Goldberg shook it off and backdropped HHH from the ring. HHH got the
sledgehammer he always has hidden under the ring (why don't they search for it
earlier?) and hit Goldberg with it. Goldberg went down, but this time came back
up like Superman, or more likely Hulk Hogan, and speared the shocked HHH.
Goldberg jackhammered HHH for the pin as the ref revived. The match was only
average, and to get Goldberg's win over it needed to be quick and lighting-like,
which wasn't going to be allowed for political reasons. But Goldberg is now the
champ and we'll see how they handle it.
2004 - At a Smackdown taping in Phoenix, Arizona, The Fabulous Moolah
& Mae Young (combined age of 162) defeat Torrie Wilson & Dawn Marie
(combined age 62) when Moolah rolled up Dawn for the pin in under four minutes.
2006 - WWE signs 2 Cold Scorpio to a three year contract. He would
go back to his old WWF name of Flash Funk (because he would not sign the rights
to the Scorpio name over to WWE) and be used on a few overseas shows, but would
never appear on WWE TV, and would be released less than a year after being
signed.
2006 - Word came out that Vince Russo had officially joined the TNA
Creative team, while Mike Tenay and Scott D'Amore were off the team. This
meant the new creative team would be Vince Russo, Dutch Mantel and Jeff Jarrett.
They would remain the creative team until 2009, when Mantel would be released
and Jarrett would voluntarily remove himself from the team.
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