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  1. Wrestling Observer Newsletter
  2.  
  3. PO Box 1228, Campbell, CA 95009-1228 March 28, 1994
  4.  
  5. WRESTLEMANIA X
  6.  
  7. Thumbs up 339 (74.7%)
  8.  
  9. Thumbs down 60 (13.2%)
  10.  
  11. In the middle 55 (12.1%)
  12.  
  13. BEST MATCH POLL
  14.  
  15. Razor Ramon vs. Shawn Michaels 353
  16.  
  17. Bret Hart vs. Owen Hart 101
  18.  
  19. WORST MATCH POLL
  20.  
  21. Lex Luger vs. Yokozuna 173
  22.  
  23. Earthquake vs. Adam Bomb 143
  24.  
  25. Doink & Dink vs. Bam Bam Bigelow & Luna Vachon 82
  26.  
  27. Quebecers vs. Men on Mission 40
  28.  
  29. Alundra Blayze vs. Leilani Kai 9
  30.  
  31. Based on phone calls and fax messages to the Observer as of Tuesday, 3/22. Margin of error: +-100%
  32.  
  33. Shawn Michaels put on one of the greatest individual performances in the history of the business at Wrestlemania X on 3/20 in New York's Madison Square Garden to highlight what the consensus is the best PPV show in WWF history. Michaels, in one of his last shows with the company before going on a what is planned to be a several month long sabbatical, put on a performance that left just about everyone in wrestling in awe in his ladder match loss to Razor Ramon. The match, probably the best match ever on a WWF PPV show, somehow overshadowed one of the greatest matches in WWF history between Bret Hart and Owen Hart that opened the show and a WWF title change with Bret's later regaining of the WWF title from Yokozuna in an average match in the evening's finale. The Hart-Hart match, with Owen scoring the surprise clean win to elevate him into the upper echelon, appeared when it was over to be a strong match-of-the-year candidate and was a tad better than the legendary Rick Steamboat-Randy Savage Wrestlemania III match which has largely been considered the greatest match in modern WWF history because of the stronger finish and every bit as good overall work.
  34.  
  35. Aside from the two excellent matches, Wrestlemania X would have been a mediocre show. However few shows in history from any promotion have ever had two matches of that quality and I was shocked at how many thumbs downs and thumbs in the middles this show received. From our poll standpoint, this show did about the same as Wrestlemania VI and worse than King of the Ring from last year. Even the first WCW Clash of the Champions on March 27, 1988 in Greensboro which had matches that finished first and second (Sting vs. Ric Flair and Midnight Express vs. Fantastics) in the match of the year balloting couldn't match the 1-2 punch in match quality and that show had nothing but two matches either. Some of the 1989 WCW PPV shows had more great matches, but none had two matches this great on the same show. The only other show that comes to mind that might have been comparable as far as the top two matches are concerned would be an August 22, 1985 All Japan women's show (double main event of Chigusa Nagayo vs. Devil Masami and Lioness Asuka vs. Jaguar Yokota) and those matches were both heavily edited when they appeared on television so comparisons can only be made based on reports from those who attended live. The December 10, 1993 All Japan women's show at Korakuen Hall which had two tag matches with the same four women back-to-back, if they are considered as two separate matches, could be comparable and Cactus Jack and Eddie Gilbert had three memorable matches on the same night in Philadelphia on a Joel Goodhart show several years ago.
  36.  
  37. Besides the work quality of two of the matches, Wrestlemania X appeared to have set a record for the largest gate for a pro wrestling show ever in the United States (the WWF's three best gates in history were for stadium shows in Toronto, London and Tokyo), although no figures were available at press time and that was a record that had been primed to be broken for several years simply by charging higher prices to a Wrestlemania even in a large indoor arena and selling out. The old U.S. record was $1,628,000 set in Atlantic City for Wrestlemania V (Hulk Hogan vs. Randy Savage). This show sold approximately the same number of tickets (in the 19,000 range, selling out in three days) but had higher ticket prices. Those who were there live reported that there were large blocks of empty seats, particularly at the top, but even in the lower regions, so there were a surprising number of no-shows. In typical WWF fashion, the company sent out a press release after the show claiming the show was expected to draw the largest PPV audience of all-time. I just hope they don't say things like this in the court room or they'll have even more indictments to worry about. As expected, this year's Wrestlemania appears to have actually drawn the lowest buy rate of any WM in the past, a 1.7--down about 15 percent from last year, but between live and PPV that almost surely will be by far the biggest wrestling show of the year. That figure would translate into about 390,000 buys or an estimated $5.27 million company gross. I haven't received a report as far as the adjacent Paramount Theater goes, except that tickets were still available at the door that day.
  38.  
  39. As for Cactus Jack, his right ear was ripped off on 3/16 in Munich, Germany during a match against Vader, an accident reminiscent of a famous wrestling incident in the late 1950s between Killer Kowalski and Yukon Eric. Jack (Michael Foley) went into the ropes and hung himself between the second and third rope. The pressure of the tightened cables was such that his right ear was torn completely off and his left ear was split badly, needing more than a dozen stitches to close the cut. Ring announcer Gary Cappetta took the right ear and iced it, however doctors were only able to save about one-third to one-half of the lower part of the right ear. Jack actually continued the match for another 2:00 or so, making a big comeback before doing the planned job. Reports we have received are that Jack's hearing is okay and he's in remarkably good spirits. He returned to the U.S. from Germany on Friday or Saturday and is receiving daily in-home treatment from a nurse. There is no definite prognosis on when he'll be able to return to wrestling, although he is said to be hopeful of returning in time for the 4/17 Spring Stampede PPV show in Chicago. Almost shockingly in the poorest taste possible, WCW in its company newsletter made a joke out of the injury calling him "Vincent Van Jack" saying "Jack did his best Vincent Van Gogh imitation" and said how after the match Cactus grabbed a photographer to make sure he could capture this Kodak moment on film forever and said Jack was being sent home from the tour EARly and closed with, "If Cactus Jack hit the ropes differently, we could be making comparisons to John Wayne Bobbitt rather than Van Gough (sic)" and even had a photo caption saying that Cactus' friends can cross ear muffs from their Christmas list for him this year.
  40.  
  41. In the late 1950s, Kowalski wrestled Yukon Eric, a famous wrestler during the period who did a strong-man gimmick, and came off the top rope with a kneedrop which somehow caught Eric on the ear. Because so many of the wrestlers in those days had cauliflowered ears due to years of lengthy matches being held in snug headlocks as did Eric, the ear was brittle and broke right off. The incident garnered much national publicity and helped turn Kowalski into one of North America's leading heels, a position he maintained for more than 15 years after. Eric, as it turned out, was so depressed from this and other events in his life that he committed suicide a few years later.
  42.  
  43. Jack wasn't the only injury suffered on the WCW German tour. On the final night of the tour, 3/20 in Hamburg in the final of a tournament to determine the first WCW European champion, Vader (who pinned Ric Flair in the semifinals) suffered a broken eardrum in a loss to Sting, which caused him problems with his balance and he had to be carried from the arena. Vader was hospitalized after the show and according to one report needed surgery although that wasn't able to be confirmed. Initial reports from Europe were that the doctors told him he'd be out of action for several weeks, although WCW officials have said he isn't going to miss any dates. What is uncertain right now is if his condition will allow him to appear on the UWFI 4/3 card because of the rougher style employed there (scheduled for 4/16 PPV in the U.S. although Vader's match itself won't be televised in this country due to his WCW contract). Vader, wrestling as Super Vader, will be working in the first round of a tournament that based on bracketing, he probably would go to the finals in (against possibly Gary Albright or more likely Nobuhiko Takada) if it went as it looks to be scheduled. If Vader misses the first date, it would severely weaken the tournament that already is somewhat anti-climactic because UWFI's grandstand play brought fans' hopes up for seeing "dream matches" with stars of other promotions, Akira Maeda in particular, that aren't going to happen. In addition, Ron Simmons suffered a torn bicep on the same 3/16 show in Munich in a tag match with Steve Austin against Too Cold Scorpio & Marcus Bagwell, and was sent home. No word on how long he'll be out of action, but torn biceps if it's a minor tear would probably be about six weeks out and if it's a major tear, like Scott Steiner suffered a few years back, can be in excess of six months. Ref Nick Patrick had to return home due to a family emergency and referee Randy Anderson suffered a broken leg early in the tour. With both referees scheduled gone, WCW had to enlist hardcore wrestling fan Didier Gapp from France as an impromptu referee which reportedly caused numerous problems due to his inexperience.
  44.  
  45. Wrestlemania X opened with a Little Richard (the 50s icon, not the former Roller Derby skater) lip-synch rendition of "America the Beautiful" complete with entourage by the Stamford, CT Baptist Church, which came off well on PPV but didn't go over at all in the building. Reportedly after the show there was heat in that Richard got out of the building after doing his thing and wouldn't sign autographs for the guys backstage. Some weren't particularly happy that when Little Richard was on Jay Leno on 3/16, he never mentioned being at Wrestlemania. Jennie Garth reportedly wouldn't do the vignette planned and seemed when she came out before the final match that she wanted to be anywhere but where she was, and Bucky & Vinny were no-shows to the disappointment of nobody. The other celebrities, in particular Burt Reynolds who is a legitimate wrestling fan because of Ron Simmons (and rumored to be an Observer reader), were largely praised. The reason Burt Reynolds had his hand in a cast is because he decked someone who tried to mug him two days earlier in San Diego, which is why he said how glad he was to be there. The lookalike Bill Clinton idea and two vignettes (with IRS and another with Ted DiBiase, whose original major role in the show was reduced to a 30 second cameo) were really lame, even by Wrestlemania standards. Jerry Lawler had four months worth of material ready and was outstanding in his designed role as staff comedian, and was actually funnier than Bobby Heenan would have been in the same role.
  46.  
  47. A. In the dark match, The Heavenly Bodies beat Bushwhackers in about 7:00 when they did the battering ram on Jimmy Del Rey, but behind the refs back Tom Prichard came off the top rope on Butch and reversed the positions. Told it was a one-star match.
  48.  
  49. 1. Owen Hart pinned Bret Hart in 20:26. They started out scientifically. After Bret reversed a ride and Owen took a bump to the floor, Owen got back in the ring and gave Bret a hard slap. The early part of the match was matwork with perfectly executed high spots and lots of near falls throughout. Owen used a german suplex, reversed a move into a tombstone piledriver and missed a head-butt off the top rope. Bret got a series of near falls as well. The first attempt at the sharpshooter wound up in a double reversal. Bret did a plancha over the top rope onto Owen, but "injured" his knee once again. Owen went to work on the knee, wrapping it around the post three times and put on the figure four, but Bret reversed it and the two wound up in the ropes. At this point both were selling their knees. Bret came back with an enzuigiri and got a nearfall after Owen took a chest-first full-speed ahead crash into the turnbuckles. Bret followed with a bulldog, a piledriver and a superplex while standing on the top rope for near falls, each time with Owen barely kicking out. Bret was awesome in making his comeback while still selling the knee. He went for a sleeper but Owen broke it with a low blow and put the sharpshooter on in the middle but Bret broke the hold. Bret came with the sharpshooter but Owen made the ropes. Bret came off the top rope onto Owen's shoulders for a victory roll that looked to be the finish, but Owen used a Mexican reversal of the spot and got the stunning three count for a tremendous finish. While the idea of Owen beating Bret was a surprise, but not a total surprise, the idea going in he'd do it clean in the middle was almost unfathomable, but also made it obvious that Bret was ending the show with the title belt. Although the win solidly elevated Owen to the top of the ladder on the heel side, his post-match interview showed that he's badly in need of a manager to effectively stay in that spot for any length of time. ****3/4
  50.  
  51. 2. Bam Bam Bigelow & Luna Vachon beat Doink (Ray Apollo) & Dink in 6:09. This was meant as a breather after the first match, but Bigelow and Doink worked hard and worked well together but because of what they were following they had a hard time getting heat. Bam Bam knocked Dink off the apron and destroyed Doink, pinning him with a head-butt off the top rope. After the match Bam Bam & Luna went for a double splash on Dink, who moved except Luna's splash still hit him because he didn't move fast enough in a blown spot. A lot better than their house show matches. *3/4
  52.  
  53. 3. Randy Savage beat Crush in 9:43 in a falls count anywhere match with falls not counting and victory achieved when one person couldn't return to the ring after one minute after the fall, which is a flawed concept if you take it seriously because what happens if a fall occurs in the ring? At a house show in San Jose which may have been the first night they tried this concept (with miserable results) they had a fall end in the ring, then had to roll out of the ring to make the concept work. This much better than what they've been doing at the shows. Crush won the first fall in the aisle in :45 when he pressed Savage and dropped him on the guard rail. Actually Savage didn't make it back into the ring until 2:10, which is much longer than one minute, but they must have had a slow stopwatch. In the second fall Mr. Fuji gave Crush salt, but Savage pushed Crush's hand and the salt when in Crush's eyes and Savage delivered the elbow off the top. To make the concept work, he then had to throw him on the floor before getting the pin at 4:30 elapsed time. Crush wasn't going to make it in time, but Fuji poured a glass of water on him which revived him. Crush backdropped Savage over the top rope, but as they brawled on the floor, Savage posted Crush, rammed him into the ring steps and clotheslined him over the guard rail. Crush responded with a superkick on the floor. Crush went for a piledriver in the aisle but Savage reversed it and rammed Crush into the well, threw him threw a few doors like it was the closing of the old TV show "Get Smart", and scored a pin at 8:09. Savage then tied Crush's feet to a chord. He was supposed to hang Crush upside down and leave him hanging and get back in the ring to win, which was a pretty creative finish, but apparently he missed his Boy Scout knot tying classes because he didn't knot part of the job done. Crush couldn't get back in and the match was called after 9:43. **3/4
  54.  
  55. 4. Alundra Blayze retained the WWF womens title pinning Leilani Kai with a german suplex in 3:23. They didn't have a chance. They exploded fireworks for Blaze's ring entrance to try and get over that she's something special and the women's matches are important but nobody is buying it yet. The two did all they could given the amount of time they had, but had almost negative heat and in the building people treated it as if it was intermission. It's going to be a very long and very difficult process in getting this division over. *1/4
  56.  
  57. 5. Men on a Mission beat Quebecers via count out so Quebecers retained the tag title in 7:45. Given the participants (I'm speaking of Men on a Mission), the match didn't have much chance of being good. Guess what? It wasn't, although there were a few good moves thrown in. Pierre was backdropped over the top rope by Jacques into almost a backward tope on Mo. Mo pulled off a somersault bodyblock in the ring. The Quebecers did a double-team suplex on Mabel which got a crowd pop because they teased not being able to do it (although that's a babyface spot). MOM did their finisher on Pierre while Oscar stopped Johnny Polo from interfering. Mo clothesline Pierre over the top rope and Mabel splashed him on the floor and he was counted out. Finish was really weak. *1/4
  58.  
  59. 6. Yokozuna retained the WWF title beating Lex Luger via DQ in 14:40. Mr. Perfect was the guest ref and played an expected role in the outcome. On the confidential run sheet before the show, this match was listed as being 25:00 (for the record, the finishes weren't listed and in the run sheet the main event was listed as Yokozuna-Luger winner vs. Bret Hart which shows just how much trouble they went through to keep the final result a secret) and thank God it didn't last that long. This was one nerve hold after another by Yokozuna. The guy has just gotten so heavy he has no stamina. He can work in a sense of his ability for somebody who is 580 pounds, but he needs to lose a lot of weight. Awful match. Luger made the comeback after Nerve Hold-a-mania by running Yokozuna into the unpadded turnbuckle (Yokozuna pulled the padding off early but never used it), three clotheslines, a bodyslam and the forearm for the KO. Luger then brought Jim Cornette in the ring and beat up Fuji, then covered Yokozuna. Perfect wouldn't count the fall and kept checking on Fuji. Finally Luger grabbed Perfect to count the fall and Perfect DQ'd him. They did a post-match argument backstage. The finish was a total screw-job but at least it had a purpose--that being the only thing in the match with any redeeming social value. Although this didn't come across on television, apparently this match didn't have much crowd reaction and was filled with "boring" chants. 1/2*
  60.  
  61. 7. Earthquake pinned Adam Bomb in :35 with the Earthquake splash. Harvey Wippleman started making fun of Howard Finkel, with a new hairpiece (I was dreading the aspect of the show with Finkel's new hairpiece and even though it didn't get over at all live, it wasn't an embarrassment although Howard was sans hairpiece the next night in Poughkeepsie so what was the point?) and ripped his tux. Finkel shoved down Wippleman. Bomb then snatched Finkel but Quake made the save and won almost immediately. DUD
  62.  
  63. 8. Razor Ramon retained the IC title in a ladder match with Shawn Michaels in 18:47. Diesel clotheslined Ramon early and was thrown out. Michaels took so many great bumps you couldn't begin to list them all. When the ladder got involved, Michaels did a slide kicking the ladder into Ramon who was on the floor. He gave Ramon a ladder shot to the ribs and destroyed him in the ring with the ladder and threw the ladder at his back. As Michaels climbed the ladder, Ramon pulled his pants down and bare-assed, Michaels did an elbow drop off the second highest step of the ladder and a splash off the second step of the ladder. Michaels climbed up again and Ramon tipped over the ladder and Michaels caught his throat on the top rope. After a double collision, Ramon reversed a whip and Michaels hit the ladder and went over the top rope to the floor. He was trying to take the ladder with him so it would land on him but didn't quite hold on. Ramon took the advantage with several ladder shots. On the floor Ramon slingshotted Michaels into the ladder, which then fell on Michaels. Ramon hit Michaels in the jaw with the ladder and he took another bump over the top. With Ramon on the ladder, Michaels came off the top rope with a double sledge knocking Ramon and the ladder down. Both men climbed to the top again and this time Ramon suplexed Michaels off the ladder but Ramon fell off as well. Ramon got back up and Michaels dropkicked the ladder and Ramon fell off once again. Michaels came off the top rope with the ladder and splashed Ramon and hit him with a superkick and jumping piledriver. Michaels then came off the ladder with a splash with the ladder. Michaels climbed up again, Ramon knocked the ladder down and Michaels not only crotched himself on the top rope but managed to tie his ankle in the ropes and Ramon climbed up and got both belts. If you haven't seen this match, make sure you do as it'll be remembered for many years. Watch how ladder matches now become the hottest gimmick on the indie scene. *****
  64.  
  65. 9. Bret Hart pinned Yokozuna in 10:36 to win the WWF title in an anti-climactic match. Roddy Piper got a huge pop as guest ref but once the match started the crowd was spent from the previous match. Hart tried all he could but this was nowhere near as good as their match at last year's Wrestlemania or numerous house show bouts between the two. At one point Piper decked Cornette. There were several near falls that got good pops. But the finish was weak, with Yokozuna setting Hart up for the banzai, but slipping and losing balance and getting pinned. After the match about a half-dozen faces including Luger hit the ring for the celebration with McMahon, Pat Patterson and Gorilla Monsoon in as well, and Owen Hart came down the aisle for the final scene giving Bret a dirty look to end the show. **1/4
  66.  
  67. The much-publicized Vince McMahon lawsuit against New York Post sportswriter Phil Mushnick was dropped this past week. McMahon dropped the suit shortly after attempting and failing to get a ruling from the presiding judge to put the suit on hold until after completion of his and his company's upcoming trial on steroid distribution and conspiracy in steroid distribution. When the judge turned down the ruling, McMahon dropped the case. The only information available regarding the case because of a judges ruling pertaining to the case is that the case was settled with both sides not coming to agreement on what the facts of the case were (in other words, neither side admits the other was right) and that the case was settled without Mushnick or the Post paying any money to Titan.
  68.  
  69. Since last week's issue, a lot more developed in what will probably turn out to be mainly a publicity stunt regarding getting Tonya Harding to sign with the All Japan women's promotion. On 3/16 as I'm sure you're all aware, Harding pled guilty to obstruction of justice, a felony, and was sentenced to three years supervised probation, fined $160,000, ordered to quit the United States Figure Skating Association (effectively ending her competitive skating career) and ordered to undergo psychiatric testing. Harding's only response when asked about the reported $2 million offer from All Japan women by the nest of news reporters who camp outside where she's living, which was a major topic of conversation on radio talk shows early in the week was, "Get real" after "No comments" to just about every other question asked. The lead story on Entertainment Tonight on 3/17 was on Harding and the All Japan women's promotion which featured several clips of the 12/6 Sumo Hall card, and the offer, which they reported still stands. E.T. reported Harding's representatives were looking to gather more information on the company and details on the offer. The clips that aired were largely of the Shinobu Kandori vs. Akira Hokuto main event, and showed photos and talked about Aja Kong and Bull Nakano, and showed a prospective photo of Tonya wearing Aja Kong face-paint. Harding's forced leave of the figure skating world removed her from the world championships that were scheduled to start 3/22 in Chiba, Japan, a city about an hour North of Tokyo. The negotiation sessions in Japan that were scheduled are out the window. However, according to the 3/22 Nikkan Sports, Toshikuni Matsunaga, the Vice President of the All Japan women's office (younger brother of Takashi Matsunaga who was quoted in all the newspapers and appeared on several television shows this past week), one of the four brothers who are co-owners of the company, was leaving that day for Portland for a meeting with Harding's representatives. However, according to our sources within the company, Harding's representatives are overloaded with work stemming from her guilty plea and numerous other offers including a movie deal, that they haven't been able to arrange for a negotiating session and privately those in the promotion don't see the deal as much of a possibility. Takashi Matsunaga told the press in Japan on 3/19 the company was still working on bringing her to the 3/27 Yokohama Arena show, but given Harding's legal status in not being able to travel outside Oregon, Washington and California without petitioning the court, the odds of being able to pull that off in such a short period of time would be difficult, which also would mean it would be under court discretion whether she'd even be able to accept the offer. There has already been interest in the U.S. to pay-per-view the Tokyo Dome show on 11/10 provided Harding would wrestle on the show, although one would have to think the odds of this ever taking place are so slim they almost shouldn't be discussed. However, in the past week, reporters from France, Germany, ABC-TV and the Wall Street Journal have all come to the group's offices in Tokyo for interviews for upcoming stories. The only other story reported in Japan this past week regarding this was another interview by Akira Hokuto, who spent one week wrestling in Korea and returned and once again said she'd like to be Harding's trainer because the two have the same look. Hokuto also said she would be the best teacher for Harding as a heel (funny that the word "heel" was used as if it's part of the Japanese language) in that promotion which would be Harding's role, because she's said she's the best heel wrestler.
  70.  
  71. Between Harding and Hulk Hogan, in the week leading up to Wrestlemania, the WWF got the big donut when it came to mainstream pub. Hogan, who at this point still hasn't signed a WCW contract but appears that more likely than not will do so, appeared on both Regis Philbin (a regular slot for WWF performers prior to PPV shows) and Conan O'Brien, largely plugging his "Thunder in Paradise" show which opened on television this past weekend to horrible reviews (TV Guide gave it a one on a one-to-ten scale calling it "violent, dumb and dull" and saying that Hogan's facial expressions are all the same, like he swallowed a bottle of kaopectate). In the interviews, Hogan said that in a few weeks he'd have an announcement that would rock the wrestling world. It is expected the announcement of the signing will take place before the McMahon trial, in which Hogan is expected to be one of the key witnesses against his former boss. Hogan appeared to make his plans even clearer in a segment in Chicago on 3/17 on the Danny Bonaduce (Danny Partridge) radio show where he plugged the Flair-Steamboat match on 4/17 and challenged the winner. Hogan's much-hyped first appearance on WCW Saturday Night on 3/12 combined with a Steamboat vs. Steve Austin No. 1 contenders match drew a 2.8 rating, which is higher than usual, but a lower rating than Rob Parker wearing a chicken suit drew and the same rating a Brian Pillman vs. Mongolian Mauler headliner a few weeks back did.
  72.  
  73. The announcement of All Japan's television show being cut to 30 minutes last week was followed by another announcement every bit as potentially disastrous for the company. Nippon TV, which considered dropping the show because one of the sponsors pulled out but eventually went with the 30 minute format, announced its new season schedule (In Japan the television season starts in April as opposed to September in the United States but unlike the U.S., the new schedule is only announced two weeks before the start of the season) and All Japan was moved from Sundays at 12:30 a.m., which is a death slot in and of itself, to Saturday nights from 2:30 to 3 a.m., which is even more deadly. The new time slot pretty well eliminates any casual fans from viewing the television. While television hasn't proved to be as important in Japan as far as drawing fans, because so many more big-name wrestlers are known to the general public as celebrities and their name value without television is strong, it will be have severe negative effects in two ways as far as getting the young wrestlers, which are really the life blood of the company, over. They can always bring in Giant Baba, Dory Funk, Abdullah the Butcher and Stan Hansen to spot shows and the public that doesn't watch television will still know the names, and they'll always be able to draw in Tokyo because so many fans are such ardent followers, but it's going to hurt, more as time goes on. Not only will the young wrestlers have left television time and fewer matches to get themselves over in with the show cut in half, but in that time period even if they are on television and have good matches, they are only being watched by the hardcore fans and while they can get over to them, there is nothing they can do to capture the interest of the general public. However, few think this change is of promotion-threatening importance, since All Japan women, which had a weekly highly-rated Saturday afternoon time slot for years, lost their slot in the late 80s after the Crush Gals and Dump Matsumoto era ended and were moved to a monthly show in the graveyard time zone, and the company's popularity was still able to make a comeback over the past few years due to getting over a generation of new talent and interpromotional booking.
  74.  
  75. UWFI announced this week the first round of its 16-man tournament which will take place 4/3 at Osaka Castle Hall (for PPV air date in the U.S. on 4/16--or the night before WCW's Spring Stampede). The eight match announced line-up, and these matches are being listed as they are bracketed in the tournament (winner of match one faces winner of match two in the second round on 5/6 at Budokan Hall, winner of that match faces winner of the winner of matches three-and-fourth in the semifinals in July at Budokan with the finals on 8/24 at Budokan Hall). 1. Dan Severn vs. Masahito Kakihara; 2. Salman Hashimikov vs. Super Vader; 3. Dennis Koslowski vs. Naoki Sano; 4. Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Badnews Allen; 5. Yoji Anjyo vs. Victor Zangiev; 6. Gary Albright vs. Billy Scott; 7. Vladimir Berkovich vs. Jean Lydick; 8. Nobuhiko Takada vs. Kazuo Yamazaki. From the bracketing it looks like either Albright or Takada would face Vader in the championship match, but because of Vader's injury, if he can't appear, the entire tournament would be messed up. The PPV show will consist of seven of these eight matches minus the Vader match. Hopefully the play-by-play announcer will either be different or improved this time around.
  76.  
  77. As expected, Satoru Sayama entered a New Japan ring for the first time since his first pro wrestling retirement in 1983 on 3/16 at the Tokyo Gymnasium which will lead to a singles match with Antonio Inoki at either the 5/1 Fukuoka Dome show or the January 4, 1995 Tokyo Dome show. Inoki, who made a rare wrestling appearance on the show, which drew 9,200 fans (about 1,400 shy of capacity), introduced Sayama to the crowd which chanted his name and Sayama said he'd like to wrestle Inoki before he retires. The nature of the angle is such that it appears to be Inoki gaining final revenge over the incident from years ago when Sayama quit the business, vowing the never return, but at the age of 37, he's being lured back by a final shot at making a big payoff because when Inoki really retires, the one big money match stemming from a "real" angle will be gone for him. I wonder if when Riki Choshu decides to retire, that Akira Maeda will do the same, although Maeda at least has been making big money all these years while Sayama has simply been a fighting coach at his own gym. Also on the show in the main event, Hiroshi Hase captured the WCW International title pinning Rick Rude with a Northern Lights suplex in 16:52. The two are scheduled to be rematched on 3/24 in Kyoto where the title will most likely revert back to Rude. Since the idea of Japanese winning major American titles for one week is hardly something new and it is widely expected Hase will drop the strap back and that the change will never be acknowledged in the United States, Hase did an interesting post-match interview. Hase in the interview said that if he doesn't beat Rude on the 24th, then the title win in Tokyo meant nothing because unless he defends it in the United States at Spring Stampede, then it'll never be acknowledged in the U.S. and it's like it never happened. It's the first major singles heavyweight title won by Hase, who is the best worker in the company, but hasn't to this point been pushed as one of the top guys on the ladder, partially due to his own unselfishness as a team leader in his role as assistant booker constantly setting the example by doing clean jobs whenever it is necessary to set someone up for a big match or put someone untalented over the right way. He's still probably going to lose to Rude since that's his role in the promotion, but it did create added interest in the rematch.
  78.  
  79. The 37th annual Cauliflower Alley Club banquet took place 3/19 in Studio City, CA. The dinner mainly features retired wrestlers along with some ex-boxers and movie stars. Among the wrestlers present and receiving awards were Dick Hutton, an NWA-champ from the late 50s who was a great amateur beforehand, Billy Robinson, Al "Kangaroo" Costello, Sherri Martel, Peggy Allen and Penny Banner while other honorees who weren't able to attend included Ed Francis, Nobuhiko Takada, boxer Oscar De La Hoya and Susan Green. Among other major names in attendance were Gene Kiniski, Lou Thesz, Gordon Solie, Gary Juster (latter two doing some tapings for upcoming pre-Slamboree telecasts), Verne Gagne, Danny Hodge, Tiger Conway, Dick "Destroyer" Beyer, June Byers, Bette Clark, John Tolos, Hardboiled Haggerty, Yoji Anjyo, Don Curtis, Toru Tanaka, Bruce Swayze, Red Bastien, Pepper Martin and Gary Albright.
  80.  
  81. WWF's Fan Fest was largely a financial success, as all seven sessions drew a sellout 2,200 fans at $22 a pop. Reports we received were that the only negative were there were far too many fans crammed in for the two-and-a-half hour sessions and the lines for autographs for the superstars was more than 30 minutes a pop in some cases and other lines were lengthy as well for climbing into the ring, calling matches and getting photos taken at the Face-to-face set. The wrestlers and Vince McMahon were said to be very gracious to the fans once they got to meet them. Secondary characters were available for autographs with little or no wait. The WWF was seemingly aware of the problems, so upon leaving, the WWF gave each fan a free pass good for a future WWF event. As mentioned on television, the WWF is planning on including Fan Festivals annually as part of Wrestlemania weekends and perhaps other PPV shows as well. With the upcoming trial, the company is going out of its way to present a positive image to offset what will almost certainly be negative publicity in about six weeks. The old-time wrestling media, for the most part ostracized by Titan in 1984, some of whom have been cooperated with over the past year and others who weren't, were all catered to like they haven't been in years, including, if you'd notice, photographers from non-Titan publications being allowed at ringside for the first time.
  82.  
  83. This is the first issue of the current four-issue set. If you've got a (1) on your address label it means this is your final set of Observers. Our schedule over the next few weeks can't be labeled as a definite weekly. I'm undergoing abdominal surgery on 3/29 stemming from the burst appendix in December. There may be an issue next week but most likely there won't be. I don't want to put a definite date on when the next issue will be after that other than it will be as soon as possible. After that point there should be no interruptions in the weekly schedule until the WWF trial, which is scheduled for 5/2. There may be a double issue in this set depending upon if more than one week is missed and how much news there is. Renewal rates in the United States, Canada and Mexico remain $12 for eight issues, $24 for 16, $36 for 24, $48 for 32 up through $60 for 40. Rates for the rest of the world for weekly airmail delivery are $9 for each set of four issues up through $90 for 40.
  84.  
  85. Fax messages can be sent to the Observer at 408-378-6562 after Noon Eastern time on a daily basis and phone messages can be left 24 hours a day at 408-379-8067.
  86.  
  87. RESULTS
  88.  
  89. 3/2 Arena Coliseo in Mexico City (EMLL): Olimpico & Ultimatum b Comodin & Rey Bucanero, Escudero Rojo & Chamaco Ayala & Reyes Veloz b Ludwig Star & Mestizo & Gran Apache I, Guerrero del Futuro & Guerrero Maya & Damian el Guerrero b El Filoso & Metalico & Oso Negro, Dandy & La Sombra & Pantera II b Tornado Negro I & Cachorro Mendoza & Javier Llanes, Dr. Wagner Jr. & Gran Markus Jr. & Gladiador Jr. b Los Brazos-DQ
  90.  
  91. 3/3 Blackburn, England (WWF - 3,900): Sparky Plugg b Brooklyn Brawler, Diesel b Virgil, Earthquake b Adam Bomb, Tatanka b Kwang, Jeff Jarrett b Rick Martel, Randy Savage b Crush, Alundra Blayze b Leilani Kai, IC title: Razor Ramon b Shawn Michaels
  92.  
  93. 3/3 Pachuca (AAA - 15,000 sellout): Zafiro & Diamante & Brillante b Terremoto & Maremoto & Hecatombe, Rey Misterio Jr. & Winners & Love Warrior Super Calo b Angel Mortal & Mr. Condor & Gallego-DQ ****, Los Payasos d Tinieblas Jr. & Latin Lover & El Mexicano **1/2, Konnan El Barbaro & Octagon & Mascara Sagrada b Black Cat & Mascara Ano 2000 & Universo 2000 **
  94.  
  95. 3/4 Arena Mexico in Mexico City (EMLL): Felinito & Damiancito el Guerrero b Bronceito & Aguilita Solitaria, Panico & Tornado Negro I & Guerrero de la Muerte b Chicago Express & El Filoso & Metalico, Mascara Magica & Justiciero & Americo Rocca b Kahos I & Cadaver de Ultratumba & Espectro Jr.-DQ, Mocho Cota & Negro Casas & Sangre Chicana b Ultimo Dragon & Ringo Mendoza & Silver King, La Fiera & Rayo de Jalisco Jr. & King Haku b Emilio Charles Jr. & Mano Negra & Black Magic
  96.  
  97. 3/4 Fort Oglethorpe, GA (TWA): Tim Strong b Jamie Strong, Tracy Black & Billy Montana b Gene Spurlock & Dark Knight #2, Max Von Hess b Richie Dye, Roger Sartain b Joel Travis, Big Tiny & Ken Arden b Bubba Humphrey & Woody Woodchuck, C.M. Quick & Fly Guy b Sam Colt & Keith Hart
  98.  
  99. 3/5 Cuautla (AAA): Centurions I & II b Espeulas de Oro I & II, La Briosa & Neftali b La Rosa & Vicky Carranza, Misterioso & Love Warrior Super Calo & Solar d Angel Azteca & Winners & Volador ***1/2, Pirata Morgan & Fuerza Guerrera & Blue Panther b El Hijo del Santo & Tiger Mask & Tinieblas Jr.-DQ ***, Jerry Estrada & La Parka & Fishman b Perro Aguayo & Heavy Metal & Latin Lover ****
  100.  
  101. 3/5 Inman, SC (Pro Wrestling Federation - 75): Randy Sledge b Russian Assassin, Chief Black Eagle b The Executioner, Texas Outlaw b Scott Powers, George South b American Ninja, Star Ryder & Italian Stallion b Terry Austin & Austin Steele-DQ, Black Eagle won Battle Royal
  102.  
  103. 3/6 El Toreo in Naucalpan (UWA - 3,500): Teutones I & II & Titere b Oriental & Seminarista & Dragon Chino, Ruben Juarez Jr. & Celestial & ? b Gran Sheik (Arias Romero) & Zandokan II & Bucanero Jr., El Texano & Negro Navarro & Shu el Guerrero b Yamato (Kim Duk) & Villano III & Scorpio Jr., Canek & Halcon Dorado Jr. & El Monarca b The Killer & Andy Barrow & Enrique Vera, WWF lt hwt title: El Signo b Crypt Keeper (Jose Estrada Jr.)
  104.  
  105. 3/6 Watham, MA (USWF - 781): Tony Roy b Perry Saturn-DQ, Bulldozer b Mad Dog Richard, Little Louie & Jamie West b Mighty Herc & Brittany Brown, Richard Byrne b Mike Sharpe, Terra Ryzing DCOR Rio Lord of Jungle
  106.  
  107. 3/10 Morristown, NJ (East Coast Pro Wrestling): Jacknife Johnny b Metal Head, Spanish Fly b Dennis Knight, Fly b Vinnie Powers, Devon Storm d Kodiak Bear, Gino Caruso b Powerhouse Chuck, Flyboy b Inferno Kid, Rocky Jones b Storm
  108.  
  109. 3/11 Munford, TN (USWA): The Spellbinder b Ron McClarity, Billy Travis DCOR Ken Wayne, Wolfie D b J.C. Ice, Jerry Lawler & Brian Christopher b Moondogs-DQ
  110.  
  111. 3/11 Union, SC (Big Time Wrestling - 225): Tommy Welker & Chris Hammer (Chris Hamrick) DCOR Bruiser Brothers, Nighttrain Jones (Joe Thomas) b Bad Dog, The Crusader b Billy Ray Badd-DQ, Jay Eagle & Johnny Red Cloud DCOR Scotty Piper & Bo Dalton, The Assassin b Super Rocker
  112.  
  113. 3/11 Fort Oglethorpe, GA (TWA): Widow Maker b Danny D, Richie Dye b Kurt Von Himmler, Woody Woodchuck b Sam Colt, Roger Sartain b Joel Travis, Big Tiny & Ken Arden b Billy Montana & Johnny Blaze, C.M. Quick & Fly Guy & Randy Steel b Sam Colt & Keith Hart & Kurt Von Himmler
  114.  
  115. 3/12 Mount Holly, NC (Championship Wrestling Alliance - 135): Magnificent Marshall & Gentleman James b Don Nie & Billy Diamond, The Lumberjack b Texas Ranger, Emilio Ulacia DCOR Rebel Stud, The Sawyer Brothers DDQ Barry Rose & The Breeze, Jay Eagle b Chris Hamrick, D.L. Cool & The Eliminator b Rattlesnake Westbrook & Mad Dog Malone-DQ, Funktown Kid b Blond Sweetheart
  116.  
  117. 3/14 Memphis (USWA - 1,400): King Cobra b Leon Downs, Skull Von Crush b Jeff Gaylord, Loser leaves town: J.C. Ice b Wolfie D, USWA tag title: Moondogs b Spellbinder & Billy Travis, Robert Gibson b Koko Ware-DQ, Jerry Lawler b Tommy Rich-DQ, Unified title vs. USWA title: Eddie Gilbert b Brian Christopher to win USWA title, Rage in a cage: Lawler & Christopher & Dream Machine (Troy Graham) b Gilberts & Rich
  118.  
  119. 3/14 Greenville, SC (J.B. Promotions - 700/heavily papered): Johnny Wild b T.W. Steel, Max Miles b Panhead Nelson, Randy Mulkey b Matt James, Davis Isley b The Assassin (Ken Timbs), Steve Carlton (yeah, right, next thing you know some baseball player will call themselves Greg Gagne) & J.W. Steele b Jason Ultima & Rick Michaels, Greg Valentine & Original Masked Undertaker b Rock Rowland & Billy Starr
  120.  
  121. 3/14 Tampa (Florida Wrestling Alliance): Surgeon General #2 b Billy Mack, Frankie Rose b Red Devil, Surgeon General #1 b Randy Fuller, Manny Fernandez b Bill Pain-DQ, Haystacks Calhoun Jr. b The Executioner, Armed Forces b Rick Thames & Sonny T
  122.  
  123. 3/15 Funabashi (New Japan - 2,200 sellout): Yuji Nagata b Tokimitsu Ishizawa, Manabu Nakanishi b Tadao Yasuda, Akitoshi Saito b Satoshi Kojima, Great Kabuki b El Samurai, The Barbarian & Hercules Fernandez & Scott Norton b Osamu Kido & Shinya Hashimoto & Riki Choshu, Jushin Liger & Masa Chono b Killer Bee & Black Tiger, Michiyoshi Ohara & Tatsutoshi Goto & Shiro Koshinaka & Kengo Kimura b Akira Nogami & Takayuki Iizuka & Hiroshi Hase & Tatsumi Fujinami 21:46
  124.  
  125. 3/15 Albany, KY (SMW - 450): Thrillseekers (Lance Storm & Chris Jericho) b Infernos (Brian Keyes & Anthony Michaels), Ladder match: Tracy Smothers b Chris Candido, Handicap match: Tim Horner b Dick Murdoch & Jim Cornette, Dirty White Boy & Dirty White Girl b Brian Lee & Tammy Fytch, SMW tag title: Rock & Roll Express b Heavenly Bodies-DQ
  126.  
  127. 3/15 Tampa (IPWA): A.J. Andrews DCOR Jammin Johnny, Mike Haynor b White Shadow, Manny Fernandez b Luis Morales, Haystacks Calhoun Jr. b The Assassin, Vern Henderson b Jeff Bradley, Handicap match: Rick Thames & Sonny T b Randy Fuller
  128.  
  129. 3/16 Tokyo Gymnasium (New Japan - 9,200): Nobukazu Hirai b Tokimitsu Ishizawa, Manabu Nakanishi b Yuji Nagata, Michiyoshi Ohara & Great Kabuki b Akira Nogami & Takayuki Iizuka, Jushin Liger & El Samurai b Killer Bee (Brian Blair) & Black Tiger (Eddy Guerrero), Scott Norton b Power Warrior, Shinya Hashimoto b The Barbarian, Masa Chono & Osamu Kido b Antonio Inoki & Tadao Yasuda-DQ, Riki Choshu & Tatsumi Fujinami & Yoshiaki Fujiwara b Tatsutoshi Goto & Shiro Koshinaka & Kengo Kimura, WCW Intl title: Hiroshi Hase b Rick Rude to win title
  130.  
  131. 3/16 Munich, Germany (WCW): Paul Roma b Alex Wright, Ron Simmons & Steve Austin b Marcus Bagwell & Too Cold Scorpio, Frank Anderson b Harlem Heat Koal, Maxx Payne b Harlem Heat Kane, Johnny B. Badd b Paul Orndorff, Sting & Rick Steamboat b Ric Flair & Steve Regal, Vader b Cactus Jack
  132.  
  133. 3/16 Evansville, IN (USWA - 400): Danny Davis b Leon Downs, USWA tag title: Moondogs b Spellbinder & Jeff Gaylord, Tommy Rich b Billy Travis, Taped fist match for USWA title: Brian Christopher b Doug Gilbert, Coward waves the flag for Unified title: Eddie Gilbert b Jerry Lawler, Lawler & Christopher & Davis & Travis b Gilberts & Rich & Skull Von Crush
  134.  
  135. 3/16 Kushiro (FMW - 3,310 sellout): Tetsuhiro Kuroda d Masato Tanaka, Battle Ranger b Damien, Big Titan b Sabu, Combat Toyoda & Crusher Maedomari & Shark Tsuchiya & Tsuppari Mack b Megumi Kudo & Miwa Sato & Yukie Nabeno & Keiko Iwame, The Sheik b Masaru Toi, Tarzan Goto & Mr. Gannosuke b The Gladiator & Ricky Fuji, No rope barbed wire street fight tornado death match: Atsushi Onita & Sambo Asako & Katsutoshi Niiyama b Mr. Pogo & Goro Tsurumi & Hideki Hosaka
  136.  
  137. 3/16 Gifu (All Japan women - 2,380): Kumiko Maekawa b Rie Tamada, Chikako Shiratori b Chapparita Asari, Aja Kong & Sakie Hasegawa b Kyoko Inoue & Tomoko Watanabe, Manami Toyota b Kaoru Ito, Bull Nakano & Yumiko Hotta b Toshiyo Yamada & Takako Inoue
  138.  
  139. 3/16 Portage La Prairie, Manitoba (River City Wrestling): Sluggo Smith d Robby Royce, Jason the Terrible b The Outpatient, Crybaby Levinsky b Vance Nevada, Jason's Outlaws b Levinsky's Machine
  140.  
  141. 3/17 Hof, Germany (WCW): Too Cold Scorpio & Marcus Bagwell b Harlem Heat, Frank Anderson b Alex Wright, Steve Austin b Johnny B. Badd, Vader b Maxx Payne, Sting & Rick Steamboat b Paul Orndorff & Paul Roma
  142.  
  143. 3/17 Sapporo Nakajima Gym (FMW - 4,860): Gosaku Goshagawara b Mr. Chin, Battle Ranger & Masato Tanaka b Tetsuhiro Kuroda & Goshagawara, Sabu & Damian b Masaru Toi & Hideki Hosaka, The Sheik NC Goro Tsurumi, Combat Toyoda & Shark Tsuchiya & Crusher Maedomari b Miwa Sato & Yukie Nabeno & Megumi Kudo, Big Titan & The Gladiator & Ricky Fuji b Sambo Asako & Mr. Gannosuke & Katsutoshi Niiyama, Tarzan Goto b Mitsuhiro Matsunaga, WWA Brass Knux title: Mr. Pogo b Atsushi Onita
  144.  
  145. 3/17 Hyden, KY (SMW - 200): Thrillseekers b Well Dunn, Ladder match: Tracy Smothers b Chris Candido, Handicap match: Bob Armstrong b Dick Murdoch & Jim Cornette, Dirty White Boy & Dirty White Girl b Brian Lee & Tammy Fytch, SMW tag title: Rock & Roll Express b Heavenly Bodies-DQ
  146.  
  147. 3/17 Mie (All Japan women - 1,100): Rie Tamada b Chikako Shiratori, Chapparita Asari b Kumiko Maekawa, Bull Nakano & Yumiko Hotta b Kyoko Inoue & Toshiyo Yamada, Takako Inoue b Tomoko Watanabe, Aja Kong & Sakie Hasegawa b Manami Toyota & Kaoru Ito 20:18
  148.  
  149. 3/17 Plant City, FL (Plant City Wrestling Federation): Jerry Flynn b Luscious Luke, Chubby Mo Cool b Hit Man, Vern Henderson b Butch Long, Ned Brady b Cody Wade, Cuban Assassin b Odessa Slim, Rick Thames & Sonny T NC Randy Fuller & Jimmy Watts
  150.  
  151. 3/17 Winnipeg (River City Wrestling): Dean Ducharme b Todd Bullet, Constable Kane & Caveman Broda & Vance Nevada b The Outpatient & Dakota Moondog & Pink Panther, Brian Jewel & Jason the Terrible DDQ Stan Saxon & Dark Jason, Sluggo Smith b Bobby Jay, Sgt. Steele b Robby Royce
  152.  
  153. 3/17 La Puente, CA (International American Wrestling - 115): Fisico Nuclear b Vandal Drummond, Thunder Machine b Kimera, Dinamico Jr. b Poison, Rick Sadist & G.Q. Gregory b Prime Time Peterson & Super Storm, Mercurio & Chamaco Rebelde b Capitan Oro & Super Boy, Larry Ludden DCOR Mr. Outrageous
  154.  
  155. 3/17 Shelbyville, TN (All-State Pro Wrestling): Boogie Woogie Boy b Rex Rider, Big Bubba b Blackie West-DQ, Tiny b Bongo Cool, Gypsy Joe b Chris Kerns, Billy Montana & Ken Arden b Ben Mullins & Glen Mullins
  156.  
  157. 3/18 Frankfurt, Germany (WCW): Too Cold Scorpio & Marcus Bagwell b Harlem Heat, Steve Regal b Johnny B. Badd, Ric Flair & Rick Steamboat b Paul Orndorff & Paul Roma, Vader b Maxx Payne, Sting b Steve Austin
  158.  
  159. 3/18 Hamamatsu (WCW - 3,470 sellout): Tokimitsu Ishizawa b Tatsuhito Takaiwa, Osamu Kido b El Samurai, Satoshi Kojima b Shinjiro Ohtani, Great Kabuki b Yuji Nagata, Takayuki Iizuka & Akira Nogami b Michiyoshi Ohara & Tatsutoshi Goto, Akitoshi Saito & Shiro Koshinaka & Kengo Kimura b Tadao Yasuda & Manabu Nakanishi & Riki Choshu, Jushin Liger & Tatsumi Fujinami b Killer Bee & Black Tiger, Shinya Hashimoto & Hiroshi Hase & Masa Chono b Rick Rude & Scott Norton & Hercules Fernandez
  160.  
  161. 3/18 Barbourville, KY (SMW - 625): Thrillseekers b Well Dunn, Ladder match: Tracy Smothers b Chris Candido, Handicap match: Bob Armstrong b Dick Murdoch & Jim Cornette, Dirty White Boy & Dirty White Girl b Brian Lee & Tammy Fytch, 60:00 marathon match for SMW tag title: Heavenly Bodies b Robert Gibson & Tim Horner
  162.  
  163. 3/18 Indianapolis (Championship Wrestling America): Jerry Faith b Doug O'Briley, Lady Vendetta b Lisa Crockett, Mad Man Pondo b Dan Anderson, Sean Casey b Gigolo Joe, Bar Room Brawlers b O'Briley & Flash Flannagan, Flannagan b Mike Samples-DQ, Flannagan won Barbed wire Battle Royal
  164.  
  165. 3/18 Dallas (GWF): John Hawk b Marc Valiant-COR, Rod Price b Scott Putski, Plowboy Wilbur b Sweet Daddy Falcone, GWF title: Chris Adams b Moadib-COR, Mike Davis b Iceman King Parsons-DQ, Country whipping match: Action Jackson b Francis Buxton-DQ, Awesome Kong & King Kong b Putski & Valiant-DQ, Price b Jeep Swenson-DQ
  166.  
  167. 3/18 Scranton, PA (WWWA): Johnny Gunn b The Terminator, Jim Neidhart b King Kaluha, Irish Leprachuan b Mighty Doom, The Boss (Ray Traylor) b Jack Hammer-DQ, The Warlord b Abdullah the Butcher-DQ, Demolition Ax & Blast b Diamond Express-DQ, Road Warrior Hawk b Nailz-DQ
  168.  
  169. 3/18 Yahaba (Michinoku Pro - 925): Wellington Wilkens Jr. b Naohiro Hoshikawa, Terry Boy b Masato Yakushiji, Gran Naniwa b Yone Genjin, Taka Michinoku b Shiryu, Super Delfin & Ginsei Shinzaki & Layo b Michinoku & Shu el Guerrero & Kazumichi Nakajima
  170.  
  171. 3/18 Dolton, IL (Windy City Wrestling): Kevin Quinn b Jake Milliman, Christopher Daniels b Danny Dominion-DQ, Smith Brothers DDQ Texas Hangmen, Ken Erikson b Ike Andrews, K.C. Knight NC Mike Anthony (not USWA wrestler of same name), Koko Ware b Mike Samson-DQ, Knight & Anthony b Senji & Takayama
  172.  
  173. 3/18 San Bernardino, CA (Golden State Wrestling Association - 100): Kid Chaos b Kimera, Thrashmaster DCOR The Renegade, Jason Redondo b Robbie Victory, Larry Ludden b Scott Cole-DQ, Redondo DCOR Jeff Bennett, Rick Sadist DDQ Eric Studd, Sadist won Battle Royal
  174.  
  175. 3/18 Fort Oglethorpe, GA (TWA): Mike Collins & Dakota Outlaw b Billy Montana & Tracy Black, Richie Dye b Kurt Von Himmler-DQ, Widow Maker & Bubba Humphrey d Sam Colt & Keith Hart, Ken Timbs b Randy Steel, C.M. Quick & Fly Guy b Big Tiny & Ken Arden, Roger Sartain & Mad Jack b Joel Travis & Frankie Lee
  176.  
  177. 3/19 Tokyo Korakuen Hall (All Japan - 2,100 sellout): Rusher Kimura & Mitsuo Momota b Haruka Eigen & Ryukaku Izumida, Johnny Ace b Tamon Honda, Dan Kroffat & Doug Furnas b Mighty Inoue & Takao Omori, Giant Baba & Kenta Kobashi & Tsuyoshi Kikuchi b Akira Taue & Masa Fuchi & Yoshinari Ogawa 28:04, Steve Williams b The Eagle, Stan Hansen b John Nord, Toshiaki Kawada b Johnny Smith, Mitsuharu Misawa b Jun Akiyama
  178.  
  179. 3/19 Wurzburg, Germany (WCW): Too Cold Scorpio & Marcus Bagwell b Harlem Heat, Non-title: Maxx Payne b Steve Regal, Steve Austin b Johnny B. Badd, Sting & Rick Steamboat b Paul Orndorff & Paul Roma, Non-title: Vader b Ric Flair
  180.  
  181. 3/19 Yokohama Arena (RINGS - 8,156): Prelim results unavailable, Herman Renting b Todor Todorov, Dick Vrij b Bart Vail, Bitarze Tariel b Clemenchov, Volk Han b Georgi Gandelaki, Akira Maeda b Andrei Kopilov
  182.  
  183. 3/19 Fukaya (New Japan - 1,800): Tatsuhito Takaiwa b Tokimitsu Ishizawa, Satoshi Kojima b Nobukazu Hirai, Yuji Nagata b Manabu Nakanishi, Kuniaki Kobayashi & Great Kabuki b Tadao Yasuda & El Samurai, Black Tiger & Killer Bee b Shinjiro Ohtani & Jushin Liger, Michyoshi Ohara & Shiro Koshinaka & Kengo Kimura b Akira Nogami & Takayuki Iizuka & Masa Chono, Hiroshi Hase & Shinya Hashimoto b Akitoshi Saito & Tatsutoshi Goto, Scott Norton & Rick Rude & Hercules Fernandez b Riki Choshu & Tatsumi Fujinami & Osamu Kido
  184.  
  185. 3/19 Harlan, KY (SMW - 450): Thrillseekers b Well Dunn, Ladder match: Tracy Smothers b Chris Candido, Handicap match: Tim Horner b Dick Murdoch & Jim Cornette, Dirty White Boy & Dirty White Girl b Brian Lee & Tammy Fytch, 60:00 marathon match for SMW tag title: Heavenly Bodies b Robert Gibson & Tracy Smothers
  186.  
  187. 3/19 Miyagi (FMW - 2,088): Masato Tanaka b Tetsuhiro Kuroda, Sabu b Gosaku Goshagawara, Crusher Maedomari b Nurse Nakamura, The Sheik b Koji Nakagawa, Combat Toyoda & Shark Tsuchiya & Tsuppari Mack b Megumi Kudo & Miwa Sato & Yukie Nabeno, Goro Tsurumi b Damian, Mr. Pogo & Hideki Hosaka b Battle Ranger & Tarzan Goto, Street fight: Atsushi Onita & Sambo Asako & Katsutoshi Niiyama b Big Titan & The Gladiator & Ricky Fuji
  188.  
  189. 3/19 Kasugai (All Japan women - 2,295): Prelim results unavailable, Kyoko Inoue b Kaoru Ito, Aja Kong & Yumiko Hotta b Suzuka Minami & Manami Toyota
  190.  
  191. 3/19 Marumori (Michinoku Pro - 422): Wellington Wilkens Jr. b Naohiro Hoshikawa, Leopardo Negro b Masato Yakushiji, Terry Boy d Taka Michinoku, Shiryu b Gran Naniwa, Ginsei Shinzaki b Kazumichi Nakajima-COR, Great Sasuke & Shu el Guerrero b Yone Genjin & Super Delfin
  192.  
  193. 3/19 Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico (WWC): Hurricane Castillo Jr. & Mohammad Hussein (Lou Fabbiano) b El Bronco #1 & Pulgarcito, Dutch Mantel NC Atkie Malumba (Ben Peacock aka Giant Kimala II), Pulgarcito b Tahitian Warrior (Lloyd Anoia), Jose Luis Rivera b El Exotico, Masked Butcher b Cyclone, Rey Gonzales b Greg Valentine, Carlitos Colon DDQ Abdullah the Butcher
  194.  
  195. 3/19 Shenandoah, PA (Championship Wrestling America {not related inn any way to Indianapolis group of same name} - 1,650 sellout): Johnny Gunn won Battle Royal, Ray Odyssey b Abbuda Singh, The Spiders b Super Jocks, Irish Leprachuan b Little Doom, Tito Santana b Jim Neidhart, Gunn b Damien Demento, Doink the Clown (Steve Keirn) b Jerry Lawler-DQ
  196.  
  197. 3/19 Andover, MA (Century Wrestling Alliance - 1,000): Kevin Sullivan & Tasmaniac DDQ Tommy Dreamer & Vic Steamboat, Misty Blue b Nasty Girl, The Trouble Makers (Double Trouble) b The Lazer & El Mascarado, Knuckles Nelson b Randy Starr, Tony Rumble b The Intern, Tony Atlas b Candy Man (Jerry Seevey), Honkytonk Man DDQ Vic Steamboat
  198.  
  199. 3/19 Harvard, IL (Windy City Wrestling): Steve Bishop b Blake Bosworth, Jake Milliman b Ike Andrews, Christopher Daniels b Trevor Blanchard-DQ, Kevin Quinn b Mike Anthony, Manson Brothers DDQ Senji & Takayama, Wrecking Crew (not former WCW team) & Haystacks Ross b Texas Hangmen & J.R., Koko Ware b Mike Samson-DQ
  200.  
  201. 3/19 Auburndale, FL (UCWA - 250): Odell Scaggs b Dirty Dave, Sensual b Mystique, Tommy Wright b Rick Ryder, Vern Henderson b Ned Brady-DQ, Lanny Poffo & Kevin Katlyn b Motor City Bad Boys-DQ, Rocky Johnson DCOR Buddy Valentine
  202.  
  203. 3/19 Shelbyville, TN (All-State Pro Wrestling): Rex Rider b Bongo Cool, Big Bubba b Blackie West, Candi Divine b Robbie Rage, Gypsy Joe b Tiny-DQ, Big Bono b Rex Rider, Billy Montana & Ken Arden b Ben Mullins & Glen Mullins
  204.  
  205. 3/20 Hamburg, Germany (WCW): Too Cold Scorpio & Marcus Bagwell b Paul Orndorff & Paul Roma **1/2, Non-title: Rick Steamboat b Steve Regal 29:28 **1/2, Johnny B. Badd & Maxx Payne b Harlem Heat *1/2, Non-title: Ric Flair b Steve Austin **1/2, European hwt title tournament final: Sting b Vader to become first champion ***1/2
  206.  
  207. 3/20 Tokyo Korakuen Hall (All Japan - 2,100 sellout): Masao Inoue d Tamon Honda, Tsuyoshi Kikuchi & Satoru Asako b Kentaro Shiga & Mighty Inoue, Giant Baba & Rusher Kimura b Ryukaku Izumida & Haruka Eigen, John Nord b The Eagle, Akira Taue b Doug Furnas, Kenta Kobashi b Johnny Ace 21:22, Stan Hansen & Takao Omori b Mitsuharu Misawa & Jun Akiyama, Steve Williams & Dan Kroffat & Johnny Smith b Toshiaki Kawada & Masa Fuchi & Yoshinari Ogawa
  208.  
  209. 3/20 Tokyo Korakuen Hall (New Japan - 2,100 sellout): Yuki Ishikawa & Tokimitsu Ishizawa b Tatsuhito Takaiwa & Shinjiro Ohtani, Satoshi Kojima b Yuji Nagata, Great Kabuki & Michiyoshi Ohara & Kuniaki Kobayashi b Manabu Nakanishi & Akira Nogami & Takayuki Iizuka, Black Tiger b El Samurai, The Barbarian & Power Warrior b Hercules Fernandez & Scott Norton, Jushin Liger & Hiroshi Hase b Killer Bee & Rick Rude, Riki Choshu & Tatsumi Fujinami b Kengo Kimura & Tatsutoshi Goto, Masa Chono & Shinya Hashimoto b Akitoshi Saito & Shiro Koshinaka
  210.  
  211. 3/20 Shiraishi (FMW): Gosaku Goshagawara b Mr. Chin, Masato Tanaka b Tetsuhiro Kuroda, Battle Ranger b Damien, The Sheik & Sabu DDQ Big Titan & The Gladiator, Combat Toyoda & Crusher Maedomari & Shark Tsuchiya & Tsuppari Mack b Megumi Kudo & Miwa Sato & Yukie Nabeno & Keiko Iwame, Tarzan Goto b Ricky Fuji, No rope barbed wire street fight tornado death match: Atsushi Onita & Sambo Asako & Katsutoshi Niiyama b Mr. Pogo & Goro Tsurumi & Hideki Hosaka 21:02
  212.  
  213. 3/20 Kita (All Japan women): Chapparita Asari d Rie Tamada, Kaoru Ito b Tomoko Watanabe, Bull Nakano & Sakie Hasegawa b Suzuka Minami & Takako Inoue, Manami Toyota b Mima Shimoda, Yumiko Hotta & Aja Kong b Toshiyo Yamada & Kyoko Inoue
  214.  
  215. 3/20 Akita (JWP): Prelim results unavailable, Mayumi Ozaki b Yagi, Plum Mariko & Devil Masami b Hikari Fukuoka & Cutie Suzuki
  216.  
  217. 3/20 Hiraga (Michinoku Pro): Terry Boy b Naohiro Hoshikawa, Shiryu b Masato Yakushiji, Kazumichi Nakajima & Wellington Wilkens Jr. b Leopardo Negro & Yone Genjin, Ginsei Shinzaki b Taka Michinoku, Great Sasuke & Shu el Guerrero b Super Delfin & Gran Naniwa
  218.  
  219. 3/21 Nagoya (New Japan - 11,000 sellout): Satoshi Kojima b Tatsuhito Takaiwa, Manabu Nakanishi b Nobukazu Hirai, Osamu Kido & Tadao Yasuda b Yuji Nagata & Shinjiro Ohtani, Akira Nogami & Takayuki Iizuka b The Barbarian & Killer Bee, Hiro Saito & Yoshiaki Yatsu b Kuniaki Kobayashi & Akitoshi Saito, Rick Rude b Masa Chono, Power Warrior b Hercules Fernandez, IWGP jr. title: Jushin Liger b Black Tiger, 2/3 falls: Michiyoshi Ohara & Tatsutoshi Goto & Great Kabuki & Shiro Koshinaka & Kengo Kimura b Hiroshi Hase & Keiji Muto & Yoshiaki Fujiwara & Riki Choshu & Tatsumi Fujinami, IWGP hwt title: Shinya Hashimoto b Scott Norton
  220.  
  221. 3/21 Poughkeepsie, NY (WWF Monday Night Raw tapings): Razor Ramon b Diesel-DQ, Lex Luger b Rick Martel, Owen Hart b Mark Kruger, 1-2-3 Kid b Black Phantom (David Heath), Crush b Ray Hudson, Earthquake b Adam Bomb, Ramon b Austin Steele, IRS & Jeff Jarrett & Head Shrinkers & Rick Martel b 1-2-3 Kid & Sparky Plugg & Tatanka & Smoking Gunns, Luger b Bam Bam Bigelow, Yokozuna DCOR Earthquake, Quebecers b Bushwhackers, Tatanka b Chris Hamrick, Diesel b Antonio Lisea, Jarrett b Koko Ware, Owen Hart b ?
  222.  
  223. 3/21 Yamato (All Japan - 1,800): John Nord b Tamon Honda, Johnny Ace b Johnny Smith, Giant Baba & Rusher Kimura & Mitsuo Momota b Masa Fuchi & Haruka Eigen & Ryukaku Izumida 24:46, Steve Williams & Dan Kroffat b Yoshinari Ogawa & Mighty Inoue, Stan Hansen b The Eagle, Mitsuharu Misawa b Doug Furnas, Kenta Kobashi & Jun Akiyama & Tsuyoshi Kikuchi b Toshiaki Kawada & Akira Taue & Takao Omori 23:00
  224.  
  225. 3/21 Tokyo Korakuen Hall (All Japan women - 1,950): Rie Tamada b Chikako Shiratori, Kaoru Ito b Tomoko Watanabe, Suzuka Minami & Chapparita Asari b Mima Shimoda & Etsuko Mita, Manami Toyota b Takako Inoue, Yumiko Hotta b Sakie Hasegawa, Aja Kong & Bull Nakano b Kyoko Inoue & Toshiyo Yamada 21:59
  226.  
  227. Special thanks to: Jeff Osborne, Shannon Rose, Dave Pinsky, Richard Lannon, Thorsten Sackmann, Steve "Dr. Lucha" Sims, Jason Meier, Matthew Cail, Karin Moore, Mad Jack, Dan Parris, Ric Gillespie, Rich Palladino, Peter Schaar, Buddy Lamantia, Jason Peters, Brian Hildebrand, Tony Freidman, Kurt Brown, Buddy Phillips, Matt Lansley
  228.  
  229. JAPANESE TELEVISION RUNDOWN
  230.  
  231. 2/19 JWP: 1. Hikari Fukuoka pinned Cutie Suzuki in 21:10 with a dropkick off the top rope and moonsault. Nice moves back-and-forth. Highlight was Fukuoka missing a plancha off the top rope to the floor and crashing on the floor. ***1/4; 2. Chigusa Nagayo made Plum Mariko submit to the sleeper in 22:40. Mariko jumped Nagayo at the bell and Nagayo bled from the first minute. Although the women fans were solidly behind Nagayo, the male fans who have no loyalty to her legendary status because they weren't fans in that era, were booing her since she worked as a heel. Mainly submissions by Nagayo and good mat wrestling. Match was totally carried by Nagayo and had great psychology and heat, but no spectacular moves. ***3/4; 3. Dynamite Kansai & Mayumi Ozaki beat Devil Masami & Candy Okutsu in 25:54. The match started out okay but slowed until about the 15:00 mark. At that point it got really good with a lot of near falls. Highlight was Masami legdropping both her foes off the top rope simultaneously on two different occasions but them kicking out at two each time. Masami kept getting near falls on both. When Okutsu tagged in at 25:00, you could sense everyone in the crowd knew they were going to the finish. Masami went to suplex her partner onto Kansai, who got her knees up and quickly rolled over and pinned Okutsu. ***1/2
  232.  
  233. 2/23 ALL JAPAN WOMEN: 1. Suzuka Minami & Chikako Shiratori & Kumiko Maekawa beat Etsuko Mita & Tomoko Watanabe & Rie Tamada. It was Maekawa and Tamada's television debut and they looked green. Shiratori is beginning to show that she's got a little potential. All action with a lot of near falls, but the younger girls didn't know how to work to get heat. Minami and Mita carried it well enough that it was good. Minami surprisingly pinned Mita after a dropkick off the top rope. **1/2; 2. Takako Inoue pinned Mima Shimoda after a flying knee to the back off the top. Both worked hard and did a lot of near falls with suplexes but not much heat. After the match, Cutie Suzuki came to ringside and challenged both women. When Takako accepted and went to shake her hands, Suzuki slapped her hand away to set up a major show match soon. **3/4; 3. Aja Kong & Bull Nakano beat Sakie Hasegawa & Kaoru Ito in 22:31 when Nakano pinned Hasegawa after a legdrop off the top rope. Kong & Nakano sold a lot to make the match better than it would sound on paper because of the size difference between the two teams. Because of that, it was a tremendous match. ****; 4. In a non-title match, Yumiko Hotta & Kyoko Inoue beat Manami Toyota & Toshiyo Yamada in 22:02. Match was super from start to finish. At one point Kyoko did 26 reps in the giant swing on Toyota. Awesome spot as Toyota was running across the ring to do a tope and just as she went through the ropes, Hotta kicked her in the chest. Toyota later did an Eddy Guerrero tope. Yamada did a plancha off the top rope onto Kyoko, who moved and wiped out her teammate. Finally Hotta pinned Toyota after a power bomb. ****1/2
  234.  
  235. 2/26 NEW JAPAN: 1. Choshu & Fujinami & Chono & Kido & Hase beat Koshinaka & Kimura & Kabuki & Goto & Ohara in a best-of-three fall six man tag match that went nearly 30:00. Only highlights of the first 25:00 aired on television. Hase did a 29-rep giant swing. Koshinaka pinned Choshu with a german suplex to win the first fall. Chono made Ohara submit to the STF in the second. Fujinami made Goto submit to the scorpion in the third. What aired on television was excellent largely due to Hase who was in most of the way and carried the match for his team; 2. Steiners beat Liger & Power in 13:05. A super match. Scott suplexed Liger all over the place early. Liger made a comeback with a rana and a plancha off the top rope to the floor. Scott came back with an overhead belly-to-belly and put Liger in the STF. Power tagged in and did a Road Warrior no-sell spot on a piledriver by Rick. Liger tagged in and got suplexed all over the place by Scott again. The Japanese did a dangerous double-team move when Power had Rick on the floor and lifted him up for a back suplex, and Liger came off the top rope to the floor with a flying clothesline for a double-team move on the suplex. Liger got several near falls on Rick, and then Power got Rick in the Power special submission but Scott made the save. The Steiners came back and Rick gave Liger a belly-to-belly superplex but he kicked out, and Scott gave Liger a DDT off the top rope and he kicked out again. Power started clotheslining the Steiners all over. Finish came with Power having Rick on his shoulders and Liger coming off the top with a cross-body, but Rick turned it into a powerslam for the pin. I've seen Rick do that move many times in the U.S. but this was the best I've seen it executed. ****1/4; 3. Hashimoto pinned Tenryu in 15:04. Although this wasn't billed for the IWGP title, Hashimoto before the match said that if Tenryu could beat him, he'd give him the belt. A lot of matwork early but these guys worked even stiffer than you'd imagine. Hashimoto got yet another bloody nose. Match was intense, with great psychology and great heat. Tenryu kicked out of Hashimoto's finisher running DDT and Hashimoto kicked out of Tenryu's finisher the power bomb. Hashimoto finally won after a belly-to-belly, enzuigiri and a second running DDT. The place went nuts seeing the new generation wrestler beat the legend. ****
  236.  
  237. 2/27 ALL JAPAN: 1. Takao Omori pinned Johnny Gunn with a german suplex. Decent pacing but no heat at all. *; 2. Kawada & Taue beat Patriot & Eagle when Kawada made Eagle submit to an abdominal stretch. The work was very good but again the lack of crowd heat made the match seem nothing special. **1/2; 3. Misawa & Kobashi & Akiyama beat Hansen & Nord & Rob Van Dam in 18:00 when Kobashi pinned Van Dam after a power bomb and jacknife pin. Van Dam has improved a lot from when he first came to New Japan. Nord is still clumsy but is aalso getting better. It was a good match but not nearly the level of a usual All Japan main event. ***
  238.  
  239. 3/5 NEW JAPAN: 1. Hase made Tadao Yasuda submit to a short arm scissors in 10:26. This was Yasuda's pro debut and he was super green. Yasuda, 30 years old, about 6-4, 280, was a former decent level sumo, but from his debut, he didn't show any potential but will get a push because he's somewhat famous from sumo and has size. Hase was his trainer, but even so, he showed nothing nor have a hint of having any real potential, almost like a younger Wajima. Hase was so great at wet-nursing him through the match that he exemplified why he's one of the best in the world and made the match also. *1/4; 2. Yoshiaki Yatsu & Hiro Saito & Norio Honaga beat Koshinaka & Kabuki & Ohara when Yatsu pinned Ohara with a bulldog headlock. Only the end aired and it looked good. Yatsu looked fine in his first match with New Japan in almost ten years although he's nothing like he was years ago when he was in the top five in the world; 3. Hashimoto pinned Liger in a battle of world heavyweight champ vs. junior heavyweight champ in 23:08, after a brainbuster. Liger wore a new ring costume without a top and with only a face-mask. He didn't do any flying and the match was mainly matwork and stiff blows. Liger kept working on Hashimoto's knees, and since he was the underdog, had the advantage almost the entire match. Liger got several near falls including a DDT off the top rope, a Frankensteiner off the top, a german suplex and a dropkick off the top. The place went nuts when Hashimoto kicked out of the Frankensteiner off the top. Finally Hashimoto cut him off with an ipponzei (judo hiplock) and stiff kicked him until the finish. ***1/2
  240.  
  241. 3/6 ALL JAPAN: 1. Misawa & Kobashi beat Hansen & Baba in 35:51. This match, complete with the pre-match hype, post-match drama and interviews took up the entire television show. The first 20:00 was just okay. Baba was over like crazy in the match and his presence was responsible for the heat and interest, but you really have to suspend disbelief watching him even though he works about as good as you can expect from a 56-year-old man with no physical credibility. The last 10:00 was great with a lot of near falls, including Kobashi kicking out of a Baba piledriver, Kobashi getting his foot on the rope at the last second ala Flair after a Hansen lariat. The place went nuts at the 30:00 and 35:00 call, as if the match going that long with Baba involved all by itself is something to cheer about. Place went nuts when Baba kicked out of Kobashi's moonsault, but finally Misawa pinned Baba after a flying clothesline off the top rope. Fans chanted like crazy for Misawa since he won, but the biggest reaction after was for Baba as a sympathetic older man who had done his best against men who are not only young enough to be his kids but in many ways are almost considered as his kids. ****1/4
  242.  
  243. UWA
  244.  
  245. The only major news is that Scorpio Jr. turned babyface on 3/6 when he returned from Japan, feuding with long-time partner Shu el Guerrero. It started in a heel vs. heel trios match, however all the heels turned on Scorpio, making him a face.
  246.  
  247. Things should be slow for the next month as El Toreo is booked because of the upcoming national elections on Sundays from 3/20 through 4/10, so the next show won't be on 4/17.
  248.  
  249. EMLL
  250.  
  251. Negro Casas turned babyface on 3/4 at Arena Mexico and is feuding with Mocho Cota. After a trios match where they teamed with Sangre Chicana against Ultimo Dragon & Silver King & Ringo Mendoza, the two split up and brawled for 20 minutes all over the building before the other wrestlers pulled them apart.
  252.  
  253. ALL JAPAN
  254.  
  255. The annual Champion Carnival singles tournament started 3/19 at Korakuen Hall with no surprises as Steve Williams beat The Eagle, Stan Hansen pinned John Nord, Toshiaki Kawada pinned Johnny Smith (sub for Dan Spivey who canceled the tour due to an injury) and Mitsuharu Misawa pinned Jun Akiyama. The 3/20 tourney results saw Nord beat Eagle, Akira Taue pinned Doug Furnas and Kenta Kobashi pinned Johnny Ace while on 3/21, Hansen pinned Eagle and Misawa made Furnas submit.
  256.  
  257. It's evident plenty of folks are paying attention to the rapid improvement in Takao Omori, as on the 3/20 Korakuen Hall show he teamed with Hansen to beat Misawa & Akiyama.
  258.  
  259. The 3/13 television show did a strong 3.7 rating, although they've got only two more weeks to get numbers like that before the time slot kills any real chance to draw much above a 1.0.
  260.  
  261. NEW JAPAN
  262.  
  263. The 3/21 Nagoya show drew a sellout 11,000 as both singles champs retained their crowns as Shinya Hashimoto pinned Scott Norton in 18:55 with a running DDT and Jushin Liger pinned Black Tiger in 16:14 in a Frankensteiner in what was reported as a great match. In a rematch of their NWA tournament final in Tokyo in 1992 and their horrible match in Philadelphia later that year, Rick Rude pinned Masa Chono.
  264.  
  265. The annual Young Lions tournament looks like it'll come down to Manabu Nakanishi vs. Satoshi Kojima. Kojima has already clinched a spot in the finals.
  266.  
  267. Keiji Muto had his first match since the Tokyo Dome and subsequent knee surgery in Nagoya but was pinned in the third fall by Shiro Koshinaka in a New Japan vs. Skinheads ten-man tag match.
  268.  
  269. Antonio Inoki worked on 3/16 at the Tokyo Gymnasium in a tag match with a rare DQ finish teaming with rookie Tadao Yasuda to lose to Masa Chono & Osamu Kido when referee Masao Hattori ruled Inoki's chokehold illegal and disqualified him when he refused to stop choking Chono. The gimmick they are using is that in a martial arts rules match which Inoki is billed as the specialist in, choking is legal. Apparently this was done to set up an Inoki vs. Chono match as well for 1994.
  270.  
  271. 3/12 television show did a 5.1 rating.
  272.  
  273. OTHER JAPAN NOTES
  274.  
  275. Akira Maeda drew a "poor" crowd of 8,156 to the Yokohama Arena on 3/19 as he beat Andrei Kopilov in the main event which shows just how much his drawing power has dropped.
  276.  
  277. Sensing the problem Maeda two days later put together a deal to bring 1992 Olympic gold medalist in judo at 209 pounds, 23-year-old Tabil Haharashivili (not certain of spelling) to be his opponent on the 4/23 card in Hiroshima as a fresh new martial arts superstar.
  278.  
  279. It appears Pancrase will have a 5/31 Budokan Hall show with Minoru Suzuki vs. World heavyweight kick boxing champ Maurice Smith and Masakatsu Funaki vs. Wayne Shamrock as the double main event.
  280.  
  281. Ryuma Go's latest promotion called Championship Wrestling Japan has shows 3/23 to 3/26 using Jesse Barr, Bruiser Brian Cox, Red October (C.W. Bergstrom) and Lou Andrews from Oregon as his foreign talent.
  282.  
  283. FMW ran a big show in Sapporo on 3/17 with Mr. Pogo retaining the WWA Brass Knux title pinned Atsushi Onita after three piledrivers and Mitsuhiro Matsunaga made his return after being out since 12/8 after major knee surgery but lost to Tarzan Goto.
  284.  
  285. Perhaps because the company has run too many shows at Korakuen Hall. Perhaps because it was just six days before the Yokohama Arena big show. Perhaps because the card was on a Monday night. Perhaps it is what everyone predicted would have to happen sooner or later in that Korakuen Hall can't keep being an automatic sellout building with so many shows running each week, since the day before both All Japan and New Japan ran shows in the Hall. Whatever the reason, All Japan women failed to sellout Korakuen Hall on 3/21, the building they usually sell hundreds of standing room to every time they have a show, for the first time in years, doing maybe 100 tickets shy of capacity for a nothing card headlined by Aja Kong & Bull Nakano vs. Toshiyo Yamada & Kyoko Inoue.
  286.  
  287. Mil Mascaras & Dos Caras will team up for the first time in Japan in more than ten years on the late April WAR tour. The next tour which starts this week will have King Haku, Corazon de Leon and Norman Smiley (EMLL's Black Magic) as foreigners.
  288.  
  289. Two Japanese wrestlers, who I believe were WAR's Gedo & Jado, worked over the weekend as Senji and Takayama for Windy City Wrestling.
  290.  
  291. USWA
  292.  
  293. The gate on 3/14 held up to $8,800 coming off the big show the previous week. The headliner was a Rage in the Cage with Jerry Lawler & Brian Christopher & Dream Machine vs. Eddie & Doug Gilbert & Tommy Rich ended with the faces winning, but after the match Skull Von Crush interfered and got the key to the handcuffs and gave it to Eddie Gilbert, who locked up Lawler and unlocked the heels and Lawler took a major pounding. Lawler is missing the 3/21 show, largely because he's scheduled for WWF voice-overs that morning (syndicated shows airing this weekend are being done in the early a.m. on 3/21 so they can talk about Mania instead of being done in advance as is the usual case).
  294.  
  295. Also in the Rage in the Cage, Rich attacked TV announcer Cory Macklin, who did the show on 3/19 with his arm in a sling.
  296.  
  297. Eddie Gilbert beat Christopher on 3/14 in a match to unify both the USWA and Unified titles. However on 3/19 television, Christopher challenged Eddie just for the USWA belt and put up his '93 Blazer. The match was said to be okay. After a ref bump, Doug Gilbert came in with a chain but when Christopher ducked, hit Eddie. Doug then KO'd Christopher. Eddie tried a bulldog on the floor but Christopher shoved him off into the post and jumped into the ring to beat the count, and under this week's Memphis rules, the title can change hands via count out.
  298.  
  299. They aired a clip from 3/18 in Middleton, TN where The Moondogs destroyed Billy Travis. During a Dogs squash, Travis & Don Bass came out swinging guitars at the Dogs and Spot juiced hardway. Travis in his interview said he went out to find a partner who could swing a guitar as well as he could.
  300.  
  301. They set up a feud with Von Crush vs. Dream Machine when Von Crush did an interview and said he'd never heard of Machine. Machine came out and slapped him in the face.
  302.  
  303. Vince McMahon did his weekly heel interview saying Memphians sounds like Amphibians and compared the fans to reptiles I guess. McMahon said that Lawler would be afraid to come to Wrestlemania and that the reason Lawler wasn't going to be on the 3/21 card is because he was afraid of the Steiners being there.
  304.  
  305. 3/21 show is headlined by a Moondog Battle Royal, which is under Royal Rumble rules and each man as they enter can bring a 2x4 into the ring and use it. The last two men left then are each given garbage cans to pound on each other. In other bouts, Christopher & Steiners face Gilberts & Rich, Moondogs defend the tag titles against Bass & Travis, Rock & Roll Express vs. Well Dunn with the winners facing Moondogs, Machine vs. Von Crush, Ronnie Lottz vs. Bert Prentice and prelims.
  306.  
  307. In Evansville on 3/16, Eddie Gilbert slapped the ring announcer who bled from the mouth. That show drew more than double the usual weekly crowd with 400 fans attending, largely due to the Rock & Roll Express billed to appear, but were disappointed when both no-showed (they were working for SMW that night).
  308.  
  309. SMW
  310.  
  311. Just a regular weekend with no major shows, however Bob Armstrong was ill for part of the weekend and was replaced by Tim Horner in his scheduled handicap matches against Dick Murdoch & Jim Cornette, and Ricky Morton has tonsillitis but still worked through the 17th, but was replaced by Horner and Tracy Smothers respectively in one hour marathon matches on 3/18 and 3/19.
  312.  
  313. With Chris Jericho leaving for a tour for WAR and Lance Storm returning home to Canada to get married, the Thrillseekers won't be back until May.
  314.  
  315. With the Heavenly Bodies gone until probably around November, Cornette is going to manage Bruiser Bedlam (Johnny K-9) who is going to get a major push as the top singles heel.
  316.  
  317. Dutch Mantel is done as color commentator for the present time since he's booking Puerto Rico for WWC, but expect the two groups to work together. Les Thatcher will work with Bob Caudle at the next taping until they get a new regular color man.
  318.  
  319. On television this weekend, Dirty White Girl did an interview building up the 4/1 Bluegrass Brawl saying that Tammy Fytch was a rat who runs from hotel room to hotel room looking for new meat. Fytch came back and said it'll be easy to win a match where the loser gets stripped of their clothes with White Girl because all you have to do is pull out $10 and she strips automatically.
  320.  
  321. Bad timing department. Smothers and Chris Candido had a very good ladder match on television Saturday that for one day people were raving about, and by the next day everyone forgot about it.
  322.  
  323. HERE AND THERE
  324.  
  325. Mike Samples suffered third-degree burns on 3/18 in Indianapolis doing an angle to set up a ring surrounded by fire match. Samples, the heel, had too much rubbing alcohol poured on him by Flash Flannagan (who has had fire thrown at him a few times before), who got the bottle from Samples' manager, and when he torched him, the flame was way too large. Even the referee, who managed to put out the flames by smothering Samples with his jeans jacket, had minor burns. The ring surrounded by fire match, which has been done a few times in Japan (FMW and W*ING), was originally an idea from Puerto Rico from an outdoor stadium main event between Hercules Ayala and Carlos Colon.
  326.  
  327. Dennis Coraluzzo and Mark Bodie drew a sellout 1,650 on 3/19 in Shenandoah, PA using Doink the Clown (Steve Keirn) vs. Lawler as the headliner.
  328.  
  329. Killer Kowalski is now writing a weekly pro wrestling column in the Boston Herald.
  330.  
  331. Tom Reeder has International Wrestling shows 3/25 to 3/27 in Arizona and New Mexico with Tito Santana and Greg Valentine as headliners.
  332.  
  333. Former wrestler and promoter Antone Leone passed away. Leone, who was sometimes confused with the more famous Baron Leone, last promoted wrestling in the early 80s around Bakersfield, CA.
  334.  
  335. Congrats to Wayne Coulter of the Real Wrestling Hotline whose wife gave birth on 3/17.
  336.  
  337. MaryLou Gantner, the mother of former pro wrestler Ed Gantner who committed suicide a few years back which she blamed on kidney failure due to prolonged steroid use, spoke against steroids on 3/21 before the President's Council on Physical Fitness.
  338.  
  339. AAA
  340.  
  341. The promotion continues to be the hottest in the world when it comes to drawing fans. On 3/19 in Toluca for just a regular card headlined by Konnan & Perro Aguayo & Heavy Metal in a trios match, they drew 20,000 fans in the baseball stadium and turned away another 5,000.
  342.  
  343. The 3/3 show in Pachuca, which aired 3/19 on television in the United States, which was also just a regular show with no stip matches drew a sellout 15,000. That show featured one of the better matches on television in the U.S. so far this year with underrated heels Angel Mortal & Gallego & Mr. Condor against Winners & Super Calo & Rey Misterio Jr. Misterio pulled off yet another new move, running across the ring apron and leaping onto Condor's shoulders and taking him over with a flying ankle scissors. He won the first fall with a move that looked like it would be a dropkick off the top rope but turned into a Frankensteiner, which when he did it first last year everyone was going nuts over and now he's taken his repertoire so far it's considered ordinary. He also did a Silver King flip dive where he ran across the ring, jumped on the middle rope and dove over the top rope onto the floor on the other side while doing a flip in mid-air. Calo & Winners did simultaneous dives through the ropes with mid-air flips as well. It's interesting how "smart" the newspaper reporters are here, because the reporters heaped most of their praise on the heels, which is deserved because nobody would dare try moves like that unless they had total faith in the person at the bottom catching them. The only thing memorable about the main event is one bizarre ring entrance. New Japan wrestler Black Cat, who wears a black mask here, is a main event heel now. Cat, who was born in Mexico and started his career here before going to Japan in the late 70s and becoming a full-time worker for New Japan underneath. Anyway, this Mexican came out wearing a gi (judo outfit) with a Japanese flag on it to the Bruce Springsteen "Born in the USA" entrance music, while manager Damian (Amigo Ultra) from FMW was waving the American flag.
  344.  
  345. Nothing new on TripleMania although current tentative plans are to return to the United States in June for some California dates which we should have more definite news on in the next issue although Pena has talked of running four more shows in both San Jose and Los Angeles this year.
  346.  
  347. Rio Nilo Coliseum near Guadalajara, the site where the Blue Panther vs. Love Machine mask vs. hair match last year drew 21,000 fans, which was being considered as one of the TripleMania sites, was closed down permanently this past week.
  348.  
  349. The 3/20 television show was taped is Cuautla on 3/5 with the main emphasis put on feuds with Perro Aguayo vs. Fishman and Jerry Estrada vs. Heavy Metal in a brutal trios main event (Estrada-La Parka-Fishman vs. Metal-Aguayo-Latin Lover). It's a good bet that there will be a hair vs. mask and hair vs. hair matches with those wrestlers at TripleMania. Estrada hit a gusher. Estrada, Parka and Metal took turns taking Cactus Jack bumps over the guard rail into the second or third rows. Metal also leaped off the guard rail with a flip bodyblock onto Estrada who was lying on the third row chairs after taking a header over the rail. The funniest thing is there was an "I Love La Parka" fan club at ringside with little kids chanting "I Love you" at this heel doing a skeletor gimmick. Heels won in two straight when Metal went for a Frankensteiner but Estrada not only blocked it and turned it into a power bomb, but then in the same move picked him up by the legs and turned him over into a boston crab for the submission.
  350.  
  351. Talk of a AAA show in Tijuana on 4/15.
  352.  
  353. WCW
  354.  
  355. Brian Pillman's status with the company is up in the air right now. Pillman's contract expired without sides reaching an agreement for renewal, and Pillman was originally pulled from all shows and publicity was given word to remove him for future pub, although it appears right now he'll remain and finish out what was already booked for him at the 4/17 PPV show.
  356.  
  357. A lot of work is being done overseas this past week. WCW signed Marel Ausun, who was the WWF promoter in Germany which should give WCW primary access to the best arenas. It is believed the idea of having Hulk Hogan on the shows caused him to switch allegiances even though WWF largely packed them in on the recent German tour while WCW didn't do nearly so well for what were all sold shows. In addition Eric Bischoff was in Sweden this past week trying to put together a television deal in that country (which gets no WWF television so WCW will be the first guys in town) building the show around Frank Anderson, the former Olympic medalist that is working internationally for the company. Talk within the company is also that they may contact Davey Boy Smith again, but for exclusively European dates. Bischoff has also opened talks with Ron Skoler because the company wants to use Konnan on West Coast house shows although I don't know if Konnan's drawing power will translate well. Bischoff also met with Chip Minton, a member of the U.S. bobsled team at the recent Olympics who during the Olympics said he wanted to become a pro wrestler.
  358.  
  359. Looks like Tully Blanchard vs. Terry Funk will take place on the Slamboree PPV show on 5/22 in Philadelphia. Negotiations to bring in Bruno Sammartino as one of the legends seemingly have broken down.
  360.  
  361. If Pillman does stay, somebody ought to inform Bobby Heenan that the Hollywood Blonds were never managed by Rob Parker. Since Heenan wasn't around, it's a natural mistake to assume such, but now that he's said it several times on television, somebody ought to correct him.
  362.  
  363. The 3/12 WCW Saturday Night show did a 2.8 rating for Hulk's first appearance, while the new-look Main Event show did a 2.1 and new-look WCW Pro did a 1.6.
  364.  
  365. A correction from last week is that the All-Nighter did a 1.2 rating, not a 1.5. The number is still good enough that TBS is said to be considering making it an annual event, but other All-Nighters have done better.
  366.  
  367. On the 3/19 television show they aired a Steamboat-Paul Roma match which included Steamboat using a figure four and the Steamboat-Flair interview where they built up some heat for the match.
  368.  
  369. Alex Wright, the 18-year-old son of scientific legend Steve Wright from England, worked on the WCW tour after so many had gone down with injuries and was said to have been impressive.
  370.  
  371. Bryan Yandrisovitz (Brian Knobs) and Rick Rude filed a counter lawsuit on 2/28 against Johnny Small and Randy Jordan stemming from the lawsuit filed after a brawl at the Charlotte Night Club Coyote Joe's on 12/23. The wrestlers claim that Jordan, "fortified with liquid courage," hit Knobs over the head with a beer bottle and Small, also allegedly drunk, hit Rude in the face twice and cracked a tooth. Both wrestlers are seeking damages in excess of $10,000.
  372.  
  373. WWF
  374.  
  375. Highlights from the 3/21 Monday Night Raw tapings saw Lou Albano come out during a Quebecers interview and say he's got a mystery team to challenge for the belts, which will turn out to be the Head Shrinkers, who are going face.
  376.  
  377. Koko Ware returned but was pinned by Jeff Jarrett's DDT, but after the match Randy Savage and Ware cleaned house on Jarrett.
  378.  
  379. The 3/28 show will be headlined by Lex Luger beating Rick Martel with the torture rack, while the 4/4 show has the ten-man tag match that was scheduled at Wrestlemania although I believe Martel replaced Diesel on the heel side, as would have happened at Wrestlemania if you noticed the interview backstage when they shot the couldn't agree on a captain angle to excuse not holding the match due to time constraints (IRS & Martel & Jarrett & Shrinkers vs. 1-2-3 Kid & Sparky Plugg & Tatanka & Smoking Gunns) which wound up with IRS pinning Kid.
  380.  
  381. Shawn Michaels was at Raw interfering in a Ramon vs. Diesel match.
  382.  
  383. Mr. Perfect did an interview talking about Lex Luger.
  384.  
  385. It appears the current marriages when WWF returns to U.S. arena shows in a few weeks will be Bret vs. Owen or Yokozuna, Yokozuna vs. Earthquake in some cities, Luger vs. Perfect, Ramon vs. Diesel, Head Shrinkers vs. Quebecers, Jarrett vs. Plugg, IRS vs. Tatanka.
  386.  
  387. The television deal in Bethlehem, PA where Luger came out with the belt was clearly a swerve, because the decision to go with Hart couldn't have been a last-minute one. The decision is pretty much an admission the Luger experiment has failed, which one has to credit McMahon with making. We received a surprising amount of calls from people who thought Luger got screwed since no doubt he was "promised" the title at one point, which is pretty well the story of his career, but you have to be able to carry the ball when you're given the push and nobody has ever been given as big a push in this business while having proven so little. When one looks at Luger, he by all accounts should be a huge drawing star, but even in a cosmetic profession, looks aren't everything and this is more a charisma profession than a cosmetic profession these days, and the bodies don't mean nearly what they used to because that secret is out of the bottle as well.
  388.  
  389. Chet Coppock, who is the Chicago Bears stadium voice and a Chicago sports d.j., did the radio of Wrestlemania with Gorilla Monsoon.
  390.  
  391. The reason Stu & Helen Hart weren't at Wrestlemania is because Helen Hart was hospitalized about a week before the show.
  392.  
  393. Both WWF Mania and All-American were done live Wrestlemania weekend from Madison Square Garden. WCW should copy that policy.
  394.  
  395. Don't know what the status of the Steiners is other than they don't appear to be part of any current plans, but are under contract until mid-December. They were sent to Memphis by WWF which shows the relationship still exists, although the primary focus for the Steiners is clearly their New Japan dates. Jacques Rougeau did an interview over the weekend talking about how they had run the Steiners out of the WWF.
  396.  
  397. It appears McMahon & Lawler will now host Superstars while Johnny Polo & Stan Lane (as play-by-play) will do Challenge. Guess we'll know for sure over the weekend. Lane, Polo and Shane McMahon will be working as assistant television producers and it's expected the younger McMahon will start becoming visible as an announcer. They are also going to change the way they promote the local events on the shows.
  398.  
  399. Vince McMahon's voice was totally shot doing the live Raw from Poughkeepsie, from both doing Mania and then early the next morning doing voice-overs for this coming weekend's Superstars.
  400.  
  401. Savage did an interview over the weekend making references to someone who stabbed "us all" in the back which was obviously in reference to Hogan, although he didn't use Hogan's name.
  402.  
  403. The March to Mania special did a 3.5 rating on Sunday, although many think that number was greatly boosted by its movie-lead in on USA (Rambo) doing a whopping 6.0. The Monday replay did a 2.6, while All-American that weekend did a 2.3 and Mania a 1.4.
  404.  
  405. WWF is returning to Europe this week.
  406.  
  407. Rocko Gibraltar, doing a garbage man gimmick, is supposed to be heading in as a regular.
  408.  
  409. Pat Patterson, Terry Garvin and Bruce Prichard were at Killer Kowalski's show on 3/12 to scout Ron Reis.
  410.  
  411. The New York Daily News gossip columnist reported finishes for Wrestlemania the day of the show, from what was overheard during a conversation with Lane, Polo, Luger, Crush and Bret Hart at a New York steak house. It was clear someone did overhear the conversation, but misinterpreted it as what was reported was that Luger would win, and then Mr. Perfect would screw him out of the title in the match with Hart when that isn't exactly how it went. However, on 3/22, the paper's gossip section reported that Vince McMahon changed the original script from Luger winning the title and losing it to Hart because of the item in the paper and the fact WWF fans were congratulating Hart on becoming the champion all morning at the Doral Court Hotel before the show ever took place. However, the finishes as reported by the Daily News on 3/20 don't make sense as compared to what took place. If McMahon actually changed the finishes of a show of this calibre with all the planning that went into it just to make a newspaper report inaccurate, he'd have lost his mind as bad as Bill Watts did since Watts in the same situation would have changed the finish despite a new finish not making sense because of the belief it proved wrestling was real (I can recall a 1985 incident in Houston that fits this bill exactly), when all it did in was create a situation that made no sense.
  412.  
  413. ~~~~~~~~~~~~
  414.  
  415.  
  416.  
  417. Wrestling Observer Newsletter
  418.  
  419. PO Box 1228, Campbell, CA 95009-1228 April 4, 1994
  420.  
  421. WRESTLEMANIA X FINAL POLL RESULTS
  422.  
  423. Thumbs up 492 (79.1%)
  424.  
  425. Thumbs down 69 (11.1%)
  426.  
  427. In the middle 61 (09.8%)
  428.  
  429. BEST MATCH POLL
  430.  
  431. Shawn Michaels vs. Razor Ramon 479
  432.  
  433. Bret Hart vs. Owen Hart 136
  434.  
  435. WORST MATCH POLL
  436.  
  437. Lex Luger vs. Yokozuna 228
  438.  
  439. Adam Bomb vs. Earthquake 193
  440.  
  441. Doink & Dink vs. Bam Bam Bigelow & Luna Vachon 95
  442.  
  443. Quebecers vs. Men on Mission 54
  444.  
  445. Alundra Blayze vs. Leilani Kai 13
  446.  
  447. Based on phone calls, letters and fax messages to the Observer as of Monday, 3/28. Statistical margin of error: +-100%
  448.  
  449. With Wrestlemania X now a piece of history, the two biggest names in pro wrestling from the 1980s are getting ready to take opposite sides in what may be the biggest wrestling show of the year. The show, has been almost ten years in the making and there won't be an empty seat in sight. And if you think that we're talking about a wrestling match with a predetermined finish, you're on the wrong page.
  450.  
  451. With the scheduled trial date of Titan Sports and its Owner and CEO Vince McMahon on steroid charges just a few weeks away, it's time for readers of this publication, many of whom have followed the proceedings from start-to-finish, to sit in the proverbial jury box.
  452.  
  453. As most of you know, and as apparently few in wrestling are actually aware, there are four charges that will be tried, two each roughly identical against McMahon and Titan Sports. The company's involvement is because allegedly McMahon used company assets to purchase the drugs in question that he allegedly distributed. Of the two real charges, one is in regard to distribution of steroids. The other is a conspiracy charge claiming McMahon, Titan Sports, Dr. George Zahorian and others conspired to get WWF wrestlers on steroids for the purpose of making more money, selling more tickets, selling more merchandise, etc.
  454.  
  455. For purposes of this, forget about the simple distribution charges. The distribution charge is open and shut in that it is either a matter that it (steroids being illegally distributed either by McMahon and/or the company) happened or it didn't. None of us know for a fact until evidence comes out whether or not McMahon personally distributed steroids unless he did to the person reading this personally. The indictment claims McMahon used company money to purchase steroids and distributed it to a wrestler known to the Grand Jury, believed to be Hulk Hogan. At the arraignment, Sean O'Shea of the Justice Department said the government would prove McMahon distributed steroids to wrestlers, as in plural. Nevertheless, if there was any direct distribution from McMahon, it doesn't appear that it was widespread. That doesn't mean an eventual verdict if there is a trial will be reflective of either it happened or it didn't as recent highly-publicized trials have shown. Despite what we get taught in grammar school, jury verdicts and the facts of the case or the truth often have nothing to do with one another. If McMahon did distribute steroids to a wrestler, or even wrestlers, which he hasn't admitted to doing, from his own statements it appears he'll try to use the euphemism for distribution into a much nicer sounding "sharing with friends." How a jury will take that defense, if indeed there is proof of distribution, is unknown. It appears the Justice Department Eastern Division has a much better won-loss record in court than does Titan Sports even though there seems to be an overriding belief among people in wrestling than Vince McMahon is the most powerful man on Earth, and the Justice Department is certainly more experience in prosecution, however Titan Sports is far more experienced in public manipulation than most companies the Justice Department goes against. But one can never predict how a jury will view things, particularly since we don't know what will be testified to and who, with the possible exception of Terry Bollea, who doesn't exactly have an exemplary level of credibility, will be his accusers. Let's face it, there should be a big difference between someone regularly distributing something and someone who may have passed an illegal drug on once. Until the trial, we really don't know what will be alleged and nobody with the possible exception of McMahon, Bollea and perhaps a few others in the inner circle, know what actually took place. And given the track record of honesty of many of those who are expected to be involved in this trial, what does come out can't nor shouldn't be taken at face value. We don't even know if people involved in this trial can stop "working," (that's our nice euphemism for lying, which in this case would technically be perjury) even under oath. Maybe some of them can, but in the case of others, it would seemingly be a new experience in their lives.
  456.  
  457. It's the conspiracy charge that, for purposes of the question asked here, is what we're referring to. No matter what will be testified to, the facts of that case are rather clear. However, while there is little to debate as far as the facts, people's interpretations of the same set of facts will probably vary widely. I hope they won't vary based on whether or not one likes the product the WWF presents, but based on past experience, that probably will be the case.
  458.  
  459. The facts are this. Titan Sports and Vince McMahon are being charged, from the years 1985 to 1991, with conspiring to have steroids distributed to wrestlers to enhance their size and muscle development. During that time period, it is an admitted fact by all concerned that a significant percentage of WWF wrestlers were using steroids. The WWF's own first steroid test, which took place nine months after possession and use of steroids became a felony, saw half of those taking the test (which, because managers and valets took the test as well means more than half the wrestlers) testing positive for steroids, so the excuse wrestlers were only using the drugs while the drugs were legal is hogwash, although everyone reading this knows that already. Before 1991, the federal law was such that using steroids were legal, but distribution for muscle building purposes was not, except in the 1985-88 period when distribution by a doctor with a valid medical prescription was legal on a federal level. Laws as it pertains to both personal use and distribution actually varied by states but since this is a federal trial, whatever state laws that could apply aren't relevant to this specific case, although they are relevant to the numerous statements by wrestlers who tried to defend personal usage claiming they used them when they were legal, which may have been true, but in many, probably most cases, they also used them after that point. The most well-known but not the only distributor to WWF wrestlers and a few wrestlers from other organizations as well, during that time period, was Dr. George Zahorian, who was convicted on eight counts of illegal steroid distribution and four more counts of other controlled substance distribution in 1991. Zahorian has spent most of the period since the trial in prison. Zahorian also supplied steroids to McMahon, so if nothing else, McMahon must have had knowledge of what Zahorian was doing as it pertains to his wrestlers since he was purchasing them himself. Zahorian, in the mid-80s, would, according to trial testimony, "set up shop" backstage at WWF house shows in Western Pennsylvania and routinely distribute various kinds of drugs including steroids to wrestlers. This is the main distinction between an NFL coach or even a promoter of American Gladiators or professional bodybuilding shows, who one can say are no different than McMahon and morally I don't think an argument can be made that the latter two are any different than McMahon in regard to this subject. When it comes to an NFL owner or college football coach for example, a strong case can be made that their role is different than McMahon. They don't prearrange who wins and loses and decide who will become a star beforehand. In most cases their motivation is to put the best players on the field. While steroids certainly in many instances are a competitive benefit which means inherently that looking the other way constitutes tacit approval, if a player is talented enough, he'll be allowed to make up for whatever size deficiencies he has if he can play. In pro wrestling during that time period, all the talent in the world may not have meant enough to make up for the size deficiencies even if the one with the size deficiencies had already proven elsewhere they could play. When it comes to American Gladiators, that is a different story. People on that show are chosen by how they look rather than for athletic ability and the emphasis on physique is every bit as strong as it ever was in the WWF during the steroid heyday. Probably stronger, since Vince McMahon only had one Jim Hellwig and the Gladiators having nothing but. When it comes to pro bodybuilding or even top-level amateur bodybuilding, the entire system is based on muscles and no athletic ability needs to be displayed, so in that context, use of steroids is an even stronger factor than in pro wrestling, even during the WWF steroid heyday.
  460.  
  461. So why aren't the promoters of American Gladiators or bodybuilding shows the target of steroid investigations? It could be one of several factors. The one most cited by people within the industry choosing to find a way to defend McMahon, is that somehow McMahon made an enemy and is being picked on. While that isn't proven and nobody has even been able to point out who this enemy would be, from a moral standpoint, McMahon is being picked on, as is virtually everyone in society charged with any sort of a crime. In every crime there are those the government chooses to prosecute and others they choose not to, and those they have evidence against and others that they don't who are just as guilty of the same behavior. However, agreeing McMahon is being picked on, that isn't a valid legal defense if he conspired to get wrestlers on steroids, if he distributed steroids, and if those two things were illegal. For example, in the Jerry Lawler case, which is totally dissimilar to this case, but this singular point is relevant to that argument, if there were five men who had sex with a 13-year-old girl and Lawler was the only one charged, Lawler could rightly claim he was being picked on by the prosecution because of his name value, but if he actually had done it and the prosecution could have proven it, the government picking on him wouldn't be a valid defense for doing something against the law. The same logic applies here. Most importantly, there wasn't a major steroid trial involving Gladiators or bodybuilders so the evidence to start an investigation wasn't already in the government's lap. If there was such a trial and it came out in testimony that one of the recipients of said drugs was the owner of the organization, and where fed-ex records showed numerous packages sent from a convicted drug dealer right to the company's president at his corporate headquarters, than I'd like to think the government would investigate that organization. In addition, that owner, who knowingly purchased drugs from that dealer, also allowed that dealer to set up shop backstage at his shows. The ironic part of all this is that not only did McMahon allow this to occur, but also more than allowing it to occur but assigning the dealer to attend the shows was the state government of Pennsylvania, whose athletic commission appointed Zahorian to be its licensed medical representative at these pro wrestling shows. That evidence was there in 1991, before any investigation was even started and before any mainstream media began reporting on this issue. It should also be noted that Zahorian--the pro wrestling doctor, was the first doctor prosecuted on that law, bringing many to say at the time he was being picked on because he was distributing to pro wrestlers rather than football players or track stars, and that a doctor who distributed to our Olympic athletes would never have been prosecuted. That speculation has since proven to be untrue since the man who according to the Canadian inquiries post-Ben Johnson testimony was the leading steroid distributor to U.S. Olympic athletes, Dr. Walter Jekot of Los Angeles, eventually was charged and plea bargained to the same charges as Zahorian, and even though he didn't challenge the government in trial as did Zahorian, he was given a much stiffer sentence than Zahorian, because he was believed to be a much more significant dealer.
  462.  
  463. During that period, 1985-91, steroids were rampant within pro wrestling and all sports involving either explosive strength or speed, or even stamina. They were more rampant probably in one or two sports than in the WWF, although the WWF had to rank in the upper echelon of sports when it came to steroid use. They were more rampant in the WWF during this time period than in pro wrestling in general, but use spread across all promotions during this time period. The company was at its economic heyday during this period. Its popularity declined and wrestlers who certainly had the outward appearance of being into steroids started disappearing at the same time the company started doing what appeared to be a testing procedure that involved more than lip service. Wrestlers during this time period were pushed based on physique. It was never based entirely or exclusively on physique, but physique was a huge factor, and probably a significantly bigger factor than ability given who was on top, although that case wasn't exclusively limited to WWF during that time period either. Too many wrestlers to be coincidental either upped their dose or "ate a lot of amino acids" when joining WWF because too many were a lot larger than they'd been before coming in to just be coincidence and not have some sort of outward motivation to be so. Whether it was peer group pressure which McMahon simply looked the other way at, as his defenders will say, or whether it was something that he, by who he hired and who he pushed and who he paid the most money to, had encouraged, is really the crux of this issue.
  464.  
  465. In McMahon's defense, the WWF today when it comes to steroid use certainly appears to be far cleaner than anyone would have believed possible three years ago. Critics of that statement will note that this fact is not so much a credit to McMahon truly wanting to clean things up, but a credit to McMahon not being a complete idiot, since no testing procedure was even talked about until after much negatively publicity had stemmed from the Zahorian trial. My belief is the first drug-testing press conference took place because of the post-trial negative publicity, not because of the trial itself, since WWF had no plans to implement steroid testing at the completion of the Zahorian trial, but reversed its position because they were bombarded with negative publicity over the next two weeks in the New York media. And the fact is, those in power knew what was going on years before the trial. There were no revelations in the trial that surprised anyone within pro wrestling. The truly serious steroid testing in that it actually started making a serious dent in use and started cleaning the company up took place I believe because the negative publicity hadn't subsided and it was at about the same time the government started investigating. Nevertheless, the WWF has done what it appears some sports organizations aren't willing to do, in that there were numerous major stars who left the organization in 1992 which hurt them economically, and although none will admit it was because of the steroid policy, logic says it had to have been because there were too many cases in too short a time period to have been coincidental. From a legal standpoint, what happened in 1992 isn't relevant to charges referring to 1985-91, but may be considered when it comes time to meting out punishment. And there still is the question of how Sid Eudy's case was handled in 1992. Eudy wasn't suspended as per the Titan written drug policy, although he has since admitted cheating on the steroid test from the time he returned from a bicep tendon injury that January and was finally caught cheating by the company just before the Wrestlemania and wasn't suspended. I'd suggest very few companies in the same position would have pulled him from Wrestlemania, but that doesn't explain his continuing as being pushed as the group's top heel on a subsequent European tour and on U.S. house shows until he quit the promotion.
  466.  
  467. So that's how and why we got to where we are. But, that doesn't answer whether Vince McMahon and Titan Sports should be convicted of any crimes.
  468.  
  469. So the question I'm asking is:
  470.  
  471. *Was Vince McMahon and Titan Sports involved in a conspiracy to get WWF wrestlers on steroids to increase ticket sales and merchandise? Remember when answering this question, you are talking about a conspiracy. What you think of the WWF product, whether you find it entertaining or not, should be totally irrelevant. Also, this question involves a conspiracy to get wrestlers on steroids and nothing else. Lying about steroid use in and to the media or to wrestling fans is not a crime, it's only a lie.
  472.  
  473. *If they were, why? If they weren't, why?
  474.  
  475. *If they were, what is fair punishment? If you believe McMahon and Titan were involved in a conspiracy to get wrestlers on steroids, but don't think that in doing so they actually did anything wrong because they never held a gun to anyone's head and shouldn't be punished for it, you can say the law if flawed and there shouldn't be any punishment. If you think Titan was involved in a conspiracy but steroids should be legal and thus shouldn't be penalized, that's a valid opinion as well. Remember, there is no precedence for a sports organization to be charged with the drug use among its participants, although if there is a conviction on this charge, no doubt there will either be similar prosecution in other sports in the future, or other owners will be so scared that they'll clean up the problem in their sport. This is more of a moral question than a legal question. The people who have to answer the legal question, the jury, will be worked by lawyers from both sides first and also, unlike readers, won't actually understand the context of what was going on when this was all going on. If you believe Titan/McMahon to be guilty, you can answer they should be fined a small amount, fined a large amount or there should be jail time done or even forfeiture of assets.
  476.  
  477. *If Titan/McMahon aren't guilty, should George Zahorian be in prison?
  478.  
  479. *If they are guilty, should others in wrestling be similarly charged?
  480.  
  481. And as that subject goes, so goes Hulk Hogan. Hogan got a lot of pub this past week due to the debut of "Thunder in Paradise," the one-hour show which starts this week in syndication (a two-hour pilot movie aired last week in many markets). The show will be used in New York by WWOR-TV as counterprogramming for Monday Night Raw in the 9 p.m. slot, and is head-to-head with wrestling in a surprising number of markets (in the SF Bay Area, the show will air Friday nights on KBHK-TV Ch. 44). The Orlando Sentinel had a series of articles on Hogan and the show, since the show is filmed in Orlando, where Hogan claimed he'll return to wrestling either with WCW or with a new HBO promotion which he claimed is offering him $1,000,000 "every time he laces up the boots." More power to him if it's legit (those at WCW think the idea of an HBO promotion is all hype), although to be able to afford a payoff like that, it would have to be a PPV show and would have to do at the very least an 0.8 buy rate, something WCW has been unable to do with all its syndicated television, a number along the lines of what Survivor Series did with all the great hyping WWF is able to do with strong national syndication and cable. Sources close to Hogan say he'll decide between the two offers in about three weeks, although our understanding is due to contractual things, it would be about four weeks before he actually could sign a contract with WCW.
  482.  
  483. Hogan also started damage control for what may come out in the McMahon trial in May, with a lengthy discussion of steroids and his career in the New York Daily News on 3/25. The article was a review of his new TV show, which like most reviewers, panned the show saying it "grafts Hogan's unique persona onto an otherwise forgettable template of sun, sea, beach and babes, with some feeble explosions, dull chases, tepid fight sequences and family values thrown in for punctuation." However, the Daily News story was more favorable to Hogan, saying that it doesn't matter because the overseas TV market will eat the show up like they did "Baywatch." Anyway, the latest Nixonian version of the steroid controversy is that Hogan admitted his previous statements were a mistake. "When the steroid thing came out, I said, `Oh, my god, there's a hysteria, just like there was with AIDS. People don't' know what this is all about.
  484.  
  485. I thought by touching upon it--and I did say, `Yes, I used them,' --that people wouldn't really dial into it, but it kind of, like, stirred it up more and I probably should have hit them bluntly.
  486.  
  487. People (were) saying that they injected me at certain arenas. Total lie. Total lie. Never happened. I gave myself any injections there ever was. Or a doctor, under his prescription.
  488.  
  489. You do what seems to be right at the time, especially when a doctor says, `Hey, here's a prescription' and it's legal.
  490.  
  491. Instead of my arm being torn and healing in three months, it helped me heal in four weeks. These guys that were wrestling every night, they were bigger and stronger than me, so it gave me that edge to have an extra 20 or 25 pounds on my body.
  492.  
  493. If I had to do it all over again, knowing what I know now? No way.
  494.  
  495. It's not like I've got some unknown disease where I gotta be quarantined. I mean, these people (wrestling fans) are very forgiving, and they're very understanding, and it's comforting to know people are like that.
  496.  
  497. If it comes up again, well then I'll just deal with it. If it's a federal trial or a question from you, this is the way it is. But there's no new news. For me, it's old news." The story that Hulk Hogan used steroids is old news. Hulk Hogan responding is also old news. Unfortunately for Hogan, it's the responses that still seem to be story, which is why the story of Hulk Hogan and steroids follows him around, and thus isn't old news.
  498.  
  499. All Japan women's Wrestling Queendom II on 3/27 at the Yokohama Arena drew the second largest crowd and gate in the history of Japanese women's wrestling, trailing only last year's Dream Slam I on 4/2/83 in the same building. Although the crowd was announced as a sellout 16,500, real attendance was closer to 15,000 (ringside tickets were $285 so the gate was probably in excess of $1 million range as the building when packed at those prices is scaled at $1.5 mil). Although the quality of the matches themselves were good, in some ways the five-and-a-half hour show was disappointing as it couldn't come close to the standard set in the same building last year (which had both a much stronger line-up and the aura of specialness by bringing back virtually all the big stars in the history of the promotion as its 25th anniversary special), or even at several of the other major women's shows of 1993. Overall it was said the show quality was even topped by many of the monthly AJW Korakuen Hall shows. Still, to call it anything but a good show with an excellent main event would be to compare it to an out-of-whack standard the company set for itself over the past two years, since it was said to be as good if not better than the major men's spectaculars.
  500.  
  501. Complete results saw: 1. Candy Okutsu (JWP) retained the All-Japan jr. title pinning Rie Tamada in 9:03 with a german suplex; 2. Midget Little Frankie, using the name Little Great Muta, beat Buddha Man, as Little Abdullah the Butcher in 7:16 with an elbow drop; 3. In one of the better matches on the show, the LLPW duo of Miki Handa & Yasha Kurenai retained the Japanese tag titles beating Kaoru Ito & Tomoko Watanabe when Kurenai pinned Watanabe with a belly-to-belly suplex in 19:26; 4. Hikari Fukuoka (JWP) pinned Chapparita Asari in 14:26 with a moonsault after Asari had missed her Sky Twister. Last 5:00 were filled with hot flying moves; 5. Megumi Kudo & Nurse Nakamura (FMW) beat Suzuka Minami & Chikako Shiratori when Kudo made Shiratori submit to the dragon sleeper in 16:38 in the worst match on the show with the exception of the midgets; 6. Manami Toyota retained her IWA title pinning Plum Mariko (JWP) in 20:31 with a Japanese Ocean suplex. This was one of the better matches on the show, but not nearly as exciting as Mariko's Korakuen Hall match with Chigusa Nagayo; 7. Eagle Sawai (LLPW) & Reggie Bennett beat Takako Inoue & Yumiko Hotta in 13:03 when Bennett made Inoue submit with the Argentinean backbreaker; 8. Etsuko Mita & Mima Shimoda captured the JWP tag team titles from Mayumi Ozaki & Cutie Suzuki (JWP) in 20:35 when Mita pinned Suzuki with the Death Valley Driver (an airplane spin dropped into a piledriver like move). This was said to be the second best match on the show; 9. Dynamite Kansai (JWP) pinned Sakie Hasegawa in 16:31 with her Splash Mountain (similar to Razor's Edge); 10. Kyoko Inoue captured the All-Pacific title from Toshiyo Yamada via submission with a facelock in 16:16. Most people going in thought this match would steal the show, but told neither looked as good as they usually do at a Korakuen Hall show; 11. In the match that drew the house and stole the show, Akira Hokuto & Shinobu Kandori (LLPW) beat Aja Kong & Bull Nakano in 35:13. The story of the match is that Hokuto and Kandori, who had the two brutal matches last year, couldn't get along. Hokuto started and worked the first five minutes because Kandori refused to tag in. Finally Hokuto slapped her hard in the face, and the ref ruled it as a valid tag. Kandori did the same, as were all the tags for the first 20:00. Finally Hokuto & Kandori started working as a team and it turned into a very dramatic exciting match ending when Hokuto, for the third time, did the Northern Lights bomb on Kong, and got the pin. It seems they are building up the idea that it's a cruel irony that Hokuto, who is retiring after two more matches in Japan (8/25 and 11/10), has never held the World title so she'll no doubt challenge Kong as the headliner on one of the two shows.
  502.  
  503. The mass media story in Japan as it regarded this show (which saw 50 newspapers and three networks coverage) related to Tonya Harding, who obviously didn't appear as the promotion hoped she would although even if she had wanted to, it would have been difficult because of terms of her plea bargain (having to petition the court to travel) to do so on such short notice. Promotion Vice President Takashi Matsunaga had flown to Portland to meet with Harding's representatives on 3/22, but was unable to even get a meeting, or get photographic proof with her "negotiating" which would have been great press back home, and really worldwide. It's obvious this isn't going to take place, as Sports Illustrated reported in this week's issue in a story on Harding's plea bargain (complete with what appeared to be a worked quote from Aja Kong) saying she has no interest in wrestling in Japan. Matsunaga returned to Japan for the show and announced in the ring he was unable to meet with her and said he's planning to return to Oregon, but put odds on signing her as 20 percent (as opposed to the 70 percent his brother said two weeks earlier). The newspapers are reporting that Harding doesn't understand what Japanese pro wrestling is, and has a bad view of it having never seen it because she's seen American pro wrestling.
  504.  
  505. The All Japan Champion Carnival tournament was thrown for a loop when it was announced that the group's triple crown champion, tournament co-favorite and top draw, Mitsuharu Misawa, would miss the remainder of the tour. Misawa apparently suffered a neck injury taking a Frankensteiner from Doug Furnas on 3/21. While he tried to wrestle two nights later in a six-man tag, he only tagged in once and was in so much pain, never tagged in again and was sent home to recuperate. Misawa and Stan Hansen were co-favorites in the annual tournament that Hansen has won the past two years, which culminates on 4/16 at Tokyo Budokan Hall. With Misawa off the tour, it makes Hansen a strong favorite and has taken a lot of interest from the tournament, traditionally the No. 2 tour of the year (behind the year-end tag team tournament). Probably the only way to have the tournament come across as a success in the end would be for Hansen to lose in the finals at Budokan to Kenta Kobashi (since Toshiaki Kawada pinned Hansen in last year's tournament so his beating Stan would be an upset, but not be something new).
  506.  
  507. With PPV pro wrestling shows on successive nights (4/16 UWFI and 4/17 WCW) for the first time ever in this country, it appears the UWFI show is going to take it on the chin. Even though both groups are appealing to different audiences, UWFI to the contact sports audience and WCW to the pro wrestling audience, cable guides we've seen show a strong lack of visibility for the UWFI show. Because it isn't being carried by Request on its two usual channels, the show won't be available in every PPV market, although in many areas it will be available on a different PPV channel and isn't being highly publicized because of the pro wrestling, karate (4/15) and boxing (4/22) PPV shows all taking place during the same one-week period that are being carried by Request. The UWFI show is scheduled for a 9 p.m. Eastern and 12:30 a.m. Eastern showing (three hours earlier on the West Coast). We'll be doing reader polls for both shows, since based on reader response, the UWFI first PPV show had a larger viewership among this newsletter's readers than WCW shows in recent years have had, although somehow I don't think that'll be the case this time around.
  508. TOTAL UNITED STATES HOUSE SHOW REVENUE 1994 (as of 3/28/94) Promotion No. of shows* Est. total revenue* WWF 57 $3,410,000 IWC/AAA 2 $265,000 WCW 13 $252,000 SMW 33 $149,000 ECW 6 $48,000 Note: Figures unavailable for USWA *Includes PPV and Clashes, updated to include Wrestlemania
  509.  
  510. Editorial time. Subject. Pro wrestling media, whatever that is meant to constitute and it covers whomever considers themself part of it. Contrary to what would seem to be popular belief among some, if one travels to California, one does not have to bring a passport. And when one comes from the United States and lands at the Los Angeles or San Francisco Airport, they don't have to go through customs, although it would seem that way when it comes to coverage of IWC/AAA. Since the first IWC/AAA shows back last August, the success of this promotion in California caught most everyone in wrestling by shock. It shouldn't have to an extent since during the summer of 1992, Lucha Libre shows at the Cal State-Los Angeles Gym were the biggest grossing shows in the United States except for very few major market WWF shows and its PPVs, topping out at a $120,000 house for the July 4th show. Even so, I don't know of anyone who follows wrestling closely with one exception who wasn't shocked out of their socks that first weekend when the Sports Arena was sold out and turned away 8,000 fans, the best showing for a pro wrestling card in the largest state in the United States in 22 years.
  511.  
  512. This is not an editorial saying that Lucha Libre is great wrestling. Just like any form, some is good, some is bad and most is in between. Today I believe AAA has the most innovative inside-the-ring wrestling in the world, but innovation goes in cycles based on when young guys who aren't bound by tradition get a chance to expand past old limitations in their entertainment craft and are put in a position to be allowed to do so. As they got older, and smarter, they also get more routine and less creative. Right now AAA is loaded with creative young workers who are exploring new in-ring horizons and in many cases, coming up with new moves and new spots, some of which will become popular in the future, just as New Japan did in the 1980s before it was overtaken by older wrestlers limiting new creativity. One of the reasons this is the case is because AAA is the youngest major promotion in the world, having debuted in May of 1992. A few years from now, another company will be loaded with talented young wrestlers and the same thing will occur. Every wrestling fan is entitled to form their own opinion about what they enjoy, what they'll support and what entertains them. Opinions are all subjective. If someone has a good time at a show that doesn't draw any fans, that doesn't make them wrong. However, eventually a normal entertainment business (a category WCW doesn't fall into since it's being bankrolled and normal business practices of having to be profitable seem not to part of the equation) to survive at a major level has to garner enough interest to turn a profit or it won't be around. I learned this years ago having a great time supporting pro sports franchises that didn't draw enough fans. It didn't matter in the long run if the people attending had a good time or not if not enough people attended, because if that was the case, economics would determine that it wasn't going to last no matter how much fun those attending had. Similarly, you can be bored to death with an entertainment event, but if you see the building consistently filled, you know you've got plenty of opportunities to be bored to death in the future because they'll be coming back. My point is that if you are a fan and you don't like a style of wrestling, that is your prerogative. If you are a student of a particular business--which those in decision making positions in this business should be or they'll eventually make a lot of bad decisions that could have been avoided by knowledge of what has been tried elsewhere and succeeded and failed, or a reporter covering a business, and you aren't a fan of a style or promotion, that is also your prerogative. However if you ignore the existence or ignore coverage of something different that is successful based on that factor, you are closing your mind to learning about your own subject, and thus, not doing your job. The only thing that stays the same in wrestling is that it always changes. And the day someone stops accepting that as fact is the day that the business has passed them by.
  513.  
  514. I'm not sure what wrestling media constitutes. Are pro wrestling magazines wrestling media, or are they purely there own form of entertainment in which real reporting has little or nothing to do with it? Are newsletters wrestling media? A few are for sure, but how many really are? A reporter on this subject should have working knowledge of all significant aspects of pro wrestling or at least make an attempt to. If gaining a working knowledge of the subject, not the subject as it was in 1985, or as you wish it would be because that's how it was when you were a kid, but as it is in 1994, is not a concern, there's nothing wrong with that either if you don't consider yourself a serious reporter on a subject.
  515.  
  516. AAA is a significant part of the American pro wrestling landscape. Significant for two reasons. One is because of the crowds it has drawn and the television audience it has--ethnic to be sure, and I'm exceedingly skeptical of its chances of gaining popularity outside its ethnic group--but large enough in number that it can no way be viewed as anything less than the third most popular promotion in the country, and second most popular when it comes to presenting live events. It is also the most popular promotion in the second largest city in the country, even outdrawing WWF by a wide margin. It is significant also because it is completely different than any other style of wrestling, which means there is more to learn from it because of those differences. Because it wasn't a significant part of the U.S. wrestling scene years ago doesn't change this fact today. If anything, it accentuates it. If its gain in significance is shunned off by saying it is because there are more Hispanics than ever before in this country, that would be to blind oneself to a significant change in the demographic make-up of our country, that by all estimates is going to only increase as the years go by, thus being blind to eventual change in our society. If one was doing a wrestling magazine or newsletter in England, would ignoring coverage or not attempting to gain a working knowledge of WWF or WCW wrestling be justified because the companies are based in a foreign country and the style is different than what was previously the norm in that country be justified? No. It would be burying ones head in the sand and not coming to grips with the reality of the present. In Japan in 1984 when the first UWF started doing shooting style, a style completely unfamiliar to everyone, most fans and reporters didn't initially understand it. Was it ignored at the beginning? By and large it didn't even draw that well but it had a rabid Tokyo following among high school aged kids. Because of that everyone learned what it was. Those that didn't got left behind. By 1988 a promotion using that style was the hottest promotion in the world. The reporters there were no different from here. They grew up watching another style. Generally they didn't like change and didn't like the style of the promotion. I'm sure many reporters and fans in Japan still don't like it, and there is no reason they should, but they don't ignore it. And a few years later, that promotion heavily influenced the traditional style promotions' ring style as it is today--virtual elimination of screw-job endings, heavier emphasis on submissions making constant high spots not necessary for false finishes, etc. AAA is not as popular in the United States as WWF is in England, so ignoring it as a subject in this country isn't as preposterous as ignoring WWF in England would be. Dissing the AAA audience for being almost exclusively of one ethnic group is still not a valid reason for ignoring it unless one would approve of the idea of a black reporter or a Mexican reporter considering themselves a serious wrestling reporter and then doing a newsletter or writing for a magazine and choosing not to cover SMW, or even WWF because so few people of his ethnic origin attend the shows. While the company being based in Mexico City (although the IWC is American), it is a very successful American promotion on a regional basis. It may never expand its demographics. In fact, it won't. But it's already here and already has made its mark. To not be able to recognize that is to not be paying attention to what is going on. This is not a situation of saying that certain things are going to change in this business because of an eventual 500 channel television system as they did more than a decade ago when cable took hold, and to be ready for what is coming so when it's here you'll be ready before it catches on. This is already here. If you're a reporter covering this industry and don't have a working knowledge of this promotion, you're in danger of becoming out of touch with your business.
  517.  
  518. This is the second issue of the current set. The scheduled for this set isn't definite right now. There may be an issue next week and I expect to certainly have an issue in two weeks. If there isn't one next week, the one in two weeks may be a 20-page double issue, depending upon how much news there is, or next week's issue may be late and the week after may be on time. If you have a (1) on your address label, your subscription will expire in either two or three weeks. Renewal rates within the United States, Canada and Mexico are $12 for eight issues, $24 for 16, $36 for 24, $48 for 32 up through $60 for 40. Rates for the rest of the world for weekly airmail delivery are $9 for each set of four, $18 for eight, etc. up through $90 for 40. All subscription renewals along with reports from live shows, letters to the editor, news items and anything else pertaining to this publication should be sent to the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, P.O. Box 1228, Campbell, CA 95009-1228.
  519.  
  520. Fax messages can be sent to the Observer after Noon Eastern time (9 a.m. Pacific) at 408-378-6562. Phone messages can be left 24 hours a day at 408-379-8067. Thanks everyone for all your nice words of encouragement in letters, faxes, etc.
  521.  
  522. RESULTS
  523.  
  524. 3/12 Portland, OR (Oregon Pro Wrestling Federation - 150):Buddy Wayne b The Bodyguard, Firefighter Adrian b Nick Danger, Billy Two Eagles b John Rambo, Buddy Wayne & Ole Olson b Riot Maker & Moondog Moretti, Mike Miller b Buddy Rose
  525.  
  526. 3/15 Tampa (Showtime Wrestling):Johnny West b Java Ruuk, Mohammad Stud b Chris Nelson, West b Nuclear Assassin, Rick Thames & Sonny T b Randy Fuller & Jimmy Watts, Jim Neidhart b Lanny Poffo
  527.  
  528. 3/17 Charleston, IN (Tri-State Wrestling):Jeff Sword b David Adcock, Kevin Haste b Doug Basham, Doug Vines b Troy Haste, Dan Childers b Jerry Faith, Mike Samples b Danny Davis
  529.  
  530. 3/18 Puebla (AAA - 8,000 sellout):Prelim results unavailable, Jerrito Estrada & Espectrito & Fuercita Guerrera b Mascarita Sagrada & Octagoncito & Super Munequito ***3/4, Los Payasos DDQ El Mexicano & Latin Lover & Tinieblas Jr. **1/4, Konnan El Barbaro & Octagon & Mascara Sagrada b Black Cat & Mascara Ano 2000 & Universo 2000 *3/4
  531.  
  532. 3/18 Dearborn, MI (Midwest Territorial Wrestling):Otis Apollo b Steve Nixon, Mickey Doyle b Scott D'Amore, Mike Kelly b The Kodiak, Scott Stevens b Shinobi (Al Snow), Andy Fish b Bobby Clancy, Al Snow & Denny Kass DCOR Chris Carter & Mohammad Saad, Bobo Brazil Jr. b Scott Summers
  533.  
  534. 3/18 Dallas (Big D):Jimmy James b Ricky Long, Terry Simms & Terry Black & Alan Dillon b Broadway Danny & Al Clifton & Doom Master, Super Gemini b El Cuervo II, Ray Evans b Big D-DQ, Mr. Mister & Chris Rox b Bill Irwin & Nick Golden-DQ, Jaivo Flores & Mascara del Fuego b Jaque Moy & El Medico
  535.  
  536. 3/18 Union, SC (Big Time Wrestling - 154): Bad Dog b The Avenger (Scott McKeever), Bruise Brother #1 b Night Train Jones, Super Rocker b Bobby Rose-DQ, Jay Eagle & Johnny Red Cloud b Scotty Hot Body & McKeever, Mask vs. mask:The Crusader (Buck Forrster) b The Assassin (Ken Boone), Rocker won blindfold Battle Royal, Junkyard Dog b Billy Ray Badd-DQ (Norman Bragg)
  537.  
  538. 3/19 Central City, KY (Tri-State Wrestling):Chris Dailey b New Dog, Flash Flannagan & Doug Basham b Mad Man Pondo & Sledge, Sheik Ali Ben Khan (Nick Nicnahad) b David Adcock, Dan Shannon b Mark Adcock, Hitman Louie (Harrison Melton) b Mike Samples
  539.  
  540. 3/19 Clover, SC (North American Wrestling Alliance - 250):David Isley d Gary Royal, Robert Jones & Dozer (J.R. Scruggs) b American G.I. (Rich Scruggs) & Jay Eagle, Junkyard Dog b Rick Link, Buddy Shane b The Assassin, Super Rocker & American Patriot (Johnny B. Goode) DDQ Ivan & Vladimir Koloff, Wahoo McDaniel b Bad Dog-DQ
  541.  
  542. 3/20 Boca Raton, FL (Sunshine Wrestling Federation - 400):Andre Moore b Sheik El Tukis, Mike DeAngelo b The Looter, Chief White Eagle b J.R. James, Steve Collins b Mannibal the Cannibal, Demon Hellstorm DDQ Corporal Kirchner, Haystacks Calhoun Jr. won Battle Royal
  543.  
  544. 3/20 Welford, SC (North American Wrestling Alliance - 47):Jay Eagle d Gary Royal, American Patriot b Thunderfoot (David Isley), Rick Link b Dozer-DQ, Buddy Shane & Super Rocker b The Assassin & Bad Dog, Kevin Kirby b Hunter Thompson, Samoan Ty b American G.I.
  545.  
  546. 3/21 Memphis (USWA - 1,350): The Spellbinder b Reggie B. Fine, Rick Savage b Leon Downs, Bert Prentice b Ronnie Lottz, Well Dunn b Robert Gibson & Jeff Gaylord, USWA tag title:Moondogs b Billy Travis & Don Bass-DQ, Dream Machine b Skull Von Crush, Moondog Spot won Moondog Battle Royal, Brian Christopher & Rick Steiner b Doug Gilbert & Tommy Rich-DQ
  547.  
  548. 3/22 Lowell, MA (WWF Superstar taping - 3,200 sellout): Non-squash results:Smoking Gunns b Head Shrinkers ***, IRS b Koko Ware *, Tatanka b Kwang-DQ 1/2*, Razor Ramon b Adam Bomb 3/4*, Yokozuna DCOR Mabel *, Jeff Jarrett b Sparky Plugg *, Lex Luger b IRS 1/4*, Bret Hart & Ramon b Shawn Michaels & Owen Hart **3/4
  549.  
  550. 3/22 Keremeos, BC (West Coast Championship Wrestling - 85):Chi Chuck b Lance Idol, Timothy Flowers b Riptide Rockford, Johnny Canuck b Canadian Assassin, Assassin & Rockford & Idol b Randy Taylor & Chuck & Canuck
  551.  
  552. 3/23 White Plains, NY (WWF Challenge taping - 3,000/papered): Non-squash results: WWF tag title: 1-2-3 Kid & Sparky Plugg b Quebecers-DQ, Koko Ware b Bastion Booger 1/2*, Mabel DCOR Yokozuna DUD, Tuxedo match:Howard Finkel b Harvey Wippleman, Lex Luger b Crush *, Razor Ramon & Bret Hart b Owen Hart & IRS **
  553.  
  554. 3/23 Kiryu (All Japan - 2,450 sellout): Mighty Inoue & Takao Omori b Tsuyoshi Kikuchi & Tamon Honda, Jun Akiyama b Johnny Smith, Giant Baba & Rusher Kimura b Haruka Eigen & Ryukaku Izumida, Akira Taue b John Nord, Steve Williams & Johnny Ace b The Eagle & Dan Kroffat, Stan Hansen b Doug Furnas, Toshiaki Kawada & Masa Fuchi & Yoshinari Ogawa b Mitsuharu Misawa & Kenta Kobashi & Satoru Asako 26:51
  555.  
  556. 3/23 Amagasaki (New Japan - 4,500): Nobukazu Hirai b Yuji Nagata, Manabu Nakanishi b Shinjiro Ohtani, Jushin Liger & El Samurai b Satoshi Kojima & Black Tiger, Yoshiaki Yatsu & Hiro Saito & Norio Honaga b Kengo Kimura & Kuniaki Kobayashi & Akitoshi Saito, Hiroshi Hase & Masa Chono b Scott Norton & Hercules Fernandez, Keiji Muto & Power Warrior b Killer Bee & The Barbarian, Riki Choshu b Michiyoshi Ohara, Tatsumi Fujinami & Yoshiaki Fujiwara b Great Kabuki & Shiro Koshinaka, Non-title:Shinya Hashimoto b Rick Rude
  557.  
  558. 3/23 Nanato (Michinoku Pro - 407):Wellington Wilkens Jr. b Naohiro Hoshikawa, Terry Boy d Taka Michinoku, Shiryu b Yone Genjin, Genjin b Shiryu, Super Delfin & Ginsei Shinzaki & Gran Naniwa b Great Sasuke & Shu el Guerrero & Kazumichi Nakajima
  559.  
  560. 3/23 Creston, BC (West Coast Championship Wrestling - 118):Chi Chuck b Riptide Rockford, Randy Taylor b Lance Idol, Johnny Canuck b Cuban Assassin, Timothy Flowers b Badnews Allen
  561.  
  562. 3/24 Kyoto (New Japan - 8,500 sellout): Akira Nogami & Takayuki Iizuka & El Samurai b Tadao Yasuda & Tatsuhito Takaiwa & Yuji Nagata, Jushin Liger & Nobukazu Hirai b Shinjiro Ohtani & Black Tiger, Yoshiaki Yatsu & Shinichi Nakano b Kuniaki Kobayashi & Michiyoshi Ohara, Keiji Muto b Killer Bee, Power Warrior b The Barbarian, Young Lions tournament championship: Satoshi Kojima b Manabu Nakanishi, Masa Chono & Shinya Hashimoto b Scott Norton & Hercules Fernandez, Riki Choshu & Tatsumi Fujinami & Yoshiaki Fujiwara b Akitoshi Saito & Great Kabuki & Kengo Kimura, WCW Int title:Rick Rude b Hiroshi Hase to win title
  563.  
  564. 3/24 Atlanta Center Stage (WCW Saturday Night tapings - 780 sellout/all freebies): Non-squash results:Rick Steamboat b Paul Diamond, Steve Austin b Tanaka-san (Pat Tanaka), Marcus Bagwell b Harlem Heat Koal, Sting b Dallas Page, Erik Watts & Dustin Rhodes b Tex Slashinger & Shanghai Pierce, Brian Pillman b The Terrorist (David Cannell), Austin b Kyoto (Paul Diamond), Steve Regal b Pez Whatley
  565.  
  566. 3/24 Hiratsuka (All Japan - 3,400 sellout): Satoru Asako & Tsuyoshi Kikuchi b Kentaro Shiga & Masao Inoue, Haruka Eigen & Ryukaku Izumida b Mitsuo Momota & Rusher Kimura, Johnny Ace b Mighty Inoue, Giant Baba & Masa Fuchi & Yoshinari Ogawa b Tamon Honda & Takao Omori & Jun Akiyama 22:46, The Eagle b John Nord, Steve Williams & Johnny Smith b Dan Kroffat & Doug Furnas, Akira Taue d Kenta Kobashi 30:00, Stan Hansen b Toshiaki Kawada
  567.  
  568. 3/24 Narita (FMW - 2,253): Masato Tanaka b Tetsuhiro Kuroda, Battle Ranger b Gosaku Goshogawara, Big Titan b Katsutoshi Niiyama, Tsuppari Mack & Shark Tsuchiya & Crusher Maedomari & Combat Toyoda b Keiko Iwame & Yukie Nabeno & Megumi Kudo & Miwa Sato, The Gladiator & Ricky Fuji DDQ The Sheik & Sabu, Tarzan Goto b Damian, No rope barbed wire street fight tornado death match:Atsushi Onita & Sambo Asako b Hideki Hosaka & Mr. Pogo
  569.  
  570. 3/24 Nipomatsu (All Japan women - 1,000):Prelim results unavailable, Toshiyo Yamada b Takako Inoue, Suzuka Minami & Aja Kong b Etsuko Mita & Manami Toyota
  571.  
  572. 3/24 Niage (JWP):Prelim results unavailable, Devil Masami b Cutie Suzuki, Plum Mariko & Hikari Fukuoka b Dynamite Kansai & Boirshoi Kid
  573.  
  574. 3/24 Trail, BC (West Coast Championship Wrestling - 195):Chi Chuck b Riptide Rockford, Randy Taylor b Lance Idol, Canadian Assassin b Johnny Canuck, Badnews Allen b Timothy Flowers to win WCCW title
  575.  
  576. 3/24 Shelbyville, TN (All-State Pro Wrestling):Boogie Woogie Boy b Chris Kerns, Big Bubba b Lynchburg Kid, Big Tiny b Anthony Michaels, Bono b The Hornet (Brian Keyes), Ben & Glen Mullins b Billy Montana & Ken Arden-DQ, Tracy Smothers b Gypsy Joe
  577.  
  578. 3/25 Tokyo Korakuen Hall (FMW - 2,150 sellout): Gosaku Goshogawara b Mr. Chin, Tetsuhiro Kuroda b Goshogawara, Miwa Sato & Nurse Nakamura b Combat Toyoda & Tsuppari Mack, Katsutoshi Niiyama & Sambo Asako b Battle Ranger & Katsuji Ueda, Ricky Fuji b Damian, Crusher Maedomari & Shark Tsuchiya b Megumi Kudo & Yukie Nabeno, The Sheik & Sabu DDQ Big Titan & The Gladiator, No rope barbed wire street fight tornado death match:Atsushi Onita & Tarzan Goto & Masato Tanaka b Mr. Pogo & Goro Tsurumi & Hideki Hosaka
  579.  
  580. 3/25 Hurley, VA (SMW - 300): Lance Storm b Brimstone the Inferno (Brian Keyes), Tracy Smothers b Chris Candido, Dirty White Boy & Dirty White Girl b Brian Lee & Tammy Fytch, SMW tag title:Rock & Roll Express b Heavenly Bodies-DQ, Storm won Battle Royal
  581.  
  582. 3/25 Indianapolis (Championship Wrestling America - 400): The Comet b Randy Gilbert, Jerry Faith b Doug O'Briley, Bar Room Brawlers b Pennsylvania Pete & Comet, Loser eats dog food: Mad Man Pondo b Dan Anderson, Ring surrounded by fire:Flash Flannagan b Mike Samples
  583.  
  584. 3/25 Dallas Sportatorium (GWF - 360/64 paid): Marc Valiant b Danny Davis (Houston wrestler), Mike Davis b Rod Price-DQ, Moadib b Pete Longhorn, GWF title:Chris Adams b John Hawk-DQ, Action Jackson b King Parsons-DQ
  585.  
  586. 3/25 Dallas (Big D - 189):Kit Carson b Jimmy James to win Big D lt hwt title, El Gato Negro b Crazy Boy, High Voltage b Nick Golden & Bill Irwin, El Medico b Mascara del Fuego, Big D b Ray Evans, Mr. Mister & Chris Rox b Tim Brooks & Bullman Downs, Condor Azul b Cuervo II
  587.  
  588. 3/25 Wakefield, MA (Century Wrestling Alliance - 650):El Mascarado DCOR Hollywood Kid, Knuckles Nelson b Candy Man (Jerry Seevey), Tony Rumble b Mean Black Bear-DQ, Little Louie b Little Animal, Vic Steamboat & Ray Odyssey b Trouble Makers to win CWA tag title, Doink the Clown (Steve Keirn) b The Intern, Jim Duggan b Tony Atlas-DQ
  589.  
  590. 3/25 Farmville, VA (CWA): Leatherface (Larry Bazil) b Blue Angel, Napalm & Ben Vardigan b Preston Fitzgerald & Ray Storm, Barbed wire baseball bat match: Ninja Warrior b Scotty McKeever, Mike Justice b The Assassin (Bazil), Doug Gibson b Buddy Landel-DQ, C.W. Anderson & Pat Anderson b Billy Maddox & Roger Anderson, Chain match:Wahoo McDaniel b Ivan Koloff-DQ, McDaniel won Battle Royal
  591.  
  592. 3/25 Shimizu (All Japan women - 1,140):Prelim results unavailable, Manami Toyota b Etsuko Mita, Aja Kong & Sakie Hasegawa b Takako Inoue & Kyoko Inoue
  593.  
  594. 3/25 Omuta (JWP - 1,100):Prelim results unavailable, Cutie Suzuki b Boirshoi Kid, Devil Masami & Plum Mariko b Dynamite Kansai & Candy Okutsu
  595.  
  596. 3/25 Kawakuto (Michinoku Pro - 378):Naohiro Hoshikawa b Masato Yakushiji, Terry Boy & Shiryu b Wellington Wilkens Jr. & Hoshikawa, Taka Michinoku b Yone Genjin, Ginsei Shinzaki b Kazumichi Nakajima, Great Sasuke & Shu el Guerrero b Super Delfin & Gran Naniwa
  597.  
  598. 3/25 Oliver, BC (West Coast Championship Wrestling - 238):Chi Chuck b Lance Idol, Randy Taylor b Riptide Rockford, Canadian Assassin b Johnny Canuck, Badnews Allen b Timothy Flowers
  599.  
  600. 3/26 Numazu (All Japan - 3,500): Mitsuo Momota b Masao Inoue, Rusher Kimura & Mighty Inoue b Haruka Eigen & Ryukaku Izumida, Giant Baba & Takao Omori & Tamon Honda d Yoshinari Ogawa & Masa Fuchi & Akira Taue 30:00, The Eagle b Doug Furnas, Steve Williams b Johnny Ace, Toshiaki Kawada b John Nord, Kenta Kobashi & Jun Akiyama & Tsuyoshi Kikuchi b Stan Hansen & Dan Kroffat & Johnny Smith
  601.  
  602. 3/26 Harrisonburg, VA (WCW - 1,900): Brian Anderson d Craig Pittman 3/4*, Too Cold Scorpio & Marcus Bagwell b Tex Slashinger & Shanghai Pierce **1/2, Steve Austin b Brian Pillman **, Arn Anderson & Rick Steamboat b Paul Roma & Paul Orndorff **, Sting b Steve Regal *, WCW title:Ric Flair b Vader *1/2
  603.  
  604. 3/26 Valley Forge, PA (ECW - 700): Crash the Terminator b Pit Bull *, 911 b Don E. Allen & Blue Mask (Chad Austin) & Hack Myers DUD, ECW TV title: J.T. Smith b Rockin Rebel **, Bruise Brothers b Pat Tanaka & Paul Diamond **, Tommy Cairo b Sandman **1/2, Cage match: Jimmy Snuka b Tommy Dreamer DUD, Cage match war games rules, numerous stipulations: Shane Douglas & Public Enemy & Mr. Hughes b Road Warrior Hawk & Kevin Sullivan & Tasmaniac & Terry Funk 22:20 (Douglas pinned Funk to win match and by virtue of stipulations won ECW title) ***1/2
  605.  
  606. 3/26 Chilhowie, VA (SMW - 700): Lance Storm b Fire the Inferno (Anthony Michaels), Tracy Smothers b Chris Candido, Dirty White Boy & Dirty White Girl b Brian Lee & Tammy Fytch, SMW tag title:Rock & Roll Express b Heavenly Bodies-DQ, Storm won Battle Royal
  607.  
  608. 3/26 Murakami (FMW - 2,230 sellout): Koji Nakagawa b Gosaku Goshogawara, Goshogawara b Chin, Damian & Sabu b Tetsuhiro Kuroda & Battle Ranger, Tsuppari Mack & Crusher Maedomari & Shark Tsuchiya & Combat Toyoda b Keiko Iwame & Miwa Sato & Yukie Nabeno & Megumi Kudo, The Sheik NC Big Titan, Tarzan Goto & Katsutoshi Niiyama b Ricky Fuji & The Gladiator, No rope barbed wire street fight tornado death match:Atsushi Onita & Sambo Asako b Mr. Pogo & Hideki Hosaka
  609.  
  610. 3/26 Kumamoto (WAR):Mikiko Futagami b Michiko Omukai, Harley Saito & Rumi Kazama b Carol Midori & Otaku Hozumi, Ultimo Dragon & Hiromichi Fuyuki b Corazon de Leon & Yamato (not Kim Duk but a former sumo wrestler making debut), Super Strong Machine b Koki Kitahara, Arashi b Nobukazu Hirai, Kim Duk b Masanobu Kurisu, Jado b Masao Orihara, Ashura Hara b Takashi Ishikawa, Genichiro Tenryu & Koji Ishinriki b King Haku & Gedo
  611.  
  612. 3/26 Woodbury, NJ (NWA - 400):Johnny Gunn b Duane Gill, Super Jocks b Ray Odyssey & Rich Myers, East L.A. b Chuck Sloan, The Spiders DDQ Black Hearts (Tom Nash & Dave Johnson), Chris Benoit b Jerry Lawler
  613.  
  614. 3/26 Dover, DE (ECW - 430): Chad Austin & Tommy Dreamer & Tommy Cairo b Pit Bull & Sandman & Rockin Rebel, Billy Buster b Hack Myers, Kevin Sullivan & Tasmaniac b Pat Tanaka & Paul Diamond, 911 b Mike Norman & Mikey Wiprecht, ECW tag title: Public Enemy b Bruise Brothers, Road Warrior Hawk b Mr. Hughes, ECW title:Terry Funk b Shane Douglas-DQ, Hawk won Battle Royal
  615.  
  616. 3/26 Johnsonburg, PA (American Commonwealth Wrestling):T.C. Reynolds b Tommy Justice, Lord Zoltan b Johnny Graham, Bad Crew b The Drifters, T.Rantula b Rip Sawyer to win ACW title, Max Thrasher DDQ Virgil, Van Hammer & Doink the Clown (Steve Keirn) DCOR 3-D (Damien Demento) & King Kong Bundy
  617.  
  618. 3/26 Uenohara (Championship Wrestling Japan - 400):Nobutaka Araya b The W*inger, Masahiko Takasugi b Ho Des Minh, Red October (C.W. Bergstrom) b Naito, Goro Tsurumi b Dane Rush, Minh won elimination match, Jesse Barr b Lou Andrews, Ryuma Go b Bruiser Brian
  619.  
  620. 3/26 Daigo (Michinoku Pro - 545):Terry Boy b Masato Yakushiji, Wellington Wilkens Jr. DDQ Yone Genjin, Shu el Guerrero b Gran Naniwa, Shiryu b Taka Michinoku, Super Delfin & Ginsei Shinzaki b Hanzo & Great Sasuke
  621.  
  622. 3/26 Bradford, VT (IWA - 600 sellout):Vladimir Koloff b Cruel Connection, Big Cheese b Scott Taylor, Vic Steamboat d Thunderfoot, Jules Strongbow b Demolition Ax-DQ, Steamboat & Koloff & Ax & Taylor b Cheese & Connection & Thunderfoot & Strongbow
  623.  
  624. 3/26 Cloverdale, BC (West Coast Championship Wrestling - 475/256 paid): Iron Maiden & Randy Taylor b Chi Chuck & Awesome Annie, Dobie Gillis b Rocky Dellassera, Coal miners glove match: Mike Roselli & Randy Tyler b Mike Starr & Johnny Canuck, Ladder match: Firefighter Adrian b Dillon Powers, Chain match:Badnews Allen b Timothy Flowers-DQ
  625.  
  626. 3/26 Ishezaki (Social Pro Wrestling Federation):Lonsap b Maruyama, Duece b Hirofumi Miura, Hopper King b Devil Hopper, Isao Takagi & Hagiwara b Usami & Nishimura & Sano, Shinichi Nakano & Masayoshi Motegi b Yoshiaki Yatsu & Hiroshi Shimada
  627.  
  628. 3/26 Mobile, AL (WWC Carl Roch promoter - 350):Lord Humongous won Royal Rumble Battle Royal, Don Fargo (the original) b Bobby Doll, Marcel Pringle b Humongous, Mike Boyette b Tyrone the Tyrant, Joey Barrett b Crazy Joe
  629.  
  630. 3/26 Centre, AL (Bama Pro Wrestling):Big Bubba b Jason Valentine, Billy Montana & Richie Dye b Tracy Black & Frankie Lee, Tim Strong b Ken Timbs, Bambi & Black b Peggy Lee Leather & Keith Hart, War Daddy & Todd Zane b The Inferno & Bud Black-DQ, Mystic Inferno b Lee Thomas
  631.  
  632. 3/27 Charleston, WV (WCW - 1,500): Brian Anderson d Craig Pittman, Too Cold Scorpio & Marcus Bagwell b Tex Slashinger & Shanghai Pierce, Steve Austin b Brian Pillman, Arn Anderson & Rick Steamboat b Paul Orndorff & Paul Roma, Sting b Steve Regal, WCW title:Ric Flair b Vader-DQ
  633.  
  634. 3/27 Matsumoto (All Japan - 3,500): Satoru Asako b Kentaro Shiga, Jun Akiyama & Tsuyoshi Kikuchi b Masao Inoue & Yoshinari Ogawa, Doug Furnas b Tamon Honda, Rusher Kimura & Mighty Inoue & Mitsuo Momota b Ryukaku Izumida & Haruka Eigen & Masa Fuchi, John Nord b Johnny Smith, Toshiaki Kawada b Johnny Ace, Akira Taue d Kenta Kobashi 30:00, Giant Baba & Stan Hansen & Takao Omori b Steve Williams & Dan Kroffat & The Eagle
  635.  
  636. 3/27 Yonezawa (FMW - 3,842 sellout): Koji Nakagawa & Tetsuhiro Kuroda b Masato Tanaka & Gosaku Goshogawara, Goshogawara b Mr. Chin, Battle Ranger b Damian, The Sheik & Sabu DDQ The Gladiator & Big Titan, Shark Tsuchiya & Crusher Maedomari & Combat Toyoda b Keiko Iwame & Yukie Nabeno & Miwa Sato, Tarzan Goto b Ricky Fuji, No rope barbed wire tornado street fight death match: Atsushi Onita & Sambo Asako & Katsutoshi Niiyama b Mr. Pogo & Goro Tsurumi & Hideki Hosaka 20:59
  637.  
  638. 3/27 Nobeoka (WAR - 2,100 sellout): Yamato b Matsuoka, Otaku Hozumi b Michiko Omukai, Mikiko Futagami & Rumi Kazama b Carol Midori & Harley Saito, Norman Smiley (Black Magic) b Nobukazu Hirai, Ultimo Dragon & Masanobu Kurisu d Gedo & Jado 30:00, Arashi & Kim Duk b Koki Kitahara & Hiromichi Fuyuki, Great Kabuki b Corazon de Leon, Genichiro Tenryu & Takashi Ishikawa & Koji Ishinriki b King Haku & Ashura Hara & Super Strong Machine
  639.  
  640. 3/27 Philadelphia (ECW TV taping - 350/all freebies): Non-squash results: Public Enemy b Crash the Terminator & Tommy Cairo, Tommy Dreamer b Sandman, Pat Tanaka & Paul Diamond b Pit Bull & Rockin Rebel, ECW title:Shane Douglas b Diamond, Sandman b Ray Odyssey
  641.  
  642. 3/27 Ono (Michinoku Pro - 251): Terry Boy b Naohiro Hoshikawa, Taka Michinoku d Kazumichi Nakajima, Wellington Wilkens Jr. DDQ Yone Genjin, UWF super welter title:Super Delfin b Shiryu, Great Sasuke & Shu el Guerrero b Gran Naniwa & Ginsei Shinzaki
  643.  
  644. 3/28 Winston-Salem, NC (WCW - 1,000): Brian Anderson d Craig Pittman, Too Cold Scorpio & Marcus Bagwell b Tex Slashinger & Shanghai Pierce, Steve Austin b Brian Pillman, Arn Anderson & Rick Steamboat b Paul Orndorff & Paul Roma, Sting b Steve Regal, WCW title:Ric Flair b Vader-DQ
  645.  
  646. Special thanks to: John Donovan, Scott Wallask, Jerry Lane, Shelby Adcock, Frank Shanley, Chris Zavisa, Gary Woronchak, Brian Hildebrand, David Shelto, Karin Moore, Scott Hudson, Dan Parris, Buddy Phillips, Gary Langevin, Dave Roberson, Eddie Goldman, Freddie Fargo, Paul Sosnouski, Travis Edgeworth, Stuart Kemp, Rich Palladino, Gabe Sapolsky, Tim Noel
  647.  
  648. UWA
  649.  
  650. Canek tied Ric Flair's record for most world title reigns (12) by doing a quickie-switch with Yamato (Kim Duk), losing the title on 3/15 in Puebla and regaining it on 3/18 in Netzahualcoyotl. This past week Yamato lost a mask vs. hair match to Canek and wound up with his head shaved.
  651.  
  652. Super Astro, El Sagrado and El Texano have jumped to EMLL, as a further sign this promotion seems on its last legs.
  653.  
  654. New are Canadian Tiger (Mike Anthony from USWA) and J.C. Ice & Wolfie D as PG-13.
  655.  
  656. Apparently Villano V's fourth cervical vertebrae was so badly injured on his recent Japan tour that doctors are telling him never to wrestle again because one more bad bump could lead to paralysis, although most believe he'll be back anyway.
  657.  
  658. With El Texano gone, the Death Missionaries (Texano & El Signo & Negro Navarro) were tripped of the trios title and a tournament will be held.
  659.  
  660. Enrique Vera, The Killer and Andy Barrow have also "quit" the promotion to work independently, but that looks right now to be an angle for a worked interpromotional feud.
  661.  
  662. EMLL
  663.  
  664. Atlantis won the CMLL light heavyweight title from Dr. Wagner Jr. on 3/2 in Acapulco, and Javier Llanes won the CMLL middleweight title from Dandy. Don't have the date although I believe it was this past week in Cuernavaca, but should have the date next week. They seem to be building toward Dandy vs. Llanes in a hair vs. hair along with Negro Casas vs. Mocho Cota hair vs. hair. The latter feud is really over and the blow-off is expected to draw a big house.
  665.  
  666. All the wrestlers were taken off guarantees and now working on percentages except Vampire, Casas, Black Magic and King Haku because they have too many wrestlers under contract and aren't running enough shows to support the talent roster and keep everyone busy.
  667.  
  668. The feud on Tuesday nights at Arena Coliseo with Los Brazos vs. Gladiador Jr. & Gran Markus Jr. & Wagner Jr. is drawing sellouts and near sellouts.
  669.  
  670. Corazon de Leon returns 4/7.
  671.  
  672. This group, along with original syndicate head Manny Guzman went to the National Arbitration Board, which ruled Guzman didn't have the right to strike. Guzman, who is one of the main powers in UWA, was trying to strike against EMLL because its wrestlers quit his union to form their own union.
  673.  
  674. The three brothers of Los Brazos are in full-time as Brazo del Futuro (formerly Robin Hood), Super Brazo and Brazo de Platino.
  675.  
  676. ALL JAPAN
  677.  
  678. Champion Carnival standings as of 3/27 are Stan Hansen 8, Toshiaki Kawada 6, Akira Taue 5, Steve Williams and John Nord 4 and Kenta Kobashi 3, The Eagle and Johnny Ace 2 and Doug Furnas and Johnny Smith 0. Nord won't be a factor at the end since he's already been pinned by The Eagle in a non-tournament match.
  679.  
  680. If the Misawa injury isn't a work, and it doesn't appear that it is, then it throws all original planning out the window. As those who have followed these tournaments before know, it is very well planned because you want to have a certain number of surprises yet at the same time need to have the standings in a certain way at the end, and one figures Misawa would have beaten just about everyone that he hadn't faced yet which gives them all two points they wouldn't have gotten (via the forfeit wins) and means they've got to go back to the drawing board. His loss also hurts at the gate.
  681.  
  682. The only key matches this past week were 3/24 at the TV taping in Hiratsuka, which was the final one-hour television show that aired this past weekend (the 30 minute show begins on 4/2 every Saturday) as Taue drew Kobashi over 30:00 and Hansen pinned Kawada with a lariat in 19:38. Since the 3/27 Matsumoto main event was scheduled as Kobashi vs. Misawa, they subbed Taue in a non-tourney match and they went to another 30:00 draw. Both the 30:00 matches were said to be very good.
  683.  
  684. Jumbo Tsuruta works the 4/10 Sendai show.
  685.  
  686. NEW JAPAN
  687.  
  688. As expected, Rick Rude regained the WCW International title from Hiroshi Hase on 3/24 in Kyoto before a sellout 8,500 fans via submission with a reverse full nelson (not sure if that's the move Tenryu used on Hase in their single match last year or the move that Steamboat used on Flair in 1989 in New Orleans) in 20:58. Hase had Rude pinned but Rude's female manager (who didn't look familiar in photos) interfered to set up Rude's victory.
  689.  
  690. Two matches announced for 5/1 at the Fukuoka Dome are Hell Raisers vs. Steiners for IWGP tag title and Rude defending his title against Sting, which may be the title change.
  691.  
  692. The bracketing was announced for the 4/16 Sumo Hall All-Star Junior Wars card. Great Sasuke (Michinoku Pro) has a bye into the quarterfinals against the winner of first round Masayoshi Motegi (Social Pro Wrestling Federation) vs. El Samurai. Other first round matches in the top half of the bracketing are Ricky Fuji (FMW) vs. Negro Casas (EMLL), Hiyabusa (FMW's Eiji Ezaki) (AAA) vs. Jushin Liger. Bottom half has Wild Pegasus (Chris Benoit) getting a first round bye and facing the winner of Black Tiger (AAA) vs. Taka Michinoku (Michinoku Pro), then Shinjiro Ohtani vs. Super Delfin (Michinoku Pro) and Dean Malenko vs. Masao Orihara (WAR). Figure quarterfinals look to be Sasuke vs. Samurai, Liger vs. Casas, Pegasus vs. Black Tiger and Malenko vs. Delfin. Semis maybe Liger vs. Sasuke and Black Tiger vs. Malenko, although by this point it is anyone's guess.
  693.  
  694. In between title reigns, Rude wrestled IWGP champ Shinya Hashimoto on 3/23 in Amagasaki in a non-title match which Hashimoto won.
  695.  
  696. Satoshi Kojiima won the annual Young Lions tournament pinning Manabu Nakanishi in the finals in Kyoto.
  697.  
  698. OTHER JAPAN NOTES
  699.  
  700. They are playing up the angle for the 5/5 Kawasaki Stadium main event of Atsushi Onita vs. Genichiro Tenryu. Onita wants the match to be an explosive barbed wire match while Tenryu wants it to be a standard cage match.
  701.  
  702. In WAR, Super Strong Machine and Ashura Hara have turned heel against Tenryu to breath some life into this group since the Skinheads, who had been headlining all the WAR shows against Tenryu and company, aren't on this tour.
  703.  
  704. The next WAR tour is 4/21 to 4/27 with King Haku, Corazon de Leon (Chris Jericho as a foreign babyface teaming with WAR members), Mil Mascaras and Dos Caras.
  705.  
  706. Ryuma Go's Championship Wrestling Japan group using wrestlers out of Oregon opened on 3/26 in Uenohara before about 400 fans. Overall said to be a poor show although Go juiced like crazy to make the mag photos look good.
  707.  
  708. NHK-TV, a Tokyo station which also airs in some U.S. markets with large Japanese populations, will broadcast Pancrase on 4/14. The group is also looking to pull All Japan women away from Fuji-TV, which has carried the group going back to the early 70s.
  709.  
  710. JWP on 4/10 at Korakuen Hall has Chigusa Nagayo vs. Devil Masami and Reggie Bennett & Cutie Suzuki vs. Dynamite Kansai & Candy Okutsu. It's really amazing how much the predominately male audience hates Nagayo now that she's back working every Korakuen show when she used to get the loudest cheers of any wrestler, male or female, in the building years ago. The women, especially girls, go crazy for her, but they're down to only about 15 percent of the crowd and it only causes the men to boo her even more.
  711.  
  712. New FMW foreign object gimmick is an ax, which Mr. Pogo opens the faces's backs up with. From photos, the 3/17 Onita-Pogo match saw Onita wrapped up in barbed wire, choked over barbed wire with Goro Tsurumi pulling his throat down with a rope, clotheslined with Pogo wrapping barbed wire around his arm and finished with Pogo blowing a giant fireball out of his mouth onto Onita's already cut back, followed by three piledrivers on a chair for the pin. Mitsuhiro Matsunaga's return in the semifinal against Tarzan Goto saw the expected heavy juice job, but not only in the forehead, but in the knee.
  713.  
  714. USWA
  715.  
  716. Jerry Lawler regained the Unified title from Eddie Gilbert on 3/25 in Senatobia, MS in a match where the story behind the switch is most interesting. Lawler gave up the book because he's having to travel to Connecticut so regularly for voiceovers and Randy Hales was made booker. Gilbert wanted to be booker and wound up no-showing 3/21 in Memphis and 3/22 in Louisville supposedly because he wasn't given the book, and some felt he had quit without dropping the strap. Lawler supposedly told him on 3/16 either (I've heard two versions, the second is the one that sounds most valid) a) He'd be made booker but first had to drop the title to Lawler in a match taped; or b) Lawler told him that he (Eddie) would become Vince McMahon's personal protege as far as local TV interviews go with Gilbert vowing to win the Unified title and bring it to McMahon. To do so, Lawler would have to get the title back so Gilbert returned and dropped the strap to Lawler. In either case, it was apparently simply a work to get the strap back since Gilbert is gone again, although his brother is still around and he is expected back at some point. The local election for County Clerk in Henderson County in Tennessee with Gilbert running is 5/3.
  717.  
  718. There is a lot of talk about sometime in May, Lawler winning the WWF title from Bret Hart and losing it when Vince McMahon interferes on a major show one week later.
  719.  
  720. Actual crowd for Memphis Memories on 3/7 was 7,700 and gate was a few bucks less than $30,000.
  721.  
  722. With Eddie out of the picture, they held a Battle Royal on TV 3/26 with Dream Machine winning. When Lawler, who was doing color, congratulated Dream, Lawler was sucker-punched so Dream went heel.
  723.  
  724. Billy Travis & Don Bass had two brawls with The Moondogs all over the studio.
  725.  
  726. Steven Dunn (Well Dunn) did an interview saying the WWF was the best promotion and promised to bring the USWA title to Vince McMahon when he wrestled Brian Christopher on 3/28.
  727.  
  728. Besides Eddie Gilbert, Scott Steiner and Ricky Morton also no-showed 3/21. Morton had legit tonsillitis. Rick Steiner wound up teaming with Christopher against Doug Gilbert and Tommy Rich on top.
  729.  
  730. 3/28 had Lawler defending against Machine, Christopher defending against Dunn, Moondogs defending against Travis & Bass in a no rules match, Lawler & Christopher vs. Doug & Rich in a match which ends when both members of one team are piledriven, Dirty White Boy defending SMW title against Doug, White Girl vs. Susan Sapphire and more.
  731.  
  732. SMW
  733.  
  734. Quiet week with two spot shows featuring Lance Storm winning Battle Royals both nights.
  735.  
  736. Interviews with Vince McMahon and Eddie Marlin aired on television where both plugged the 4/1 Pikeville card and said they'd welcome the losing team into their federation. Thrillseekers said they were asked to fulfill Rock & Roll Express' contracts if they lost, but said they would, but didn't want to. Ricky Morton read a letter thanking Robert Gibson and the fans and said he thought they'd win, but if they didn't, he was retiring from wrestling.
  737.  
  738. Jim Cornette to announcer Brian Mathews, who had a black eye: "When you got up in the middle of the night for a drink of water, did the toilet seat fall on your head again?"
  739.  
  740. A few weeks back, Ron Hed of San Jose who was on vacation in the area did ring announcing and Tom Prichard gave him a DDT on the floor and KO'd him. He did a Bernie Lomax ("Weekend at Bernies") imitation being carried from the floor and put into a chair, where he stood slumped over. When he was supposed to ring the bell, they had someone put the hammer in his hand and move his hand down to ring the bell.
  741.  
  742. ECW
  743.  
  744. Three shows over the weekend which were largely described as way below par. The 3/26 Valley Forge, PA show which drew about 700 featured little underneath although Peaches and Sandman continued their break-up, with an eight-man War Games style cage match with numerous stipulations with Mr. Hughes & Shane Douglas & Public Enemy over Terry Funk & Road Warrior Hawk & Kevin Sullivan & Tasmaniac rated ***1/2 in the match nobody could afford to lose. It wound up with everyone climbing out of the cage (isn't the whole idea of cage matches to avoid this?) and brawling all over the place with Sherri Martel involved, leaving Funk in with both Douglas and Hughes. They double-teamed Funk and Douglas pulled out a plastic bag and suffocated Funk (ala Funk/Ric Flair in 1989 Clash), putting him out so Douglas could pin him and thus win the ECW title. The show that evening in Dover, DE was a little better quality with Douglas retaining his title losing via DQ to Funk before an estimated 430 and Hawk winning a Battle Royal. A free TV taping in Philadelphia on 3/27 which drew about 350 was mainly to set up the next ECW Arena house show on 4/16 headlined by Douglas defending against Hawk. In a Bad Company (Pat Tanaka & Paul Diamond) match with Pit Bull & Rockin Rebel, Jason began arguing with Rebel. An ECW title match with Douglas vs. Diamond saw Martel hit Diamond with a chair at the bell for the pin. Tanaka ran out and he was also hit with a chair and KO'd. Hawk then came out and he was hit with a chair, but didn't sell it at all, and Douglas and Martel ran off. Later in the show, Mr. Hughes did the sidewalk slam on six different guys, egged on by Douglas, when Hawk came out. Hughes sidewalk slammed Hawk and Douglas came off the top rope on him and left him laying.
  745.  
  746. HERE AND THERE
  747.  
  748. Steve Signore's Midwest Championship Wrestling, after debuting with a $34,000 house a few weeks back, came back on 3/19 in Westchester, IL drawing 200 fans for a show with Terry Funk, Nailz, Demolition Smash and Eli the Eliminator. They have shows 4/15 in Kankakee, IL (Jim Duggan, Bob Orton, Ron Powers) and 4/23 in Cicero, IL (King Kong Bundy, Tito Santana, Jake Roberts, Duggan, Kevin Sullivan).
  749.  
  750. Funk was in Orlando this past week filming "Thunder in Paradise." The episode that airs this week and next will feature Sting in a heel role.
  751.  
  752. Jerry Lawler put Chris Benoit over in their first-ever meeting on 3/26 in Woodbury, NJ stemming from the angle at the previous show where Lawler, disguised as Atlantis, broke a plaque over Benoit's head. The show drew 400, and match was said to be **1/2. 4/23 in the same building will be the first-ever Benoit vs. Terry Funk match.
  753.  
  754. Funny story of the week. At an autograph show this past week, a fan came up to John Studd with a photo of him with a mask from the late 70s in Texas where he worked as Captain USA. He asked Studd to autograph a photo as Studd and another photo as Captain USA. Studd was really friendly about it and asked him, "How do you spell Captain?"
  755.  
  756. Dillon Powers broke his ankle on 3/26 taking a big bump in a ladder match against Firefighter Adrian in Cloverdale, BC. Told it was also the best match in years in British Columbia.
  757.  
  758. West Coast Wresting Alliance on 4/8 in Porterville, CA. That group is looking for technical crew personnel to assist in production of a weekly TV show in the Concord, CA area. For more info call 510-825-6958. First taping is 4/23 at Ygnacio Valley High in Concord.
  759.  
  760. NWA on 5/13 in Mahonoy City, PA headlined by Doink the Clown (Steve Keirn) vs. Papa Shango, plus Black Hearts, Dick Murdoch and Bushwhackers.
  761.  
  762. Bobby Fulton has a show 4/8 in Delaware, OH with Junkyard Dog, Doink, Pez Whatley, Fulton and more.
  763.  
  764. Autograph signings on 4/9 at Pennsylvania National Guard Armory in Philadelphia, free admission, 165 dealer tables, with Sandman (1-3) and J.T. Smith (11-1).
  765.  
  766. Percy Pringle (Paul Bearer) lives. Using the name Percy Pringle, he has been managing many Saturday nights in Mobile, AL for WWC.
  767.  
  768. Buddy Rose was on local Portland, OR television with Tonya Harding the day she left for the Olympics. Apparently she was a fan of his growing up.
  769.  
  770. AAA/IWC
  771.  
  772. A few corrections from two weeks ago. The gate for Los Angeles was actually $238,225, not $228,225 as listed, which has a good shot at being the second largest in the U.S. this year. Also, while there is constant negotiation between both sides when it comes to expenses of these shows, the percentage each side gets of the gate is agreed upon contractually and there have been no problems from either side over that.
  773.  
  774. Antonio Pena was named Vice President of International Affairs and booker for IWC. The latter he was to begin with.
  775.  
  776. The 3/12 Los Angeles show aired on 3/26, which was the hottest TV show of the year because of the minis title match and Mascarita Sagrada splash off the top of a 10-12 foot (as opposed to the usual eight foot billed as 15 foot in the U.S.) cage. Visually, seeing a three-foot tall man standing on a 10-12 foot cage looked like a normal sized wrestler jumping off a tall building. However they didn't air the semifinal with the Love Machine-La Parka feud beginning which is interesting because that was the only match they did post-match interviews at ringside for television. Maybe it'll air later, but nothing is ever guaranteed. Instead of that match, they aired Los Payasos, and it was the best Payasos match thus far. The cage match came off good on television because of the outside interference, although the work in the cage didn't come across any better.
  777.  
  778. 3/27 television was taped 3/18 in Puebla. Main event was one of those confusing all angle, little wrestling matches with Black Cat & Universo 2000 & Mascara Ano 2000 vs. Konnan El Barbaro & Mascara Sagrada & Octagon. Cat kept refusing the tag the Dinamita brothers. After the heels lost the first fall, during the break, Cat attacked Universo and went after his mask while Konnan kept Mascara Ano 2000 from helping his brother. Sagrada & Octagon, after standing around for a while, decided they wanted to help Universo, but Konnan blocked them. But as they occupied Konnan, Mascara Ano 2000 got in and turned the tables on Cat until Konnan started fighting both Dinamita. Sagrada & Octagon then went after Cat to beat him to win the match, but Konnan blocked them as well, although finally they made Cat submit. Konnan continued to shove Octagon & Sagrada after the match and help Cat and eventually carried Cat out. Somehow this built to a match on 3/25 in Cancun which drew a sellout 8,000 with Konnan teaming with Cien Caras (brother of Mascara Ano 2000 & Universo 2000) & Perro Aguayo against Cat & Love Machine & Chicano Power. If you think you misread that and it doesn't make sense, think of actually watching it. In that match Konnan and Cien Caras battled throughout.
  779.  
  780. The plans seems to be to feud the Dinamita as faces against Cat & Machine & Eddy Guerrero in a Mexico vs. USA feud (even though Cat is actually Mexican, billed from Japan, he comes out to "Born in the USA" which makes him an honorary American).
  781.  
  782. A press conference will be held this week to announce the cities and main matches for the three TripleMania shows. It now looks like the first will be 4/26 in Aguascalientes.
  783.  
  784. The main matches for the three shows look to be Aguayo vs. Fishman hair vs. mask, Heavy Metal vs. Jerry Estrada hair vs. hair and maybe Cien Caras vs. Konnan for the IWC title (although they have a title match scheduled next week) or Blue Panther vs. Tiger Mask mask vs. mask. UWA is continuing to want to work with AAA, although that deal is on hold, although Pena has an idea to run a tournament of champions using every IWC, Mexican and UWA champ in every weight division in a one-night tournament to come up with one champion of champions (not one in each weight class, but one overall).
  785.  
  786. The Toluca show on 3/19 that drew 20,000 airs this coming weekend, although I don't think anything out of the ordinary took place.
  787.  
  788. WCW
  789.  
  790. Names listed in a flier being sent out by WCW as appearing at Slamboree are Dusty Rhodes, Verne Gagne, Killer Kowalski, Red Bastien, The Assassin, Ray Stevens, Mike Graham, Tommy Young, Greg Gagne, Tully Blanchard, Ole Anderson, Blackjack Mulligan, Hardboiled Haggerty, Larry Hennig and Lou Thesz. They will hold a Slammeet on 5/21 and Slamfeast on 5/21. It wouldn't be WCW without mucho problemas. The flier lists the show, Meet and Feast as taking place in April, not May.
  791.  
  792. Cactus Jack will definitely wrestle at Spring Stampede. He's having no hearing problems, but is having some problems with his balance.
  793.  
  794. Vader was back in action already this week, although the broken eardrum must be holding him back as his arena matches with Ric Flair were only in the *1/2 range.
  795.  
  796. The Kansas City Star did a feature 3/19 on Harley Race. Race mainly talked about his divorce which he said made "War of the Roses" look tame, said he had dropped 48 pounds and said he still wants to do a retirement tour through Japan.
  797.  
  798. WCW is going with a three-man play-by-play team (Schiavone, Jesse Ventura and Bobby Heenan) on all Clashes and PPV shows.
  799.  
  800. Brian Pillman is staying at least through the PPV to appear at all shows where advertising was out, although at press time the sides were said to be far apart in inking a new deal.
  801.  
  802. WCW Saturday Night on 3/19 did a 2.6 rating for the second week of the Hogan scenario, Main Event did a 1.9 head-to-head with Wrestlemania and Pro did a 1.6.
  803.  
  804. WWF is attempting to keep WCW from using the name "The Boss" and the policeman gimmick for Ray Traylor. Wonder if the WWF legal department is hassling Bruce Springsteen too.
  805.  
  806. Steve Austin now using the Fuller leglock, called "Hollywood & Vine."
  807.  
  808. The Hogan interview where he talked about his four year-old son asking him if he was better than Ric Flair aired this weekend. Actually they are doing a really good job of a slow-build on this scenario. Only problems are that after this weekend's television show, that if Hogan doesn't sign, they've really wasted a lot of time. Even if he does sign, there has yet to be a case of an ex-WWF superstar going to WCW that has taken his fan following and drawing power with him. Hogan may be unique in this, but he may also be seen by fans as yesterday's news.
  809.  
  810. At least a few wrestlers are being asked to take 20 percent pay cuts to help balance the budget, which will do wonders for morale when they hear about all the money being spent on a new set, new announcers, and the seven-figures it'll take to land Hogan. As noted in the business comparisons, in February, all the new sets and announcers wound up as an eight percent drop in ratings as compared with the same month last year.
  811.  
  812. Fire Cat, billed as the first of many Japanese wrestlers, who worked a good TV match with Steve Austin was Brady Boone. In upcoming weeks Austin will wrestle Pat Tanaka and "Kyoto" (Paul Diamond under a hood) leading to the match with Great Muta.
  813.  
  814. Steve Keirn & Bobby Eaton debuted as a heel tag team. They'll be using either the name Bad Attitude, or The Men of Distinction.
  815.  
  816. Neither Sherri Martel or Kevin Sullivan were at this past week's tapings.
  817.  
  818. Bunkhouse Buck, after a match where Erik Watts & Dustin Rhodes beat Tex Slashinger & Shanghai Pierce, attacked Rhodes with Watts' trophy. An angle on 4/9 TV has Flair in a suit, winning a squash and won't break the figure four until Steamboat, also in a suit, makes the save, and all the officials pull them apart and Flair slaps Steamboat.
  819.  
  820. A correction from what has been written in the letters pages. A few months back when Roanoke's WSLS had a pick the promotion vote between WCW and SMW, the final tally was 1,553 for SMW and 862 for WCW according to the station.
  821.  
  822. WWF
  823.  
  824. Figures for Wrestlemania. Actual attendance at Madison Square Garden was 18,065 fans with a gate of $960,000. It was nowhere even close to the largest gate ever in the U.S. although almost surely will be the largest of the year. A sellout at those ticket prices would have indicated it would have been a record setter and it actually came nowhere close. This may mean a ton of the highest priced tickets had to be comps and overall there had to be a lot of comps tickets since the same number of tickets with lower prices at Trump Plaza brought in $670,000 more at Wrestlemania V. Mania even brought in less money with higher prices than last year in Las Vegas which had fewer fans and ample comps. As a live gate it be in sixth place on the all-time U.S. list and tenth place on the all-time WWF list. The Paramount, with all the national hype, failed to sellout, putting 4,200 in a 5,500 seat capacity building. The seven Fan-Fests all did full houses of 1,700 each (we were initially told 2,200 each), although they were heavily comped as well as they averaged about 1,000 paid and 700 comps per session. Total merchandise sales for the weekend was $237,000--or about $7 per head.
  825.  
  826. The Undertaker and Paul Bearer were in Japan for a press conference. Undertaker totally stayed in character as they were plugging the WWF Japan tour in May. Undertaker & Genichiro Tenryu will form a tag team in several main events. It was also announced Bret Hart would defend the title on the four shows against Owen Hart, Bam Bam Bigelow, Randy Savage and Yokozuna and as already mentioned here, Madusa (who will be billed in Japan as Madusa rather than Alundra Blayze) will have two matches with Bull Nakano and one each with Kyoko Inoue and Sakie Hasegawa. There will also be a Royal Rumble and a Tenryu vs. Yokozuna singles match. We should get complete line-ups by next issue.
  827.  
  828. Some notes from the tapings this past week. At the Superstars taping on 3/22 in Lowell, MA, they ran a strong angle with Tatanka and IRS. Tatanka beat Kwang via DQ when he used the Kabuki mist in the eyes. IRS, who was at ringside, attacked Tatanka and tied him in the ropes, put on the headdress and did a war dance. He started ripping the headdress when Chief Jay Strongbow made the save chopping IRS. As he tried to untie Tatanka, IRS attacked him and destroyed him and started stuffing the feathers down his pants.
  829.  
  830. Shawn Michaels will apparently in his absence as an active wrestler do a segment called Heartbreak Hotel that will replace the Funeral Parlor. In the first one Bret Hart challenged anyone and Luna Vachon came out to challenge him for Bam Bam. Luna slapped Bret after Bret asked her if she had gotten her rabies shot. Alundra Blayze then came out and said she knew Bret would never hit a woman and challenged Luna to start their program. Another segment with Mr. Perfect (who received about 75 percent cheers) saw Perfect say he doesn't hold grudges and he's long since forgotten that Lex Luger knocked him out at Wrestlemania 392 days earlier and to show he doesn't hold grudges, he shook Michaels' hand.
  831.  
  832. Jeff Jarrett beat Sparky Plugg with his feet on the ropes and Dink told the ref what happened. Jarrett chased Dink around the ring and to the back but Doink ended up dousing Jarrett with a bucket of water to start their program.
  833.  
  834. McMahon did live opens with Jerry Lawler.
  835.  
  836. They set up what will apparently be an IC title match on TV at the next taping with Razor Ramon defending against Diesel, which will probably be a title switch to set up a house show program. It also appeared that Crush and Randy Savage will work cage matches and that Yokozuna will be programmed against Earthquake.
  837.  
  838. Perry Saturn got a try-out but the jobber didn't work well and his match was pretty bad.
  839.  
  840. Crush now using the heart punch as a finisher and IRS now using a version of the STF.
  841.  
  842. 3/23 tapings in White Plains saw 1-2-3 Kid & Sparky Plugg apparently win the tag titles from Quebecers with a second ref counting the fall after the first ref was knocked down, however later in the show they announced it was a win via DQ as per the ruling of the original ref and the title didn't change.
  843.  
  844. Howard Finkel had a tuxedo match with Harvey Wippleman. Wippleman ripped up Howard's pants so he had to work in his underwear, but made the comeback and left Wippleman in his underwear as Savage's music played. Finkel got one of biggest face pops of the night.
  845.  
  846. Johnny Polo is doing the interview segment on Challenge since Stan Lane & Ted DiBiase are doing the announcing.
  847.  
  848. Tapings were far more disorganized than usual. On at least three occasions jobbers were in the ring and told to go back to the dressing room.
  849.  
  850. Monday Night raw on 3/21 did a 2.8 rating which considering it was going against the Academy Awards isn't too bad, while All-American did a 2.0 and Mania a 1.3, both of which were lower than expected considering all the hype attached to them doing both shows live from MSG.
  851.  
  852. Roddy Piper did an interview that aired on Superstars, but probably just designed to get people to order the PPV replay.
  853.  
  854. A lot of changes, mostly for the better, on the syndicated shows, that look even slicker than before overall.
  855.  
  856. Mabel and Yokozuna worked two matches at the tapings, with each bodyslamming the other although the bouts other than that were said to have been awful.
  857.  
  858. King of the Ring 6/19 in Baltimore.
  859.  
  860. Rocco Gibraltar is from South Florida, real name Mike Drossi, about 6-7, 320.
  861.  
  862. Jennie Garth update. She wasn't unhappy about being there because she was getting a big payday for doing basically nothing. She refused to do the skit they had lined up for her because she thought it was in bad taste and wasn't happy because of a security problem.
  863.  
  864. People at the tapings in Lowell, MA were raving about the work of jobber Chris Hamrick, who did all kinds of Lucha bumps through the ropes.
  865.  
  866. THE READERS PAGE
  867.  
  868. WRESTLEMANIA
  869.  
  870. Thumbs up. Best match was Owen vs. Bret. Worst was Men on Mission vs. Quebecers. The tone was set for the whole evening when Owen beat Bret in the ****+ match. It was obvious then that Bret would win the belt. Earthquake vs. Adam bomb would have been the worst match but it was kept short.
  871.  
  872. It is disturbing that neither WWF or WCW can pace a major show. I suppose it was better to drop the 10-man tag than have to rush through two matches, but I wanted to see that match. It was unusual for a card to have the opener as the best match and go downhill from there. Otherwise it was a well-booked show given the talent on hand.
  873.  
  874. We were so glad not to see Michael Buffer, so they came up with a fake President Clinton to insult our intelligence. This simply affirmed to the average viewer that pro wrestling is something that no President would ever watch. If it had been done more tongue-in-cheek it would have been different, but this wasn't the least bit entertaining and totally lame. Now they've got a credible champion, but pissed it away with a fake president.
  875.  
  876. Dave Lane
  877.  
  878. Lewisville, Texas
  879.  
  880. DM: Pro wrestling may be something that no President will admit to watching publicly, but it isn't something that no President would watch. George Bush was a wrestling fan and used to attend matches before becoming a major political figure when he lived in Houston.
  881.  
  882. Thumbs up. Best match was Ramon vs. Michaels. Worst was Doink & Dink vs. Bigelow & Luna. I felt that Ramon vs. Michaels was the highlight of the show. It was exciting and very original. The fact that the ladder took as bad a beating as the wrestlers was one of the best parts. the background entrance with the big "X" made me feel like Spike Lee was sponsoring the show. The WWF, for all its faults, has a great way of giving people who order the PPV a lot of atmosphere. The special door, lights, house dimming for entrances, etc. make you feel like you're watching a special event. WCW builds its PPV shows no different than Clashes in that there is no difference in the atmosphere.
  883.  
  884. The Clinton lookalike was convincing at first, but it really insulted my intelligence. Jennie Garth played a huge role. And Michael Buffer has nothing to worry about if Burt Reynolds gives up acting.
  885.  
  886. Darren Chan
  887.  
  888. San Francisco, California
  889.  
  890. Thumbs up. Solid matches. Mostly logical and good endings and a storyline that went from opener to main event and made sense when it was over. It would have been nice to see 1-2-3 Kid in action, but the matches cut down in time or eliminated weren't missed at all. Best match was Owen vs. Bret and worst was Quebecers vs. Men on a Mission.
  891.  
  892. Steven Grant
  893.  
  894. Seattle, Washington
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