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WCW 1992 : A New World of Sport


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Shooters Club vs Samoan Swat Team

Al Perez vs Austin Idol

Kevin Von Erich vs Nobuhiko Takada

Big And Bigger vs The Fantastics

The Journeymen vs The Enforcers (WCW tag titles are not on the line)

Cactus Jack vs Dustin Rhodes

Ron Simmons vs Steve Williams

Rick Rude vs Ricky Steamboat (US Heavyweight Title on the line)

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Shooters Club vs Samoan Swat Team

Al Perez vs Austin Idol

Kevin Von Erich vs Nobuhiko Takada

Big And Bigger vs The Fantastics

The Journeymen vs The Enforcers (WCW tag titles are not on the line)

Cactus Jack vs Dustin Rhodes

Ron Simmons vs Steve Williams

Rick Rude vs Ricky Steamboat (US Heavyweight Title on the line)

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Shooters Club vs Samoan Swat Team

Al Perez vs Austin Idol

Kevin Von Erich vs Nobuhiko Takada

Big And Bigger vs The Fantastics

The Journeymen vs The Enforcers (WCW tag titles are not on the line)

Cactus Jack vs Dustin Rhodes

Ron Simmons vs Steve Williams

Rick Rude vs Ricky Steamboat (US Heavyweight Title on the line)

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Shooters Club vs Samoan Swat Team

Al Perez vs Austin Idol

Kevin Von Erich vs Nobuhiko Takada

Big And Bigger vs The Fantastics

The Journeymen vs The Enforcers (WCW tag titles are not on the line)

Cactus Jack vs Dustin Rhodes

Ron Simmons vs Steve Williams

Rick Rude vs Ricky Steamboat (US Heavyweight Title on the line)

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Shooters Club vs Samoan Swat Team

Al Perez vs Austin Idol

Kevin Von Erich vs Nobuhiko Takada

Big And Bigger vs The Fantastics

The Journeymen vs The Enforcers (WCW tag titles are not on the line)

Cactus Jack vs Dustin Rhodes

Ron Simmons vs Steve Williams

Rick Rude vs Ricky Steamboat (US Heavyweight Title on the line)

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Shooters Club vs Samoan Swat Team

Al Perez vs Austin Idol

Kevin Von Erich vs Nobuhiko Takada

Big And Bigger vs The Fantastics

The Journeymen vs The Enforcers (WCW tag titles are not on the line)

Cactus Jack vs Dustin Rhodes

Ron Simmons vs Steve Williams

Rick Rude vs Ricky Steamboat (US Heavyweight Title on the line)h i

 

Strange that you're using a TBS logo from 30 years in the future tho and that's definitely Kerry Von Erich

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The Kerry error is intentional, part of my behind-the-scenes story that is going on.

 

Snow, Severn and Shamrock photos however, are an unfortunate issue of available imagery for the aesthetic I want to accomplish. It extends to Dan Spivey as well. If anyone else dms me a decent half body pic of any of them, I will correct for future shows. Hell, even El Gigante's photo was utter trash and it took everything in me to not just use a Giant Gonzalez render. I couldn't even find a half decent Severn without him covered in a sea of belts lol.

 

The TBS logo is definitely just laziness on my part.

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Shooters Club vs Samoan Swat Team

Al Perez vs Austin Idol

Kevin Von Erich vs Nobuhiko Takada

Big And Bigger vs The Fantastics

The Journeymen vs The Enforcers (WCW tag titles are not on the line)

Cactus Jack vs Dustin Rhodes

Ron Simmons vs Steve Williams

Rick Rude vs Ricky Steamboat (US Heavyweight Title on the line)

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OSYaM9m.jpg

 

EPISODE 92.01

 

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The broadcast opens on the Broadcast panel (Dusty, Harley, Paul E), a neon reinterpretation of the current ESPN sportscenter set. The feeling in the room is nightclub-esque, and the hosts each have a whisky glass that is illuminated by the neon to really tie the whole aesthetic together. Ted Turner is on hand to be present for the unveiling of the new Saturday Night set. We go to shots of the ringside area, where the entrance way has a ramp going all the way to the ring, there are neon back-lit glass panels surrounding where wrestlers will enter from, and above the panels is a massive neon WCW Saturday Night sign. Smoke machines billow smoke to around the stage. At the centre of it all is a neon light tunnel for the entry way. Back at the broadcast panel, the panel members are excited by their new digs and talk about WCW being the hottest sports show on television, before they get into discussing tonight’s show. Being the debut of the new format, there is a lot of focus on the rules, the point scoring system, and the division structure. This opening segment runs 10 minutes long, breaking down the card and both Harley and Paul E drop catchphrases that will stick for quite some time. Paul E Dangerously signs off, heading to the locker room to prepare his tag team (The Enforcers) for tonight’s match.

 

Lance Russell introduces our officiating staff for tonight, Mike Atkins, Scott Armstrong and senior official Randy Anderson. JR notes that Scott competed in an exhibition on Friday’s Main Event, as he’s still an active competitor but did not qualify for the 1992 Season. He’ll be working towards competing in the 1993 season.

 

Dusty Rhodes and Harley Race break down tonight’s main event, between Rick Rude and Ricky Steamboat. Comments from both athletes are aired. The emphasis here is that at 38 years of age, Steamboat will likely need to get a fast start and finish Rude early as Rude’s conditioning will serve as an advantage the longer the match goes on.

 




DgkWGc0.gifA hard hitting brawl that was spilled into the ringside area between two large heavyweights. Williams enjoyed a size advantage, but despite that, the action was very even. Both men fought fair with respect to the rules. Williams had Simmons in a leg bar, but when Simmons reached the ropes, Williams let up immediately and Simmons rolled through to win with an inside cradle that caught Williams off-guard.

Ron Simmons (1-0-0) def. Steve Williams (0-1-0) in 14:23

 




afups4T.gifThe second bout of the evening was an overly chaotic scene which referee Atkins was very in control of. The Fantastics did everything in their power to keep Big Josh isolated, as the giant’s size advantage over both Bobby Fulton and Tommy Rogers was staggering. Eventually, the tag was made out to Gigante, who had to contend with both opponents attacking his knee. In an impressive spot of strength and exhibition of size, Rogers got El Gigante down to one knee, only for Gigante to grab him by the throat while on his knees and raise him up for a chokeslam, then rising to his feet and lifting Rogers even further, before slamming him down. El Gigante ended up getting the pinfall over Bobby Fulton after Big Josh saw most of the action. At ringside, young luchador La Parka was in Big Josh and El Gigante’s corner, and Firebreaker Chip was backing The Fantastics.

Big and Bigger (1-0-0) def. The Fantastics (0-1-0) in 10:01

 

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Magnum TA runs through the results from last night’s Main Event action, which saw Shooters Club defeat Samoan Swat Team and Al Perez defeat Austin Idol. In additional exhibitions, Scott Armstrong def. Billy Jack Haynes, Johnny B Badd def. The Mongolian Stomper, and Mike Rapada def. Ivan Koloff. There was also an interview with Jerry Lawler, Lawler stated he was excited to be a part of WCW and discusses being hired to carry the Main Event show as his commitments to Memphis based USWA prevent him from competing on Saturday Nights in Atlanta. He warns his first round opponent, Jushin Liger, that he’s the premier star of their division, the King of Memphis and the King of Main Event and won’t hesitate to put Liger out of action.

 

We get the card reveal for next week’s Premier league contests, featuring Luger vs Sullivan, Koloff vs OMG, and Bigelow vs Sting. Early odds show Luger, Sting and OMG as the favourites.

 

At ringside, Magnum TA goes over the heavily hyped Rock N Roll Express versus the Steiner Bros match occurring in round one, goes over the ramifications of a week one victory. Both teams are present and show respect to one another. Magnum states that the teams are considered two favourites for their divisions, for very different reasons. The Rock N Roll Express are the tried and true veterans, while the Steiner’s are the exciting young upstarts. Both teams are praised for their high-octane styles and the match promises to be an exciting one. This heavily anticipated match occurs in two weeks.

 

In the locker room, Lance Russell interviews Pillman and Z-Man on competing against each other in Division two, and asks them their thoughts on tonights Div 2 matchups. They both have their first round matches next week and are focused on their matches currently. They praise the whole field of Division 2 competitors, stating that WCW have done a phenomenal job of making this tier feel important and diverse. Both men however are disappointed as they had lobbied to be featured in the tag team division for 1992, but were denied by management. They don’t face each other until late in the season, but intend to remain allies and wrestle together on the independent scene.

 




AnLxELB.gifCactus Jack went all out here, putting himself in dangerous spots consistently, while Dustin stuck to a game plan of luring Cactus Jack towards him rather than pushing forward himself. On the commentary booth, Schiavone mentioned that Dustin is considered the favourite to win Division 2, that betting odds are all heavily in his favour. This one was a wild brawl, as Cactus busted Dustin open early, but Dustin didn’t seem phased by the sight of his own blood. The moment shifted when Cactus attempted a diving elbow drop onto Rhodes on the outside, but ate concrete for his efforts. Dustin successfully avoided being drawn into Cactus’ game and was able to capitalize by getting a clean right to the jaw of Cactus, stunning him long enough for Dustin to strike with a Running Bulldog for the pinfall victory.

Dustin Rhodes (1-0-0) def. Cactus Jack (0-1-0) in 13:31

 




haW8mpY.gifSnow and Adams were outclassed here by The Enforcers, but managed to keep in the match by sticking to tag team basics. Chris Adams was continuously providing the rookie Al Snow with feedback and criticism from the apron, and Arn and Larry mocked them accordingly. Snow, being the least experienced member in the contest, ended up getting defeated when he got frustrated and charged Larry on the apron, only to turnaround where Arn caught him with a vicious spine buster, keeping him down for the count.

The Enforcers (1-0-0) def. The Journeymen (0-1-0)) in 13:27.

 

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First edition of Inside the Squared Circle, with Ventura and Magnum. Ventura focuses on a lack of killer instinct from Williams in his match against Simmons, compared to The Enforcers in their match against the Journeyman. During Dr. Death’s match, Steve Williams refused to pounce on an injured opponent, allowing recovery time and ultimately gave Simmons the opportunity to get back into the bout and pull off the victory. Whereas Arn and Larry never let up in their contest against the Journeymen. Ventura rolls back the footage of rookie Al Snow trying to recover from a hurt knee in the corner, and Zybszyko didn’t let up, even with the referee trying to restrain him. That created frustration in Snow which caused him to provide an opening later on in the contest when he opted to take a swing at the illegal man rather than focusing on the very dangerous Arn Anderson. Magnum disagrees, stating that respect for the rules and your opponent cannot be ignored and that some level of sportsmanship has to be on display. Ventura rebutted, showing footage of The Fantastics against Big and Bigger. Bobby Fulton knew the need to focus on Josh and not let Gigante into the match - the two smaller men did everything in their power to keep it a double team on Josh, and when Gigante did break in, it spelt the end for the smaller men. The Fantastics in their bout never crossed the line of unsportsmanlike, but forced the match to be competed under their game plan through sheer tenacity. Magnum tries to argue back, but Ventura just talks over top of him until the segment runs out of time, ironically proving his own point without meaning too.

 

In the locker room hallway, Lance Russell interviews the Enforcers about their win, who are both towelling off after a post-match shower. They are accompanied by fellow members of Dangerous Alliance, Bobby Eaton, Tully Blanchard, Madusa, Dangerously and Steve Austin. Arn calls it a statement win to start the season, saying that every match counts and if you take your eyes off the ball, you’re going to drop out of the running real fast. Lots of respect to Adams for taking a young guy like Snow under his wing and says that the kid took a shot that cost him. Larry says that this is just day one for the most dominant collection of wrestlers in the game today, and that they’re here to begin a dynasty, not just make a run for the gold.

 




UxWJyYG.gifTeddy Long was in Takada’s corner. Before the match began, Bischoff apologized to the viewers for a misleading graphic for this match that had used Kerry Von Erich (who works for the WWF as the Texas Tornado) instead of Kevin. Schiavone made an off-hand remark about wondering if anyone would get fired over this, and Bischoff nervously played it off like a small mistake. This match was different than everything else on the card, as it was more reminiscent to Japanese shoot-style wrestling. JR on commentary discussed how Takada runs UWFI back in Japan and that promotion features this style of wrestling at it’s forefront, with a heavy emphasis on kicks. Von Erich showed that he could fight this style too, getting in a sick side thrust kick that knocked Takada out of the ring to catch his breath. Kevin got winded 10 minutes in when he took a stiff spin kick to the ribs and ultimately it was the consistent fast pacing that Takada maintained that created an opening, as Von Erich took a moment to catch his breath after a move, opting to turn his focus to Teddy Long who was screaming at ringside, and exposed himself to be taken down and tapped to a leg bar submission. Both men showed they’ll be one’s to watch throughout the competition.

Nobohiko Takada (1-0-0) def. Kevin Von Erich (0-1-0) in 14:57

 




ZfBOqUb.gif20 minutes of amazing back and forth. Steamboat proved here that he still has the legs to go the distance and Rude was insistent on proving himself Steamboats equal. This was a 20 minute sprint, as Rude did everything in his power to tire the older Steamboat out, but The Dragon was game for it, including a spot where he was thrown from the top rope but landed on his feet and did jumping jacks right in Rude’s face. The last 30 seconds featured both men realizing the clock was going to expire and opted to see who had more fighting spirit with a vicious exchange of shot for shot without either man backing down or caving. The crowd erupted for the two as they stood toe to toe after the clock ran out and shook hands. Dangerously gets frustrated at ringside as his client chose not to go for the kill and take a chance in the last 30 seconds. JR explains that a draw means one point each to start the season and if at the end of the season they are the top two in their division, they’ll have to compete in a tie-breaker due to their head-to-head being indecisive.

Rick Rude (0-0-1) and Ricky Steamboat (0-0-1) went to a time limit draw after the 20 minute period elapsed.

 

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Jesse Ventura announces we are out of time for this week, but before we go he announces this weeks three stars:

3. Larry Zbyszko

2. Rick Rude

1. Ricky Steamboat (wins $10,000 wrestler of the night bonus)

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February Week 2, 1992 - 9:00 AM - High Voltage, Low Wattage

 

It was the Monday morning after episode 1 and the management staff were all present in the Atlanta boardroom to discuss the first show. Inside the room was Bill Watts, Ole Anderson, Eric Bischoff, Dusty Rhodes, Jim Ross and Paul Heyman, The atmosphere was a mixed bag of emotions, ranging from ecstatic to angry as the first show was a chaotic nightmare behind the scenes, but what was put on screen was easily considered the one of the best wrestling programs to have ever aired on television. The new format premiere captured mainstream media’s attention and the presentation garnered phenomenal reviews. However, the team managing the show had an impossible task on their hands of handling a sea of new talent, navigating a television set that was still in set-up production up until 20 minutes before the show kicked off, and a lack of a shared vision for the show. Kip Frey entered the room holding a newspaper and had a cocky grin on his face, clearly pleased with the show that he had put together. But his grin quickly dissipated as the entire boardroom burst into argument immediately, shouting over-top of one another like a kindergarten class with a collective sugar high.

 

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Bill Watts

“It’s f*cking anarchy - that’s what it is. Sure, the matches were good, but you can’t f*cking bring in some guy from Japan without any introduction, any promos, anything, and have him beat a f*cking Von Erich in his first match. That’s bullsh*t - the guy has no build in America, our audience has no clue who he is, and there’s no heat towards it. I don’t care if it was one of the best matches on a great card - it’s @ss backwards and killed Von Erich dead on arrival on his first f*cking show in WCW. And to top it off, we mis-announce his debut by showing a f*cking graphic of his brother?!?! What kind of clown show circus hour is this?”

 

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Eric Bischoff

“The graphic’s team had to put together the card pictures quickly - we signed all that talent in less than a three week span and had to have the new graphics pack created one week before the show, it was an innocent mistake Bill. And it’s not like we showed one of the dead family members by accident.”

 

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Paul Heyman

“That really doesn’t make it better, Eric. You think that just because we didn’t show a dead kid, the mistake is fine? You signed off on the graphics pack - this is your error. But Bill, what the f*ck do you want?!?! It’s Takada’s first match on American soil - the kid is a clear star in the making - and Kevin’s career is most likely winding down at this point. He’s going to put on good matches this year, and the boys are happy to work with him, but let’s not kid ourselves we didn’t just put some no name over Ric Flair.”

 

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Bill Watts

“Okay - so your excuse is that Takada’s a new star and we want to make him? What about having The Fantastics, Dr. Death, and The Journeymen all lose in their debuts then? What’s the difference there? We’ve built no heat for them - we’ve already destroyed any possibility of Dr. Death making a championship run as he’s a loser in his first match despite being a monster of a man - and the only real storyline to come out of it is build up for a Chris Adams versus his jobber partner down the line. We have to understand our audience here folks - we are selling to f*cking southern wrasslin fans. Dusty - back me up here”

Dusty didn’t speak up, looking like he was trying to find the right position he wanted to take, so Ole jumped in instead.

 

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Ole Anderson

“Bill’s right guys - I’m back there trying to put together matches with the talent, and I’m stuck putting together a face versus face match in Dr. Death against Simmons and there’s no build up to it - no heat. What the hell am I supposed to do with that? The match was fine, but what sort of story are we supposed to tell? How are the fans supposed to know who to cheer for? Why do they care? This is wrestling, not boxing.”

 

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Kip Frey

“Stop. I want you all to stop talking right now. Have we not read the reviews? The show was a run-away success - a success we can continue to build on. The format was easy for the viewers to digest, and with time they’ll find comfort in the structure. The opening panel segment was a massive hit - newspapers and tv channel guides alike already have made the quotes from Harley and Paul E big-deal catchphrases and we haven’t even gotten to a second show yet. Our first rating? We are up 100,000 viewers from the first show of the year, and the positive reception is only going help that number grow. Our job is to put on a wrestling program that people want to watch, and that’s what we are doing. If you can’t wrap your head around that, I will show you the door and you can go run some other fed where bullshit booking ‘control’ is more important than building a successful show.”

 

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Dusty Rhodes

“I… I actually agree. That set that we opened on and run our panel from? That was magic. I felt so much energy in those opening moments - it felt like the big leagues, like it could be anything. It was so outside of our normal - it didn’t feel like Southern wrestling, it felt like a national broadcast. The show from start to finish just flowed naturally - there was action and breaks that didn’t feel random and it, it felt like a broadcast of Sunday Night Football. My my my, it was amazing. The roles of the broadcast team felt real and defined. It felt like it’s own show, it’s own world, completely different from any other wrestling.”

 

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Bill Watts

“But the talent need direction, they need heat built up. You are missing wrestling fundamentals in favour of flashiness. And these guys all competing for best match? What criteria are you running? They’re going to step away from psychological based wrestling in order to just wow the crowd and earn a few extra bucks. It’s bullsh*t. There is going to be anarchy in the back.”

 

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Dusty Rhodes

“Bill, we were in the back - the boys had a blast. After Ricky was announced wrestler of the night, it felt like being back in a college football locker-room. The boys were all cheering, there was celebration and Ricky treated everyone to beers with his winnings. Everyone knows that Steamboat is a stud inside the ring, and they loved seeing it recognized.”

 

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Ole Anderson

“But what happens when Steamboat wins it every week he’s on and the boys start getting jealous? Aren’t we going to have revolt and frustration in the locker-room then?”

 

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Kip Frey

“Quite frankly Ole, that’s part of your job - to get these boys to where they need to be to win the weekly bonus when they have the shot. It’s not an easy job, but it’s what you are getting paid to do. If the talent doesn’t step up, they won’t earn the bonus - it’s not a handout though and it’s not an ‘everyone gets a turn’ feel good slap on the back.”

 

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Bill Watts

“Kip, what makes you think that you know this business? You don’t understand Ole’s job, you have no respect for my job, you haven’t clarified what I’m doing going forward, and it feels like you are just making up the rules as you go along. You have a wealth of knowledge in myself and Ole and you rebuke it at every f*cking turn. You don’t know what you are selling, and you don’t know the people that make the show go on.”

 

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Kip Frey

“Everyone, please leave. I’d like to have a moment with Bill privately.”

The staff all got up silently and stepped out, leaving a very tense moment between Frey and Watts. Frey eyed Watts up and down, holding out before finally speaking.

 

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Kip Frey

“Mr. Watts, between your consistent confrontational and argumentative demeanour in these meanings, you lack of willingness to adapt to the landscape in front of you, and your piss-poor attitude in the locker room at the shows, I don’t understand what it is you want out of this job anymore. How am I supposed to utilize your knowledge when you have shown zero willingness to be cooperative as a member of this team? What am I supposed to think of you in a leadership role, when at the shows you are getting into fights with your subordinates, and refusing to celebrate their successes? You have your opinion of what wrestling should be, as well as your opinion of me as a leader, and you are entitled to your opinions. I am your boss, and I am entitled to my opinions as well. Bischoff and Ross have both been receptive to the changes around here, have worked with me, and in turn I have given them divisions to run without my intervention. They are working towards the same vision - you are working with your eyes shut, ignorant to anyone’s voice but your own. The change has happened, whether you are happy with it or not - if you are not willing to work within that change, then perhaps it is best that you leave. You are a grown man, capable of great things. You are the only one that can decide whether that greatness is here, under my structure and vision, or not - until you decide on that though, you are hindering my product and will be placed on unpaid leave until you decide.”

 

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Bill Watts

“… F*ck you, Kip. I don’t need this sh*t. You want me out, I’m out. If you are too much of a coward to fire me - that’s your issue not mine. This circus? It’s going to go tits up under your watch. I’m not going to let my name become associated with your f*cking failure.”

Bill Watts stormed out, and Kip sighed. It was one less problem to deal with, but it would have negative ramifications with the locker room - there were people who looked up to Bill. As long as no one walked, he’d be able to wash this over, but he had one other problem to deal with - and that was the Von Erich error. He called Bischoff back into his office and told the rest of the team to call it a day.

 

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Kip Frey

“Eric, I wanted to talk to you about the mishap with the Von Erich graphic. I understand the situation of the time crunch and mistakes do happen. However, I’ve put you in charge of production and it’s part of what you oversee - you need to own the mistakes that come from your work and future-proof for them. You cannot make excuses - human error simply put exists. You accept the errors and correct, do I make myself clear? Outside of that, you nailed it. The show set? That was better than anything I could have dreamt up in years. I want you to remember this - and only improve upon it. I wasn’t the biggest fan of the match card graphics - they were good, but the backdrop image felt kind of flat. I want it improved for round two, so you have two weeks to get them tweaked. During those two weeks, you need to ensure protocol is developed for new wrestlers imagery. This is going to be a challenge every year at season kick off as new talent comes in. The timeline will never improve. Figure it out and make it work.”

 

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Eric Bischoff

“Th… thank you, sir.”

 

 

WEEK 92.02 CARD

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Prediction Grid:

 

Samoan Savage vs Shane Douglas

Van Hammer vs Tom Zenk

Bobby Eaton vs Brian Pillman

The Outsiders vs Southern Rockers

The Killer Bees vs The Fabulous Freebirds

Nikita Koloff vs One Man Gang

Kevin Sullivan vs Lex Luger

Bam Bam Bigelow vs Sting

 

 

Prediction Contest Leaderboard::

Lord Byron : 1/8

Satyr24 : 2/8

Helginho : 2/8

monrapi3 : 2/8

ElectricX : 2/8

smw88 : 3/8

Smasher1311 : 4/8

DHK1989 : 4/8

Jaysin : 5/8

SonOfSharknado : 5/8

Edited by CactusHack
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Samoan Savage vs Shane Douglas

Van Hammer vs Tom Zenk

Bobby Eaton vs Brian Pillman

The Outsiders vs Southern Rockers

The Killer Bees vs The Fabulous Freebirds

Nikita Koloff vs One Man Gang

Kevin Sullivan vs Lex Luger

Bam Bam Bigelow vs Sting

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Samoan Savage vs Shane Douglas

Van Hammer vs Tom Zenk

Bobby Eaton vs Brian Pillman

The Outsiders vs Southern Rockers

The Killer Bees vs The Fabulous Freebirds

Nikita Koloff vs One Man Gang

Kevin Sullivan vs Lex Luger

Bam Bam Bigelow vs Sting

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Samoan Savage vs Shane Douglas

Van Hammer vs Tom Zenk

Bobby Eaton vs Brian Pillman

The Outsiders vs Southern Rockers

The Killer Bees vs The Fabulous Freebirds

Nikita Koloff vs One Man Gang

Kevin Sullivan vs Lex Luger

Bam Bam Bigelow vs Sting

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