WWF Survivor Series 1990
Venue: Hartford, Connecticut
Date: 22/11/90
Attendance: 16,000
Commentators: Gorilla Monsoon & Rowdy Roddy Piper
The fourth annual Survivor Series would be the last to be solely
comprised of tag team elimination matches but would be the first (and only)
event to feature an "Ultimate Survival Match" where the survivors of
each bout would face off in a final battle to close the show. There was also a
lot of speculation at the time about who (or what) would be revealed from inside
a giant egg on the show. I wonder how many extra buys that got for the show...
Review
The Ultimate Warrior, The Texas Tornado & The Legion of Doom
vs Mr Perfect & Demolition
Eliminations: Warrior pinned Ax; Hawk, Animal, Crush & Smash were
disqualified; Perfect pinned Tornado; Warrior pinned Perfect. Warrior was the
survivor.
Warrior continued to struggle as champion but to be fair to Mr Hellwig
the company failed to line up any serious heel threats during his reign.
Warrior spent a lot of his time tagging with Legion of Doom against Demolition
on the house show circuit. Speaking of Demolition, Ax was soon to be leaving
the WWF so naturally he was crushed on his way out. No pun intended. Also his
'heart condition' turned out to be a serious shellfish allergy which he was
first struck down with on the WWF's tour of Japan back in April. Demolition
would continue with Smash and Crush but it wouldn't last long. The Texas
Tornado was still wearing the Intercontinental Title here despite losing it
back to Mr Perfect just three days earlier at the Superstars of Wrestling
taping. Their match wouldn't air until 15/12/90. This opening bout was fine
although it felt a bit like a squash match when Warrior was involved. He
dispatched Ax after about two minutes before the Legion of Doom and Demolition
(Smash & Crush) were eliminated in an ultra lame mass disqualification.
Paving the way for their title match in December, Perfect pinned Tornado with a
little help from an exposed turnbuckle. The same turnbuckle would be no match
for the Warrior though as he kicked out of the Perfect-Plex and quickly beat
Perfect with a splash.
Hawk nails Smash with a flying shoulder block |
Ted Dibiase, The Honky Tonk Man, Greg Valentine & The Undertaker vs
Dusty Rhodes, Koko B Ware & The Hart Foundation
Eliminations: Undertaker pinned Koko; Jim Neidhart pinned Honky; Dibiase
pinned Neidhart; Undertaker pinned Rhodes; Undertaker was counted out; Bret
Hart pinned Valentine; Dibiase pinned Hart. Dibiase was the survivor.
The Dream Team versus The Million Dollar Team was based on Ted Dibiase's
continuing feud with Dusty Rhodes which would later involve Rhodes' son Dustin.
The Rhodes family would soon be on their way to WCW but in the opposite
direction came Dibiase's mystery partner. The former "Mean" Mark
Callous was repackaged as The Undertaker and managed by Brother Love. He was
originally called Cain the Undertaker but thankfully that was dropped just as
Brother Love would soon be once a more suitable manager became available in the
form of Paul Bearer. The Honky Tonk Man was another on his way out of the WWF.
He would continue as a heel colour commentator on Superstars of Wrestling until
his departure in January. The Undertaker made short work of Koko B Ware with
his first tombstone piledriver before Jim Neidhart sent Honky packing with a
power slam. Then came a hat trick of weak eliminations. Dibiase beat big
Neidhart with a clothesline; Undertaker beat big Dusty Rhodes with a double axe
handle; then Undertaker was counted out despite not being the legal man in the
ring! It was then time for Bret Hart to once again show his potential as a
singles wrestler as he pinned Greg Valentine before having a good four minute
finale with Dibiase. Dibiase managed to reverse a cross body to pin the
"Hitman" who uttered the word "f*ck" on camera after the
three count. This was a decent match but still nothing special.
The Undertaker is about to finish off Koko B Ware |
Rick Martel, The Warlord & Power & Glory vs Jake Roberts, Jimmy
Snuka & The Rockers
Eliminations: Warlord pinned Marty Jannetty; Martel pinned Snuka; Paul
Roma pinned Shawn Michaels; Roberts was counted out. Martel, Warlord &
Power & Glory were the survivors.
On the 6/10/90 edition of Superstars of Wrestling, Rick Martel
attempted to spray "Arrogance" (his cologne) on Damien while Jake
Roberts was being interviewed by Brother Love. As Roberts attempted to stop
him, Martel sprayed the substance into Jake's eyes blinding him. In the weeks
that followed Roberts even wore a white contact lens to 'sell' his blindness.
Come Survivor Series, Roberts was partially sighted in just one eye and was cleared
to wrestle as he captained his team of "Vipers" against Martel's
"Visionaries". Clever. Meanwhile Shawn Michaels had returned from
injury as he and Marty Jannetty resumed their feud with Power & Glory while
Jimmy Snuka and The Warlord rounded off the teams. It didn't turn out too
well for the reptile team as one by one they were eliminated leaving Roberts to
face all four members of the heel team by himself. In the end Roberts chased
Martel back to the locker room with Damien meaning the "Visionaries"
became the first team to survive completely intact at the Survivor Series. You
see, unlike in the previous match Martel was correctly not counted out as he
was not the legal man. Despite being so one-sided the match was another decent
affair.
Hulk Hogan, The Big Boss Man, Hacksaw Jim Duggan & Tugboat vs
Earthquake, Dino Bravo, Haku & The Barbarian
Eliminations: Boss Man pinned Haku; Duggan was disqualified; Hogan
pinned Bravo; Earthquake pinned Boss Man; Earthquake & Tugboat were counted
out; Hogan pinned Barbarian. Hogan was the survivor.
Hulk Hogan and Earthquake continued to feud as they captained their
respective teams in this next encounter. Ravishing Rick Rude was
originally to be part of the heel team but he left the WWF in October after a
disagreement and debuted in WCW at Halloween Havoc soon after. The Big Boss
Man, who was feuding with Rude would continue the conflict with the rest of the
Heenan Family instead. This was a fairly standard match as you might expect.
Boss Man pinned Haku early on before Jim Duggan got himself disqualified. Hogan
then pinned Dino Bravo with a small package before Earthquake evened things up
by downing the Boss Man. Tugboat's only contribution was a showdown with
Earthquake which lasted less than a minute before both men were counted out.
That left Hogan and The Barbarian for a quite predictable climax as Hogan
advanced to the final battle.
Nikolai Volkoff, Tito Santana & The Bushwackers vs Sgt Slaughter,
Boris Zhukov & The Orient Express
Eliminations: Santana pinned Zhukov; Luke pinned Sato; Santana pinned
Tanaka; Slaughter pinned Volkoff; Slaughter pinned Butch; Slaughter pinned
Luke; Slaughter was disqualified. Santana was the survivor.
This was essentially a jobber match that existed to fill time and to
help get Sgt Slaughter's heel character over. Slaughter had a looong interview
with Gene Okerlund on his way to the ring to drive home his anti-American
stance. Akeem was originally supposed to be on the "Mercenaries" team
but left the WWF prior to the event and was replaced by Boris Zhukov. Sato was
also about to leave the company although we would see him again as the flag
bearer for Yokozuna at Summerslam 1993 and as Hakushi's manager Shinja in 1995.
The Orient Express and Zhukov are eliminated quickly but Slaughter then
ploughed through The Bushwackers and Nikolai Volkoff with ease. Slaughter's
manager General Adnan was then caught out attacking Tito Santana with the Iraqi
flag meaning a disqualification for Slaughter. It was nice to see Santana get a
win for a change! This was a poor match and there was no sign here that
Slaughter would be World Champion in two months time. His offense was slow and
looked weak.
The Gobbledy Gooker - Hard to believe this idea bombed... |
Just before the main event it was time to reveal who was inside the
giant egg! It was of course the Gobbledy Gooker played by the talented Hector
Guerrero. To say it was a massive disappointment would be an understatement
although could you really expect anyone good to debut from an egg? The crowd
were stunned. Believe it or not some people at the time thought it would be Ric
Flair!
The Ultimate Warrior, Hulk Hogan & Tito Santana vs Ted Dibiase, Rick
Martel, The Warlord & Power & GloryEliminations: Santana pinned Warlord; Dibiase pinned Santana; Hogan pinned Roma; Martel was counted out; Hogan pinned Dibiase; Warrior pinned Hercules. Warrior & Hogan were the survivors.
The final showdown was effectively a victory parade for the babyface superpowers (sorry not you Santana). The heels were squashed but the only man beaten of any value was Dibiase (Martel walked) and at least he went down last. It was a nice feel good ending for the crowd but the victory was far too easy for Hogan and the Warrior. There was a serious lack of top heels at that time but Randy Savage and Sgt Slaughter were being readied.
"The Final Match of Survival" |
Overall
This was pretty much a nothing show overall. The matches were mostly adequate but there was certainly nothing outstanding. There were no significant happenings with the exception of The Undertaker's debut but it was way too early to know how well he would get over (quite well as it happened). Roddy Piper continued in his role of colour commentator but had now firmly settled in the face role after see-sawing at Summerslam. Survivor Series 1990 drew 400,000 buys on pay-per-view.
ResultsThis was pretty much a nothing show overall. The matches were mostly adequate but there was certainly nothing outstanding. There were no significant happenings with the exception of The Undertaker's debut but it was way too early to know how well he would get over (quite well as it happened). Roddy Piper continued in his role of colour commentator but had now firmly settled in the face role after see-sawing at Summerslam. Survivor Series 1990 drew 400,000 buys on pay-per-view.
1 The Ultimate Warrior, Texas Tornado & The Legion of Doom def Mr Perfect & Demolition (14:20) **1/4
2 Ted
Dibiase, The Honky Tonk Man, Greg Valentine & The Undertaker def Dusty
Rhodes, Koko B Ware & The Hart Foundation (13:54) **1/2
3 Rick
Martel, Warlord & Power & Glory def Jake Roberts, Jimmy Snuka & The
Rockers (17:42) **1/2
4 Hulk
Hogan, The Big Boss Man, Jim Duggan & Tugboat def Earthquake, Dino Bravo,
Haku & The Barbarian (14:49) **
5 Tito
Santana, Nikolai Volkoff & The Bushwackers def Sgt Slaughter, Boris
Zhukov & The Orient Express (10:52) 3/4
6 The
Ultimate Warrior, Hulk Hogan & Tito Santana def Ted Dibiase, Rick Martel,
Warlord & Power & Glory (9:07) *1/2
Rating
11.5/30 =
38.33%
Star Rating
Guide
***** Excellent/World Class
**** Very Good
*** Good
** OK/Acceptable
* Poor
DUD Abysmal
SQ Squash (Less than 1 min)
Allow me to also to give my two pence worth on the Grand Finale match:
ReplyDelete1.Because Hogan was trying to celebrate with him at the end after they won, Warrior should've been like, "Get the hell out of my ring and let me have my moment alone!"
2.It's pretty funny that DiBiase and Hercules were both on the same team, considering the feud they had two years earlier. But here, Hercules is playing not just second fiddle, but FIFTH fiddle to DiBiase.