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The Importance of...10.24.08: Tori
Posted by Mike Chin on 10.24.2008



Chinternationally-Renowned Observations
Quick notes on the past week in wrestling

-The CM Punk and Kofi Kingston-Miz and Morrison match on Raw was a fun watch. Punk and Kingston are showing more chemistry as a team now than the vast majority of the tag roster has for the last five years, and Miz and Morrison continue to roll along as one of the best acts in wrestling, period. I do have to criticize WWE for booking this match, though. As entertaining as it was, these are two top level teams. Punk and Kingston are, at least in theory, headed for a tag team showdown with Simply Priceless. Miz and Morrison are quite arguably the standard-bearers for tag action among the three brands, and have a date with DX in a couple weeks. Simply put, neither of these teams could afford a loss.

As for the ending of the match, on one hand I liked it. It all made sense—Miz was sneaky and showed his tag team experience, Punk was a house of fire and only went down on account of his not thinking like a tag team wrestler (not noticing the tag, and getting rolled up by the new legal man). That's all fine, and makes sense, and yet I hate seeing Punk job in this context, period. Before the critics jump on me, yes, I understand that everybody loses sometime, and that this was a protected loss, and that it helped build The Miz, who was probably the least over guy in the ring. But with all of that being said, when's the last time Triple H, The Undertaker, or Edge got pinned with a cleanly by someone who's decisively a mid-carder? As such a recently dethroned champion, CM Punk should have a similar level of clout to the men I just named, and yet, he never will as long as he's absorbing these kinds of losses. All in all, it was a good match, but it may have contributed to some long term damage.

-Raw's main event gauntlet match did not make any sense to me. For one, there was the inherent logical flaw—if two guys are competing against the same gauntlet, no stage in the gauntlet is ever going to be fair (Regal was worn out before he met Jericho, in theory the same was true for Henry and Kane meeting Batista). Beyond that, in a traditional gauntlet, the gauntlet is over as soon as a guy loses, so really, Jericho should have lost the whole thing as soon as he got DQed. What would have happened if Kane beat Batista? Would it be a draw? Would Jericho have won? This was just nonsense, and had no place on Raw, much less in the main event.

On to our regular column...

When thinking of important women in wrestling history, there are a number of names that leap to mind. Fabulous Moolah, as WWF's longstanding champion. Madusa Miceli as the heir apparent to women's wrestling stardom. Miss Elizabeth as a woman of grace and dignity. Miss Texas, the first woman to crack the PWI 500. Sunny as the pioneer of women as divas. Chyna as the mainstream competitor to find some success performing with men. Trish Stratus as WWE's commercial champion of the early 2000s. Awesome Kong as today's monster. Linda McMahon, Stephanie McMahon and Dixie Carter as quite arguably the most influential women in the history of the business. There are many more names worth mentioning, but one which is not likely to leap to the top of the list that of Tori—not Torrie Wilson, but Tori, whose real name was Terri Pach, and who, in less than four years in mainstream wrestling, left quite a significant mark.

Tori arrived in the WWF in the character of a fan, obsessed with Sable. It is demonstrative of the chaotic nature of the storylines in the Attitude Era that Tori emerged as the face in this program, used and abused by an arrogant Sable until she fought back, regaining her dignity in the process—if never really giving Sable her comeuppance (she lost the blow-off match at Wrestlemania XV). While the stories veered in different directions the crazed element of this introductory story arc, coupled with the lesbian undertones, made it a clear forerunner for the Trish Stratus-Mickie James angle that would follow several years later. The Stratus-James story was justly lauded as one of the best women's programs of all time, and so, the influence of Tori's program lends weight to Tori's legacy in wrestling.

From there, Tori continued to break new ground in women's wrestling, as a participant in the WWF's first women's hardcore match. She battled Ivory there, with the women's title on the line. The match culminated in two memorable spots—first with Ivory smashing a mirror over Tori's head, and then with Ivory brutally burning her back with an iron. These may go down as the most violent women's spots in mainstream American wrestling history, and were a precursor for other women's hardcore action, such as the Trish Stratus-Victoria brawls that were to come.

Tori also worked a more traditional women's role in acting as the woman who redeems a freak when she went steady with Kane—humanizing the monster. She followed another traditional role in betraying Kane, playing the Jezebel as she aligned herself with his arch-rival of X-Pac. This femme fatale storyline was not entirely new, but not a common one to the wrestling world, and complex in the way it played out. Tori played a paranoid, borderline psychotic woman, in accusing men of advances, only to sic Kane upon them. This turn worked well with her character's previous bout of insanity over Sable, and led well to her heel turn, as she dropped the crazy act altogether upon leaving Kane.

As a part of DX, Tori added a fun and different dimension to the group. She was a hot heel chick who added some cool cred to the group by hanging out with them. What's more, she was effective in a managerial role, an off-beat take on more traditional stables, like The Horsemen, Devastation Incorporated, and The Heenan Family, which all had a manager backing them.

Upon returning from an injury, Tori adopted a new role as the masked Black Ninja to second Raven in his feud against Crash and Molly Holly. The angle culminated in her being unmasked and then oddly pulled from television, never to be seen in wrestling again. Some reports indicate that Tori accused Raven of non-kayfabe backstage harassment, and when her complaints were not taken seriously, she left the company and wrestling altogether.

Regardless of how short her time in the mainstream may have been, after less than four years, Tori left an indelible mark on the business. She was a pioneer when it came to the crazy diva character, and when it came to what women could do in a hardcore context. Furthermore, she was an interesting figure in the DX story, and seemed on the brink of another interesting angle with Raven and the Hollys before her story came to an abrupt end. For all of these reasons, Tori is an important woman in wrestling history.

That's all for this column, and for this series on the members of Degeneration X. Next week, we as we celebrate Halloween in style, taking a look at the importance of the Spin the Wheel Make the Deal Match. See you in seven.


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Comments (17)

 
Thanks for a great column! Tori was always one of my favorites and is very much underappreciated in the annals of women's wrestling history. She was not a superb wrestler in the same vein as a Moolah, Madusa, or Mickie James, but she was a decent worker who cut pretty decent promos. She was not bad to look at either I might add! Anyways, thanks a lot for confirming what I have thought for a long time, Tori was one of the most overlooked women's wrestlers of the last 20 years.

Posted By: SmokeyDNuggs (Guest)  on October 24, 2008 at 03:36 PM

 
 
Pics or GTFO.

Honestly, I didn't remember her.


Posted By: BobbyC (Guest)  on October 24, 2008 at 03:58 PM

 
 
She was in DX? WOW!
By the way, even Ron Killings was in DX once. So how about an article on him? If you are really going to do a series of articles on DX.


Posted By: who cares (Guest)  on October 24, 2008 at 04:23 PM

 
 
And by the way, is it Terri Poch or Terri Pach?

Posted By: who cares (Guest)  on October 24, 2008 at 04:30 PM

 
 
Meh..women have no place in wrestling and should stick to the kitchen.

Posted By: Billy (Guest)  on October 24, 2008 at 04:54 PM

 
 
"Tori arrived in the WWF in the character of a fan, obsessed with Sable. It is demonstrative of the chaotic nature of the storylines in the Attitude Era that Tori emerged as the face in this program, used and abused by an arrogant Sable until she fought back, regaining her dignity in the process-if never really giving Sable her comeuppance (she lost the blow-off match at Wrestlemania XV). While the stories veered in different directions the crazed element of this introductory story arc, coupled with the lesbian undertones, made it a clear forerunner for the Trish Stratus-Mickie James angle that would follow several years later. The Stratus-James story was justly lauded as one of the best women's programs of all time, and so, the influence of Tori's program lends weight to Tori's legacy in wrestling."

I'm pretty sure that the obsessed fan angle would have been done at some point with or without Tori doing it originally and this whole column seems to be arguing that since Tori did things like this first she is important. While I understand that viewpoint I think it only goes so far because ultimately Tori is rather forgettable and everything she did has been done much better since.


Posted By: 17 (Guest)  on October 24, 2008 at 06:13 PM

 
 
Tori had little to no importance in wrestling, she came in tried to win the women's title, lost each time. Became Kane's lover if you could believe that, turned on him and joined DX. Got tombstoned and put through a table and ended up becoming Raven's ninja and when she was found out she disappeared forever. That pretty much sums it up in less than a paragraph.

Posted By: Michael (Guest)  on October 24, 2008 at 06:22 PM

 
 
hehe Tori?......seriously? Man you guys are reaching for shit to write about. Whats next? The importance of the Red Rooster?

Posted By: Guest#8432 (Guest)  on October 24, 2008 at 06:55 PM

 
 
Wow, this is some dedication to the theme. I was a bit of a Tori mark back in the day, but admittedly I forgot she was even associated with DX.

I do remember her having a minor role in Tough Enough One before she got released.


Posted By: AJP (Guest)  on October 24, 2008 at 08:32 PM

 
 
WCW did the whole obsessed fan thing with Woman (aka Nancy B****t) and Rick Steiner. It sucked then as well.

@Guest 8432:
Terry Taylor's a helluva lot more important than this slapper.


Posted By: Iron Knee (Guest)  on October 24, 2008 at 09:00 PM

 
 
Props for giving some love to Tori!

Posted By: The Great Capt. Smooth (Guest)  on October 24, 2008 at 09:47 PM

 
 
Ron Killings was not in DX. He tagged with Road Dogg from 99-00 when DX had disbanded.

Posted By: Jeremy (Guest)  on October 25, 2008 at 12:17 AM

 
 
LOL she's one of the most forgotten wrestler PERIOD.

I hated the attitude era.Just took the ecw formula and ripped off WCW characters and storylines in put it in a pretty package.

I always thought WCW was more interesting I just hated there production.


Posted By: MacDollarz. (Guest)  on October 25, 2008 at 01:00 AM

 
 
I always hated DX, especially the New Age Outlaws. Never understood why the NAO became so popular. Anyway about the only two things I did like about DX were Tori's tits.

Posted By: Manfred (Guest)  on October 25, 2008 at 04:40 AM

 
 
Before her WWE days in te early 1990's, Tori was one of the top stars with the short lived Ladies Professional Wrestling Association named Terri Power.
So I give her credit for trying to legitimize women's wrestling in the eyes of fans, during a time when neither WWE or WCW had a women's division.


Posted By: Reid (Guest)  on October 25, 2008 at 05:28 AM

 
 
I agree, Tori deserves more recognition. I didn't like that comment about Chyna saying she garnered "some" success wrestling men, when she is hands down the most unforgettable female to step foot into wrestling. Back to Tori though; I never liked the way WWE used her. Her jobbing to Sable was such a laugh to me and I was only 8 at the time. It didn't seem real. She should have been pushed as a champ, she could have helped make the women's division get some major attention if used properly. Honestly, though, not many people paid attention to the division until Chyna joined it and dominated everybody in 2001 up until she left 5 months later. When Sable was around, no one paid attention to the division, folks just tuned in for Sable.

Posted By: MostDominantAthlete (Guest)  on October 26, 2008 at 04:19 PM

 
 
I agree Tori's hardcore match with Ivory was one of the best free TV brawls anywhere.

Posted By: The Adamantium Elbow (Guest)  on October 27, 2008 at 07:11 PM

 


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