Against The Grain 01.31.09: WCW Souled Out 2000
Posted by Julian Bond on 01.31.2009
The nWo 2000. Terry Funk vs. Kevin Nash. Billy Kidman fighting three specialty bouts in one night. These are just some of the weird and odd occurrences that happened on one of the most memorable, messed-up, and worst PPVs that I have ever seen. I will take everyone back in time to revisit the craziness during and surrounding the event that was WCW’s Souled Out 2000.
Welcome everyone to Against The Grain, my (bi-weekly) take on some of the most unconventional and not-often talked about subjects in the wrestling world. The 2000 edition of WCW Souled Out is one of the weirdest and messed-up PPVs I have ever witnessed in my life for a number of reasons. First of all, no wrestling fan that I normally talk to even remember what PPV I am referring to because a good number of people stopped watching the brand at this point. Second of all, the very odd and significant amount of injuries suffered by key wrestlers before the PPV truly showed the definition of the phase "THIS CARD IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE". And thirdly, the events that had happened before, during, and after this particular PPV were the starting point of some significant events to happen to the company that some could say that attributed to its eventual demise a year later. So for those who had the unfortunate pleasure of watching this, have fun in this trip down memory lane, and for those who haven't…you're in a weird ride.
"The Enigma That Was WCW Souled Out 2000"
Before I get into describing this odd travesty of a PPV, I would first like to explain why the hell I would want to order this event in the first place. Firstly, I was working at my local McDonald's as a restaurant food coordinator (also known as a burger flipper) back in the old days of high school and I had received my annual raise in December 1999. With a long-worked pay week combined with my pay bump, I received a nice big paycheck right after the holidays and had decided to treat myself by spending it on doing the unthinkable act back then (due to my limited budget) of ordering all 3 major wrestling brand PPVs in the same month.
So I had lined up for January 2000: WWE Royal Rumble, ECW Guilty As Charged, and WCW Souled Out. The first mentioned was the almighty and very infamous 2000 edition of the popular Rumble card. With moments like the legendary HHH vs. Cactus Jack bout, the Hardys and Dudley Boyz tearing it up in a great Tables match, and of course the Royal Rumble itself, this PPV was definitely a no-brainer to buy. With ECW Guilty As Charged, it was a little bit of a mixed bag. I didn't really know what matches were going to be on the card (you know…the norm procedure for ECW PPVs) and had missed a few episodes of ECW Hardcore TV because of my increase in hours as a burger flipper. But luckily the undercard was pretty good and the two match-ups of former friends-now bitter rivals in RVD vs. Sabu paired with the sick and brutal "David versus Goliath" Mike Awesome/Little Spike Dudley main event totally made the $30 spent well worth it. Now with WCW's Souled Out…it was a totally different story.
I hadn't ordered a WCW PPV in about a year due to the company's known "hit and miss" record with their match-ups. But strangely in late 99', I started to watch and become horribly interested in the "Vince Russo Era" of WCW. I won't get into my full-blown opinions about this highly talked about time in pro wrestling history (another day, another time IWC), but I saw that the company was having some pretty great highlighted match-ups involving the likes of Bret Hart, Chris Benoit, Sting, and Jeff Jarrett (good wrestlers, but before this not being booked properly). So on top of this potential for a good PPV, WCW dropped a random bombshell in the form of creating a "new" 2000 version of the one-time mega popular New World Order (nWo). Not every wrestling fan remembers this specific edition of the group (I'll get to the specific reasons in a little bit), but this version of the faction was more like what I called the "cool bits" of the past incarnations (i.e. not having 20+ no name wrestlers in the group). You had the original members Kevin Nash and Scott Hall (The Outsiders), the then WCW Champion Bret "The Hitman" Hart, Scott Steiner, and the great, but sort of random, inclusion of the horribly over at the time, dubbed "Chosen One" Jeff Jarrett. One may automatically talk crap and assume that this group was doomed from the get-go, but at its debut, it really was a nice breathe of fresh (although recycled) air into the "all over the place" type of booking WCW was incorporating.
The main build-up for the Souled Out card came into the form of Sid Vicious (yea…the former Psycho) attempting to challenge Bret Hard for the WCW Title [not too bad], Kevin Nash taking on then Commissioner Terry Funk (yea…Funk as Commissioner…random) in a No Holds Barred bout for Funk's position as leader on the line [different, but potential to be good], and the one match that made me want to automatically give up the $30 without any question: a "Triple Threat Theater" match-up, which was supposed to be a gauntlet of specialty bouts (a Bunkhouse match [no DQ], a Dungeon Rules match [no ring ropes used] and a Caged Heat match [bootleg Hell In A Cell]) where arch-rivals Chris Benoit and Jeff Jarrett (who tore up the house the month before at Starrcade in an impromptu ladder match) were going to battle it out three times in one night over the U.S. Title. Along with these three bouts, a standard undercard, and other stars who I assumed were going to be present at the PPV (Goldberg, Rey Mysterio, DDP), I had confidence that my precious earned $30 from slaving at the McDonald's fry cooker would be put to good use. Oh…how I was wrong…horribly wrong. In the moments before, during, and after the PPV, a series of random occurrences happened and it had significantly altered the card for the PPV. Where do I begin…
First of all, a couple of weeks before the PPV, they had a backstage skit where Goldberg was attempting to get revenge on the nWo 2000 (for costing him the WCW Title) by chasing the members to a limo and then having him smash the limo windows with his hands and elbows (you know…to make him look tougher). So while this looked kind of cool, Goldberg got a little bit too wild on the pounding and the shards from the glass severely cut into his forearm and thus placed him out of commission with a serious injury. Great…no Goldberg. Then in an ironic twist, Goldberg's rival at the time, Bret Hart, was found to have a serious concussion that he infamously suffered in his match against Berg a month before at the Starrcade PPV, so he couldn't compete at Souled Out as well and sadly enough was forced to retire right after this due to its permanent damage. Damn…no Hart either. To top it all off, Jeff Jarrett was involved in a weird match-up the Monday Nitro before the PPV where he had to face three wrestling legends in one night (i.e. in preparation for the TRIPLE Threat Theater), but in the process had also suffered a pretty bad concussion (not as nearly as bad as Hart's) due to a flying headbutt Benoit gave him from the top of a steel cage. So Jarrett was out too…wow. Despite having low confidence that the PPV was going to go over well, I still was sticking to my guns and wanted to achieve my rare goal of ordering all three PPVs in one month.
What sadly followed instead was one of the worst undercards I've ever seen. You had matches such as the cruiserweight belt being exchanged in a horrible bout between women's wrestler Madusa (good wrestler, should have never won the belt) and Jim Ross impersonator "Oklahoma", a 2 minute "real boxing match", i.e. WWE's Brawl For All, between Tank Abbott (who?) and Jerry Flynn (double who?), and the talented and then underused Booker T getting the crap beat out of him by a seriously overweight Ahmed Johnson (then known as the stupid "Big T"…get it). Besides this and the other crap that was featured (minus the surprisingly good Buff Bagwell/DDP match…sad that this was the best one of the bunch), my hopeful main events were also all squashed and/or ruined in some type of way: Nash vs. Funk was lame due to the one-sidedness of Nash just killing Funk…not in a good way; the Triple Threat Theater spot with Benoit and Jarrett was instead given to the very awesome Billy Kidman, but turned out disastrous due to the horrible booking behind it (ex. Kidman facing of ALL PEOPLE in the company, the two-moved based "The Wall" in the once potentially good, but now God-awful cage match); and lastly the WCW Title match, which was turned out to be a shocker because it gave the mega-over Chris Benoit a chance to FINALLY win the vacant belt in a bout against the challenger Sid Vicious, turned sour even after Benoit achieved his dreams of winning the "big one" as they featured a backstage skit shortly after (while still being live) with "new commissioner" Nash telling Benoit in a weird "Is it kayfabe or not?" way that he'll be losing the belt sooner than he thinks.
So instead of fully celebrating that I at least got to see history with Benoit winning through watching this eye-burning PPV, I instead cried in my head thinking that my hard earned burger money was now totally wasted knowing that Benoit would probably be stripped of the belt (...and he was) due to the retarded booking that was apparently going on behind the scenes. As many people may know, due to this crazy booking and lack of legit pushes, Benoit, along with his buddies Dean Malenko, Perry Saturn, and Eddie Guerrero, immediately left the company following this PPV and headed up north to the much more pleasant lands of the WWE. The significant aftermath of this one single PPV had taken away WCW's major stars, either by injury or by quitting, had produced random and horrible further storyline changes (the brand spanking new nWo 2000 disbanding in just a month due to its major stars Jarrett and Hart being out), and arguably had started the company on a "last rites" march due to their ultimate demise happening almost a year later.
In retrospective, I just wanted to take a trip back in time to revisit this event not just because of my personal scarring experience that I went through of ordering and witnessing it live, but also to point out how a little not-so-known WCW PPV actually had some potential to be a good rival card to the mega-house WWE line-up of events and then flushed it up down the toilet with a significantly strange line-up of injuries to their top stars paired with the overall lameness of their booking abilities. Instead of just recalling this as just another lame duck PPV from WCW, I now look at it as the PPV that I will forever regret ordering but will always and sadly remember watching.
For Your Viewing Pleasure
Chris Benoit WCW Title Win
Billy Kidman vs…The Wall?!? (Triple Threat Theater – "Caged Heat")
Remember the "new" nWo…2000 Sliver & Black Edition? (Chances are...you probably don't!)
Next Time On….Against The Grain
On the recent heels of the "shocking" turn of events with Matt Hardy betraying his brother Jeff and costing him the WWE Title, I wanted to take a look at another "best friend turns against the other" feud in the form of the Rey Mysterio/Eddie Guerrero rivalry during 2005. I talk about why I think it's one of the best feuds ever done in the WWE and why the subtle complexities of it are somewhat underrated by the fans who have previously viewed it.
I remember the 05 Mysterio/Guerrero feud...it got WEIRD fast.
Posted By: Bman (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 12:31 AM
I believe that Jarrett got the concussion from a splash from Snuka from the top, not Beniot.
Posted By: Guest#2526 (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 12:53 AM
Great read man. NWO 2000 had so much potential but injuries and bad booking prematurely killed a potentially great re-up.
Posted By: Fred Richani (Registered) on January 31, 2009 at 12:58 AM
WCW lost me at Great American Bash of 2000, I couldn't take their shyt anymore.
The Bash is coming to Philly this year, and I don't know if I want to buy tickets or not, that name still scars me.
Posted By: Ant-LOX (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 01:00 AM
You know what's crazy about this show, except for the obvious? WWE never recognized Benoit's WCW title win. Now, sadly, they aren't recognizing Benoit's WWE win; due to his actions in June 2007. Anyways, a show even more appauling then this one was Starrcade 1999; which I was watching clips on a couple of nights ago. The Goldberg/Bert Hart match was a mess!
Posted By: DoubleADaGreat (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 01:03 AM
Goldberg was supposed to smash the limo windows with a pipe, but dropped it. So HE made the wise decision to smash the windows with his forearm.
Not to mention the "Catch-as-catch-can" match b/w Malenko and Kidman which was botched after about 1 minute.
Posted By: Cleavy (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 01:11 AM
I watched WCW up to the bitter end and recall all of this stuff. It really was an interesting combination of horrible booking, bad business, and random chance that drove them to bankruptcy. Even when they tried to book a good show someone would get injured. After the Radicals left immediately following this show, there really wasn't any talent left in the mid-card and the company was doomed even further. Let this be a lesson to TNA to not follow too closely in their footsteps.
Posted By: Andy (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 02:17 AM
I stand by the fact Russo's WCW run wasn't that bad.
Think about it everyone says WCW lost it when Benoit, Guerrero, Malenko, and Saturn had left and they only left once Russo was out and Sullivan was in.
Plus Russo didn't book everything in what is considered the bad run.
He booked October of 99 to January of 2000. Which in my opinion had a lot of fun stuff.
January of 2000 till March of 2000, Russo had nothing to do with it.
April of 2000 till June of 2000, Russo was booking but then was off for three weeks from June to July after WCW paniced when an advister pulled out.
Russo returned at Bash At The Beach and booked until October of 2000 when he suffered a concussion.
And for the remainder of WCW, Russo had nothing to do with the booking.
In my opinion the only time WCW was really bad towards the end was when Russo wasn't involved.
And I still say the David Arquette thing wasn't so bad plus that wasn't even Russo's idea it came from Tony Shavonie and Russo took it to a lot of different people and they all liked the idea. So how can you blame Russo for that.
Any way on to Souled Out, yeah it was an odd Pay Per View. That would have been better had Russo been booking it. A one night Tank Abbott run would have been okay with me.
Anyway solid column.
Posted By: Mike (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 02:46 AM
Billy Kidman was indeed awesome
Posted By: Guest#7701 (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 03:21 AM
Yeah, I remember the Kidman/Malenko match. If I rember correctly, the man who touched the floor first lost, and after about the first minute of action Malenko rolled out to the floor to catch his breath and just like that it's over.
Posted By: A King (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 04:20 AM
doesn't anyone find it funny that arn anderson had to referee a match involving the man that stabbed him???
Posted By: guest (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 04:43 AM
I was actually at this show in person. I remember three things about this show, the Mamalukes, Big T vs. Booker being really boring, and the Chris Benoit vs. Sid match.
For reasons I still don't understand to this day, a bunch of guys stood at the top of the ramp just watching the match.
Posted By: AlaskanHero (Registered) on January 31, 2009 at 05:13 AM
you see the thing was, when benoit mad sid tap, sid's leg was under the bottom rope, just like benoit's was when sid tried beating him with the chokeslam.
Posted By: DaJ (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 06:01 AM
"You know what's crazy about this show, except for the obvious? WWE never recognized Benoit's WCW title win. Now, sadly, they aren't recognizing Benoit's WWE win; due to his actions in June 2007"
um...they're both listed in the title histories on WWE.com. What do you want them to do? Open every show with a video package celebrating Benoit's 2 World title wins?
Posted By: Guest#8934 (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 06:47 AM
did the ref count the cover in the Bret-Goldberg match with Piper covering Goldberg???
Oh dear.
Posted By: Evan (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 06:58 AM
This was an insane show that ended up being an afterthought to the first Russo era.
Then comes Kevin Sullivan and out goes the Radicalz. The next two months brought a return to the same main eventers that killed the company in 99, plus the added bonus of really really boring matches.
BTW, Russo knew that you needed to make new stars in WCW, and you can't say that he wasn't trying to do that. Unfortunately, the booking was so frantic with too many title shifts and face/heel turns that very few got over in either of the eras. Not to mention the quality of wrestling took a dramatic shift downward. ALl you need to know is the number of PPV matches in the 1st Russo era. Usually, a PPV is at its best with 7-9 matches. From Havoc 99 to Souled Out 2000, there were a whopping 12 matches--way too many for decent, compelling wrestling that helps the characters get over.
Posted By: Michael L (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 08:41 AM
Hey Mike, is your last name Russo?
Posted By: Jboy1307 (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 08:41 AM
God Julian you talk aload of Bullshit. Nash wasent even stripping benoit of the belt . Do your research idiot as he said it was a lader match on Nitro. Why do you idiots do these reviews pissing off true WCW fans just to slag the company off you damn Pro WWE fans. The wwe product today is complete shit and WCWs PPV then are way better!
Posted By: Steven1977 (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 08:59 AM
Airing dirty laundry at the main event, Hogans' rant at vince russo was 'Great' booking eh vince! LOL Jarrett/Booker T main event should have been the original ME and this is one of the billion reasons wcw went out of business is because of the shitty storyline work by russo, bisch running this place like a bank, and finally surrounding everything on hogan having the title. The year is 2000 not 1980 anymore and thats where change did not want to take place when it came to wcw and that is why wwe took it over, that and vince bought it out!
Posted By: guest1228 (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 09:52 AM
Hey Mike, is your last name Russo?
Posted By: Jboy1307 (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 08:41 AM
I don't know why but for some reason I found this very funny.
No my last name is not Russo but it does start with an R. The Irony.
Anyway I'm just a fan of Russo's work and I think it's too bad that the guy get's such a bad name just because he doesn't book what the IWC thinks a wrestling show should be.
Because the truth is, if you were to ask a room full of long time WWE fans what some of their all time favorite WWE moments were. I think most of them would have at least 3 or 4 Russo booked moments.
Posted By: Mike (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 10:38 AM
HAHA. Glad you took it as a joke. Thats all that was meant. I wasnt trying to start a comment war or anything. I dont hate the dude either
Posted By: Jboy1307 (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 10:50 AM
However, Steven1977 needs to go back to watching the best of Buff video. Dude, relax. It was a good read.
Posted By: Jboy1307 (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 10:53 AM
"Because the truth is, if you were to ask a room full of long time WWE fans what some of their all time favorite WWE moments were. I think most of them would have at least 3 or 4 Russo booked moments."
It's widely accepted that Russo's WWF stuff worked because McMahon and Co. were there to filter the shit and find the gold.
Conversely, WWEs product started going down without Russo when the McMahon's and the H's were allowed to book whatever they felt like without a Russo to offer alternatives.
Oh, and Benoit's title win was featured on his DVD set.
Posted By: neverAcquiesce (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 11:42 AM
God Julian you talk aload of Bullshit. Nash wasent even stripping benoit of the belt . Do your research idiot as he said it was a lader match on Nitro. Why do you idiots do these reviews pissing off true WCW fans just to slag the company off you damn Pro WWE fans. The wwe product today is complete shit and WCWs PPV then are way better!
Posted By: Steven1977 (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 08:59 AM
Nash is old and totally not over and beniot is more over than Nash even though the obvious. So your a WCW fan back then and now or was that a one time deal? LMAO
Posted By: guest1228 (Guest) on January 31, 2009 at 03:50 PM
"Conversely, WWEs product started going down without Russo when the McMahon's and the H's were allowed to book whatever they felt like without a Russo to offer alternatives."
I thought WWE's post Russo era wasn't bad. I thought Chris Kreski did a great job for a year. Storyline and wrestling wise. It's just without Russo WWE really lost it's edge and it was the edge that brought in the ratings and I'm sure threats by the PTC to tone down their product didn't help either.
But once Stephanie and Triple H took over along with the downfall of WCW. your right it took a turn for the worse.
That's why I was happy in June 2002 when it was announced Russo was coming back to WWE. Russo and McMahon together again also with Heyman in the mix would have been gold but Stephanie and Triple H put in their two cents and it didn't happen.
On a side note, I always thought McMahon missed a golden opportunity in 2002. I mean at that point he could have had himself, Russo, Bischoff, Heyman, and Terry Taylor all in the same company. Who were the real creative minds behind the wrestling boom of the 90's and having all of them all the same creative team would have been epic, once some of the egos cleared out of the way.
Posted By: Mike (Guest) on February 01, 2009 at 12:41 AM
Russo didn't book this show. He was removed the week of this show because he wanted to have Tank Abbott win a battle royal to become WCW Champion, people backstage freaked out and got him sent home.
Posted By: JTX (Guest) on February 02, 2009 at 06:14 PM
Oh God. Thanks for reminding me of Big T. Lord that was awful. I always kind of laugh when I hear his name though. I think it was Dan Lovranski from the Law who said something along the lines of "Big T...does the T stand for Tummy?" For some reason that always stuck with me and I can't forget the guy now.
Posted By: Guest#5788 (Guest) on February 06, 2009 at 06:59 AM
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