Category Archives: Wrestling

Best Of US Wrestling 2007 Disc 4

This is the last disc of this part of the compilation. After this one, the comp splits into seperate volumes for each show, which I’ll review based on the date the comp begins from. Anyway, there’s some good stuff coming up in this volume, so I’m looking forward to reviwwing this one.

Match 1 (ECW, April 3rd)
CM Punk vs Stevie Richards
This is actually a match that’s a long time coming, if you remember Stevie’s ROH appearance in 2005. It wasn’t a heated match or anything, because that was an ROH angle, not a WWE angle, so this was largely a good, quick mat based match. Punk largely used headlocks and other holds working on the head, mixing those with his kicks. Stevie on the other hand had a ready made strategy, as Punk’s ribs were hurt from the Money In The Bank match, so he went to work on those. Punk got the obvious three count with the Go To Sleep- **3/4

Match 2 (Raw, April 2nd)
20 Man Tag Team Title Battle Royal
I would name all the teams, but they went to a commercial when the teams were coming out, and thus I could’t get all the names. It was a solid battle royal type match, about as good as these matches get, but there wasn’t anything special about it or anything. Eliminations were as follows (I think there was another team eliminated during the break)-
Chris Masters and Kenny Dykstra (I didn’t see who eliminated them)
Cryme Time by Deuce and Domino
Eugene and Jim Duggan by Elijah Burke and Matt Striker
The Highlanders by Deuce and Domino
Deuce and Domino by John Cena and Shawn Michaels
Matt Striker and Elijah Burke by Finlay and King Booker
Rob Van Dam and Sabu by Finlay and King Booker
King Booker and Finlay by John Cena and Shawn Michaels- **1/4

The match ended the way General Manager The Coach expected, so therefore he made another Tag Team Battle Royal right now with more teams.

Match 3 (Raw, April 2nd)
20 Man Tag Team Battle Royal Number Two
Again, there was a break so I couldn’t see all the teams that entered, but you’ll soon know who was in and was eliminated. Personally, it wasn’t all that different from the last match, in that it just followed your regular Battle Royal formula, although the final few minutes with Cade and Murdoch and The Hardys produced some good stuff. Eliminations were as follows (again, there was an elimination we weren’t told about during the break)-
Val Venis and Viscera by everyone
William Regal and Dave Taylor by Tommy Dreamer and The Sandman
Tommy Dreamer and The Sandman by Lance Cade and Trevor Murdoch
Miz and Morrison by Shawn Michaels and John Cena
Shawn Michaels and John Cena by themselves (Michaels threw Cena over the top rope)
Chavo Guerrero and Gregory Helms by Paul London and Brian Kendrick
Paul London and Brian Kendrick by themselves (Kendrick eliminated himself when eliminating Chavo and Helms)
Lance Cade and Trevor Murdoch by The Hardys (The Hardys are the new Tag Champions)- **1/2

Match 4 (Impact, April 5th)
Senshi vs Austin Starr
I liked that they weren’t just given two minutes like every other Impact match I’ve seen, although this was still pretty short. But with the time they had, they produced some pretty good X-Division style action, with lots of high flying and kicks, although with more time they would probably have had some more mat wrestling in here too. Austin Starr won he match when Bob Backlund threw in the towel when Senshi was locked in a Single Leg Crab- **3/4

Match 5 (Smackdown, April 6th)
Matt Hardy vs King Booker
This was a grudge match since Hardy put his hands on Queen Sharmell at Wrestlemania. Hardy went for fast, high flying moves, while Booker went for more of a power style due to him having the size advantage, and also used a few submission holds. King Booker actually dominated for much of this match, with Hardy’s only getting brief moments of offense. The match was solid all the way through, but the final few minutes were excellent, and really elevated the match. Hardy got the fall out of nowhere with a Small Package- ***

Match 6 (ECW, April 3rd)
Extreme Rules Match- ECW Originals (The Sandman, RVD, Sabu and Tommy Dreamer) vs The New Breed (Matt Striker, Elijah Burke, Kevin Thorn and Marcus Cor Von)
This is a rematch of the Wrestlemania match, and this far bettered that match thanks to some of the insane moves both teams took. There were all kinds of weapons used here, which took this match to a new level, turning this into a homage of the classic ECW matches of the past (although not to the level of the truly great ECW matches). Anyway, I really enjoyed this, and it’s a must see match for ECW fans: it’s one of my favourite TV matches of 2007. After some big table spots, Elijah Burke won it with an Elijah Express through a table on Sabu- ***3/4

Match 7 (Raw, April 9th)
The Hardy’s vs The Worlds Greatest Tag Team
This is a battle of two of my favourite tag teams, so I obviously enjoyed this one a lot. It was a bit short for my liking, but what we got was good and entertaining. The clash of styles here saw Haas and Benjamin try to keep the Hardy’s down on the mat, while The Hardys took a lot of risks and pulled out some great double teams. The Hardys won this non-title match when Jeff pinned Benjamin following a Twist Of Fate-Swanton combo- **1/2

Match 8 (Impact, April 12th)
Chris Sabin vs Black Machismo
Jay Lethal has officially entered his Macho Man impression gimmick now, which I personally don’t mind since it gives him a little character. Lethal is surprisingly good at mimicking Savage’s moves, so to be honest, he wresled exactly like Savage would. On the other hand, Sabin wrestled his usual explosive high flying style, and seemed a little dissapointed in Lethal for taking on this character. Lethal won the match with the Elbow Drop from the top. A solid match overall- **1/4

Match 9 (Smackdown, April 13th)
MVP vs Chris Benoit
These two had some great matches around this time period, in what was Benoit’s last really good series with anyone before the unspeakable act occured. This was no exception, as they again had a great back and forth match, with a mixture of mat wrestling, power and hard hitting strikes from both men. There was also a lot of suplexes, whether this was Snap and German Suplexes from Benoit, or Belly To Bellys from MVP. After a great final couple of minutes, MVP won with a rollup using the ropes for leverage. Overall, great stuff- ***

Match 10 (ECW, April 10th)
Marcus Cor Von vs Rob Van Dam
This was very much a battle of the power of Marcus Cor Von against the high flying skill of RVD. It was an interesting match on paper, and I liked it, since it was well wrestled and there were no botches, although I was surprised by how much Marcus Cor Von controlled the match. After Burke distracted RVD by attacking an injured Sabu at ringside, Cor Von got three with the Pounce. After the match CM Punk comes out and joins the New Breed: I wish they had kept him as a heel but they haven’t pulled that trigger yet.- **3/4

Match 11 (Smackdown, April 6th)
Jeff Hardy vs Mr Kennedy
Good stuff again here. Hardy went for all of his usual high flying moves, while Kennedy went for the strategy of working over Hardy’s back with a series of submissions and high impact power moves. So overall I’d say this was a good, back and forth match that the crowd were really into, and I enjoyed it. Hardy missed the Swanton, and Kennedy used that opportunity to hit a DDT for three- **3/4

This was another good volume, better than the previous one, and there’s some great stuff here. The ECW Extreme Rules match was the best here, since it was filled with great hardcore spots, and was much like ECW matches of the past. Other good matches were Matt Hardy’s match with King Booker and MVP against Chris Benoit. The rest of the matches were solid in a little average (in that they weeren’t too different from matches we’d seen previously). Overall though, there’s a few matches you shoul try to watch if you can, especially the Extreme Rules match.

7.5/10

Best Of US Wrestling Jan-April 2007 Disc 3

Match 1 (Smackdown, March 16th)
Mr Kennedy vs Matt Hardy
I enjoyed this match, it had some very solid matwork, and the crowd were reasonably into it. Kennedy made extensive use of that ground game, using it to work over the knee of Hardy when he hurt it coming off the top rope. Hardy on the other hand took more risks, but also did some good wrestling of his own. I like that this match was given a lot of time, as it helped it build, and it was really good stuff towards the end. Hardy managed to win it with the Twist of Fate. Surprisingly better than I expected.- ***1/4

Match 2 (ECW, March 13th)
Extreme Battle Royal- The ECW Originals (Sabu, RVD, Sandman and Tommy Dreamer) vs The New Breed (Kevin Thorn, Elijah Burke, Matt Striker and Marcus Cor Von)
Another battle royal, but a unique one since you rarely see teams within one of these matches. The wrestling was also pretty solid, and both teams took a few nasty bumps during this match, so it’s probably one of the better battle royals WWE have had during this time period (barring the Royal Rumble). The elimination were as follows.
Sandman by Matt Striker
Marcus Cor Von by RVD and Sabu
Sabu by Kevin Thorn
Kevin Thorn by Rob Van Dam
Rob Van Dam by himself (in eliminating Thorn he eliminated himself)
Matt Striker by Tommy Dreamer
Elijah Burke by Tommy Dreamer- **1/2

Match 3 (Raw, March 12th)
Gauntlet Tag Match- Shawn Michaels and John Cena vs The Worlds Greatest Tag Team vs Lance Cade and Trevor Murdoch vs MNM (Cage Match)
I was never really a fan of the Michaels/Cena team personally, since it was a re-hash of the partners who hate each other scenario from the Attitude Era. I do however love the WGTT, and the first part of the gauntlet was pretty damn good although short, with good mat wrestling throughout. Cena made Haas tap out to the STFU.
Next were Cade and Murdoch, which made this a very different type of match, with more brawling and hard hitting moves as opposed to the matwork we saw earlier. Michaels got worked over for a while, before getting the hot tag to Cena, who got the three count on Murdoch with an FU-Superkick combo that caused some more tension.
Then the cage was lowered for part three again MNM. I don’t remember a lot of tag cage matches with tag team rules rather than tornado style rules. Michaels again got worked over by MNM, who used a lot of high flying moves on him, before Cena got the hot tag. After more tension, Cena got the fall on Mercury with the FU- **3/4

Match 4 (Smackdown, March 16th)
The Undertaker vs King Booker
Batista is on commentary here, and I don’t think I understood anything he said. The Undertaker made much of this match a brawl, with loads of punches and strikes, and used the outside of the ring to his advantage. Booker T wrestled a similar style, using a lot of strikes, but also used a few power moves and submission holds. The match was decent overall, but it was a little slow in places, but was pretty good in the final few minutes. Finlay interfered to cause the DQ- **1/2

Match 5 (Smackdown, March 23rd)
WWE Tag Team Titles- Paul London and Brian Kendrick (c) vs MNM
At this point, London and Kendrick are the longest reigning tag team champions of all time, beating MNM’s own record. As you would expect from these two teams, it was very much a battle of high flying moves, and it was a very good match that never slowed down and was energetic from start to finish. It was a little too short though, but overall it was good stuff while it lasted. London pinned Mercury following a Cross Body- **1/2

Match 6 (Raw, March 19th)
Chris Benoit vs John Cena
This is a battle of the United States and World champions, but no titles are on the line. Shawn Michaels also joins the commentary team. It was a hard hitting match, with Benoit throwing a lot of stiff strikes, and Cena going for power. Benoit managed to get Cena in a few submissions here too, getting close to making him tap. Cena however surprisingly made Benoit tap out to the STFU, quite a surprise since Benoit rarely taps. A bit short, but pretty good stuff- ***

Match 7 (ECW, March 27th)
Rob Van Dam vs Elijah Burke
I’m a fan of both of these two, and I thought this was a good match as a result. This match saw a lot of high flying wrestling, with both men happy to take risks. Burke was a little more grounded though, using some submission holds to keep RVD down. Overall, a good match with some innovative moves and crisp high flying. RVD won this match with the ***** Frog Splash- **3/4

Match 8 (Smackdown, March 23rd)
Chavo Guerrero (c) vs Jimmy Wang Yang
I personally don’t mind Jimmy Yang’s rather silly gimmick, although JBL certainly hates it: the gimmick got him over and gave him some personality. Yang used his usual range of high flying moves and kicks here, while Chavo tried to ground him with explosive, high impact moves and submissions. It was a good match, but lacked a little something. Jimmy Wang Yang won the match with a Moonsault- **1/2

Match 9 (Impact, March 29th)
Kurt Angle vs Abyss
A big clash of styles here, with Angle having to use his wide range of mat skills to work over Abyss, mainly going after his leg. Abyss on the other hand went for power due to his size advantage. It wasn’t much of a match to be honest: far too short to be anything major, and Abyss got little offense in. The ref got knocked out, and Abyss had the match won with the Black Hole Slam, but Angle won it with a rollup when a new ref came in- *1/2

Match 10 (ECW, March 27th)
Mr Kennedy, Randy Orton, King Booker and Finlay vs The Hardy’s, CM Punk and Edge
I don’t get pairing Edge, a heel, with three faces, including his mortal enemy Matt Hardy, but this is supposed to be a showcase of the Money In The Bank match. And it was a good match despite this key problem, with a wide range of styles on show. Obviously the Hardy’s team were more towards high flying and fast paced wrestling, while Orton’s team looked to keep their opponents grounded. Punk got isolated from his corner, then made the tag to Edge, who promptly tagged himself out and left. Booker T pinned CM Punk following a Scissors Kick- **3/4

Overall, this wasn’t quite as good as the previous volumes, but considering it was the run up to Wrestlemania nobody was going to take any major risks and risk injury (although that’s no excuse for TNA and their one short match). The Kennedy/Hardy match is the best match and one you should look to watch, while Cena/Benoit is also pretty good stuff. The rest of the matches average around **1/2, so there is some good stuff here.

7/10

Best Of US Wrestling January-April 2007 Disc 2

This is part 2 of 4 of this compilation of the best wrestling from Raw, Smackdown, ECW and Impact during the first four months of 2007. There was some good stuff on the last comp, and it only gets better with each volume.

Match 1 (Impact, February 15th)
Gauntlet For The Gold- Sting vs AJ Styles vs Rhino vs Chris Sabin vs Kip James vs James Storm vs Abyss vs Kurt Angle vs Tomko vs Samoa Joe vs Robert Roode vs Eric Young vs BG James vs Scott Steiner
It was a decent match, considering it’s a battle royal, and much like the Smackdown one from the last comp, there was some good wrestling in here when things weren’t too chaotic. Not one, but two commercials hurt the match, but TNA have an annoying habit of doing this, and this is just one reason why WWE are beating them. But it was a fun match and I enjoyed it. Eliminations were as follows
Chris Sabin by Abyss
James Storm by Kurt Angle
AJ Styles and Rhino by Tomko
Kip James by Samoa Joe
BG James by Scott Steiner
Abyss by Samoa Joe
Kurt Angle by Scott Steiner
Robert Roode by Sting
Sting by Scott Steiner
Eric Young by Tomko
Scott Steiner by Tomko
Tomko by Samoa Joe- **1/2

Match 2 (Raw, February 19th)
Edge vs Rob Van Dam
Since this is a Money In The Bank qualifier, and considering RVD’s standing with the company, the winner is obvious. RVD went through his usual array of high risk offense, while Edge just looked to slow the match down and work over him with submissions. Overall a good match with some innovative offense by both men. Randy Orton interfered, and got kicked in the face by RVD, but he then got pinned for three by a Spear from Edge- ***

Match 3 (ECW, February 20th)
CM Punk vs Johnny Nitro
A decent, albeit short match, although Nitro was a little sloppy and wasn’t quite on his game. It was wrestled at a fairly quick pace, with several high impact moves, and also had some good mat wrestling. Nitro missed a Corkscrew Moonsault, and this allowed Punk to get three with the Go 2 Sleep- **1/2

Match 4 (Impact, February 22nd)
Ladder Match- Jerry Lynn vs Jay Lethal vs Sonjay Dutt vs Senshi vs Austin Starr
A decent X-Division style match. There was lots of high risk moves as you would expect, and adamantly it was a spotfest. However, it didn’t have a whole lot of time, and there was a commercial break in the middle, so I can’t really give it that high a rating. Jerry Lynn pulled down the X to get the victory- *1/2

Match 5 (Smackdown, February 23rd)
No DQ- Kane vs King Booker
On paper, this doesn’t look like anything special, since both men are past their prime at this stage, but it ended up being quite a solid match aided by the No DQ stipulation. Kane worked over King Booker with power moves, chokes and strikes, while Booker T had to do everything to take Kane off of his feet, even using the ring bell at one stage, and wore him down with submission when he was off his feet. My only issues was the match was a little slow, and the crowd were pretty quiet. The Great Khali interfered, throwing Kane through the barricade, allowing King Booker to get three- **1/4

Match 6 (Raw, February 26th)
Shelton Benjamin vs Jeff Hardy
This match saw an obvious clash of styles, with Hardy going for a lot of high flying moves, while Benjamin looked to ground Hardy and outwrestle him on the mat. It ended up being a great match, wrestled at a fast pace, and it was highly entertaining. It was however a little sloppy at times, and Benjamin botched a major spot, but it was still good. Hardy won via a Swanton Bomb- ***

Match 7 (Smackdown, March 2nd)
Matt Hardy vs Joey Mercury
King Booker is on commentary, and is a little too excited at times. Hardy again took time to work over the face of Mercury, which was still injured from the Royal Rumble. When the face wasn’t being worked over, they exchanged a mixture of high flying moves and mat wrestling holds. It was actually pretty similar to their previous match (although possibly slightly longer), which wasn’t a bad thing, as this was good stuff. Hardy got the fall with a Top Rope Twist of Fate, after removing Mercury’s face protector- ***

Match 8 (ECW, February 27th)
Extreme Rules- Sabu vs Mr Kennedy
With the Extreme Rules stipulation added, this gave something else to what was a good match. It did however suffer from Sabu’s weakness to missing spots, as he botched a couple during this match. But for the most part it was good stuff, with Kennedy trying to stop Sabu’s onslaught with a chair and other weapons, while Sabu went through his usual range of high flying moves. Kennedy got three with a DDT onto a broken table- **1/2

Match 9 (Smackdown, March 2nd)
Chris Benoit vs MVP vs Finlay
This wasn’t quite as good as say the Daniels/Styles/Joe 3 ways, but this was still a pretty good three way match. The match actually played out much like a one on one match, with two wrestlers in at one time while another was taken out on the outside. MVP and Finlay also teamed up on Benoit at some stages, but Finlay put an end to that fairly quickly. Finlay pinned Benoit after a Shillelagh shot, after Hornswaggle distracted the ref- ***

Match 10 (ECW, February 27th)
Cage Match- Bobby Lashley vs Hardcore Holly
A short match, since Lashley had to win in five minutes or less or he’d lose the title. The match was going along decently before Umaga was brought in by Vince McMahon. He through a chair in that Hardcore Holly used to smash his head in. Lashley threw a few chair shots, and got three with a Running Powerslam. Some stiff chair shots aside, this wasn’t anything special, but the spot after the match, where Lashley breaks the cage by jumping through it onto Umaga was awesome- *1/2

Match 11 (Raw, March 12th)
Ric Flair vs Carlito vs Randy Orton
They played up Flair and Orton’s rivalry in the past, which gave a hint as to how the match would go. Flair and Carlito often worked as a team on Orton, trying to take him out of the match due to this being elimination rules, but like all three way matches their alliance fell apart quickly. When it did, Orton took advantage by eliminating Flair with the RKO. Orton was very much in control after this, with a series of rest holds and strikes, but Carlito stayed in it and came close to victory. However, Orton would get three with the RKO. A bit sloppy and slow at times, but good in places as well- **3/4

Overall, there again was some pretty good stuff here, but nothing that you desperately need to go out of your way to see. The best matches all rated at ***, and there’s 5 of those, while the rest are all in the ** region. So if you get a chance to see any of the *** matches on Youtube or on DVD, then they are well worth a view, but there’s nothing to see from the other matches.

7.5/10

WCW Nitro 24th June 1996

Bluebloods (Steven Regal and Dave Taylor) vs Public Enemy
As you would expect, a huge clash of styles here, with Public Enemy trying to brawl while the Bluebloods wanted to wrestle on the mat. Regal was again, pretty damn awesome in this: his mannerisms add a lot to the match and his mocking of Public Enemy’s dance was hilarious. And while this match was decent, the differences between the two teams were such that they didn’t click, so the match was at times sloppy. Grunge used the cast from his broken arm to get three on Taylor- **

Kevin Sullivan vs ?
I didn’t catch the name of the jobber Sullivan was facing, but it didn’t matter anyway since he had no offense at all. Sullivan took this match around the arena to prove a point to Chris Benoit I suppose. There was no official finish, but I guess the jobber lost via countout, or maybe Sullivan got DQ’ed, I honestly don’t know- n/r

Cruiserweight Title Match- Dean Malenko (c) vs Bobby Walker
Decent match here, but Walker’s lack of experience once again told since he botched and mistimed a few moves here. But Malenko helped to drag a good match out of him the best he could with his usual solid mat wrestling. Malenko locked the Cloverleaf, but Disco Inferno distracted him, allowing Walker a brief fightback, before Disco started dancing for no real reason. Malenko Dropkicks him Walker into Disco, before getting three with a Northern Lights Suplex. Bizarre end to the match- *3/4

The Barbarian vs Eddie Guerrero
The Barbarian doesn’t even get ring music now, and I don’t really know why. It was a battle of the power of Barbarian against the speed of Guerrero, and this made for a good match. Plus it helped that the crowd were quite into it, especially with some of Barbarian’s power moves. Despite Barbarian’s size advantage, Guerrero was able to steal a win when he blocked a top rope move with a Cross Body for three- **1/2

Four Horsemen (Arn Anderson and Chris Benoit) vs Rock N’Roll Express
I enjoyed this match: again, it followed the similar formula of the Rock N’Roll Express matches, with Morton taking a nasty beating from Benoit and Anderson, before Gibson gets the hot tag and cleans house. And for the most part the wrestling was good, barring some sloppy spots involving Ricky Morton, caused by trying to do stuff he should have stayed away from at his age (like flips for example). It was also hurt by the NWO angle being discussed for much of this. Gibson got pinned following a briefcase shot- **1/2

Alex Wright vs DDP
A solid match, with good back and forth wrestling, where both looked good. Wright went for more technical and high flying style offense, while DDP focused on grounding Wright and setting up for the Diamond Cutter. My only problem is that some of the wrestling could have been crisper, but it was still good with lots of countering. DDP won with the Diamond Cutter- **1/4

VK Wallstreet vs Randy Savage
Decent, basic stuff here, with Savage firing away with punches for the most part, and Wallstreet trying to keep him grounded, and cheating at every opportunity. The unintended highlight ended up being the fans chanting “We Want Flair” despite Flair being the ‘bad guy’. The match was won by Savage obviously, when Greene threw Wallstreet into the ring post, and Savage hat the Elbow for three- *3/4

WCW Tag Team Title Match- Sting and Lex Lugar (c) vs Harlem Heat vs Steiner Brothers
Good main event tag match, especially when any combination of Sting, Booker T and Scott Steiner were in there. It was an energetic match, with a mixture of power moves and mat wrestling. Sting in particular took quite a beating from everyone else in the match (expect Lugar of course). My only problems with the match were a commercial right in the middle, and the commentators not always concentrating on the match but the NWO angle. When the match reached it’s peak, Scott Hall and Kevin Nash came out, and out of nowhere Harlem Heat won the match with a Schoolboy on Lugar- **3/4

Commentary Botch Of The Week- Tony Schiavone calls an Inverted Atomic Drop by Sting an “Inverted Powerbomb”.

An average show this week, with no real matches that stood out. The best match was the main event tag, although the Four Horsemen/Rock N’Roll Express and Guerrero/Barbarian match were also solid. So it’s a show that you can avoid unless your a completionist, but at the same time it’s worth watching if you have nothing else to watch.

6/10

WCW Nitro 17th June 1996

Stevie Ray vs Rick Steiner
Personally, I feel this is a battle of the two weaker partners in their respective tag teams. It wasn’t a bad match to be honest: a little sloppy in places (most notably when Steiner messed up a Bulldog), but it had it’s fair share of hard hitting moves as well, and was kept short. Steiner won it with the Steiner Line- *1/2

Disco Inferno vs Joe Gomez
Gomez is making his Nitro debut after being beaten down the previous week by the Four Horsemen. He’s an OK wrestler, but nothing special, and this was a solid and short, if unspectacular match. Disco had the match won with a Neckbreaker, but took too much time to pin Gomez, then Gomez rolled him over for three- *1/4

Four Horsemen (Chris Benoit and Arn Anderson) vs American Males
The Horsemen have officially reformed with Steve McMichael joining the previous night. While a step down from the match the American Males had with Flair and Anderson a few weeks earlier, it was still pretty good in places, especially when Benoit was in there, who was as crisp as he ever was at this stage. Despite the best efforts of the American males, Benoit won the match by pinning Riggs following a Gutbuster on the ropes- **3/4

Big Bubba vs John Tenta
A grudge match here, with Tenta trying to get revenge for Bubba cutting his hair off a few weeks earlier. And it was an OK if not very exciting big man match. Bubba had to use his speed and cheat a bit to battle the sheer size of Tenta, who overpowered him with ease. Tenta got a good piece of revenge here, by attacking Jimmy Hart and hitting two big Slams for three (putting his feet on the ropes)- *3/4

Ric Flair vs Randy Savage
A big grudge match with all of the problems Flair has caused Savage over the past few months. It was at times wild, with the match going all around ringside, especially when Savage was in control, while Flair tried to keep the match in the ring for the most part, and cheated at every opportunity to keep Savage down. It was good stuff overall, and very entertaining due to the red hot crowd. The ref got bumped, and Savage went nuts by hitting Elbow after Elbow on Flair, then the Four Horsemen interfered with Mongo hitting Savage with a briefcase, allowing Flair to get three- ***

WCW Cruiserweight Title- Rey Mysterio vs Dean Malenko (c)
This is a rematch of their fantastic match the previous night. It was fantastic stuff as per usual, in a fantastic series of matches they had in 1996. Mysterio used his speed to take Malenko off his feet, while Malenko overpowered Mysterio and worked him over on the mat with submission holds. The crowd weren’t in to it to begin with, but they won the crowd over as the match went on. Mysterio came close with several different pinning combinations, but Malenko defended the title with a Reverse DDT- ***1/2

WCW World Title- The Giant (c) vs Scott Steiner
An enjoyable main event, with Steiner trying to use his power on The Giant, but not being able to get him off his feet, and The Giant could then use his power to control the match. Steiner had bad ribs coming into this match, so The Giant was able to work over those both inside and outside of the ring. When Steiner did manage to get The Giant off his feet, the crowd erupted. Steiner hat The Giant with a wooden chair, smashing it, and it had no effect, allowing The Giant to get three with the Chokeslam. I enjoyed that more than I thought I would- **3/4

Great episode overall. There were four good matches on this show, with the best match being the Cruiserweight Title match, and the other three were all good in their own way. There were no really bad matches on the show, and the matches that didn’t have a lot of potential were kept short. I can easily recommend this show.

8.25/10

Sorry for the lack of reviews over the past couple of days: I’ve been busy with a lot of stuff, but I do have some time to do some new reviews now. Look out for more over the next few days.

WCW Nitro – 10th June 1996

This is the show where the NWO angle really began to pick up steam, with the arrival of Kevin Nash alongside Scott Hall. I must admit, this angle is just as great as it was all of 13 years ago.

Booker T vs Scott Steiner
You’d have actually been quite surprised to see these two headlining WCW shows just four years later. It was a good match, as these two have good chemistry. There was some good back and forth mat wrestling, with counter holds exchanged again and again. Both wrestlers also put power moves to use, with Scott generally having the advantage in that area. Steiner would get the win with a belly To Belly after Booker T missed a Splash- ***

Jim Powers vs DDP
Not much of a match: it was pretty basic stuff just to get DDP out there and make him look good. In fact due to Powers complete lack of overness, the crowd were noticeably cheering for DDP. After a brief fightback by Powers, DDP got three with the Diamond Cutter- *1/4

Sting vs Meng
A short and solid enough, back and forth match here, with Sting going through his usual array of moves, while Meng try to keep him grounded by cheating and throwing a lot of strikes. His plan didn’t work, as Sting won this match without a whole lot of effort, getting the submission with the Scorpion Deathlock- *1/2

Dave Taylor vs Jim Duggan
I dislike Duggan, and this match did little to change my mind: other than some solid mat wrestling by Taylor, it was just the same old Jim Duggan match we’ve seen over and over. It was almost a squash match, with Duggan dominating the majority of it and getting three after a taped fist shot (I still don’t get why that isn’t a DQ)- 1/2*

The Giant vs Scott Norton
This match came about from The Giant attacking him the previous week. Norton could do little to stand in the way of The Giant, who dominated the match. After Norton missed a Splash on the outside, hitting the ringpost, The Giant gave him a Chokeslam on the floor, and got three in the ring- *

Billy Kidman vs Steven Regal
Kidman is very, very skinny indeed. It was a very short match, with Kidman going all out with his high flying moves, but missed a 450 Splash. Regal then made him tap with a nasty Elevated Crab- *

Public Enemy vs Nasty Boys
As with their match a few weeks earlier, this was a complete brawl, with very little structure to it, as these four just fought all around ringside. I will admit though, it wasn’t to the standard of their earlier match, since weapons were rarely put to use, and Grunge was limited due to a broken arm. But it did go back and forth, and there was some good stuff in here at times, although it simply went too long. Public Enemy won by DQ when Knobbs used a garbage can- *3/4

WCW Tag Team Titles- Sting and Lex Lugar (c) vs Ric Flair and Arn Anderson
Originally, The Renegade and Joe Gomez were supposed to be in this match, but Sting and Lugar replaced them, and I think that was a much better choice. A good tag team main event here, with the crowd red hot for everything, and the wrestling was entertaining and solid throughout. After Sting was worked over for most of the match, Lugar got the hot tag and cleaned house, but The Giant interfered for the DQ. Great stuff, these two teams can’t have a bad match- ***

After the match, Scott Hall and Kevin Nash cut an awesome promo running down WCW and it’s ageing stars. A shame that when the NWO was completely up and running, this was dropped, because if the focus had remained on pushing the young talents over the “dinosaurs”, WCW may have still been here today.

Overall, it’s a two match show to be honest. The main event tag and the opener are the only two matches you need to watch, as well as the NWO angle. The rest of the matches are awful to average.

6.75/10

This review is another from the archive: I’ve not had a lot of time to review new stuff recently, but I hope I can have something properly new done within the next few days.

Your commentators for this event are Ben Jordan and the other spots rotates between Sal and Vito Thomaselli, Mike Quackenbush, Nate Webb (why wasn’t he wrestling?), Tasty Travis (a referee) and Brandon Thomaselli

Jack Thriller cuts a promo before the first match running down the people of Indiana and his opponents

Match 1
Jack Thriller vs Zach McGuire vs Chris Hybrid
I have seen Thriller wrestle before, but I’ve never seen the other two. Zach McGuire is deaf apparently, so I wonder how much this hinders him in the ring. This match was decent,. but sloppy in places and the crowd was completely dead. These three just aren’t quite there yet, they lack experience but they’ll get better with time. The best move of the match would have to be Thriller hitting a Banshee Clothesline on McGuire who was holding Hybrid who got German Suplexed. Thriller makes Hybrid tap to the Figure 4 Leg Lock to win the match- *3/4

Match 2
8 Man Lucha Tag Team Match – CJ Otis, Hillbilly Jed, Indiana Kidd Jr and Jeff Brooks vs ‘Diehard’ Dustin Lee, Vortekz, OMG and Jimmy Shalwin
I’ve seen some of these guys before and some I haven’t, so it may be hard for me to keep track of who’s who. I thought this was a lot of fun, it topped my expectations which weren’t that high to begin with. The match did have some problems, as there were some botched spots and sloppiness at times, but the match also had some good high flying wrestling, and power as well from Otis and Hillbilly Jed, although it had little mat wrestling and was basically a spotfest. CJ Otis would win the match for his team with the Burning Hammer. Very decent lucha tag match- **1/2

Match 3
IWA Light Heavyweight Title Match- ‘The Trendsetter’ Josh Abercrombie (c) vs ‘The Impact Bully’ Brandon Thomaselli
These two have wrestled a lot in the past as well as teaming together, so I expect that this should be good. This actually ended up being heel vs heel, but the dynamic seemed to work, and Josh adapted to playing the face in peril role. And the match was very good, with great matwork and some high flying in there as well, and the two seemed quite evenly matched. Josh slightly slipped on the pinfall to win the match, as he bridged while Brandon was on the ground to get three- ***

After the match, Brandon Thomaselli shakes hands with Josh Abercrombie, but turns on him and leaves. Nate Webb (Josh’s partner in the Trailer Park Boys team) comes to help him.

Chuck Taylor cuts a pre-match promo (for some reason Chuck’s voice reminds me of The Rock’s), throwing insults around about the crowd, then issuing an open challenge to two wrestlers to challenge him for his belt. Ricochet is first to answer the challenge, then Billy Roc comes out to be the second wrestler in this match.

Then before the match starts Chuck Taylor cuts another promo saying he hates Ricochet more than the fat kids in the crowd and says Billy Roc has been ducking him for a year, so he will beat both of them.

Match 4
IWA Heavyweight Title Match- Chuck Taylor (c) vs Billy Roc vs Ricochet
Another good match, I enjoyed this one and it topped my expectations. Taylor has improved a lot in the ring and he wrestled a slower, technical style with lots of cheating compared to Roc who used a mix of high flying and technical wrestling, while Ricochet was going for all out high flying with some innovate offense, and generally there was a lot of innovative moves here. Ricochet botched a few things near the end that hurt the ending, but Taylor got the win with the Omega Driver to retain the title- ***1/4

Chuck Taylor cuts a third promo after the match, saying he did what he said he was going to do, and then challenges Low-Ki to a Street Fight. Taylor’s heel promo’s are excellent.

Jim Fannin cuts a promo towards Jimmy Jacobs, saying he’s had increased the bounty on his head for putting the IWA Title in the trash, then says The Barbarian will be coming to the IWA to take him out.

Match 5
The Iron Saints (Sal and Vito Thomaselli) vs The Basham Brothers (Doug and Danny Basham)
This is my first time seeing The Basham Brothers wrestle outside of the WWE, so I have no real idea what to expect, but I heard great things about Doug in OVW so I’m looking forward to seeing what he can do. A good match, nothing overly special but still good. The Bashams are good wrestlers, although to me they still wrestle pretty much the same way they did on TV, and I didn’t see enough of Doug to see how good he is. The Thomaselli’s were practically dwarfed by the two of them though. So a good, mat based Sports Entertainment style of match. Vito pinned Doug with the Californication after Doug was pulled down from the top rope- **3/4

After the match Danny beats up the Thomaselli’s for cheating him out of a win.

Match 6
Barbed Wire Bat Match – Ian Rotten vs Freakshow
This simply isn’t my thing, so I don’t plan to review it since I can’t give a good account of this style of match- no rating

Match 7
‘Lightning’ Mike Quackenbush vs ‘Double C’ Claudio Castagnoli
The reason I bought this DVD, as these two have had classic matches around the independent scene and I expect no different here. This was yet another great match between these two men, as while they did wrestle this slightly slower than their earlier match, they had more time so were able to build more, and as a result I was able to enjoy this just as much, if not more than their previous encounter. They did some insane stuff as you would expect, too much to mention, but if you liked their first encounter then you’ll love this one. Claudio got the win here once again with a backslide with a bridge Match of the night- ****

Match 8
Four Corners Of Pain Match- Drake Younger vs Insane Lane
Again, this sort of match just isn’t my thing, and I don’t plan to review it, so please buy the DVD and watch for yourself- no rating

Overall this show is solid, and the match that you should buy this DVD for is the Mike Quackenbush-Claudio Castagnoli match, as they had yet another great match. Besides that, there’s not a lot else that stands out as must see, but there are two good matches in Abercrombie-Thomaselli and Roc-Taylor-Ricochet. Mild thumbs up for this event.

No new review today, because my day has been pretty bad and I’m simply not in the mood (let’s just say I made a big mistake by even the most idiotic of standards). So here’s another from the archive.

Your commentators are Ben Jordan and Jimmy Jacobs (recovering from his knee injury).

Match 1
Joker w/Eddie Kingston vs Gran Akuma
A meeting of two hard hitters in this one, and a first time meeting. A really enjoyable opener here, with some strong mat wrestling and fast paced action, as well as the hard hitting kick and chop exchanges that you would expect these two to have. I am impressed by Joker, and he is someone I want to see more of, and Akuma impresses me more and more every time I see him (he really need to be in ROH full time). Joker got a rollup out of nowhere when he had Akuma in an Armbar to get the three count. Great match, topping my expectations- ***1/4

After the match, the two wrestlers shake hands.

Before the next match, Joey Eastman decides to do the introductions for his team (he used to be the IWA Mid South ring announcer, but turned into a heel manager recently)

Match 2
Pretty Unreal (Michael Elgin and Ash) w/Joey Eastman vs Naptown Dragons (OMG and ‘Diehard’ Dustin Lee)
I’ve only heard good things about Ash and Elgin, so I’m looking forward to seeing what they can do. I thought this was a decent tag match, with some good wrestling, but you can tell these guys are inexperienced and they messed up a few moves. Ash and Elgin have some way to go but I see potential in them and they will do well on the indy scene in the next year or two. After a good final few minutes, Elgin and Ash won when Elgin pinned OMG after a Razors Edge-Neckbreaker combo double team move- **1/4

Z-Barr cuts a promo saying he’s tired of people not cheering for him (I wonder why people don’t cheer for him? Maybe because he’s an awful wrestler). He then tells Jimmy Shalwin that he won’t cheat tonight, but subsequently cheats.

Match 3
‘The Hype’ Jimmy Shalwin vs ‘The Most Hated Man In IWA History’ Z-Barr
If I remember correctly, the whole point of Z-Barr being on the roster is because he makes people go to the concession stand to buy stuff. That tell you how good this match was: not very good at all. Press the skip button on your DVD, there’s nothing to see here. One interesting note though: Jimmy Shalwin was apparently the person who told Jimmy Jacobs to wear the furry boots for his Huss gimmick. Jimmy Shalwin pinned Z-Barr with the Moonsault- 1/4*

Again, Joey Eastman does the ring announcing for his wrestler CJ Otis.

Match 4
7 Man Lightweight Rumble- CJ Otis w/Joey Eastman vs Jack Thriller vs Ricochet vs Zach McGuire vs Human Tornado vs Josh Abercrombie vs Billy Roc
This sort of match is always a lot of fun, and this was no different as this proved to be a great high flying bout. The entrants didn’t seem to know when to come out since the ring announcer wasn’t very thorough in his explanation, plus the match suffered from the usual indy spotfest syndrome of everyone getting eliminated within a minute of each other to take the match down to the final participants. Tornado was hugely over with the crowd, the most of anyone in the match. Once Abercrombie came in the match turned insane and got really good, although as I said earlier this was an indy spotfest plain and simple, although a damn good one. The eliminations were as follows-
Jack Thriller by Human Tornado
Zach McGuire by CJ Otis
Ricochet by Billy Roc
Billy Roc by CJ Otis (with an awesome Burning Hammer-Double Stomp combo alongside Human Tornado)
CJ Otis by Josh Abercrombie
Josh Abercrombie and Human Tornado were the final two, and had some great wrestling exchanges, before Josh Abercrombie won a title shot with the Taliban Backpack. That may have been a spotfest, but I loved it and it was done very well- ***1/2 (I know I shouldn’t rate it that high, but I loved it that much)

Before the next match, AJ Styles takes his turn to cut a promo, saying that he doesn’t care who Tiger Mask is and doesn’t care about the fans cheering or clapping him.

Match 5
AJ Styles vs Tiger Mask IV
I wonder why this was so low on the card, as I would have had this as the main event. A good match, but not an excellent, standout match that you would expect these two to have. It just seemed a bit too slow, and AJ seemed to calling in his performance rather than giving his 100% best. Not to mention Tiger Mask was not a spectacular opponent, and was sloppy in his offense at times. But there was some good mat wrestling and high flying at points in this match that helped make this match a decent contest overall. Tiger Mask rolled up AJ to get the three count- **1/2

Match 6
Joey Mercury vs Tyler Black
I always thought Joey was underrated when wrestling the indy’s the first time around, simply because he didn’t do hundreds of flips, but the indy scene has changed and people now appreciate him a lot more after his exploits in WWE. Tyler has also evolved as a performer considerably since I saw him last in the 2006 TPI. This was a good match, and Joey can go despite having some ring rust, and for me looked a few levels above Tyler in terms of ring skill (which is a big compliment considering how good Tyler is). A quick paced match, with lots of high flying, high impact offense, but also some very good matwork, and some close nearfalls towards the end. Unfortunately my DVD messed up and I missed the finish, but – ***1/4

Match 7
‘The Impact Bully’ Brandon Thomaselli vs Jigsaw
A good lightweight bout, although nothing spectacular. Jigsaw wrestled his usual fast paced, high flying lucha style, and was very much the underdog to Thomaselli who cheated at every turn and also used a slower, more power based style. Jigsaw at one point held Thomaselli back so that a fan could chop him. It could maybe have been shortened a little, since it could have been a more effective match for me that way, but besides that I have no real complaints since there were no botches of any kind, and the match flowed well. Brandon Thomaselli retained his title with a move I believe he called the McGuillicutter (it was an Implant DDT of some kind, I am probably wrong wit the name, so e-mail me so I can correct it). Good bout that I actually enjoyed more than Styles/Tiger Mask- ***1/4

Match 8
Chuck Taylor vs Devon Moore
I’ve only seen Moore compete once before, in PWU where he had a great match with Azrieal. Another good match, which was very fast paced, as Moore wrestles a high flying, spotty style while Taylor wrestles quick but uses more heelish tactics and uses everything he can to get the advantage and get the crowd booing him, as well as putting some submission holds to use. Moore is a good wrestler but he still needs some seasoning as he made a few botches here, but was a good opponent for Chuck. Despite some near falls, Taylor was able to retain the belt over Moore when he pinned him with the Omega Driver- **3/4

Match 9
Falls Count Anywhere- Axl Rotten vs Tank
As I stated in my previous IWA review, I am not a fan of this sort of match, so I feel I cant’ give a good account of it, so you’ll need to watch this if your a deathmatch fan to see what you think- no rating

Match 10
Hotstuff Hernandez vs Eddie Kingston
Great, hard hitting main event. Kingston looks to have lost a good deal of weight, he’s almost slim now. Both of these men threw hard forearms, chops, knees and just about everything else, hitting each other very hard and holding nothing back. Both men also used a variety of submissions and power moves, with Hernandez throwing Kingston around like he was a light-heavyweight. And that was much of the story of this match: Hernandez overpowering Kingston, while Kingston tried to fight back with hard hitting strikes and some power moves of his own. Hernandez and Kingston both came close to winning this near the end, but it was Hernandez who would win this in the end with the Border Toss. Best match of the show for me.- ***1/2

This was a very solid show overall. There were no MOTY candidates or excellent, outstanding, must see matches, but the show features 2 ***1/2 and 3 ***1/4 matches, with the rest of the undercard solid barring the Z-Barr match. So this is an easy recommendation.

WCW Nitro 3rd June 1996

John Tenta vs Big Bubba
This is as a result of Bubba shaving half of Tenta’s head last week. It wasn’t much of a match: Bubba got slammed by Tenta, then Bubba got counted out when he refused to get back in the ring because Tenta had scissors- n/a

High Voltage vs Faces Of Fear
According to Tony Schiavone, this is High Voltage’s first major WCW appearance. The Faces of Fear, other than a brief moment at the beginning of the match, completely destroyed High Voltage here, and they pulled off some impressive stuff I must admit. Meng won it with a Mafia Kick- SQ

Disco Inferno vs Craig Pittman
Not too good a match: the wrestling was sloppy and not very exciting, other than a brief moment of explosiveness from Pittman. Pittman had a Pounce like move, and went for the Code Red, but Disco gave up before he could even lock it in. Bizarre finish- 1/2*

Steven Regal vs Jim Duggan
At this point, Regal’s being built up for his next Television Title run. And he deserved another title reign, since his cowardly heel antics were pure gold here: some of the facial expression here were hysterical. So while it wasn’t that great from a workrate standpoint, it was pretty entertaining. Duggan got the 3 Point Stance, but the ref was distracted by Robert Eaton, then Regal rolled him up for three- *1/2

Kevin Sullivan vs Prince Iaukea
Iaukea was little more than a jobber here, with Sullivan making a statement with the beating he gave here, to show Chris Benoit what he would dish out to him in the future. Sullivan won it with the Double Stomp- SQ

Unfortunately, my copy of this show starts to have major sound issues at this stage, making most of the next match unwatchable. The sound came back after the commercial break mid match, so that’s where I pick this one up from.

Rock N’Roll Express vs Ric Flair and Arn Anderson
What I saw of this match was pretty good: it’s clear the Rock N’Roll Express were over the hill, but they were still capable of good matches. It was pretty much following the usual tag formula of the team: Morton got the hell beaten out of him, then made the hot tag for Gibson to clean house. Following interference from Woman, Gibson was pinned following an Anderson DDT. Really good stuff, although the crowd was pretty much dead.- *** for what I saw, possibly ***1/4 for the whole match

WCW World Title- The Giant (c) vs Ice Train
The outcome could easily be predicted before the match begun: Ice Train didn’t stand a chance. Ice Train was pinned in seconds following a Chokeslam, after a distraction from Jimmy Hart- n/r

Scott Norton came out to help his partner, then The Giant destroyed him as well. This lead to the next match-

Hugh Morris vs Scott Norton
Norton was still out from the Chokeslam, so Morris came in and toyed with him for a while. Morrus took way too long to put him away, giving Norton time to recover, who pinned him after catching Morrus in mid No Laughing Matter, slammed him and covered for three- 1/4*

Steiner Brothers vs Sting and Lex Lugar
This match is as a result of the problems these two teams had in the Sting/Scott Steiner match last week. This match had a problem that stopped it from being great: the first few minutes saw the focus on a call with Randy Savage, angle. But when the focus was on this match, it was pretty good stuff as you would expect, with a hot crowd and solid wrestling. The Giant interfered, hitting a sloppy Chokeslam on Rick and making Scott go over the top for a DQ- **1/2

And then Scott Hall walked out to rip on WCW some more again, and almost got into a fight with Sting, before promising a “big surprise” next week, i.e. Kevin Nash.

Not that great a show to be honest. The only match you really need to go out of your way to see is the Rock N’Roll Express tag match, and even then, it might not exist without the sound problems. The main event tag was solid, but the rest of the show was just throwaway matches and squashes. As a result, I can’t recommend this very highly.

5.75/10

WCW Nitro 27th May 1996

This is an infamous episode of Nitro for many reasons. Not only is this the first 2 hour Nitro, it’s also the beginning of the hottest angle in pro wrestling history: the NWO, with Scott Hall’s appearance.

Our commentators for the first hour are Tony Schiavone and Larry Zbyzko, while Eric Bischoff and Bobby Heenan commentate on the second hour.

Arn Anderson and Ric Flair vs American Males
This is, other than the Tag Title win, the biggest match the American Males had in WCW (before Bagwell broke out on his own). And it was a pretty good tag team match, with the American Males holding their own here. Riggs had his leg worked over for much of the match by Anderson and Flair, and the Males had brief fire filled fightbacks. Despite coming close, Flair got the pin on Riggs after an Anderson DDT. Very enjoyable match- ***

Mike Enos vs Steve Doll
A complete throwaway match: the big thing here was Scott Hall walked out to the ring to cut an infamous interview about the Monday Night War, which would lead to the NWO. And personally, that was better than the match ever would be. It was a no contest- n/r

Craig Pittman vs DDP
Pretty average stuff, since Pittman is an average worker and DDP couldn’t really carry him. It was kept short, and DDP dominated the majority of it. Pittman got the Code Red late on, but DDP grabbed Teddy Long, and that distracted Pittman long enough to allow DDP to get the Diamond Cutter for three- 3/4*

WCW World Title- The Giant (c) vs Shark
A battle of two very big men, it was not that great. A bit sluggish and dull, the only real highlight was The Giant slamming Shark with ease, with the rest basically just being a whole load of punches. The Giant won with the Chokeslam- 3/4*

Maxx vs Lex Lugar
Again, a very average, sluggish match, because Maxx is not a very good wrestler and Lugar didn’t have the skill to carry him. Maxx should have just been a jobber here, as the crowd didn’t react that much to him and were massively behind Lugar, but he had too much offense. Lugar would eventually get the win with a Torture Rack- 1/2*

Bobby Walker vs Brad Armstrong
These two had a good match on an episode of WCW Pro if I remember correctly, but they didn’t match it here. While the action was solid at times, there was a lot of botches and sloppiness from the rookie, so this hurt the match quite a bit. Plus the crowd were dead and barely reacted to anything. Walker pinned him with some kind of Flipping Senton off the top rope (he slipped in mid move so I wasn’t sure what it was)- *

Steven Regal vs Alex Wright
Some good European style action here, with back and forth mat wrestling, as well as some high risk moves from Wright. Regal’s methodical strategy seemed to work better for him here, with Wright spending much of the match on the mat in submission holds. Wright was only limited to brief offensive spurts and quick near falls. Regal got the fall with a bridging pin, countering a Monkey Flip- **1/2

Scott Steiner vs Sting
A battle of two future Main Event Mafia members. And it was a good match between two great wrestlers. Steiner overpowered Sting with a series of big, high impact moves, while Sting used his agility and speed to take down Steiner. Overall a great match that went back and forth and had plenty of good wrestling, plus a hot crowd. The match would be a no contest when Lex Lugar and Rick Steiner interfered- ***1/4

A mixed big here. On the one hand, there were two great matches, and a solid one, but on the other hand the rest of the show was very average. The two good matches could probably be seen on any other show, so I probably have to rate this a little lower as a result. Try to find the two good matches, and don’t go out of your way to see the rest.

6.75/10