2007
The Gwinnet Center
Atlanta, Georgia
October 14, 2006
-The show opened with the
James Earl Jones soundalike narrating an inspirational video package with the
usual grandious phrases about how all people can't achieve glory on one night,
but everyone has a chance to be one of those who do later. And so on.
-Mike Tenay and Don West introduced the event.
1 -- ELIX SKIPPER & SENSHI vs. LAX (Homicide & Hernandez) - Ultimate X Match
Winner earns a tag title shot. They fought at ringside in the opening minute.
Senshi hit Hernandez with some kicks, which Hernandez brushed off and then threw
Senshi across the ring. At 3:00 Homicide began working his way across the rope
above the ring to grab the "X" hanging above the ring, but Senshi chased him up
there and yanked him down. Hernandez beat on Skipper in a corner. Senshi made
the save, but again got knocked out of mid-air and out of the ring by Hernandez.
Senshi takes great bumps, but this is so not the way Senshi should be presented.
Homicide hit Senshi with a running dive through the ropes onto the floor. West
went berserk. Skipper began to climb toward the "X,"; but Hernandez quickly
yanked him down. Hernandez climbed up to the top turnbuckle for the first time,
then leaped toward the "X." Skipper went for a save, but was kicked. Hernandez
was right next to the "X," but didn't grab it as he waited for Skipper to
dropkick him from behind Senshi went for it. Hernandez yanked him down and
powerbombed him. Skipper and Homicide fought on the top of the rafter. Skipper
stood on top of it and dove down onto Hernandez below in a major spot. "Oh my
god, that was insane!" yelled West. Too bad he's been yelling all match so his
reaction didn't stand out from more ordinary moments in the match. He does get
genuinely excited, so it's not faked, but it's just too much because there's no
way to sell huge spots when he reacted at maximum level to anything the least
bit cool. Homicide and Skipper both climbed the same rope. Homicide dropped down
and took Skipper with him in neckbreaker position. That led to a "Holy sh--!"
chant from fans. Homicide set up Senshi for a Gringos Killer off the top rope.
Senshi blocked it, knocked Homicide into hanging upside down in the corner, and
then hit him with his Warrior's Way double foot stomp. Homicide hung from one
leg trapped on the top turnbuckle. A loud "TNA, TNA" chant broke out. Hernandez
then tossed Homicide with a Cracker Jack overhead toss. Hernandez then lifted
Skipper and Border Tossed him over the top rope onto Senshi and Homicide on the
floor at 10:00. Then he climbed over and grabbed the "X" for the win.
WINNERS: LAX in 11:00.
STAR RATING: *** -- Lots of big spots in the midst of nonstop action unlike
anything you see with WWE, which is where TNA's focus ought to be at this stage
of their existence as a distant no. 2. The crowd ate it up, too. It was so
oriented toward one big spot after another all squeezed into just over 10
minutes, so it wasn't a classic by any means, but for a spotfest gimmick match,
very much filled its slot on the card well.
-They showed Kurt Angle arriving and then Karen Angle arriving earlier, both
separately. Then they showed Kevin Nash arriving. West reminded viewers that
Nash had told Angle that he's on his own. Tenay and West then ran down the rest
of the line-up in a nicely used 90 seconds to set the stage for viewers who may
not have remembered, known, or been able to digest everything scheduled for the
rest of the three hour show.
-Crystal interviewed Christian Cage, Tyson Tomko, and A.J. Styles backstage.
Christian said the Fight for the Right match is full of wrestlers who want to
become like him, the type of person who when he walks into a room, a hush comes
over everyone because of his awesomeness. Christian said he should be in the
match so he can earn that title shot, but Samoa Joe has derailed him. Cristal
asked Styles about this being his "first chance to claim the title in his
hometown of Atlanta, Ga." Styles said he's very excited. As he made some
shout-outs, Tyson interrupted and said tonight the charade of Team Pacman comes
to an end. Tomko told Styles he better not let him down tonight. Styles said he
wouldn't. Then he tried to go back to some shout-outs as Tomko dragged him away.
2 -- FIGHT FOR THE RIGHT MATCH
Participants: Jimmy Rave, Lance Hoyt, Shark Boy, Petey Williams, Kaz, Alex
Shelley, Chris Sabin, Sonjay Dutt, Kip James, B.G. James, "Cowboy" James Storm,
"Showtime" Eric Young, Robert Roode, "Wildcat" Chris Harris, Junior Fatu. The
rules are: 16 wrestlers start outside the ring, the first eight in the ring then
fight a traditional battle royal, and then the final two match a "traditional
match" (which inevitably, for no logical reason, will almost assuredly last less
than three minutes. Fatu was the first in as everyone else fought at ringside.
Kaz suplexed Roode into the ring so they both qualified. Shelley leaped in next.
When Young tried to enter, Hoyt pressed him on the ring apron to throw him off,
but Young fell backward into the ring. It honestly was one of the dumbest sights
you'll ever see because there were clearly instances where a wrestler with no
opposition stood around waiting to fight someone rather than roll into the ring
easily to qualify. Storm leaped in to just beat his own partner Harris for the
final slot, although it, too, was ridiculous as Storm clearly waited to time it
so it was close "and dramatic" rather than just go in as quickly as possible
once he was unopposed. Really poor execution of an idea that in theory is clever
and different but has to be meticulously booked; it wasn't.
Young eliminated Storm immediately when the bell rang to start the eight man
battle royal. Just to add another ridiculous level of complication to it, Tenay
then explained that the eight who made it into the ring will be part of a
tournament on Impact where the first eliminated would face the last eliminated,
the second eliminated would face the seventh eliminated, and so on. So the
battle royal determined bracketing for a tournament, making it virtually
irrelevant and arbitrary since there's no sense that the worst wrestlers are
eliminated early in battle royals, as there's always a randomness to the events.
Fatu sat on the face of Hoyt in the corner. Rather than fight back as Fatu
paused for dramatic effect, Hoyt just made a face. It's like a bad pro wrestling
spoof movie made by people who hate pro wrestling. Kaz, Young , Roode, and Hoyt
teamed up to try to eliminate Fatu. Shelley and Sabin then double dropkicked him
over the top rope to eliminate him. Tenay said fan interaction at FanFest during
the weekend was "just incredible." For a moment, I thought Justin Credible made
a guest appearance. Kaz knocked Sabin off the ring apron with a jump front
thrust kick that looked really good. Roode one-arm slammed Kaz off the ring
apron to eliminate him; Kaz's landing made a huge thud sound and his reaction
indicated it hurt. Roode knocked Hoyt off the top rope as he set up a moonsault.
That left Shelley, Young, and Roode. Shelley was knocked off the apron when
Roode shoved Young into him.
It came down to Young vs. Roode in a singles match to battle over the no. 1 seed
position "and bragging rights," added Tenay, perhaps realizing the pointlessness
of the "prize" of being top seed. Tenay noted that Shelley will have to face
Sabin in the tournament because they were seeded three and six. Young won with a
small package two minutes in.
WINNER: Young in 12:00.
STAR RATING: 1/2* -- Just a bunch of moves and eliminations in an overly
complex, convoluted concept match.
-Cristal interviewed Ron Killings and Pacman Jones backstage. Killings said
certain football powers that be forced Pacman out of the match, so they'd found
a substitute - Consequences Creed. Pacman said he's all about "the streets" and
"how to be a champion."
-Karen and Kurt Angle were arguing behind the scenes. The camera found them
mid-argument. Karen said he's never been this unreasonable by putting their
family in jeopardy by making it personal. Kurt said he made it personal because
for the first time he's got Sting right where he wants him. He told Karen to get
out of his face.
3 -- RON "THE TRUTH" KILLINGS & RASHEED LUSCIOUS "CONSEQUENCES" CREED vs. A.J.
STYLES & TYSON TOMKO
Thanks to PWTorch reader Michael Tyler who sent the following info on Creed:
Consequences Creed is Austin Creed. "Awesome" Austin Creed uses an Apollo Creed
gimmick. His signature moves include the Monte Fisto and rolling clothesline a
la Konnan. He tags with Hayden Young as the Awesome Attraction and are the NWA
Anarchy Tag Team Champions. You can check out a few matches of his by going to
www.thesuperstation.net for NWA Anarchy.
Tenay explained that Styles & Tomko won their tag title shot because of last
month's PPV - one of those details that TNA viewers (including me) can't keep
track of because there's just so many stips thrown out there one after another,
without enough time to drive them home. West said because "professional
football" won't let Pacman wrestle, they've found a new member - skirting the
issue of whether TNA allows championship teams to just rotate partners. The team
name is 'Truth & Consequences," although they came out to a Team Pacman graphic.
West and Tenay said this is quite a wildcard thrown at Styles & Tomko since they
had no time to prepare for Creed. Creed is a black guy with a fro, American flag
patterned shorts, is shorter than Styles, and very muscular. He had a look that
was right out of the "Good Times" sitcom from the '70s or the Jackson Five. He
moved around the ring with nice athleticism that fit well with Killings's style.
When Tomko tagged in at 2:00, Creed quickly tagged in Killings. Styles and Creed
had some nice fast-paced exchanges. At 6:00 a four-way brawl broke out. Styles
got Northern Lights tossed into the corner. Tomko gave Creed a quick overhead
suplex. Pacman yanked down on the top rope, so Tomko fell to the floor. Tomko,
though, caught Creed when he dove at him. Killings flip dove over the top rope
onto Tomko at ringside. Styles then did a flip dive onto all three. Pacman stood
on the ring apron with a wad of money. Styles yanked it out of his hands.
Killings went for a roll-up, but rather than count, ref Earl Hebner gathered the
money and pocketed it. By the time he made the count, Styles kicked out. Tomko
and Styles gave Killings a double team corkscrew to the mat for the pin.
WINNER: Styles & Tomko to capture the TNA Tag Team Titles in 9:00.
STAR RATING: ** -- Decent action, silly finish with the ref grasping for money.
One of those silly comedy spots best kept to a separate environment than a tag
title situation because there isn't likely to be ramifications, but if the belts
are to be taken seriously within the world TNA creates, that must result in an
announced fine or suspension for the ref.
-Borash asked Karen backstage if she realizes how much money goes along with
that World Title. She said she knows. Karen then noticed Kevin spending time
with a blond woman. She told the woman to scram. She told Kevin that he has to
talk to Kurt because Sting is going to kill him. Nash said Angle is more
stubborn than Scott Hall, so he's not going to waste his time. Karen said if he
loses the title, they both lose their meal ticket. "You don't think I know how
much he pays you for his bogus sessions? What are you going to do, wrestle
again? You take one more blow to your knees, you'll be in a wheel chair." Nash
said, "I'm not gonna wrestle. I don't know what you're smoking if you think
that. But I will go and talk one more time to Kurt." He then sarcastically
thanked her for being a buzzkill on his making a move on the blond lady.
4 -- "BLACK MACHISMO" JAY LETHAL vs. CHRISTOPHER DANIELS - X Division Title
match
They just couldn't get themselves to save this for the semi-final spot or at
least the second half of the show to gives some sense of prestige to this title
so it could at least feel like a Smackdown-Raw relationship between these two
titles rather than an ECW-Raw relationship. Tenay noted before the match that
Daniels beat Lethal in a non-title TV match just days after beating Angle for
the belt. At least that match ended up meaning something in the big picture,
leading to a title match for Daniels. It was still too early to justify Lethal
losing even with this storyline. West said he thinks Karen is sincere in her
feelings because she is a mother and knows that her husband went too far messing
with Sting's son. Machismo let out an "Ohhh yeahhh!" before the match. The
announcers still provide no insight into Machismo and whether he's doing a
tribute to Randy Savage, thinks he's Randy Savage, or if it started as a spoof
and now he's bought into it seriously, or what his deal is. Viewers are
certainly wondering and would like a little deeper insight into what makes him
tick after all of these months. After some opening back and forth rapid action,
Daniels took control. At 8:00 Daniels hit a BME for a near fall, reacting with
frustration after the kickout. Lethal hit a full nelson suplex to stun Daniels.
Both lay on the mat as the crowd chanted "TNA, TNA." Lethal blocked a subsequent
huracanrana attempt off the top rope, then went for his signature top rope
elbow. Daniels moved and Lethal landed hard. Daniels made the cover, but Lethal
kicked out just before three. Lethal hit his Lethal Combination (back-breaker
into a face-plant) off the top rope for a clean win.
WINNER: Lethal in 10:00 to retain the X Division Title.
STAR RATING: ***1/4 -- Good match. They told a nice story within the ten minutes
they were given, but it felt rushed and crammed into not enough time. They could
have used four extra minutes minimum to slow things down a little.
-Cristal interviewed Scott & Rick Steiner backstage. Scott talked about it being
a tables match against Team 3D, which translates into nobody had the guts in TNA
to force anyone of the four to actually take a pin.
5 -- SCOTT & RICK STEINER vs. TEAM 3D - Two out of Three Tables Match
They brawled in the aisleway before getting to the ring. Scott threw some beer
in the face of Ray. Rick made it to the ring with Devon first. They did the ol'
stand-up brawl through the crowd, which helped them avoid having to be athletic
or take bumps. At 6:00 they returned to the ring and Team 3D put Rick through a
table to take a lead. Scott made a comeback against Brother Ray, who sat on the
top rope making a cartoon fear-face as Steiner took his time walking over to
him, then gave him his signature Frankensteiner off the top rope to send Ray
through a table. Ray almost overshot it, but his head and shoulders made enough
impact to break it at 9:00. Brother Ray whipped the Steiners with his spiked
belt. Team 3D set Scott on another table at 12:00. The table collapsed as soon
as Scott was set on it. It made the tables looked pre-broken, which tends to
ruin the intended effect because it brings into question the authenticity of the
other tables, even though in reality there's no benefit to gimmicking the tables
to break easily. They set Scott on a new table, grabbed chairs, shoved ref Rudy
Charles aside, and then set up a finish when Shelley & Sabin ran to ringside and
distracted them. Scott got up. Devon swung a chair at Scott, but Scott ducked
and Devon hit Ray's chair which sorta hit Ray. Scott then lifted Devon onto his
shoulder and Rick bulldogged him through it for the win.
WINNERS: Steiners in 13:00.
STAR RATING: *1/2 -- Gave fans what they had any right to expect. Satisfactory.
-Borash interviewed some of the TNA Knockouts backstage, but when Awesome Kong
walked in, they all fled the scene.
6 -- TNA KNOCKOUTS BATTLE ROYAL for the TNA Knockout Title
Ms. Brooks and Jackie Moore began the match. Shelley Martinez entered third.
Next was Awesome Kong followed by ODB. Kong eliminated Shelly, Brooks, and
Moore. That left ODB vs. Kong. Angel Williams entered next. She hit Kong with an
enzuigiri. ODB and Angel double-teamed her. Christy Hemme was out next and she
instantly got destroyed by Kong with a contorting inverted body vice type move,
then a powerbomb. Gail Kim ran out next and hit Kong with a dropkick off the top
rope. Tenay said he liked seeing her take the fight right to Kong. Medics came
to ringside to check on Hemme. "She broke her back, let's face it!" said West,
diagnosing things from the announce table. Everyone teamed up to eliminated
Kong, who went briefly entirely topless in the process when her outfit snapped
open. A DVR freeze-frame revealed full double nipple exposure for several
frames. She has two. Expect screen captures of that online right about now. West
giggled a little but didn't openly acknowledge it. Talia Madison was out next.
Angel Williams was eliminated next. ODB and Kim exchanged chops mid-ring. Roxxi
Laveaux was the final entrant. It came down to Roxxi vs. Gail in a standard
singles match, which will for no good reason as always last less than two or
three minutes. Kim missed a top rope dropkick leading to a near fall for Roxxi.
Kim fired right back with her finisher for the win.
WINNER: Gail Kim in 13:00 to capture the TNA Women's Title.
STAR RATING: *1/4
-Nash met with Angle backstage. He offered to schmooze Sting a little and say
that he apologizes for losing his son and hitting his son. "Hopefully he accepts
your apology and you two can go out there and have a nice, competitive match,"
he said. Angle said he's sharper than ever. He said Nash has lost his edge.
Angle said if anyone needs to apologize, it's Sting for slapping his wife. Nash
said it's been proven Sting didn't slap his wife. Angle said he's delusional.
Nash said he won't be there for him because he's caused Sting to snap. Angle
laughed and asked if he can even get in the ring. "When you get up, I hear your
knees creek," said Angle. He told Nash to go buy a ticket and sit front row
"with all of the other idiot fans." Nash yelled, "If you lose this title match,
I lose everything." Angle told him he's already lost everything. He closed with,
"Excuse me while I go take a great big nasty Nash." Nash threw a chair.
7 -- SAMOA JOE vs. CHRISTIAN CAGE - with Matt Morgan as special enforcer at
ringside
Joe and Morgan crossed paths and had a brief staredown as Joe walked to the
ring. The crowd had a battle of chants - "Instant Classic!" and "Let's Go Joe!"
They exchanged some chops and slaps a minute in. Joe charged Christian with a
knee in the corner, then put his boot across his face for a face wash with
several swipes. He followed up with a running low dropkick to Christian as he
hung upside down in the corner. Joe set up a suplex on the ring apron, but
Christian escaped with an eye rake, then kicked him using the middle rope as a
fulcrum, and followed up with a dive off the ropes. Joe moved and Christian hit
the railing. Joe followed with a suicide dive elbow to the floor. Really nice
start to the match. Joe gave Christian the "Ole Ole" running boot to the face at
ringside. Christian countered seconds later with a DDT out of nowhere onto the
mat at 4:00. West did a nice job explaining how Joe let his guard down to catch
his breath and Christian, a smart veteran, used that moment to muster all the
energy he could to counter Joe's momentum - and it worked. If West stopped
yelling and presented that kind of analysis that adds a sports-like feel and
draws you into the strategy and logical progress of a match, he'd be better off.
Joe kicked Christian out of the ring. Christian backed into Morgan at ringside
to stop him from retreating. Joe dove at Christian, but barely caught him and
landed hard on the mat. Joe caught his breath, threw Christian into the ring,
and went at him with clotheslines as the crowd chanted "This is awesome!"
Christian went for a desperation dive, but Joe moved and then pointed to his
head. Then he hit Christian with a Stan Hansen-style hard, charging lariat with
a nice yell for extra effect. He followed by setting up a Muscle Buster, then
applied a sleeper. Christian slipped out and tried for an Unprettier, but Joe
easily shoved him off and powerbombed him into the top turnbuckle, followed by a
big boot and a senton splash for a two count. When Joe mounted the second rope,
Christian knocked him down and went for a pin with his feet on the rope for
leverage. Joe went for his clutch, but Christian slipped out and stomped Joe.
Joe kicked back from the ground and then nailed a snap powerslam for another two
count at 10:00. They battled on the second rope and shoved each other off;
Christian fell to the floor and Joe fell to the mat. Tomko walked to the ring.
Morgan ordered him to the back. Punches were exchanged. Styles slipped past them
both, but as Styles tried to spring into the ring, Morgan yanked him down and
threw him into Tomko's arms. Morgan chased them to the back with a chair.
Christian then kicked Joe between the legs and gave Joe an Unprettier. Joe
kicked out. Christian applied a sleeper. Joe powered out and applied his rear
naked choke. Christian tapped.
WINNER: Joe in 14:00.
STAR RATING: ***3/4 - Very, very good match, something if TNA tried to put
together multiple times on each PPV and once in a while in a showcase
environment on TV could really help set them apart from WWE and in general
attract fans to pay for their product. One with a lot of Joe's signature spots
and mannerisms. Both guys are their best. Would have loved another five minutes
to play out a little more because it seemed like it was building still when they
went to the obligatory distraction at ringside before the finish. This was my
main reason for recommending the show and it delivered.
-Nash approached Sting backstage. He said Kurt is stubborn and what he did was
wrong, but it's gone too far. Sting yelled, "It went too far when he put his
hands on my son." Sting said it's not about wrestling, it's about respect,
something Kurt knows nothing about. Nash asked about turning the other cheek.
Sting asked what was up about Nash anyway. Nash said, "He's all I got." He said
this is the closest he's ever gonna get to the main event again. Sting said,
"I'm really sorry, but tonight, game over." I'm not sure about this angle where
they portray Nash as this sad figure who wants to start for the high school
football team but can't because of bad knees so he's just hanging around. But it
depends on where it's going.
8 -- ABYSS vs. RHINO vs. RAVEN vs. BLACK REIGN - Monster's Ball Match
Lots of weapons and objects used in a brawl. Reign followed Raven up the
rafters. Raven told Reign to jump from the balcony, but Reign hesitated, so
Raven leaped off the apron onto Abyss who was stacked on several tables at 5:00.
At 8:00 back in the ring Raven poured thumb tacks on the mat mid-ring. James
Mitchell ran out and offered Raven a bag of broken glass to also use. Raven
accepted. Abyss reversed things and gave Raven a Black Hole Slam on the glass
and tacks for the win. Mitchell threw a fit on the stage as he looked on.
WINNER: Abyss in 9:00.
STAR RATING: *1/2 -- It was what it was and what you'd expect in this type of
match.
9 -- KURT ANGLE vs. STING - TNA World Hvt. Title match
They started the "I want to kill you" match with a collar and elbow hookup and a
clean break by Sting against the turnbuckles. Angle then went to a wristlock a
minute into an "I want to kill you" match. That's the problem with including
"kill" into match hype - you can only wrestle one kind of match consistent with
that. What they're wrestling is the type of match they should have if they had
hyped this the way I'd have preferred and think would have drawn the most money,
which was two legends and icons testing each other, with the TNA Title and
career pride and legacy as the focus. A few backstory tweaks could have added
subplots, but nothing that would prevent this type of match from making sense.
Angle bailed out at ringside at 2:00. When he returned, Sting clotheslined him
to the floor and then followed him out, slamming him head-first into the
announce table. Angle spent the next few minutes in control with matwork. At
10:00 Sting came back with a spinebuster for a two count. When Angle lifted
Sting for an Olympic Slam a minute later, Sting rolled it into a pin attempt for
a near fall. Angle then went for his unreleased suplex series and hit three of
them leading to a two count at 11:00. Angle went for an anklelock, but Sting
countered right into a Scorpion Deathlock. Karen Angle ran to ringside just as
Kurt teased tapping. The ref and Sting both turned to her. Nash entered the ring
and clotheslined Sting, then rolled back out of the ring. Security escorted
Karen to the back as Angle hit an Olympic Slam. The ref was still occupied with
Karen, so Angle turned to yell at the ref. Finally the ref ran back to the ring
and Angle made the cover, but Sting had time to recover and kicked out at 14:00.
Angle went for a belly-to-belly off the second rope, but Sting knocked him down
and went for a splash. Angle lifted his knees and then scored a near fall on
Sting. Angle powerslammed Sting, then went to the top rope for an unsteady
moonsault attempt. He flipped in mid-air and actually landed on Sting with a
double stomp. Sting kicked out as Nash cheered him on at ringside. Ankle applied
an anklelock in mid-ring. Sting spit at Nash, powered out, and flipped Nash
right into Nash at ringside. Angle went to clothesline Angle, but hit the ref by
mistake. Sting then gave Angle the Death Drop. Sting saw the ref was down, so he
called for a replacement ref. A second ref ran out, but as he counted, Nash
yanked him out of the ring and punched him. Nash then entered the ring and
attacked Sting with a series of elbows and knees in the corner, his signature
offensive series. They doubled on Sting, but Sting ducked and knocked both Angle
and Nash down with a double arm clothesline. He knocked Nash out of the ring,
but when he turned, Angle gave him a low-blow. Angle then grabbed Sting's black
bat and swung it at Sting. Sting was supposed to stop it, but it went right
through his hands and hit Sting in the face. Sting no-sold it anyway, and hit
Angle with it several times. Nash tried to come in, but got caught on the top
rope. Sting nailed him with a bat to the face. Angle got to his feet, but was
uneasy. Sting gave him a Scorpion Death Drop for the pin.
WINNER: Sting in 18:00 to capture the TNA World Hvt. Title.
STAR RATING: ***1/4: Good match up until the crazy, zany bag-o-tricks overdose
that two wrestlers the caliber and stature of Sting and Angle don't need to have
a satisfying big-show main event. Still, a good main event that delivered enough
to add to, not take away, from the show, including a major title change.
REPLAY RECOMMENDATION: Yes, a good show. Far from perfect, but enough really
good action to be worth it for TNA fans who were on the fringe.