Goldberg is champ, so WCW should surely be turning things around, right? Well, wrong. Pretty much starting the week after Hollywood Hogan won the top title and Goldberg won the U.S. title, WCW started losing their grasp on the ratings war with WWF and never recovered. So I’m starting this chunk with Kevin Nash’s title win at Starrcade, because he has the honor of being the first person crowned champion during WWF’s ratings win streak to the finish.
December 27, 1998 – Washington, D.C.
Kevin Nash def. Goldberg {WCW World Heavyweight Championship No Disqualification Match}
From the 16th Starrcade. The pacing of this was so odd. Five minutes in, Goldberg hit the spear but Nash responded with a low blow and the match basically reset. This was so slow, but that’s what I expected coming into this particular matchup. After a few more minutes, the interference started. Scott Hall, dressed as security, hit Goldberg with a stun gun. From there Nash hit the Jackknife Powerbomb and won the title at 11:20. I’m sure there was some angle around Hall being a surprise or something, but since there was so much other interference it sure seemed dumb that hedress in disguise to attack Goldberg. The crowd is just silent the moment the match ends, and that about sums up the enthusiasm people had for WCW after this. For as bad a decision as this was, WCW absolutely could have built an interesting feud coming out of it. Instead they let Goldberg flounder in meaningless feuds with Hall and Bam Bam Bigelow. His career didn’t recover until he popped up in WWE a few years later, and even then he wasn’t really over anymore. The guy is honestly lucky he’s been able to make so much bank out of such a nonsense career post-streak. *
January 4, 1999 – Atlanta, Georgia
Hollywood Hogan def. Kevin Nash {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Monday Nitro 173. I guess Hogan wanted the Atlanta fans who saw him lose to see him win the title back, even if it was during this weird bit of nonsense. You know how this goes, they pace a bit and then Hogan pokes Nash’s chest and the champ takes a dive at 1:41. Goldberg tries to attack after the match and gets killed. Sucks to be a babyface in late millenia WCW. The nWo reuniting was supposed to be a big deal, but the ratings sure didn’t reflect that (or anything ever for the rest of WCW’s lame duck run). N/A
March 14, 1999 – Louisville, Kentucky
Ric Flair def. Hollywood Hogan {WCW World Heavyweight Championship First Blood Barbed Wire Steel Cage Match}
From the fifth Uncensored. Flair became president of WCW by winning and would have had to retire if he’d lost. At 50 and 46 years old respectively, Flair and Hogan were considered way over the hill at this point. That fact was a major slight levied against WCW at the time, but both guys continued winning titles for years after this. But if you need any proof that AEW is WCW’s successor, look no further than 50-years-old-and-no-sign-of-ever-retiring Chris Jericho on top. I thought this might be at least decent, as their PPV match five years earlier was great. But with the character dynamic flipped the match didn’t work. Flair bleeds like five minutes into this thing, and while there was lip service paid to not calling this match for a scratch, Flair’s whole face is bloody and the match rolls on. Why would you make this a First Blood match when there’s so much that can cut you around? The commentators can’t square it and it’s pretty hilarious the way they crap on it for a moment. Hogan tries to pin Flair and then freaks out that the referee won’t count and won’t call the match over. Flair hits Hogan with a hidden foreign object (there are no disqualifications so why are you hiding weapons!) and Hogan bleeds. The match still doesn’t end so at least they’re being consistent. But the crowd has no idea what to make of any of it. Now the referee starts counting sometimes. Is it too much to ask for a match to simply make sense? Or have a clear way of ending? Or even a convoluted way of ending? This match had no way of ending. Arn Anderson came out, attacked David Flair, and gave Ric a tire iron. Then Ric put on the Figure 4 Leglock and the referee counted Hogan’s shoulders down at 14:19. You can say until the cows come home that Flair buying off the referee explains this, and I’ll tell you to shut up because this could not have been executed worse. ¼*
April 11, 1999 – Tacoma, Washington
Diamond Dallas Page def. Ric Flair, Sting, and Hollywood Hogan {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Four Corners Match}
From the fourth Spring Stampede. This was the first time (if you don’t count World War 3) that the WCW title changed hands in a match with more than two wrestlers. Goldberg was dead in the water at this point, so they decided to give it a try with DDP here. Michael Buffer is finally gone as ring announcer. That guy made me so uncomfortable. Randy Savage was guest referee but did so in his new BDSM-meets-Night at the Roxbury-meets-the Jersey Shore ring gear with his hair tied back. Bobby Heenan’s, “He’s never looked better,” Gorgeous George line is pretty damned hilarious. It’s also funny that the only valet at ringside is there for the referee, and that the referee keeps his sunglasses on the entire time. After all of the garbage I’ve just suffered through, the fact that this match is so good feels like it happened by accident. But these guys went out there and just had a match full of non-stop, manic action. Flair and DDP worked over Hogan’s knee to the point that he was carried out by trainers early on. There are rumors that this was a real injury, but whether that’s true or not they did a good job of keeping things interesting with him gone. The crowd went insane for Sting’s terrific comebacks. Where has this guy been for the last two years?! But it’s WCW and they couldn’t help themselves, as Savage hit a diving elbowdrop on Flair to stop him from beating Sting with the Figure 4 Leglock, confusing everyone. If the commentators had just said that this was his tough guy way to break the hold after Sting got to the ropes it might have seemed cute, but as it is it’s just nonsense. DDP won moments later with the Diamond Cutter at 17:27, becoming champ for the first time at the age of 43. WCW just hated young people. I really liked this match, weird finish aside. ***½
April 26, 1999 – Fargo, North Dakota
Sting def. Diamond Dallas Page {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Monday Nitro 189. I had high hopes for this given Sting’s performance at Spring Stampede. High hopes in WCW was really just an expectation that it wouldn’t be terrible. These two made the whole match seem urgent, something that none of the other guy’s in the main event scene had done in years. The crowd stayed hot for this, though regardless I think it was about five minutes too long. Imagine my only complaint about a WCW main event is that it overstayed its welcome a little bit. Sting won the title at 19:57 after blocking the Diamond Cutter and hitting the Scorpion Death Drop. Sick finish on top of everything. We’re on a roll! But I dare not hope it continues. ***¾
Diamond Dallas Page def. Sting, Kevin Nash and Goldberg {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Four Corners Match}
Later in the night, WCW President Ric Flair booked this match from an insane asylum he was being treated in. The match was joined in progress because of a commercial break with under ten minutes left in the broadcast. This wasn’t boring, but it felt like a bunch of stuff was happening without any reason or rhyme to it. I appreciate that it wasn’t terrible and that it was relatively short, but the bar being this low doesn’t mean you should go out of your way to watch this. Savage interfered, giving DDP a foreign object and helping him pin Nash at 7:47 (shown). **¼
May 9, 1999 – St. Louis, Missouri
Kevin Nash def. Diamond Dallas Page {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the seventh Slamboree. Nick Patrick looks like a ‘70s porn star here, and DDP at times looked like a Ralph Bakshi cartoon. This was just way too long for these two. After fifteen minutes of not-a-whole-lot, Savage interfered and attacked Nash, getting Page disqualified. Eric Bischoff restarted the match, and a few more minutes of not-a-whole-lot later Nash hit the powerbomb for the win at 18:23. Nope, not good. *½
July 11, 1999 – Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Randy Savage & Sid Vicious def. Kevin Nash & Sting {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Tag Team Match}
From the sixth Bash at the Beach. Creepy Michael Buffer is back, and says that whoever gets the pin gets the title. He also says that this is the first time a world title has ever been defended in a tag team match. I don’t know if that’s true or not but I know you shouldn’t brag about that, and the fact that WWF started doing the stipulation the following year really bothers me. Sid and Savage are literally my two favorite wrestlers of all time so I’m going to like this even if it’s awful. This was in the middle of the hummer angle, so I actually expect it to be awful. And indeed, nothing happens in this match. Nothing at all. Tony Schiavone sums up the match perfectly half way through when he says it’s been a basic match that has seen nobody try to win. Then, Sting beats up Savage’s ladies because what a hero, and the actually heroic Sid chokeslams him to stop the abuse. The finish sees George, who had faked turning babyface because of a black eye given to her by Savage, turning on Nash (she missed two low blows, one by a mile and a second hit Nash’s butt instead of balls) and letting Savage hit the diving elbowdrop for the win at 13:20. Terrible match, but so great to see two of the greatest team on PPV the only time it ever happened. ¾*
July 12, 1999 – Jacksonville, Florida
Hollywood Hogan def. Randy Savage {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Monday Nitro 199. Hogan returns from injury and gives Savage another one-day title reign. Savage’s WCW run was the weirdest thing ever. Hogan beats up the girls just like Sting did the night before. In both cases it was cartoony and not violent, but hearing Bischoff cheer it on while on commentary in his “I’m not a regular dad, I’m a cool dad” voice is gross. Nobody ever said this was a no disqualification match but both guys use Hogan’s belt as a weapon liberally. Monotonously too, for a very long time. Sid interferes and there’s no disqualification, and that’s when Bischoff pretends that it was no DQ all along. Sting and Nash save Hogan and the Jackknife Powerbomb leaves Savage open for Hogan to win at 14:14. Typical dumb WCW trash. It’s amazing how amateurish this whole operation looked despite having all these wrestling legends. Nash asked for a match for the title without a fix, but he didn’t end up winning it so I don’t have to watch it thank god. *
September 12, 1999 – Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Sting def. Hulk Hogan {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the seventh Fall Brawl. Michael Buffer’s shirt looks like a Saudi human rights violation. Everyone is a babyface here (Hogan is back to McDonald’s colors), which could be a dynamic for a better structured match. Fingers crossed. Uncross your fingers, this was bad. It’s astonishing that this was a PPV main event. The crowd didn’t care (big parts of the lower bowl were filled with empty seats), because Hogan controlled with chokes and shots to the back. Did these two ever have a good match? Probably not. After all that nothing, DDP interfered but was attacked by Bret Hart. Sid tried to interfere but got clowned. Same for Lex Luger. Sting leveled Hogan with a bat, turned heel I guess, and won the title at 15:21 with the Scorpion Deathlock. ¾*
This chunk of history was a mixed bag, but at least it wasn’t the unmitigated disaster that the pre-Goldberg nWo days were for the title. It did fall back on the stale ‘80s wrestlers, just like it did when they decided to finally push Goldberg to the top the first time. And the ratings were plummeting, falling below a 4.0 on a regular basis and even breaking through the 3.0 floor as WWF’s were rising. So in their desperation, WCW turned to a man they didn’t fully understand. And indeed, he wasn’t interested in anything logical. And indeed, WCW burned. Come back for the next part, if you dare.