June 24, 2008 – Houston, Texas
Vince McMahon got blown up again on Raw. The dude loves blowing himself up. But Teddy Long wants the show to go on so he starts the show by introducing Matt Hardy, the WWE United States Champion and ECW’s newest draftee.
Matt Hardy & CM Punk def. John Morrison & The Miz
Punk had been drafted to Raw… but he’s on this show because the brand split didn’t mean anything since like 2002. ECW Champion Kane had also been drafted, telegraphic his loss at the PPV this Sunday. This was a solid enough tag team match. Hardy & Punk made for a fun team, but again I don’t understand what Punk is even still doing on ECW. Hornswoggle distracted the Miz down the stretch, keeping him from stopping Hardy from hitting the Twist of Fate at 8:14 (shown) and getting the win. Shouldn’t Hardy & Punk have been added to the tag title match at the PPV thanks to this win? **¾
Kofi Kingston def. Shelton Benjamin {Extreme Rules Match}
Both guys had been drafted to other brands, so this was just to wrap up their issue on this show. At least I can appreciate that there’s a reason for these two non-ECW wrestlers to be on this episode. This took a while to take off since neither guy was particularly adept at this kind of brawl. As such it just like two dudes mindlessly hitting each other with trash cans and lids. The last couple of minutes were good though, as Kingston got his act together and used the plunder that Benjamin had set up against him and then hit the Trouble in Paradise for the win at 8:17. **¾
Mike Knox def. Evan Bourne
Wow, Bourne got rolled here. If they weren’t planning on pushing Knox significantly after this then it was a hell of a waste of Bourne’s momentum. Knox hit that roll of the dice type thing at 3:43 for the win. *½
Mark Henry def. Kane
Big Show sat in on commentary during this match, which started with fewer than five minutes left in the broadcast. This match was pretty irritating, as Kane was dominating with good energy, but then he looked at Show on commentary and got caught with Henry’s World’s Strongest Slam at 3:26. They used Henry’s win here to sneak him into the title match at the PPV. *¾
Three matches on Night of Champions 2008 featured all ECW wrestlers, even though two were for titles that weren’t exclusive to ECW. But roster affiliation has more or less been my rules when taking on PPV matches, so here’s all three. They happen to be the first three matches on the show.
June 29, 2008 – Dallas, Texas
John Morrison & The Miz def. Finlay & Hornswoggle {WWE Tag Team Championship Match}
It’s odd, even though all four of these guys are ECW wrestlers, because the tag titles are more associated with Smackdown we’ve got Jim Ross and Mick Foley on commentary and a Smackdown referee. The crowd was super hot for this, and I can’t think of a time I’ve seen Hornswoggle better utilized. The few times he got in offense (almost always on Miz) the crowd ate it up. But it never lasted long and as soon as the champs were done messing around with him, Morrison threw him off the top rope for the win at 8:48. This was about 1,000 times better than anyone could have expected it to be. ***¼
Matt Hardy def. Chavo Guerrero {WWE United States Championship Match}
I can’t track how commentary and referees were chosen, as we now have an ECW referee but the Smackdown announce team is still on the job. Foley devalues the ECW Championship by saying it’s on the level of this midcard title. Anyway, this was a Chavo Guerrero match, so, you know, it was boring. A super hot crowd and great selling from Hardy helped a bit, but you can’t make Chavo be not-Chavo. Hardy won in 9:21 with the Twist of Fate out of nowhere. **½
Mark Henry def. Kane and the Big Show {ECW Championship Triple Threat Match}
Weirdly enough, this match had fewer ECW wrestlers in it than the previous two, so Henry winning was sort of a given. Tazz and Mike Adamle take over on commentary, and I just can’t understand why Ross and Foley spoke over the last match. They built the ECW announce table and had their commentators on the show, so why not have them handle more matches? If it’s just because Adamle was terrible, I actually understand. “Kane is still out here in front of our broadcast thing,” said Adamle, almost to my disbelief. Hearing him defend his decision to call it a thing and not a table when Tazz calls him on it is especially jarring. This guy was about to get a microphone every week on Raw. Anyway, the match was trash. I went into it with high hopes because Kane had been performing well in recent weeks on TV, but holy crap this was so bad. It was awkward as hell, utilized the laziest of triple threat match tropes, and had a crummy finish as Henry popped in out of nowhere to splash Kane for the win and the title at 8:19 after Kane had tossed Show off the turnbuckle. Blah. ¾*