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Epic Fail and Great Moment in Wrestling-Survivor Series
By Mike "Mr. Old School" Rickard
It's not very often that a Great
Moment in Wrestling can also be an Epic Fail but that's what happened when the
two biggest wrestling companies decided to go head to head on Thanksgiving
night.
The result was the beginning of
the end for one promotion and the debut of one of the longest running PPV's in
WWE history.
Join me as I look back at
the debut of the
Survivor Series.
Thanksgiving has always
been an important day in professional wrestling.
In 1987, it would become important for
another reason-the location of an all-out battle between rival promotions the
World Wrestling Federation (WWF) and Jim Crockett Promotions (JCP).
In the end, one promoter would be very
thankful while another was thankful to still be in business.
For years, Thanksgiving
was one of the most important days (if not the most important) for Jim Crockett
Promotions.
Even before the promotion
launched its
Starcade show (The
grand-daddy of them all), Thanksgiving held a special place for the promotion
and its fans.
Thanksgiving was the day
in which many feuds were settled and new programs developed as the fans relaxed
from a big Thanksgiving dinner and watched some top-rate wrestling action.
Starcade
only magnified this, giving fans from all around the Mid-Atlantic area a chance
to see the big show that before then, was often sold out.
This of course, made Thanksgiving the
biggest night of the year for JCP.
It
was the promotion's
Superbowl or in
wrestling terms, its
Wrestlemania.
And speaking of
Wrestlemania, 1987 was an amazing year
for the WWF.
Wrestlemania III was a monster success for the WWF (thanks to its
epic Hulk Hogan vs. Andre the Giant main event) as well as for the PPV companies
which beamed the show into homes around the world.
Seeing the success of
Wrestlemania III, Vince McMahon decided to embark on a second PPV
that year.
After all, if one PPV was
successful, imagine how good things would be with two.
Some people were skeptical.
After all, could the market sustain TWO
pay-per-views in one year (McMahon had run two PPV's in 1985 but failed to do
so in 1986)?
As laughable as it may seem
now, there was serious concern about flooding the market with two PPV's over
the course of twelve months.
Even more
serious was the notion of running a show directly against their competitor
JCP.
Could the market sustain TWO
pay-per-views on the same night (Thanksgiving)?
The wrestling world was
all abuzz about the prospect of the WWF competing directly against JCP.
For several years, the WWF and JCP had bumped
heads as both companies grew from regional to national promotions.
By 1987 the WWF had the upper hand but JCP
remained a respectable second place to the WWF and they were by no means
finished.
While the WWF had Hulkamania
powering its ship, JCP relied on traditional wrestling that appealed to many of
the old school fans turned off by the sometimes cartoonish antics of the
WWF.
Stars like Ric Flair, Lex Luger,
Dusty Rhodes, and the Road Warriors made JCP a thriving promotion of its
own.
Now, wrestling fans would be able
to truly voice their opinion on who was the better company.
It's even been said that JCP welcomed the
chance to compete against the WWF as they felt their superior wrestling product
would triumph over the glitz and glamour of the WWF.
If Vince McMahon had his way though, there would be no head to head battle. Using the leverage of the super-successful Wrestlemania III, McMahon made it known to cable companies that they now had another big WWF product to make loads of money off of. The only catch was that they had to carry this new show exclusively, especially if they wanted to get Wrestlemania IV. In a gesture reflecting his abundant goodwill, McMahon made it clear to the cable providers that there was no need to carry that second-rate Starcade any more since the big boys i.e. the WWF were running a Thanksgiving show. If that didn't get the cable companies thinking his way, he told them that they had to carry this new show exclusively, especially if they wanted to get Wrestlemania IV.
For those wondering
about the legalities of what the WWF pulled, this was something that definitely
could have been challenged in court.
The
problem was that by the time the case got to court, it would have been too
little too late.
JCP might have been able to get some sort of
injunctive relief against the WWF and/or cable companies involved but they
risked alienating the cable companies in the future.
In the end, the majority of the cable
companies went with the WWF, shutting JCP out of the picture.
The result was that,
Starcade had very few clearances while the WWF's new show
Survivor
Series had many.
To no one's
surprise,
Survivor Series crushed
Starcade, if for no other reason,
because it was most fans' only choice if they wanted wrestling for their post-turkey
dinner relaxation (Conventional wisdom has it that the WWF show was actually a
better show wrestling-wise than
Starcade
but you be the judge).
Survivor
Series'
success continued the WWF's good fortunes, proving
that the company could run more than one PPV a year.
It also sealed JCP's doom as the company
banked on
Starcade to make a lot of
money (which was certainly reasonable on their part as the show had always done
so before).
Without the revenue
traditionally generated by
Starcade,
JCP ran into cash flow companies and its owners were forced to sell the company
to Ted Turner just a year later.
As we all know, the
Survivor Series has gone on to become
one of the WWE's "Big Four" PPV's. The WWF stopped airing on Thanksgiving
years ago and for a while it looked as if the
Survivor Series elimination matches were history.
Fortunately the WWE has seen fit to bring
back the elimination matches, reestablishing the
Survivor Series as more than just another PPV.
Over the last twenty plus years, fans have
delighted to many memorable moments at
Survivor
Series such as the inaugural show's ten team tag elimination match (1987),
the debut of the Undertaker (1990), the Undertaker's tainted win over Hulk
Hogan for the WWF Championship the following year (1991), the infamous Montreal
Screwjob(1997), the night "Stone Cold" Steve Austin was run down by a
mystery driver (1999),
the climax to the Invasion angle,
and the debut of the Elimination Chamber
(2002).
On a personal note, 1995's
Survivor Series was memorable as it was
the first PPV I ever attended (and actually a pretty good show in its own
right).
Mike Rickard is the author of the book, Wrestling's Greatest Moments which captures the best in wrestling from the last thirty years. It includes more information on Survivor Series and Starcade as well as the backstory between Jim Crockett Promotions and the WWF. Wrestling’s Greatest Moments brings you all the most memorable and controversial moments from modern wrestling history. It’s an insightful and essential compendium of thirty years’ worth of groundbreaking matches, angles and interviews. From Hulkamania to the Montreal “screwjob,” from the NWA to the nWo, you’ll rediscover what really occurred in arenas and on the air worldwide, and learn all the backstage and behind-the-scenes secrets that made these highlight-reel moments possible from the men and women who were there.
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James
Rodney
Mack One
Man Gang Harley
Race Dave Taylor
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