I’m continuing this week to watch the WWF Attitude Era starting in 1996 and going through to (at this moment) 1997. Actually to let you in on some inside baseball, I’ve been watching 1996 and 1997 for most of the past year, writing down notes to myself, and it’s only now that I’m posting them, but here’s my notes from Summerslam 1997.
Summerslam 1997 was a pretty good show all things considered, but it includes one of the scariest incidents captured on PPV in the WWF/E.
First the background (which was a joy to watch). Bret Hart is doing a gimmick where he and his family are “good guys” in Canada but “bad guys” in the USA. He’s doing a classic anti-American gimmick but since WWF tours in Canada, he gets to be a hero in his home country. Anyway this gimmick led to a series of matches at Summerslam pitting the Bret Hart and friends against American WWF wrestlers.
Bryan Pillman faced Goldust in a match where if Pillman lost he’d wear a dress picked by Marlene (Goldust’s wife). British Bulldog faced Ken Shamrock (real life former champion in UFC) in a “loser eats dog food” match. That match was actually pretty good because towards the end, Bulldog taunts Shamrock with the dog food, causing Shamrock to absolutely snap. Shamrock destroys Bulldog (getting DQ’d) then starts attacking the officials. Shamrock showed a lot of in-ring charisma and got a HUGE crowd reaction, but it’s unfortunate that WWF booking has turned him into “just another guy” because I think at this point in his career he had the makings of a genuine star, not just a good wrestler.
Then Owen Hart faced Steve Austin, if Austin didn’t win he would kiss Owen Hart’s ass. The match was absolutely on fire, and Austin was over huge. Owen is a great wrestler, Austin was a great wrestler, but unfortunately they do a spot with a piledriver. A piledriver is a move where Owen holds Austin upside-down and then slams Austin’s head into the mat. Normally this move is done safely so that the head of the guy being slammed never actually makes contact, and Owen’s legs would have been the only thing really slamming the mat. But Owen held Austin too low this time (it was a complex spot they were doing) and Austin’s head truly did hit the mat. This drove the force of the blow up through Austin’s spine, temporarily paralyzing him. Austin laid there motionless for a minute while Owen stalled, Owen was smart enough to start a “Ca-na-da” chant against the crowd, which was chanting “U-S-A” but I could tell Owen didn’t really know how to stall well. Eventually Austin weakly trips up Owen for a pin before being helped to the back by officials, but if you were watching in 1997 you probably thought you had just witnessed Steve Austin die because it was such a scary and dangerous spot. In interviews Austin has said that immediately after the piledriver, he couldn’t feel his legs and thought he was permanently paralyzed, and there’s a cruel irony too because 5 years early Austin had nearly paralyzed a Japanese wrestler with a botched piledriver. Either way Austin (who already had severe neck issues) lost years of his wrestling career to this and other neck injuries, and it’s long been a huge “what if” question about how long and awesome his career would have been had he not had these neck issues, he retired just 5 years later but also was out 2 of those years due to injury. That injury mares what was until that point an incredible match between two of the best in the WWF.
Final notes, WWF was still losing the economic war against WCW, so they seemed to try to basically copy an element of WCW’s hottest angle. The NWO in WCW were cool wrestlers who also got popular by engaging in a little gang-violence style shenanigans (wearing gang colors, attacking people before/during/after matches, tagging everything, working bits of gang culture into their heel work). The WWF decided that faction warfare was what the viewers wanted. One of their factions therefor was the Nation of Domination, a pseudo-black power group but with prominent white (Crush) and latino (Savio Vega) members. Faarooq retooled the Nation by firing the white and latino guys (some unfortunately racist one-liners used by Faarooq, telling Savio Vega to “go back to picking jalapenos”) and absorbing more black WWF wrestlers. The nation was now 100% black.
Meanwhile the fired white guy and the fired latino guy brought in their own gang members, the white guy (Crush) became a biker with a biker gang called “Disciples of Apocalypse”. DOA was super popular in Canada and the northern cities of America, probably in part because they rode motorcycles and motorcycles are cool. Savio Vega got some luchadors and created “Los Boricuas” a Puerto Rican gang. Los Boricuas and the Nation were more popular in southern and Eastern cities probably in part because those cities had more black and Puerto Rican fans. Summerslam had a fight between DOA and Los Boricuas due to Los Boricuas destroying a DOA motorbike. It got surprisingly large cheers from the crowd and Crush (who’s been with the WWF for over a decade by this point) seems to actually be the best wrestler he’s ever been. He’s still nothing more than a mid-carder but he’s definitely improved over the decade. But the Nation came out to make it an all-out race war and I think that’s basically how WWF is going to have this angle go throughout 1997 as a faction feud based on race. I know that eventually Rocky Maivia will join the Nation and transform into The Rock, but who knows when that will be.
Either way, beside Canada vs America, this white bikers vs black power vs Puerto Rico race war is the storyline WWF was pushing the hardest, and it really is the kind of thing you’ll likely never see on TV wrestling today. Now remember, they would say that they were just copying the gang warfare from WCW, but to my memory the WCW gangs never had nearly so much of a racial angle as this. WCW’s gangs were usually company-based rather than race (for the most part). The NWO (new world order) was a bunch of ex-WWF stars whose stated goal was to take over WCW. They added a few WCW guys into (to be shocking and unpredictable) but mainly any ex-WWF guy got tossed in there. It was fairly multi-racial as far as WCW was concerned. The NWO was so popular they made a huge number of split-offs. The most important was probably the Wolfpac. Wolfpac was supposed to be a “cool, good guy” group of NWO members, so it included for instance Konnan (often called the Hulk Hogan of Mexico).
There was also the LWO (Latino World Order) that was made as a vehicle for Eddie Guerrero. Eddie was unhappy with his position in WCW, and had arguments with Eric Bishoff. They turned this real-life animosity into a storyline of Eddie getting all the ex-AAA guys (AAA is a Mexican wrestling company) to unite because Eric Bishoff was “taking advantage of the situation back home and paying us peanuts.” In real life the Mexican economy was in free fall and many Mexican wrestlers were working very cheap contracts in America because they were desperate for money. But also in reality Eddie was a native of Texas, so it was a bit weird for him to talk about “back home” as being Mexico, especially since his previous gimmick had been an anti-Mexican pro-USA gimmick when he was working a tag team for AAA.
When WCW wrestlers worked in Japan there was also NWO Japan which was made up of any wrestler who had a connection to America, including I think some Japanese wrestlers who’d done shows there.
Still, it was seen as distasteful by 90s standards when the NWO wrestlers deliberately incorporated gang culture into their heel work. One of their most iconic moments was when they “tagged” the WCW belt with spray paint to write “NWO”