In Your House #21: Unforgiven: It’s Getting Hot In Here

Unforgiven: In Your House #21
Date: April 26, 1998
Location: Greensboro Coliseum, Greensboro, North Carolina
Attendance: 21,427
Commentators: Jim Ross, Jerry Lawler

As mentioned, this is in a new era for the WWF as they’re back on top of the mountain for the first time since about In Your House #10. The company is on fire with Austin at the helm and the most evil man in company history going after him. This made for some very entertaining shows and hopefully this is one of them. Let’s get to it.

The opening video focuses on Undertaker vs. Kane which is the bigger story coming into this show.

Nation of Domination vs. Faarooq/Ken Shamrock/Steve Blackman

Rock has officially taken over the Nation after kicking Faarooq off the team. The non-Nation team does the Nation salute just to tick them off. Tonight the Nation is Rock/Henry/Brown. The fans are already all over Rock about five seconds after the bell. Brown grabs Blackman’s (a rather generic martial artist) arm to start things off and they trade shoulder blocks until Brown hooks a snap suplex. Blackman comes right back with a dropkick and an armdrag into an armbar.

It’s off to Shamrock to stay on the arm but the ankle lock is escaped via the ropes. Faarooq hesitantly comes in but Brown asks for mercy. Instead he gets a whipping with Faarooq’s belt and a snap suplex from Blackman. Back to the armbar but Brown gets away to tag Henry. That lasts about five seconds before it’s back to Brown who walks into a cross body for two. Back to Faarooq who is easily taken down before it’s back to Rock for the cheap shots he’s been looking for.

Henry comes back in and drops some elbows for a somewhat delayed two count, allowing Faarooq to pound away and make a tag off to Blackman. Henry runs Steve over but takes his time covering again. Back to Brown for a middle rope elbow and a standing one to the jaw for two. Rock comes in and stomps away in the corner while talking a lot of trash.

The still yet to be named People’s Elbow gets two and you can see the crowd really starting to react to it. Rock hooks a chinlock and it’s back to Brown for some trash talk and a backbreaker. D’Lo misses a moonsault and Steve makes the hot tag off to Faarooq. The Nation’s house is cleaned and everything breaks down with Faarooq hitting the Dominator out of nowhere to pin Rock.

Rating: D+. This didn’t do much for me. The match wasn’t horrible but the crowd didn’t really react to it very strongly and the ending didn’t work nearly as well as it was supposed to. Faarooq getting some revenge on Rock is a good idea but when the fans seem to like Rock more than Faarooq, it’s not the best move.

Before we get anywhere else, here’s Austin to really fire the place up. He calls the timekeeper into the ring due to him ringing the bell on Vince’s orders last week during a match. If that happens again tonight and Austin gets screwed, the timekeeper will be beaten out of the company. It’s fine if Dude Love beats him for the title, but if Austin gets screwed, the timekeeper is going to feel some pain.

European Title: Owen Hart vs. Hunter Hearst Helmsley

Owen had won the title by dressing up as Goldust and surprising HHH but then HHH went after a bad leg injury that Owen had suffered to get it back. Chyna cost Owen his rematch at Wrestlemania, so tonight Chyna is trapped inside a one person cage suspended above the ring. Slaughter forces Chyna into the cage as a lot of time is killed. HHH spends too much time talking to Chyna and Owen gets in a cheap shot to take over. They fight up the aisle and the bell hasn’t rung yet.

Owen pounds on HHH in the aisle and sends him face first into Chyna’s cage while it’s still on the ground. They finally get inside and the bell rings as Chyna’s cage rises into the air. All Owen still as he chops away in the corner until HHH drops him face first onto the top turnbuckle to get himself a breather. The jumping knee to the face puts Hart down and HHH chokes away with his boot in the corner. The knee drop to the head gets two and HHH hooks a dragon sleeper of all things.

Back up and Owen is sent chest first into the corner ala his brother to give the champion another two count. Chyna drops what appears to be a small saw from the cage but neither guy in the ring noticed it. Owen gets two off a sunset flip but HHH grabs a swinging neckbreaker for the same result and it’s back to the dragon sleeper. Hart fights up again but gets sent into the post and middle buckle to put him right back down. A facebuster gets two more for HHH as this continues to go slowly.

We hit the dragon sleeper again but Owen fights up and flips over HHH to suplex him down. Chyna has bent the cage bars open as Hart gets two off an enziguri. The spinwheel kick gets the same and there’s a piledriver on HHH for good measure. A top rope elbow hits HHH but Chyna is out of the cage. She can’t get down though so it doesn’t matter much.

HHH gets his leg caught in the ropes for a bit as Owen goes over to look at Chyna. That gets boring though so Hart DDTs HHH and puts on the Sharpshooter. The cage is lowered though and Chyna gets to the ground so Owen breaks the hold. Slaughter holds Chyna back as X-Pac (new DX member) comes in to blast Owen with a fire extinguisher to keep the title on HHH.

Rating: D+. So to clarify, Owen stuck around after his brother got screwed, doesn’t get the world title shot, and gets to lose to HHH on back to back PPVs (not counting HHH eliminating Owen from the Royal Rumble. HHH on the other hand gets to lead DX and win the European Title. Funny how that works. The match was dull stuff though with the majority being spent on HHH putting the same hold on Owen.

Post match Owen says enough is enough, which meant a heel turn for him.

Here’s Jim Cornette to introduce the next match.

NWA World Tag Team Titles: Rock N Roll Express vs. New Midnight Express

The New Midnight Express is comprised of Bombastic Bob (Bob Holly) and Bodacious Bart (Bart Gunn). The original version was managed by Cornette and feuded with the Rock N Roll Express (challengers tonight) for most of the 80s in a feud that revolutionized tag team wrestling. The Rock N Roll Express comes out to the Rockers’ (a WWF tag team) music. Bob and Robert Gibson start things off with Gibson shoulder blocking Bob out to the floor.

Back in and the formerly very fast Rock N Roll Express are just kind of quick here with their signature double leg snap into a rolling double punch to the Midnight on the apron. The fans just do not care here and it’s rather sad to see. Ricky Morton comes in and works on Bob before sending him into Bart, starting an argument between the champions. Bart comes in and puts on an abdominal stretch as I think this is a way to replicate the original feud but it’s just not working at all.

Cornette gets in an argument with the referee and comes into the ring for a boxing match which is an old signature spot of the feud. The referee is ready to go and Cornette runs away to wake up the crowd a bit. Cornette drops back to the floor and trips Morton, allowing Bart to hit a knee to the back, sending Ricky to the floor. The Midnights double team Ricky for two and Bart’s powerslam gets the same.

Bob misses a top rope legdrop though and it’s off to Gibson with no one reacting at all. Everything breaks down with the Rock N Roll in control and hitting their double dropkick on Bart. Gibson has to avoid a Cornette elbow drop but the distraction lets Bart bulldog Gibson down for the pin to retain.

Rating: F. This match wasn’t so much bad as it was pitiful. This was a tag team trying to get back to its old level of glory and just not being able to do it anymore. The match wasn’t horrid, but the idea of the match just didn’t work at all. The NWA angle never worked and had to have been a way to humiliate Cornette instead of help the company at all.

Luna says she’ll win the evening gown match.

Sable vs. Luna Vachon

This is the first evening gown match, meaning they start in gowns and the first to be stripped to their underwear loses. They walk around very slowly with both girls losing a sleeve each. Luna, an actual wrestler, drives in some shoulders in the corner before ripping off Sable’s skirt. Lawler is thrilled and Sable charges at Luna to take over. Mero comes out to yell at Sable, allowing Luna to strip the rest of Sable’s dress off for the win. There wasn’t enough to rate here but this wasn’t wrestling anyway.

Sable powerbombs Luna and rips off most of her dress anyway. They head under the ring and Sable comes out with Luna’s underwear in hand. Goldust covers Luna with a robe to get her out.

Here’s Vince, flanked by his Stooges Pat Patterson and Gerald Brisco. Vince addresses the rumors that he’s here to screw Steve Austin out of the WWF Championship. However, he’s really here because he was born here in North Carolina but stops to listen to the Vince sucks chant. He won’t be responsible for the main event tonight and Austin will screw himself.

Tag Titles: New Age Outlaws vs. LOD 2000

LOD 2000 is nothing all that different, including that they’re challenging tonight. It’s still Hawk and Animal but with helmets on the way to the ring and Sunny as a manager. Road Dogg says they’ve brought University of North Carolina basketball coach Dean Smith out of retirement for one night only but it’s actually a blowup doll. Billy starts with Animal but is quickly taken down by a shoulder block. Gunn misses a cross body and gets taken down by another flying tackle.

Road Dogg comes in and has his arm cranked on before it’s off to Hawk for an ax handle to the shoulder. A powerslam puts Dogg down and a jumping fist to the face sends him crawling into the corner. Gunn is literally pulled into the ring for a botched slam and a shoulder breaker for two. Animal comes back in for a chinlock as this has been one sided so far. Another powerslam gets another two on Gunn before it’s back to Road Dogg. The LOD immediately loads up the Doomsday Device but Gunn comes in with a chop block to break it up.

Roadie puts Animal in a spinning toehold and drags the bad leg into the corner so Billy can wrap it around the post a few times. Back in and Dogg puts on a leg lock before driving his own knees into Animal’s knee. Billy drives a knee in as well before cranking on a leg lock of his own.

Back to Dogg for some punches in the corner and some choking from Billy. Gunn comes in but can’t piledrive Animal, getting caught in a leg drag instead. The hot tag brings in Hawk to clean house as everything breaks down. Hawk hits a top rope splash on Dogg but Billy hits him in the back with a tag belt….for two. Dogg hits Gunn in the face with a belt and a German suplex by Hawk gives the LOD the titles back.

Rating: D. So basically it was the same match as last time but with the LOD regaining the belts instead of losing again? That doesn’t really make me want to see more from the LOD as they’re just too far gone in years at this point. It’s not as bad as the Rock N Roll Express but it’s still not working at all.

Or not as the referee says Hawk’s shoulders were down and Dogg’s were up, meaning the Outlaws keep the belts. The LOD beats up the referee as a result. The replay shows that Dogg never raised his shoulders at all and the referee screwed up.

Here’s Jeff Jarrett to sing with Sawyer Brown. There isn’t really anything to say here other than Jeff sings and the band has the real talent. This goes on for the better part of seven minutes until Steve Blackman comes out to break it up. He gets a guitar to the head and the Figure Four.

Lawler gets out some marshmallows and hot dogs to roast during the inferno match.

We recap Undertake vs. Kane which we’ve pretty much covered already. It’s a rematch from Wrestlemania where Undertaker beat Kane, but Paul Bearer wants more revenge. Tonight it’s about lighting the other person on fire. Various caskets with various remains of Undertaker’s relatives were burned to further the feud as well.

Kane vs. Undertaker

They get in the ring and the flames come up around the ring in a cool visual. They slug it out in the corner and Undertaker actually busts out Old School, giving us the other feature of the match: the flames go WAY higher when anyone lands hard on the mat. Kane gets back up and sends him into the corner before choking away on the ropes. Lawler wants Undertaker’s face lit on fire. Undertaker rips at Kane’s mask to blind him for a second and fights back up.

Kane powerslams him down, sending the flames higher into the air. Paul throws in a chair which goes upside Undertaker’s head to give Kane the first significant advantage. Undertaker pops back up though because that’s the kind of guy he is. They slug it out in the middle of the ring with Kane taking over but not being able to put Undertaker in the fire. Kane pounds away in the corner but charges into a boot to the face. A Russian legsweep puts Kane down and a legdrop sends the flames flying up again.

Both guys grab the other by the throat but it’s Kane chokeslamming his brother down. Undertaker slips out of a tombstone and chokeslams Kane down this time. Kane is up in just a few seconds so both guys kick the other in the face at the same time. Undertaker misses his jumping clothesline and Kane goes up, only to have Taker crotch him down onto the top rope. A superplex takes Kane down and sends the flames to an even higher level than they were before.

With little else to do to each other in the ring, Undertaker throws Kane over the top rope and over the flames. Kane tries to walk out so Bearer bullies the guy in charge of the flames into turning them up even higher. Before Kane can get away though, Vader returns to fight Kane back to ringside. Undertaker dives over the top rope to take them both out in a great visual.

To sum up what just happened: a possibly undead 7’0 demonic man just dove over a wall of flames to get his hands on his possibly even more demonic, pyromaniac brother who is trying to light his on fire as well as a man known as the Rocky Mountain Monster. That sounds AWESOME among many other things. Vader leaves and Undertaker caves in his brother’s head with a pair of chair shots. That leaves Undertaker alone with Paul Bearer and Paul is chased up to the band set where a drum is wrapped around Bearer’s head. Back to ringside and a big boot puts Kane’s (covered) arm into the fire for the win.

Rating: D+. This is a good example of a match where a bunch of still shots and audio clips of the match would have done much better than the match itself. There were some AMAZING moments in there like the dive over the top and that superplex, but that’s not enough to carry a fifteen minute plus match. It’s fun, but would be better with just a highlight package.

We recap the main event with Austin becoming WWF Champion and Vince declaring it a public relations nightmare. Cactus Jack wasn’t pleased with the fans’ universal love for Austin and became corporate Dude Love to fight Austin for Vince. Austin is convinced there’s a conspiracy and Vince sitting at ringside for the match ala Montreal isn’t helping things.

WWF World Title: Steve Austin vs. Dude Love

Dude jumps Austin from behind but Austin pounds away on him in the corner to take over. An elbow sends Dude to the floor before a Thesz Press takes Love down back inside. Austin hits a snapless spinebuster and an elbow drop for two before having to chase Dude up the aisle. They head back to the music stage with Austin slamming Foley down and hiptossing him off the stage and down onto the floor in a big crash.

Back and ringside and a clothesline puts Love down again before they get back in the ring. Love avoids a running hip attack to the ropes and bulldogs Austin down for two. Steve explodes out of the corner with a clothesline but Dude gets in a shot to the ribs to put him down again. Dude puts on a bodyscissors with a choke as Vince and the Stooges come out to watch. Austin fights out of the hold with a bunch of elbows to the face but stops to look at Vince, giving Dude a rollup for two.

Steve wraps both legs around the post and does the same to the arm for good measure. They head back to the floor with Love backdropping out of a piledriver attempt on the concrete. Austin is sent into the barricade so Vince can go laugh at him like the evil monster he is. Steve gets up but Dude saves his boss from probably death. Dude knocks Austin off the apron and Vince tells Austin to be a man and get back in.

Back inside and Dude puts on an abdominal stretch with Vince nearly calling for the bell as fast as he could. They head outside for the fifth or so time with Austin suplexing Dude legs first onto the steps. Now they head into the crowd with Austin in full control but once they’re back inside, Dude is able to score with a swinging neckbreaker to put the champion down.

Sweet Shin Music (exactly what it sounds like) is blocked but Dude clotheslines the referee down. The Stunner is countered and Dude gets the Mandible Claw. Austin goes out but there’s no referee to call the win. Dude lets go of the hold and gets backdropped out to the floor. Austin and Vince fight over a chair but Dude saves his boss again. The chair is knocked into Love’s face but Austin misses Dude and knocks Vince out cold with a chair shot to the head. Back inside and the Stunner puts Dude down for Austin’s own three count to end the match.

Rating: B+. This is another solid brawl with both guys knowing exactly how to work this style. Vince being out there was a sword of Damocles over Austin’s head and the chair shot to him sent the crowd into delirium. Love would be back but this was a solid way to have Austin’s first title defense. The pin didn’t count of course but it kept Austin looking strong, which is what you needed here.

A long stretcher job by Vince ends the show.

Overall Rating: D+. This is another example of the main event being the only thing worth seeing on the show, but unlike the older shows it’s not enough to save things. That’s the problem with having a three hour show: you need more than a great twenty minute match. The main event scene was on fire at this point but everything else was pretty dreadful. However, that would soon change and things would get a lot better in a hurry. Not a good show here, though the main event is very good.

 

Remember to follow me on Twitter @kbreviews and pick up the paperback edition of KB’s Complete 2004 Monday Night Raw Reviews (also available as an e-book) from Amazon. Check out the information here:

https://kbwrestlingreviews.com/2019/08/26/new-book-and-e-book-kbs-complete-2004-monday-night-raw-reviews/

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1 Response

  1. Stone Cold Tea says:

    Unforgiven in April. What next? Vengeance in December?

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