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| Survivor Series 2000 - Ice Palace - 11/19/00 |
The 2000 edition was a very frustrating one for me. I had really gotten fed up with the lack of emphasis on elimination matches and how chintzy they had become. The roster in 2000 was so stacked they could've effortlessly put together a good old-school Survivor Series card, but instead they went with a slew of regular matches and only two rather short elimination bouts.
The opening match was a six-person tag that could've easily been turned into an intergender elimination match by adding a member to each team. Steve Blackman, Crash Holly and Molly Holly faced T&A and Trish Stratus. This went only five minutes and was a rather vexing inclusion to the lineup.
The first elimination match was next as The Radicalz (Chris Benoit, Eddie Guerrero, Dean Malenko and Perry Saturn) took on Road Dogg, K-Kwik, Billy Gunn and Chyna. It was a fairly one-sided affair mostly designed to give the Radicalz something to do. Benoit and Saturn won the match, but this wasn't great. Benoit would regain some footing the following month by capturing the I-C Title from Billy Gunn.
Third was one of the few bright spots on the card as Kane and Chris Jericho had a very entertaining midcard match. I say this a lot, but they probably should've just captained opposing teams. Still this was a solid outing which was sadly followed by a lame Last Man Standing match the next month.
Another pointless match was next as William Regal defended the European Title against Bob Holly. Since the opening match featured six people and this match featured two, and both matches sucked, why couldn't they have been combined into one elimination match, hmmm?
The midway point featured the first bout of the "triple main event," as The Rock faced turncoat/cousin Rikishi. The background of this rather ill-conceived feud dates back to Survivor Series 1999. Remember how Steve Austin was run down by a mystery driver to explain his year-long absence from TV as he received spinal fusion surgery? Leading up to his return they finally revisited this angle to establish a payoff. There was a two-episode RAW arc where Commissioner Mick Foley questioned everyone who was in the building the night of the incident, and it was established the driver of the car had blond hair. Now it seemed like all signs were pointing to Shawn Michaels being the culprit, which had me all in a tizzy (I discounted Triple H since he was far too obvious a choice - more on that later). But as it turned out, Rikishi was the mystery driver. Incidentally, Rikishi had literally just debuted on television the day before Survivor Series '99. So this guy who had just joined the WWF decided to run over the top star in the company, to help out his cousin The Rock, who was the company's number-two star? I mean in a way it makes sense, but it was pretty effin' thin. Plus, no one wanted to boo Rikishi. He was an amusing babyface character who generally lightened the mood with dancing and occasional comedy spots, but could still hold his own in a good stiff match. There was no business reason to turn him heel, and doing so undermined his whole persona.
So Rikishi fought a returning Steve Austin at No Mercy 2000 in a brief no-contest, then later in the night attacked The Rock, costing him the WWF Title. Ummmm, wasn't your whole motivation supposed to be to HELP The Rock? Shortly thereafter on RAW it was revealed that Rikishi was working for someone else, who paid him to run down Austin (the result of the company panicking when Rikishi's unwanted heel turn didn't light the world on fire). That someone else? Triple H. The most obvious guy to want Austin out of the way in 1999. Really? Has no one in this company ever watched a murder mystery? This was so poorly written it was actually comical. So now Rock wanted revenge against Rikishi, and Austin wanted revenge against Hunter.









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