Our
story begins on July 7th, 1996, during the main event
of 'Bash At The Beach', a 'Hostile Takeover' match between
The Outsiders and the team of Randy Savage, Lex Luger
and Sting, representing WCW. With Luger already out of
action, and Randy Savage's comeback interrupted by a Kevin
Nash low blow, all four men are down, and the 'third man'
of Hall and Nash's team has yet to arrive. Suddenly, the
lights go out, and it's here that we enter the story...
And
it's here that it's dark, and nothing can be heard but
confused shouting from the ring, and furtive murmuring
cutting a frantic undercurrent through the anxious silence
of the crowd, as they anticipate the arrival of the third
man. Suddenly, a thunderously loud chairshot rings through
the arena, reverberating to magnify it's already tremendous
sound. There's a pause of silence, as the shouting stops,
and the crowd hangs on the edge of their seats. As suddenly
as the lights died, so are they reborn, and the ring is
bathed again in light, illuminating clearly the sight
of Hall covering Sting, as Nash does Savage, the weapon
obviously used to down the heroes nowhere to be seen.
Loathe to do it, but bound by the rules, the WCW referee
bends to his knees, and slaps the mat with both his hands,
once, twice, thrice. WCW not only failed to defend it's
honour, but it was unable even to learn the identity of
the third man. It is on a defeated note, save for the
arrogantly posing Outsiders, that Bash At The Beach concludes...
July
8th, 1996: WCW Monday Nitro
The
opening shot of Nitro focuses on the broadcast table,
and sitting at it are Eric Bischoff, Bobby 'The Brain'
Heenan, and the 'American Dream' Dusty Rhodes. They hype
the episode's main event, in which Randy Savage will face
off against one of his rival Flair's allies when he clashes
with Chris Benoit. They start then to talk about the events
of last night, when two men stride onto the scene, Kevin
Nash and Scott Hall: The Outsiders.
Nash
laughs, slapping Hall on the back, as they both
loom over the announce desk
"Hey
look, it's another three 'WCW Big Boys.'"
Hall steps behind Nash, a smirk on his face
"Hide
me, Kev! They're about as scary as those three men we
fought last night!" Nash sighs deeply "Man,
that was some fight, huh? I mean, we hardly needed that
third man, we had them beat without him, ain't that right,
Dusty?" he says, slapping Dusty in a friendly way
on the shoulder. Dusty stands up angrily, the former multi-time
world champion staring up into the eyes of Nash. Nash
laughs, putting his hands up, with a goofy smile on his
face, backing off from the broadcast table with Hall,
laughing as they go.
Later
on in the broadcast, Bischoff puts his hand to his headset,
listening closely, before reporting that Randy Savage
couldn't make it to the show tonight, and that they're
looking into the reason why. Another twenty minutes pass
before the reason why is explained, as Bischoff reports
that a tape has been sent in with the explanation for
his absence, and the camera cuts out to show the tape.
And
it's a shocking sight that greets the audience of Nitro:
Lex Luger, Randy Savage and Sting, all tied to chairs
in a dank room, gags tied in their mouths. A tough voice,
full of grit and gravel growls at them from behind the
camera.
"Something
was wrong with last night. Three former champions, three
great wrestlers, couldn't stop two thugs? Now, unless
old age suddenly caught up with you all in one night,
there's just no excuse. One of you must be the inside
man, I'm sure of it. And I've been a part of this business,
this industry, this company, too damn long to let it slide.
I'm going to get to the bottom of this. That's a promise."
The camera focuses on Lex
"Now,
your injury at the start of the match, that was awful
convenient, if you ask me. Maybe you set it up, huh? Set
it up so you could come out there later in the night,
and no-one would know." Luger shakes his had in vehement
denial of this accusation, before the camera turns to
Sting
"And
you. It was your splash that took him out, and no-one
could have seen if that chairshot was you hitting Savage.
Then you could've just lain down to protect your cover."
The look of cold fury in Sting's eyes raises above the
camera to stare daggers at the man behind it, as he swivels
it around to face Savage, struggling against his bonds,
trying in vain to reach the man behind the camera. The
voice growls
"Of
course, the same could easily be true of you. You could've
hit Sting and let yourself get pinned too. I find that
a lot more likely than Sting, personally. I've fought
Sting, and he's a man of honour. Besides, he's always
been in this company, whereas you and those Outsiders
all came from up north. I'm going to call and let people
know where you are now. You won't get back in time for
Nitro, but that wasn't the point. The point was to let
you know how easily I can have you at my mercy. I'm going
to be looking into things. If I find out it was one of
you, you'll be back here, and you won't get out so easily."
With
this, the camera is switched off, and we return to the
broadcast table, where Bischoff and Heenan discuss whether
this could really be true, could any of those three be
the traitors, and if we can't trust them, is there anyone
we can trust? Dusty, on the other hand, looks determined.
He stands up, and begins to walk away from the desk. Bischoff
turns, giving him a quizzical look. Dusty comments
"Savage
and Benoit is off. We need a new main event, I'm gonna
go backstage and get ready to beat some sense, beat some
respect into Kevin Nash. How's that sound to you? That
sound like a main event?" Bischoff turns in his chair,
a shocked look on his face.
"Well,
you heard it here first, people. Dusty Rhodes returns
to action tonight. I just hope he can put Nash out of
it."
When
the main event comes around, Nash strolls confidently
down to the ring, not looking the least bit worried about
the notion of Dusty putting him out of action. The crowd
think differently, however, judging by the explosion of
noise that greets 'American Dream' blasting through the
speakers, and the sight of Dusty striding to the ring.
The bell rings, and the match is under way. Nash starts
by roughly shoving Dusty, causing him to stumble back,
and Nash to raise his arms above his head, as if he'd
already won. Dusty looks enraged now, and rushes forwards,
peppering Nash with quickfire punches. Nash interrupts,
grabbing him by the arm and whipping him roughly into
the ropes. Dusty comes back with a shoulder block that
causes Nash to stagger back a step or two. From here,
Dusty is able to deliver a Bionic Elbow, sending Nash
careening back into the ropes. Dusty drops his head, ready
to backdrop Nash when he comes back, only for Nash to
scoop him up from the position, dropping him back down
with a brutal jackknife powerbomb, scooping him up and
dropping him with another, then a third, before casually
placing a foot on his chest, pinning him for three. As
Nash celebrates as if he'd just won the world title, paramedics
rush to bring Dusty away, where he can be safely checked
medically, drawing Nitro to a close with the Outsiders
victorious again.
July
15th, 1996: WCW Monday Nitro
The
Four Horsemen look all business as they arrive at the
arena for tonight's edition of Nitro. Forcefully shoving
the doors open, they stride purposefully through the corridors,
where they meet Randy Savage, going the other way. There's
a stalemate in the corridor, neither giving way to let
the other pass. After a tense moment, Savage steps forward,
going eye to eye with Arn Anderson. Arn meets his stare,
and the two seem ready to fight, when Flair shoves Savage,
turning the two to face each other, Savage keeping watch
on Arn from the corner of his eye. Flair warns Savage
"We're
not coming for you, Randy...not today, at least. We're
here to get Nash and Hall for what they did to Dusty.
See, we went to war, back in the day, and that gave me
a hell of a lot of respect for the Dream. And the Dream's
slumbering in a hospital bed right now, after that nightmare
last Nitro. One way or another, they'll be made to pay.
You planning on standing between us and them?"
Savage
steps to one side, letting the Horsemen file past him,
only stopping Arn, grabbing his arm as he passes.
"This
isn't over, Arn."
"You'd
better pray it is."
Bischoff
happily supports the Horsemen from the announce desk,
and the main event of Outsiders versus Ric Flair and anyone
he wants to bring with him to the ring is quickly made.
The
Outsiders are 'reached for comment' later in the night,
although by the look on Gene Okerlund's face, and the
arms of Hall and Nash forcefully holding him on either
side, it looks more like Hall and Nash reached Gene, to
make him broadcast their comment. Hall is the first to
speak
"Y'know,
Kev, does this whole thing seem fair to you?" Nash
turns and looks at his partner, before jovially responding
"What
whole thing, Bad Guy?"
"The
fact that there's four horsemen," he raises four
fingers "gunning
for two of us", dropping two of them now. Nash smiles,
reminding Hall
"Three
of us, you mean." Okerlund interrupts, turning to
Kevin Nash and asking the question
"And
just who is this third man we've heard so much about?"
Hall's hand pushes Okerlund to face him, and he asks
"What
are you, the kind of man who was always sneaking a look
at his Christmas presents as a kid? It's a secret, ok?
You'll all find out soon enough. You might even find out
tonight." Nash shrugs "This guy's boring me,
Scott. Let's get gone. We gotta get ready for Flair and
the failures later tonight."
The
time of the match rolls around, and Hall and Nash casually
stroll to ringside, Hall stopping to make a crying face
at a camera, mouthing "Poor Dusty" at it before
laughing and moving on. They slouch in adjacent turnbuckles,
watching the ramp with bored expressions, as conversation
at the announce desk is furtive about who Flair has picked
to be his partner. Flair struts out, holding a microphone
and accompanied by the rest of the Horsemen, who, with
the exception of the approving smile of Arn Anderson,
look disgruntled. They flank the ramp on either side,
and look towards the entrance arch, as Eddy Guerrero steps
tentatively out, looking slightly unsure of himself, but
proud nonetheless, and takes his place next to Flair.
Flair raises the microphone, and begins to speak.
"Let
me introduce to you, my partner for the night, Eddy Guerrero!"
The camera cuts to Nash and Hall, and the former shouting
in a voice of mock terror
"Not
Eddy Guerrero! We're finished now!" while the latter
is unable to stand still for laughter. Back to Flair,
who continues
"I
see some of you are a little...confused about my choice"
Bischoff interjects on commentary that Benoit and Malenko
look "more angry than confused."
"Especially
you two in the ring, who I wouldn't expect for a second
to understand this choice! Now, while I see confusion
in you, all I see in Mr. Guerrero here is one hell of
a lot of promise! And it's that promise that makes WCW
so great, and it's that promise that you two are trying
to crush by coming here! Me and Dusty, we were just guys
on the midcard with a hell of a lot of promise once, and
it's for that reason that I want Eddy Guerrero in my corner,
to help me beat some respect into you two punks! Wooo!"
Eddy,
getting increasingly fired up by Flair's speech, dashes
towards the ring.
Flair looks mildly frustrated before dropping the mic
and heading after him, the Horsemen heading down to surround
the ring. Eddy hits the ring first, charged up, and makes
a beeline for Hall, only for Nash to blindside him with
a big boot. The two then proceed to lay the boots to him,
until Flair enters, laying a blinding flurry of knife
edge chops that alternates between the two, giving Eddy
time to regain his feet, whereupon he immediately leaps
on Nash and throws elbows wildly. The official calls for
the bell, and is eventually able to regain order, forcing
each time to send a man back to their corner. Flair sends
Eddy back, as Nash steps over the ropes to his side. A
fire burns in Flair's eyes as he obviously seeks vengeance
against Nash for Dusty, fixing Hall dead on with a look
of pure steel and mouthing
"Send
him in." Hall shakes his head and laughs, prompting
a barrage of chops from the Nature Boy, causing Hall to
stagger backwards into the turnbuckle next to Nash's corner.
Flair grabs him by the head, and drags him towards Nash,
before receiving a knee to the midsection, which doubles
him over. Flair regains his posture in time to catch a
lariat from Hall. Hall scoops him up, and hoists him in
the air for a suplex, only for Flair to float over and
score with a neckbreaker. He strides to Nash, and slaps
him roughly across the face, turning back around to Hall.
Nash, look of anger on his face, takes a step across the
apron and slaps Hall on the back, tagging himself in.
Flair doesn't notice, allowing Nash to smash a giant elbow
across the back of his head, dropping Flair to his knees.
Nash grabs Flair's hair and begins to pull him up, but
the dirtiest player in the game lives up to his name,
scoring a low blow on Nash, much to the crowd's approval.
The two then engage in a wild mix of high impact throws
and suplexes with merciless strikes, Flair's rage more
than compensating for the size difference. After a brutal
exchange of strikes in the centre of the ring, the fight
has clearly taken a lot out of both men, and when a Flair
closed fist strike staggers Nash, and is thrown with such
force by the battered Flair that he drops to a knee, they
each recognise the need to tag out, and make their ways
to their corners. Hall cockily stares Eddy up and down,
a smile on his face. Hall's underestimation proves to
be is undoing, as Guerrero surprises him with a flurry
of dropkicks, enzuiguris, headscissors and other aerial
manoeuvres that keep Hall from mounting a counter offensive.
His youthful exuberance is his undoing, however, as he
clambers prematurely to the top rope for a Frog Splash,
which Hall is able to roll away from, tagging his partner
in. Eddy regains his feet and sprints at Nash, leaping
up for a hurracarana, only for Nashto transfer it into
a Jacknife Powerbomb. With Eddy firmly in enemy ground,
and Flair battered and tired, he is unable to reach Eddy
in time to stop the three count. The Horsemen hit the
ring, causing Hall and Nash to duck out of it, laughing
and congratulating each other as they back off up the
ramp.
July
22nd, 1996: WCW Monday Nitro
Two
events of significance to our story occur on this broadcast.
The first sees Sting barge up to Ric Flair, with an obvious
mind to speak his piece
"Explain
something to me, Ric! How come, when I extend the offer
of partnering you, of being in your corner, you brush
me off? You tell me you have a better partner in mind,
and then that happens? What is it, you don't think a man
who's held the top honour in wrestling multiple times,
has even taken it from you, is good enough?"
"Now
Sting, I know you're good in the ring. Hell, I know you're
one of the best in the ring. But two weeks ago, on Nitro?
I reckon some pretty good points were raised. I don't
know yet if I can trust you to be good in here" he
places a hand on Sting's chest. The implication that he
might be the third man is too much for Sting to take,
and he shoves Flair with such force that he stumbles backwards,
dropping to the ground.
"Let
me get this straight, you don't trust me? You, who took
this company's world title, and ran off to parade it around
the same places those two scumbags came from? You, who
could have had anyone in your corner, and chose someone
they were able to best easily? You, who call yourself
the dirtiest player in the game, want to call yourself
clean of this, and me dirty?"
Flair
regains his feet, and the two have to be separated by
a mass of people as they struggle towards each other,
itching to fight.
The
other is another video taken by the abductor of Sting,
Savage and Luger two weeks ago. This time, we see, from
a shoulder mounted camera, the man root through a house,
muttering under his breath that there
"must
be some clue here. Got to show people the truth."A
car is heard pulling up, stopping, and doors slamming,
causing the man to exclaim "Damn!" as the voices
of Hall and Nash and Nash can be heard outside.
"Man,
sure is good to take a well earned break from kicking
the ass of a whole company, huh?"
"Oh,
because it's such hard work"
The
camera is put down onto a table, and we see the midsection
of the investigator, a well built man, crouching on his
haunches, and grabbing a nearby baseball bat to defend
himself with, the other hand reaching to switch off the
camera.
July
29th, 1996: WCW Monday Nitro
Nitro
this week opens with the announcers excitedly discussing
news of Flair vs Sting being added to the upcoming Hog
Wild card. They are interrupted, however, by the sight
of Hall and Nash, dragging a struggling man, with hands
bound, and a large sack placed over his head, towards
the ring. He is hurled roughly under the ropes, and stumbles
to his feet while the Outsiders enter the ring, only for
Hall to put him down with a rough punch, before raising
the microphone to speak
"Well
what have we got here? Looks like we've got a treat for
you, people of" he turns to Nash with a bemused stare,
mouthing "what town is this?"
Nash
replies "Rome. All these hick towns look the same
to me, too."
Hall
laughs a little "Rome? As in, friends, Romans, countrymen?
This town sure looks built in a day. Anyway, people of...Rome,
we have here the man who has been stalking this company,
looking for some sign of who the third man is. Apparently
he thinks we're some second rate movie villains who'd
just leave these kind of clues lying around. And today,
we ain't gonna tell you who our third man is, that's our
litte secret, but we will show you who this mystery investigator
is! Hicks and hickettes, may I present your home-town
hero, Arn Anderson!"
With
this declaration, the sack is removed, and the camera
focuses in on the bloody, bruised visage of Arn Anderson,
rage still burning in his blood caked eyes.
Hall
continues, once the anger of the crowd dies down "Now,
what should we do with you" when all of a sudden,
over the broadcast system...
"He's
American Made!"
A
male voice croons over power chords, signalling one thing:
Hulk Hogan had returned to WCW. Hall and Nash appear for
the first time to be concerned, and drop from the ring,
backing off with hands raised, the cock-sure grins half
wiped from their faces, but still lingering at the corners
of their mouths. Hogan hits the ring to an enthusiastic
reaction from the live crowd, and cannot help but strike
a quick pose before he sets to Arn's bound and gagged
state, freeing him from his restraints, and offering a
hand to help him up, only for Arn it shove it away, hefting
himself up by the ring ropes. Hogan looks surprised, and
watches as Arn limps towards and lifts one of the mics
dropped by Hall and Nash as they made their escape.
Struggling
between ragged breaths, he begins to speak "First
of all, let me thank you, Hulk, for helping me out of
a bind there, not to mention helping me out of those binds...once
you were done posing for the crowd. And I'll follow these
words of gratitude with a question: Where the hell have
you been? WCW's in trouble, WCW's in the worst trouble
it's been in for a long time, and you're, what - vacationing?
Spending some quality time at home? This is the first
time I've seen you since those invaders showed up. You
didn't think it was worth defending the company that welcomed
you with open arms when they were done with you up north?
But maybe, just maybe you were around. Maybe you were
there on July 7th, huh? Maybe, when the lights went out,
you were able to avoid the spotlight just that once, to
go and help those two out, and all that this is is an
act to cover it up."
Hogan
stares with reproach at Arn, the crowd unsure of how to
react, waiting for his response. Hulk picks up the other
abandoned mic, and ends the crowd's waiting
"Arn,
pal, you're hurt bad. I'm going to let all that slide,
because you've obviously been through hell this last week.
I'm just gonna walk away, and forget what you just said,
okay?"
Hogan
heads towards the ropes on the other side from Arn, making
to leave, before Arn bitterly remarks "Walk away
then. I guess more than just your ring gear is yellow,
huh?"
Hogan
pauses, looking back at Arn.
"What
was that?"
"You
heard me, coward."
Hogan's
patience is clearly frayed by accusations of treachery
and cowardice, and he storms across to Arn, giving the
injured man a shove hard enough to send him over the top
rope to the floor below, before storming off.
Arn's
night goes nowhere good after this, shortly after an announcement
that he is booked to face Hogan at Hog Wild, the cameras
catch him limping backstage, when he bumps into the Macho
Man, Randy Savage, who has some choice words
"Oooh
Yeeah! Karma, baby! What a concept! Looks like you got
what was coming, running around like Sam Spade!"
A
grimace firmly planted upon his face, Arn's response is
to growl that he's "Gonna get better, Savage. I'll
remember those words. I got better people to deal with
right now."
And
so it is that we later catch up to him, entering the locker
room of The Four Horsemen, whose faces turn to looks of
concern on seeing their comrade in arms in so bad a condition,
while his remains a bitter one.
"Where
the hell were you, huh? I thought The Horsemen rode together,
that we looked out for our own."
Flair
is quick to answer "Looking for you, Arn. You've
been missing all week. We were in town, trying to find
you. Hell, we only got word of what happened an hour ago.
We've got your back again, and we'll get them. No-one
does that to a Horseman. Benoit and Malenko here have
got Hogan and our old friend Sting tonight, and once we're
done with them, we can focus on the fools trying to outgun
us."
Arn
settles wearily into a seat and takes a drink from a hipflask,
and the scene fades out, the horsemen talking strategy
for the main event.
The
main event sees Benoit and Malenko hold their own briefly
against Sting and Hogan, with considerable help from Flair
at ringside, before eventually tumbling to the combined
forces of two of WCW's biggest names, who look ready for
anything at Hog Wild. The commentators spend much of the
match tensely wondering if Hall and Nash would make an
appearance, but this match was free of their interference.
August
5th, 1996: WCW Nitro
In
the final Nitro before Hog Wild, the focus is obviously
on the card ahead, and with that in mind, the main event
is set: the Horsemen's top two men will face their enemies
at Hog Wild, Hogan and Sting, in a triangle tag match
against the Outsiders.
Bischoff
smugly adds from his desk "Oh, and that's going up
against Ahmed Johnson winning some battle royal on Raw.
Not much of a comparison, is there?"
Mean
Gene Okerlund is able to get an interview with the returning
Hulk Hogan during the evening, who has something to get
off his chest, for all the fans to hear, and there's an
obvious anger to his usual energy.
"Y'know
something Mean Gene? It's good to be back, good to be
back in the old WCW, in front of all my Hulkamaniacs!
But when I get here, everything's out of control, brother!
We got, we got these damn punks, these Outsiders, trying
to run wild on my company, on my friends, and on my Hulkamaniacs!
And that makes me angry, brother. I get to the show, and
those two fools are in my ring, parading that they kidnapped
a man, that they took him and beat him like a dog! And
that's not right, brother. So I make my way down there,
I make my way down, and I save Arn Anderson, a man I have
no love for, a man I've fought before. Does he say thank
you? NO! He calls me a coward, calls me a traitor. You
want to say it's all a cover, Arn? Well, I gotta say,
I think that The Horsemen are fools for riding with you,
Arn! Because you're the one kicking up the biggest fuss
about finding out who this is, and the best reason to
do that is if you're trying to push eyes away from you,
brother. I'll see you in the ring!"
Ric
Flair and Sting start the main event off with an excellent
display of chain wrestling, which Flair is able to get
the better of, leaving Sting down after a strong superplex.
Hall blind tags himself in on Flair, and proceeds to beat
down the already tired Sting, using quick tags to Nash
to keep the other men out of the match. Sting gets a window
of opportunity when he is able to dive out of the course
of a Nash avalanche in the corner, a time he uses to will
himself to Hogan for the hot tag. Hogan and Nash face off now, the Hulkster
in the rare position of having to stare up at his opponent.
Fuelled by the crowd's deafening response to him, however,
he is able to trade blows with a colossal Nash. With one
of the men responsible for subjecting him to a week of
ceaseless brutality and humiliation, and the man who has
accused him of treachery both in the ring, Arn begins
to pace impatiently on the apron. Seeing no sign of a
respite in the trading of shots, Arn steps into the ring,
and charges into the melee, striking both men with wild
abandon. When the focus becomes on Nash, Hall is quick
to enter, drawing Arn away and into a fight with Hall.
Flair steps in to chop block Hall's legs out from under
him, and with both other teams having both their men in
the ring, Sting joins the growing brawl, as the referee
abandons all hope of controlling the ensuing chaos, which
eventually draws to it's conclusion when Sting hits Arn
with the Scorpion Deathdrop, only for Hall to quickly
lariat him down, and cover Arn for himself, earning the
victory for the Outsiders.
August
10th, 1996: WCW Hog Wild
Hog
Wild opens with a panning shot of the crowd, before focussing
on two "fans" in the front row: Hall and Nash.
Security stands near the duo, arguing with them as they
brandish their tickets, and Hall complains "Hey yo,
this is persecution! We just wanted to watch from the
good seats man, see how our golden friend does tonight."
Security
leave, with the Outsiders being ticket holders, and not
actually doing anything to warrant being thrown out. The
opening contest between Dean Malenko and Ultimo Dragon
is blindingly good, and when Malenko is able to beat Ultimo
to retain his title, the Outsiders stand and applaud loudly.
So goes the format for both Lex Luger's TV title defence
and The Giant's defence of his World Heavyweight gold,
the Outsiders enthused for the champions, while the commentators
muse if this is what they meant by "Golden Friend",
and if one of these men is the third man, or just a false
trail set by the Outsiders.
Another
early point on the show sees a camera catch Hogan bump
into Sting going the other way in the corridor. Hogan
makes some small talk with his recent tag partner, before
Sting brushes him off, telling him
"I
tagged with you because the office told me to, nothing
else. I don't care one bit for Arn, but he makes some
good points. Where the hell were you, man? And now that
you're back, finally, the first thing you do is pick a fight
with the guy who is most against the Outsiders. I'm starting
to see his case, brother." Sting walks away,
leaving Hogan to fume silently.
Elsewhere
on the card, Sting faces Ric Flair in a match that begins
as the usual display of wrestling mastery one expects
from this pairing, but the recent bad blood quickly drives
this beyond a standard match, and things get out of hand
when Flair is hurled into a turnbuckle, rolls over it
and onto the apron, dashing to the other side to climb.
The dash is interrupted by a Sting dropkick which sends
Flair to the outside. Sting tries to plancha onto Flair,
who avoids it narrowly, and begins using the area around
the ring to his advantage. Sting takes a harsh beating,
with Flair several times rolling in for long enough to
restart the count, but turns it around when the sight
of his own blood following an Irish whip into the ring
post triggers something in him, and he repays the beatdown
he received in kind. As he climbs back through the ropes,
Flair grabs his leg and yanks it down, crotching him on
the ropes. From here, Sting is dragged to the turnbuckle,
and Flair applies a figure four from outside, assisted
by the cornerpost. Back in the ring, Flair is merciless
in his targeting of the leg, and while Sting begins to
mount several comebacks, each is cut off in turn by quick
cheap shots to the leg, before Sting eventually falls
to the figure four.
While
Sting vs Flair began as a standard match and then became
a bloody affair once it left the ring, Hogan and Anderson
makes no pretences at being a technical encounter from
the start, both men flying at each other with fury and
recklessness. The referee is able to keep things barely
in line, and Arn holds his own for a decent time, but
is overpowered by Hulk Hogan, who doesn't stop to pose
as he usually does, his bad mood from the general mistrust
of him leading him to drop the usual pageantry and merely
storm off after earning a three count from a pair of legdrops,
leaving Arn down and out in the middle of the ring.