TJR: PPV Flashbacks - WWF Ground Zero 1997
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The World Title was held by Bret Hart. His character was strongly against America, so it was only natural that an opponent of his would be The Patriot, a masked American wrestler that proudly waved the flag of his country. Hart got pinned clean by The Patriot on Raw to earn the title shot on this show. The other big news was Steve Austin's neck injury that caused him to be out of action for this show. Owen Hart's errant piledriver injured his neck so severely that Austin was on the shelf. He was scheduled to drop the tag titles he held with Dude Love (Mick Foley) on this show due to the injury. The last historic note is that this is the first In Your House PPV to go three hours. Previously only the big five PPVs (Royal Rumble, WrestleMania, King of the Ring, Summerslam and Survivor Series) went three hours with the other IYH shows going two hours. Now that you're caught up on the main angles, let's get to the show. Note: There will not be any play by play rundown of these matches. For this one and Badd Blood '97, I'll have short thoughts on the matches, give star ratings and add any other bits of info needed to give you an idea of what happened. I will go back to doing the full play by play for Survivor Series '97. WWF In Your House: Ground Zero Louisville Gardens in Louisville, Kentucky August 3, 1997 The announcers are Vince McMahon, Jim Ross and Jerry Lawler. Goldust w/Marlena vs. Brian Pillman Analysis: *¼ There was a lot of running and chasing without much semblance of a story in the match due to the limitations of Pillman mainly. This was the last PPV match he would ever wrestle. Brian Christopher vs. Scott Putski Analysis: ½* Not much of a match due to the injury. Faarooq vs. Crush vs. Savio Vega Analysis: -½* I don't give negative stars often, but this one deserved it. There were botched moves, there was no pace and no story told. Just a bad match that filled some time. Too bad it wasn't the end of this rivalry. Max Mini vs. El Torito Analysis: **½ Not a bad way to fill ten minutes on a PPV. Also not something anybody was going to remember a minute after it happened. This was an example of how thin the WWF roster was at this time. Next up was the ceremony where Steve Austin had to give up the tag team titles with Dude Love. Due to his injury he wasn't able to compete, so he had to give up the belt. The fans had sympathy for him because he never actually lost the belt, yet he was being screwed over by management because they didn't like the language he used or the middle finger salutes he always did. This was huge because Austin was continuing to get over as the hottest character in the WWF. Even though he was hurt, he was kept on TV to get the character over even more. Jim Ross interviewed him with Commissioner Slaughter also in the ring too. When Austin was told to give up the belt, he dropped it and made Slaughter pick it up. Then, without warning, Austin gave a stunner to Ross just because he was furious with the authority figures in the WWF. Ross wasn't even in that position on camera, yet the fans ate it up because it was different from the things they were used to seeing. More people ate stunners after this, but at this time it was still very fresh and something I remember talking about with my friends in the days that followed because it only added to the cool persona of Stone Cold. Awesome segment. Elimination Tag Title Match: Owen Hart & The British Bulldog vs. Legion of Doom vs. The Godwinns vs. The Headbangers Analysis: *1/4 Pretty bad tag match that went too long even with four teams. I always got the sense from watching LOD and the Godwinns that they legitimately didn't like eachother, which could have played a part in Henry Godwinn breaking his neck while receiving the LOD clotheslines. Anyway, the Bangers won their first and only tag titles here although it didn't really last that long. It was good to see because they did work hard and were popular with most of the fans. I just don't think Vince ever had that much faith in them. WWF World Title Match: Bret Hart (c) vs. The Patriot Analysis: ***1/4 Solid match typical of what Bret Hart could do on a regular basis. Patriot wasn't a bad worker by any means. He just didn't last much longer after this because his character was very bland. I think Hart could see a bit of the writing on the wall when he was booked in a match like this while Michaels was given the spot as the top heel going against Undertaker. The Undertaker vs. Shawn Michaels At the end of it all, with most of the wrestlers out to separate the two, Undertaker did a huge no hands plancha (leap over the top rope) onto about eight guys. That was very memorable. I remember they replayed it a bunch of times on Raw episodes for weeks after that too. For a guy that's a legit 6'9" to do that is pretty scary. I don't think anybody can ever question how good of an athlete Undertaker is for somebody his size. Analysis: ***3/4 It was a fun, smartly booked match that holds up a decade later because it was a really fresh match that the crowd was very interested in. From a booking perspective, the finish made sense because they didn't want to give away a clean finish the first time Michaels met Undertaker. That was a wise move. On its own, this is not an all time great match that you have to absolutely go out of your way to see. However, if you want to see why Hell in a Cell was so amazing I think it's important that you remember how this match did a perfect job of building to it. This was the appetizer for what would be a very memorable main course to come. Final Thoughts This was not a show that a lot of people have talked about in the years that have passed. It just kinda happened without much news coming from it. Remember that this was at a time in the WWF when the roster was very thin and they were on the brink of becoming something really special. The last two matches were pretty good although Undertaker/Michaels obviously had a better one a month later while the Hart/Patriot match was as predictable as any title match in the history of WWF PPV. The segment with Austin was also pretty important in his growth as the man in the WWF, so at least there is something you can take from this PPV as being memorable. The problem is everything else on the show was largely forgettable. It's basically bad match after bad match with very little happening in the way of newsworthy events. A sad sign of how poor the midcard in the WWF was at this time. It's okay to look back at it now because we know that things got better. Three Stars of the Night 2. Undertaker – I'd say 1997 was his best calendar year and this match was a shining example of that. 3. Bret Hart – Carried a nobody like The Patriot to a good match. 4 out of 10 - That score is for the last two matches plus Austin's stunner. The rest? Nothing to get excited about. Next Up: In Your House: Badd Blood 1997 – The introduction of Hell in a Cell. Past Reviews Smell ya later, Visit My Archives to view ten years of my previous work. |


