Quote:
Originally Posted by Dynasty
February 1982 Territory Thoughts
Mid-Atlantic
We get to see Ric Flair for the first time both in interviews and in a good match with Jay Youngblood. Flair was acting somewhat heelish despite being cheered by the fans.
Promoting the insanely large NWA World Tag Team Championship tournament dominates the shows all month. Though, I sensed a dip in the last episode. Perhaps problems with actually executing the idea were already starting. Roddy Piper has used the tournament well to draw attention to himself by refusing to name his partner.
The show also talks about the ~Most Impactful Wrestler of 1981~ fan voting. Apparently, Steamboat was in the lead but Piper has overtaken him. How anybody but Flair could win is beyond me.
Sgt. Slaughter had a big month, including an attack on Flair in a taped house show. Also, Don Kernodle became a new Private in the Cobra Corp. Slaughter's the top dog in a nice little faction.
Austin Idol is annoying the other wrestlers and me by coming to ringside and recording their matches. Nobody bothers to mention that there are TV cameras in the studio also recording the matches.
Boring Mike George shows up. If you're watching Mid-South, you saw him get injured and reported out indefinitely.
Blackjack Mulligan may be gone for good. He's in the WWF.
I felt it was kind of a rough month for Mid-Atlantic. Any tapering-off of the absolute fixation on the tag team tournament is a good thing, because that fixation was killing the episodes.
The most entertaining thing that happened all month was, after weeks of Roddy Piper refusing to say who his tag team partner would be for the tournament, just showing up one week with a random homeless guy as his partner for an enhancement match. I loved that.
Slaughter continues to be entertaining. The Ole Anderson/Stan Hansen team is also quite enjoyable.
I actually first became acquainted with Austin Idol as an old dude, since he's working these days as a manager in NWA Powerrr, and he's annoying as ****, constantly trying to put himself over even when that's clearly not what the segment's aim is. I also find him annoying here on 1982 Mid-Atlantic, but I'm predisposed to not liking him.
I don't actually mind Mike George myself. Zero personality, but I've found him to be decent in the ring. Of course, it was easier to look decent when working with the likes of Ted DiBiase. Not sure what he'll bring to Mid-Atlantic.
Quote:
Mid-South
Skandor Akbar had a great month starting with the first episode. He instigates betrayal, a title change, two injuries, and introduces an '80s legend. This is how a heel manager should stir the pot.
Mr. Olympia is getting pushed hard and the fans seem to really like it.
I can't get too into the "Louisiana Championship" and "Mississippi Championship" singles titles. I don't remember them being mentioned in the Apter Magazines (PWI, etc.). And, three singles titles in this territory is too many.
Dusty Rhodes is somewhat prominent at the end of the month. He has a match with Ed Wiskowski and spends the final episode doing commentary. I knew he spent some of late 1981 and 1982 taking time off from Florida wrestling after he dropped the NWA title to Flair. But, I didn't know he was working here even if it's just a short stay.
Every Paul Ordorff match is lightning quick. He was more methodical in his WWF run that I saw back in the day.
Mid-South, meanwhile, is doing the much stronger work than Mid-Atlantic. Skandor Akbar is quite good. Mr. Olympia has been surprisingly entertaining (though his match with Ed Wiskowski on the last episode of the month was a clunker). Ted DiBiase is an excellent white-meat babyface. Dusty as the commentator on that 2/27 episode was killing it until his physical involvement ended the appearance...but even then, that altercation with Bob Roop and Paul Orndorff was pretty great.
Quote:
World Class
WCCW has a long way to go but I liked February more than January.
King Kong Bundy made his heel turn (apparently against Kevin Von Erich but we don't see it).
With Bundy and the Great Kabuki, WCCW has two good heels with a great manager in Gary Hart. I'm also okay with Wild Bill Irwin.
Kerry Von Erich was called "The Uncrowned World Champion". This was a big part of his push in 1982. According to online results, Kerry lost to Ric Flair by DQ on January 25 (Dallas), February 4 (Austin), and February 25 (Dallas/TV taping).
Though we haven't seen it, I think what happened is that Kerry accidentally threw Ric Flair over the top rope and earned an automatic DQ. However, the match went on for some reason (ref was down and didn't see it?) and Kerry pinned Flair cleanly to apparently win the NWA title. Presumably, some referee discussion ensued and the decision was reversed and the title was returned to Flair. This was a standard approach.
Ric Flair will be on the March 13th episode. So, I'm hoping the long Kerry - Flair feud of 1982 starts to ramp up.
David Von Erich showed up for the first time but only did commentary.
Al Madril may have been genuinely injured during a match causing a botched finish. It was weird.
Ivan Putski showed up. I think he first became big in Texas.
Kevin and Kerry aren't very good on their interviews. But, I remember them being reasonably smooth in 1983.
WCCW is the toughest to get through. I feel like it's going to get better, so I'm going to stick with it, but if I didn't have reason to feel like it was going to improve then I would have pulled the plug by now.
Bundy's "turn" seems to have just consisted of showing up one week with a heel manager? Odd way to do it. He's a more capable promo than I remember him being.
Kevin Von Erich is especially rough on the mic at this point. Though he did get some unintentional comedy points when I listened to one of his promos and then went, "Wait...did he basically just cut a promo where all he said was essentially, 'I sure do love banging the hot women who come to the matches'?" Kerry was the more compelling of the two, at least at this point.
Through February '82, it's Mid-South >>>> Mid-Atlantic >> WCCW.