Dusty Wolfe

WWF Superstars of Wrestling [Mar. 21 1987]

World Wrestling Federation
Superstars of Wrestling

Thomas & Mack Center, Paradise, Nevada, United States
21st March 1987

Lead announcers: Bruno Sammartino, Jesse Ventura & Vince McMahon

Superstars of Wrestling logo 04 1987

Line-up:
Barry O & Dusty Wolfe vs The Can-Am Connection

Alex Knight vs Ron Bass

Jim Duggan vs Tiger Chung Lee

Jerry Allen & Jesse Cortez vs Kamala & Sika

Jake Roberts vs Joe Mirto

Billy Anderson vs King Harley Race

Bruno, Vince and Jesse
Vince McMahon opens proceedings with Bruno Sammartino and Jesse ‘The Body’ Ventura who “tells it like it is”. This show was recorded before WrestleMania III, however aired a month later. Ah, the days of TV tapings and PPVs. This is a good example of the general TV shows WWF put out back then, so you can imagine how much more important the PPVs felt. Despite that, there is a huge crowd on hand.

Packed Thomas & Mack Center

Barry O & Dusty Wolfe vs The Can-Am Connection (Rick Martel & Tom Zenk)

Vince marvels at the “young ladies at ringside” as they approve of the Can-Ams. Put that in the Vince Files.

Zenk and Martel
Dusty Wolfe WWF

And here’s our pal Dusty Wolfe, from WCCW! Hello again! Barry O is of course Barry Orton, brother to ‘Cowboy’ Bob in the Orton clan.

Barry "O" Orton

Wolfe takes the initiative, and seems to throw Zenk directly into his own partner on the apron, but it’s Zenk who is stunned by this. Martel sneaks in to catch Zenk out of a suplex attempt, assists Zenk with a lifting front dropkick to Barry and then Dusty, then they hit stereo dropkicks. As always, Jesse points out the blatant cheating by the good guys here. A nice drop-down and dropkick combo from the Can-Ams has Dusty rocked. A bridging German suplex (or “that manouvre!” as per Vince) from Zenk almost finishes this one quickly, but Barry O breaks up the pin.

Martel enters the fray legally this time and Wolfe takes a double dropkick, tagging out to Barry. During this there’s an in-frame promo from the Can-Ams targeting the current tag champions, The Hart Foundation. Commentary makes a good point about the Can-Ams having no manager, which is rare in this golden age of managers.

Martel takes a knucklelock into a headscissor, climbs the ropes with his hands and then twists Barry across the ring with a headscissor takeover, very nice! Martel runs rings around O, rolling through a failed O’Connor roll, cartwheeling and leapfrogging around with pace. O catches Martel mid-jump and hangs him out on the top rope. The heels are happy to poke eyes, ignore rope breaks and use closed fists, but Martel breaks away and tags out to Zenk who fires away with dropkicks and hiptosses. Zenk whips Wolfe into O on the apron and follows up with a slick whirling body slam. Martel takes the tag and gets the pin after an assisted slingshot splash!

“Very impressive – very illegal”. Jesse’s not wrong to be fair.

Craig DeGeorge introduces the ‘new’ Brutus Beefcake

This contains some WrestleMania III spoilers. Beefcake talks about being able to take a pounding. We’ll come to know why when we come to Mania itself. In other news, it looks like Beefcake has that classic Hasbro attire on. Nice.

Babyface Brutus Beefcake

‘Entertaining’ shenanigans

Hillbilly Jim and Outback Jack
Hillbilly Jim and Outback Jack have a discussion about country living and cuisine, to the amusement of Vince McMahon alone.

Alex Knight vs ‘Outlaw’ Ron Bass

Alex Knight

Alex Knight may be familiar to AWA fans, but he is much of an unknown to me. He is giving up a lot of height and weight to Bass. Much to my delight, Ventura asks Sammartino if he’s ever eaten any outback foods, prompting Vince to ask what a possum is. Highlight of the match already? Yes. Bass appears to have a beautiful valet, however Vince lets us know it’s “Betty Federette”, one of the Federettes who I have never seen featured so clearly on a broadcast before. They were essentially ring cabaret.

Betty Federette

Bass dominates with strikes, a falling body slam and a back body drop. In-frame promo from Bass calls out Blackjack Mulligan. Fishhooks from Bass shows he’s a mean “hombre”, he must be getting revenge for his brother Sea Bass. Bass asks his opponent to hit him, giving away a few free shots, but Knight remains overpowered and is swiftly pinned after a diving back elbow from Bass. Quick work for these boys tonight.

Ron Bass

‘Mean’ Gene time!

Okerlund is hyping the upcoming Boston Garden show. The Duke of Dorchester is on the card, woo!

Okerlund, Davey Boy and Dynamite

He is joined by The British Bulldogs, discussing the fallout from WrestleMania III regarding the Hart Foundation and Danny Davis. Davey Boy promises “no mercy” while Dynamite Kid is barely intelligible but says they are “stronger and more efficient”.

‘Hacksaw’ Jim Duggan vs Tiger Chung Lee

This is one of Duggan’s first TV matches in WWF following a highly successful run in Mid-South.

Jim Duggan

Tiger Chung Lee is a Korean-Japanese wrestler more famously known as Kim Duk, but in WWF he is probably best known as one of Mr Fuji’s former tag partners.

Tiger Chung Lee (Kim Duk)
Duggan hits a lot of his repertoire early, clotheslining, knee dropping and body pressing Lee. In-frame promo from Slick with the Iron Sheik and Nikolai Volkoff targeting Duggan. Duggan and Volkoff know each other well from Mid-South.

Duggan misses a charge in the corner allowing some offence for Lee. This is quickly reversed with a quick elbow and a delayed body slam. 3-Point Stance Clothesline is enough for the pin. Duggan’s in full stomping, cross-eyed, thumbs up “hooooo”ing form already. It’s impressive how long this shtick worked for him. This is even before he donned his trademark blue trunks.

Hulk Hogan rant time

Classic Hulkamania Hogan
Hogan addresses Bobby Heenan and King Harley Race, implying Heenan butters up his clients only for them to fail to beat him. Hogan states that Race is his “next victim”. I wonder how differently NWA or AWA would have treated a Hogan/Race match. That would have been interesting.

Savage squad antics

Sika, Fuji, Kamala and Kim Chee

Mr Fuji is the new manager for the group and speaks with Sika, Kamala and Kim Chee, where he encourages Sika to munch on a giant raw fish…which Sika does, wide-eyed. Kamala’s wailing makes this even more questionable, with the big man trying to snatch some fish as we cut away. Vince seems to make some unusual noises himself as we go back to ringside. I wonder what Roman Reigns thinks when he sees stuff where his dad is featured like this.

Jerry Allen & Jesse Cortez vs Kamala & Sika with Kim Chee & Mr Fuji

Jerry Allen and Jesse Cortez (Hernandez)

Cortez is the future trainer-to-the-stars and referee Jesse Hernandez, while Jerry Allen may be known by AWA, Portland and Memphis fans as Jerry O or Oski. Jerry even had a run with UWF in Japan in ’84, so these are fairly notable jobbers.

I hate to say it, but I kind of loved Kamala’s entrance music. Fuji is noted as being new to the group and sports Kamala-esque face paint much like when he sported Powers of Pain paint. They come out as quite the stable of oddities.

Kamala, Sika, Fuji and Kim Chee
Jerry looks quick and sharp in there, gaining advantage over Sika, but Kamala gets the tag, leapfrogs Jerry and lands a thrust kick. Cortez tags in but is floored by chops and headbutts from Kamala and Sika. Cortez looks so awkwardly stiff in the ring and takes the pin after a running splash from big Kamala.
Sika adds insult to the loss by choking out Cortez after the match.

Blackjack Country

DeGeorge and Mulligan
Craig DeGeorge catches up with Blackjack Mulligan out in the desert, in what may actually be Mulligan’s private land. It seems Mulligan and Bass are at odds over the love of “Sarah-Jo Puckit”, who apparently spits tobacco better than any man Mulligan knows. Who says romance is dead?

Jake ‘The Snake’ Roberts vs Joe Mirto

Joe Mirto
Mirto is a longtime WWF job guy, but looking jacked here! Reminds me of Lance Cade a little bit. Jake is so over at this stage in his career, it’s always great to watch the crowd get behind him. He’s like the original Steve Austin or Razor Ramon anti-hero type for WWF. And what’s in the bag, Jake…look at the genuine fear on faces at ringside. Gold.

Jake is looking quite trim here, maybe the best shape I’ve personally ever seen him in. Mirto manages to body tackle Jake to the mat. The advantage is lost early as Jake pounds and floors Mirto with an arm lock, trying to pull Mirto’s shoulder out. Jake is flagrant with his hair pulls and facewashing, wearing down Mirto with a half-nelson. Jake reaches for the snake bag from the corner which stirs the crowd again. Instead he uses the knee and elbow to wear down Mirto’s left shoulder.

There’s discussion from commentary and from an in-frame promo from the Honky Tonk Man about banning the DDT from WWF rings due to it being a “dangerous hold”.

A short comeback from Mirto as he stops Jake with a knee, however Jake responds with a knee lift, short-arm clothesline and it’s a thumbs up and thumbs down from Jake. The DDT!! Jake slithers over into a pin and it’s all over. Jake rapidly releases his snake Damien and wraps him around Mirto’s neck. That’s what the people came to see.

Damien meets Joe Mirto

Patera’s penance

‘Mean’ Gene details the sad arrest and imprisonment of Ken Patera following the infamous McDonalds incident which saw him sentenced to prison for two years, and how he is accepting of his punishment and returning to WWF a changed man. Patera appears from behind bars in the clip and blames Bobby Heenan for being abandoned. Patera wants to return to take out guys like Heenan. It’s a shame he never changed his hairstyle when he was in the slammer, he looks like my auntie Margaret.

Patera in jail

Billy Anderson vs King Harley Race with Bobby ‘The Brain’ Heenan

Young Anderson is perhaps better known as The Black Knight, and in Japan as one of the Mercenarios Americanos (as well as Star Man). Having wrestled in Mexico at this point in his career, Billy doesn’t feel like your typical jobber on paper.

Billy Anderson
Not a huge fan of Race’s King gimmick, but Bobby Heenan is always welcome in a managerial role. He demands the humanoids pay homage to the King, and wonders why there is no ovation. He blames the mic and becomes the bearer of the crown for King Harley at ringside.

King Harley and his crown
Race dominates early with knees, body slams and a hip-breaker. Heenan delivers a reply to Ken Patera with an in-frame video calling Patera “garbage”.

Prolonged butterfly lock into a butterfly suplex, then following up with some classic Harley knees. Race busts out a thumping fisherman suplex with a tight cradle for the easy win. Poor Billy barely got out of the blocks.

Heenan re-crowns Race following the match and demands recognition from the crowd once more.

‘Mean’ Gene’s promotes the Boston show with Jake Roberts

This is the hilarious skit where Gene talks about upcoming show at the Boston Garden, posing with a golf club and a gavel, tossing the gavel behind the camera and getting an “OH!” from someone. “Sorry about that, pal”, as he tries to hide his smile. I love it when Gene breaks on camera!

Gene Okerlund

Bulldogs vs Hart Foundation catches my attention as always. Jake faces Honky Tonk Man also! Which leads to a little chat with Jake Roberts…

“Just let me say this. I don’t mind being abused, I’ve been abused all my life. But then I like to return the favour from time to time, y’know, that way I feel like I’ve got something to live for. Y’know, it’s sorta like-Gene-you ever get on an airplane, man, and you’re up there in the air, and you’re flying along at 40,000 feet, and that plane starts to shake, and it’s creaking and flying from side to side, things flying through the roof, people jumping up and down and screaming, praying? You ever been through something like that?”

Jake Roberts with Gene Okerlund

A worried Gene replies, “I’ve been uh…I guess a time or two.”

“What choice do you have when you’re up there? You can’t get out. No, no, you see the doors are shut, you’re 40,000 feet, you ain’t got no choice, you better ride this one all the way to the ground! Well, Honky Tonk Man, you took your shot, and it was a good one, it was a great one, and I can appreciate that! But my man, it’s my turn now, and when you shut that door by planting me with that guitar, man…you’ll have to ride it out. All the way down. And it’s a ride you can’t hold on to. It’s too much for him.”

Gene, again, looking somewhat worried, “It was a blast from the past, so to speak”.

Jake giving little laughs during his promos is always so devious. Easily my favourite interview guy, ever. I may end up writing out everything he says on here. I just love him.

“You’ll sing too”. Chilling.

Highlights:
Rick Martel is the man.
WWF’s Jim Duggan early days.
DUSTY WOLFE! The search for a win goes on. 0-2.
Jake the Snake takes the cake.

Thoughts:
Superstars shows itself to be mostly a quick enhancement show, but at least we get some segments with Gene. I forgot Craig DeGeorge existed and he features here quite a bit. I don’t have much high hopes for future episodes of Superstars, but we’re in it for the long haul.

Verdict: Very skippable, especially since I’m on a WrestleMania III hype train right now. I wanted more substance. Only Jake really stood out.

Available here on Dailymotion.

World Class Championship Wrestling TV [Mar. 21, 1987]



World Class Wrestling Association
World Class Championship Wrestling

The Sportatorium, Dallas, Texas, United States
6th March 1987

Lead announcers: Bill Mercer

Line-up:
Al Madril vs Scott Casey

Bob Bradley & Jack Victory vs The Fantastics

Kevin von Erich vs Matt Borne

Dusty Wolfe & Steve Doll vs The Rock ‘n’ Roll RPMs

2-Minute Challenge
Jeep Swenson vs Red River Jack

Al Madril vs Scott Casey

Back to the Sportatorium in Dallas for World Class. It’s easy to see why Bill Mercer is so fondly remembered, he’s seems the kind of guy to go drinking and sing karaoke with until dawn.

First up is wiley vet Al Madril against the autograph-inundated cowboy Scott Casey. Madril sporting a lovely rat-tail and being easily put off by the partisan crowd “Go Scott, go!” Madril again taking hip tosses like he is being thrown from a moving car! His hips must have been hurting. Madril tries to con the ref into thinking Casey pulled his trendy hair. He of course follows up by gaining the advantage by pulling Casey’s hair! Devious! A little kiss (or maybe a bite to the lip) by Madril before throwing him to the floor. These refs in WCCW are more lax than ECW’s.

Casey using his fists and knees, but is cut off by cheap tactics. A huge shoulder tackle in the corner avoided by Casey, who takes control. A toe punt is reversed into a back body drop, and Madril appears to have been disqualified for putting the man over the top rope. This dumb rule applies here in World Class? I hate this rule so much.

Black Bart arrives? Bart and Pringle challenge Casey to a “drug store cowboy match”, which sounds awesome if you ask me. Sadly, it just means the loser gets ridden with a saddle. Threats are made to Casey’s family and he just accepts it while the ref barely holds Casey back. Way to make Casey look like a chump.

Bob Bradley & Jack Victory vs The Fantastics (Bobby Fulton & Tommy Rogers)

Potentially a good match here with the tag champs involved. Bradley looks different than a few weeks ago but still billed as ‘The Cat’. Lovely tag leapfrogs as per the Fantastics’ norm. Tommy Rogers has a great dropkick, huge height! Bradley goes for the eyes in response. The Fantastics bounce back as commentary compare Bradley & Victory’s stylish looks to jaguars and civets (not joking). Fulton scores a nice headscissors setting off a tag move cascade and a double Fargo strut! I am curious who trained both these guys, their moves are lucha-esque. A nice parallel armbar by Rogers to Victory, while taunting Bradley into a trap! Cameras miss it, but Bradley goes to the top rope and it appears Fulton shakes the ropes from the other side resulting in Bradley’s beans getting smashed on the top turnbuckle! Ouch. Rogers trying his best to make the inexperienced Victory look good out there, huge leaping ability from Rogers. Fulton teases bashing Victory’s beans with his boot, but he escapes to get Bradley back in.

Bradley decides a backwards handspring will show the Fantastics. It does not. The girls favour Fulton in the exchange of moves and hip thrusts, but Fulton is blindsided by a knee to the lower lumber when getting a little too close to the fresh man. Again the refs look very silly here for missing everything. Huge hair-slam is also ignored while Rogers goes ballistic, allowing more illegalities to take place behind the ref’s back. Nice flying forearm by Bradley puts down Fulton but he misses a fish-flop headbutt. We have four men in, The Fantastics are able to leapfrog out of each others’ way and send Victory to the floor with a double dropkick! Interesting finish, where Rogers pins Bradley with an assisted sunset flip!

The Fantastics hit the floor to celebrate with the fans, they are very popular at the Sportatorium indeed!

Interview segment

Bill Mercer speaks to Gary Hart and Nord the Barbarian

Nord is being hyped as a trainee of Brody and being of the same level of danger, basically being hyped as a future champion of WCCW. He’ll have to beat Kevin von Erich if that’s the case. Lance von Erich shows up for some reason, so Nord batters him after a sucker punch. I guess this was the set-up for the last show we watched. Lance repping a Gold’s Gym tanktop, this is so 80s. Shame he’s not in Zubaz and shades. The security team hold back Lance before he can get his ass kicked any further.

Kevin von Erich vs ‘Maniac’ Matt Borne with Percy Pringle



Hugely interesting match up now, with the future Doink, Matt Borne vs current WCWA World Champion Kevin von Erich! Matt already had a great run in Mid-South at this point and both lads are second-gen pro wrestlers.

Borne has Pringle in his corner and immediately bends the rules. The ref tries to create a rope break, but Kevin decides to fight out and gets cheap-shotted for his trouble. Ref is already losing control here. Barefooted Kevin with a vicious double corner kick, heels first into Borne’s chin followed by a lovely flying dropkick to the face! While Borne kills time, we are shown the WCWA World title belt, so I guess this is for the title? It wasn’t announced as such. Pringle’s facial reactions are fantastic, such a great manager.

Borne takes a shortcut out of a Greco-Roman knucklelock and the ref counts for a rope break…and gets to five. No DQ however! Nice recovery to pull off a rolling flying headscissors on Borne, going for the submission but Borne able to squeeze out. Borne just looks constantly angry. Caught by a flying body scissor, Kevin playing the part of a boa constrictor this match. The mat game countered by heavy strikes. Borne’s forehead gets clamped by the Iron Claw but he manages to push Kevin to the corner for the break. No wait! Pringle jabs his cane full force into Kevin’s lower back and running away like a pig on fire. The distraction helps Borne big time, nailing a suplex and backbreaker. Kevin is thrust into the corner but springs back out like Spider-Man with a spinning cross body block! He got the pin!

Bit of an awkward stand-off following the match for unexplained reasons.

Dusty Wolfe & Steve Doll vs The Rock ‘n’ Roll RPMs (Mike Davis & Tommy Lane)

Steve Doll & Dusty Wolfe, wow, what a team! Enhancement Fodder would be a good name.

The RPMs jump these famous jobbers before the bell, Lowrance almost gets caught in the crossfire! I was curious to see if Wolfe or Doll would get any offense here, since I can’t recall either of them ever dealing any damage in WWF or WCW. So far Lane and Davis are dominating. Dusty almost takes out the cameraman when hitting the ropes, but that’s his only offense thus far. Quick tags for the RPMs, keeping it simple with basic strikes. Dusty kicks away a back drop attempt to get Doll the tag! Dropkick by Doll! Dropkick by doll!! A second is blocked! Tommy Lane lifts Doll into a spinebuster position while Mike Davis lands a second-rope clothesline, a bit like the Hart Attack! It’s over. RPMs with an easy win here.

Subdued celebrations from the RPMs, and my hopes to see Dusty Wolfe win a match continue on.

Jeep Swenson vs Red River Jack
2-Minute Challenge

This has been named as a “two minute challenge”. But no real clue as to why this is a two minute challenge. I assume because Swenson can only wrestle for two minutes before passing out. The guy is built like a brick shithouse and literally portrayed Bane in Batman & Robin (1997), delivering the stiffest clothesline and kicks the Sportatorium may have ever seen. Brody still wearing a white Super Médico mask for his Red River gimmick – he is apparently from Arizona. This is a mess. Brody is able to go strike for strike with Swenson until landing a big running boot. Brody grabs a chair, goes to the top and waffles Jeep with the chair off the top! Swenson barely kneels and throws punches and forearms in a rage. Time limit expires!

Ref goes flying! It’s chaos! So, despite using a steel chair, Red River Jack wins the challenge I guess? He did last over two minutes with Jeep Swenson and that appears to have been the only goal of match with no other rules stated. A weird one.

Highlights:
Some nice tag work from the Fantastics!
More rare Red River Jack.
Jeep Swenson having a rare match.
DUSTY WOLFE! The search for a win begins here!
Borne and Kevin were an intriguing match up.

Thoughts:
I swear WCCW is supposed to be better than this…isn’t it? Not absolutely awful, but I do expect more from the weekly TV shows.

Verdict: Another skippable show.

Available here on WWE Network.