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Andy Douglas announced his retirement at the Nashville
Fairgrounds Sports Arena last night.
In a fitting conclusion to his eleven year career, Douglas made the surprise announcement after losing a steel cage match to his former
partner of seven years, Chase Stevens, who was making his first defense of the
SAW International Championship. The emotions inside that ring where as real as
it gets.
Combine that with one of the best weapons brawls you would ever want to see,
and I’m thinking it was SAW’s best event ever - as good as it gets for southern
style pro wrestling in 2010.
For length and pacing, they nailed it right on the head. They started early
(7pm - a kid friendly idea if I ever saw one) and finished in 2:30.
Although not quite as large in numbers (800), it was the hottest crowd, start
to finish, for any of the four SAW events at the Fairgrounds. It was getting
rowdy. Security had to ask the people to move back because they kept crowding
up near the ring barrier, just like back in the day. Clearly, SAW has
established an passionate core fanbase that knows the characters and follows
the product on TV.
(1) Drew Haskins (with Sista O’Feelyah) submitted Cody Melton with
a figure four leglock. I only saw the finish. Haskins’ gear
wasn’t as…um…flamboyant as it was later in the evening.
Downtown Bruno was interviewed Natalie Van Eron. A fair percentage of the crowd
seemed to remember him. Bruno took us down Fairgrounds memory lane, pointing
out the spot where he met his fiancé, and listing some of the great ones he had
the opportunity to work with. Good segment. Bruno has lost the scruffiness he
had back in the day and was quite well spoken.
(2) Jesse Emerson pinned Big Bully Douglas in 4:51. A somewhat mixed reaction for Emerson. He’s apparently
too clean cut for a certain segment of this crowd. Back when there were
territories, Douglas would have earned a
living as a pro wrestler. Emerson took control. Douglas said enough with this clean wrestling BS, and leveled Emerson with a lariat. Douglas followed with a lariat off the ropes and a
fallaway slam. Crisp finish- Emerson got the drop on Douglas and tried for an O’Connor Roll. Douglas blocked it and Emerson pinned him with a backslide.
(3) Brian Christopher beat Lani Kealoha in 3:08. Christopher got a longer, louder pop than he did for his return to the
Fairgrounds last month. Kealoha was in the best cosmetic shape of any of his
SAW appearances. He attacked before the bell. Christopher dropped Kealoha in
his tracks with a superkick, hit a missile dropkick and deposited him outside
the ring. Christopher danced and got tripped up by Kealoha. A nifty
ropes-mounted spinning back elbow by Lani connected, but no such luck on the
diving headbutt. Christopher capped his comeback with the top rope leg drop. No
goggles this time. Hmm.
Stevens came into the ring with the SAW International Title for the first time
and was interviewed with Van Eron. He’s way over but not to the degree
Hammerjack is. Stevens was elated about having the prize coveted by every
wrestler in the locker room, and said he was no paperweight champion. Adams appeared in the entrance way, and wow, did he ever
get heat. He complained about biased officiating (by matchmaker Reno Riggins)
and pointed out that while Stevens won the match, he was yet to walk out of the
ring with the title. Rick Santel blindsided Stevens. Stevens cut that off with
a high backdrop but got nailed by Andy Douglas. Adams joined in to make it a three on one beatdown, until Christopher made the save.
(4) PG-13 (Wolfie D & JC Ice) retained the SAW Tag Team
Championship vs. Derrick King Enterprises (Derrick King & Drew Haskins with
Sista O’Feelyah) in a double count out in just 4:04. The first of
four advertised matches saw DKE invoke the Freebird rule with Haskins subbing
for JT Stahr. Haskins’ gear was hilarious. He wrestled in tiny blue tights
while wearing socks and loafers. It was so gay. I’m not sure who exactly “Teen
Excitement” was trying to excite. Wolfie was handing Haskins his ass. Bad image,
sorry. Haskins ended up wearing only one loafer. King interfered and DKE
briefly got heat on Wolfie. He used a Morton roll for the hot tag. Wolfie’s
timing on what to do and when to do it is so spot on. Ice got a pair of near
falls on Haskins. The match broke down with all four on the floor. Half Dolla
came out with a broom, and King broke it across Wolfie’s back. Hopefully, this
program is just getting off the ground.
(5) “Maniac” Marc Anthony beat Hammerjack in a Tennessee Streetfight in 14:53. Match
of the night and my favorite live match so far for 2010. For a weapons brawl,
it don’t get no better. Anthony’s promo work has been phenomenal. Last night,
he brought his A game in the ring. He deserves a shot on larger stage. Kudos to
Hammerjack on a remarkable piece of work. He was sick as dog, to the point he
had no business doing the match, much less putting on a stellar performance.
Hammer received an explosive pop coming out, and the heat never let up from
there. The brawled outside the barricade, and Anthony fell back over the rail
wearing one of those giant trash barrels. Anthony took over and delivered a
Dick Murdoch elbow with Hammer lying defenseless on the apron. Anthony bashed
Hammer with this giant metal roasting pan, and the impact created one of the
best weapons sound effects ever. Hammer crowned Anthony with a trio of metal
trash can lid shots. Anthony keeled over onto the concrete floor. Crowd was
going nuts for Hammer’s comeback. Anthony drove a chair edge into Hammer’s
throat over by the announcer’s desk. Finally inside the ring, Anthony whipped
Hammer head first into a chair wedged between the turnbuckles. Within moments,
Hammer’s face was covered with blood. Anthony charged and took a backdrop to
the floor. Hammer tried to follow up, but Anthony started beating on him with a
tennis racket. A can lid shot to Hammer’s head sounded like an explosion.
Hammer suplexed Anthony into a coffin of chairs at ringside, busting up the
chairs for a great carnage visual. Another huge “Hammerjack” chant here.
Anthony fired one of the chairs at Hammer’s head to cut him off. Anthony
delivered a low blow that Hammer sold like the mother of all nut shots. Anthony
crashed and burned on a top rope headbutt. Just when Hammer had Anthony where
he wanted him, a video played on the big screen. It was an endless loop of
Hammer’s daughter running towards the camera with a present in her hand
shouting “Happy Birthday, daddy!” It’s usually so lame when a wrestlers stops a
match to look at something on screen, but this was disturbing enough to allow
for suspension of disbelief. Anthony capitalized with one chair shot to the
back and a sick one to the head for the pin.
The postmatch was like a psychotic nightmare. Anthony set Hammer’s throat on
the edge of a chair and waffled his back with another chair shot. Hammer was
still bleeding profusely. Hot Rod Biggs hit the ring. Anthony whacked him in
the head with the chair and a second shot put him down for good. Biggs bled all
over his white shirt and looked like a zombie mess. At one point, Anthony was
holding ten guys at at bay, before they were able to pull Hammerjack out of the
ring. As Hammer was being carried out, Anthony put his helmet on and barked to
the heavens. This match that will be etched in my brain for a very long time.
(6) Brian Christopher beat Rick Santel (with Paul Adams) via DQ in
2:33. The pop for Christopher was amplified the second time
around. Santel was talking smack. Christopher shut his mouth with a quick burst
of offense. Adams jumped up to provide
distraction, and Santel jumped Christopher from behind, injuring his shoulder.
Christopher fired back, but the shoulder was giving him fits, and Santel hit a
back suplex. Nature’s Greatest Elbow hit nothing but canvas. After laying Santel
out with a neckbreaker, Christopher went up top and Douglas dumped him for the DQ. A Team doubled up on Santel until Stevens made the save.
The point was to get Christopher over more as a babyface and it worked.
(7) Jon Michael Worthington defeated Cody Melton in 4:37. This was the only match the crowd
wasn’t up for. Melton came off the ropes and tasted Worthington’s boot bigtime. Worthington made three consecutive covers but
no dice, so he beat the hell out of Melton in the corner. Melton escaped from a
power slam position and downed Worthington with a back stabber. Melton’s big near fall came off a flying body press.
Finish saw Melton attempt to suplex Worthington out of the ring. Not gonna happen. Worthington countered with the Brentwood Breaker (jackhammer).
(8) Chase Stevens pinned Andy Douglas at 13:42 to retain the SAW
International Championship inside a steel cage. It wasn’t the
best match they’ve had during this incredible run. But it added a final piece
to the impressive body of work these men compiled over the last 16 months.
Their epic series of matches set the standard by which to judge great matches
in SAW. They took SAW from a company that had a rep for not being able to
deliver the goods in big matches, to one where it is now the norm. This was an
old-fashioned cage match. Nobody was getting in and nobody was escaping.
Stevens was all over Douglas at the start,
flinging him into the cage. Stevens took a chest bump into the buckles, and Douglas returned the favor with shots into the cage. The
third one was a classic face first shot. Stevens bled. Douglas kept the pressure on the blood was really starting to flow. The crowd got
behind Stevens, and they let the heat build before Douglas let the air out of them with a high knee for a near fall. Stevens hit a top
rope superplex that left both men down. At the count of six, Stevens scrambled
for a cover and Douglas kicked out. Douglas begged for mercy. Stevens gave him the one finger
salute in stereo. Stevens hit a codebreaker for a near fall. Douglas snapped off a Jake Roberts style DDT for a near fall. Stevens made Douglas miss with a guillotine leg drop. Stevens then
missed with a moonsault from the top of the 12 foot cage. Completely insane,
but what the hell, the guy had survived a fall from the balcony in one of their
previous matches. Douglas covered and Stevens
kicked out. Douglas used a Frankensteiner for
a near fall, and then hit the Natural Selection. Stevens kicked out of it just
before the three count. Douglas went for it again,
and Stevens countered, dropping him on his neck with a variation on the
Attitude Adjustment.
Douglas embraced Stevens. This was far from an
ordinary hug. Douglas was choked up bad. He
asked for the mic. What an awful time for the sound system to konk out. They
waited and waited and with no working mic forthcoming, Douglas went without, which in a way, made it even more special. Few could hear what Douglas was saying, but the raw gut churning emotion made
it unforgettable. Here he was, retiring in the building where he made his name,
a building where countless legends had preceded him, after putting over his
long time partner. Douglas started weeping and
it became difficult to find the words. Only after they left the ring and people
were starting to leave, was a working microphone brought out. Douglas said wrestling meant the world to him, and he always gave 100% for the fans. He
ran down a list of people he owed thanks to. Douglas started weeping and it became difficult to get the words out. Stevens took the
mic and said, “You are my best friend, and I love you very much. Thank you for
the seven years you gave me.”
NOTES: SAW returns to the Nashville Fairgrounds Sports Arena on May 8. There
will be a television taping in the interim at a location to be announced… In
the absence of Dan Masters, ring announcing duties were handled by Aaron Camaro
and Dan “The Danonator” Davidson...Vordell Walker, David Young and Masters were
all booked for the Oates family retirement event in Ellaville, Ga…Dutch Mantell
was not in attendance, as he was booked for the Legendsmania fanfest in
Atlanta…SAW regulars, Micah and Tracy Taylor are headed into Roger Gleaton’s
CWA promotion in South Carolina…To read what Douglas posted within hours of his
retirement click here…Area
legend Corsica Joe passed away today at the age of 90.
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