(All screen captures are the property of World Wrestling Entertainment)
No Mercy
October 21, 2001
Savvis Center
St. Louis, Missouri
News & Notes: Shane said Hebner screwed Austin at Unforgiven, but Angle refused to grant a return bout. Austin sent angry faxes to Heyman in response. Meanwhile, Regal backed Angle’s decision to deny Austin’s wishes. He said Austin lost his rematch clause when he joined the Alliance because he negated his WWF contract. However, the Alliance voted on someone to face Angle in a non-title contest. If they succeeded, Austin would receive his chance. RVD won the vote and defeated Angle. Then Austin fought Kurt and regained his title when Regal betrayed the WWF to help Austin! William said he did it to ensure a worthy man held the championship. Afterward, Linda McMahon fired Regal and reinstated Mick Foley as the commissioner, but the Alliance made Regal their personal commissioner to counteract the appointment. This didn’t stop Foley from booking the triple threat main event for this PPV.
Now for a quick rundown of some extra storylines. DDP did some soul-searching after his loss to Sara. He decided it wasn’t a bad thing. It was a good thing. In fact, his failures encouraged him to become a motivational speaker and a yoga instructor. The problem was, DDP’s pep talks were quite self-centered and snarky. Elsewhere, X-Pac grew frustrated after dropping the Cruiserweight belt back to Kidman. He threatened to jump to the Alliance. In other news, Tough Enough concluded with two winners in Maven and Nidia. Tazz immediately tested Maven in three matches. Maven failed in the first two, but he scored an upset in the third with Nidia’s assistance. And speaking of Tazz, he punished Kidman for snitching on Austin when Austin lied about a vote. Unfortunately, Tazz pissed Austin off again when he implied RVD might win the WWF gold. Austin called him a party pooper.
The opening video focuses on the three men in the main event. Austin is a desperate man. He is grasping onto his identity as it slowly slips away from his once-iron grip. Angle is a vengeful man. He wants to regain a taste of power. Angle savored it for a moment, but he abruptly lost it. And RVD is a confident man. He is ready for battle, but he has nothing to lose. This is his opportunity to gain it all. These three men have varying motivations, yet they share a common goal. One man will emerge triumphant while showing no mercy to his opponents.
Now “Click Click Boom” by Saliva plays while fireworks explode. JR welcomes everyone to the show before he discusses the card with Heyman. They will decide championships on a night that could change sports entertainment for a long time to come. While JR says this, the teams arrive for the first contest. It’s the Hurricane & Lance Storm vs. the Hardy Boyz for the WCW tag team titles. JR and Heyman talk about the Hardys’ history with the Hurricane.
WCW Tag Team Title Match: The Hardy Boyz (c) (w/ Lita) vs. The Hurricane & Lance Storm (w/ Mighty Molly & Ivory)
Storyline: The Hurricane wanted Molly Holly as his sidekick, so he rescued her after she got knocked out during a match with Ivory. Hurricane took her away on his Hurri-Cycle, much to Spike Dudley’s dismay. When we saw her again, she had joined the Hurricane! Molly said she dumped Spike because he didn’t have superpowers. Afterward, Molly told people to call her Mighty Molly. She stood for truth and justice, so she confronted Lita. Molly accused Lita and the Hardys of cheating because they won the WCW tag titles with the Undertaker’s help. This led to an encounter between Molly and Lita, which Molly won. Meanwhile, Hurricane also pissed off the APA. He pulled down their door with the Hurri-Cycle, so the APA stole the bike. While these things happened, Matt Hardy had his own side feud with Kanyon because Kanyon harassed Lita.
The Match: Jeff and Hurricane exchange holds, takedowns, and knockdowns until Storm makes a blind tag. Then Storm and Hurricane score their Samoan neckbreaker combo before the action spills outside. Ivory interferes, which allows Hurricane to don his cape and perform a flying crossbody onto everyone. Back inside, Jeff fends off double-teaming and lands a Whisper in the Wind. This leads to Matt’s hot tag. He cleans house with Side Effect and a neckbreaker. Plus, Jeff adds Poetry in Motion before Matt nails a Drop Shot. Storm and Hurricane try to stop them with a double superkick, but it fails, so Molly intervenes. Now the women brawl and cause chaos. Jeff attacks Ivory, but Storm puts Jeff in the Maple Leaf. However, Lita breaks it up with a flying hurricanrana. With Storm neutralized, the Hardys end it with a Twist of Fate and a Swanton on the Hurricane.
Thoughts: This was a nice opener. They maintained a fine pace and built to a chaotic finish. I mean that in a good way. The chaos never spiraled out of control, and it earned a loud reaction from the crowd. It even gives Hurricane and Storm a reason to claim the ref screwed them.
Winners: The Hardy Boyz (7:41)
RVD appears backstage, but Regal stops him. He assumes RVD will find Austin and apologize for frog splashing him on Smackdown, but RVD says no. Upon hearing this, Regal says he hopes this is a temporary lapse in sanity. Then Regal tells RVD to have nothing to do with Vince McMahon in any way, shape, or form. RVD says he isn’t on Vince’s side. He was only looking out for number one, which is R-V-D! With this said, RVD tries to walk away, but Regal grabs him. He tells Rob to not do anything he will regret later, so RVD sarcastically says okay.
Speaking of Vince, he arrives in a limo with a license plate that says Gem-8 on it. (What does that mean?) Cole approaches him for an interview. He wonders why Vince is late. This is an important night. He also asks Vince why he returned. Before Vince answers these questions, he asks Cole to help him with his coat. Cole fumbles it when Vince turns his back, but he helps Vince put it on. Now Vince says he is glad to hear RVD is in the building. And as far as Cole’s questions, he will answer them one way or another by the end of the night. After all, he is there to make a difference and an impact. Once Vince finishes, he turns to leave, but he changes his mind. Vince tells Cole he will drop him the next time he drops his jacket.
Test vs. Kane
Storyline: Booker T and Test formed a team and started a feud with the Brothers of Destruction. Test’s job was to neutralize Kane. He brawled with him multiple times while Booker and Shane attacked Taker. Then Booker and Test won the WCW tag titles because of Shane’s interference and escaped in a limo. However, the Undertaker helped the Hardys take those belts. Booker challenged Taker to a match because of this, which inspired Test. He did the same thing with Kane. Later, Test cost Kane a chance to capture Hurricane’s European title, but Taker rescued Kane from a beating after the bout. Finally, Taker teamed with Angle against Booker and Austin. Test interfered and fought with Kane in the crowd.
The Match: Kane scores a powerslam, and a hotshot before press slamming Test over the ropes! Then Kane threatens Nick Patrick, so Test fetches the ring bell and whacks Kane. Patrick does nothing about it. Back inside, Test lands a suplex and a side slam while fending off Kane’s comeback. A missed flying elbow follows, so Kane hits a side slam and sends Test outside. Now Test shoves Kane into the post, but he misses a big boot and takes a chokeslam, a powerslam, and a flying clothesline. When Kane continues, Test responds with a pumphandle powerslam and a flying elbow. Neither one ends it, so Test grabs a chair only for Kane to dropkick it into his face! Next, Kane tries to use the chair, but Patrick stops him. Kane chokes and pushes Nick, which allows Test to win with a low blow and a big boot.
Thoughts: This was a great hoss battle. They did some impressive spots and had some nice nearfalls. Plus, they built to a hot finish. Test does well in these big-man matches. It’s an underrated trait. He deserves more credit for it.
Winner: Test (10:05)
JR calls Nick Patrick totally corrupt. While he says this, Nick doesn’t leave the ring fast enough. Kane sits up and chokeslams him. Then Kane almost leaves, but he pulls Nick to his feet for a second one! Heyman begs JR to have some compassion and stop Kane, but JR won’t do it. In fact, Kane returns to give Nick a powerbomb before setting off his pyro.
Backstage, Coach knocks on Stone Cold’s door, but Debra answers. He asks to interview Austin, so Debra asks Steve if he wants to talk to Coach. Austin says no, but he yells messages for Debra to relay to Coachman. Steve says he thinks Angle is a sorry son of a bitch. He also wants Coach to know RVD is a big piece of trash. And as far as Vince, he’s a bigger piece of trash than RVD! Furthermore, Austin won’t lose his WWF title tonight! Once Austin finishes, Debra asks if he has anything else to say. Austin tells her to thank Coach and tell him to get his ass out of there. Debra passes on the messages, but she censors the cursing.
Elsewhere, Stacy Keibler approaches Matt Hardy. She asks him if he knows the Dudleys’ location. Matt doesn’t know, but Stacy says it doesn’t matter. He’s a Hardy. However, Stacy opens her robe and asks Matt for his opinion of her lingerie. He stammers and tells her it’s great. Matt even mumbles the words lingerie match. When he finishes, Stacy thanks him and leaves while Matt stares at her. Lita arrives after she’s gone. She asks Matt what he’s looking at, but he says he’s looking at nothing. Matt kisses her before she asks more questions, and he tells her she did great tonight.
This leads to Stacy vs. Torrie. They will compete in their lingerie, but this isn’t a Bra & Panties contest. This has normal rules, other than the attire. During the entrances, JR calls Stacy the Duchess of Dudleyville.
Lingerie Match: Torrie Wilson vs. Stacy Keibler
Storyline: Stacy didn’t understand why Torrie was dating Tajiri. The relationship bothered her, so Stacy challenged Torrie to a mixed tag encounter. Stacy and Tazz wrestled Torrie and Tajiri twice, and they traded wins. Then Stacy jumped Torrie backstage and interrupted her interview with Lilian Garcia. This led to a Bikini Contest, which Torrie won. Stacy couldn’t handle it, so she choked Torrie with her robe. Later, Tajiri teamed with Big Show and Spike against the Dudleys and Tazz. The Dudleys revealed Stacy was their new manager and Stacy attacked Torrie. Worse yet, Stacy helped the Dudleys put Torrie through a table while Tazz locked Tajiri in the Tazmission. Finally, the Dudleys ambushed Tajiri and Big Show, but Torrie returned. She went after Stacy and pulled off her pants, so Stacy ran away.
The Match: Stacy attacks before removing her robe. She cartwheels through two Irish whips and kicks Torrie in the face. With Torrie down, Stacy disrobes and pulls out a cat of nine tails! She spanks Torrie and the referee, Jack Doan. Now Torrie tackles Stacy and they tussle. They even roll over Jack, so Heyman says he wants to be Jack Doan when he grows up. Next, Stacy rams Torrie into the turnbuckles and chokes her with her foot, but Torrie answers with a sunset flip. This leads to reversals and pin attempts. Afterward, Torrie sends Stacy into the corner, but Stacy catches her with a headscissors. She tries to pull Torrie to the top rope, so Torrie brings her down with a super snapmare. After a cover for two, Torrie avoids a clothesline and does the handspring elbow. She rolls a dazed Stacy up for three.
Thoughts: This was surprisingly good. They clearly practiced this ahead of time and stuck with what they knew. It contained some amusing moments and a nice exchange of pinfall counters. Plus, they kept it the right length.
Winner: Torrie Wilson (3:09)
Cole interviews Kurt Angle. Michael mentions Vince McMahon’s recent behavior and his comments from earlier. Angle says Vince marches to the beat of a different drum. Plus, he has his eyes set on RVD for some reason. However, Angle has his eyes on Austin and RVD. Before Kurt can say more, Vince enters the room. He shakes Kurt’s hand and says, “Long time no see!” Vince says he wants to wish Angle the best of luck, so Kurt thanks him, but he doesn’t need luck. Tonight, he will win the WWF title one more time. Oh, hell yeah! It’s true. As a matter of fact, it’s Van Dam true!
Next, Lilian speaks with Christian. She says we all saw what Christian did last week. Now he’s moments away from facing Edge in a Ladder Match. Christian says he still remembers everyone picking Edge as the big star from their team. What people fail to realize is, no matter how good you are, there’s always someone better. The people of St. Louis know this. Mark McGwire set a record three years ago, but a better man broke it. Tonight, Christian will prove to the entire world he’s better than Edge.
Ladder Match for the Intercontinental Title: Edge vs. Christian (c)
Storyline: Christian rode in limos after winning the Intercontinental title. He also refused to give autographs to kids and mocked them for being ugly. However, Christian wasn’t as confident as he seemed. He kept his gold through disqualifications. Plus, Edge came after him, so Christian approached the APA for help. Bradshaw rejected the request and challenged him for his championship, so Christian ran. Since he created so many enemies, Christian recruited X-Pac and Albert to protect him. But it didn’t end there. Later, Christian lured Edge into a trap. He told him their mom was in a car accident. When Edge rushed backstage, Christian and the Alliance ambushed him. Heyman then revealed Christian was the Alliance’s newest member! Christian called them his new family because the only accident was when their mom gave birth to Edge. Finally, the Alliance jumped Edge and held him down for Christian’s attack.
The Match: They brawl in and out of the ring and into the crowd. Plus, Edge baseball slides a ladder into Christian. Then he catapults Christian into it and builds a ladder bridge. They fight on top of it until Edge crotches Christian on the rungs. Not to be outdone, Christian see-saws the ladder into Edge’s face. After some attempts to climb, they send each other into the ladder. Edge even gives Christian an inverted electric chair onto it. Now they set up more ladders and perform moves off them. Edge does the Edge-O-Matic. Christian scores a reverse DDT.
Next, Edge stops a one-man Conchairto and splashes Christian on a ladder. Christian recovers and climbs again, so Edge spears him off the ladder. Unfortunately, both men fall outside when they try to climb. When they return, Edge gives Christian a low blow with a chair. This leads to fighting on top of three ladders, and Edge nails Christian with the one-man Conchairto. Christian falls, so Edge reaches up and grabs the belt to win.
Thoughts: This was great. They used a good mix of high spots and a brutal but fitting ending. The poetic justice of Edge using the one-man Conchairto told a nice story. My only gripe is it dragged slightly, but the big moments more than made up for this.
Winner: Edge (New Champion) (22:32)
Meanwhile, Spike Dudley drowns his sorrows at WWF New York with beer and shots. They present a replay of the Dudleys backdropping him onto a table before JR asks Spike how he is feeling. Spike sarcastically says he feels like a hundred bucks. He came to WWF New York to watch Tajiri and the Big Show lay a beating on his brothers. When Spike says this, Heyman mocks him for losing his girlfriend to the Hurricane. This doesn’t bother Spike because a woman flirts with him. He blows off Heyman to speak with the lady, so Heyman takes offense to this.
WWF Tag Team Title Match: The Dudley Boyz (c) vs. The Big Show & Tajiri
Storyline: The Dudleys defended their WWF tag titles against the Rock and Angle, and they put them through tables. Then the Dudleys faced the Rock in a handicap tables fight with the WCW belt on the line, but the drama between the WWF and WCW refs robbed them of the victory. This led to the Dudleys and Nick Patrick vs. Rock, Jericho, and Chioda. Chioda pinned Patrick, and the Rock had Chioda and Hebner do People’s Elbows! Next, the Dudleys drove Torrie through a table. They also knocked Spike out of action by backdropping him over the ropes and onto a table! Their actions pissed off Tajiri and Big Show. Afterward, they fought Big Show two-on-one. Tajiri saved him and Big Show chokeslammed Bubba on a table. Finally, Tajiri wrestled D-Von and Big Show helped him succeed, despite Stacy’s interference.
The Match: Tajiri and Big Show fend off the Dudleys’ double-teaming. Then Tajiri lands a moonsault and Big Show squashes D-Von in the corner with his butt. Tajiri even scores a somersault plancha. Unfortunately, Bubba ends the onslaught with a Bubba Bomb after a blind tag. Now the Dudleys land a double flapjack and subdue Tajiri with a chinlock. When Tajiri shows life, the Dudleys distract the ref, so he misses Big Show’s tag. They use the opening for the Wassup Drop.
Eventually, Tajiri counters a powerbomb into a DDT and tags Show. He cleans house until D-Von does a chop block. However, Tajiri makes a blind tag. He puts D-Von in the Tarantula and nails a double handspring elbow. With the Dudleys dazed, Tajiri sprays the mist, but he hits the ref by mistake! The blinded ref can’t count when Big Show chokeslams Bubba, so Rhyno interferes. He gores Big Show and leaves. Tajiri attempts a rally, but the Dudleys overwhelm him. They finish Tajiri with a 3D.
Thoughts: This was a strong showing from both teams. They did a good job making it look like Tajiri and Big Show could win, but a series of mishaps and shenanigans cost them the victory. This was simple yet effective storytelling. The loss didn’t hurt Tajiri because he still did well.
Winners: The Dudley Boyz (9:30)
Backstage, Regal stops Rhyno to commend him for his actions and his initiative. Rhyno says he interfered because he’s tired of people treating the Alliance like a joke. He’s going to change the way people look at them even if he has to do it single-handedly. Regal says, “Bloody good. Bravo!”
Meanwhile, Booker, Shane, and Test also celebrate Rhyno’s behavior. Shane says this is all about respect and making an impact. Test already took out Kane. Now Booker has to take out the Taker. If he does, the Alliance will have all the R-E-S-P-E-C-T for Booker T. After all, the Undertaker has never been a five-time WCW champion! And he doesn’t have a move that electrifies millions like the Spinaroonie. Upon hearing this, Booker calls Taker a dead sucka walking. Test and Shane can dig that.
The Undertaker vs. Booker T
Storyline: Booker T failed to capture the WWF title from Angle, so he formed a team with Test and went after the WCW tag titles instead. They faced Taker and Kane, and Shane McMahon interfered multiple times to help them win the gold. Afterward, Booker, Test, Shane, and Nick Patrick escaped in a limo. Then Booker and Test defended the championships against the Hardys, so Taker attacked Booker and the Hardys succeeded! This was the final straw for Booker. The disrespect since he came to the WWF had to end. Therefore, he challenged the WWF’s most respected man, the Undertaker. Later, Austin held an Alliance vote to pick a partner for him. He lied and said Booker won the vote because Austin didn’t want RVD as his teammate. Booker and Austin teamed against Taker and Angle. Test and Booker also fought the Brothers, and Test helped Booker pin Taker!
The Match: They fight in and out of the ring until Booker hurts his shoulder on a missed charge. Now Taker focuses on the injury with armbars, arm wringers, and short-arm scissors. He also nails Old School, so Booker regroups. While outside, Booker tries to use the bell, but the ref grabs it. This doesn’t prevent them from brawling in the crowd. When they return, Booker sends Taker into the post and subdues him with heel kicks and a side slam.
Booker fends off Taker’s comebacks and scores a neckbreaker, but Taker responds with a jumping DDT. However, Booker cuts him off again with a hotshot and a sidekick. As Taker recovers, Booker does the Spinaroonie. An axe kick follows, but Taker gets a foot on the ropes during the pin. Next, Booker counters a chokeslam with a low blow and does corner punches. Unfortunately, Booker poses, so Taker turns it into a Last Ride for the three.
Thoughts: This was fine. It wasn’t overly thrilling, but this contained solid action. Plus, this was the strongest Booker has looked in the WWF. I’m sure Taker was happy to work with someone good after last month.
Winner: The Undertaker (12:10)
Coach stops Jericho backstage for an interview. He says they are moments away from the WCW title match, but Jericho interrupts him. Jericho says it’s time to put up or shut the hell up. He would like to stick around and chat, but Coach will have to excuse him. Jericho has to go win the big one. Once Jericho leaves, JR says that’s the wrap on Jericho. Can he finally win the big one or is he a choke artist like Bill Buckner?
WCW Title Match: Chris Jericho vs. The Rock (c)
Storyline: Jericho accidentally wiped out Stephanie and gave her a concussion during a rematch with RVD. When she returned, Jericho insulted her, so Shane and RVD fought Jericho and the Rock. The problem was, Jericho hit Rock with a chair by mistake. This caused a brawl between Jericho and Rock. However, they patched their differences until Jericho defeated RVD for a shot at Rock’s WCW championship. This only escalated the tensions. They grew worse when Jericho stood by and let RVD and Rhyno beat up the Rock. Sensing an opening, Stephanie stirred the pot between Rock and Jericho, but they told her to leave. Nevertheless, a tense confrontation resulted in Jericho taking a Rock Bottom. Later, Foley made Rock and Jericho team again because he wanted them to get along. It didn’t work. Jericho took out everyone with a chair and did the People’s Elbow to the Rock.
The Match: They do some chain wrestling and takedowns before evading each other’s finishers. Now Jericho scores a triangle dropkick, a flying back elbow, a backbreaker, and a hotshot. This leads to fighting on the top rope. Rock crotches Jericho and lands a superplex before doing a belly-to-belly and a Samoan Drop. Scuffling around the announce table follows until Rock takes Jericho inside for a chinlock. Once Jericho escapes, he hits a missile dropkick, a neckbreaker, and a hurricanrana. Jericho even uses the Rock Bottom and a Lionsault, but he misses a People’s Elbow. This pisses off the Rock, so he brings Jericho outside and puts him through the Spanish table with a Rock Bottom!
Back in the ring, Jericho counters the real People’s Elbow into the Walls, but Stephanie appears. She delivers a chair, so Jericho releases the hold to go after her. Stephanie falls off the apron when he approaches, but the distraction allows Rock to nail a DDT. This earns applause from Stephanie. When she climbs up to cheer the Rock, he pulls her over the ropes and gives her the Rock Bottom. The ref checks on Stephanie, so Jericho seizes the opportunity. He drops the Rock on the chair with a full nelson facebuster and covers for the three.
Thoughts: This was quite good. They started slowly, but it built to a crescendo and a hot finish. The action contained a nice ebb and flow. Plus, they had a hot crowd. Seeing Jericho win his first world title is great.
Winner: Chris Jericho (New Champion) (23:44)
Jericho taunts Stephanie because she helped him win the title. Then he poses with his belt, but the Rock grabs the chair and stares at him. When Jericho turns and sees him, the Rock holds up the weapon and questions his actions. Once he says his peace, the Rock hands the chair to Jericho and leaves. JR says he handed him the smoking gun, but Jericho doesn’t seem to care. He raises it along with the gold.
Afterward, they show Vince’s locker room door. JR asks what kind of impact will Vince make.
Triple Threat Match for the WWF Title: Stone Cold Steve Austin (c) vs. Kurt Angle vs. Rob Van Dam
Storyline: RVD gained popularity within the Alliance while Austin was gone. They came to Rob for advice. The Alliance also chanted RVD’s name and carried him on their shoulders when RVD earned Austin the rematch. Once Austin regained the title, Shane suggested Austin should reward RVD with a WCW championship shot, but Austin wanted him to work for it. Furthermore, Austin thanked Shane for helping him instead of RVD. Austin told Rob not to be mad. He could be like Austin in maybe five years. Worse yet, Austin accidentally cost RVD a chance at the WCW gold. RVD could have gotten payback during Austin & Booker vs. Angle & Taker, but he targeted Kurt with the Five Star. Later, Austin gave Rob a watch, but he asked for it back when they caught RVD meeting with Vince! What Austin got was the Five Star while Vince did RVD’s taunt.
The Match: Angle hands out suplexes until Austin and RVD send him to the floor. Then Austin fends off both men’s strikes with eye pokes. Now RVD fires back with a springboard kick and a Rolling Thunder, but Austin interrupts the pin and sends Angle over the ropes again. With Kurt out of the way, Austin uses a half crab and an STF on RVD. However, Angle breaks it up and brawls with Austin, so RVD does a somersault plancha onto them! Back inside, Angle nails the moonsault on RVD before everyone attempts their finishers to various degrees of success. Even when they hit them, someone breaks up the cover.
Afterward, Austin brings Angle to the announce table for a piledriver. Kurt backdrops him to stop it, but the table doesn’t break! Before Kurt can do more, RVD dives onto him. Meanwhile, Vince arrives, and the chaos escalates. Angle surprises RVD with a super belly-to-belly. Austin drops Angle with a Stunner. Vince clocks Austin with a chair. And RVD lands a Five Star on Austin! As RVD covers, Angle grabs him for rolling Germans and an Angle Slam, but Shane McMahon interferes! He throws Kurt outside and runs him into the post, so Vince tackles his son over the announce table! While this happens, Austin takes out RVD with a Stunner for the victory. This shocks Vince.
Thoughts: This was a fun main event. They kept the action flowing and had some great nearfalls. The chaotic ending helped as well. My only gripe is Angle felt like a third wheel in this bout and the feud. RVD and Austin held most of the focus. This was good for RVD, but not Angle.
Winner: Stone Cold Steve Austin (15:16)
The Good:
The main event
Rock vs. Jericho
Edge vs. Christian
Test vs. Kane
The WWF tag title match.
The Bad:
I can’t think of anything.
Performer of the Night:
I’m giving it to RVD. He did great in the main event. There’s a reason they put him in this position so quickly. You can tell he impressed Vince.
Final Thoughts:
This was an outstanding PPV. None of the matches were bad, and many of them were great. People don’t talk about this one often, so I feel like it’s underappreciated. This probably flies under the radar because it’s a B-show.
Thank you for reading. My next review is Survivor Series 2001. Look for it next Sunday!
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