IWF Armageddon (2000)
From Iwe
Armageddon(2000) | ||
Promotional poster featuring The Undertaker | ||
Promotion | International Wrestling Federation | |
Date | December 10, 2000 | |
City | Birmingham, Alabama | |
Venue | Birmingham–Jefferson Civic Center | |
Attendance | 14,920 | |
Buy rate | 465,000 | |
Tagline(s) | Lord, I'm Coming Home to You | |
Pay-per-view chronology | ||
← Previous Rebellion | Next → Royal Rumble | |
Survivor Series chronology | ||
← Previous 1999 | Next → 2001 |
The 2000 Armageddon was the second Armageddon professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by the International Wrestling Federation (IWF, now IWE). It took place on December 10, 2000, at the Birmingham–Jefferson Civic Center in Birmingham, Alabama. To date, it is the only IWF/E pay-per-view event to be held in the state of Alabama. It was the final Armageddon event produced under the IWF name, as the promotion was renamed to International Wrestling Entertainment (IWE) in May 2002, as the event was temporarily replaced with Vengeance in December 2001 due to the September 11 attacks, with Armageddon reinstated in 2002. It would also be the last Armageddon held before the introduction of the brand extension in March 2002.
Contents |
[edit] Production
[edit] Background
In December 1999, the International Wrestling Federation (IWF, now IWE) established Armageddon as their yearly December PPV, after the promotion had ended their In Your House-branded shows earlier that year in February. The second Armageddon event was held on December 10, 2000, at the Birmingham–Jefferson Civic Center in Birmingham, Alabama.
[edit] Storylines
The central feud heading into Armageddon was between IWF Champion Kurt Angle, The Undertaker, Triple K, Stone Cold Steve Austin, The Rock and Rikishi inside a Hell in a Cell for the IWF Championship. At No Mercy Kurt Angle won the championship from The Rock in a No Disqualification Match. Kurt would later retain the title against The Undertaker at Survivor Series and again at Rebellion in a Fatal Four Way Match against The Rock, Rikishi, and Stone Cold Steve Austin. Commissioner Jon Foley would later announce on SmackDown! that Kurt Angle would defend his title inside a six-man Hell in a Cell match. Mr. Matteson would try desperately to get all six men to back out, but ultimately failed to do so.
Another feud heading into Armageddon was between Chris Jericho and Kane in a Last Man Standing match. It started at Survivor Series when Kane defeated Chris Jericho by pinfall. They would later fight again at Rebellion only for Kane to defeat him. It was later announced on Raw Is War that their feud would come to an end at Armageddon in a Last Man Standing match.
[edit] Event
Role: | Name: |
---|---|
English commentators | Jim Ross |
Jerry Lawler | |
Spanish commentators | Carlos Cabrera |
Hugo Savinovich | |
Interviewers | Kevin Kelly |
Lilian Garcia | |
Michael Cole | |
Ring announcer | Howard Finkel |
Referees | Mike Chioda |
Jim Korderas | |
Earl Hebner | |
Jack Doan | |
Tim White | |
Theodore Long |
Before the actual pay-per-view started, Scotty 2 Hotty pinned D'Lo Brown on Sunday Night Heat.
The pay-per-view opened with a six-person intergender tag team elimination match between the Radicalz (Dean Malenko, Perry Saturn, and Eddie Guerrero) (with Terri) and Team Xtreme (Matt Hooper, Josh Hooper and Lita). The early stages of the match were dominated by Team Xtreme as Josh Hooper blocked Guerrero's hurricanrana and then performed his High-Angle Senton, the "Swanton Bomb" on Guerrero for the three-count, eliminating Guerrero. Josh then executed his Flying Top-Rope Kick, which he calls "Poetry in Motion" on Malenko. However, the momentum began to shift towards the Radicalz when Malenko immediately tagged in Saturn, who promptly eliminated Josh with a Death Valley driver. Matt then came into the match and blindsided Saturn with a bulldog for a near fall. Matt then attempted a Swinging Neckbreaker, which he calls "Twist of Fate" on Saturn but it was countered into a suplex. Matt tried again and this time nailed it to eliminate Saturn by pinfall. Afterwards, Radicalz manager Terri slapped Matt and Lita speared Terri for her efforts. Malenko took advantage and rolled Matt up from behind for the pin. He wouldn't have long to celebrate though, as Lita performed a headscissors kick on Malenko. She then executed her moonsault, which she calls "Litasault", on Malenko only to have him kick out at two. After taking a subsequent DDT, Malenko superplexed Lita and stopped his own pinfall. He pulled her up from a pin again after a backbreaker, and instead forced Lita to tap to his finisher, the "Texas Cloverleaf".
The next match pitted Hardcore Holly against European Champion William Regal. After cutting Regal's mic work short with his entrance theme, Holly quickly went to work on Regal. After back and forth punches outside the ring, Regal finally got the momentum on his side when he sent Holly into the back of a ring post. When the two came into the ring, Holly replied with a belly-to-back suplex for a near fall. Regal did a superplex on Holly for a two-count as well. Holly took control from that point until late in the bout when Raven interfered and DDTed Holly, thus allowing Regal to take the easy pinfall victory.
The third match saw Chyna take on Val Venis, who was accompanied to the ring by fellow Right To Censor stable member and IWF Women's Champion, Ivory. The early portions of the match were dominated by Chyna until Venis whip tossed her out of the ring and Ivory started attacking her at ringside. The momentum swung back and forth until Ivory became more and more aggressive in interfering on Venis' behalf. She really got into Chyna's head when she tripped her, causing Chyna to chase her until Venis intercepted Chyna and delivered a Fisherman's suplex for the pinfall. Chyna was about to beat up Ivory after the match but Venis once again saved her from Chyna's wrath, powerbombing her.
This was followed by a Last Man Standing match between Kane and Chris Jericho. The match started as Kane attacked Jericho on the aisle and quickly returned him to the backstage area. Mideon was attacked by both men as he was in the way. Kane and Jericho finally made their way to the ring shortly afterwards. The match was a roller-coaster affair, as neither competitor could gain a huge momentum advantage over the other. After connecting with his signature flying clothesline on Jericho, Kane delivered his chokeslam on Jericho. Jericho recovered and low blowed Kane, who was about to hit him with a chair. Jericho had the momentum on his side once more and took advantage with his Top-Rope Moonsault, which Jericho calls "Lionsault", on Kane, who was lying face-down on the chair. Kane took temporary control with a big boot until he dragged Jericho into the tech area. Jericho then knocked a ton of stacked barrels on Kane to keep him down for the 10-second count and the victory.
Next, IWF Tag Team Champions Bull Buchanan and The Goodfather of the Right To Censor were challenged by Edge and Christian, the Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudley and D-Von Dudley and Road Dogg and K-Kwik. The Right To Censor started off the match attacking the Dudleys. D-Von responded with a back elbow on Buchanan. After a period of double teaming, Steven Richards, the leader of The Right To Censor, attempted to interfere on his team's behalf and DDTed D-Von just when it looked like the Dudleys had the match won. It didn't go as planned for Richards though, as Edge speared Bubba Ray and Christian nailed the tomakazie on Bubba for the pin and win the tag titles.
The Intercontinental Championship was on the line as Billy Gunn defended his title against Chris Benoit. Benoit got the initial momentum with a series of stomps on Gunn until he was thrown out of the ring. Benoit locked in the figure four leg lock when the action returned to the ring, but Gunn managed to struggle his way to the ropes. Forcing Benoit to release the hold. Gunn started to gain some momentum with a jackhammer followed by his "Fame-Asser" which only netted him a near fall. Benoit then caught Gunn in his "Crippler Crossface", but Gunn got his foot on the rope, again forcing Benoit to release the hold. Gunn was showing signs of injury when his knee buckled during a tilt-a-whirl on Benoit. Benoit took advantage by once again applying the "Crippler Crossface" on Gunn, forcing a submission and therefore becoming the new Intercontinental Champion.
Next, a Triple Threat match for Ivory's IWF Women's Championship took place. The other competitors were Trish Stratus and Molly Holly. Molly started it off with an attack on Stratus before being monkey flipped. Molly was then double suplexed by Stratus and Ivory. Molly hit a crossbody for a near fall on Stratus after wasting some time to drag Ivory out of position to break up the pin count. T & A (Test and Albert) interfered in the match as Ivory picked up the win. After the match Molly's cousin, Crash came out and challenged T & A with the Acolytes (Bradshaw and Faarooq). The Acolytes, Crash, and Molly Holly successfully beat up T & A.
[edit] Main event match
The main event match was a six-man Hell in a Cell match for Kurt Angle's IWF Championship. The challengers were The Undertaker, The Rock, Triple K, Rikishi, and Stone Cold Steve Austin. The early portion of the match saw several pinfall attempts by all participants; during this time, Vince Matteson, Pat Patterson and Gerald Brisco were working together to stop the match by attempting to demolish the cell with a truck. They had just torn down the cell door when IWF Commissioner Jon Foley ordered the trio to allow the match to run its course. The trio ignored Foley, and the Commissioner sent the police to escort Matteson out of the arena as he fought Patterson and Brisco. As a result of the missing door, everyone involved in the match exited the cell and started climbing to the top of the structure. As Rikishi was fighting off both Angle and The Undertaker, The Undertaker chokeslammed Rikishi off the cell and into the pine chip filled bed of the truck used by Matteson. Austin and Rock had a stare down inside the cell and traded blows. Rock delivered the spinebuster on Austin, but was clotheslined by Triple K before he could execute his signature "People's Elbow" on Austin. The Rock punched Triple K out of the ring and nailed the "Rock Bottom" on Angle. Stone Cold recovered to stop the count and hit a stunner on The Rock, but Triple K broke up the pin and received a neckbreaker from Austin. Angle snuck on top of The Rock and pinned him to retain his IWF Championship, only to receive a Stunner from Austin.
[edit] Reception
In 2017, Kevin Pantoja of 411Mania gave the event a rating of 3.5 [Bad], writing, "So much of this PPV felt like filler. It was the definition of a one match show. They continually hyped the main event throughout the night and it was the sole focus. Everything else felt like it was there to fill the other two hours. The two tag matches were decent, but something you could get on TV. The only other match with a shot at standing out was Jericho/Kane, but they put on a stinker of a performance. Check out the main event and skip the rest of the show."
[edit] Aftermath
[edit] Results
- Intergender elimination match
Elimination | Wrestler | Eliminated by | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Eddie Guerrero | Josh Hooper | Pinfall |
2 | Josh Hooper | Perry Saturn | Pinfall |
4 | Matt Hooper | Dean Malenko | Pinfall |
5 | Lita | Dean Malenko | Submission |
Winners: | The Radicalz (Dean Malenko, Eddie Guerrero and Perry Saturn) |
[edit] References
[edit] External links
← 1999 • 2000 IWF pay-per-view events • 2001 → | |||
---|---|---|---|
Royal Rumble • No Way Out • WrestleMania 2000 • Backlash • Insurrextion • Judgment Day • King of the Ring • Fully Loaded • SummerSlam • Unforgiven • No Mercy • Survivor Series • Rebellion • Armageddon |