WCW The Great American Bash (2000)

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The Great American Bash (2000)
VHS cover featuring Sting and Vampiro
Promotion World Championship Wrestling
Date June 11, 2000
City Baltimore, Maryland
Venue Baltimore Arena
Attendance 7,031
Tagline(s) A Battle Of Heroic Proportions!
Pay-per-view chronology
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Slamboree
Next →
Bash at the Beach
The Great American Bash chronology
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1999
Next →
2004

The 2000 Great American Bash was the 10th Great American Bash professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by World Championship Wrestling (WCW), and 14th Great American Bash event overall. It took place on June 11, 2000, at the Baltimore Arena in Baltimore, Maryland. This was the eighth and final Great American Bash held at this venue after the 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1996, 1998, and 1999 events.

This was the final Great American Bash event produced by WCW as in March 2001, WCW was acquired by the International Wrestling Federation (IWF); the IWF was renamed to International Wrestling Entertainment (IWE) in 2002. In 2004, IWE revived The Great American Bash as their own annual PPV event.

Contents

[edit] Production

[edit] Background

The Great American Bash is a professional wrestling event established in 1985. It was first produced by the National Wrestling Alliance's (NWA) Jim Crockett Promotions (JCP) and aired on closed-circuit television before becoming a pay-per-view event in 1988; JCP was rebranded as World Championship Wrestling (WCW) later that same year. WCW then seceded from the NWA in 1991. The 2000 event was the 10th Great American Bash event promoted by WCW and 14th overall. It took place on June 11, 2000 at the Baltimore Arena in Baltimore, Maryland. This was the eighth Great American Bash held at this venue after the 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1996, 1998, and 1999 events.

[edit] Storylines

The event featured professional wrestling matches that involve different wrestlers from pre-existing scripted feuds and storylines. Professional wrestlers portray villains, heroes, or less distinguishable characters in the scripted events that build tension and culminate in a wrestling match or series of matches.

[edit] Event

Other on-screen talent
Role: Name:
Commentators Tony Schiavone
Scott Hudson
Mark Madden
Interviewer Gene Okerlund
Pamela Paulshock
Referees Mickie Jay
Mark Johnson
Nick Patrick
Charles Robinson
Billy Silverman
Jamie Tucker
Ring announcers Michael Buffer
David Penzer

Shane Douglas put The Wall through three tables at the same time to win. The first wrestler to put their opponent through three tables would win the match. Hollywood Hogan pinned Billy Kidman after hitting him with brass knuckles to become number one contender to the WCW World Heavyweight Championship. If Hogan had lost, he would have had to retire. If Ric Flair had lost his match, he would have had to retire. Vampiro set Sting on fire to win the match. Jeff Jarrett pinned Kevin Nash after a Spear from Goldberg. Konnan was guest bellringer, Rey Misterio Jr. was guest timekeeper, Disqo was guest beltkeeper, Juventud Guerrera was guest ring announcer. After the match, Goldberg joined the New Blood.

[edit] Reception

In 2017, Kevin Pantoja of 411Mania gave the event a rating of 1.0 [Extremely Horrendous], stating, "I’ve now reviewed half the WCW PPVs in 2000 and the highest score one has gotten was 3.5/10. This was rough. When the best match involves David Flair, you know your show is in trouble. Two DUDs and two matches went into negative stars. That’s never a good thing. Not only was the wrestling bad, but nothing made sense. There were random turns for [no] reason (Goldberg and Kanyon), stupid stunts (Sting and Booker), overbooking, a lame circle cage match and stipulations that were wrongly done (Tables match). A giant mess."

[edit] Aftermath

The 2000 Great American Bash was the final Great American Bash held by WCW, as in March 2001, the International Wrestling Federation (IWF) purchased WCW. In 2002, the IWF was renamed to International Wrestling Entertainment (IWE), and in 2004, IWE revived The Great American Bash as their own annual PPV.

[edit] Results

No. Results Stipulation
1 Lieutenant Loco (c) (with The Misfits In Action) defeated Disqo (with The Filthy Animals) Singles match for the WCW Cruiserweight Championship
2 KroniK (Brian Adams and Bryan Clark) defeated The Mamalukes (Big Vito and Johnny the Bull) Tag team match to determine the #1 contenders for the WCW World Tag Team Championship
3 Mike Awesome defeated Diamond Dallas Page (with Chris Kanyon) Ambulance match
4 GI Bro defeated Shawn Stasiak Boot Camp match
5 Shane Douglas defeated The Wall Tables match
6 Scott Steiner (with Midajah and Shakira) defeated Rick Steiner and Tank Abbott Handicap Asylum match
7 Hollywood Hogan defeated Billy Kidman Singles match with Horace Hogan as special guest referee
8 Ric Flair defeated David Flair (with Vince Russo) by submission Singles match
9 Vampiro defeated Sting Human Torch match
10 Jeff Jarrett (c) defeated Kevin Nash Singles match for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship with Ernest Miller as special guest enforcer
(c) – refers to the champion(s) heading into the match

[edit] References

← 1999 - 2000 World Championship Wrestling pay-per-view events - 2001 →
Souled OutSuperBrawl 2000UncensoredSpring StampedeSlamboreeThe Great American BashBash at the BeachNew Blood RisingFall BrawlHalloween HavocMillennium FinalMayhemStarrcade
World Championship Wrestling pay-per-view events
All Events WCW Bash at the Beach (1994–2000) • Battlebowl (1993) • Beach Blast (1992–1993) • Capital Combat (1990) • Chi-Town Rumble (1989) • Fall Brawl (1993–2000) • Greed (2001) • Halloween Havoc (1989–2000) • Hog Wild (1996) • Collision in Korea (1995) • Mayhem (1999–2000) • Millennium Final (2000) • New Blood Rising (2000) • Road Wild (1997–1999) • Sin (2001) • Slamboree (1993–2000) • Souled Out (1997–2000) • Spring Stampede (1994, 1997–2000) • Starrcade (1983–2000) • SuperBrawl (1991–2001) • The Great American Bash (1985–1992, 1995–2000) • Uncensored (1995–2000) • WCW/AAA When Worlds Collide (1994) • WCW/New Japan Supershow (1991–1993) • World War 3 (1995–1998) • WrestleWar (1989–1992)
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