Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
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Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
I didn't know much about the AWA before buying this, but Vince got most of the WWE from the AWA. He just took their developed talent. I thought the story of the AWA was good, but the matches on the dvd weren't great. It's only $6.99 on Amazon.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
I was pretty disappointed when I watched that DVD, because I was a big AWA fan as a kid, and in my memory those matches were way better than they actually were.
The documentary part was really good, though.
The documentary part was really good, though.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
I knew Vince stole a lot of AWA talent, but I never realize how many guys he truly got from them until I watched this DVD. He totally KILLED the company.
Also, if you enjoyed watching this one, you gotta watch the DVD about World Class. Just a heartbreaking story considering how much the Von Erichs went through and how many of them ended up dying by one way or another.
Also, if you enjoyed watching this one, you gotta watch the DVD about World Class. Just a heartbreaking story considering how much the Von Erichs went through and how many of them ended up dying by one way or another.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
Both of these are available to be streamed free via Netflix. Great stuff.
Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
When I think of the AWA several words come to mind but "Spectacular" damned sure ain't one of em'.
Can't believe they never put the strap on this guy:
& yet they wanted to put it on this guy:
Can't believe they never put the strap on this guy:
& yet they wanted to put it on this guy:
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
2 things you have to keep in mind however. First, Greg was the owner's son. And 2, before Hulk came into the AWA he sucked. Verne Gagne was still a purist and wanted Hulk to get better technically before he put a strap on him. Give Vince credit for spotting talent and getting Hulk before the AWA knew what they had.sliquor wrote:When I think of the AWA several words come to mind but "Spectacular" damned sure ain't one of em'.
Can't believe they never put the strap on this guy:
& yet they wanted to put it on this guy:
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
Greg Gagne was a joke.
I watched the AWA just about every week and I could not fully understand how Gagne was able to win a match, let alone against opponents that had 50 to 100 lbs or more on the guy.
His sleeper hold was weak.
I know, I know who the dad is and that he ran the AWA, but the kid was a joke and only had a career because of his father.
The more Greg Gagne appeared in important matches, the more I was disgusted by the AWA.
I watched the AWA just about every week and I could not fully understand how Gagne was able to win a match, let alone against opponents that had 50 to 100 lbs or more on the guy.
His sleeper hold was weak.
I know, I know who the dad is and that he ran the AWA, but the kid was a joke and only had a career because of his father.
The more Greg Gagne appeared in important matches, the more I was disgusted by the AWA.
Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
All I know is as a kid it made no sense to me & my friends why Thunder Lips:LillianRoxyFA wrote:2 things you have to keep in mind however. First, Greg was the owner's son. And 2, before Hulk came into the AWA he sucked. Verne Gagne was still a purist and wanted Hulk to get better technically before he put a strap on him. Give Vince credit for spotting talent and getting Hulk before the AWA knew what they had.sliquor wrote:When I think of the AWA several words come to mind but "Spectacular" damned sure ain't one of em'.
Can't believe they never put the strap on this guy:
& yet they wanted to put it on this guy:
Could never beat the near 50 year old Nick Bockwinkle:
I'd get Pro Wrestling Illustrated every month (never saw AWA until ESPN picked it up) & check the listings to see if Hogan had finally won the strap. Of course Verne never put it on him, but he did to the almost un-heard of Otto Wanz:
...........Who?
Verne fucked up big time, time & time again.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
I started watching it yesterday but I got confused.
They said AWA was basically the Mid west/ Illinois territory of NWA that broke away...but if AWA was so successful why were they based out of Minneapolis? I looked at their title history and no title change in Chicago until 1980.
Was it because NWA had a huge promotion in Chicago?
They said AWA was basically the Mid west/ Illinois territory of NWA that broke away...but if AWA was so successful why were they based out of Minneapolis? I looked at their title history and no title change in Chicago until 1980.
Was it because NWA had a huge promotion in Chicago?
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
Hogan didn't suck before he got to AWA he was doing great in Japan before then he became the highest paid star in Japan in the early 80s. Vern wanted a piece of Hogan merchandise money and money from Japan. Hogan said no, so Vern wouldn't put the belt on him. Vince got Hogan WWE becomes a billion dollar industry by the late 80s.LillianRoxyFA wrote:2 things you have to keep in mind however. First, Greg was the owner's son. And 2, before Hulk came into the AWA he sucked. Verne Gagne was still a purist and wanted Hulk to get better technically before he put a strap on him. Give Vince credit for spotting talent and getting Hulk before the AWA knew what they had.sliquor wrote:When I think of the AWA several words come to mind but "Spectacular" damned sure ain't one of em'.
Can't believe they never put the strap on this guy:
& yet they wanted to put it on this guy:
NJPW Hulk Hogan vs. Abdullah The Butcher
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Lhjr8iHz4g
Hulk Hogan Vs Bob Backlund 1980
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MwmlqcG7 ... re=related
Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
So you're saying Hulk was not a good actor?LillianRoxyFA wrote: 2 things you have to keep in mind however. First, Greg was the owner's son. And 2, before Hulk came into the AWA he sucked.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
I think it was because the Chicago promotion never fully committed to Gagne. It was a 50/50 promotion with the AWA and Dick the Bruiser's WWA promotion out of Indiana. Weird part was, they used all of Bruiser's guys but never even mentioned the WWA by name, much less have any WWA title matches there. They may never have had an AWA title change here until '80, but they had a TON of false finishes here. You'd go home thinking Billy Robinson or Dick the Bruiser or Bobo Brazil had won the AWA title, but then you'd watch All Star Wrestling the next morning and there would be the announcement that because of (fill in the lame excuse), Bockwinkel was still the champion. That part didn't bother me, because I was a huge fan of Tricky Nick, but it was still BS that they never had a title win in Chicago for that long. Lots of tag title changes, though.FullDJacket wrote:I started watching it yesterday but I got confused.
They said AWA was basically the Mid west/ Illinois territory of NWA that broke away...but if AWA was so successful why were they based out of Minneapolis? I looked at their title history and no title change in Chicago until 1980.
Was it because NWA had a huge promotion in Chicago?
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
Thanks, great info.Lardbucket wrote:I think it was because the Chicago promotion never fully committed to Gagne. It was a 50/50 promotion with the AWA and Dick the Bruiser's WWA promotion out of Indiana. Weird part was, they used all of Bruiser's guys but never even mentioned the WWA by name, much less have any WWA title matches there. They may never have had an AWA title change here until '80, but they had a TON of false finishes here. You'd go home thinking Billy Robinson or Dick the Bruiser or Bobo Brazil had won the AWA title, but then you'd watch All Star Wrestling the next morning and there would be the announcement that because of (fill in the lame excuse), Bockwinkel was still the champion. That part didn't bother me, because I was a huge fan of Tricky Nick, but it was still BS that they never had a title win in Chicago for that long. Lots of tag title changes, though.FullDJacket wrote:I started watching it yesterday but I got confused.
They said AWA was basically the Mid west/ Illinois territory of NWA that broke away...but if AWA was so successful why were they based out of Minneapolis? I looked at their title history and no title change in Chicago until 1980.
Was it because NWA had a huge promotion in Chicago?
I wonder why NWA weren't more aggressive. If they lost a territory like NYC or Chicago why wouldn't they back and fully support some smaller promotion in that era and use all their leverage to hurt the competition?
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
The WWWF/WWF/WWE was and always has been a northeast stronghold since the 1950's, the NWA didn't stand a fighting chance to make progress of any variety in that market place no matter who they were backing.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
They could've tried at least? NWA had Flair, Thesz, Dusty Rhodes and all these stars. That should sell out arenas even in enemy territories?ParaDime77 wrote:The WWWF/WWF/WWE was and always has been a northeast stronghold since the 1950's, the NWA didn't stand a fighting chance to make progress of any variety in that market place no matter who they were backing.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
Heres why otto wans became world champion
In the summer of 1982, Verne Gagne brokered a deal resulting in a new man being crowned AWA heavyweight champion. European superstar Otto Wanz paid Verne a sum of money in order to become AWA champion. Wanz was a large man standing well over 6 feet and weighing well over 300 pounds.
Otto won the title from Nick Bockwinkel on August 29th, 1982 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Wanz's title reign was a short one as he lost the title back to Bockwinkel in Chicago six weeks later. The title changes confused AWA fans as Wanz was unknown in the United States. The AWA would have been better served to have Bockwinkel lose the belt to an up and coming North American star like Tito Santana, Dino Bravo or Hulk Hogan which would elevate the new champion to superstar level but all Verne Gagne could think about was having the money Otto Wanz paid him inside his pocket.
Even has a kid greg gagne made no sense to me
In the summer of 1982, Verne Gagne brokered a deal resulting in a new man being crowned AWA heavyweight champion. European superstar Otto Wanz paid Verne a sum of money in order to become AWA champion. Wanz was a large man standing well over 6 feet and weighing well over 300 pounds.
Otto won the title from Nick Bockwinkel on August 29th, 1982 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Wanz's title reign was a short one as he lost the title back to Bockwinkel in Chicago six weeks later. The title changes confused AWA fans as Wanz was unknown in the United States. The AWA would have been better served to have Bockwinkel lose the belt to an up and coming North American star like Tito Santana, Dino Bravo or Hulk Hogan which would elevate the new champion to superstar level but all Verne Gagne could think about was having the money Otto Wanz paid him inside his pocket.
Even has a kid greg gagne made no sense to me
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
No Vince was brilliant at marketing those rival promotions were not.FullDJacket wrote:They could've tried at least? NWA had Flair, Thesz, Dusty Rhodes and all these stars. That should sell out arenas even in enemy territories?ParaDime77 wrote:The WWWF/WWF/WWE was and always has been a northeast stronghold since the 1950's, the NWA didn't stand a fighting chance to make progress of any variety in that market place no matter who they were backing.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
And the reason Otto wanted the AWA Championship was to use it to help build his rep back in Germany. He felt it gave him cred. Otto was a complete asshole but he always paid what he promised.theglammerthebetter wrote:Heres why otto wans became world champion
In the summer of 1982, Verne Gagne brokered a deal resulting in a new man being crowned AWA heavyweight champion. European superstar Otto Wanz paid Verne a sum of money in order to become AWA champion. Wanz was a large man standing well over 6 feet and weighing well over 300 pounds.
Otto won the title from Nick Bockwinkel on August 29th, 1982 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Wanz's title reign was a short one as he lost the title back to Bockwinkel in Chicago six weeks later. The title changes confused AWA fans as Wanz was unknown in the United States. The AWA would have been better served to have Bockwinkel lose the belt to an up and coming North American star like Tito Santana, Dino Bravo or Hulk Hogan which would elevate the new champion to superstar level but all Verne Gagne could think about was having the money Otto Wanz paid him inside his pocket.
Even has a kid greg gagne made no sense to me
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
Nick Bockwinkel's promos were godlike! Especially when paired with Heenan.
Supposedly Bockwinkel was Vince's first choice to do the "Million Dollar Man" gimmick. But since they didn't think Bockwinkel would wrestle more than a year or two longer they went with someone younger to get more mileage from the character.
And I could never look at Greg Gagne without thinking of Greg Brady.
Supposedly Bockwinkel was Vince's first choice to do the "Million Dollar Man" gimmick. But since they didn't think Bockwinkel would wrestle more than a year or two longer they went with someone younger to get more mileage from the character.
And I could never look at Greg Gagne without thinking of Greg Brady.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
Bockwinkel did have great mic skills awesome heelGarbageman wrote:Nick Bockwinkel's promos were godlike! Especially when paired with Heenan.
Supposedly Bockwinkel was Vince's first choice to do the "Million Dollar Man" gimmick. But since they didn't think Bockwinkel would wrestle more than a year or two longer they went with someone younger to get more mileage from the character.
And I could never look at Greg Gagne without thinking of Greg Brady.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
AWA on Donahue: "Wrestling Special" Features Hulk Hogan debut in AWA
Funny seeing Jesse Ventura get pissed when Hogan upstages and takes the spotlight away from his match
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f57_PngTG1k
Funny seeing Jesse Ventura get pissed when Hogan upstages and takes the spotlight away from his match
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f57_PngTG1k
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
Metalistner wrote:I didn't know much about the AWA before buying this, but Vince got most of the WWE from the AWA. He just took their developed talent. I thought the story of the AWA was good, but the matches on the dvd weren't great. It's only $6.99 on Amazon.
The name is stupid, there wasn't really anything "spectacular" about it.....of all the territories in wrestling I'd watched in the 80s, AWA was certainly dead last on any list.
Watching lawn darts was more gooder than AWA wrestling.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
WCCW = Everyone diedsilent_eyes wrote:I knew Vince stole a lot of AWA talent, but I never realize how many guys he truly got from them until I watched this DVD. He totally KILLED the company.
Also, if you enjoyed watching this one, you gotta watch the DVD about World Class. Just a heartbreaking story considering how much the Von Erichs went through and how many of them ended up dying by one way or another.
AWA = Everyone went on to be big stars everywhere else
Both stories are sad for different reasons but at least with the AWA their legacy lived on through Hulk Hogan, Ric Flair and Shawn Michaels to name a few.
With WCCW you could argue that a few of the later guys like Booker T, Mick Foley, Steve Austin and Undertaker started there but they weren't really part of WCCW's prime. They were there technically USWA/GCW guys.
Last edited by The Cusack on Wed Dec 05, 2012 10:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
After the mid-80's, but before that it looked like a good league. Vince got so many of his wrestlers from that league.lemmysmole wrote:Metalistner wrote:I didn't know much about the AWA before buying this, but Vince got most of the WWE from the AWA. He just took their developed talent. I thought the story of the AWA was good, but the matches on the dvd weren't great. It's only $6.99 on Amazon.
The name is stupid, there wasn't really anything "spectacular" about it.....of all the territories in wrestling I'd watched in the 80s, AWA was certainly dead last on any list.
Watching lawn darts was more gooder than AWA wrestling.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
I find it hard to believe the AWA failed with great promotional pieces like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdnB7OLHNwM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdnB7OLHNwM
Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
canadianhavoc wrote:I find it hard to believe the AWA failed with great promotional pieces like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdnB7OLHNwM
That clip just proves what a copy-cat joke the AWA was.
01:04 - 01:14
00:46 -00:57 - I liked Jerry Blackwell but a 400+ pound man crashing thru a 2 X 10 X 12 is not exactly a impressive feat.
Those crying about Vince "stealing" Verne's talent - someone gives you a offer of a better job that will more than likely lead to bigger & better things what are you going to do. Besides that talent would've rotted on the vine there. Hogan (who Vince Sr. had before Verne) was proof of that.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
They trying to copy WWF NY entertainment style and failed badly.canadianhavoc wrote:I find it hard to believe the AWA failed with great promotional pieces like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdnB7OLHNwM
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
But the leagues would have been more competitive, so he wouldn't have died out in the AWA.sliquor wrote:canadianhavoc wrote:I find it hard to believe the AWA failed with great promotional pieces like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdnB7OLHNwM
That clip just proves what a copy-cat joke the AWA was.
01:04 - 01:14
00:46 -00:57 - I liked Jerry Blackwell but a 400+ pound man crashing thru a 2 X 10 X 12 is not exactly a impressive feat.
Those crying about Vince "stealing" Verne's talent - someone gives you a offer of a better job that will more than likely lead to bigger & better things what are you going to do. Besides that talent would've rotted on the vine there. Hogan (who Vince Sr. had before Verne) was proof of that.
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Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
Yes but the point was fans wanted Hogan, Ventura and Vern wasnt pushing them the way Vince Jr didMetalistner wrote:But the leagues would have been more competitive, so he wouldn't have died out in the AWA.sliquor wrote:canadianhavoc wrote:I find it hard to believe the AWA failed with great promotional pieces like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdnB7OLHNwM
That clip just proves what a copy-cat joke the AWA was.
01:04 - 01:14
00:46 -00:57 - I liked Jerry Blackwell but a 400+ pound man crashing thru a 2 X 10 X 12 is not exactly a impressive feat.
Those crying about Vince "stealing" Verne's talent - someone gives you a offer of a better job that will more than likely lead to bigger & better things what are you going to do. Besides that talent would've rotted on the vine there. Hogan (who Vince Sr. had before Verne) was proof of that.
Re: Dvd The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA
Those stating that Ric Flair was stolen from the poor AWA - give me a break!
Flair may have been from Minnesota, trained there & wrestled a little bit but he is NWA, Carolinas & the Crocketts all the way.
Wooo!!
Flair may have been from Minnesota, trained there & wrestled a little bit but he is NWA, Carolinas & the Crocketts all the way.
Wooo!!