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===2000===
===2000===
[[Image:starrcade.jpg|right|WCW Starrcade 2000]]
'''December 17, 2000 in Washington, D.C. (MCI Center)'''
'''December 17, 2000 in Washington, D.C. (MCI Center)'''
*[[3 Count]] def. the [[Jung Dragons]] and [[Jamie Howard|Jamie Noble]] and [[Evan Karagias]] in a ladder match
*[[3 Count]] def. the [[Jung Dragons]] and [[Jamie Howard|Jamie Noble]] and [[Evan Karagias]] in a ladder match

Revision as of 13:34, 4 June 2006

File:Starrcade99.PNG
Starrcade logo

StarrCade was the primary supercard of the NWA and World Championship Wrestling from 1983 until 2000. Often billed as "The Grandaddy of Them All," StarrCade was the first annual wrestling supercard to be broadcast on closed-circuit television, before even the legendary WrestleMania.

Perhaps the highest moment in StarrCade history was in December 1997 when Hollywood Hogan lost the WCW/nWo World Heavyweight Title to Sting, despite the change of hands for the title being mired in controversy, after holding it for over a year. The following year, rookie world champion Bill Goldberg's undefeated winning streak came to an end when he was defeated by Kevin Nash with help from Scott Hall who jabbed Goldberg with a taser to help Nash win the match. Ric Flair is widely considered to be the "flagship" of StarrCade, as he headlined 9 of these supercards, the first of which had been subtitled A Flair for the Gold.

The final four Starrcades all took place at the MCI Center (now Verizon Center) in Washington D.C.

1983: A Flair For the Gold

November 24, 1983 in Greensboro, NC (Greensboro Coliseum)

1984: The Million Dollar Challenge

November 22, 1984 in Greensboro, NC (Greensboro Coliseum)

1985: The Gathering

November 28, 1985 in Greensboro, NC (Greensboro Coliseum)/Atlanta, GA (The Omni)

1986: Night of the Skywalkers

November 27, 1986 in Greensboro, NC (Greensboro Coliseum)/Atlanta, GA (The Omni)

1987: Chi-Town Heat

November 26, 1987 in Chicago, IL (UIC Pavilion)

The rest were included on the Home video release

1988: True Gritt

December 26, 1988 in Norfolk, VA (Norfolk Scope)

1989: Future Shock

December 13, 1989 in Atlanta, GA (The Omni)

1990: Collision Course

December 16, 1990 in St. Louis, MO (Kiel Auditorium)

1991: BattleBowl

December 29, 1991 in Norfolk, VA (The Scope)

1992: The Lethal Lottery

December 28, 1992 in Atlanta, GA (The Omni)

1993

December 27, 1993 in Charlotte, NC ( Independence Arena)

1994: Triple Threat

December 27, 1994 in Nashville, TN (Nashville Municipal Auditorium)

1995: World Cup of Wrestling

December 27, 1995 in Nashville, TN (Municipal Auditorium)

1996

December 29, 1996 in Nashville, TN (Municipal Auditorium)

1997

December 28, 1997 in Washington, D.C. (MCI Center)

This is considered by some as the beginning of the end for WCW. Hogan was heavily criticised for not doing a clean finish which confused and irritated fans who had waited over a year to see Sting take down the nWo. The finish actually involved a recently-introduced Bret Hart coming down to the ring after Hogan "won" the match through a supposedly fast count by referee Nick Patrick, ostensibly to "make things right" and protect Sting from being "screwed," a la the Montreal Screwjob. Unfortunately, the "fast" three-count which Hogan used to win was quite obviously a normal-speed count, requiring the announcers to act as though it was fast, since that was the finish they had been told - though everyone viewing the show had just seen a clean pinfall. Rather than the triumphant victory that one would expect the most popular wrestler in the company to gain over the hated man he had been chasing for over a year, as Sting had Hogan, the finish was confused and chaotic, with the live audience visibly displeased at the entire spectacle. Hart "restarted" the match, and Sting quickly won the title, but given the circumstances, excitement was rather muted. It is rumored that Hogan paid Patrick a sum in cash backstage before the show in exchange for failing to execute the planned finish, with the intent of protecting Hogan's image. The entire debacle resulted in the title being held up for another Hogan-Sting pay-per-view match, which many WCW fans took as a slap in the face and a hapless attempt to draw additional money to see the result WCW had failed to deliver the first time around.

Though Starrcade 1997 drew the biggest pay-per-view buyrate in the company's history, afterwards WCW seemingly entered a creative stall, and while they were still profitable well through 1999, most of 1998 saw the competing World Wrestling Entertainment drawing television ratings, gate money, and buyrates that would ensure they returned to their position as the #1 "sports entertainment" company in the United States. Four months after this StarrCade, during a peak in Monday Night RAW viewership due to the intrigue surrounding Steve Austin, Mike Tyson, and Shawn Michaels, the WWF ended WCW's stranglehold on the Monday night ratings after 83 consecutive weeks of WCW victories.

1998

December 27, 1998 in Washington, D.C. (MCI Center)

You must add a |reason= parameter to this Cleanup template – replace it with {{Cleanup|March 2006|reason=<Fill reason here>}}, or remove the Cleanup template.
This PPV marked the end of Bill Goldberg's winning streak. As head booker at the time, Kevin Nash chose himself to win. Many people look at this as being the beginning of the end for WCW, as the WWF began to outmatch them in most every event up until WCW's demise in 2001.

1999

December 19, 1999 in Washington, D.C. (MCI Center)

Note: The World Title match between Bret Hart and Bill Goldberg is infamous for the fact that Bret Hart suffered a career-ending injury towards the end of the match, resulting from a misplaced kick to the head from Goldberg. Although Bret wrestled for a few weeks after the injury, he was forced into retirement shortly after.

2000

WCW Starrcade 2000
WCW Starrcade 2000

December 17, 2000 in Washington, D.C. (MCI Center)

See also