Jump to content

Living Dangerously (2000)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Dlegend91 (talk | contribs) at 17:48, 22 January 2021 (Main event match). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Living Dangerously (2000)
PromotionExtreme Championship Wrestling
DateMarch 12, 2000
CityDanbury, Connecticut
VenueO'Neill Center
Attendance5,000
Pay-per-view chronology
← Previous
Guilty as Charged
Next →
Hardcore Heaven
Living Dangerously chronology
← Previous
1999
Next →
Final

Living Dangerously (2000) was the third and final Living Dangerously professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW). It took place on March 12, 2000 from the O'Neill Center in Danbury, Connecticut. The commentator for the event was Joey Styles.

The main event was a tournament final match for the vacant World Television Championship, which had been vacated by previous champion Rob Van Dam due to an injury. Super Crazy defeated Rhino to win the vacant World Television Championship. On the undercard, Mike Awesome retained the World Heavyweight Championship against Kid Kash and The Impact Players (Lance Storm and Justin Credible) won a Three-Way Dance match to win the World Tag Team Championship.

Event

Before the event aired live on pay-per-view, Mikey Whipwreck defeated Pitbull #1 in a non-televised match.

Preliminary matches

The event kicked off with Steve Corino insulting The Sandman's wife Lori Fullington, prompting Sandman to come to the ring to fight Corino but The Network attacked Sandman and Lori until Dusty Rhodes made the save and it led to a Texas Bullrope match against Corino. Rhodes hit Corino with a chair and delivered an elbow drop to win the match.

Next, Danny Doring and Roadkill competed against The New Dangerous Alliance (C.W. Anderson and Bill Wiles). Roadkill was about to hit an Amish Splash on Wiles but Elektra turned on Roadkill as she crotched him on the top rope. Lou E. Dangerously hit Doring with his cell phone and Anderson nailed an Anderson Spinebuster to Doring for the win.

Next, Kid Kash was scheduled to compete against Simon Diamond (w/ Mitch & "The Prodigy" Tom Marquez). However, Mike Awesome came out threatening violence. This chased Diamond away from the ring while Kash attacked Awesome from behind to begin a match between Awesome and Kash for the World Heavyweight Championship. Awesome delivered an Awesome Bomb to Kash through the table to retain the title. After the match, Jazz checked on Kash until Diamond ordered Jado and Gedo to attack her. Nova and Chris Chetti made the save and this led to them competing against Jado and Gedo. Nova and Chetti hit a Tidal Wave to Gedo for the win.

Rhino advanced to the final of the World Television Championship tournament as The Sandman was unable to compete due to being attacked earlier in the show and taking his wife to the hospital. Super Crazy competed against Little Guido in the only semi-final death match. Sal E. Graziano interfered in the match but Crazy removed him by hitting a hurricanrana. Crazy followed by powerbombing Guido onto a table and followed with a springboard moonsault to win the match and advance to the final round.

Next, Balls Mahoney took on Kintaro Kanemura. Mahoney delivered a Nutcracker Suite to Kanemura on a steel chair for the win. After the match, Da Baldies attacked Mahoney until New Jack made the save and attacked Da Baldies with various weapons, leading to a match between Jack and Baldies member Vic Grimes. The action spilled to the ringside and they brawled with each other throughout the arena. The two then climbed the top of a steel structure and fell off it onto two tables. Grimes landed hard on Jack's head, which gave Jack a wound in the forehead.

The penultimate match was a three-way dance, in which Mike Awesome and Raven defended the World Tag Team Championship against Tommy Dreamer and Masato Tanaka and Impact Players (Lance Storm and Justin Credible). Tanaka nailed a Roaring Elbow to Awesome for the first elimination. The action then continued between the remaining two teams. The Impact Players delivered a Deep Impact to Dreamer to win the titles.

Main event match

The main event was a tournament final for the vacant World Television Championship between Super Crazy and Rhino. The referee was knocked out when Rhino pulled the referee in front of Crazy's moonsault. Yoshihiro Tajiri interfered in the match by spitting mist into Crazy's eyes. Rhino and Tajiri double teamed Crazy until Rob Van Dam, Scotty Anton and Bill Alfonso made the save. The injured RVD broke a crutch on Rhino's back while Anton attacked Tajiri. RVD drove Rhino through a table with a flapjack and Crazy hit a moonsault on Rhino to win the vacant title. After the match, The Network attacked Crazy, RVD and Anton until The Sandman made the save by clearing Network.

Reception

According to Bob Colling of Wrestling Recaps, "this show consists of several matches that were decent but nothing stands out as great or really all that good. You can certainly skip this pay per view as you wouldn’t be missing much."[1]

Scott Keith of 411Mania wrote "Can’t go any higher than thumbs down for this one, given the lack of payoff, entertaining matches, good booking or common sense, despite the usual hard work from the participants."[2]

Nick Sellers of 411Mania wrote "There's good, there's average and there's absolute idiocy on this show. The ECW vs TNN stuff was actually done well, but apart from the TV title stuff the rest of it fell a bit flat by comparison.And then there's THAT New Jack/Grimes scaffold dive, which was reprehensible. Apart from those, and the midcard starting to get formulaic, there's still that intangible ECW fun factor attached to the show and the crowd is hot throughout, and those two elements alone always make their shows easy viewing. Call it somewhere in the middle."[3]

Results

No.ResultsStipulationsTimes
1Mikey Whipwreck defeated Pitbull #1Singles match
2Dusty Rhodes defeated Steve Corino (with Jack Victory)Texas Bullrope match10:13
3The New Dangerous Alliance (C.W. Anderson and Bill Wiles) (with Lou E. Dangerously) defeated Danny Doring and Roadkill (with Elektra)Tag team match7:23
4Mike Awesome (c) (with Judge Jeff Jones) defeated Kid KashSingles match for the ECW World Heavyweight Championship4:44
5Nova and Chris Chetti defeated Jado and GedoTag team match7:33
6Rhino defeated The Sandman by forfeitECW World Television Championship tournament semi-final match0:00
7Super Crazy defeated Little Guido (with Sal E. Graziano)ECW World Television Championship tournament semi-final match7:47
8Balls Mahoney defeated Kintaro KanemuraSingles match1:58
9New Jack fought Vic Grimes (with DeVito and Angel) to a no contestSingles match
10Impact Players (Lance Storm and Justin Credible) (with Jason Knight and Dawn Marie) defeated Raven and Mike Awesome (c) (with Francine), and Tommy Dreamer and Masato TanakaThree-Way Dance for the ECW World Tag Team Championship9:06
11Super Crazy defeated Rhino (with Steve Corino, Jack Victory and Cyrus)Tournament final for the vacant ECW World Television Championship7:56
(c) – the champion(s) heading into the match

Tournament brackets

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
         
Rhino Pin
Spike Dudley ECW on TNN (3/10)
Rhino Forfeit
The Sandman Living Dangerously
The Sandman Pin
Yoshihiro Tajiri ECW Hardcore TV (3/11)
Rhino Living Dangerously
Super Crazy Pin
Little Guido Pin
Kid Kash ECW Hardcore TV (3/11)
Little Guido Living Dangerously
Super Crazy Pin
Super Crazy Pin
C.W. Anderson ECW Hardcore TV (3/11)

Three-Way Dance eliminations

Elimination no. Wrestler Team Eliminated by Elimination move Time
1 Mike Awesome Mike Awesome and Raven Masato Tanaka Roaring Elbow 4:32
2 Tommy Dreamer Masato Tanaka and Tommy Dreamer Lance Storm Deep Impact 9:06
Winners: Impact Players

References

  1. ^ Bob Colling. "ECW Living Dangerously 2000 3/12/2000". Wrestling Recaps. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  2. ^ Scott Keith (July 30, 2002). "The SmarK Retro Repost – Living Dangerously 2000". 411Mania. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  3. ^ Nick Sellers (March 16, 2013). "Canvas Critiques #6 – ECW Living Dangerously 2000". 411Mania. Retrieved 16 June 2018.