In Your House 8: Beware of Dog was the eighth In Your House professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE). The event was originally only scheduled to take place on May 26, 1996, from the Florence Civic Center in Florence, South Carolina, but a second night of the event also took place on May 28, 1996, at the North Charleston Coliseum in North Charleston, South Carolina.
In Your House 8: Beware of Dog | |||
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Promotion | World Wrestling Federation | ||
Date | May 26, 1996 May 28, 1996 | ||
City | Florence, South Carolina North Charleston, South Carolina | ||
Venue | Florence Civic Center North Charleston Coliseum | ||
Attendance | 6,000 (Florence)[1] 4,500 (North Charleston)[2] | ||
Tagline(s) | It's Vader Time | ||
Pay-per-view chronology | |||
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In Your House chronology | |||
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Due to a severe thunderstorm, the power went out during the broadcast on May 26, resulting in only two matches being shown on pay-per-view and a series of matches where the building had very little power. As a result, a second night titled "Beware of Dog 2" was scheduled for May 28. The two matches televised from the May 26 event were shown again at the beginning of the rescheduled pay-per-view. The event is available to stream on the WWE Network as one event, with no mention of the blackout.
To date, this is the promotion's only pay-per-view event to be held in South Carolina. This event marked the end and disbanding of the Million Dollar Corporation with Ted DiBiase leaving for WCW and joining the nWo.
Background
editIn Your House was a series of monthly professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) events first produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) in May 1995. They aired when the promotion was not holding one of its then-five major PPVs (WrestleMania, King of the Ring, SummerSlam, Survivor Series, and Royal Rumble), and were sold at a lower cost.[3] In Your House 8: Beware of Dog was originally scheduled to only take place on May 26, 1996, from the Florence Civic Center in Florence, South Carolina. The name of the show was based on the rivalry between Shawn Michaels and The British Bulldog.[1]
Due to a severe thunderstorm, the power went out during the event, resulting in only two matches being shown on pay-per-view and a series of dark matches not aired on television.[4] The televised event was rescheduled as "Beware of Dog 2" and took place on May 28, 1996, at the North Charleston Coliseum in North Charleston, South Carolina after a scheduled taping of their syndicated WWF Superstars program. The two matches televised from the May 26 event were shown again at the beginning of the rescheduled pay-per-view.[2]
Event
editMay 26
editBefore the event aired live on pay-per-view, a match for the WWF Tag Team Championship between the challengers, The Smoking Gunns (Bart Gunn and Billy Gunn), and the champions, The Godwinns (Henry O. Godwinn and Phineas I. Godwinn), was broadcast live on Free for All. The Godwinns were accompanied by Hillbilly Jim and Sunny. Several minutes into the match, Sunny appeared on the ring apron and approached Billy Gunn while Phineas and Bart wrestled inside the ring. Billy then grabbed Sunny and kissed her, causing Phineas to become distracted which allowed Bart to perform a German suplex and make the pinfall to win the WWF Tag Team Championship.
Role: | Name: |
---|---|
Commentator | Vince McMahon |
Jerry Lawler | |
Interviewer | Dok Hendrix |
Mr. Perfect | |
Ring announcer | Howard Finkel |
Referee | Jack Doan |
Tim White | |
Earl Hebner | |
Mike Chioda |
The first match to air live on pay-per-view was a standard match between "Wildman" Marc Mero (with Sable) and Hunter Hearst Helmsley. Helmsley attempted to perform his finishing move, the Pedigree, when Mero countered by grabbing Helmsley's legs out from under him and performed a slingshot catapult, sending Helmsley head-first into the top of the ring post. Mero covered a "knocked-out" Helmsley for the pinfall.
The next scheduled match was a Caribbean Strap match between Steve Austin and Savio Vega. At the beginning of the match, power to the arena and WWF satellite television trucks went out and the pay-per-view feed cut out due to a severe thunderstorm. This match, along with the other scheduled matches, still took place but with little light in the arena and not broadcast on pay-per-view. The power and feed were restored just before the ring entrances for the main event match.
The main event of the night featured WWF Champion Shawn Michaels defending the title against the British Bulldog. Just before the match began, as scripted, Michaels was served a summons from Bulldog's storyline attorney Clarence Mason. It stated that Michaels was a defendant with the charge of "attempted alienation of affection" due to the allegation of him making advances towards Bulldog's wife (storyline and real life) Diana Smith, therefore causing strain in their marriage. The timing of the subpoena by Bulldog's camp was an attempt to throw Michaels off his game, giving Bulldog a better chance of winning the championship. During the match, as part of the script, Bulldog accidentally ran into referee Earl Hebner, knocking him out for a period of time. A replacement referee (Mike Chioda) continued the match. Shawn Michaels performed a German suplex into a pinfall combination on Bulldog. By this time, the original referee had regained his senses, and both referees counted the pinfall. Both wrestlers had their shoulders on the mat as Chioda counted Michaels' shoulders down, while Hebner counted Bulldog's down. Due to both wrestlers being pinned simultaneously, the match was ruled a draw and Michaels retained the WWF Championship.
The WWE Network version of the event jumps to this match after the opening match, after which the second part of the show streams. None of the matches that took place in the dark are included.
May 28
editRole: | Name: |
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Commentator | Jim Ross |
Mr. Perfect | |
Ring announcer | Bill Dunn |
Referee | Tim White |
Mike Chioda | |
Jack Doan |
The second half of Beware of Dog was held live on Tuesday, May 28, 1996 after a scheduled taping of WWF Superstars at the North Charleston Coliseum. The event was held a day after a Raw event at the Cumberland County Civic Center a day after, and entitled "Beware of Dog 2". The broadcast began by re-airing the two matches shown on pay-per-view from May 26 (Mero/Helmsley and Bulldog/Michaels) while Superstars taping was ongoing. The first match that aired live on May 28 was a Caribbean Strap match between Steve Austin (with Ted DiBiase) and Savio Vega. The previous night on Raw (May 27), Ted DiBiase announced that if Austin did not defeat Vega, DiBiase would leave the WWF.[5] The match was back and forth until Austin wrapped a portion of the strap around Vega's neck and began to drag him around the ring with the strap over his shoulder. Austin started the process of touching all four corners to win the match, but Vega also touched the corners (without Austin's knowledge) as he was being tugged. After Austin and Vega touched the third corner, Vega put up enough fight to force Austin to turn around. The two were now facing each other and Austin pulled on the strap, attempting to touch the last corner, but instead pulled with enough strength that Vega flew into the corner causing Austin to lose the match and DiBiase to leave the WWF. After the match, Vega led the audience in "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye" by Steam, directed at DiBiase.
The following match was a standard match featuring Vader (with Jim Cornette) versus Yokozuna. It began with Vader reluctant to engage with his opponent until Yokozuna gained control for most of the match. Eventually, Yokozuna became occupied with Cornette and attempted to perform his finishing move, the Banzai Drop, on him when Vader pulled Cornette out of the way. Yokozuna missed his target which provided Vader the opportunity to deliver an elbow drop to the leg, followed by a Vader Bomb allowing him to make the pinfall.
The next, and last match of the event was a Casket match for the WWF Intercontinental Championship between the champion, Goldust (with Marlena), and the challenger, The Undertaker (with Paul Bearer). During the match, Undertaker performed his signature Tombstone piledriver to Goldust and went to roll him into the casket. However, when Undertaker opened the casket, Mankind appeared inside and locked-in his Mandible Claw hold, positioned Undertaker into the casket and shut the lid, which resulted in Goldust winning the match and retaining the Intercontinental Championship. After the match, Mankind sat on top of the casket until it suddenly started to smoke. Mankind retreated to the locker room while Paul Bearer and WWF officials tried to open the casket. When it eventually opened, the Undertaker was gone. The arena lights darkened and Undertaker's entrance theme began to play as the pay-per-view signed off the air.
The WWE Network version of the show picks up right after the Shawn Michaels/British Bulldog match with the Tuesday make-up show.
Reception
editThe WWF earned $63,435 in ticket sales from the May 26 event with an attendance of 6,000.[1] The pay-per-view received a buyrate of 0.45, the equivalent of approximately 100,000 buys.[6] The event was released on VHS in the United States on August 6, 1996, by Coliseum Video.[7]
Results
editMay 26
editMay 28: "Beware of Dog 2"
editThis was also a WWF Superstars television taping.[8]
No. | Results | Stipulations | Times | ||
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1 | Savio Vega defeated Stone Cold Steve Austin (with Ted DiBiase) | Caribbean Strap match Since Vega won, Ted DiBiase was forced to leave the WWF, had Austin won, Savio Vega would have had to become Ted DiBiase’s chauffeur. | 21:27 | ||
2 | Vader (with Jim Cornette) defeated Yokozuna | Singles match | 8:53 | ||
3 | Goldust (c) (with Marlena) defeated The Undertaker (with Paul Bearer) | Casket match for the WWF Intercontinental Championship | 12:36 | ||
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References
edit- ^ a b c "Beware of Dog info". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
- ^ a b "Beware of Dog 2 info". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
- ^ Cawthon, Graham (2013). The History of Professional Wrestling. Vol. 2: WWF 1990–1999. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ASIN B00RWUNSRS.
- ^ Clayton, Corey (2011-08-27). "WWE's Forces of Nature". WWE. Retrieved 2011-10-12.
- ^ "WWF @ Fayetteville, NC – Cumberland County Memorial Auditorium – May 27, 1996". The History of WWE. Retrieved 2010-12-03.
- ^ "Every WWE Pay-Per-View Buyrate". wrestletalk.com. September 2020.
- ^ WWF WrestleFest '96 (VHS). ASIN 6303937411.
- ^ "1996". thehistoryofwwe.com. 16 January 2023.