Super Summer Sizzler Spectacular

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Super Summer Sizzler Spectacular
ECW Arena
Attendance650
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The Super Summer Sizzler Spectacular was a

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the United States.[1]

The Super Summer Sizzler Spectacular was ECW's first "

supercard" and the first ECW event to be released on VHS.[2] In 2020, it was added to the WWE Network.[3]

Event

The commentator for the Super Summer Sizzler Spectacular was Jay Sulli, with guest commentary from

Paul E. Dangerously, Terry Funk, Joey Styles and Tod Gordon. The referees were Jim Molineaux, John Finnegan, and Kevin Christian.[4] The event was attended by approximately 650 people.[5]

The opening bout saw Don E. Allen wrestle Herve Renesto to a no contest. This match was not included on the VHS release.[5]

In the first match to appear on the VHS release,

Superfly Splash.[4]

Terry Funk wrestled in the main event of the Super Summer Sizzler Spectacular.

In the third bout, former

first blood match. The match ended when Rockin' Rebel came to ringside and distracted Winters, enabling Stetson to hit him with a chain wrapped around his fist and draw blood.[4][6]

In the fourth bout,

Miss Peaches faced Terrible Tigra in a "catfight humiliation match", with the loser being the first woman to be stripped. After both women removed one another's t-shirts, Peaches - with assistance from the debuting Angel - won the match by tearing off Tigra's shorts. Following the match, Stetson and Rockin' Rebel attacked Peaches and Angel, stripping Angel topless before being driven off by Larry Winters and the Sandman.[4][7]

In the fifth bout, Jimmy Snuka (accompanied by his manager,

ECW Pennsylvania Champion Tommy Cairo. Snuka retained his championship after Dangerously tripped Cairo, enabling Snuka to pin him using a roll-up with his feet on the ring ropes.[4][6]

In the sixth bout, Rockin' Rebel faced the Sandman in a "

Philadelphia street fight", with Rockin' Rebel pinning the Sandman using a schoolboy after an unnamed Tammy Lynn Sytch entered the ring and momentarily blinded the Sandman with hair spray.[4]

The seventh bout was scheduled to be between Dark Patriot and Dick Murdoch. Before the match, Dark Patriot's manager, Paul E. Dangerously, announced that he was unavailable and introduced the masked Dark Patriot II as his substitute. Murdoch went on to defeat Dark Patriot II with a roll-up.[4]

The eighth bout was a

Pizza Splash to Michaels and pinned him.[4]

The main event was a "

"Hot Stuff" Eddie Gilbert (accompanied by Paul E. Dangerously) and Terry Funk, with the winner to be named "King of Philadelphia". The match saw the two competitors chained together at the wrist, with the winner being the first man to touch all four turnbuckles consecutively. Towards the end of the match, Funk succeeded in touching all four turnbuckles, but was not named as winner by referee Kevin Christian. Subsequently, Gilbert hit Funk with a chair and then gave him a piledriver on the chair, enabling him to touch all four corners and win. After the match, Dangerously revealed that Kevin Christian was in fact "Freddie Gilbert", Eddie Gilbert's brother, and had cheated on his behalf. Following the match, Funk and ECW commissioner Tod Gordon brawled with Gilbert and Dangerously, after which Funk gave Gordon the "King of Philadelphia" crown and cut a promo praising ECW.[4]

Results

No.ResultsStipulationsTimes
1Herve Rinesto vs.
Paul E. Dangerously) defeated Terry Funk by touching all four turnbuckles
Texas chain match massacre for the title of "King of Philadelphia"17:16
(c) – the champion(s) heading into the match

References

  1. ^ McNeill, Pat (June 22, 2013). "Brotherly Love: McNeill previews ROH's Best In The World 2013 internet pay-per-view". PWTorch.com. Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved September 20, 2020.
  2. ^ a b Heels Inc (July 24, 2014). "The 'Oh My God!' Review: ECW's Super Summer Sizzler '93". CrazyMax.org. Retrieved September 20, 2020.
  3. ^ WWE. "Super Summer Sizzler 1993". WWE.com. WWE. Retrieved September 20, 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Schwabe, Robert (May 12, 2012). "Extreme Archive: ECW Super Summer Sizzler Spectacular 1993". InsidePulse.com. Retrieved September 20, 2020.
  5. ^ a b Kreikenbohm, Philip. "ECW Super Summer Sizzler Spectacular". Cagematch.net. Retrieved September 20, 2020.
  6. ^ a b Scherer, Dave; Theophall, Pete (June 20, 1993). "ECW 6/19". Rec.Sport.Pro-Wrestling. Archived from the original on August 9, 2021. Retrieved November 23, 2020.
  7. ^ Woodward, Buck (March 15, 2007). "PWInsider Q&A: WSX, Four Horsemen DVD, topless woman in ECW and more". PWInsider.com. Retrieved September 20, 2020.

External links