The Fingerpoke of Doom
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The Fingerpoke of Doom is the common nickname for a pivotal storyline in American professional wrestling history that happened on January 4, 1999 on WCW Monday Nitro, the flagship show of World Championship Wrestling. The show took place at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta.
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[edit] Setup
In the storyline, champion Kevin Nash was scheduled to face Goldberg in a rematch for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship. Goldberg was undefeated until Nash beat him for the title, and this was going to be their anticipated rematch. However, Goldberg was arrested mid-show and accused of "aggravated stalking" by Miss Elizabeth (he was originally going to be accused of rape, but Goldberg refused to go along with that particular storyline). He was released when Elizabeth couldn't keep her story straight. Meanwhile, Hollywood Hulk Hogan returned to WCW after a hiatus and challenged Nash to a match, which Nash accepted.
[edit] Match
The match started with the two men circling each other. Hogan then poked Nash in the chest, and Nash quickly fell to the mat on his back. Hogan then covered for a pin, and was declared the new WCW World Heavyweight Champion. After this occurred, Scott Hall (who accompanied Nash) and Scott Steiner (who accompanied Hogan) entered the ring and celebrated with Nash and Hogan to reform the nWo. After their actions, Goldberg ran out, only to be jumped by Lex Luger (who turned heel) and then beaten down by the nWo as the show ended.
[edit] Impact
After this episode, WCW's TV ratings steadily went down, only reaching a 5.0 rating or higher twice (it drew a 5.7 on February 8, 1999 because of a Westminster Dog Show-induced RAW pre-emption). In retrospect, many observers inside and outside the pro wrestling business noted that this storyline turned off numerous fans for several reasons:
- It devalued the WCW World Heavyweight Title by having Nash simply lie down and give it to Hogan with no effort.
- The nWo by that time was very overdone. Reforming it made many fans even more tired of it.
- nWo Wolfpac became the "elite" group, yet WCW continued to allow nWo Hollywood (which was dubbed the "B-Team") to exist despite the lack of fan support.
- By this time, WCW had developed a reputation for consistently putting heels over faces, no matter the circumstances. This incident reinforced that perception in the minds of many fans.
- Goldberg was a huge fan favorite because he represented something fresh and new for WCW. Having the nWo beat him up like any other person lent the impression (which had been building for months) that Goldberg was never going to be the number one figure in WCW. Fans felt that, no matter what, Goldberg would forever remain on the backburner in favor of Hogan and Nash, whose interests would always come before the fans or the business.
- The only positive outcome of the incident was how effectively Goldberg fought other members of the nWo. When nWo members were celebrating their reunion, Goldberg had just reached the arena, and was told by somebody backstage what had just happened between Nash and Hogan. He ran toward the ring, confronted Hogan, Nash, Hall, Steiner and Bagwell, and dominated all of them until Luger appeared and turned on him.
- WCW poorly scheduled a match that could have been a big draw. Vince McMahon once made a reference to the incident, commenting that the Hogan-Nash encounter deserved to be held at WrestleMania or StarrCade, which would make the company millions of dollars; instead, WCW management opted to book the match on Monday Nitro, and the poor execution and length of it only added insult to injury.
- The only other time Hulk Hogan and Kevin Nash were pitted against each other was at Road Wild 1999, where Hogan successfully defended his World Title in a retirement match. The match was not highly regarded in terms of impact, build-up or quality wrestling.
- Many internet fans or smarks saw this as a vulgar display of backstage power, since it was well known that Nash was the booker in WCW and Hogan had a creative control clause in his contract.
- This was also the night that the arch-rival WWF would air a pre-taped match directly opposite Nitro on RAW in which Mick Foley (as Mankind) would win the WWF Championship. Earlier that night, WCW found out about what was going to occur, and spoiled the results on their broadcast. On orders from an infuriated Eric Bischoff, WCW announcer Tony Schiavone gave away the result of the match before it aired, sarcastically adding "That'll put a lot of asses in the seats." Within minutes, Nielsen ratings showed that several hundred thousand viewers switched channels from Nitro on TNT to RAW on the USA Network, many of whom wished to see a guaranteed title change and/or a title victory by the exceedingly popular Foley. After Mankind won the title, many fans then switched back to Nitro (which still had 5 minutes of air time left), suggesting that WCW had a show that the fans wanted to see, and could have emerged the victor that night had they not given away the RAW main event results. The final ratings for the night were 5.7 for RAW and 5.0 for Nitro. During the year following the incident, many WWF fans brought signs to the shows saying "Mick Foley put my ass in this seat."
- Several times throughout the night, the WCW announce team talked about how they had a "real main event" and how the main event for the show was what "wrestling was all about."
- Also damaged was the credibility of the company itself, which did not present the match that had been advertised (a Goldberg vs. Kevin Nash rematch from Starrcade '98), as well as what was perceived to be an underhanded way of selling out the arena for that night's telecast. Strangely enough, WCW would continue this bait and switch type of booking until their demise in 2001.
[edit] Trivia
- When asked about the Fingerpoke incident, Kevin Nash once replied "If Hogan had given Goldberg the Fingerpoke of Doom, it would've killed him!" Nash has made fun of himself for the same thing as a result of an injury he sustained on WWE RAW in 2002 just from running.