PART 10
In front of a record WCW crowd of 36,506 paid ($906,338), Goldberg defeated Hollywood Hogan to become WCW Heavyweight Champion. It is being seen, perhaps rightfully so, as the passing of the torch in WCW from Hogan to the rookie Goldberg.
The atmosphere for the title match in the Georgia Dome was among the best in the history of professional wrestling on television. The camera angles captured the enormity of the event and the overwhelming tension and anticipation among the fans. When Goldberg came out the reaction for him rivaled that of Steve Austin’s receptions, a comparison which will probably become more common in coming months.
For Hogan, the moment must have been eerie. The crowd reaction for Goldberg was so similar to the crowd reactions Hogan received during his peak years of popularity, be it when be was a breakout babyface star in the AWA in the early-’80s or his peak years nationally in the mid- and late-’80s in the WWF. Perhaps for the first time in Hogan’s career, he felt what it was like to wrestle himself.
Like many Hogan opponents over the years, he was merely backdrop fodder for the phenom that is Goldberg. Goldberg no-sold Hogan’s offense, kicked out of his finisher, and pinned him cleanly. Hogan’s only out for losing the match was that Karl Malone and Dallas Page at ringside drew his attention away from his match.
WCW hopes that by putting the Goldberg vs. Hogan match on Nitro they will regain lost ratings momentum. Critics within and outside of WCW, though, saw the hotshot move of booking the Goldberg-Hogan match on Nitro as a huge mistake. The potential pay-per-view revenue for Goldberg’s first WCW Title shot, especially against Hogan, would have been awesome. With two months of solid hype, it could have blown away all WCW PPV records and given Wrestlemania a run for its money. Never again will WCW be able to offer on PPV the First-Ever Goldberg Title Shot.
That said, the spectacle of Goldberg winning the title on Nitro was so perfect that it may work out to benefit WCW in ways they didn’t imagine. By airing the Goldberg title win in front of probably the largest audience to ever witness a match on cable television, WCW allowed millions more fans to be part of that special, perhaps historical moment, who otherwise would have only heard about it had it aired only on PPV. Now they may be even more inclined to continue to follow Goldberg’s career on PPV. Will that be enough over the long run to make for the loss of potential PPV revenue? That judgement can be made in a few months.
All expectations are that Goldberg’s title reign will not be short. For all of the mistakes they make due to internal politics, lack of organization, and short-term thinking, WCW doesn’t want to repeat the mistakes of the past when it comes to super-hot babyfaces. Had Verne Gagne given Hogan a title win over Nick Bockwinkel instead of disappointing AWA fans time after time with DQ and screwjob endings, the wrestling landscape in the ’80s might have turned out quite differently. The Road Warriors were never the same (nor was Chicago as a wrestling market) when at Starrcade ’88, in front of their purported hometown fans, they won the tag titles from Tully Blanchard & Arn Anderson only to have a classic Dusty Rhodes screwjob ending snatch them away due to a ref bump and DQ ending.
Monday night, the fans wanted Goldberg to beat Hogan. WCW gave them their wish.
Goldberg could be a draw on PPV like Mike Tyson was over the last decade. While customers won’t give Goldberg’s opponents a chance, they still will want to get together with friends and watch him win on PPV. But who are potential Goldberg PPV opponents? Kevin Nash, Bret Hart, Giant, Lex Luger, and Sting in order of drawing potential. Rematches with Hogan could also draw. But that’s it, and only three of them are actually heels. Goldberg is too dominant for anyone to take anyone else seriously as an opponent. If WCW has the patience to build those opponents properly that’s not a bad list of six PPV opponents.
Goldberg is getting paid $600,000 this year, $800,000 the next two years, and $1 million the final year of his recently inked four-year contract. If he turns out to be WCW’s version of Austin (who by all accounts this year will break the single-year earnings record of any wrestler in history), how long before Goldberg renegotiates his contract? And how long before Hogan turns babyface to team with Goldberg to ride his popularity?


