Mike Reviews WCW Halloween Havoc 1994
By Michael Fitzgerald on 19 October 2024
Happy Spooky Saturday Everyone!
We’re continuing our journey into 1994 WCW today with Halloween Havoc. When we last left things back at Fall Brawl, Ric Flair and Hulk Hogan had agreed to another match for the World Title, whilst Steve Austin had both won and lost the US Title in quick succession. Let’s see where WCW takes things next at Halloween Havoc.
You can view the card for Halloween Havoc by clicking below;
Halloween Havoc 1994 is emanating from Detroit, Michigan on the 23rd of October 1994
Calling the action are Tony Schiavone and Bobby Heenan
The announce team yaks for a bit, with Heenan doing the A Class hype job. whilst Mean Gene hocks the hotline. Make sure you dial now kids, olives don’t come cheap.
Some bloke sings the American national anthem, just in case the people of Detroit forget which country they’re in I guess.

Opening Match
WCW World Television Title
Champ: Johnny B. Badd Vs The Honky Tonk Man
When Hulk Hogan entered WCW in 1994, he brought with him a lot of the wrestlers who had been big stars during his “Hulkamania” Era in the WWF. Jim Duggan, “Earthquake” John Tenta and Honky Tonk Man amongst others all entered the promotion in the autumn of 1994, and all of them were quickly put into important feuds and storylines. Whereas Duggan won the United States Title and Tenta feuded with Sting, Honky found himself feuding with Johnny B. Badd over the TV Title. In some ways it made a lot of sense, as both characters were inspired by classic Rock and Roll Stars of the past, with Honky having his whole Elvis thing going on whilst Badd’s character was heavily inspired by Little Richard. Badd has some vampire fangs as part of his entrance tonight, so he’s getting into the Halloween Havoc spirit at least. Badd gets the better of things in the early going, and then makes the cardinal sin of messing with Honky’s hair!

Honky is understandably fired up about that, but Badd is still able to fend the challenger off and continue the shine. Honky eventually manages to catch Badd with a sly knee to the gut, and that appears to be the cut off. Badd sells well during the heat and takes some nice bumps, whilst Honky keeps it simple with strikes, rest holds and playing to the crowd. Honky is very good at riling up a room full of strangers, so that works well enough, although it’s not the most exciting thing to watch when you’re sitting at home and you’re not there in the arena to boo the Heel. Badd makes sporadic attempts at fighting back, but Honky always manages to regain control, much to the crowd’s annoyance. Badd finally makes a comeback and looks to finish things off with a big punch, but Honky counters it with a back suplex and the two scrap on the mat for the remaining time in the match as the clock runs down
TIME LIMIT DRAW
RATING: **
Thoughts: My main criticism of this one is that you never really felt that Honky was actually trying to win. Honky trying to trap Badd in holds to run down the clock would have worked were Honky the Champion trying to hold on and retain, but he really needed to show more urgency in the challenger role than what we got here. Honky’s work in the heat was a bit dull, but he did a good job of angering the crowd, so that made up for it somewhat. Not a great match, but passable
Honky attacks Badd following the match, but Badd fends that off and sends Honky bailing from the ring, so this feud will continue.
We get clips of Ric Flair defeating Hulk Hogan back at Clash of the Champions #28, owing in a large part to Hogan having an injured knee thanks to an attack from a mysterious masked assailant. Then on an episode of TV in October, it was revealed that there was ANOTHER masked assailant, as this is getting like that storyline on one of the SmackDown Vs Raw games. Then we see footage of Flair going for dinner with Mr. T, which raises questions as to whether T will be unbiased later on tonight.

Match Two
WCW World Tag Team Titles
Champs: Stars And Stripes (The Patriot and Marcus Alexander Bagwell) Vs Pretty Wonderful (“Pretty” Paul Roma and “Mr Wonderful” Paul Orndorff)
Stars And Stripes had upset Pretty Wonderful for the tag belts, so the former Champs are getting their rematch here. They start this one hot, with all four wrestlers going at it, leading to Roma and Bagwell doing a nice bit together inside the ring. The Champs continue to shine on Roma following that, as they show some good cohesion and Roma takes nice bumps for everything, as does Orndorff when he tags in. Orndorff seems more interested in playing the traditional stooging Heel than Roma does, which perhaps was foreshadowing for what would happen at SuperBrawl V.
The Heels eventually double up on Bagwell for the cut off, which looks to be our heat segment, which Bagwell does a good job of selling for. The heat feels like it maybe goes on for a little bit too long, as this might fit into the usual formula that PW used to do of doing a really long heat and a really short finishing stretch, which just always kind of made the Faces look bad because it would involved them getting battered for ages and then losing after a brief flurry. Patriot ends up coming in without a tag, which leads to Roma getting a cheap shot on Bagwell whilst the ref is distracted, and that leads to Pretty Wonderful getting the win and their belts back.
WINNERS AND NEW CHAMPIONS: PRETTY WONDERFUL
RATING: **1/4
Thoughts: The wrestling was fine, but the heat segment felt like it went on forever and then we didn’t even get a proper hot tag segment either. Just kind of a flat match really, although it was mechanically sound for the most part
Mean Gene Okerlund is backstage with Ric Flair and Sensuous Sherri, who are both in a good mood tonight because they’re going to end Hulk Hogan’s career. Flair cuts a promo about the match later, and it’s a Ric Flair promo, so it’s good. Sherri is all kinds of wacky for this promo as well, and I’m here for it.
We get a video package to hype up the next match when two “brothers” will do battle.

Match Three
Brother Vs Brother
“Taskmaster” Kevin Sullivan Vs Evad Sullivan
Sullivan hates Hulk Hogan and his storyline dyslexic brother, Evad, loves The Hulkster, so now they are feuding. Evad debuts new music tonight, which features Hulk Hogan attempting to rap. Despite supposedly being Hulk Hogan’s new bestest buddy, it doesn’t seem to have helped Evad get over with the crowd, as a shot of two moody looking kids in Hogan bandannas would seem to confirm. Evad is trying really hard in order to justify his push here, although he isn’t much in the ring and can really only do clotheslines and the like. Kevin does a good job of holding things together, and eventually manages to cut Evad off and work his brother over.
Kevin as the vicious bully, despite him being considerably shorter than his brother, actually works really well, although Evad’s somewhat goofy selling limits the effectiveness of the work somewhat. Evad eventually manages to fling Kevin off the top rope and start mounting a comeback, which leads to Kevin pretending to become a Hulkamaniac in order to sucker his brother in for a cheap shot. You know, having to resort to cheap tricks in order to out smart an idiot demeans us all. The two brothers fight outside the ring following that, with Evad managing to roll back into the ring to beat the count and pick up the win.
WINNER BY COUNT OUT: EVAD SULLIVAN
RATING: *
Thoughts: Yeah this wasn’t very good, with the rubbish finish being the dollop of past-it’s-best ice cream on top of the undercooked cake. Kevin actually didn’t look too bad here, but he didn’t have much to work with and the crowd didn’t really care that much about it either, even with Evad having the Hulk Hogan connection in storyline. What’s interesting about the whole thing is that Evad had enough size that if he’d been remotely competent in the ring then he could have wrestled against Hogan whilst still using his previous Equaliser character as a designated monster of the month for Hogan to slay, but his lack of in-ring aptitude led him to becoming Hogan’s comedy lackey instead. Wrestling is just like that sometimes
We get a video package for the next match.

Match Four
“Double A” Arn Anderson w/ Colonel Robert Parker and THE MONSTER MENG Vs “The Natural” Dustin Rhodes
Anderson betrayed Dustin back at Bash at the Beach 1994, so this is a chance for Dustin to get some revenge in a singles match after previously doing battle with Double A in the War Games at the previous pay per view. Anderson is quick to throw a punch early on, which leads to Dustin replying in kind and then working the babyface shine on Anderson. Anderson is a great seller and bumper, whilst Dustin shows good fire on offence, so it’s an effective section of the match, even though the crowd reactions aren’t quite what you’d like or expect them to be for it. We’ve had a draw, Heels winning belts and a lame Count Out in the first three matches though, so maybe the crowd has been flattened out a bit? Or maybe the fans were just over this feud seeing as it had been going on in some form since the Spring if you consider the Parker Vs Dustin aspect of it?
Dustin ends up taking a spill to the floor when Anderson dodges an attack (with Dustin only just avoiding the ring steps in the process) and that not surprisingly leads to the cut off and heat segment. Dustin sells well during that, and makes sporadic attempts to fight back to show that he’s still in the fight, whilst Anderson looks good on offence and does a solid job of desperately clinging on to control. Dustin does eventually make the comeback, as the crowd are gradually getting more into this one. Anderson tries to catch Dustin with a DDT (one of his finishers at the time) but Dustin grabs the rope to block it and then gets a Stun Gun (the move, not the item) for good measure. Dustin tries to drop a knee on Anderson’s arm as revenge for Anderson doing similar to Dustin back at BATB, but Anderson dodges it and gets a rope assisted pinning hold. The referee catches the cheating though, and that allows Dustin to get his own pinning hold for three.
WINNER: DUSTIN RHODES
RATING: ***
Thoughts: I really enjoy finishes like that, as it not only makes the referee actually look competent at his job, but it also led to the Heel being immediately punished for doing something villainous, which plays into the whole idea that wrestling is one big morality play. The match itself was well worked and told a good story, with Dustin being in a bad mood and looking for vengeance; whilst Anderson tried to keep his angry opponent at arms length just long enough to snatch a win. The only disappointment was that the crowd didn’t seem that into it, but this feud between Parker’s stable and Dustin Rhodes had been going on for a LONG while by the time Halloween Havoc rolled around, so there’s a chance that the fans were just over it by this stage
Anderson and Parker look to put a beat down on Dustin following that, as it looks like this feud is going to keep going. I think we still had a Barry Darsow Vs Dustin Rhodes section of the storyline to come as well when Parker took the former Repo Man under his wing in an attempt to run Dustin out of town (which was actually successful due to an unauthorised blade job, but we’ll get to that in March 2025 if I get there in time or Netflix brings over the WWE Network archives).
Mean Gene is backstage with Hulk Hogan, Jimmy Hart and Brother Bruti (Ed Leslie/Brutus Beefcake). Hogan talks about how Hulkamania is running wild in Detroit, and that means that only one of The Hulkster or Flair will be left in WCW. Hogan also adds that he’s spoken with Mr. T, and he trusts T to call the match fairly later on. This was a decent promo from Hogan that set the stage nicely for the Main Event later on, and kept the side-story of Mr. T’s loyalties going on as well. Hogan was a bit more lowkey and serious than usual here, which helped make this feel like a big deal.
We get a quick video recap of how Steve Austin was awarded the US Title back at Fall Brawl, only for him to then lose it to Hacksaw Duggan. So we’ve got a rematch tonight. Austin was so good in that angle at Fall Brawl, being an arrogant jerk who then got his comeuppance. It’s just a shame that they did the angle with Duggan, as otherwise it might have been a nice bit of business that would have given Austin an out for losing his belt so quickly.

Match Five
WCW United States Title
Champ: “Hacksaw” James Duggan Vs “Stunning” Steve Austin
Hacksaw got a quick win over Austin back at Fall Brawl in an impromptu bout, but Austin knows the match is coming this time and should be more prepared. Austin attacks Duggan during his entrance here, and actually gets a prototypical version of the mudhole stomping in the corner at one stage, only for Duggan to then fight back. This one has some really good crowd reactions early on, and both wrestlers seem to be responding to it. Austin attacks Duggan’s legs in an attempt to gain some traction in the bout, but Duggan doesn’t seem too interested in actually selling it for that long. Case in point, Duggan uses the leg for an Atomic Drop on Austin and is none the worse for wear for doing so. Austin tries to befriend Duggan following that, but Hacksaw isn’t interested and works a headlock, which leads to Austin fighting out and coming off the ropes with some Axe Handle Smashes.
Keeping the trend of the match going though; Duggan manages to shrug off the offence and counter Austin’s attempts before regaining control again. An unseen mule kick from Austin looks to finally put Duggan on the defensive, which leads to the crowd chanting “USA” for the Champ. Austin busts out another move he’d been known for doing in his latter WWF stint by coming off the second rope with an elbow, but he misses another move off the top and that leads to Duggan making the comeback, which the crowd is also into. Austin counters the Three Point Charge by giving Duggan a back body drop over the top rope to the floor though, and that’s a DQ. I should point out that folks were thrown over the top rope in matches previous to this one, but those weren’t DQ’s, as the over the top rope DQ was only a DQ when WCW decided that it needed to be, which made it a dumb rule.
WINNER BY DQ AND STILL CHAMPION: HACKSAW DUGGAN
RATING: **1/2
Thoughts: This match actually had decent energy to it and the crowd seemed to genuinely be enjoying it, but the lame finish knocks it down somewhat. I get that they probably wanted to rehab Austin a bit following Fall Brawl, so they did a DQ rather than having Austin get pinned again, but honestly it might have made more sense for Austin to slip on a banana peel and get pinned here so that both wrestlers could move onto different storylines. Duggan shrugging off so much of Austin’s offence was a tad annoying, but it was what the crowd wanted to see I guess. It wouldn’t matter as much if they hadn’t spent most of 1994 making Austin look like a World Champion in waiting and he was just any other mid-card goober. But Austin had been booked really well prior to this feud, so not only did this make him look like a chump but it also left all the wrestlers he beat in the previous 8 months looking chumpish too that a guy who was doing jobs in the WWF the last time he was in a major promotion could just walk in and steamroll one of WCW’s most pushed guys like this
Austin tries a post-match beatdown, but Duggan chases Austin off with his 2×4 and I guess this feud will continue for the time being.
Mean Gene brings out Sting to the entrance way for some promo time, with Sting being decked out in a snazzy suit. Sting is here to watch the Main Event later on.
We get a video recap of the long running feud between Vader and The Guardian Angel. Vader has kept getting the better of Angel for the majority of the feud, getting wins over his opponent on multiple pay per views. That being said, very few of them have been clean, as Vader has won some by DQ and won others thanks to his manager, Harley Race, getting involved. Vader and Race had previously battered Angel on an episode of Saturday Night, with Vader crushing Angel with a Moonsault.
Match Six
Vader w/ Harley Race Vs The Guardian Angel
These two seemingly spent most of 1994 feuding together, but the matches were normally good at least. WCW actually had permission to use the Guardian Angel name, and that’s displayed here as Angel has a bunch of other Angel’s with him for his entrance. Sadly I don’t seem to see Aaron there with them though. Vader tells Muhammad Ali at ringside that Ali is the man, which leads to Ali cracking a big smile in a nice moment. Whilst Vader is bonding with the GOAT though, Guardian Angel is putting a beatdown on Harley Race inside the ring, because he’s just so gosh darn mad at Vader and his allies. Vader calmly gets into the ring following that, and we get the usual match between these two, in that both of them just slug away at one another with little in the way of technical wrestling taking place. Interestingly, Vader knocks Guardian over the top rope to the floor at one stage, with it clearly being deliberate, but it’s not a DQ, even though it was even more blatant than the incident in the US Title match.
Race continues to get involved, with the ref just letting it all go, because WCW I guess. That does lead to Angel body slamming Vader onto Race in a crowd pleasing spot though. The crazy power stuff continues, with Angel countering a Vader cross body into a powerslam at one stage. Angel then starts firing off enziguri’s and even tries coming off the top as well, as both of these guys can not only brawl but they are also pretty nimble on their feet, which is why their matches together were usually so entertaining. You can tell that both of them start to tire as the bout rages on though, as Angel tries the Boss Man Slam but it looks like Vader is supposed to do some kind of a fancy counter and it goes awry, meaning that Vader just throws a sloppy lariat and the two lie around for a few moments to catch their bearings. Vader follows up with the Pump Slash following that, but he gets greedy and tries it again, which allows Angel to get his knees up and follow with a Spine Buster for two. The Boss Man Slam looks to finish things, but Race causes a distraction and that allows Vader to catch Angel with a Splash for the three count.
WINNER: VADER
RATING: ***
Thoughts: The stuff with Race was a bit OTT, with it almost starting to make Angel look dumb that he was so focused on beating up the retired manager rather than the guy he was actually wrestling. It was still a good powerhouse brawl though, which you expect to see when these two go at it
Vader jaws with Sting following that, but I’m not sure it led to anything as Vader was set to go after Jim Duggan next and Sting was feuding with Kevin Sullivan.
Mean Gene interviews Thomas Hearns (a famous boxer) in the entrance way. He doesn’t deliver the best of promos, but at least WCW could say that he cameoed on their Halloween Havoc pay per view I suppose.

Match Seven
The Stud Stable (Terry Funk and Bunkhouse Buck) w/ Colonel Robert Parker and THE MONSTER MENG Vs The Nasty Boys (Knobbs and Sags)
The Nasty’s helped out The Rhodes Family back at Fall Brawl, so The Stud Stable beat them up backstage for it as penance. The Nasty’s returned the favour and now we have this match at Halloween Havoc. Funk and Buck are tremendous Heel buffoons in the early stages, with The Nasty’s bumping them around and the Heel team taking plenty of pratfalls for them. The Nasty’s mostly rely on throwing punches and yelling during the babyface shine, but that works just fine for the match they’re having here, as if you’re watching The Stud Stable take on The Nasty Boys and are expecting arm drags and headlock takeovers then I’m not sure you really know what you’re getting into. Funk gets so annoyed at being unable to get any traction against The Nasty’s that he starts hitting himself in the face with a chair at one stage, much to the bemusement of the folks on the front row.
Funk and Buck eventually double up on Sags whilst the referee is distracted dealing with Knobbs, and that leads to our heat segment, for all of 5 seconds until Knobbs gets tagged in and runs wild in Nasty fashion. Knobbs then gets tripped up illegally by Buck, which the ref misses due to Parker, and that sets up a possible punch with a loaded glove from Buck. However, the referee turns around in time to catch Buck, which leads to Meng trying to make the killing blow instead. Knobbs manages to duck it though, and it ends up being Funk who gets clocked by Meng, which leads into Sags giving Funk a piledriver on a pumpkin (well it is Halloween Havoc) and that’s enough for three after an exceedingly whacky little match.
WINNERS: THE NASTY BOYS
RATING: **1/2
Thoughts: I had fun with this, but your own mileage may vary depending on how much you enjoy watching sloppy brawling and Terry Funk acting like an absolute madman. If you like one or both of those things, then you’ll probably have fun with this. If those sound bad to you, then this match will probably be an ordeal for you to live through
Mean Gene is in the ring with Bill Shaw and Eric Bischoff, and they bring in Muhammad Ali for a special presentation of a cheque for Ali’s foundation. Bischoff then presents Ali with a nice plaque. That was a nice moment and was classily done.
Tony Schiavone says that he likes Ric Flair, but he still thinks that Hulk Hogan will win tonight. Bobby Heenan then goes on a big anti-Hogan rant, as he was want to do.

Main Event
Luchas de Apuestas
Loser Must Retire
Guest Referee: Mr. T
WCW World Title
Champ: Hulk Hogan w/ Jimmy “Mouth of the South” Hart Vs “The Nature Boy” Ric Flair w/ Sensuous Sherri
Hogan had defeated Flair for the Title at BATB and then Flair had won a rematch by count out thanks to an attack from a mystery masked assailant. Flair had gone around calling himself the real Champ after that, and it was decided that they would clash in a cage here at Halloween Havoc with both the belt and their careers on the line. Mr. T is here because Hulk Hogan clearly woke up and mistook it for being 1985, and thus thought booking Mr. T would be a useful way to juice the buy rate. There’s a bloke dressed in Hogan cosplay on the front row, but despite that there are audible chants from some in the crowd that Hogan does the opposite of blowing, which was always going to happen when Mr. WWF came to WCW and started steamrolling all of their favourite wrestlers, regardless of Heel/Face alignment. In reality, neither of the wrestlers in this match were actually going to leave WCW, they just made that stipulation in the hope that it would help draw more buys for the show, and Halloween Havoc did end up being a success so I guess it paid off.
Mr. T quickly shows that he’s not going to have bias here, as he stops Hogan from choking Flair with a T-Shirt, but Hogan doesn’t need it and starts punching away at his hated rival. T breaks that up, which doesn’t really make sense in a No DQ match like this, but I guess they wanted to work in a spot where T got to assert his authority. Hogan keeps coming and flings Flair into the cage a wall a few times, which I thought was going to lead to Flair doing a customary blade job, but I guess the no blood rule is in effect here and Flair’s face remains uncut. Flair decides to start attacking Hogan’s left knee, which is the same knee that Hogan injured in their match back at Clash #28, and Flair has some joy with that, as well as some follow up attacks. Hogan is selling big here, which is the first time he’s really done that in this feud thus far, and it helps give this match a feel of a fight as opposed to just being a regular Flair/Hogan match, especially as Hogan is almost showing some desperation at points when Flair has him on the backfoot.
You can tell that this one is a big occasion, as Flair actually successfully comes off the top rope at one stage. They’ve mostly split the offence here, with the momentum being traded throughout, and the crowd has been really into it. The action itself has been exciting too, with both of the two wrestlers working this at a quick clip and really going for it in there. That’s par for the course with someone like Flair, but you almost feel like Hogan thinks he has something to prove here, and that’s why he’s really putting the effort in. They even fight on the top rope and near the top of the cage at points, with Flair getting flung into the fence numerous times and selling it spectacularly. Flair keeps going for the leg, and rips off some of the protective bandaging on it, which gives T a chance to yell at Flair and show that he’s going to be equally curmudgeonly towards both competitors. Flair goes to the Figure Four and T doesn’t seem to know that you need to count when someone’s shoulders are down in that, but the crowd still pops when Hogan starts fighting out of it.
Mr. T ends up getting accidentally struck by Hogan, which gives us our ref bump, and Flair decides to add some stomps for good measure just to be a jerk about it. Sherri and Jimmy Hart go at it outside the ring, with Hart accidentally pulling down Sherri’s skirt at one stage as she tries to climb the cage. Sherri deals with Hart following that, but that brings Sting out of his seat to stop her from getting into the cage. However, the mysterious masked assailant takes out Sting with a pipe, leaving The Hulkster without anyone to counter the villain’s machinations. So the Heels then handcuff Mr. T to the bottom rope, which doesn’t make a tonne of sense seeing as they need him to count the pin. Wouldn’t it have made more sense for them to keep T knocked down, batter Hogan, and then let T wake up unaware as to what happened and then count the pin?
Anyway, the point ends up being moo, as Hogan starts Hulking Up and ends up taking out both Flair and Sherri all by himself (with Sherri taking some fantastic bumps for it all) with the crowd being happy to accept the visual of burly Hulk Hogan clobbering a woman, which I guess is a testament both to how much heat Sherri had and also how much legitimacy as a tough character she had in the eyes of the fans as well. Hogan eventually decides he’s destroyed the Heels enough and then drops the leg on Flair to pick up the three count from the recovering T.
WINNER AND STILL CHAMPION: HULK HOGAN
RATING: ****
Thoughts: This was all kinds of entertaining, as they worked the match at a quick clip and both put in top level effort. It’s a shame that they didn’t delay Flair’s eventual Heel turn for a few months, as this would have been a fantastic Starrcade Main Event, and that was technically the bigger show than Halloween Havoc. It’d be like if WWE had their biggest feud of the year end at Royal Rumble and then didn’t have anything bigger for WrestleMania. This wasn’t just Hogan battering Flair from pillar to post either. Flair was given plenty of offence and was presented as being on Hogan’s level, and you could argue that if he hadn’t started up the dog and pony show and just focused on wrestling the match straight, then he might have even won in the end. However, he had to bring in Sherri and that led to Hogan firing up and then making the big comeback to win, angered as he was by the chicanery that was going on. This one was basically non-stop action and a suitable end to the feud between the two.
The Masked Assailant tries to attack Hogan following that, but Hogan is able to fend him off and remove the mask, revealing Brother Bruti. Brutus Beefcake betraying Hogan after years of servitude to the mighty Hulkster was kind of an interesting twist, but Beefcake was never the same as a worker following his parasailing injury in 1990 and he was a terrible choice as the next feud for Hogan after he’d just vanquished Ric Flair. If one of the greatest Champions of all-time couldn’t pin Hogan, what chance did the wacky bloke from the WWF who tried to cut people’s hair? Again, imagine Cody finished the story against Roman at Royal Rumble and then ended up facing Shawn Spears at WrestleMania? Anyway, Kevin Sullivan and The Avalanche (John “Earthquake” Tenta) run down and destroy Hogan, setting them up as the new dangerous faction that Hogan and his buddies are going to have to deal with going forwards. And indeed, Sting, runs down to make the save for The Hulkster, as the next chapter of WCW starts to be written, and it isn’t going to be as good as the previous one.
In Conclusion
Halloween Havoc is a decent show, with the Main Event being excellent and some good matches peppered around the undercard. Only the battle of The Sullivan’s was what I would call a bad match, with the rest of the card being passable to good. I personally enjoyed Fall Brawl a little bit more, but Halloween Havoc was still an okay watch.
Recommended Show

Credit to WCW Worldwide and Classic Wrestling Reviews for majority of the pics
