The Wrestling-A-Holic Retro Review For WWF Survivor Series 1987 by Steven Emanuel

With this Survivor Series being the first one, I thought it would be approiate if I did this one for Wrestling-A-Holic. Before the end of Hulkamania. Before the Montreal Screwjob. Before the Deadly Game Tourament. Before the Austin Run-over. Before HHH no selling death. Before the end of WCW. There was this...Survivor Series 1987.

The background to the formation of this event was interesting as Vince McMahon decided to screw the NWA, the pre-cursor to WCW and their only main competition left, by schelduing the Survivor Series on the same night, Thanksgiving, as the NWA's signature event, Starrcade. Starrcade had, for 4 years, held the Thanksgiving night slot but with the WWF more popular then ever before, and with the WWF in the middle of the Rock n' Wrestling Era boom, most cable companies around the country picked up Survivor Series over Starrcade. The WWF would screw Jim Crockett and the NWA once more in 1988 with the Royal Rumble on USA the night it had the Bunkhouse Brawl but the NWA shot back in March of 1988 by schelduing the first Clash of the Champions the same night as Wrestlemania IV. The two wrestling companies would battle for the time slots until the cable companies themselves stepped in and ordered that the two stop battling for time slots or NEITHER would ever have a pay-per-view again. Vince and Crockett complied and have been until 2001.

Survivor Series was hyped as the Thanksgiving Night Tradition and would be for several more years before moving to the more accomadating Sunday Night slot in 1995.

As for the storylines into the matches, there really weren't any between the teams but in the inviduals and these matches were scheldued so that the wrestlers could meet but not blow-off the feuds yet.

And its old SKOOL with 5 men tag teams.


No introduction video or music for that matter. Just a graphic that says Survivor Series and we are live! From the Richfield Coliseum in Richmond, Ohio. Original Airdate: Thanksgiving, November 26, 1987.

Your hosts for this event: Gorilla Monsoon and Jesse "The Body" Ventura who is wearing a pilgrim hat.


Opening Match-Survivor Series Elimination Match: "Macho Man" Randy Savage, Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat, Jake "The Snake" Roberts, Brutus "The Barber" Beefcake, and Hacksaw Jim Duggan vs. The Honky Tonk Man, "Dangerous" Danny Davis, "Outlaw" Ron Bass, "King" Harley Race, and Hercules Hernandez

HTM, Race, and Duggan are the only workers in this match that don't have a nickname. Just thought I mention that. The main feud in this match goes back to Randy Savage's face turn which happened after he lost the intercontinental title to Steamboat who lost it to HTM. Savage was involved in a feud with Honky to get the title back and was recieving increasing face pops as a result. On an episode of Saturday Night's Main Event, Honky Tonk smashed a guitar over Elizabeth's head. That enraged Savage and the next week the two met in a match. The match ended when the Hart Foundation interferred but Liz brought out Hogan to make the save. Hogan and Savage shook hands in one of the most emotional moments in WWF to form the Mega-Powers. With Savage now a face, Steamboat and him respected one another after their incredible match at Wrestlemania III and also had a common enemy in HTM. As for the other guys, the entire babyface side of the WWF LOATHED HTM and so they teamed up. Honky got some backup and so this match came to be.

Here we go: Herc and Brutus start off. They do a sequence and Beefcake manages to apply the sleeper-hold (back when it was considered a legit finisher) but Herc escapes and tags in Danny Davis, the evil ex-referee who screwed Tito Santana out of the I.C. Title that Savage won which led to the Steamboat match which led to the HTM win which led to the Savage face turn which led to this match! See, how all things are connected? Davis is in, and the faces can't wait to get their hands on him as all five members of Anti-Honky Tonk Man beat on the poor little evil referee which draws a huge pop. Davis can't take anymore and tags in Harley Race, King of the WWF. Race gives Steamboat a belly-to-belly suplex for two. The Dragon sells it like he's been in an iron-man match. Tag to Jim Duggan, who was feuding with Race at the time over the "King of the WWF" title and they brawl and brawl and brawl some more outside of the ring until the referee counts them out, eliminating the both of them at 4:28. Nice touch of booking. Savage is in and so is Bass and the two go at it. Savage gives Bass no chance as he destroys him and tags in Brutus Beefcake who eliminates him with the high-knee (soon to be called the Hiney by WCW) at 5:34. Good job Booty-Man, The Discple, The Man With No Name, The Man With No Face, Zodiac, and The Butcher. Honky Tonk Man is finally tagged in and Brutus goes after him. However, HTM easily eliminates Beefcake with the Shake, Rattle, n' Roll at 7:09. The Anti-HTM team lives up to their name (which is why I dubbed them that) and are defending Elizabeth's honor after the guitar shot. Who says chivarly is dead? Jake and Macho Man take turns beating the crap out of Honky Tonk Man and the crowd can dig it. Savage is in and HTM runs like a chicken and tags to Danny Davis. How nice. He gets his butt whipped and tags Honky back in who counters the DDT. Tag back to Davis who Roberts finishes off with a DDT to eliminate him at 11:29. Hernandez stops Roberts from getting the hot tag several times and he and HTM beat on Jake and prevent him from tagging Macho Man or Steamboat. Honky Tonk applies the chinlock on the Snake. Herc messes up and Snake gets the hot tag to Ricky Steamboat who cleans house on Honky Tonk's Men. The Dragon hits the flying chop on Hercules and tags in Savage who hits his AWESOME~! flying elbow to pin and eliminate Hercules at 16:36 in the only time Savage and Steamboat ever did a double-team move.Now its just Honky Tonk Man on his own and Savage beats him up for hitting his woman. But HTM can't take it anymore and just walks out like he did in every Intercontinental Title defense. The referee counts him out at 19:14. Team Anti-HTM wins and the crowd goes wild. **1/2 The times were clipped and the ending was a little bad but a good match that introduced the audience to the Survivor Series Elimination Match. And its historic because its the first one. Remember that for trivia games. Survivors: "Macho Man" Randy Savage, Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat, & Jake "The Snake" Roberts. HTM and Beefcake would feud after this.


Survivor Series Elimination Match: The Fabolous Moolah, Rockin' Robin, Velvet McIntylre, and The Jumping Bomb Angels vs. Sensational Sherri, Donna Christianello, Dawn Marie, and The Glamour Girls

This was back in the days when women's wrestling actually MEANT something in North America which just goes to show how different the WWF was. And I know what you're thinking, and nope, this was a different Dawn Marie and a ugly one at that. The main feuds in this match were between the WWF Women's Champion, Sherri Martell and Moolah. Sherri had won the title from Moolah early in the year. The other big feud in this match was between the Jumping Bomb Angels and the Glamour Girls, who were the Women Tag Team Champions at this point. I can't believe those titles actually existed and in the WWF! Velvet and Christianello start the match up with some great face pace action wowing the crowd. One victory roll later, and Christianello is eliminated at 1:58. Rockin' Robin, Jake The Snake's sister, is tagged in and she takes some punishment for a while. Robin gets some action and eliminates Dawn Marie with a hurricarana at 4:12 and the face women's team is up 5-3. Fast start. The Angels are tagged and go after the Glamour Girls and do some BEAUTIFUL JUST WONDERFUL action that absolutely wows the crowd. They do some lucha libre and introduce that to the North American audiences and several near-falls and it is just AWESOME! Why can't the women wrestlers in the WWE do that stuff today? Wait a minute, how many women wrestlers are there actually in the WWE? Trish Stratus, Molly, Jaqueline, Victoria. DAMN! One of the Angels, I can't tell who, does an underhook suplex on Sherri and Rockin' Robin is tagged in breaking the GREAT flow of the match. Sherri does a suplex and that move is all it takes to eliminate Rockin' Robin at 6:51. Good riddance. The Angels and the Glamour Girls get back in and they do another wonderful sequence then Moolah is tagged in and the match slows down to a mediate pace. Cool. Moolah is suppose to be a babyface, but the fans are booing her every moment she is in the ring. That's just weird since its MOOLAH we're talking about. Anyway, the Glamour Girls double-clothesline Moolah and Judy Martin pins her and eliminates her at 10:54. Angels back in and they and Velvet work on Martin's knee for a bit. Velvet hooks Judy Martin with a Boston Crab followed by a great looking Surfboard and when she releases it, Sherri is tagged in and does a legdrop and a bad suplex on McIntyle. The timekeeper messes up at one point, ringing the bell thinking that Yamazuki was pinned but kicked out at two. The referee waves it off and Velvet hits a victory roll on the reigning Women's Champion to eliminate her at 14:56. A big deal because she pinned the Women's Champion. Good for her. Lelani Kai comes in and takes down Velvet with a fallback slam and pins her at 17:52 to eliminate her. She was showing a good performance and I feel bad for her being eliminated. So now its just The Jumping Bomb Angels and The Glamour Girls. The Angels take control keeping Kai from Martin and Yamazuki pins her with a flying crossbody to eliminate Kai at 18:38. Judy Martin is the last member on the heel team left and she tries to go after both Angels, but a top-rope clothesline by Tateno eliminates her at 20:17 to give their team the win.wow. Wow. WOW! A great match that got the Jumping Bomb Angels over big time and from then on, the Bomb Angels were on a roll ending with them winning the Women's Tag Team Championships at the first ever Royal Rumble in January. The titles were retired shortly after and so were the Angels. D'oh! Survivors: Itszuki Yamaziki and Noriyo Tateno***


Backstage, Mean Gene Okuerland interviews the heel tag teams about the upcoming match.
Backstage, Mean Gene interviews the babyface tag teams about the upcoming match.
Tag Team Survivor Series Elimination Match: Team Strike Force, The Fabolous Rougeau Brothers, The Young Stallions, The Killer Bees, and The British Bulldogs vs. The Hart Foundation, Demolition, The Islanders, The New Dream Team, and The Bolsheviks

Wow! Look at all the talent in this match! What's also amazing is the fact that with 20 men in one match, and 2 men in the ring at once, that there are 18 men surrounding the apron which is a sight to behold believe me! Team Strike Force were the Tag Team Champions at this point. The Hart Foundation are still heels at this point, and would be for 5 more months. Bret Hart has a fat face here. He must have lost some weight during these years. Probalby one of the most impressive collection of talent in one match that ain't in Japan or Mexico. Except Paul Roma. This is tag-team Survivor Series rules so when one member of a team is eliminated, the team is. Here we go: The match begins fast-paced and there is so much going on that it is impossible to keep up. Incredible. The face tag teams get about 5 tags in in under a minute. They get 5 tags in 20 seconds. Tito Santana gets tagged and he nails Boris Zhukov with the Flying Forearm (soon-to-be-known as the Flying Jalapeno) to eliminate him first quickly at 1:44. The Bolsheviks have been eliminated and its 4 teams to 5. The faces do a great job of teamwork as they do some ultra-tag after a milisecond in the ring. Just beautiful. Dino Bravo gets in representing the New Dream Team and faces four guys in a span of 10 SECONDS. He must be dizzy after all that tagging. I would be. Seriously, this is too fast to call. Which necessary isn't a bad thing either. Paul Roma gets tagged in and he gets beat up for a while. His hair doesn't get messed up though. Roma's representing the Young Stallions who used Rocky Maivia's original theme music during their WWF career. And Roma sucks also. Finally, Jacques Rougeau tags in and so does Demolition Ax. Two guys representing their teams with the same names. Rougeau tries to do a cross bodypress, but it fails to connect with Ax and Ax gets the pin on Jacques at 5:49 to eliminate The Fabolous Rougeau Brothers from the match. 4-4. Roma back in and he gets his butt kicked again. Yep. Dynamite Kid of the British Bulldogs is tagged in and the crowd goes wild. Dynamite Kid gets worked over a bit by the heel tag teams. The referee tries to stop the heel teams from working over The Kid so Demoltion Smash shoves the referee. The ref doesn't like this and he calls for the bell disqualifing Smash at 9:11 and taking Demolition out of the match. Good judgment. Bret Hart gets tagged in and he and Dynamite Kid go at it continuing the British Bulldogs/Hart Foundation feud as the Bulldogs lost the tag belts to them who lost them to Strike Force. See how everything is connected again? It's a dream match that sadly never happened btw, Hart vs. Dynamite. Jim Powers of the Stallions interrupts that dream match. Powers and Roma-Jobbers 4-Life! Next, The Hart Foundation and Strike Force tag in and out back and forth for a bit as the Harts try to get revenge over the Tag Team Title lost. This is probalby when the WWF Tag Team Division was at its best and would not return to this level of greatness until in 2002 with the Angle/Benoit, Guerreros, Misterio/Edge feud. Ah, the wonders of tag team wrestling. Back to the match as Jim Neidhart of the Hart Foundation gets tagged in and Bret drops an elbow on Tito Santana. Neidhart pins Santana at 12:04 to eliminate Santana and eliminate the reigning WWF Tag Team Champions from the match. Wow. The Tag Champs gone incredible. Revenge is too sweet. Next, Jim Powers gets tagged in and he gets beat on for a while. Nice to know the booking is straight herre. A long time. The New Dream Team and The Young Stallions go at it and a clipjob happens. After the cut, Dino Bravo of the New Dream Team side suplexes Powers and tags in his partner Greg "The Hammer" Valentine, former Intercontinental Champion. Then in a shocking moment, Valentine goes for the figure-four leglock but Powers escapes and tags in Roma who almost gets figure-four too, but Roma comes off the top rope with a REALLY good Sunset Flip and he eliminates Valentine at 17:11 to send The New Dream Team away. Roma PINNED Valentine? No way. But it happened in this match. Great spot and the match is now down to four teams in The Hart Foundation and The Islanders on the heels side and The Young Stallions and The Killer Bees on the face side. The Bulldogs had been eliminated but that was in the clipjob. Why would they clip the Bulldogs elimination? That was weird. Anyway, the match NOW picks up as if the whole match was just pratice. And still Roma is the whipping boy for the heels. Heh. Haku gets tagged and he does a dropkick on Roma then Neidhart gets tagged and he does a dropkick on Roma also. Powers gets tagged in and he does a elbow smash from the second rope which gets two. A brawl breaks out. Jim Brunzell of the Killer Bees tries to slam Bret Hart but Tama of the Islanders dropkicks him. However he rolls through and he shockingly pins Bret at 23:59 to eliminate the Hart Foundation from the match. Incredible man. So now its 2-1 as the Islanders are the last team left on the heel side. They waste no time however beating the crap out of Brunzell. Brunzell gets the hot tag to Powers who along with Roma beat on Haku of the Islanders and get a two count on him. The Islanders were tough to beat you understand. Another brawl takes place allowing the Killer Bees to get the advantage doing a monster switch-trick B. Brian Blair of the Killer Bees doing a Sunset Flip on Tama to eliminate him and the Islanders from the match and win the match for the face side at 30:47. JUST WONDERFUL! JUST WONDERFUL! The clipping must have cut out the boring parts as the rest was just wonderful and not a suprise with all the great talent in it. The booking was a suprise as the two lower-card teams made it in the end and all the high-profile teams were eliminated early. Great job, great booking and just great action for a half-hour. **** Tag Team match of the year and possibly the entire decade. Just great. Survivors: Paul Roma, Jim Powers, B. Brian Blair, and Jim Brunzell Solid match from solid teams!


And now, a special Thanksgiving vignette from the Million Dollar Man Ted Dibiase. Ted Dibiase had yet to debut in a WWF ring yet, but thanks to his vignettes, and his super-supremo arrogrant attitude in those vignettes, the fans LOATHED him. And that was all the WWF wanted. And it worked. In this special vignette, Dibiase shows how his Thanksgiving is better than the average person. How sweet. He's shown counting his money in his limosuine and wearing his fur coat and driving in his fabolous sports car. And we end the vignette with a nice, well, rich Thanksgiving dinner in his billion dollar mansion with turkey, stuffing, and wine served by his butler and Virgil who was his personal assistant. What is the Million Dollar Man thankful for? Simple: Money, money, money, money, money. Yep, that bascially sums up his character right there. I have some fond memories of the Million Dollar Man. He had a catchy theme song and I HATED the man. It's too bad he actually began to believe his character later on. But he became a born-again Christian so it all worked out for the best.
On the interview stage (I miss those), some...guy, I don't know his name but he ain't Sean Mooney, interviews the Honky Tonk Man and his manager, Colonel Jimmy Hart. HTM is wearing his entrance attire but with a towel around his neck. Nothing of note. Just time filler before the main event.
Backstage, the Sean Mooney look-a-like interviews Bobby "The Brain" Heenan and Andre's Team. I should mention at this moment that I hate the original Survivor Series logo and was a big fan for the one they used for several years in the early 90's. Nothing of note, except that Andre gurantees that he will win the Survivor Series match.
Backstage, Hogan's Team speak about the upcoming match as they don't need no interviewer to speak to! Hulk has red and yellow beads coming out from his bandana for some reason. Hulk and his team make the generic threats which (finally) lead to.....
Survivor Series Elimination Match: Hulk Hogan, Bam Bam Bigelow (with Oliver Humperdink), Ken Patera, "The Rock" Don Muraco and "Mr. Wonderful" Paul Orndoff vs. Andre The Giant (with Bobby "The Brain" Heenan), King Kong Bundy, "Ravishing" Rick Rude, One Man Gang, and "The Natural" Butch Reed (with Slick)

As usual, the card ends with Hulk Hogan. Now, I know I may sound like a mark for saying this, but damnit!, I STILL mark for Hulk Hogan! Sure, he sucks in the ring, on the mic, is old, bald, and nearly crippled, but, I've been a Hulkamaniac since I was little, and no matter how much of a smark I become, I can't hate the guy. No matter how many political games he played. I can't. I just just can't. Now, let the hate mail begin! Just kidding. I hope.

The main feud for this match was between Hulk and Andre. This is infact Andre's in-ring return after being gone for an astounding 8 months after he and Hulk's unbelieveable incredible historic match at Wrestlemania III: Bigger, Badder, Better where Hulk slammed the Giant to retain the WWF Title. Ever since then, Andre has claimed that he DID pin Hulk but the ref didn't see it. That issue would be settled on the infamous episode of The Main Event in February 1988. But until then, the two just hated each other and this match was hyped as the first in-ring meeting between the two since Wrestlemania. As for the other members, they were just brought in because Hulk and Andre needed backup.

In some sad chain of events, Paul Orndoff was on this team even though he did a heel turn on Hulk on a memorable episode of Saturday Night's Main Event in 1986 that led to a great feud between him and Hulk that ended in a cage match at the CNS Dome in Toronto which drew 78,000 or so we're told. Hogan can forgive and forget apparently. The sad part? With Hogan defeating him, Orndoff's credibilty was ruined and he was buried and was useless in the WWF at this point. Infact, he'd be gone shortly after this match.

Hulk carries a HUGE United States flag to the ring as he is defending America against Andre's team that has...4 Americans on it! Oh well, atleast it ain't as bad or noticeable as when Lex Luger took on a Forgeiner team that had 2 Americans on it at Survivor Series 1993 (since when is Hawaii a forgein country?). Don Muraco is subbing for "Superstar" Billy Grahmn who looked ALOT like Hogan, in order to get Muraco over. It didn't work. Muraco would be managed by Grahmn soon.

And now...the main event of the first-ever Survivor Series!

A fast pace start to the match as Hogan's Team does a good job of beating on Andre's Team for the first few minutes. Fast tags a go-go as Bam Bam (who was crazy over and agile at this point) Gorilla Press Slams Rick Rude. Everyone hits their signature moves on Rude and then Butch Reed. Orndoff then gets tagged and he does a dropkick on Reed. Hogan and Mr. Wonderful double-team The Natural and hit him with a clothesline. Hulk then finishes off Butch with the legdrop and Reed is done at 3:05. Go Hulk GO! Sorry, some Hulkamania swept into me for a moment. Hulk celebrates as the crowd cheers but then Andre The Giant enters the ring. Hogan, however, doesn't notice this and tags in Ken Patera, the former Olympian who became a criminal! Patera and the Giant go at it very quickly and he gets his butt handed to him by Andre's Team. One Man Gang gets tagged and he beats the stuffing out of Ken and after a little bit of brawling, he does the fat splash and pins him at 7:58 to even the fields 4-4. Jesse The Body Ventura had been making jokes about Patera's jail history during the match. HA! Hulk and Orndoff double-team Gang but Gang tags in Rude. Tag back to Paul. Orndoff and Gang fight in the corner as the babyfaces now take control of the match. It's been like that all this match. Mr. Wonderful does a bodyslam on Rick Rude, but King Kong Bundy hits a cheapshot on Orndoff allowing Rick to get a fluke pin on Orndoff to send him out of the WWF at 9:36. Poor Paul. Rude poses while the crowd LOATHES the guy, but that ends quickly and the crowd becomes happy as Hulk and Muraco double team Rude. Hulk hits a high knee and "The Rock" applies a powerslam on The Ravishing One to eliminate him at 10:24. Hogan actually allowed someone else to get the pin. And who says Hogan is selfish? Huh? I can just feel the contractors coming now. One Man Gang is tagged back in and Muraco tries to beat him in the corner. That is short-lived however, as Gang comes back and hits the Big Fat Splash of Doom to eliminate "The Rock" at 12:08. Well, atleast he tried his best and that's all I can ask for. So, now its down to Hulk and Bigelow against Andre, Bundy, and Gang. Andre gets tagged and he beats down on Bigealow for a bit. Bigealow and Bundy would be tag team partners as apart of the Million Dollar Corporation led by Ted Dibiase at Survivor Series 1994, but now, they are fighting each other with King Kong gaining the advantage. Andre is in the match 15 minutes in as the crowd waits for Hogan to enter to complete the circle. Bam Bam rolls through Andre and gets the hot tag to Hogan and the crowd goes crazy. And I mean CRAZY. Hulk and Andre are in the ring together for the first time since Wrestlemania III, and Hulk goes buck wild on Andre, beating him down in the corner as the crowd goes crazy. Wow. Hulk has the Hulkamaniacs by his side this time. GO HULK GO! Must...retain...Hulkamaniac...inside.However, the excitement ends quickly, as King Kong Bundy drags Hogan out of the ring. Hulk starts battling Bundy even bodyslamming him but the referee is counting and the count reaches 10 and Hogan is shockingly eliminated at 16:43. Okay, that was a suprise. Not just for the fans but for me also. No one expected that and that's good. Anyway, Hogan is pissed that he got eliminated as was me and the fans and he throws a temper tantrum outside. He does have a right to be mad ya know. So now Bam Bam Bigealow is the last member of Hulk's Team and he is up against 3 men who are weigh 400 pounds seperately. First, Bundy is in, and Bigealow takes care of him with some knees to the groin. Bundy comes back but he misses a charge and Bam Bam pins him after the slingshot headbutt at 19:18. One Man Gang tags in next and they go at it, but Gang misses a flying Splash and a winded Bigealow pins and eliminates him at 21:37 as the crowd is getting hot hoping that Bam Bam can pull off the upset and beat Andre The Giant. And so its Andre vs. Bam Bam and the crowd is going crazy, the two begin battling, and...Bam Bam misses a blind charge. Andre shoves Bigealow to the ropes. Then rams Bigelow's back using his head in the corner. Finally, Andre does a hip-toss dubbed a "suplex" by Gorilla Monsoon. That's a suplex? Okay, if you say so. And, sure enough, Andre The Giant pins Bam Bam Bigealow for the pin and the elimination at 22:54. Andre's Team wins. **1/2 A pretty good match that had lots of action, shocking upsets, and a good ending. Survivor: Andre The Giant. Andre celebrates with "The Brain" as his gurantee has come true. I thought only Vince McMahon's gurantees came true. The crowd boos heavily as they are not happy about their night ending like this. Then, they roar with cheers as Hulk Hogan makes his way back into the ring and he beats on Andre by nailing him with the WWF Championship belt as the crowd cheers. Andre leaves the ring but reminds Hulk that he beat him as "Real American" starts up. Hulk spends the next few minutes posing to the approval of the crowd and they end the first Survivor Series on a happy note. Hulk Hogan, you rule! D'oh! I said it again! Shut it. Shut it!


The feud between Hulk Hogan and Andre The Giant was not over yet. Oh no. Not by a longshot. The two would settle their year old rivalry in a match on an episode of The Main Event in February 1988 in which millions of fans around the country tune in to one of the most shocking moments in WWF history: Hulk Hogan losing the title via screwjob.
Bottom Line: Well, it's the first one so its historic by default. Even though, this Survivor Series didn't have anything significantly historic on it, like most of the Survivor Series of the late 80's and early 90's.

There are definatley good matches on it in the form of the Women's Survivor Series match and the WICKED~! AWESOME~! Tag Team Survivor Series match. So, you must see those matches.

Recommended for those reasons.

Hulk Rules! UGH!

Feedback is welcomed.

Check Out The Other Survivor Series Rants

WWF Survivor Series 1988 Review
WWF Survivor Series 1989 Review
WWF Survivor Series 1990 Review
WWF Survivor Series 1991 Review
WWF Survivor Series 1992 Review
WWF Survivor Series 1993 Review
WWF Survivor Series 1994 Review
WWF Survivor Series 1995 Review
WWF Survivor Series 1996 Review
WWF Survivor Series 1997 Review
WWF Survivor Series 1998 Review
WWF Survivor Series 1999 Review
WWF Survivor Series 2000 Review
WWF Survivor Series 2001 Review

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