The Good: Now this was an improvement over the dire UK version of No Mercy. The show got off to a good start with a fast-paced opener between D-Lo Brown and a wonderfully obnoxious Jeff Jarrett, who made a plant hoover up some debris in the ring before slapping the figure four on her. Chris Jericho started showing signs of improvement (after a seriously rocky start to his WWF career) in his match with the Road Dogg. Big Show and Kane, who are astonishingly still fixtures on WWE TV today, had a decent match with each other, too. The headlining WWF Championship cage match between The Rock and Triple H made sure everyone got their money's worth from this one. They'd have better matches with each other in 2000, but this was a very encouraging sign. The Bad: Lots of short matches. X-Pac/British Bulldog, Ivory/Tori/Luna, Val Venis/Mark Henry and The Godfather/Gangrel all lasted all but a few minutes each. The action in them wasn't great, either. The Rest: The heels spent much of their promo time running down England and English fans. The term 'cheap heat' comes to mind.