WWE 1999 PPVs From Worst To Best

6. Rebellion

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.
Contributor
Contributor

Student of film. Former professional wrestler. Supporter of Newcastle United. Don't cry for me, I'm already dead...