WWE 2002 PPVs From Worst To Best

12. No Way Out

The Good: No Way Out 2002 has to go down as one of the most average WWE PPVs of all time. The big story was the return of the New World Order - Hulk Hogan, Scott Hall and Kevin Nash. The three former WCW hellraisers opened the show with a blah promo and then appeared in segments during the rest of the show. The Order made an appearance during the Steve Austin versus Chris Jericho main event, a good match (if not a little disjointed) that was marred by ref bums and run-ins. Another decent match was Kurt Angle versus Triple H, although Kurt was treated like an afterthought. The Bad: There was nothing outwardly terrible on the show, just a lot of matches that were just, kind of 'there'. The opening tag team turmoil was alright, Rob Van Dam versus Goldust was probably Mr. Monday Night's most boring PPV match ever, Edge and Regal's Brass Knuckles on a Pole match was fair and The Rock versus Undertaker did what it needed to do. The Rest: The WWE locker room were not happy with the arrival of the nWo. They feared that they would bring their half-assed, egotistical WCW attitudes with them and pollute the locker room. They were right - it only took Scott Hall three days to alienate himself, telling the Dudley Boys that he couldn't wait to kick out of the 3D. Things would get worse for Hall, Nash and Hogan by the end of the year...
Contributor
Contributor

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