No Way Out 2000 kicks off with a video hyping that this night might be the last time we ever see Cactus Jack as he puts his career on the line in the main event. I remember, even back then, thinking it was awfully suspicious how they kept referring to Foley as "Cactus Jack" and not coming out and directly stating that if Foley lost, it was Foley - under any gimmick - that would be forced into retirement. Also, I remember thinking that after their hellacious match at the Royal Rumble in January, there was almost nothing that Foley and Triple H could do to top it or top Foley's Hell in a Cell match with the Undertaker and so there was almost no way this match wouldn't be underwhelming. Anyway, Jim Ross comments that tonight's show might be "the most emotional ever," which is an awfully weird thing to say not too long after Owen Hart literally died in the ring...
Chris Jericho defended his Intercontinental Championship against Kurt Angle in the opening contest. This wasn't "must see," but it was very good for its time and was an excellent showcase for both Jericho and Angle (who also got to cut a promo before the match). This was a "transition" period for the WWE as, in 98', one could argue that the number of actual decent in-ring performers was rather low with guys like X-Pac, Jarrett, and Owen really doing a ton of heavy-lifting against lesser and less experienced workers like Val Venis, D'Lo Brown, and Steve Blackman. In 99', though, the roster really improved with Jericho's arrival, the debut of Angle, and both the Hardys and Edge & Christian showing what they could do without restraints. Jericho and Angle cut a very brisk pace though there are still some restholds thrown in to slow things down and tell the story. Chyna is pretty useless on the outside until the finishing stretch. This is the kind of match that explains why Angle was considered a "prodigy" because, considering how few matches he had under his belt, he was already very smooth, very exciting to watch, and knew how to balance being an unlikeable heel with also being a dangerous competitor. (3/5)
Unfortunately, the show goes on a bit of a downturn from here as The Dudley Boys challenge The New Age Outlaws for their WWE World Tag Team Championships. If I'm not mistaken, the Outlaws were heels at this point and part of the McMahon-Helmsley Era or whatever. Their shtick felt so dated by this point and it hasn't aged any better, but is undeniable that they were still over the live crowds.. There's really not much to this match as the Dudleys cheat to win. I read later that this led to the split of the Outlaws, a storyline I don't remember much from. (1.5/5)
Mark Henry vs. Viscera is the next match. This was bad and the lead-up to it was embarrassing and unfunny as Mark Henry had supposedly impregnated Mae Young and Viscera had almost caused a miscarriage by splashing her. Anyway, again, not much to say this aside from noting that JR makes a remark about this match likely not earning "many stars" because it is nothing more than two monstrous men fighting it out. I don't personally care too much about Meltzer's ratings, but I will say this - if a match is going to be objectively bad, maybe don't put it on PPV? Anyway, at least this didn't last long and Viscera does deliver a nice spinning heel kick, so it's not completely devoid of any positives. (1/5)
Christian and Edge, still being promoted as actual brothers, took on a team of actual brothers - The Hardys (with Terri Runnels) - in a match to decide who would be challenging for the World Tag Team Championships at WrestleMania. On Sunday Night Heat, Terri had hired the APA to make sure nobody else got involved. Anyway...these two teams had put on a barnburner at No Mercy a few months before this, but they had the advantage of being able to use ladders to keep the crowd popping. Here, they have a harder task of needing to keep the crowd engaged without those extra bells-and-whistles and they deserve credit for doing so over a lengthy 15+ minute match. Jeff Hardy busts out all sorts of high-flying stuff that looks terrific. Edge and Christian aren't quite in full-on heel mode, but their double-teams are good and their control segment is fine. There are some small gaps in the action when they seem to lose the crowd, but, to be fair, audiences at the time weren't quite conditioned for lengthy tag matches like the ones the WWE routinely put on PPVs in the 80s and early 90s. The final few minutes are really good and its kinda sweet to see these guys deliver a bunch of signature moves that JR doesn't know how to call because they weren't true signature moves yet. Terri Runnels turn on the Hardys at the end and I actually like the clever booking there as that explains why Terri would've hired the APA (to make sure her plan went off without a hitch and to guarantee that the Hardys wouldn't try to exact revenge after the bout is over, which they attempt to do). Above-average match, for sure. (3/5)
Tazz vs. Big Bossman is next. Big Bossman is accompanied to the ring by Prince Albert. Tazz and Bossman brawl outside of the ring and then the match falls apart once they get inside it as Albert interferes and it becomes a 2-on-1 beatdown. The objective here was to get Tazz's toughness over as he refuses to stay down despite the attack from the heels, but I'm not sure it works. I feel like Tazz would've gained much more just getting to beat Bossman in a somewhat competitive match, but Vince didn't want to give him that "rub" yet because he was an ECW guy and I think Vince always had an issue with Tazz's height. Anyway, this is barely a match so its hard to rate it, but I know its not good whatever it is. (1/5)
Next up - X-Pac vs. Kane in a No Holds Barred match. One cannot comment on this match without discussing the storyline that led up to it. In 1999 - if I'm not mistaken - X-Pac and Kane were a hugely successful tag team, winning the WWE Tag Team Championships on two occasions. The partnership also led to the "humanizing" of Kane as he became a full-fledged babyface during that run and even had an on-screen girlfriend named Tori. Then, towards the end of 99', with the creation of the Helmsley-McMahon Regime and the reunification of DX officially as heels, X-Pac turned on Kane and then revealed that he'd been hooking up with Tori too. X-Pac's betrayal was a gut punch and got legitimate heat from the audience so this match was set and most fans agreed that it was time for X-Pac to get his comeuppance, especially considering they'd already faced each other at December's Armageddon show. For the majority of the match, Kane is in full control and nothing X-Pac (or Tori) can do has much effect on the Big Red Machine. I'm pretty staunch in my opinion that Kane is a mediocre-at-best worker, but this match was solid and featured just enough movement and bells-and-whistles to keep me entertained. Overall, it's a good match and doesn't overstay its welcome and X-Pac does everything he can to make Kane look like a monster...but the finish, designed to extend the program, was highly controversial at the time and only looks worse in hindsight as the two would go on to compete in a meaningless tag match at WrestleMania 2000 and then, based on Cagematch, not have a true blow-off match. Kane ended up okay because the nature of his character allowed him to be "heated up" whenever needed. X-Pac didn't have much of a run after this match and, if I'm not mistaken, it is around this point where the term "X-Pac Heat" began to be used to describe guys that the audience was sick of seeing in any capacity. Seeing Kane tombstone a woman has also not aged well, but hey, what should one expect from WWE in the late 90s/early 00s? (3/5)
Rikishi and Too Cool took on The Radicals (Chris Benoit, Dean Malenko, and Perry Saturn) in the next match. Eddie Guerrero was at ringside, but he'd injured his arm while delivering a frog splash on Raw before this show. Rikishi and Too Cool were arguably at their peak of popularity at this time, which probably is why Vince thought they'd have a monster heel in Rikishi once they revealed he was the guy who ran over Steve Austin. Of course, that angle flopped pretty hard, not least of which was because Rikishi's reasoning ("I did it for The Rock") made little sense and they also were dumb enough not to have him change his look at all and keep wearing the sumo outfit (which only served to make Rikishi look like a somewhat comedic character all along). Anyway...If you're looking for a great Benoit or Malenko match, this is not the one to watch, though it is interesting to see them clearly wrestling a more "WWE style" that is heavy on chicanery, stooging, and keeping their own offense simple so as not to get any potential cheers from the crowd. Rewatching Too Cool matches, it is clear that Scotty 2 Hotty was the superior worker, though I still find The Worm to be corny. The crowd was super into this and they told a good story, but this wouldn't be a match I'd try too hard to see. (3/5)
The Big Show took on The Rock in a Number One Contender's Match for the WWE Championship. The story coming into this was that The Rock's feet had touched the ground at January's Royal Rumble before he eliminated The Big Show. The video clearly shows that Big Show was correct, but few cared because The Rock was so immensely over as a babyface. This isn't the worst match ever, but Big Show had clearly lost most of his aura - or whatever remained of it - since his initial push in WCW in 96', when guys like Sting, Flair, Luger, and Savage had really made him look like a true top-tier talent. The action is good and fast-paced and because The Rock is so over, the crowd is definitely engaged in every minute. The Big Show bringing a chair into the match makes no real sense unless you really, really overthink things and pretend that everything that happens in the last two minutes was planned and accounted for by Shane McMahon, which is hard to find reasonable. Shane McMahon's heel turn - I don't even recall him being a real babyface, but he certainly gets a massive ovation when he arrives - was what this match was all about and it was an effective one. Not great, but not terrible. (2.5/5)
Main event time - Cactus Jack vs. Triple H for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship in a Hell in a Cell match where Foley's career is also on the line. I don't think I had seen this match since I first watched it some 20+ years ago on the couch at my buddy Zak's parents' house. I remember, even then, thinking that the hype around this match was going to be impossible to overcome. For starters, the commentators had really played up the idea that if "Cactus Jack" lost, he'd be forced to retire...which wasn't necessarily the same thing as saying Mick Foley would retire. (During the match itself, Lawler clarifies that it did mean that all of Foley's personas would be forced to retire too). Then you have Foley really overselling what he was planning to do to Triple H, stating that his plan was to toss Triple H off the cage and then come crashing down on him, a spot that nobody expected to happen but was still teased. Of course, the biggest issue was that Foley had taken the two craziest bumps in WWE history - I don't think they've ever really been topped in terms of risk factor either - in the previous Hell in a Cell match and so the expectations were super high as to how he might top himself. With such unfair expectations - not that the WWE did anything at all to lower them - Foley and Triple H set up to disappoint and, at the time, this match was a disappointment. Decades later, on re-watch, though, this match is excellent and arguably the 3rd, 4th, or 5th best Hell in a Cell match ever. Foley's bumping is great. The use of weapons is terrific. Both of Foley's big falls, while obviously lesser than what he did against The Undertaker, were still tremendous. I wasn't a huge fan of some of the psychology; Why did Triple H climb atop the cell again? To escape Foley? From that height, he had no way to win the match and once Foley began climbing up - after inexplicably trying to toss a chair up that would've ended up in the hands of the Game, who already had a barbwire 2x4 - he didn't even try to climb down. I did really like how part of the match revolved around the shoddy construction of the cell as it added a real sense of danger to what has become, 20 years later, something of a staid affair (though I'm not sure every gaffe was planned [if it was, kudos to the WWE production for fooling me when Triple H's foot nearly fell through part of the ceiling]). Loved the repeated the use of the steel steps, but was less impressed at the use of fire, which seemed a touch "forced" as a way to make up for a match that both competitors knew couldn't and wouldn't live up to the impossible-to-reach hype. Foley's final bump is an unreal visual and the production team deserves some serious credit for pulling it off as, despite a little bit of internet sleuthing, I'm still not 100% sure how they were able to pull it off (most assume that while Triple H and Foley were brawling on top of the cage, someone underneath the ring was removing boards and placing the crash pad). After the match, Foley's farewell didn't quite seem "big enough," potentially because, to the WWE audience, Foley's most beloved character was always Mankind and not Cactus Jack. I wouldn't call this match a "hidden gem" because it has always been out in plain sight, remembered by just about anyone who was a fan of the WWE at the time, but not nearly as praised as the Foley/HHH streetfight from January's Rumble or Mick's infinitely more famous Cell match against Taker in 98'. It's unfortunate that those two matches cast such a huge shadow over this one that this match, and Foley's performance in it, are rarely mentioned. (4/5)
Though its 2.44-out-of-5 Kwang Score would lead you to believe this show is too uneven to recommend, No Way Out 2000 was a good show as a whole and a considerable step-up from some of the real low points of 1999 (specifically December's Armageddon show). The main event is very strong, Jericho/Angle and the Hardys/Edge & Christian matches are considerably better than almost anything the WWE's midcard had seen in a few years at least, and the X-Pac/Kane match, despite its awful booking, might be one of Kane's best matches (thanks to X-Pac pinballing himself all over the place to keep things moving). It also doesn't hurt that the crowd was very much into things and the weaker bouts - the Tag Titles match, Viscera vs. Mark Henry - were kept short.