Back when Tag Team Wrestling was at its peak, and managers really counted, this was a match made it heaven.
The colorful, and passionite James E. Cornette, who was a meval on the mic, and had a genuis mind for wrestling, combined areial dyenmics, wrestling abillity and mentrial arts of Bobby Eaton and Sweet Stane Lane or Dennis Condrey as the tag team specialists. They had the look, the gimmick, the know how and all the write moves.
The legendary clashes with The Rock 'N' Roll Express (who were the classic babyface team of the time), started in the early eighties in the highly praised Mid-South territory, and moved onto to the NWA in the late part of that decade into 1990, with superchanged matches on PPV, television and all over the country. The Midnight were so good at what they did than the hardcore fan base in certain areas couldn't help but cheer them, and go against the faces. Jim Cornette and the ME had the fans in the pelms of their hands, weather they cheered or booed them.
Other classic desputes and matches included ones against The Steiner Brothers, The Fantastic, The Freebirds, The Dynimetic Dudes, The Z-Man and Flyin' Brian and the Southen Boys. It is fair to say than along with Ric Flair, The Midnight Express were the hardest working, and most consistant in-ring performers of the era in the NWA.
The colorful, and passionite James E. Cornette, who was a meval on the mic, and had a genuis mind for wrestling, combined areial dyenmics, wrestling abillity and mentrial arts of Bobby Eaton and Sweet Stane Lane or Dennis Condrey as the tag team specialists. They had the look, the gimmick, the know how and all the write moves.
The legendary clashes with The Rock 'N' Roll Express (who were the classic babyface team of the time), started in the early eighties in the highly praised Mid-South territory, and moved onto to the NWA in the late part of that decade into 1990, with superchanged matches on PPV, television and all over the country. The Midnight were so good at what they did than the hardcore fan base in certain areas couldn't help but cheer them, and go against the faces. Jim Cornette and the ME had the fans in the pelms of their hands, weather they cheered or booed them.
Other classic desputes and matches included ones against The Steiner Brothers, The Fantastic, The Freebirds, The Dynimetic Dudes, The Z-Man and Flyin' Brian and the Southen Boys. It is fair to say than along with Ric Flair, The Midnight Express were the hardest working, and most consistant in-ring performers of the era in the NWA.