This was the final Great American Bash event produced by WCW as in March 2001, WCW's assets were acquired by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF); the WWF was renamed to World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) in 2002. In 2004, WWE revived The Great American Bash as their own annual PPV event. It was also the final non-WWF PPV held at this arena until All Elite Wrestling (AEW) held Full Gear in 2019.
In 2017, Kevin Pantoja of 411Mania gave the event a rating of 1.0 [Extremely Horrendous], stating, "I’ve now reviewed half the WCW PPVs in 2000 and the highest score one has gotten was 3.5/10. This was rough. When the best match involves David Flair, you know your show is in trouble. Two DUDs and two matches went into negative stars. That’s never a good thing. Not only was the wrestling bad, but nothing made sense. There were random turns for [no] reason (Goldberg and Kanyon), stupid stunts (Sting and Booker), overbooking, a lame circle cage match and stipulations that were wrongly done (Tables match). A giant mess."[5]
Aftermath
The 2000 Great American Bash was the final Great American Bash held by WCW, as in March 2001, the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) purchased WCW.[6] In 2002, the WWF was renamed to World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE),[7] and in 2004, WWE revived The Great American Bash as their own annual PPV.[8] This was also the final non-WWF/E event at this venue until 2019 when startup promotion All Elite Wrestling held Full Gear at this venue, which was then renamed to Royal Farms Arena, now known as the CFG Bank Arena.
^ abCawthon, Graham (2015). the History of Professional Wrestling Vol 5: World Championship Wrestling 1995-2001. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN978-1499656343.
^ ab"2007 Wrestling Almanac & Book of Facts: Great American Bash 2000". Wrestling's Historical Cards. Kappa Publishing. 2007. p. 153.