Excerpts from The Night the Line Was Crossed (including the unabridged main event) aired on the syndicated television show ECW Hardcore TV, while the full event was released on VHS in 1994. It was made available for streaming on the WWE Network in 2020.[2] The main event and the bout between Jimmy Snuka and Tommy Dreamer were both included on the compilation DVDECW: Unreleased Vol. 1 released by WWE in 2012.[3]
Event
The commentator for The Night the Line Was Crossed was Joey Styles.[4] The ring announcer was Bob Artese.[5] The referees were Jim Molineaux and John Finnegan.[6] The event was attended by approximately 1,000 people, selling out the ECW Arena.[7]
In the opening match, which was not included on the VHS release, the previously unnamed 911 defeated Chad Austin by pinfall following a chokeslam.[5][8]
In the fifth match, Jimmy Snuka faced Tommy Dreamer. Towards the end of the match, Dreamer kicked out of Snuka's Superfly Splash to the shock of commentator Joey Styles.[9][4] Snuka then gave Dreamer two more Superfly Splashes before pinning him with one hand. After the match, Snuka gave Dreamer yet another Superfly Splash - causing him to cough up blood - then gave a diving double axe handle to ECW president Tod Gordon after he attempted to intervene.[6]
The penultimate match was a singles bout between J.T. Smith and Mike Awesome. Smith defeated Awesome in an upset after reversing the Awesome Bomb into a cradle. After the match, Awesome attacked the referee.[9][4] He attempted to give the referee a diving splash, but the ring rope broke.[6]
The main event was a three way dance for the ECW Heavyweight Championship, with the reigning champion, Terry Funk, defending his championship against Sabu and Shane Douglas. The match arose after Sabu lost the Championship to Funk due to interference from Douglas.[5] The stipulation for the match was that Sabu and Shane Douglas would begin the match, with Funk joining after 15 minutes (or when one of the competitors had eliminated the other).[6] The match was a "wild brawl" with interference from 911, the Bad Breed, Paul E. Dangerously, and Sherri Martel.[10] After 60 minutes, the match was declared a time limit draw.[4][9] The match received a standing ovation from the audience.[7] Following the match, Douglas gave "a fiery interview, laced with shoot comments",[11] then brawled with Funk.[6]
Response
"The first match that I recall ever feeling good about was The Night the Line Was Crossed. I remember coming back to the back and thinking to myself 'I don't know how we did it, but somehow that was a pretty damn good match'." - Shane Douglas[7]
The main event of The Night the Line Was Crossed has been attributed with making "wrestling fans around the country take notice of the happenings in South Philadelphia".[7] Journalist Dave Meltzer noted "there are very few examples anyone can come up with of a one hour television show where a world title match would air in its entirety in North America".[12] The main event stood out for both its length and the then-rarity of three way dances, with the match helping popularize them.[11] ECW mainstay Tommy Dreamer described The Night the Line Was Crossed as "a turning point" for ECW, stating "you knew something special was here, and we started running more and more towns after that."[13]