Why did they decide to shoehorn "Match-Up" into the show when it went to series? They had a perfectly good, self-contained half-hour format as it was. Change the points over to dollars if you want, but either way, it works.
The fact that the pilot, as seen today, ran for a good solid 28 minutes probably had at least
something to do with the changes. Even if they left
all the funny bits on the cutting room floor, there was no way in hell an every-celeb-plays-every-question format (what they were clearly shooting for) was clocking in under 25 with three rounds.
"Match Game" without Gene Rayburn somehow just doesn't feel like "Match Game" to me. Gene totally absorbed that show.
Keep in mind, this was Bert's third time
ever hosting the format. Being on a panel occasionally in the early 70s is not the same experience as being host.
At a bare minimum, today's show was more enjoyable than 95% of the shows I've seen that Gene & co. made after 1978. Honestly, unless the panel's been in the sauce, most of the 70s episodes after Dawson left are, well, not great. And even quite a few of the episodes *with* Richard could be hit or miss. If Bert had been able to host, and the show managed to find a way to escape the gigantic number of cancellations in 1991, I think there's a legitimate argument that a version hosted by Bert could be remembered with at least the same fondness as Gene's.