Stuka Jr. vs. Hechicero: A Feud of Relampago
While looking through some matchlists I saw that Stuka Jr. and Hechicero have now had 4 lightning matches over the last 4 years, and being that they are two of my very favorites in CMLL I figured it would be pretty easy to knock them all out. Given CMLL's roster, there are an absurd number of potential lightning match combos, so it seems odd that they've matched up 4 times, and I'm curious how much they mixed things up match to match.
Stuka Jr. vs. Hechicero CMLL 2/1/15
ER: A fairly easygoing start to our feud. Much of the early matwork felt perfunctory and uninterestingly cooperative. The matwork still has some cool segments like Stuka going for an armbar and Hechicero turning it into his one armed deadlift, which Stuka then rolled through for another shot. Hechicero takes two big bumps to the floor, one over the top tumbling, the great one a Fuerza bump that he lands butt first. Yeowch. Stuka hits a big quebrada and gorgeous hands-to-side springboard crossbody; Hechicero hits his inverted monkey flip and a hard dropkick to Stuka's ear, and Stuka finishes a little too easily with his torpedo splash. This was a pretty basic intro to these two, but nothing really outside of what you might expect out of these two in a typical trios. Let's see where we build this.
Stuka Jr. vs. Hechicero CMLL 9/27/15
ER: This match is much more Hechicero-controlled than the first one, and features more overt rudo work from Hechicero. The first match was pretty genial, this at least has Hech taunting the crowd and picking on Stuka as both do some fun tumbling, and Hechicero breaks out a fast dropkick through the ropes to the floor and a slingshot tornillo back into the ring. Hechicero pulls out two even bigger bumps in this one, getting thrown under the bottom rope and landing stomach first, and then peaking when he whiffs on a charge and wraps himself around the ringpost to the floor. Stuka follows with a completely bonkers moonsault over the ringpost to the floor, just wild. I always love Stuka's dedication to roll-ups and he always stays tight on sunset flips, really reminds me of El Dandy in that way, and it made the finish look good. Hechicero catches Stuka on a rana and deadlifts him up to powerbomb him (which itself was used earlier to toss Stuka into the buckles), but Stuka just keeps the momentum going and rolls right over the top, Santo style. We still haven't had any WorldWide classic between the two, but it's in there somewhere.
Stuka Jr. vs. Hechicero CMLL 7/28/17
ER: Closer to the second match in the series, but less satisfying. The ending is a little more modern lucha for me (Hechicero misses a moonsault, Stuka moonsaults into boots, cut to spinning backbreaker win for Hechicero), but the big stuff plays big. Hechicero takes a fast rolling bump through the ropes to the floor, and Stuka hits a locomotive of a dive, and later we get another nasty Hechicero bump past the ringpost with another great Stuka moonsault over that ringpost. You got a crazy spot, you do your crazy spot in a lightning match. I liked the way they tied some things together, loved a silky tilt a whirl armdrag from Stuka, a nice springboard elbow to a standing Stuka, but this one felt a little more hollow.
Stuka Jr. vs. Hechicero CMLL 6/8/18
ER: I figured with 4 different singles matches between these two, we would get one good enough to land on a list. Well, I don't think they did it. This was probably the best of the 4, but it felt more like a fun collection of stuff than an actual complete match. This felt like probably the best combination of the best parts of the other matches, with all their nice offense and a nice callback finish. This match felt weirdly saved by a minorly flubbed spot. We basically get all of the same things we've seen in the other matches, some nice Hechicero strength spots, big dive, torpedo splash off the top and moonsault to the floor from Stuka, Stuka flying halfway across the ring off Hechicero's inverted monkey flip, all cool stuff. They got a bit crossed up and saved it by snapping off a couple of nice spots right away to immediately distract, with a nice headscissors by Stuka and then a fast Code Red. That immediate covering for a flub quickened the pace from there out, not sure if that moment was the catalyst or not but it felt possible. The finish was cool and not one typically used in CMLL (that I've seen) with Stuka going again for his torpedo splash and landing right in the waiting arms of a Hechicero armbar. It's a cool finish and maybe because I haven't seen it in CMLL, it surprised me and felt like a big deal.
So, all four matches were fun (and short, these are lightning matches after all), but nothing MOTY list worthy. Now, the series is evened up 2-2, so I'm sure someday we'll get the conclusion to this best of 5.
Labels: 2015 Lucha, 2017 Lucha, 2018 Lucha, CMLL, Hechicero, Stuka Jr.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home