Segunda Caida

Phil Schneider, Eric Ritz, Matt D, Sebastian, and other friends write about pro wrestling. Follow us @segundacaida

Thursday, April 30, 2020

2020 Ongoing MOTY List: AJPW BattlArts Tribute Tag

18. Yuki Ishikawa/Hikaru Sato vs. Jake Lee/Fuminori Abe AJPW 1/19/20

PAS: This was a BattlArts tribute tag, with Lee and Abe removing their boots before starting the match. It was more grappling heavy BattlArts stye than kick you in the eye BattlArts style, but really well done grappling. Ishikawa is of course an all timer at this kind of thing, but I really liked the other three guys as well. Sato landed this awesome banana split on Lee and a nasty kneebar for the finish, and both Lee and Abe seemed perfectly comfortable rolling on the mat and moving forward and attacking. There was a weird thing with Abe going to the outside and ripping up some guys suit, but outside of that this was slick shootstyle in a way it is hard to find in Japan anymore.

ER: Fun tag with I don't think any real striking, just 10 minutes of grappling and also some guy [apparently Munenori Sawa] getting his suit ripped off. It felt underbaked in that the best BattlArts tags were 20 minutes long, giving each guy enough time to try different things. This felt like a BattlArts tag that went home just when things were about to get violent. It did not approach BattlArts violence, but had the skill of BattlArts and that's a nice high floor. I always like seeing Yuki Ishikawa mix it up with new guys, see what tricks he pulls and see what new guys are able to get away with. His runs with Jake Lee were a real highlight, and I love how it looked like Ishikawa let Lee pass into side control just so he could grab trap him in a quick headscissors, a shoot style spider catching a fly. He looked like he was giving Lee fits down the stretch as Lee kept trying to control mount and Ishikawa kept muffling ever attempt at a pass. Sato was a cool partner for Ishikawa, felt like an authentic BattlArts guy without ever actually being involved with BattlArts. He has a cool cranking submission style, a guy who felt to me more like a UWFi guy, in a good way. I really liked the simple single leg crab that finished, although again that finish felt like it came 12 minutes early.


2020 MOTY MASTER LIST


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Wednesday, April 29, 2020

AEW Dynamite Workrate Report 4/29/20

What Worked

ER: Cody/Darby was really good, while also having a finish I thought made Darby look like a first class dummy, and a bunch of knee work that added absolutely nothing to the match. I loved the smoke and mirrors and the actual big match feel that they worked, and all of the knee work could have played into something cool if they remembered to give it a third act. It was set up by Cody tweaking his knee while bridging up, which is a cool way to set up something like that. I tweaked my hip getting up too quick after napping on the couch, surely it's possible for Cody to tweak a knee while doing an off balance bridge. But neither ever seemed too interested in building off that, until they were suddenly VERY interested in building off that for two minutes, until they both decided that they can move past it. While Darby was working a kneebar on the knee that he didn't originally attack, that was probably my first clue that none of this was going anywhere, but I don't put that on Darby. I thought his cannonball into Cody's knee was cool, dug the floatover Indian deathlock grapevine, and was bummed that they couldn't find a way to close that story out. The rest of the big match stuff played nicely.

Darby was great at being bullied around by Cody, loved the spot where he got flung into Brandi and Cody still fit in a thrust kick before tending to his wife. Britt Baker hitting Cody with a shoe was weird, but kind of fun (even if it felt a little out of place in this kind of match. I mean would they build to Baker/Brandi or something? Plus after she hit him with her shoe I'm STUNNED that Jericho didn't say something like "She turned HEEL!"), and Cody really came off like a confident star in his beatdown. I liked the finish, until I didn't. Cody foolishly attempting the Coffin Drop really feels like something hubristic that Cody would try in a big match, only to have it backfire. But the finish was so telegraphed and only even works on paper if you believe that Darby is an actual idiot. Darby hits his own Coffin Drop right after, then pins Cody, but you see it was actually CODY who pinned DARBY! And for that to work, I am supposed to believe that for the first time in his life, Darby opted to pin a man in a position that he's never pinned anyone before, rolling himself back onto his shoulders ON THE MAT to pin Cody. This might have felt clever on paper, but made Darby look like a real dweeb in practice. Sometimes just a normal boring finish is better than a cute finish that requires out of behavior stupidity.

PAS: I thought this was mostly very good outside of the wonky finish. Cody doesn't really have the kind of offense or bumping or selling which connects with me. If he did everything 10% better I think I would like him a lot, but he is kind of missing that 10%. Darby is so good, he first showed up on people's radar as an insane bump machine, but now he can work a match like this where he hardly takes any big bumps at all, and just move the match along on his timing and the fluidity of his offense. I really liked Cody hurting his knee on the bridge up, and do wish that the legwork part of the match was done better, although I kind of accept that limb work isn't what these guys do. I haven't been watching much empty arena wrestling, but the AEW set up of wrestlers in the crowd works way better then the WWE setup. Here it just feels like an IWA-MS show with 30 people in the crowd, and that is still a recognizable form of pro wrestling


-I liked Wardlow yanking Musa off the top into a kneelift, and liked Wardlow's bump off Musa's kind of sketchy handspring spinkick.

-The Flim Flam Jam was fine for what it was, but the Manitoba Melee was entertaining and a fun use of quarantine. Good use of cameos, but I'm surprised they actually didn't do a sponsored ad with Cameo. They got Ferrigno, and I'm sure you can probably find people like Ted Beneke from Breaking Bad for a good price. And now I'm wondering if Larry Blackmon is on Cameo.

-Britt Baker's promo from her dental office was the kind of segment that is making me an unexpected fan of Baker. I wish her dental office was filled with more awkward sibling photos, the way my dad's dental office has pictures of my sister and I, with the most recent one of either of us being from 2004.

-Brodie/Marko was fun, which I recognize means that I now have to face myself in the mirror while trying to come to terms with how Deeply Disturbing my conscious has become. I am amused at moments like Lee swinging a clothesline from his normal arm slot and being surprised it missed, even though his normal clothesline traces 2 feet over Marko's head. But Marko crashed and burned spectacularly, the spinning slam looked great, the sitout powerbomb finish was disgusting, and him stepping right on Marko's face was maybe the coolest thing Lee has done in AEW.

ER: Dustin/Archer was very good, the kind of high class main event wrestling story that Dustin excels at. You need an irrepressible vet to die on his sword in an effort to keep this bad haired bad tattooed wrestler from fighting his brother? Dustin is going to deliver. Archer has come a long way and has some impressive big offense. I do think the seams in his game come out the longer his matches tend to go, and this was a match that got a lot of time. Against someone who wasn't Dustin, that would have been a big problem. But Dustin is good at filling time and good at building sympathy, and it's cruel that this match wasn't in front of any kind of pro wrestling crowd. Bloody Dustin is a babyface who NEEDS a crowd, needs to have fans losing it as his blood drips across his face at cool angles (seriously how great does Dustin blood always look as a visual). I love how Archer countered a lot of Dustin's signature stuff, like blocking the dropdown punch or stopping his momentum to block Dustin's powerslam, that kind of stuff is right up my alley. Archer busts open Dustin with a chair, and Dustin bleeding means his opponent is going to punch him in his cut, and that rules. Both guys traded some really hard clotheslines, Dustin finally does hit that snap slam, and I like the AEW Story is Obvious moment of Archer kicking out of the Cross Rhodes at 1. I can definitely do without stuff like Archer's long rope walk moonsault, which while impressive, felt completely out of place in a bloody fight. It's also a shame that a lot of Archer's weakest stuff came during the home stretch of the match (that repeated facepalm into the mat while just holding the other side of Dustin's head looks like something that would have been edited out in post), but overall this was a great presentation.

PAS: I liked parts of this a lot (The Dustin parts obviously), but I don't think this fully connected with me. Archer is so plodding and having him work this long section of dominance was tough. He wanders around, hits a mediocre punch or clothesline and wanders some more. He is supposed to come off like this vicious killer, but instead comes off like a big Power Plant guy with a couple of bits of big offense, but no idea how to string a match together. I think Dustin vs. Shawn O'Haire could be a good match, but not for 20+ minutes, with O'Haire lumbering around for 16 of it.  I don't know how many big Dustin main events are left, and each one is a treasure, but I wish he had a better dance partner for this one.


What Didn't Work

-Leave it to chuds like Chuck Taylor and Kip Sabian to make the No DQ stip as uninteresting as possible. When Jimmy Havoc is in the top half of workers in any given match, you know you've sunk to some depths. Taylor threw some strikes so bad in this match that were so bad there would be no way of describing them to a non fan as strikes. You've possibly never seen clubbing forearms as bad as whatever Chuck Taylor was doing. Some of the garbage stuff looked good, like Havoc blindsiding Orange Cassidy with a thrown chair, or Taylor taking a backdrop onto a ladder, but overall? Nah. This is one of those matches where the best thing you can say about it is "Well all of the people I dislike the most were all used in the same segment, which means their specific brand of awful was at least quarantined and won't infect the rest of the show."


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Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Tuesday is French Catch Day: Delaporte! King Kong! Tarres! von Chenok! Humez! Debusne!

Al Arajo vs. ? 7/26/57

SR: JIP with about 4 minutes shown. Very mysterious match. The fact that these guys look alike doesn't make it easier. This was a technical affair. There was a nice Solar esque pin attempt, cool double leg nelson and a great looking arm throw, but there was also stuff that looked quite blown. The winner takes it with a nice looking victory roll.

MD: Two Spaniards here, as best as I can tell. We just get a few minutes of this and it's not quite as smooth as we're used to. There's a good leg nelson spot full of the usual whacks and a full rotation armdrag which someone should be doing now, plus what I think was our first victory roll pin for a finish, but this wasn't enough to get a real opinion on either guy.


Roger Delaporte vs. King Kong Taverne 7/26/57 - GREAT

PAS: This was an odd match to rate. Taverne had a lot of charisma, and a great look but wasn't very good. He kind of reminded me of Bugsy McGraw, his shots had a lot of windup but not a ton of force, which was disappointing. He looks like a guy who hits hard, and everyone in France hits hard. He did take some fun showy bumps, including one over the top rope. He was a good punching bag for Delaporte though, who kept getting nastier and nastier, until the finish where he just starts punching him in the neck and back of the head, and even smashes the referee. Delaporte is a great heel, and this was a fun performance around a guy who was pretty limited. Kind of what I imagine a Bockwinkle vs. Baron Von Rashke title match might look like.

MD: Very interesting thirty plus minutes of footage. This is our first look at Taverne and he's remarkable. He's a huge lumbering presence, like a George Steele, but somehow more solid. I kept picturing the world's biggest and baddest Ed Asner, just from the put upon looks he'd give Delaporte and the ref (there's a certain Mr. Belvedere thing to Delaporte by the way, but I'll let Eric delve into that someday). Yes, he's lumbering. Yes, he's stocky. He hammers and swipes and bull rushes, but he's also able to do a lot of the typical spots we've seen so far. He's able to headstand out of headscissors, and hit a headscissors takeover out of an armbar. They did a lot of snatching at legs, both a single leg takedown and a double leg from behind, and at one point he was lightning fast at getting his leg around and escaping. One of the biggest spots of the match was them trading dropkicks and doing the big double miss.

Much of this was Delaporte trying to deal with the intellectual problem of King Kong Taverne, which is always a build I love. It meant for a lot of running away and going for cheapshots, of trying a hold, be it a headlock or armbar, and Taverne just out powering (or sometimes as noted, out finessing him). Delaporte would try something cheap and Taverne would respond in kind, twice as hard, and Delaporte would stooge and sell and run. There were some really funny exchanges, like both of them going after the ears at the same time. At one point, after Taverne picked him up and crotched him on the top rope, I was pretty certain the fans were going to get behind Delaporte, but he knew how toxic even a little bit of the fans' adulation could be for his lead heel role and he leaned even harder into being despicable. He had his chance after a dodged Taverne bull charge in the second fall and biggest spot of the match, a huge back body drop bump onto the floor. That led to a nasty king of the mountain segment with some more big Taverne bumps to the floor and Delaporte going all in on Taverne's eyes. The ref repeatedly tried to stop him and Delaporte clocked him for his troubles, drawing a DQ. So far DQs have been very rare (this might be the first we've seen?) and this left both guys looking good (and nasty/vile/bad, of course). Entertaining stuff.

SR: 2/3 Falls match going roughly 25 minutes. Holy lord, King Kong Taverne is a massive, massive man. Big, bald, hairy, built like a gorilla, he had the quintessential look of a guy you don‘t want to piss off. Delaporte, in the span of 7 days, goes from hated prick to almost a comical babyface as he tries not to get squished by the mighty Taverne. Some really amusing cat and mouse play and Delaporte going for clean wrestling holds ensue. This is our first taste of Delaporte in a singles match and he looks like a really good character worker allowing both his charisma and ability to shine. Taverne, despite his size, is quite good both at scurrying out of positions aswell as stooging and working sequences. He also just runs over Delaporte when he tries to get cute and throw punches, then makes sure to forearm him in the face in the ropes. Delaporte soon gets what‘s coming to him as Taverne locks on the mother of all bearhugs before throwing Delaporte like he was 20 pounds for the fall. The match took a drastic turn in the 2nd fall, as an overzealous Taverne misses a few charges, banging his head against the steel post and flying out of the ring. Before soon Delaporte is at him just trying to rip his eye out, biting and attacking a blinded King Kong with nasty forearms and punches to the face. Quite a return to form for Delaporte to go back to being such a violent prick. Before soon he has forearmed the referee and the match is thrown out. I am going to assume that French wrestling was booked like US studio wrestling except the matches were longer, because I can see this setting up the most epic arena brawl ever for Taverne to get his revenge on Delaporte. We don‘t have such a match, and Taverne only shows up once more which seems to be the theme of this French footage, we have hundreds of matches of great forgotten workers going 20-30 minutes and it‘s still not enough. Atleast we‘ll have plenty more Delaporte, maybe we‘ll see him meeting the guy to give him his comeuppance on TV for once. The ultra vicious streak he showed in this match was some of the most intense wrestling I‘ve seen in a while for sure.


Jose Tarres vs. Karl von Chenok 4/2/59 - GREAT

SR: 2/3 Falls match going roughly 30 minutes. Karl von Chenok was another Hungarian wrestler, although he was billed as „the German strangler“ here. His son, Jörg Chenok, was a decent middleweight working the German scene in the 1980s and early 90s adn appeared on British TV at least one time. As far as evil fake-German guys with strangler gimmicks go, von Chenok sure was no Dr. Adolf Kaiser, as he reeeally liked the nerve hold, but he looked a decent grappler and his european uppercuts sure were stiff as hell. Tarres was a Spanish worker with the legend saying he had metal plates implanted in his head, giving him the nickname „Iron Head“. His headbutts in this were tremendous. This was even further removed from typically beautiful French style pro wrestling than the previous match between Debusne and Humez. It was basically scrappy and uncooperative the whole way through and built around von Chenoks nerve hold vs. Tarres‘ headbutts, with both guys having good ways to avoid the other signature moves. Tarres was really brutalizing von Chenok with those, including a spot where he had him in a surfboard and rammed into the back of his head. Tarres also did a great job fighting out of von Chenoks nerve holds and tossing him around by his bald head. Von Chenok ended up busted open and KO‘d losing the first fall. Through this we learn that unlike in a British wrestling, in France a KO doesn‘t end a 2/3 falls match immediately. If the match had continued in the vein of that 1st fall I could have seen this being really great, but instead we were subjected to a lengthy nerve hold routine from von Chenok. Tarres sold like an absolute champ and you could tell he was a superstar quality worker though. If he had mounted some kind of epic comeback against von Chenoks tactics this really would‘ve been awesome, but I guess it wasn‘t in the books that night. At least we get some more matches of Tarres, including one against Dr. Adolf Kaiser who is the rich mans evil German strangler, so that is something to look forward to.

MD: This gives us a look at some of the diversity in late 50s French wrestling. Von Chenok feels a bit like Kaiser with his nerve holds, but with a sense of survival that would make Bernaert jealous. Tarres is a relatively huge guy with an iron skull who spends the entire match going for headbutts. Chenok spends the entire first fall diving to the mat to try to avoid them and then trying to grab a limb or lock in the nervehold. Tarres is just too strong and has too long a reach advantage, however. He can elbow out of the nerveholds, or even grab poor Chenok's ears and just pull him over. Every time Tarres does get a headbutt in, it's a lot of fun, especially if he strings together a combo with one to the gut and one up high or a few to the back before turning Chenok around and Chenok's sense of desperation is palpable. He was very emotive on close-ups, especially when he did lock in the nervehold for more than a second. We haven't seen an act in this footage quite as singularly focused as Tarres and his headbutts; he seemed limited but strong and spry. He used his size and strength well, including throwing some deadlift headlock suplexes. His selling in the nervelocks during the second and third falls when Chenok did manage an advantage was pretty solid too, giving us a sense of cumulative damage. You end up wishing this went the other way with some fireworks at the end. Ultimately, I imagine Tarres would be a great foil to all of the brilliant heels of the day. We have him in another 59 match against Kaiser and I'm looking forward to that as Kaiser is more of a stooge than Chenok.

PAS: I thought this was a blast. It was guy with an iron head (literally) versus a master of the nerve hold. For this kind of simplistic match to work, you need a guy with a great headbutt and a guy with a really nasty nerve hold, and we check both boxes here. Tarres, has a bunch of different cool ways to set up his headbutts, and Chenok was really fun trying to avoid getting cracked, only to fail and eventually get busted up. I also loved those deadlift suplexes, looks like Chenok wasn't feeding him at all and instead Tarres just yanked him over by his neck. Surprised at the finish, as Chenok just nerved him down until the match ended, I kept expecting Tarres to get one more big headbutt flurry, but instead he got put down.


Charles Humez vs. Paul Debusne 4/2/59 - GREAT

MD: Humez was a famous french boxer and Debusne a stooging heel, but this was very different than the Dauthuille match. In that, it was Dauthuille going for punches and Bernaert doing anything he could to avoid them. Here, the goal seemed to be to get Humez over as a capable wrestler. He wasn't nearly as smooth as most of the other technicians we've seen but he had a counter for everything Debusne attempted and the only way Debusne could get one over on him was with a hair pull, generally. Whenever he tried anything else, Humez would put on a full nelson and turn it into a cobra clutch. That's where we saw Debusne's real strength, sticking his tongue out and mugging. Eventually, he had enough and started to lay in cheapshot knees and even a straight on foul, which was when Humez decided that he too had enough and started to unleash forearms, jabs and uppercuts that just demolished Debusne. I'm almost certain I liked the Dauthuille match more but he came out of that feeling more like an attraction that might get old quickly while Humez came out of this looking like a solid wrestler who had a secret weapon in his pocket if you pushed him enough that he'd have to use it. That was an act with more legs.

SR: 1 Fall match going about 15 minutes. Humez is one of the great French boxers. OJ theorized that this may be his debut match, and it had the feel of a debut match. It felt like French pro wrestling, but there was no overlay elaborate stuff. Feels weird to see a middle aged guy with bald spots working a rookie match. Instead the match just turns into this nasty fight with Humez reacting to Debusne's shenanigans by tagging him and Debusne trying to gouge Humez eyes. It wasn‘t a Roger Delaporte level eye gouging, but it served to get Humez sufficiently fired up. Debusne ends up busted open and Humez takes him to the pay window. Humez has these cool left-right european uppercuts and Debusne was really good doing some noodle legged selling. It wasn‘t an epic spectacle, more like a fun way to debut Humez as this no-nonsense hitter, but it was really enjoyable and not having more Humez feels like a big miss.

PAS: It was odd to watch a different style fight where the Boxer is also such a superior wrestler. These matches are cool when they are a clash of styles,  here Humez doesn't even use much boxing until the end of the match, he is too bust tooling Debusne on the mat. I did like Debusne eye gouging and ball kicking to get an advantage, and Humez unloading on him at the end was awesome. I really liked the way he would use footwork and angles to unleash those uppercuts, he would shift his feet and to get perfect position and evade anything firing back, and really twist his waste to get full torque on the shots. Last couple minutes of this were as cool as anything we have seen from this footage, I just wished Humez had shown a little more vulnerability in what should have been Debusne's strength.

ER: Most of this didn't feel like a Different Style fight at all, but I liked it for what it was. Debusne really made this with his pratfall bumps and his endless bag of nasty cheapshots, and it's fun when a guy can be so in charge and shape a match while also getting maybe 5% of the offense. This was Humez beating Debusne at every single skill, never being on his ass for long, coming back and always dominating. He lands every shot, and every fair shot that Debusne tries for sees him whiff by several feet and bump halfway across the ring. I like Debusne's missed punch bump, as it feels like the kind of bump Burt Reynolds would take in movies when his character was drunk. Bandit standing up and doing a forward roll over the corner of the bed is done with a very similar motion as Debusne striking air and power flopping onto his back. The cheapshots are what really sold me on all of this, as the whole thing has been dominated by Humez until Debusne realizes he has another in. There were a few great ones that I've never seen, with my absolute favorite being his single leg takedown followed immediately up with a kick to the hamstring of that same leg. That feels like such a natural progression and so almost obvious for a heel to do, but it felt entirely fresh here. There were some not very sportsmanlike knees and I love how the nut shot was his undoing, stepping too far over that line that leads to his drubbing at the humorless hands of Humez. The Humez final punch out would have been great on its own, but Debusne took it like a man who knew he deserved this punishment, gettin rocked by every uppercut and finishing his extremely generous role in making Humez look like a star.


La Complète et Exacte French Catch


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Monday, April 27, 2020

Monday War Games: PCW - Team PCW vs. The Cornerstone

Team PCW (Brian Blaze/Brian Kane/Geter/Johnny Danger/Kevin Park/Quasi Mandisco/Supernatural) vs. The Cornerstone (Bill The Butcher/The Carpenter/Jon William/Trevor Aeon/Trey Williams/Mystery Man A/B/C) PCW 4/7/16 - FUN

PAS: Total mess of a match, but an amusing mess. This was outdoors with the two ring cage. The entries seemed kind of random more like a battle royal then a Wargames, at one point the Washington Bullets come in as a tag team, and three heels in hoods come in all together. I thought some of the early brawling with Brian Blaze and the Carpenter was cool. Geter is a giant fat dude who is a fun new generation GA Indy heavyweight, and had some cool clear the ring moments. Really hard to understand what the hell is going on in this match, and the ending was weird. Jeff G. Bailey comes out with Gunner Miller and everyone just kind of leaves the cage to let Miller and Geter have a pull apart brawl. Kind of makes me want to check out the Miller and Geter blow off match, but a no-contest is a pretty shitty finish to a Wargames.

COMPLETE AND ACCURATE WARGAMES

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Sunday, April 26, 2020

WWE Big 3: Lorcan, Gallagher, Gulak 4/5-4/11/20

Oney Lorcan/Danny Burch vs. Ricochet/Cedric Alexander WWE Raw 4/6

ER: This was a fun surprise, the first ever Raw appearances of Lorcan and Burch. If you live in Tampa, you're on Raw! was the theme of this show, but give me a fun Burch/Lorcan sprint and whatever. Match was under 4 minutes, but it was worked like they were trying to fit as much into 210 seconds as possible. Lorcan and Burch weren't winning, but I'm glad that they weren't treated as cannon fodder and were instead treated as equals. There's no reason they shouldn't be equals, but I wasn't expecting it. Burch especially got to really lace into Alexander, absorbing some kicks from Cedric to be close enough to throw a couple of great punches, a headbutt, and some uppercuts. It's fun seeing Lorcan and Burch cut Alexander off from tags. They weirdly gave Apollo Crews a half hour to work, probably more time on Raw than he's had combined in two years, so at this point I got excited that we might be getting a stretched out Lorcan tag classic. Well, things went downhill pretty quickly for them once Ricochet finally tagged in. Once that happened it was a pretty quick Cedric/Ricochet show, with every Lorcan/Burch move being evaded, Burch tossed to the floor, and Lorcan eating a nice atomic drop/enziguiri double team before getting downed by the shooting star. I would have loved to see this get even two more minutes, but it was a nice surprise seeing Lorcan on Raw.


9. Jack Gallagher vs. Oney Lorcan 205 Live 4/10/20

ER: First time EVER singles match between these two, no clue what took them so long. Last week they talked about Gallagher's new vicious side while he was not doing any vicious offense. Well, this week the new side came out in full, as he pummeled Lorcan's body nearly the entire runtime. Before we get to the pummeling we start with some cool matwork, because we're in the weird era of WWE where guys here now have cooler matwork than guys on the indies or Japan (with a couple notable exceptions). All of Gallagher's traps and set-ups were great, loved him tightly wrapping his legs around Lorcan's legs to force pressure on Lorcan's joints, and these are guys who are also clearly going to be great at headscissors escapes. Gallagher really focuses his attacks afterward on Lorcan's body, big open hand shots that he kept landing and landing, finding gaps. He even kicks Lorcan across the ring with nice shots to the ribs. Lorcan showed he can hit with more power, but Gallagher was the one absorbing a big shot to land 3 shots to the body, even egging Lorcan on. Lorcan reddened Gallagher's chest with chops, which made his clipper ship tattoo look like it was heading off into the sunset. I hadn't seen Gallagher utilize his headbutt since starting on his new vicious side, but here he makes up for all of that by throwing out a dozen: A couple big wind-up shots, and a bunch of short thrusting blows to Lorcan's ribs, neck, and chest while trapping him in the corner. Lorcan pays Gallagher back with big running attacks and big throws, having given up on trading with him. Lorcan's running back elbow was an all timer here, his half nelson looked like it was going to bounce Gallagher off his ear, and he threw a short powerful clothesline that whipped Gallagher inside out so quickly that I had to rewind to see just what the hell happened. The finish of this was dumb, with Tony Nese being a doofus cop breaking up two teens making out in a car, just the worst possible timing. But up until the Neseing this was everything you wanted from 2/3 of the Big 3 throwing down.

PAS: This was really dope up until the turd ending. It is weird that these guys have been circling each other for years now, but have never matched up before and of course it is great. Gallagher seems to be going straight shootstyle with his new gimmick, which is a weird choice, but totally awesome. He was amazing in that first Tetsujin show, and it is really cool to watch him drop the WOS stuff and just focus on vicious body shots, Ikeda headbutts, and leglocks. Lorcan is a perfect antagonist for this. He isn't going to have that same level of skill on the mat, but he is going to totally match the intensity, I loved him trying to forcibly remove Gallagher's tattoo with his chops. Tony Nese is such a blight, why can't he be sensibly concerned about his health and stay home.


2020 MOTY MASTER LIST


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Saturday, April 25, 2020

2018 Ongoing MOTY List: PARK vs. PCO

75. LA Park vs. PCO MLW 10/4 (Aired 10/26/18) - GREAT

ER: I saw reports saying these two "under delivered" and I guess...I would have no idea what actual match people would have been expecting to see out of two 50 year olds, to then view the match as underwhelming. This had everything I expected and more, a compact hard hitting match relying on the charisma and craziness of both men. Both guys slam with hard shoulderblocks, Park eats some big shots including a stiff kick to the stomach, PCO hits his old guy moonsault and a big dive that crashes Park into the guardrail and sends the guardrail crashing into fans. That right there would have left me satisfied with the match. But we get the expected Park belt whipping, a big Park dive to give PCO his own chance to crash into the guardrail, and a great spot where Park catches a PCO kick and smashes him with a headbutt, then a lariat. I don't think I've seen Park use a headbutt that often, and it looked awesome here. They work Park's missed bump in the corner nicely, with Park doing his great upside down turnbuckle bump, allowing PCO to go back on control and hit a powerbomb and running knee strike. But as Park rolls to the apron, PCO - and this is part of why I have no idea what any actual reasonable person could have expected from this match - crashes and burns as he whiffs on a cannonball off the top, banking off the edge of the apron. Crazy bump for anyone to take, definitely a bump that shouldn't be taken by a 50 year old. Park's spear is a good finish, because Park has a fantastic spear. This delivered what I wanted it to deliver.

PAS: I think this could have used blood, and maybe a slightly quicker pace, but otherwise this was pretty rad. There are a lot of dives in wrestling now, but these are two guys who now how to make a dive look like it hurts. The PCO dive to the apron is a psychotic bump for a 180 pound 25 year old, much less a 300 pound 51 year old, and that PARK plancha which followed it up looked like it broke PCO's neck. PCO is a guy who sometimes suffers in between the big spots, but PARK is a guy who is great at filling space. Fun stuff well worth checking out if MLW fell through the cracks for you.


2018 MOTY MASTER LIST


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Friday, April 24, 2020

New Footage Friday: FUNK! BOCK! ALLMARK! GALLAGHER! TANK ABBOTT?!? BOB SAPP?!?

Terry Funk vs. Nick Bockwinkel AJPW 7/12/83

MD: As new footage goes, this isn't as major a discovery as it looks. We had this match pro-shot with commentary, but missing the first few minutes. This gives us a HH version from a different angle with much better crowd noise and a few of those first few minutes of actual action (including a much better listen to Bockwinkel's Bill Murray lounge style Star Wars theme), but then misses a few minutes of great matwork has other, smaller cuts on longer holds throughout.

I still pushed for it for NFF because it's a match I've always loved with two of my favorite wrestlers and because it's a great match to signify that my first post for Segunda Caida was 6 years ago this week. I was really looking for both an outlet then and for a way to keep myself honest and focused on lucha specifically, since I had struggled with working out the ins and outs of the DVDVR set. I couldn't have been happier how that worked out (even if yeah, we're mourning the loss of Cubs' channel this week). In the last few years, starting with the release of the Houston Footage, but then with the weekly WWE Hidden Gems, and Japanese handhelds, big German releases, and now the French Catch collection, it's been just great to scour the net and to unearth and bring this stuff to people's attention. I'm less focused on modern wrestling than Phil and Eric who manage to watch everything that comes their way, but between Tuesday and Friday, I am watching six+ matches a week and having a blast. So thanks to them for letting me be part of this place.

Enough of that; on to the match. I watched this side by side with the pro-shot footage and that's always interesting. This was part of Funk's first retirement run and part of the benefit of the HH is that you see a clear shot of both of them throughout the entire match. While close-ups are good, Funk and Bock stand out compared to almost every other wrestler ever in that you want to see them every moment of a match. They are always acting and reacting. I don't think there's anyone in wrestling history better at portraying his emotions during a moment of advantage than Bockwinkel. A lot of wrestlers barely even try. With Bock, it's the elation and struggle of every single hold. Likewise, no one sells like Funk, especially in this early 80s AJPW setting. That's how he got over there despite being an American in an environment where the foreigners were all heels. He had a willingness, an utter fearlessness, to be vulnerable but resilient. Name another wrestler of this era in this place that would, even in victory, limp his way to the back. Without the announcing, with nothing but raw crowd noise, you can hear the crowd chanting his name, hear them get behind his comebacks. You can feel the energy and the adulation. There are so few matches between these two on tape but in some ways they are the perfect counterparts for one another, two perfectly engaged wrestlers who are able to thereby engage with one another, able to create a sum that is greater than even their incalculably lofty parts.

PAS: 70s and 80s title match wrestling is a style I am pretty much over, it's the reason I have very little interest in revisiting Jumbo matches. These are two guys which can add enough interesting things to a match to get me into a style I am not excited to see. All of the matwork was solid stuff with Bock trying to hold the spastic Funk down, with Terry spinning out and taking different angles then you might expect. Though the knee work was solid stuff which Funk sold great, and the fight on the apron near the end was a real highlight. This was the equivalent of some cool character actor performances in an otherwise standard movie.

ER: Let me say that I could not be happier with what Matt has brought to Segunda Caida over the years, and I can't believe it's been 6 years. I love the match structure analysis that he brings and I'm pretty sure he points something out that I didn't notice in every single post he writes. He's awesome, and this match was awesome. I'm really glad he pushed for it as it's a match up between two legends that I don't think I've ever seen before. I don't think of these two as opponents and I certainly can't recall ever seeing them in a singles match. But I loved it, muga minimalism at its finest, with every headlock and knee attack executed with snug realism. Bockwinkel's knee attacks came off really cruel, and part of that was Funk's less-grandstanding-than-normal selling. Funk still managed to flop around the ring and ringside (throwing himself into the guardrail right in front of the announce table) and continued to prove that it is an impossible feat to throw one individual streamer out of a wrestling ring. I loved how aggressive Funk was with a single leg takedown, and the way Bock punished that knee, dropping his own knee on it hard and peaking at the finish where he was throwing brutal shots that looked like he was trying to dissect Funk's MCL with fists. They did a lot of really cool stuff in the ropes (Funk is always good at flopping around on ropes) and Bockwinkel takes a nice bump to the floor that I assume leads to the Count Out. Again, I'm pretty positive I've never seen these two cross paths, and I absolutely loved it.


Bob Sapp/Stone Mountain vs. Kevin Northcutt/Tank Abbott NWA Wildside 12/14/00

PAS: Man I have no idea how Cornelia feds were always able to find such huge dudes. Both Stone Mountain and Kevin Northcutt looked to be of comparable size to Bob Sapp and Tank actually looked small. This was a tag with two guys who were basically untrained, but Sapp and Tank both had an entertaining awkwardness, shots would either miss or land way too hard. I really liked Tank's body shots, he seemed to really lay those in and that must have really sucked. Northcutt had a nice crescent kick, although other stuff looked odd. Sapp has an undeniable ring presence, and in a different world would have been a huge wrestling star. I can imagine if WCW didn't go out of business Sapp vs. Goldberg would have been a supernova. Nifty look at an all time WAR level weirdo tag and good to see that Bill Beherns is uploading Wildside to youtube again.

MD: This was pretty fascinating, I suppose. You're here to see Abbot and Sapp in the same ring, and you do for a bit, and it's probably the best part of the match, and it's really just Abbot taking a powder on the outside and stalling. It's hard not to like that because the dissonance of toughman Tank Abbot playing Larry Z. Playing against expectations is good heel wrestling. He was playing Harley Race in a tag match in Japan here; whenever he got in, his side lost control. Sapp obviously wasn't there yet but you still couldn't look away from him. The guy was so big and so exuberant that his muscles were somehow able to get in the way of his own clotheslines. I don't know what to say about Northcutt. I liked his energy slamming guys into the corner. Less so his strikes once he got them there. He could do a slingshot flipping senton into the ring. You get the sense that he and Stone Mountain could have an ok singles match, but it's not exactly one I'd go out of my way for.

ER: Man, give me a pro wrestling match like this every week and I will be a happy man. Wildside was such a great indy, something that holds up as still ahead of its time today. But a match like this will draw my full attention no matter where or when it happened. When the amount of mass in a ring is SO RADICAL that TANK ABBOTT comparatively looks like a tiny little junior. Any fed that throws Green Giants in the ring with any number of shoot fighters is a fed that I will support and a match that I will desperately seek out. The best part of shoot fighters in a wrestling match is the shots that land way harder than they should, and Tank threw a couple shots to the back of Stone Mountain's head that didn't look purposely unprofessional, just accidentally unprofessional. And the Accidental Unprofessionalism is the kind of thing that makes a match like this brilliant. It's the same reason someone like Sean McCully is so endlessly watchable in early Zero-1. That combination of "yeah I'm an athlete but I've never done this before but sure I'll try it!" that always leads to someone taking a super dangerous bump to the floor or accidentally punching a guy in the throat.

Kevin Northcutt was a guy who showed up in dying days WCW syndication that I thought had a ton of potential, and even here he threw an awesome kneedrop to Stone Mountain's temple and some great shots to the body throughout. Stone Mountain was clearly the greenest guy in the match, but his leaping elbowdrop looked fantastic, and that's probably because he just leaped up and dropped his full weight behind an elbowdrop. And that's precisely the kind of thing I WANT to see from a match like this, precisely the kind of untrained wildness I want. And then we get it again when Bob Sapp drops his tremendously large dome down in a killer falling headbutt, and snaps off an effortless powerslam. If I had the choice of seeing a match like this or a previously unseen Flair/Steamboat match, I'm going to choose a match like this every single damn time.


87. Jack Gallagher vs. Dean Allmark NGW 9/14/14

PAS: Really nifty juniors match between two of the best 21st century British wrestlers. We start with some WOS matwork, and this is something that these two guys do much better then most of the British indy guys. It doesn't feel like a pair of a guys slowly going through dance choreography but incorporating that stuff in an actual wrestling match. My favorite spot of the whole match was probably Allmark's simple single leg takedown, which he landed with real velocity and force. The finish is a bit wonky with Gallagher arguing with the ref only to get smashed with a superkick. There was some big moves near the end of this match that would have been better finishes. Still this was good stuff.

MD: Fun thematic inversion of the Funk/Bock match as this one has had a handheld out there for a few years but now we get to have a pro shot version. This was a ten minute TV-style match as part of the Davey Boy Smith cup tournament. Very back and forth but everything was good. Gallagher isn't a big guy and doesn't have a huge palette to work with but he's great at changing up his look in interesting and iconic ways. They didn't have a lot of time to tell a story, especially considering how evenly this was worked, so it was down to the counters (and repetition, like how Gallagher went through the legs on an escape once but got caught the second time later; little things like that) and how they engaged the crowd. Allmark was quick to appeal to them or to try to get a clap going while Gallagher was delightfully smarmy, mocking Allmark while shaking his hand, clapping his own hand with Allmark's while he had him in a hold, etc. They tried plenty of tricked out chain wrestling flourishes and a few rope running spots and everything seemed pretty smooth and not too cooperative. They set things up for the finish and had a few good near falls but I would have liked this to have more time so Gallagher could control longer and Allmark's comeback would mean more.

ER: This was about the smartest way to work a quick 50/50 TV match, as both guys got to fit a ton of cool stuff into an short overall runtime, without ever feeling like either guy was shrugging something off to get their own stuff in. Gallagher wasn't on my radar until about a year after this match (even though he'd been a 10 year vet by that point, it's hard to keep tabs on EVERY wrestler) and I fully agree with Phil that these are likely my two favorite modern WOS guys. There's so much flash they do that is much more than merely flash, and even the slickest sequence felt like it had purpose. I loved things like Allmark trapping Gallagher's arms before popping off a straight Rockette kick to the chin, or knocking out Gallagher's legs to plausibly trap him in the ropes long enough to stomp on his neck and snapmare him off the turnbuckles. One of my favorite things about Gallagher is that he's so consistently good about making each individual piece of offense count, so that even though he's working from the same offensive toolbag each match, he's not just going through rote sequences. He mixes his offense differently into matches, so things like his massive corner dropkick always come off as a surprise and keeps it a finisher-level move. The early matwork in this was good enough to write up, but I love how the bumped it up into exciting juniors wrestling, with a big bump to the floor and actual quality nearfalls (at least three things down the stretch could have been finishes). I thought the finish was done well for that finish, as Gallagher wasn't overtly turning his back to Allmark while arguing with the ref, and it just showed that only a couple of seconds was enough for Allmark to take advantage with a nasty superkick.


2014 MOTY MASTER LIST


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Thursday, April 23, 2020

Black Terry Wove a Red Cloak So Regal to See

Black Terry vs. Chico Che IWRG 1/29/12 - GREAT

PAS: It's odd that this match escaped me for so long, it's hair match featuring two of my all time favorite wrestlers, during one of my favorite wrestling vintages early 2010s IWRG. How didn't I see it in 2012? How has it been on Powerbomb for two years? How did I review the set up match and not the apuestas? Well I am watching it now, and while booking kept this from being a super high end Black Terry match, it was still pretty awesome stuff.

Chico Che is full rudo in this match, which isn't a role I have seen him in before. He doesn't do his awesome rope running sequence and focuses more on chops and punches, but he has great looking chops and punches so it works good. We get a bunch of gruesome cinema verite close ups of bloody bruised faces getting punched and headbutted. There is an amazing BTJr. shot of both guys smashing their foreheads against each other, while blood sprays off. There was a lot of interference by the seconds (I want to say Dynamic Black and Commando Negro, but I admit my ability to ID IWRG guys from a decade ago has wained), and the third fall was basically all interference and a pretty mistimed ref bump, if they had kept it a gore fest brawl it would have been an easy epic, but I think the set up match is the better of the two. Still this is Chico Che and Black Terry in an Black Terry Jr. filmed HH, so incredibly worth watching.


COMPLETE AND ACCURATE BLACK TERRY


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Wednesday, April 22, 2020

AEW Dynamite Workrate Report 4/22/20

What Worked

-I'm still not certain we've gotten an actual Sammy/Darby classic, and they've matched up several times. It's possibly because their best matches are against monsters and matched up against each other one on one they somewhat negate what the other is best at. They're easily two of my favorite five guys in AEW, but they can both likely have better matches against lesser opponents than against each other. HOWEVER, I liked this a lot, I just have a higher bar set here. It's strong throughout, but weirdly cut apart by commercials, which hurt the flow a bit. I could see the argument that the commercial layout was smart, as it allowed recovery time from some pretty big stuff, but I would have liked to see just how they handled that recovery. Instead we jumped right back into more big moves and it didn't feel right. It starts with Sammy blindsiding Darby with a tope and then hitting a nutso superfly splash to the floor, "putting" Darby through a ladder. Except the ladder doesn't budge and both of these two are going to be dealing with crushing rib pain for the next week. Darby worked on Guevara's foot and even ripped off his boot, that all lead to a cool kneebar that I would have bought as the finish. Both guys take some big spills (not a shock) and I liked Sammy's lunatic dedication to selling a foot by actually trying to do a one foot springboard cutter and a 630 where he was clearly favoring a leg. That's a great way to die, but I think he pulled it off. Love seeing these two do their thing.

-Best Brodie Lee squash so far, but I also think the other ones have been weak. His big windup clothesline looked great, that's really the only kind of stuff he should be doing. Drop the superkicks and somersault sentons.


What Didn't Work

-I was on a long phone call last week with a relative, and missed most of Dynamite. I *did* want to mention that I made it back in time for the Hager/Moxley match, and it was a real clunker. Easily the worst "Bloodsport" style match I've seen over the past few years, compeltely sluggish, both completely over their heads, no idea where to take the match, and it felt endless. In a just world, people would be dumping on that match as much as they dumped on Edge/Orton.

-To add to the discussion of Better Wrestler: Lex Luger or Kenny Omega, I like being able to throw on an old episode of Raw and see Luger take Tony DeVito to the woodshed. Omega always wants to have these extended squash matches, where he runs through a squash and then when the squash match is supposed to end he just stands there for awhile and lets someone do all of their kick combos. Alan Angels is fine I guess, but the Kenny Omega Competitive Squash structure is a real dud. He dominates, then kinda hangs around for awhile until he finishes it. Am I supposed to think Angels is a  future contender? Am I supposed to believe that every person on the roster is one quick pin away from the main event? Just squash a guy.

-"But right now, let's take a special look at Scorpio Sky" sounds like such an unnecessary vignette in 2020. But I look forward to the special looks at Scott Lost, several Gallineros, TARO, Hook Bomberry...

-Jimmy Havoc is bad, but THANK YOU Jimmy Havoc for just trying to have a normal match with Orange Cassidy, thank you for not selling the intentionally silly offense parts instead of doing that thing most opponents do where they bump across the ring for a finger poke. Most of Havoc's stuff doesn't look good (he had a nice punch and a nice forearm, and the former got a quick camera cut away because they knew Jimmy Havoc was about to attempt to punch a person). The Penelope/Kip involvement was really shoehorned in, and most of this didn't work for me. But I am much more interested in seeing someone work an actual match. Sadly, that person was Jimmy Havoc.

-Not buying Wardlow, and I'm about as easy as it gets when it comes to finding things to like about big gassed wrestlers. Lee Johnson has been the bump king of AEW squash matches, but there's only so much he can do.

-Liked the Brodie Lee squash, but that ring gear is B-A-D.

-I actually did not realize just how terrible Kip Sabian was until tonight. I know that I've never enjoyed Kip Sabian before, but I thought his match against Darby was fun (even though that was just a great Darby performance). But this? This was atrocious. Sabian looked like the absolute worst AEW worker on the roster in this match, and this was a match that had a Penelope/Brandi showdown that saw Brandi run straight past Penelope without either of them pretending to duck or act like they were avoiding each other in any way. This was Dustin working a Sabian match, and it was straight torture. Things got momentarily compelling with Dustin working a knee injury after hitting the turnbuckles. But then he had to keep selling for Kip Sabian's offense and that was when this whole thing got impossibly bad. Kip Sabian looked like he was trying out every piece of offense in his repertoire for the very first time, and I wish he was in with someone who isn't as much of a nice guy pro as Dustin. Could you see someone like Finlay bumping for that short arm clothesline? Finlay would have grabbed Sabian by the maxilla and elbowed his nose into oblivion. With no hyperbole, I can honestly say that was the worst short arm clothesline I've seen, completely beyond parody to have Sabian hitting offense lighter than the guy in sunglasses who purposely hits half of his offense lightly. I would have thought it impossible to have a 10+ minute Dustin match wind up on the bottom here, and that tells me everything I need to know about Kip Sabian. I encourage everybody to find and watch this match, just so someone can explain to me their theories on what any of Sabian's offense was supposed to be. Is Sabian's hiring like when Johnny Ace hired the wrong one legged wrestler? Was someone in AEW actually supposed to hire BLK Jeez?


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Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Tuesday is French Catch Day: Chaisne!! Bernaert!! Fisher Brothers!! Delaporte!! Robin!!


Jo Rinaldi vs Robert Moine 7/11/57

SR: About 13 minutes of 30 are shown. Rinaldi is said to be Italian, which of course may be a complete fabrication. Moine doesn‘t show up again, and Rinaldi only shows up in these JIP matches, which I‘m a little salty about because both guys did some quality shit here. There was a particular cool sequence centered around leglock reversals that was the brainy type stuff I associate with European style matwork. There was also a great keylock escape that lead to a giant swing. They never threw strikes and then it goes to a time limit draw without ever heating up, so I guess it was that kind of scientific match. Still, it was cool to watch.

MD: Good thirteen minutes of technical action, JIP, before the draw. Rinaldi got a little dirtier at times and Moine a bit more heated, but in general they worked this clean. For two guys we aren't going to hear much from in this project, they both looked quite good. Everything was a real struggle, with a lot of back and forth counters and escape attempts (lots of trying to kick and jam and get a leg in). They both ended up in a joint leglock at one point slapping at each other's legs and selling appropriately for a moment after. They both went for a dropkick at the same time. One would go for a nose and the other would immediately return the favor. Very even in that regard. My favorite bit was probably Rinaldi catching Moine's leg as he tried for that grounded leg stamp we've seen a bit lately and turning that catch into a giant swing. I think we get another two minutes of Rinaldi and no more Moine and that's a shame. Really, if nothing else, it just shows the high baseline level of French TV wrestling in 1957.

Michel Chaisne vs Pierre Bernaert 7/11/57

SR: 1 Fall match going a little over 20 minutes. We go from Bernaert stirring shit up in a big way against Dauthuille to Bernaert doing a surprising amount of wrestling in this match. Although he did go back to his kidney punching, neck elbowing ways soon. Bernaert doesn‘t do much to truly set my world on fire, but he is solid enough to always be good for a niggly bout. Chaisne is notable for bringing really good babyface fire. Not quite as much here as he did in his match against Dr. Adolf Kaiser, so I guess Belgian jock who acts like a massive dick isn‘t quite as stirring as evil German Doctor of Philosophy. Once again, I felt the match ended a bit abruptly. This had such a lengthy build and we see so many matches where the heel ends up bumping like a maniac all over the place that the match just ending like that made this feel like a prelim bout.

MD: I'm higher on this one than Sebastian. Bernaert is extremely entertaining to watch. He actually got me here, too. After wrestling the first seven minutes or so clean and even holding an advantage on points (he was in control more often than not, hanging on to holds and even using a pretty nice Cobra Clutch style hold), he asked for a handshake and just clocked Chaisne for huge heat. This was just a week or two after the Dauthuille match too, so I should have known better, but sometimes guys flip from week to week depending on the opponent in this footage. After that, it followed a lot of the format of the prior match, with Bernaert doing anything he could to avoid comeuppance, most especially a long short arm scissors and endless heat-drawing leg dives. This felt very self aware, with Chaisne even catching him on one attempt with a big uppercut. That was one of the big moments of Chaisne getting revenge, another being a bodyscissors reversal out of nowhere (until Bernaert bit the foot to get out), and a third being the ref catching a hairpull and letting Chaisne back into it with these huge punting knees. To me the finish seemed a little abrupt but mostly triumphant, with a big hiptoss powerslam type move off the ropes and the post match shenanigans where Bernaert just wouldn't stop and Chaisne was forced to pound the heck out of him. To me, it was all tied together. Chaisne's a good, noble, straight-laced face but Bernaert was the star of this again.

PAS: I liked this a bunch too, Chaisne is a bit dry, but he is a fine foil for demonstrative heels. Bernaert is a really skilled grappler, he really hangs on to holds and grinds on them. Of course he is a dirty cheap shot artist too, his kidney punch, show the ref the open palm is a great bit of signature heel bullshit, I could totally see Doug Gilbert or Ric Rude using it. As a confessed short arm scissors superfan, this French footage has been a godsend, loved how Chaisne kept slapping his hand to keep it from going dead. I thought the finish was a bit abrupt, but it certainly heated up at the end, and those big uppercut knees leading to it, felt like a big babyface comeback. Hell that hiptoss powerslam might have been Chaisne's version of the Diamond Cutter or something. 

Roger Delaporte/Guy Robin vs Charles Fisher/Arthur Fisher 7/19/57


SR: 2/3 Falls match going nearly 40 minutes. JIP and the fans are already pelting the ring with garbage, enraged at the tactis of Delaporte and Robin, who were pulling every dirty trick in the book. This was an all out fight from beginning to end, no shots pulled. The Fishers did almost nothing but forearm and throw the shit out of their opponents, but it was some great looking forearms and throws. One thing I really appreciate is the chinlocking the guys will do to pull others away from a scrap, it‘s such a small detail but it aids to the barfight feel. Delaporte & Robin are constantly jumping on  the Fischers 2 on 1 and it‘s natural for a 4th guy to join the fray and try pull one of these bastards off. Aside from all the guys fighting, tumbling and climbing over each other you get some nasty armwork which while not being played up in the long run leads to a pinfall. I probably liked Robin the best of all the guys in the match, he did this awesome in ring tope to break up a hold, and he was always sneaking around to kneedrop someones throat. Delaporte was no slouch either and the faces convincingly play their role. It‘s a bit hard to rate this kind of match since it‘s basically a brawl worked like a sprint going 40 minutes with 2 breaks, it didn‘t have the kind of build I am normally used to from a wrestling match where it ebbs and flows, but as a heated slugfest it was quiet great.

MD: Forty minutes of extremely fun tag team wrestling, with a great heel side and some fiery faces. The latter are the Fighting Fishers from England, and I hate to admit it, but I really can't tell them apart well. I think it's Charlie and Arthur. They portrayed a rugged enthusiasm and the crowd seemed elated every time they scored an advantage and celebrated it. So much of that was because of Delaporte. He was a promoter as well as wrestler and we have him over twenty times in this footage and I think we'll thereby have the opportunity to claim him as one of the great in-ring villains of 20th century wrestling. He comes off as a slime and a stooge, but a formidable one, cheating at almost every opportunity even if just for the sake of cheating, yet unquestionably dangerous. Robin we saw vs Hayes early on and I really liked him as Delaporte's underling here. He had a bound to his step, this eager energy. When he interfered he'd leap over the rope into the ring to do so. He was lightning fast with his spots and really dogged and persistent with his limbwork.

This had a lot of heel control, as they were very good at cheating, double-teaming, constantly helping one another and dismantling a limb. We haven't seen much limb selling in French wrestling as of yet, but it's still very effective as a means for heel control, spotted with big comebacks by the Fishers. Early on, that was Delaporte's leg stretches off the ropes (and the double team version) which we've seen before. Fisher escaped that torment by headlocking both opponents at once and peppering them with knees, clearing the ring triumphantly. There'd almost always be a great heel miscommunication spot in these comebacks too. When the heels came back, it was with Robin endlessly driving Fisher's arm down into a Fujiwara armbar. Just again and again and again with that sort of bulldogging armlock. Fisher put up with so much of this that when he made his comeback, he tried to get his licks back in instead of going for the tag and ended up pinned for his trouble. When the Fishers do come back later on, they have a lot of fun stuff like a rolling short arm scissors and a giant swing. Eventually though, the cheating (including the first time we've seen ring rope choking in this footage) is just too much for them and the heels pick up the win with a pair of nasty shoulder breakers from Delaporte. The Fishers definitely keep themselves in the minds of the crowd by standing tall and furious in the post match. These tags can be exhausting but it's because they're so full of good stuff.

PAS: Really enjoyed Robin as the Spike to Delaporte's Chester, just running in and hitting all of these pesky high energy attacks. Loved him flying in and breaking everything up with a big headbutt. Liked the finish to all three falls, the giant swing into a big stacked pin was really cool as was Delaporte's shoulder breakers. I didn't get a huge sense of the Fishers, obviously skilled but I couldn't tell them apart and they didn't have much flash. Delaporte is a real prick in these matches so far and I am looking forward to see how he evolves, we have Delaporte matches up until 1984, so we are going to a breadth of his as a wrestler and I have a feeling he ages well.


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Monday, April 20, 2020

Monday War Games: EWE - The Illuminati vs. Devil's Rejects

The Illuminati (Brandon Collins/Jason Collins/Johnny Viper/Se7en) vs. The Devil's Rejects (Andrew Alexander/Patrick Bentley/Tank/Rufus Black) Empire Wrestling Entertainment 8/3/13 - FUN

PAS: This was a lower end Devil's Rejects Wargames, but they are always well worth watching. The opening 10 minutes or so with Patrick Bentley and the Collins Brothers was pretty bad it was all superkicky juniors wrestling, I really don't want to see Canadian destroyers in my Wargames matches. It got a lot better when Tank and Rufus Black came in, they are exactly the kind of stabby psychos which makes this match fun. The four Illuminati doesn't come out originally and instead Se7en jumps Alexander on the outside before he can join the match. Se7en is really good at seeming scary and monsterous and I dug the finish with Seven squeezing Dan Wilson's bloody head until Alexander surrendered for him. Our buddy Dan is not afraid to spray the fruit punch in these War Games matches and it is appreciated. Hated the start, but liked the finish, so overall OK.


COMPLETE AND ACCURATE WARGAMES


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Sunday, April 19, 2020

WWE Big 3: Lorcan, Gallagher, Gulak 3/29-4/4/20

Jack Gallagher vs. Tyler Breeze 205 Live 4/3

ER: Gallagher has been going through some changes the past month, first showing up suddenly covered in tattoos (which I don't hate as everyone else I guess?) and now wearing a cape to the ring that he possibly stole from a Dickensian woman of affluence. This match is a pairing I've been hoping to see for awhile, but this was a bit more vanilla than I was hoping for. They're pushing Gallagher's new "vicious side" but ever since he debuted his "vicious side" he's been far less vicious than at any time during his WWE run. Sure, tell me he's vicious all you like, but he's oddly dropped his great headbutt and his decapitating dropkick and seemingly toned down his strikes. In this match his working style came off much more like Tyler Breeze than classic Jack Gallagher, and even as a Tyler Breeze fan that's just not something I want. So I suppose "vicious side" is just taking away the things that made him genuinely unique? They have a professional match, and its fine, though it never really approaches anything special.

I liked the headlocks used by both, and I'd rather have snug headlocks with guys leaning their weight down and into their opponent than back and forth elbow/superkick strike battles (which we eventually get to). Even Jack's mounted strikes felt like the worst strikes I've seen him throw in WWE, so I'm not really sure what this new side of his is supposed to accomplish. He had a couple of dickish little mocking kicks, but those felt more like 1998 heel Jericho kicks, not anything coming from a "vicious side". Late in the match Gallagher jams Breeze's shoulder into the buckles and briefly works it over, and it felt like this was when the match was going to turn into more of a vicious limb torture show, but Breeze gets to the ropes fairly easy to break an armbar and they never went back to it. There were things that looked good, like Breeze's jumping knee strike that sends Gallagher to the floor, and the roaring elbow that Gallagher wraps up with certainly looked like a finish. This was the kind of match that was worked in a totally silent arena, that would have been worked in total silence no matter how large the crowd. This just felt like two guys doing things for 10 minutes, without much behind those things.


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Saturday, April 18, 2020

2020 Ongoing MOTY List: Kendrick vs. A-Kid

7. Brian Kendrick vs. A-Kid NXT UK 1/18 (Aired 2/27/20)

ER: Man NXT UK rules ever since they let Ohno and Kendrick go over there and work their specific magic on the roster. Those two are a good influence on that style, so now they need to send Gallagher over there and let the three of them just hang out. These two were a great pairing that I wouldn't have thought to ask for, but I'm glad we got. A-Kid's biggest strength is his fast matwork and quick attacks, and Kendrick is a guy who knows how to do cool things against that and with that. Their fast early exchanges were really good, starting with a hard Kendrick shoulderblock and going through some quick but snug work, A-Kid working Kendrick's arm and Kendrick always finding crafty reversals, and A-Kid surprising him with a slick armdrag and dropkick. Things really pick up when Kendrick starts working a disgusting cravat, locking his knuckles around Kid's windpipe. Kendrick is really great at keeping a thread going through a match, and great at making opponent's offense look meaningful. 


A-Kid grazed Kendrick on a fast tope and spilled deep into the entranceway, and instead of selling the tope, Kendrick sold the bump from the tope and sold pain in his arm and shoulder from earlier. Kid hits a nice heavy high crossbody, and Kendrick faceplants hard on Kid's La Mistica, really made it look like Kid could come away with his arm. Kendrick is probably the best rope worker on the roster, as he's so great at working submissions around ropes and making distance to the ropes part of the drama in smart ways, and his escapes and struggles to get to the ropes really validate opponent's submissions. The home stretch is hot (but the whole match was work this pace, so it was really a culmination of everything), with Kendrick cruelly knocking Kid crotch first on the top and getting a great butterfly suplex, then getting what I thought was actually the finish with a killer Captain's Hook (my favorite submission in wrestling). But instead we get Kid working in a springboard DDT and Kendrick absolutely spikes himself on it. Keep these legends over in the UK, they're making it my favorite weekly wrestling show.

PAS: I had no idea until Eric mentioned this match that A-Kid was in the WWE. He is a guy I mainly know for kind of fucking up an Ambition show last year and having a Meltzer rated ***** match with Zack Sabre Jr. which I will never watch. Kendrick is a guy who can do cool things with a guy with bad habits, and none of the fighting spirit stuff or weak strikes were present here. A-Kid has some big offense and Kendrick sold it great, the La Mistica was beautiful, the top rope springboard DDT looked amazing, and all of the big moments happened at the right time. Kendrick is great at adding simple nasty flourishes to his matches. The spot where he grabbed Kid's arm and drove him into the top rope throat first was killer, and I loved him grinding out the neck in the cravat too. Kendrick is pretty brilliant and I would love to see him get a run in the Gulak/Bryan stable. They need a third to combat Zayn/Nakamura/Cesaro and Kendrick makes too much sense.


2020 MOTY MASTER LIST


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Friday, April 17, 2020

New Footage Friday: NWA GREAT AMERICAN BASH TOUR 7/10/87!!

Misty Blue vs. Kat Laroux 

PAS: Surprisingly fiery 3 minute women's match. Laroux comes in with a crutch (fishing rod?) and starts pounding on Blue with it. That sets the tone and it ends up being a nasty little brawl. Blue finishes her off with a superfly splash which is a big move in 1987, and then wears her out with the same crutch.

Chris Adams/Sting vs. Barbarian/Thunderfoot #1

PAS: Weird tag, as you have a bunch of biggish name and then Thunderfoot #1. The sections where the Barbarian was in with either Sting or Adams was pretty cool, and then you had the parts with Thunderfoot. Barbarian vs. Sting was an especially neat match up, I would have liked to have seen that be a feud at some point. Barbarian has to be one of the most underused wrestlers of the 80s and 90s.

Italian Stallion vs. Black Bart

PAS: This was another fun short match. Stallion was really good at what he did, undercard dancing babyface who is going to put up a fight. Bart isn't a guy I normally have a ton of time for, but he was good here too, nice clothesline, bumped well on a monkey flip and the second rope legdrop in a heck of a finisher.

Buddy Roberts vs. Jerry Jackson 

PAS: I am not sure who Jerry Jackson was, he had the feel of WCW's Tom Magee, a roided up guy who they put in with a veteran hand to see what they could do with him. The answer here was not much, there is a reason we never heard of this guy, he was really tentative with his movement, there is a point where he triple clutches before trying a knee drop, and the stuff he hit looked really bad. Magee at least had some highspots, this guy didn't even have that. Roberts is going to do his thing, he is as professional a guy as it gets, but nothing was going to be salvaged here.

MD: I really don't have a lot to say about the undercard. The best thing was the 3 minute Laroux vs Misty Blue sprint. The Sting/Adams tag had the two of them very over in the entrances and at the finish but not during the body of the match itself. I liked Barbarian skulking around the ring weirdly at the start and the clash of the titans opening bit with him and Sting was good but it suffered from too many tags later in the card so the couldn't give it heat. Plus Thunderfoot had no credibility. Stallion vs Bart was fine but I would have rather seen them added to the Sting tag to make it a six man, maybe? I don't know what the Buddy Roberts match was about. He gave way too much if he was the face there. 



Lightning Express vs. Rick Steiner/Eddie Gilbert

PAS: Fun if kind of oddly paced match. The Express take about 75% of it, with a short face in peril section which is mostly a Rick Steiner bearhug. Steiner does have a really nice lookin bearhug though, that is a rawbone strong dude to be squeezing your ribs. Quick hot tag and a finish. Felt like it needed a couple more minutes to really work, but Gilbert is a fun bumper and I enjoy Rick Steiner.

MD: This felt more like a TV match than a house show match. It really didn't have any room to breathe. It was a good match of its kind though. Eddie was maybe a bit too over in front of this crowd. He worked like a competent manager more than anything else, which made Steiner's athletic strongman work seemed all the more potent. I liked how they went the extra mile on the transition: Gilbert drew Armstrong out of his corner which distracted the ref and let Gilbert catch Horner with a knee from the outside coming off the ropes. If they did that spot today (EDIT: Or you know, elsewhere on the card in a match with less thought), they'd ignore the ref distraction and just let the knee happen in plain sight. Most of the heat was a Steiner bear hug with no real hope spots, so there wasn't much there, but the finish was nice and chaotic, if pared down like everything else.


Big Bubba Rogers vs. Jimmy Garvin

MD: Really enjoyable 4 minute match that felt like it could have been a taping dark match main event and the fans wouldn't complain too much. You got all of the hoopla of Garvin getting his entrance, super over as a face. Bubba coming out to the theme from Peter Gunn was so perfect. WWE should have licensed that for his 99 heel run. The match was basically two minutes of Garvin throwing these great punches up at Bubba, Bubba cutting him off, Garvin getting some low blows, Bubba cutting him off, and then after Garvin's last comeback, going into a BS DQ finish that you knew was coming. It was obvious by this point just how much Bubba got it, just in the way he paced things and how he would really milk the selling/bumping on the low blows, etc.

PAS: This was a bunch of fun, super babyface Garvin isn't someone I have seen a ton of, but man he was great. Loved the double strap drop on the suspenders and the energy he had. Bubba had to be 70 pounds heavier then he was during his Bossman days and he really used that girth menacingly, but still had really surprising agility.


Michael Hayes/Terry Gordy vs. MOD Squad 

MD: The first half of this didn't even feel like wrestlers going up against broomsticks. It felt like wrestlers working with the crowd with no opponents at all. Some of that was the handheld cropping which would cut out the Mods entirely. A lot of it was just Hayes (and to a lesser degree Gordy) hamming it up. When the Mods had a chance, they stooged and pinballed valiantly, but they almost didn't have to and this would have been exactly the same. Amusingly, they used the same knee to the back transition but they did it right in front of the ref. The back half of the match was actually a match, with the Mods looking fine in control and Hayes working well from underneath and really engaging the crowd. Amusingly, when you watch a whole card like this, it wasn't just the second knee to the back transition but the third "heel goes to the top" transition so far. But this was a perfectly fine look at the 87 babyface Freebirds doing their thing in front of a less familiar crowd.


Dr. Death Steve Williams vs. Dick Murdoch 

PAS: This was unsurprisingly excellent. Both guys come in with casts on their arms, so it is a battle of who can wreck the other guys arm the most. Williams does this really cool almost torture rack armbar where he hangs Murdoch over Dr. Death's back by his arm. Eddie Gilbert is at ringside for Murdoch and keeps cheap shotting Williams and allowing Murdoch to hit his arm with a cane. We had some great Murdoch stooging where Williams punched him, Murdoch fell into his arms, and Williams propped him up to punch him again. Finish was really cool too with Murdoch flying off the top rope directly into a Williams elbow, felt like a Misawa finish. I really liked how this built from a body part match into a bomb fest. A real hidden gem.

MD: The injury angle where Murdoch took out Doc's arm was in May. The TV match with Doc's comeback was in June. This was July and felt like a more refined version of the TV match that had less color and lower stakes. Doc had a cast that he wasn't supposed to use but that played into the finish. He was as dynamic as you'd expect, both in the way he worked over Murdoch's arm early in in his comeback attempts (even just trying to dart around the ring on his knees to get Murdoch after the initial shot to his arm). The counterpoint was that the early shine armwork was all sorts of loose and weird and nothing actually looked like it ought to hurt, but he was so enthusiastic and Murdoch sold so big that no one was really going to care. You get house show Murdoch in the stretch, which wasn't at all lazy, but was ridiculously over the top in the stooging about. But it's not 1985 or 1995 or whatever. It's 2020 and we're all stuck in our houses and stooging Dick Murdoch is the joy we all need.


Midnight Express (Bobby Eaton/Stan Lane) vs. Ron Garvin/Barry Windham

PAS: This incarnation of the MX was such a fun act, you had dancing Kung Fu Stan Lane, the always amazing Bobby Eaton, Cornette heat seeking on the outside and Big Bubba standing around looking menacing. Windham I though was kind of just there, but Garvin was a blast. He is a guy with some big exciting spots, and he knows how to time his headscissors or big punch for the maximum pop. I think I like the Lane MX more then the Condrey MX, Lane is such an amusing dipshit, his little dancing or strip mall karate adds so much character to the match. I loved him squaring up against Garvin's boxing stance, only to let discretion be the better part of valor, and bailing out.

MD: The difference between this match and comparable WWF Heel-in-peril matches from the same time is how many tricks they pull out. It's not just endless armwork control. It's one elaborate spot after the next and one gimmick after the next. They'll do a blind tag where Barry will get out of the way and Stan will have to leapfrog his own partner only to walk into a slam. Eaton will lose his pants and work for half a minute before realizing it. Bubba will get involved as part of the heel miscommunication that almost brought them to blows (the second of such spots; I'm surprised they didn't do one with Cornette too). Bobby will have the advantage over Garvin for a second but he'll come right back with a great headscissors takeover. When Stan finally takes over (and that takes about three steps, too - a missed elbow drop, a superkick to the gut, and Barry catching Stan's foot but Stan getting him with the other one), the Midnights start dancing victoriously. After all of that, they really needed another minute or two on top though. I love that Barry, even at his size, could still believably go through a smaller guys legs for the hot tag. He was like Dustin in that he could hide his height when he had to work from beneath. Garvin had the instinctive timing of a folk hero. He got more mileage out of pulling Eaton's pants down than most people would get with three minutes of elaborate rope running spots. For all of his eventual flaws, Hebner's timing and attitude in finding the hat in the middle of the ring really added something to the finish. Plus, the last person I was expecting to see during this match was Pat Roach! I'll take a short cut in the match for him.


Arn Anderson/Tully Blanchard/Ric Flair/Lex Luger vs. The Road Warriors/Dusty Rhodes/Nikita Koloff

PAS: What a delight this match was. Watching this you really see the charisma which is missing in today's wrestling. Is there anyone even as charismatic as Nikita in the WWE? Much less someone like Ric Flair or Dusty Rhodes. This match was all fireworks, big moments of the heels bumping, including Tully and Flair feeding into Animal press slams, and Flair taking an atmospheric high backdrop. There is a moment where Dusty tags in and he elbow smashes all four guys at once, so much fun to watch Dusty shuck, jive and jiggle. We get a couple of moments of heat on the faces, which leads to a couple of crazy hot tags. The crowd is on their feet for the entire match and it was really easy to get into the swing of things. Such a thrill to watch.

MD: Just an iconic match, with a hot crowd, where every interaction felt larger than life. The early image of the Horsemen on the turnbuckles and the faces standing tall in their corner will stick with me. Dusty in a circle with the heels launching bionic elbows and double punches is something they could get away with on a house show, but it's also the purest distillation of Dusty possible and I think it elated everyone in a two mile radius. The spot where Arn backs Animal towards a neutral corner so Tully can run up the apron and dive up the top only to get caught and set up an Arn elbow drop is one of the best possible transitions to heel control I've seen in ages, even if they didn't actually use it as such. The big problem with heel-in-peril, by the way, is that it doesn't have the same value as face-in-peril. There it's all build and payoff. There's much less value in a payoff which is the heels taking over, so all the build gets sort of squandered. There's value in a shine in general but usually only so much. Animal becomes vulnerable with the very next spot as he takes a bump out of the ring off a missed clothesline and then gets slammed, but there was really no reason not to let Arn's elbow drop be the move that turned the tide instead. That's all I'm saying. I did like Animal working from underneath as he kept going for the tag but was swarmed at from every angle due to the sheer number of heels. The second bit of heat on dusty was good too and built to a hot tag for Nikita and a that finish was nice and chaotic. You got exactly what you wanted out of this one.


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Thursday, April 16, 2020

Drew Gulak is Standing in the Wake of Our Pain

Drew Gulak vs. Zach Sabre Jr. CZW 4/10/11 - FUN

PAS: This was a chance to check out both of these guys in their earliest incarnations, and Sabre looked 14 years old. Sabre was really just a WOS tribute act at this point, but those are fun spots and Gulak was a good foil. This was really hard mat wrestling like later Gulak matches and I had no idea CZW was running this stuff this early. I liked how frustrated Gulak got and how he gritted his teeth and tried to grind Sabre down. This didn't have the polish of the their later matches against each other, but it had the same DNA and I enjoyed checking in.

ER: Phil told me earlier that this looked like high school versions of Sabre and Gulak doing their best Sabre/Gulak match, and I thought "What? It's less than 10 years ago, it's not like they were in their teens." And then I turned this on and it looked like two 15 year old brothers with dorky ass teen sports bowl cuts that just got picked up by their mom from soccer practice. I don't know if this was good - if I saw two different guys have this same exact match in 2020 I probably wouldn't bother to write it up - but it was fun seeing them working out the kind of match they would both be great at just a few years later. Gulak looked a lot better than Sabre. Gulak really didn't wrestle that differently than any other time I've seen him. Sabre really looked like a backyarder who somehow only had access to World of Sport, who was doing his best to mimic what he had seen. Every sequence he did here he can do a lot tighter today, and Gulak did a great job at actually making this stuff look like he couldn't prevent some of this stuff from happening. Some sections of submission set-ups looked good, but full sections didn't. I liked Gulak's palm strikes to Sabre's body, but down the home stretch they did these hand slap headbutt trade off sequence that looked absolutely silly. But it was fun seeing the bones of this style, before it was a style being done great on the indies.


COMPLETE AND ACCURATE DREW GULAK


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Complete and Accurate Drew Gulak

Cedric Alexander vs. Drew Gulak - WWE Cruiserweight Championship ...



Gulak is a guy we have written a ton about since coming to the WWE and a guy who seemingly has hit his peak performance at a very strange time in the world. We wrote up some of his EVOLVE run too, but there is a world of Chikara and CZW adjacent stuff we haven't covered at all. As always we will rate things EPIC, GREAT, FUN and SKIPPABLE.


2008

Drew Gulak vs. Dustin Lee CZW 4/5/08 - GREAT

2010

Soldier Ant/Fire Ant vs. Super Smash Brothers CHIKARA 6/26/10 - GREAT

2011

Drew Gulak vs. Zack Sabre Jr. CZW 4/10/11 - FUN

2012

Drew Gulak vs. Danny Havoc CZW 5/12/12 - EPIC

2013

Drew Gulak vs. Green Ant Wrestling is Respect 6/30/13 - GREAT

2014

Drew Gulak vs. Biff Busick CZW 4/27/14 - EPIC
Drew Gulak vs. Tommaso Ciampa Beyond Wrestling 7/27/14 - GREAT
Drew Gulak vs. Timothy Thatcher EVOLVE 8/7/14 - EPIC
Drew Gulak vs. Biff Busick CZW 9/27/14 - EPIC

Drew Gulak vs. Sami Callihan PWG 12/11/15 - EPIC

2016

Drew Gulak vs. Timothy Thatcher PWG 1/2/16 - EPIC
Drew Gulak vs. Louis Lyndon AAW 1/15/16 - FUN
Drew Gulak/TJ Perkins vs. Zack Sabre Jr./Sami Callihan EVOLVE 1/23/16 - EPIC
Drew Gulak vs. Chris Hero PWG 2/27/16 - GREAT
Drew Gulak/Tracy Williams vs. Chris Hero/Tommy End EVOLVE 4/1/16 - GREAT
Drew Gulak vs. Fred Yehi WWN Supershow 4/2/16 - EPIC
Drew Gulak/Tracy Williams vs. Drew Galloway/Johnny Gargano EVOLVE 4/2/16 - GREAT
Drew Gulak/Tracy Williams vs. TJP/Fred Yehi EVOLVE 5/6/16 - GREAT
Drew Gulak v. Tracy Williams EVOLVE 5/7/16 - EPIC
Drew Gulak vs. Anthony Nese vs. TJP vs. Lince Dorado vs. Johnny Gargano EVOLVE 6/11/16 - FUN

2019

Drew Gulak vs. Mark Andrews WWE Worlds Collide 1/26/19 - FUN
Drew Gulak vs. Jordan Devlin WWE Worlds Collide 1/26/19 - GREAT
Drew Gulak vs. Matt Riddle NXT 1/30/19 - GREAT
Drew Gulak vs. Eric Bugenhagen NXT 1/30/19 - FUN
Drew Gulak vs. Brian Kendrick WWE 205 Live 2/26/19 - EPIC
Drew Gulak vs. Tony Nese WWE 205 Live 3/12/19 - SKIPPABLE
Drew Gulak/Humberto Carrillo/Jack Gallagher vs. Gran Metalik/Kalisto/Lince Dorado WWE 205 Live 3/26/19 - FUN
Battle Royal WWE 4/4/19 WWE Worlds Collide - FUN
Drew Gulak vs. Humberto Carrillo WWE 205 Live 4/23/19 - FUN
Drew Gulak vs. Tony Nese WWE 205 Live 4/30/19 - GREAT
Drew Gulak vs. Kushida NXT 5/1/19 - FUN
Drew Gulak vs. Kushida NXT 5/18/19 - GREAT
Drew Gulak vs. Akira Tozawa WWE 205 Live 6/4/19 - FUN
Drew Gulak vs. Humberto Carrillo vs. Akira Tozawa vs. Oney Lorcan WWE 205 Live 6/11/19 - EPIC
Drew Gulak/Ariya Daivari/Tony Nese vs. Humberto Carrillo/Gran Metalik/Lince Dorado WWE 205 Live 9/10/19 - FUN
Drew Gulak vs. Braun Strowman WWE Smackdown 10/18/19 - FUN

2021

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