Tuesday is French Catch Day: Corn! Lamare! Peruano! Labat! Straub! Mann!
Sergio Reggiori vs Guy Mercier
SR: Guy Mercier, baby. I have no idea if his uncooperative style and suplexes are due to his legit background or because he was trained in some old philosophy of Catch that was forgotten over the years, but he is awesome to watch even in his young age. There was about 6 minutes of this and it looked like a fantastic match. Reggiori was a prick and Mercier just tried smashing his head in. No idea how French guys had better elbow smashes than anyone now but they looked awesome here. Really liked how Reggiori just dumped Mercier over the top rope like a piece of shit, and the overhead suplex Mercier hit was awesome. Hell of a clip.
MD: Just good, struggle-filled wrestling. Here, they had a lot of time and they used it to create plenty of build which got paid off at the end of long holds and at the end of the falls. That was most evident at the end of the second fall, where Corn managed to get the better of one punishing hold after the next, ending with a long short arm scissors. It was enough to frustrate Lamare and once he finally got out (by sending both of them through the ropes to force a break), he started unloading shots. This let Corn go through the legs and get a pin. In some of the other matches we'd see, that'd be the end of it, and that'd be satisfying because it felt like real storytelling. In this one though, they seemed to always take an extra couple of loops around and that led to one of the best finishing stretches to a fall we've seen full of quick counters and attempts to put each other away. The match was full of extra flourishes. Earlier in the second fall, they set up a pin > bridge > bodyscissors catch spot, that we've seen a bunch, but went around an extra time first by having Corn shoot up suddenly before landing it. Little bits of variation like that matter to me and they had to matter to an audience that regularly watched these matches. There were a few things that I can't remember seeing in 50s Catch here too, a straight up Corn powerbomb (as opposed to a flip or a catch) and great Rude Awakenings, as well as some sort of flipping thing that didn't work out for him as he got caught and powerbombed (which set up the end of the first fall), and Lamare hitting a running (walking) power slam. A big chunk of the third fall was a sort of short leg scissors, where the two were quite tied up before things escalated into bomb throwing, both some of the aforementioned moves and an amazing Lamare flurry of uppercuts, punches, and headbutts against the ropes. Good stuff.
SR: 2/3 falls going about 35 minutes. This was certainly a 35 minute long match that flew by. Jacky Corn seems to be the go to guy at this point for these type of long technical lightweight matches. We won‘t see Lamarre again until 12 years later, and he looked good here. This felt a bit like the Atlantis/Panther of lucha. Jacky Corn may have absolutely no charisma, but you can bet matches with him will have a ton of that clinical French hold for hold styled wrestling. There was a great double leg split spot. Eventually, Corn lost the advantage and the second fall, which lead to him staging this great comeback against Lamarre. Some spots were not hit clean it felt like it needed a bigger crescendo at the end, but if I was to demonstrate the quirks of a technical French bout, this would feel like one of the go-to display objects.
PAS: This was a long technical match, and it is always impressive how much more dynamic the French versions of these matches are then the US versions. This had way more flash and excitement then your average Dory Jr. or Backlund match. Matt is right about the big bomb portion of this match, that Rude Awakening looked nasty and their forearms were about average for French Catch which makes them top 10% ever. All of the rolling leg work in the third fall was really cool, and I thought they did a bunch of cool stuff with the knuckle lock and short arm scissors exchanges. 30 minute plus matches are tough for me at this point of my life, but this kept moving at a nice pace.
PAS: This was a long technical match, and it is always impressive how much more dynamic the French versions of these matches are then the US versions. This had way more flash and excitement then your average Dory Jr. or Backlund match. Matt is right about the big bomb portion of this match, that Rude Awakening looked nasty and their forearms were about average for French Catch which makes them top 10% ever. All of the rolling leg work in the third fall was really cool, and I thought they did a bunch of cool stuff with the knuckle lock and short arm scissors exchanges. 30 minute plus matches are tough for me at this point of my life, but this kept moving at a nice pace.
MD: I really liked this pairing. Peruano is explosiveness and creativity, marred dramatically by a penchant to hang out by the ropes and take every advantage. Labat's the perfect straight man, technically sound, bemused at every moment of cheating and quick to want revenge and often get it. Peruano manages this expertly though, slipping back to the ropes with a scalded dog expression and then, as Labat turns again, only having been able to get in about a third of the damage he wanted to do, bursting back out with a trip or a shot to the back. This was JIP as the announcer was talking to the wrestlers from the later match, but it started with such a burst of energy and abandon before settling down into the format mentioned above. Peruano had such a way of luring an opponent in, drawing him to the ropes so he could shoot him off neck first or, when he could do it, locking in that hanging headscissors, or just setting up a double knucklelock entry that he'd step through over both hands to win the advantage on. Once he got it, he'd sneak in rabbit punches. Labat, on the other hand, just had to get his hands on Peruano cleanly to hit his uppercuts, knee crushers, or everyone's favorite, that trademark shoulder blast. Peruano would just slip through his grasp before long, however. That's why the rolling leg nelson with the stomps and face-rubbing was the most satisfying thing in the world. Even that didn't last long and it ultimately opened him up to Peruano's trademark cradle, though for a nearfall. It was hard to hang on to Inca Peruano for long. Eventually, Peruano just exploded on the arm and locked in the nastiest step over armbar for the win. Peruano is the most watchable guy in all of this footage, I think. You don't want to look away for a moment.
PAS: Peruano is a revelation, what a unique freaky master of a wrestler. The overall skill level in this French footage is so high, but there isn't a giant difference between someone like Labat or Corne or Sola, which can make their matches a bit dry. Peruano is a one of one. He is always attacking from odd angles grabbing legs and arms, slithering out of holds, grabbing roll ups from the bottom. He almost reminds me of a jujitsu master, like watching Demian Maia. That finish was something, he just tears up Labat's arm until trips him and and locks on a violent step over armbar. One of the most dominant finishes we have seen.
MD: Here's another look at Mann (our last) and our first look at Straub, who's listed, like half the people we encounter, as a former champion of France. The first fall was generally very even with both wrestlers quite even and neither keeping a hold for long. I liked Straub's escapes which often had him two movements ahead (he'd work the back to get the head, etc.) and Mann was very good from going from one hold to the next. After Straub went up and over (with a bit more of a headscissors than usual) Mann had enough and unloaded with great hammering forearms. That gave him the total advantage, allowed him to hit a slam and pick up the fall, angering the fans. Mann came out punching after the break, but Straub was ready for him, getting some quick revenge, right until Mann cut it off with a rabbit punch while in a hold. From there, things start to break down, with Mann focusing on the throat and doing that cardinal sin that we saw him do last time, locking in a hold too long after bodily contact. The crowd goes unglued at this and starts launching things at him, including a newspaper, with the front row hammering the ring intensely. They ratchet it up a little more but then Straub comes back with a spin kick, driving Mann to the ropes, where a fan summarily takes a whack at him. The fall continues that way, with Straub locking in triumphant holds and Mann using cheapshots and late grappling until it escalates to a full nelson exchange and roll up. The final fall was more of the same, cheapshots by Mann and big moments of comeuppance from Straub. Towards the end, a woman rushes to ringside brandishing a cigarette and hammers the mat and it sums things up as well as anything else. We all love short arm scissors around these parts so for the finish to be one that rolls back and forth was equal parts tremendous and underwhelming considering the other holds we see in most of these matches. I think that was part of the point though. Mann just got all the more heat for submitting to it and avoiding more punishment. Straub was fine and could substitute for a lot of the babyfaces we've seen, but Mann was masterful in manipulating this crowd. It was amazing how much heat he could get for just doing a basic action at a time when the crowd absolutely thought he should be keeping his distance. It's also amazing that so few other wrestlers we've seen have gone to that length. That, in part, opens the door. If every heel did it in every match, it wouldn't stand out. When you get a foreigner coming in and just stomping all over the accepted norms, that's huge heat though.
PAS: Man oh man Tommy Mann. He is the grandfather of that British asskicker style, Finlay's great uncle, Terry Rudge's mean stepdad. Just a heat seeking asskicker. He riles up the crowd by crowning Straub with vicious uppercuts, forearms and stomps and holding every hold a bit too long. The crowd goes bat shit throwing shit into the ring and pounding the mat, I am surprised no one took a swing at him. Straub was there mostly to be an opponent, but his rolling short arm scissors was an appropriate triumph of good over evil.
Labels: French Catch, Inca Peruano, Jacky Corne, Jo Labat, Luc Straub, Ted Lamare, Tommy Mann
6 Comments:
Since my review of Reggiori/Mercier got lost apparently:
Guy Mercier vs. Serge Reggiori (8/23/1958)
Guy Mercier, baby. I have no idea if his uncooperative style and suplexes are due to his legit background or because he was trained in some old philosophy of Catch that was forgotten over the years, but he is awesome to watch even in his young age. There was about 6 minutes of this and it looked like a fantastic match. Reggiori was a prick and Mercier just tried smashing his head in. No idea how French guys had better elbow smashes than anyone now but they looked awesome here. Really liked how Reggiori just dumped Mercier over the top rope like a piece of shit, and the overhead suplex Mercier hit was awesome. Hell of a clip.
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Mercier/Reggiori purveyors of pain come to fuck each other up
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Hi Guys does anyone have any clips of Tommy Mann fighting. I have seen the one with Straub. He was my Dad but we don't have any clips of his fights. Cheers in advance
Hey, glad you found this one. There was only one other match in the collection, but it's another good one. We covered it here:
http://segundacaida.blogspot.com/2020/05/tuesday-is-french-catch-day-mann.html?m=1
and the youtube link is there as well. He's been great to watch as he really knows how to get the crowd going. It's a shame we don't have more of his matches, but I'm glad that these two were recorded and that you get to see them.
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