Segunda Caida

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

Monday, October 30, 2023

AEW Five Fingers of Death 10/23 - 10/29

AEW Dynamite 10/25/23

Bryan Danielson/Claudio Castagnoli vs Orange Cassidy/Kazuchika Okada

MD: Let's talk about intent though we'll take the long way to get there. I'm bad at lists. I'm bad at ranking things. I'm bad at star ratings. I get that even the C+A version of Skippable/Fun/Great/Epic would probably be useful to people for these AEW matches or what we did with Catch or whatever, but that's just not the way I'm set up. I'm much more into looking for patterns and trying to understand the nuts and bolts of what makes things work. I'm also not as much of an execution guy as some of my esteemed peers. Good execution helps more than bad execution hurts. However, I'll certainly hold it against a wrestler/match if he does something beyond his own physical abilities or beyond the abilities of the wrestlers combined to make feel somehow organic and natural. In a lot of ways, that goes back to theory, to mapping out what will be done, either in the back or in the moment. I imagine Erik might have some controversial things to say about Okada's execution here and that would make for a good article but it's not my lane, not really.

I'm also not one to just hunt for the greatest matches. You learn a lot from the things in the cracks. You learn a lot from matches that are never positioned for that sort of established, star-adorned greatness. I think a lot about purpose and situational understanding. What can you learn from a squash? What can you learn from a ten minute TV match meant to set up something else? What about a house show? A tag vs a trios vs a triple threat? A gimmick match? A match building off of limb damage vs more of a bomb throwing sprint? And yeah, a main event title match too? But we're never all the way in. We never know exactly what we don't know. For instance, I don't know when Bryan Danielson got injured. Was it off of Andrade's back elbow on Collision? Was it off of Okada's pancake that Taz was wincing all over the place on? Was it really somewhere in the Orange Punch/Rainmaker? Did he work the whole match hurt? Was he even hurt at all (he likes to lie, remember)? 

Here's another one we don't know: How long ago was the match planned? Okada's schedule is what it is. Danielson's just coming back from injury and only has so much time left so it makes sense to hotshot matches that might have been held off on otherwise. Cassidy's program with the BCC seemed more or less over until Moxley's injury. Basketball's back so they needed a big base-popping match to try to keep the ratings steady given the competition. This match might have set up Danielson vs Okada at WrestleKingdom. It did set up Claudio vs Cassidy at Dynamite. It's probably a step on the road to Cassidy vs Moxley. 

So there's a lot we don't know. Does that matter to your individual enjoyment of the match? Maybe. Maybe not. For me, the context matters, because I am personally curious just what the circumstances of the match are and how well the wrestlers manage to accomplish their goals. That's a driving force in how I look at a match. The brain doesn't shut off. I'm not ranking anything here. I'm not just thinking of greatness for the sake of greatness. So, even putting aside the potential injury and potential frustration for the matches lost to a future that is quickly slipping away, I'm left to primarily engage with the text itself. That's not unusual for me. A lot of the matches for Found Footage Friday end up like that. Some of the Panama matches do. Most of the Catch matches did. It's one reason I'm so thoroughly enjoying Esteban's putting all of the Puerto Rico matches in context.

There are things we can know from the text. This wasn't Orange Cassidy's match. He was a cog in the machine. It elevated him to be in this spot. It continued his story to a degree. He was there to eat the fall to set up the Claudio match. This was an attraction match, however. It was the local star and Mil Mascaras or Andre the Giant against some of the top heels. In this case, the heels were tweeners who could go either way, but the idea was the same. Moreover, it was set to build to one key exchange at the end, Bryan vs Okada, before giving way to the coda of Claudio vs Cassidy that would set up what was to come. That meant we got Danielson vs Cassidy to start but also that we didn't get much of it. Danielson didn't engage with Cassidy's theatrics. He just went right at him instead. It was almost like we didn't have the interaction between them at all. It wasn't even a tease for what might have been; it was a mauling that defied it but that also didn't deny the possibility that it might some day exist, that if given the time and the space and the opportunity, Cassidy might get under Danielson's skin. It was almost defensive, as if Danielson was afraid to open that door and see what might be behind it. In a tag setting, he was able to get away with that. In a singles setting, things might be different.

It let them tease out Claudio vs Okada, strength and size vs star power and presence. It let them bear down on Cassidy during the commercial break, and it finally built to Danielson and Okada facing off with one another and the pop that went with it. From that hot tag on, they rolled into an extended finishing stretch. They kept quite a few interesting beginning and middle bits for this sort of a match on the table for some other time and built instead to the duel moment of the camera cut outs for Okada and then the hug, before paying off the Punch/Rainmaker combo and the swing and setting things up for next week. As a stop on the road, it was satisfying. As a first encounter between Danielson and Cassidy, it was lacing. As a second 2023 encounter between Danielson and Okada, it was only a tease. As a set up for Claudio vs Cassidy (and potentially for future BCC matches with Okada), it was entirely effective. As a clutch TV main event you could never get anywhere else, it felt special. As a dream match, it was probably lacking. To some degree, every match exists in multiple states in this way. This one, however, just happens to be worse than most.

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Saturday, October 28, 2023

Found Footage Friday: DUSTY, JR.~! EIGEN~! OKUMA~! GYPSY JOE~! FUJI~! HENNIG~!


Mr. Fuji vs. Curt Hennig WWF (Kuwait) 1982

MD: There are plenty of things that are interesting about these Kuwait matches. Often times they're on smaller cards with smaller crews and need to go longer than what you'd see even at MSG and sometimes with hierarchy slightly off because the shows have to make do with what they have. They're also in front of crowds that are game but maybe less familiar than the New York faithful. Sometimes that lets a wrestler lean into strength, like Roddy trying to cause a riot or Putski doing as much as possible with as little as possible and being super over in the process.

Sometimes you get a match like this which is eighteen minutes, and maybe eight too long, and that's with us coming in just a bit JIP, which means we lose a little bit of the opening shine. Almost immediately, Fuji takes out the eyes with a foreign object and the next ten minutes or so are Fuji working nerve lock with Hennig working up, hitting some dynamic piece of offense and then immediately Barry Houston-ing himself with some huge bump (missed dropkick, dive through the ropes, giant dive onto Fuji's knees, all starting with that huge spasming sell of the eyes).

All of that works pretty well, if only because Fuji's such a jerk, perfect for this crowd, and because Hennig is so far over the top with everything he does. When he finally punches up, however, they go into what should probably be a finishing stretch, but because they're so far from home, they can't go home. It just lingers for minutes after that, with Hennig locking in a long front facelock. Mercifully, Fuji eventually goes back to the object, allowing Hennig to get it and get revenge on Fuji's eyes. He stooges around the ring blindly, all but beckons Hennig over to hit an elbow drop, and they land the plane with maybe the only 80s abdominal stretch I've ever see end a match (with some great exhausted selling from Fuji on a close up). I like seeing wrestlers facing challenges like this to see how they react. I wouldn't say this passed with flying colors but there was a pretty good twelve minute match in this eighteen minute frame.


Mark Scarpa/Dusty Rhodes Jr. vs. Haruka Eigen/Motoshi Okuma AJPW 6/5/90

MD: This is more Found than New, but it was buried on a tape list for quite a while, long enough for some of us to be ready to state our appreciation for Eigen and Okuma at least. This one showed that their act was probably a little dependent upon their opponents (I have new respect for Rusher after it) but it was also a good match for Dustin to be in to learn a thing or two. Dustin was billed as Dusty Jr. here. Not every punch hit exactly how you'd like, but overall, he was well on his way. His size was absolutely noticeable against Okuma and Eigen and let him take a lot of the match, maybe more than ultimately was enjoyable since they're so good at getting scuzzy heat.

Scarpa was, of course, Jay Youngblood's kid, also Mark Young. He had an Evel Knievel thing going with his gear and did some breakdancing arm movements that had the announcers calling him a "squishy pose" man. Eigen did play off of that amusingly. In general, for a guy that had over 150 matches at this point, a lot of them on WWF house shows against name opponents, and that had 15 matches on this tour already to get used to the AJPW rings, he was jarringly bad at getting whipped into the ropes. It's something that you take for granted with almost anyone you see at this level (especially that made it to an All Japan tour). Sometimes it might have been part of a spot Okuma wanted to do, such as missing a leaping headbutt and wiping out, but even that didn't look like it should have. He was capable at other times and took a great bump off of Okuma's head in the corner, for instance, but it's hard not to remember those whips.

So without heat and with Scarpa offering a little bit of sizzle but not too much else, the big draw here is just to see Dustin fit into the Eigen and Okuma show. That meant hitting elbows to little effect early given Okuma's hard head but being able to floor him late with the full flip, flop, and fly, or doing the spit spot on the apron with Eigen, increasingly realizing what he had until he hammed it up for the crowd bigtime on the third smack to the chest.

ER: Matt and I, big Eigen and Okuma guys, were excited for this one, and even though it's probably more exciting on paper than in execution, this is the Exact Kind Of Shit I Like. Matt might not know this, but I was a major Mark Young Guy when I was 7 and 8 years old. Before I knew what a job guy was, Mark Young was my favorite job guy. Even I, a 7 year old, figured out quickly which WWF wrestlers were going to be winning matches on WWF weekend TV. If one man was named The Widow Maker and then other man was named Dennis Allen, I was smart enough to know that things were about to go poorly for Dennis (especially once I asked my dad what a widow was and what "makes" widows). But Mark Young was the job guy who got more offense, and occasionally got close pinfalls. He looked like a guy who was primed to get a win, and I was excited to see him get that win. He also did breakdancing and flips, and that shit certainly didn't make me like him any less. Watching him with adult eyes, he basically looks like Dave Meltzer and runs the ropes like a guy in his first week of wrestling school. 

But that's okay! While it is alarming how poorly literally any spot that required him to run the ropes went (this All Japan tour came after he had already been working the WWF house show/TV circuit for at least a year) I thought it was impressive how well the match worked. Eigen and Okuma were in there with a gangly 6'6" large adult cowboy baby and a breakdancing goofball who couldn't properly run, and Dustin/Scarpa provide two of the most uniquely odd opponents I have ever seen Eigen and Okuma deal with. I loved every single instance of Eigen getting almost Actually Upset by Scarpa's breakdancing. Eigen is angry that he even has to attempt to lock up with a man who is wiggling his arms like Plastic Man. I loved all of Okuma's headbutts, especially how Eigen would run Dustin and Scarpa across the ring to slam them face first into Okuma's head. Scarpa was so weird, because he couldn't begin to understand Irish whips, but he actually had really impressive bumps. I loved how he bumped and sold after being run into Okuma's head. When Okuma ran at him with a headbutt to the stomach, I loved how Scarpa fell to his butt. Scarpa also had a really incredible sunset flip, leaping to the top rope and twisting in midair to glide perfectly over Eigen. It looked like a legit finisher, and also created a great moment where Eigen was not there and Scarpa just flipped off the top onto nothing. 

Dustin was mostly in there to be the son of Dusty Rhodes. Is it kind of weird that Scarpa didn't also go by Jay Strongbow Jr.? It's probably because Strongbow was a WWF guy who really didn't wrestle much in Japan, so they wouldn't recognize whatever family offense Scarpa would have been doing. They recognize Dustin doing the jabs and hard Dusty elbow to Okuma. Eigen/Dustin was a fun pairing and after Dustin took a tough bump to the floor, hitting the apron on his way down, I actually bit at Eigen's tope feint. Eigen got such a head of steam that I actually thought this man was hitting a tope into the large target of Dusty Rhodes Jr.  I was NOT expecting Dustin to facilitate Eigen spitting into the crowd. I don't think gaijin usually got involved in that spot. It's almost always one of Eigen's peers, and I wish I had behind the scenes footage either explaining the intricacies of the spot to Dustin, or letting Dustin know he would be trusted enough to have the honor of facilitating Haruka Eigen spitting all over Chiba salarymen. 


Gypsy Joe vs. Hot Rod Biggs (First Blood) Hardcore Championship Wrestling 1997(?)

MD: This is the main event starting around the 1:38:00 mark. Gypsy Joe was mid-sixties at this point and he had a series of matches with Biggs. This is the one we've dropped in on as it's a recent upload. It's First Blood, which, as best as I can tell, meant that Joe could win, but Biggs could still be protected due to the haphazard nature of "First" and especially get his heat back post-match by really laying out Joe and opening him up.

There's a real art to an old pro being able to hold court in the center of the ring and having his opponent create motion. In order to make this work, things have to look credible, the fans have to respect the old lion, and everyone has to be dedicated to the act. Jose Lothario in Houston was amazing at this and I've seen Lawler manage it pretty well before his stroke. Joe and Biggs do great with it here, with Biggs coming at him again and again only to feed and fall. The flip side of this is the post-match beatdown, where it feels like an real heat-drawing affront that Biggs is doing so much damage to someone so old and beloved and (from a kayfabe perspective at least) admirable.


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Thursday, October 26, 2023

El Deporte de las Mil Emociones: Master List

MD: I wanted to get this up early. The sheer size of the posts means that blogspot is having a hard time even if you can access the tag. I think, a few weeks in, I also have a little more of a sense of what this project is. So much of that, so far, has been driven by the Puerto Rico footage we have available to us. Right now we (mostly Esteban!) have been telling the story of 1989's feuds and on-screen and in-arena narratives. When these lead to a big match we have included it. Between language barriers, footage constraints, and the legwork not having been done previously, this project is providing a new context that will help people follow along for what is an underexamined era. That'll be only more true as we continue on into 1990. Thanks for reading along so far and please do share this with anyone you think will find it interesting.

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Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Kakuto Tanteidan: We Are Fighting Detectives 10/12/23



Hideki Suzuki vs. Yu Iizuka

PAS: Iizuka is young GLEAT UWFI guy whose nickname is Volk Kid, that is sort of like Harold Miner calling himself Baby Jordan or Gary Trent being nicknamed Shaq of the MAC, you are never going to live up to that and shouldn't make the comparison. Still Miner and Trent could both ball, and Iizuka can go a bit on the mat. Suzuki is a venerated veteran and after his ill-fated and truly bizarre NXT run (he is up there with Brazo de Plata and Meiko Satomura as some of the odder people to get a WWE run) has been one of the most dependable wrestlers in Japan. This really had the feel of some of the under the radar killer FU-TEN and Battlarts openers. Iizuka is more of an offensive wrestler, flashily spinning into cool submissions, including a great triangle choke. Meanwhile Suzuki is a grinder, he pressed his weight into Iizuka trying to make him feel force the entire match, until he maneuvered him into side control, flattened him out and just put him down with hammer and anvil elbows. Great example of exuberance of youth getting played by a old master. Suzuki doesn't have the charisma of Fujiwara but that felt like a very Fujiwarish performance.

TKG: This didn't really vibe with me. Suzuki starts with an insanely stiff dropkick. I don't know how many times I rewound the drop kick Suzuki works this match like a big bruiser: In theory this is guy with a ton of technique working a guy who outmatches him in strength. But it never really worked for me. They stayed in subs way to long and I never bought the idea that IIzuka dominating with his finesse, or that Suzuki was ever in danger. Suzuki did look like a hoss.


Hikaru Sato/Brother YASSHI vs. Ikuto Hidaka/Thanomsak Toba

TKG: I haven’t seen any of these guy’s in ages. Hidaka has aged facially into looking like Wings era Paul Mcartney but hasn’t slowed down a bit. In Memphis , you’d put him in a mask and push him as new challenger. Toba has aged into looking like not so much a boxer as a British Music Hall performer working as a boxer in Punch and Judy panto. Real Benny Hill vibes that I enjoyed, Brother Yasshi has gone from guy in dreads who listens to Vybez Kartel to a guy with dreads who listens to Buffet ( may his memory be a blessing). He unfortunately also works like a Parrothead. I don’t remember Sato being this level of goofy goon. Just goonish selling and work and really selling idea that he was overwhelmed and out of his element. Like Tully with Luger and when he was in this it was really fun.


PAS: Toba was a total beast in this, throwing not only straight punches, but hooks and uppercuts, the spot of the match was Toba dropping Sato with a check hook, or it might have been YASSHI throwing coconut headbutts and Toba responding with heavy punches. I liked the Sato vs. Hidaka sections too, fast tricky exchanges with enough violence to be appropriate, Hidaka's shots were more speed then force, but the speed looked good, and Sato maneuvering into the armbard was pretty sick. Battlarts would have this killer undercard tags, and this was in that spirit.


Super Tiger vs. Keita Yano

TKG:Super Tiger and Keita Yano are both guys who had worked actual Battlarts. Was a point where felt Super Tiger was only good there. Yano I didn’t much care for in Battlarts but has become a guy I like outside of it. This was Yano as guy who can absolutely control Tiger with wrestling for whole match while Super Tiger is guy who can hit a kick or sub to end it at any moment. I dug this more than the opener for guy controlling match but not able to close vs bigger stronger opponent. It’s weird to have 2 of those on the undercard so close. Super Tiger isn’t as charismatic or impressive as Suzuki, But I bought into this one, bought Yano’s ability to turn Tiger upside down and twist up…and loved the real taunting and fucking with Tiger. The reckless back scratch that made Super Tiger lose his composure and step up his aggression was neat point where you knew Super Tiger wanted to end it now.

PAS: I think I liked this a little less then Tom, I thought there was some good looking stuff, I loved the Yano roll into the LaBell lock, and some of his other arm control, but thought other stuff by both guys didn't look as good. Super Tiger is really hit or miss, some of his kicks looked good and others wiffed, and I really want a KO kick on a show with Daisuke Ikeda, Toba and that main event to look way nastier. 


Daisuke Ikeda/Minoru Fujita vs. Daisuke Sekimoto/Yuki Ishikawa

TKG: Is this the biggest hottest crowd Ishikawa and Ikeda have worked their match in. Fujita/Hidaka once was an exciting pairing and I think Sekimoto had adjusted to this style in the past. But this started Fujita and Sekimoto really working like they were the local indy guys in a Santo/N8 Mattison v Blue Panther/Conrad Kennedy III match in Flint; with Fujita and Sekimoto just working a match independently of what else going on-like they didn’t get it. I dug the early everyone simmering part of match and then Sekimoto/Fujita ran their spots and I wish someone could have picked Usuda and Ono up from the reteirement village. Ikeda and Sekimoto hit double headbut that knocked both to ground and where it looked like Sekimoto might have lost a tooth. It super picked from there and was amazing when it was cooking.

For your old guy brawlers to have a transcendent match; they have to either do Black Terry v Mr Condor Zona 23, or the 2018 Fugofugo Yumeji/Buki v. Ishikawa/Joeta. Either “two guys laying a hellacious beating where in end it changes neither of them and they will continue beating on each other forever cause this is what they do” or “two guys engage in such a helacious beating that you think they will be changed forever,,,will never fully recover”. This wasn’t either of those but there were so many moments that teased they were going to reach transcendence. The point where Ikeda is chopping the top of Ishikawa’s head and Ishikawa ansers with punches to eye and temple, there is what almost felt like an enziguri to knee that ends up being a trip into submission ,,,,and both of these guys are so great at selling that they could make me buy Scott Putski Jr axehandle as taking something out of them. And the finish felt totally credible. Clearly not criticizing a match for not being transcendent,,,I’m praising it for these mother fuckers are still able to tease that it could be.

MD:This worked for my sense of anticipation, at least. I wanted Ishikawa vs Ikeda in this setting in front of this crowd for this moment and they did a good job delaying it for most of the match until they paired up for the finishing stretch. That included heat, of sorts, on Sekimoto, with Ikeda more than happy to rush across the ring when he wasn't legal to pepper shots in on him or knock Ishikawa off the apron. Fujita and Sekimoto built to throws, cutoffs, and counters, before they decided to pay things off for the crowd with Ishikawa and Ikeda. Even then, things didn't really boil over though. More than that, it felt like watching two great old chess masters do their thing at a table in a city park. The stakes weren't there. Glory had passed them. But they were masters and familiar with one another. You just happened to be there for their weekly routine. In this case, the routine was two guys pushing each other to their physical, technical limit and punching one another in the face. But overall, same idea. Ishikawa had a clear advantage and it was just a case of Sekimoto German Suplexing an interfering Fujita enough times for him to really press it.

PAS: Really awesome Ishikawa performance, he has a bad back and can't even stand up straight, but can still throw brutal straight hands and grapple like a master. Every time he was in the ring he elevated the match, the Fujita and Sekimoto against each other parts didn't do a ton for me, but Ishikawa taking Fujita down to the mat to stretch him ruled. Ikeda is more limited at this point of his career, the recent Ikeda stuff will have moments, but he isn't going full force like he did even pre-pandemic in WXW, still you could see the glances, and his selling is still tremendous. This felt a little like late era Dundee and Lawler stuff, where it was mindblowing like it was in their prime, but you could still see the shades and shadows of brilliance. 


Fuminori Abe vs. Takuya Nomura

PAS: This promotion was a joint production by these two tag team partners and close friends, and they matched up in the main event in an attempt to do justice to what came before. Abe started the match with a bit of clowning, mugging and shit talking, biting Norma in the armpit to break a submission hold, using some hand feints to land a hard slap, and even giving Norma an oil check in the rear to counter a knee bar. Ikeda would do this sort of thing in the classic BattlArts days as a way to rile his opponent up. Nomura was much more serious and responded to the clowning with brutal kicks and slaps. Fun times ended pretty quickly after that as they exchanged cringy clunking headbutts. It was harrowing violence going forward, hard punches to the forehead, kicks to the spine and headbutts so nasty that they eventually split Abe open. Abe has these cool chopping overhand punches which look like Harley Race when he was trying to split someone’s eyebrow. Normura hit some really big suplexes near the end of the match as Abe was fading and it looked like he going to be counted out, until he caught a Nomura high kick and turned into a ankle lock, and then an ankle lock german suplex. He then put on an octopus stretch, which Normua countered into a single leg crab. Abe then faked grabbing a rope break and instead rolled it into a kneebar which he cranked for the tap. Very cool counter wrestling. This didn’t have the mat wrestling mastery of a high end BattlArts era Ishikawa or Carl Greco singles match, or the brain smashi`        ng suplexes of Otuska, and while it was sickly stiff, I am not sure if they got all the way to Ikeda. So this topped out at the level of a high end Katsumi Usuda match, which in 2023 still puts it right up there with the best stuff anywhere in the world. Let’s hope this is a semi-regular thing, because this style hasn’t really had a home since FU-TEN folded in 2015, and I just love this stuff.

TKG: I at this point peripherally follow US wrestling and stick with low end lucha gym show, so this is my first experience with these two. And dude, this is a great introduction. I’m assuming that Nomura is the
Jackie Fargo Incomparable Kid to Abe’s Wild Roughouse Fargo. Abe is super super charismatic as crazy
Roughouse never-say die hardheaded fighter. And I enjoy all the Dennis Condrey forgets not to hit
Burrhead Jones in the head spots…I don’t know anything about Japanese racial caste so I can claim
ignorance of the if there are any of the ugly implications of those spots, but great spots. I think my
favorite Abe section was the thing where he used a dragon screw to transition to offense, celebrates
the dragon screw with big arm flourish and then realizes that he can’t feel his mouth and eyes cross and
uncross as he drools all over himself over the beating he just ate. I’m so used to insane never say die guy
being matched up against a guy going “what is it going to take to put him away” or “ how have I become
so violent” that refreshing not to see that. Nomura is a guy on his own journey There are lots of neat
moments where Nomura is slow to answer Abe’s strikes; forces himself to eat a bunch of strikes before
he can throw out one answer, moments where he can’t muster any strength behind his strikes and so
just throws weak ones and keeps on measuring for the eventual big make or miss haymaker, He does a
bunch of Dustin style flying away for distance selling and one of my favorite things he does is all of his
walking around ring , recovering in corner during count outs and 10 counts. When I say a guy with his
own journey, I would actively enjoy “ A How To with John Wilson” edit of this match, where never get to
see the fighting parts..just Nomura’s walkabout as he contemplates life. Ending had a lot of nearfalls,
but I bought all of them and the actual finish felt 100 % like a finish.

MD: Abe's energy in this match was off the charts. I'm not going to say the guy was living his best life here because he ended up split open at the top of his head in a way that you figured his flesh might just fall off of him at any moment, just torn in two, but talk about a guy who can capture every moment. Nomura wrestled his best match, the perfect straight man who was going to drive forward at every point and give absolutely no quarter. The few times he popped up from a shot or a throw, you believed it. This guy was just a consumed engine of destruction, kicking and stomping and wrenching like he could somehow stamp the very notion of indignity itself out of the world through force alone.

Abe brought the color though, literally and figuratively, his expressiveness drawing the viewer in, at times making you want to see his comeuppance and increasingly down the stretch, making you root for him in spite of increasingly dire odds. You end up grinning along with him to start and then wincing along with him with every headbutt, elbow, knee, and kick. When it became apparent just how badly he was opened up, the camera caught his expression and it was a real "You'll never believe how I got into this one" look. From there, even as he threw strikes and struck out with increasingly unlikely throws, it felt like he was racing time, racing the rate of his own bloodloss and with an opponent like Nomura running the race with him, he was sure to lose. That's what made the last hold all the more gripping. Abe was hanging on for dear life; nothing less would have worked. It was an admirable performance by Nomura, but a timeless one from Abe.




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Monday, October 23, 2023

AEW Five Fingers of Death 10/16 - 10/22

AEW Collision 10/21/23

Bryan Danielson vs Andrade el Idolo

MD: I'm going to pass on the battle royal. There were a couple of cute bits (even some involving Dustin) but nothing I feel the need to write about. 

I don't have a strong "in" on this one either. What it showed me, more than anything else, is that we missed out on another heel run from Danielson due to injuries in 2023. It would have done the elite feud a world of good for a heel Danielson to be able to be on some of the TV matches leading to Anarchy in the Arena or Blood and Guts. It's unlikely, given that he's on his end-of-fulltime-career odyssey right now that we'll really see him get to go full heel over the next nine months either. This match, where he's up against a guy determined to stand as a babyface when LFI is right there waiting for him, let him stretch those January 2022 muscles a bit though. 

This started out clean. It almost felt a little like a lucha match in its own way. They started chain wrestling (first set of exchanges) and escalated into rope running (second set) before things boiled over with Danielson throwing a chop, Andrade following suit, and Danielson escalating further with the kicks. Who knows if they had Mistico vs Rocky on their mind. Once Danielson took out the arm, though, things really opened up. That included the jumping jacks during the commercial break with Andrade rushing in,  hot-headed, which is about the only time I've seen that actually get under someone's skin (other than the crowd's) during his AEW run. The problem was, and this is going to be a problem for the next year if Danielson ever wants to lean this way, that the crowd wanted to chant for him. You'd get either "This is awesome" chants or "Danielson"/"Bryan." To be fair, Andrade has been a heel for so much of the last few years that while he's fought valiantly against the House of Black or Bullet Club Gold, I don't think the fans really buy into it yet. We'll see if the Miro feud changes that. My guess is that they get behind Miro; the Andretti match later in the night was very smartly put together but the fans kept on chanting for Miro despite it. 

I really liked the transition towards the comeback and finishing stretch. Danielson threw that right arm clothesline (not exactly a Danielson staple) a week or two ago. He's got the Luger-implant now, the bionic arm, and it gives him one extra narrative weapon to throw around, potentially a KO blow in a way that you wouldn't normally expect from a guy his size and style. Andrade ducked it though, which brought them into the stretch. Pulling back to last week's review, Bryan had me a little worried after the back elbow. It was just the way some of those first few roll-ups went. Fool me twice, shame on me, I guess, but it'll probably keep working again and again until All In next year. Danielson's doing amazing work; you can see here how he chose to work this one a darker shade of grey. I'd hate to lose even one potential match while we still have him like this.

Eddie Kingston vs Jeff Jarret

MD: First and foremost, the execution here was top notch. Eddie was excellent throughout, acting, reacting, being the valiant hero, fist-busting Dave Brown, standing up to the odds as defiantly as possible, and creating all the big moments. Jarrett was a big, blustery, over the top villain, willing to take every insult Eddie was going throw at him, physical, emotional, or otherwise. All of Jarrett's coterie played their parts well. Sometimes that meant Sonjay running into a fist and sometimes it meant Lethal hitting a cutter through a table.

It was just the theory that was off. It's one thing to do a tribute. It's another to shove it down people's throats. I know that Jarrett lived it. Given the timing, Tony almost certainly had the DVDVR Memphis set and sure, Eddie had Memphis' Bloodiest Matches, but this felt like a copy of a copy of a copy. At some point, you lose fidelity. What made Memphis so special was that the chaos erupted around a steady baseline. Lance was master of ceremonies just trying to run a TV show (or Eddie Marlin trying to run an arena show) and the pressure created by these insane characters and their penchant for uncontrollable violence tore at the seams of the format. The characters were insane, but instead of things happening organically, this played out like the characters running through an elaborately designed set piece. It was more like the final stage of Double Dare, than the sort of streetfight you'd want between Jarrett and Kingston. 

That they went to the concession stand in Tupelo was a symptom of what was going on, not the disease itself. As with things that have been mythologized over the years, the underlying meaning and associated sensation, which are almost always more important than the trappings themselves, get lost in translation. So while there was blood, mustard, and tables, it all felt like a parody awash in sports entertainment instead of pure pro wrestling mayhem. That it still managed to work at all was down to the performances of the wrestlers.

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Saturday, October 21, 2023

All Time MOTY List Head to Head 2004: Kawada vs. Hashimoto VS. Necro vs. Klein


Shinya Hashimoto vs. Toshiaki Kawada AJPW 2/22/04 

ER: This is the definition of Dream Match wrestling with actual, real purpose and incredible execution. Beyond being one of the biggest one-off dream matches in wrestling history, the fact that both men worked the exact brutal match that everyone viewing it as a dream match would want to see just cements its legendary status. Hashimoto beat Great Muta for the Triple Crown Title almost exactly a year before this match, but badly injured his shoulder in a July 2003 tag match opposite Kawada, and wound up vacating the Triple Crown due to that ongoing shoulder issue. Kawada never actually beat Hashimoto for the Triple Crown - he beat Mike Awesome and Shinjiro Ohtani in a tournament - so this match was the showdown every single fan wanted to see happen the second Hash won the Triple Crown. Since vacating that title due to his shoulder, Hashimoto continued working through the injury until it got so bad that it inadvertently lead to his death, when the necessary surgery required him to stop taking his heart medication. But now, nearly 8 months after first injuring it and much worse for wear, that shoulder is wrapped up with a trainer's room worth of KT tape, and in classic puro tradition would be targeted in the most sadistic ways. 

Hashimoto takes a logically sound wrestling psychology approach to the match by targeting Kawada's knee, whereas Kawada opts for a straight ahead vicious approach by aiming to destroy Hashimoto's shoulder and set the snowball rolling fast down the hill towards his death. While it's entirely unfair to say that Toshiaki Kawada murdered Shinya Hashimoto, Toshiaki Kawada murdered Shinya Hashimoto. The selling from both is incredible from stoic beginning to white towel finish, starting with Hash selling Kawada's first kick with the same disinterest as a man scrolling his phone while eating a half sandwich in his work break room, and while he's wobbled down to a knee after walking into a Kawada crescent kick, it's not before he cups Kawada's ear with a slap so hard that Kawada's ear starts leaking blood. When someone's ear is bleeding a couple minutes in, you'd think that would be the most violent thing you were going to see, and they spend 15 minutes trying to top it. 

There is a hamstring-knotting kick exchange so hard that after a half dozen of them their plant legs and kicking legs are both stiffening up, and we get one of those unparalleled Kawada leg wobbles, which Hash stops short with a leg sweep that looked like it would explode any mortal man's achilles. Hashimoto's dissection of Kawada's knee is done with the confidence of a man who is not advertising to the world that his shoulder is currently constructed of milk-soaked graham crackers, as he stomps on it, sits on it, jumps on it, and kicks at his tendons. The best part about Hashimoto's stomps is that he's not stomping on Kawada's knee the way a pro wrestler would, he's stomping on that knee like it's the biggest cockroach he's ever seen on his kitchen floor. Except Hashimoto does not fear this cockroach, he loathes this cockroach, and wants nothing more than to splatter its viscera across his tile. Also, he is in somebody else's house acting like a total asshole, and you can only get away with that for so long. 

Hashimoto gets away with it until he tries for an o goshi hip throw, and realizes what he's done when Kawada plants and pulls. Hash is now fighting to not get backdropped onto his shoulder - the way a man with a debilitating shoulder injury who is desperately trying to avoid surgery would - before being deadlifted completely against his will, his shoulder taking the entire brunt of the fall. You know when you try so hard to avoid a pothole that you end up driving right through it? Brother, Hashimoto's shoulder hit that pothole dead on. Kawada is now the mechanic who recognizes how fucked Hashimoto's suspension is, and he's gonna price gouge him hard. Now it's his turn, and he yanks on that shoulder, leaps onto it with his knees, kicks at it like a heavy bag. His knee is still shaky but not perilously so, and he runs the length of the ring to jam a boot as hard as he can into that shoulder, then whips his boot across the back of Hash's head with an enziguiri so strong that it sends Hash into a staggering Sean Salmon plunge, a reference almost as old as this match. 

Kawada's Stretch Plum with Hashimoto's shoulder as the focal point of all the pressure looks like one of the most painful holds ever applied. The wounded, anguished face of Hash as Kawada kicks his shoulder around the ring, is gutting. He looks like a mastodon who knows he's dying but merely attempting to stay on his feet due to animal survival instinct. That flame in his eyes as he finally catches one of those legs and slashes downward on Kawada's knee, and how he takes immense aggrieved pleasure in sizing up a huge roundhouse left to Kawada's chest after, is a reminder that even dying mastodon's have those lethal tusks. His brainbuster has incredible lift and spike, and is capped off by Hashimoto screaming like a railroad spike got driven into his shoulder on landing. That scream is the scream of a mortally wounded man and you can see him hit the pedal from there, going hard with high lefts to Kawada's chest and high rights to the back of his head, Kawada doing a full wobble legged teetering sell, cross-footed across the ring, the vacant expression of a man whose upper torso just weathered the hardest kicks of a 22 year career. 

But when Kawada manages to pull the Stretch Plum again, you know it's over. Hashimoto knows it's over but pride won't allow him to actually say so, a man who stood until he couldn't, towel thrown in as Zero-1's literal meal ticket takes years off his career by refusing to submit. We know one man did irreparable damage to his body in this match, but the selling is so next level that it feels like a match neither man would ever recover from. To that point, this was the last elite performance of either man's career. We didn't know that Hashimoto had only 60 matches left and that his last singles matches would be against King Dabada and UPW owner Rick Bassman. Kawada became more of a 2000s Taue who would turn it up in one big match or two every year, but never endured anything else like he did here. 


PAS: These two spent the 90s on parallel paths, a pair of killers slicing their way through the rosters of their respective promotions with vicious kicks. I was an active fan of Japanese wrestling during the primes of both wrestlers. I started getting video tapes from a local Japanese video store and quickly dove into the world of tape trading. This was the dream match I most wanted to see in 1994, a pair of threshing machines aimed at each other to see who would get chopped up. By the time we finally saw it 10 years later, they had mostly been threshed. Hashimoto's shoulder is cooked, Kawada's knees are toast; they are much closer to the end of it all than the beginning, which is what made this match so compelling. 

These aren't the two baddest dogs in the yard anymore. Their bodies don't work, but in their hearts and minds they can still deliver at that level, and they are going to rip each other into tiny pieces to prove it. The selling in this match is incredible, although I am not sure how much of it is selling. Kawada sells as if his knee is being destroyed, but his knee actually is being destroyed; Hashimoto's stoic demeanor is broken as he howls in pain, but I think he might actually just be howling in pain. One of the things which made the Thrilla in Manila such an iconic fight is that Ali and Frazier weren't at the peak of their powers anymore. Frazier was a year away from retirement, Ali never really reached those heights again. This was wrestling's Thrilla in Manila: two all time greats hanging by a string and falling together into the abyss. 




Verdict: 

ER: I think we both knew that Hashimoto/Kawada was going to be our 2004 champ when we started this project a decade ago, but Necro/Klein is so damn good that we got a kick out of seeing it represented among the other All Time Classics. That match deserved its long reign, but the King has returned from battle, taking his rightful place on the throne. 



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Friday, October 20, 2023

Found Footage Friday: ANGEL AZTECA~! MANO NEGRA~! PANTERITA~! MA 2000~! ARANDU~! GARGOLA~! WAGNER~! BLUE FISH~! ESCOBEDO~! MR. TERROR~!

Angel Azteca/Mano Negra/Panterita del Ring vs. Mascara Ano 2000/Arandu/Sultan Gargola CMLL 1992

MD: We've been covering these more or less chronological on when Roy posted them and I don't always check to see if they've been easily available before. I am, however, skipping Mascara Sagrada/Atlantis/Panterita del Ring vs Negro Casas/Jerry Estrada/MS-1 because it wasn't just available but available with better VQ previously. Ah well. This footage has been a lot of fun to go through overall. Monterrey had a pretty wild feel for most matches and this was no different.

Here, though, the focus wasn't on Panterita but on Angel Azteca and Arandu. Obviously one of the big advantages of this footage has been Panterita/Ephesto/Safari/HsN and really getting a better sense of him in this stage of his career as a local hero, but Arandu has quickly become a favorite too. In some ways he looked like Estrada's bulkier brother, the Gordy to his Buddy, but he loved to bump out of the ring just as much. Whereas most guys would fall to the floor on a dropkick or armdrag, he'd go absolutely sailing through the ropes. On the comeback in the segunda here, we don't see how it happened, but when we cut from the ring to the floor, we just see him sprawled over six chairs. Azteca held his own when it was time to chase Arandu around the ring or what not too and obviously, he's the guy who lawn darted him into the seats, even if we didn't see it.

Everyone else was fine here. Mascara Ano 2000 matched his partners well in green. I probably don't give Sultan Gargano's mask with the turban enough credit but he was perfectly solid from what we can see and a natural partner for Arandu and obviously well-practiced working Panterita. Mano Negra really was just there save for one spot in the tercera where he got to punch everyone enjoyably. Panterita had one great flip off the top into a pin to end the segunda too. Finish was fun with Arandu fouling only to drop to the ground selling himself and somehow conning the refs into letting the rudos win. Judging by the objects flying into the ring after the fact, the fans really hated it in the best way.  



Mongol Chino/Blue Fish/Rey Venus vs. Ausente/Luminoso/Chuy Escobedo CMLL 1991

MD: This was undercard stuff and I can't tell you much about the tecnico side past Escobedo. He looked pretty slick here in his exchanges and crazy as he missed a flip dive off the apron to the floor. What probably made this most interesting was how much of local rudo Blue Fish we got to see. No single move or spot stood out, but he was confident and assertive, always in the right place at the right time. Chino was a solid cheapshot artist and did a really nice plancha over the top. While things ended with Fish and Austene after everyone else cleared out with the dives, there was never a clear central story that I could pick up on. The rudos ambushed early, the tecnicos came back, and things went more even for the tercera, sure, but there wasn't one pairing that seemed to be at the center of everything. Amusingly, rudo-leaning ref Guerrero got wiped out into Chino on the outside and the two were at odds for the rest of the match, only making things easier for the tecnicos. This one wasn't essential but I have a better feel for Blue Fish now at least.

 

Super Punk/Platino/Asterisco vs. Dr. Wagner Jr/Alacran/Mr. Terror CMLL 1991

MD: Luchawiki is not a ton of help here. For Mr. Terror it basically tells us that he exists. For Alacran (the Scorpion), it basically says that he existed and was thought to be poor. The Asterisco noted is a Reynosa guy but the mask checks out. Despite what the on screen graphic says, "Latino" is "Platino," and he's got some great gear and robotic taunting. I'll be honest that I spent the whole match tracking Mr. Terror hoping he'd do something cool and it never quite happens. Really, the interesting thing here is that Asterisco eats a nasty toss into the chairs (something common for this footage, right?) at the end of the comeback in the segunda and gets taken to the back and it becomes 3 on 2 with the rudos having a deficit. They were booked to win too and I don't know if it's because Wagner's the biggest name or what, but they didn't switch it. So you get some fun stuff of Wagner and Terror fighting for their lives to try to keep as much advantage as possible with double teams and fouling and attacking people on the outside when they really should have been in heavy deficit. They definitely didn't come up with any narrative reason why the third guy wasn't turning the tide except for the ref occasionally holding him back. And then they won it after a dive and a caverneria by Terror. Post match, Super Punk blew off an interview because there was no way of talking to the match without looking like a chump.


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Thursday, October 19, 2023

El Deporte de las Mil Emociones: The Man They Call TNT

Week 5: The Man They Call TNT

EB: As Steve Strong’s feud with Invader #1 was winding down, another member of El Ejercito de la Justicia started appearing on Strong and Chicky’s radar. We previously saw TNT appear with Invader #1 during the death match between Carlos Colon and Steve Strong, trying to help Carlos with his injured shoulder. He had also teamed up with Carlos and Invader #1 a few weeks before to take on Strong, Chicky and Rip Rogers in a six man tag, so TNT does have some familiarity with Strong and has seen first hand the devastation he has caused among the tecnicos (and specifically Carlos Colon). And while TNT had not yet really interacted too directly with Steve Strong, events would unfold that would push TNT into being Strong’s next challenger. But in order to better understand those events, we need to explain who TNT is and understand the context behind his Cobra Dinamita hold (it’s what his cobra sleeper is called).

Let’s go back to October 1986, where CSP is coming off their Aniversario 86 weekend event (highlighted by a three day tournament for the Universal title which was won by Carlos Colon).  On TV,  a mysterious unknown wrestler debuted in the promotion. He had a shaved head, wore face paint and did not speak. This wrestler appeared to be a martial arts practitioner and he was accompanied by an equally mysterious masked manager named El Profe (who spoke with an affected Mexican accent). This wrestler was named TNT.

There was intrigue about who these two people were, especially since TNT was very impressive in his TV matches, including obtaining some wins over wrestlers such as Super Medico. During that time, one of the weekend tv shows (CSP would air shows on Saturday and Sunday) had an interview segment named ‘Asi Soy Yo’ (which translates to That’s How I Am), a segment hosted by reporter Lysette Santiago. A few weeks into their run, El Profe and TNT appeared as the guests of the segment.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=llzA9OcmZCs

From the interview there are a few things that are established about who these men are. In the interview, TNT sits in the back without saying a word as El Profe does all the talking. From the interview, the fans learn that TNT is Puerto Rican (although Profe refuses to specify from what part) and that Profe claims to be Toluca, Mexico.  Profe also claims that he is a phys ed and self defense teacher (hence the name El Profe). TNT and Profe have been in Puerto Rico three weeks at this point.  Since TNT is just sitting back not saying a word, Lysette at one point tries to ask some questions directly to him. However, Profe interjects saying that he’s the only one allowed to talk for TNT.

Lysette mentions that TNT has caused a sensation because he has only been wrestling on TV and not at the arenas. El Profe says that their main motive for coming to Puerto Rico is the Universal title; they have issued a challenge to the champion Carlos Colon that has not been answered yet. Profe hopes Carlos answers it soon because this man (TNT) will soon be the new Universal champion. We will later learn that they are refusing to appear at the arenas until Colon answers their challenge. El PRofe mentions that TNT is a black belt in tae kwon do, has been wrestling five years and is the man Profe sees that can dethrone Carlos Colon. That is their goal. Lysette promises that next time she’ll try to get some words out of TNT.

And that is how Puerto Rico fans first met TNT and El Profe. TNT was presented as a dangerous martial arts expert with a signature kick named La Patada Dinamita (or Dynamite Kick), sold as being devastating. TNT was also the master of a cobra sleeper they dubbed the Cobra Dinamita. One thing about sleeperholds in Puerto Rico, they are treated as a potentially dangerous hold, holding to the logic that the move cuts off the air supply to the brain and the opponent needs to be woken up in order to stop the effects of the hold. If you recall, during the Colon vs Strong street fight, Chicky called in Pogo to help revive Strong from the sleeper Carlos had put on Strong, it’s because of this logic being in play.

During that first month or so, TNT would only wrestle on TV and win with his Cobra Dinamita, with his opponents being left unconscious from the hold. Afterwards, El Profe would come into the ring with a towel that he carried and cover the downed opponent with it so that no one could see how TNT revived the opponent (so no one would know the pressure point that would counter the effects). As an example, here is a TV match vs someone who will likely be familiar to many of you.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pdD7tlByNPY

TNT ends up winning with the Cobra Dinamita and it’s a good example of how the move was sold and how the need to revive the downed opponent is highlighted. On commentary they mention that TNT’s run through several wrestlers (including Super Medico) and that he and El Profe have issued a challenge to Carlos Colon for the Universal title. They are refusing to appear at the arenas unless Colon answers the challenge. Keep in mind TNT has been around a month or so to this point.

MD: I was not expecting to hear Come On Eileen on a Puerto Rican interview segment from 1986, especially one introducing El Profe and TNT, but there we have it. I liked the air of respectability here with Profe being polite and composed, almost like you’d expect a (masked) teacher to be. For the squash, I liked that Dean got a few solid wrestling moves (generally single leg takedowns, but not just) in early. On the one hand, maybe it makes your new monster look a bit more vulnerable against enhancement talent, even one with the last name of Dean, but it also set things up for a wrestling vs martial arts showcase. The way the back half went, with a lot of downwards chops to the back of the head and TNT being absolutely dominant overall, showed that supremacy of TNT’s style even over a wrestler who could use foundational skills to take him down a couple of times. The towel gimmick doesn’t make a lot sense as it doesn’t obscure too much, but it does make for a nice, memorable visual overall.

EB: Eventually, due to the run TNT has been on and the insistent challenge being thrown out by El Profe, Carlos Colon accepts the challenge. This match would take place on TV, a very rare occurrence for the Universal title to be defended at the TV tapings. We go to the November 15 tv episode for this match.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMeM2HiZrBE

As the match begins, the commentators (Joaquin Padin, hijo and Hector Moyano) talk about how TNT had been very anxious in getting this match and he's finally gotten it. Carlos is coming off a tough title defense (Carlos had just wrestled Stan Hansen that previous weekend). It's youth vs. experience. TNT comes out firing and this match is basically a sprint, with both men exchanging blows. Carlos takes control with some dropkicks and a butterfly suplex, but TNT uses his martial arts prowess to cut Carlos off with a thrust kick. TNT puts Carlos in the Cobra Dinamita (cobra sleeperhold) and Carlos tries to fight out of it. Carlos pushes off the turnbuckle but accidentally knocks down referee Ricky Vargas. Carlos pushes off again and the hold is still not broken. A third attempt to kick off the ropes fails, but Carlos manages to get out by elbowing TNT. As Carlos struggles to get his bearings, a desperate Profe jumps into the ring and wallops Carlos on the head with this briefcase. TNT promptly hooks the Cobra Dinamita on him again. The referee calls for the bell and it appears we have a new Universal champion.

El Profe comes into the ring to celebrate with TNT. He also places the towel on Carlos' face in advance of TNT waking up Carlos. Profe demands the title belt as TNT continues to celebrate. The announcers start to mention that TNT has to wake Carlos up and that the ref is signaling for TNT to do so. The ref is also calling for the title belt. As the ref approaches with the title belt, he signals that Carlos is the winner via DQ, he had seen Profe hit Carlos with the briefcase. By this point, the announcers pick up on the fact that Carlos is spewing foam from his mouth. He has not been woken up from the hold! The ref is pointing at Carlos, signaling to TNT that he has to wake him up. For a brief moment it looks like TNT will do that, but instead he angrily picks up the towel and leaves the ring. El Profe follows, not before spitting on the fallen Colon. The announcers are worried, the only man who knows the technique of how to wake someone up from the Cobra Dinamita has left and Carlos is still out. A worried Joaquin Padin starts thinking that maybe they could get Victor Jovica (the master of the sleeperhold in Puerto Rico) to help. Padin sends fellow commentator Hector Moyano to go find Jovica. Moyano heads off to find Jovica, as referee Ricky Vargas is trying to think of what to do. Carlos is starting to tremble and is still foaming. Ricky Vargas tries to see if he can wake Carlos up but it's no use. Padin on commentary is saying that they're hoping that Jovica, who is an expert in the sleeperhold, might be able to do something for Carlos. Finally, Moyano returns with Jovica.

Jovica enters the ring and works on Carlos. He manages to wake him up, but with some difficulty, as the Cobra Dinamita is a different technique than his sleeperhold. Still, he manages to bring Carlos out of it. Carlos starts heaving in deep breaths and looks like he is about to hurl. Jovica and Vargas help Carlos out of the ring as Padin calls for applause for Jovica (Padin: It's a miracle, thank you Victor Jovica!). Carlos can barely stand and is still heaving in deep breaths as he is helped back to the locker room by the referees and Moyano.

MD: This was a really great 5 minute clash of the titans sprint. Colon may have been weary from battling Hansen, but he was also honed from fighting him and had every reason to look strong even against so dangerous a threat. Colon tried a waistlock takedown early, but TNT had an answer. TNT tried the chop to the skull early, but Colon had an answer (in this case effective headbutts). Colon drove things a bit more, including with a really nice looking, tight double underhook suplex, but TNT had an answer for everything. After Colon missed a corner charge, TNT hooked on the Cobra. This led to yet another excellent ref bump and the attempts to escape. Something I liked here, given the gimmick of the towel and the recovery technique was that the fans knew that even with the ref bump and a potential false finish, if Colon went out from the Cobra, there was no way for him to possibly recover, even after the ref woke up. It wasn’t a case where the ref might miss a pin but Colon could still come back. He’d just be out indefinitely. It was a tricky balance between the Hansen feud and TNT getting a phantom win, but not actually winning. Here Colon did escape the hold but was groggy. That allowed for some hope that he might have found a way to come back. Profe clobbering him with the briefcase anyway signified the overall threat of Colon but also the lack of moral fortitude of a heel. If he had just stood back and let TNT put the Cobra on once more, his man would have likely been champion. As it was, the decision was reversed. That logic may be just a little flimsy if you really pull at the threads, but with the emotions at play and the visuals of the towel and Colon seemingly near-death, it was enough to get by while keeping everyone protected and everyone over.

EB: TNT’s feud with Carlos quickly established him as a key heel in the promotion, and this feud actually happened at the same time Colon had the Hansen feud going on (in between Hansen appearances this was Colon’s main feud). After a series of matches with Colon (which would be put on hold when the Hansen feud picked back up for the year end show), TNT would face different tecnicos throughout the first couple of months of 1987 (including winning Gillette Cup tournament in February). As result of another incident of TNT refusing to wake someone up from the Cobra Dinamita (a masked wrestler which turned out to be Maelo Huertas), a feud would start with Invader #1 in March of 87. Eventually, TNT would have one more shot at Carlos Colon and the Universal title in April. Here is a highlight video for TNT promoting that match which includes many highlights of the previous months for TNT.
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uedq7s-_INA

El Profe at the end runs down the list of people that have fallen to TNT (as TNT is striking a pose in full ninja garb and holding a sword), and says that Carlos Colon is next. Here is the new Universal champion, TNT. However, TNT would be unsuccessful in winning the Universal title that night.  Shortly after this match, TNT formed a tag team with Mr. Pogo (who was also managed by El Profe) and together they won the World tag titles.This would also result in a chain of events that would see TNT turn to the side of the tecnicos, since problems would arise between TNT and El Profe.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M31UXR85xUo

This is an interview from the summer of 87, Hugo had promised a special interview with a secret interview subject. Turns out Hugo has tracked TNT to his dojo and has managed to secure an interview to talk about what has been happening as of late (we finally hear TNT speaking). You can see on the wall that TNT has a picture of him and a bloody Invader from their feud a few months earlier. Hugo asks about what is going on with El Profe, in interviews Profe has been saying that Pogo is a better wrestler than TNT, that Pogo is a better martial artist. TNT says that Profe has a right to his opinion and he respects it. Hugo then mentions that Profe also has been saying that the only reason TNT and Pogo are the World tag champs is because of Pogo, he won those titles, he is better than TNT. and it's because of  Pogo they are tag champs.  TNT says that in a tag team both have to be good and he believes he is also good. Hugo then brings up an incident in Mayaguez where in a match, after Pogo had made a mistake, an irate Profe had slapped TNT for what happened in front of everyone. TNT says it was a misunderstanding but it has all been cleared up. Finally, Hugo brings up something that he found out and he has proof of this based on looking through the records of the CSP promoters, that El Profe is basically taking half of TNT’s money. TNT says he doesn't want to talk about that. Hugo doesn’t want to push that topic further, but asks TNT what is his opinion about El Profe as a manager. TNT says that there are things he is grateful to El Profe for, which is why he’s where he’s at now, but then starts shaking his head indicating he doesn’t want to answer any more. 

As you may guess, Pogo and TNT would lose the World tag titles and Profe would again blame TNT for this. TNT would have enough and attack Profe, turning face as the crowd went wild. TNT’s match with Pogo would serve as the third main event of Aniversario 87 (the event aired simultaneously from three locations with each location having a specific main event). 

Afterwards, TNT would slot in as the up and coming tecnico, usually teaming with Carlos Colon throughout the rest of 1987 against Hercules Ayala, Kareem Muhammad and other members of Chicky Starr’s Sports Club. He would become very popular with the fans, since his martial arts skills and being a ninja were pushed throughout special video packages and promos. Here is such a promo, called Aventura Ninja (Ninja Adventure).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P8WrRe0F_RY

Throughout 1988 and 1989, TNT would win several singles titles in Puerto Rico and have feuds with different wrestlers such as Hercules Ayala, the Ninja Express (Mr. Pogo, Kendo Nagasaki and Super Black Ninja aka Great Muta), Buddy Landel, Jason the Terrible, Rip Rogers and Abudda Dein. And yes, there were still videos highlighting TNT’s martial arts skills. Here is Aventura Ninja 2, which focuses more on TNT in late 88.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqmUpWPCwNo

But soon TNT’s path would cross Steve Strong’s. We go to a joined in progress match between Steve Strong and the White Angel.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OZCZojgUa7I

As mentioned previously, White Angel used to wrestle for Chicky Starr, but was turned on by Chicky for not wanting to take shortcuts that Chicky insisted on doing. Strong is basically getting some revenge on White Angel for Chicky, as Strong would continue attacking White Angel after the match was over. However, TNT would come in to make the save and thus get on Strong’s radar. And since TNT interfered in Strong and Chicky’s business, Strong was going to pay him back. We go now to match that occurred between TNT and Chicky Starr in Vega Alta near the end of June 1989

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwqabW1NTbM

Chicky wastes no time as he jumps TNT while he’s entering the ring. Chicky stays on the offensive, even choking TNT with his own black belt. However, a missed clothesline allows TNT to counter and go on the offensive for the first time in the match. TNT nails Chicky with the dynamite kick and immediately slaps on the cobra sleeper. As Chicky is almost completely out, Steve Strong comes to the ring and attacks TNT from behind, causing a DQ. As Chicky rolls out to recover, Strong adjusts ‘Damien’ and attacks TNT, busting him open. Strong continues to attack TNT’s forehead, but TNT manages to duck a clothesline and knocks Strong down with three kicks to the head. TNT slaps on the Cobra Dinamita, and despite Strong’s best efforts, manages to keep the hold on Strong for quite a while. Eventually, TNT manages to completely knock out Steve Strong. The refs tell TNT he needs to revive Strong, but TNT leaves the ring. Strong starts spasming slightly as the refs try to find someone to try to revive Strong. Chicky gets in the ring to check on Strong, but we see Mr. Pogo and Rip Rogers arrive. Pogo revives Strong, who is heaving and throwing up slightly. Chicky checks on a still woozy Strong as Hugo on commentary warns the kids watching to not try these holds at home. Strong manages to leave the ring, helped by Chicky and Rip. The Universal champ has been humiliated. 

We then go to a Chicky and Strong promo ,where an irate Chicky is yelling about TNT trying to kill the both of them. Strong cuts his promo promising to get his revenge on TNT. A very fired up Chicky promises that Strong will make sure TNT will end up in the hospital after tonight. We then go to Hugo for TNT’s rebuttal, but TNT storms onto the set and yanks the mic from Hugo’s hands. TNT calls out Strong, saying everyone saw how Strong tried to hurt him and put TNT out of wrestling. But he didn’t get away with it, Strong may have busted him open, but tonight its for the Universal title. Strong hurt Carlos Colon and has survived every obstacle in his path so far, he is strong, but tonight when they are face to face and Strong looks into TNT’s eyes, he will see the man who put him to sleep. None of your demons were able to save you, and tonight in Caguas, TNT is ready to avenge what he did to Carlos Colon and what Strong tried to do to him in Vega Alta. He is going to do the impossible tonight and leave as the Universal champ. As Hugo makes his closing comments, TNT lets out a loud roar. And as a bonus, we get the card rundown for July 1.

MD: One thing I love about these angles/matches is how straightforward they are. There are bits and pieces I disagree with but so often the balance is just right for what they’re trying to accomplish. This is about two minutes for the TNT/Chicky match. It starts with Chicky, in his full regalia, ambushing TNT and nailing him with the belt but it quickly turns around with TNT ducking a clothesline and taking over and quickly getting the Cobra Dinamita on and Chicky fading. It matched the hierarchy but still gave Chicky enough in an underhanded way to make it have some substance and weight.

When I was younger, I read a bunch of Edgar Rice Burroughs. It’s fun to read old science fiction because they could get away with so much more. We, both scientists and the public at large, knew less, so the breadth of fiction could be larger. Who was to say that there weren’t hidden civilizations on Mars, right? In some ways, it’s the same thing with the Cobra Dinamita. We know a lot more about how actual fights go and while wrestling has kept some of its rules and norms (at least we still have the Irish Whip), there’s no way a secret chokeout technique from the Orient that an equally secret counter to then wake someone up would fly today. The world’s less interesting for it. This was classic vulnerable champion stuff, which is always all the more potent when the champion is also a monster.   

EB: On July 8, a tag match happened between TNT and Invader #1 vs Strong and Chicky (you can watch on the following two links).

Part 1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eHlt0iddO1c

Part 2
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58vJoBhYFe0

Strong and TNT immediately get into it at the start, before TNT can get his gi and title belt off. TNT manages to fight Strong off and the match properly starts.  Invader #1 starts gesturing that Chicky has an object on him and goes to the commentary table to call this out. Two refs check Chicky and find an object on him. TNT and Chicky start the match, with TNT and Invader getting the best of Chicky and keeping him in the ring. Chicky does manage to tag in Strong, who presents a bigger challenge. We come back to Chicky bloodied in the ring as Invader attacks him. A battered Chicky manages to make the tag but is kicked out of the ring by Invader. Chicky is laid out on the floor. This allows Invader and TNT to team up against Strong. Some fellow rudos come out to carry Chicky to the back, leaving Strong alone against TNT and Invader. Strong withstands several hits, but eventually is knocked down by a TNT kick. Strong still holds his own vs the two tecnicos but eventually succumbs to a heart punch / dynamite kick combo. TNT pins the Universal champ.

MD: Different ways to get to similar places. In this case, we don’t have just two minutes of them beating up on Chicky. We have closer to ten. They hold their own against Strong to start and when it’s Chicky’s turn, he gets everything that’s coming to him. Just a beautiful, bloody mauling by TNT and Invader. Once they open him up, they start focusing on the wound and never look back. Chicky takes and takes, ending up like the corpse in Weekend at Bernie’s as they manipulate his body this way and that (or just drop a legdrop on him), selling but in a hopeless out-on-his-feet sort of way. When he tries to desperately get a tag, it’s just pathetic in the best way. When he’s finally able to collapse in the right direction to tag Strong in and his cronies carry him away, the numbers game end up clearly in TNT and Invader’s favor. Strong makes a fight of it, but he’s dragged under eventually and TNT gets a clear and clean pin on him after a kick. Strong was more or less protected as it was the numbers (and a detrimental partner) that got him and things are heated up for TNT to be able to challenge once more.

EB: Steve Strong and TNT would face each other again, eventually settling their series in a barbed wire match.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fszG3dQCYm0

EB: This match is from a tv episode some weeks after the match took place, with Hugo, Carlos Colon and Chicky Starr on commentary. As such, we are close to Aniversario 89 by this point and the commentary is more focused on talking about the upcoming Aniversario main event. It’s also why you get the Ivan Koloff insert promo discussing his match with Invader #1 for Aniversario, as well as a recent attack Koloff did on Invader in a picture in picture video. Both Carlos and Chicky remark about the dangers of being in a barbed wire match, you get scratched up, cut up, and can’t escape. As you would expect, both Strong and TNT are a bit hesitant to go after each other too hard due to the barbed wire surrounding the ring. They each try to get the other tangled in the barbed wire but both are able to avoid it. After a few minutes, Strong loads up ‘Damian’, knocks TNT down and manages to get him sliced open with the barbed wire. TNT starts bleeding from his forehead. Strong maintains the advantage until he launches TNT into the ropes, which inadvertently causes TNT to stop his momentum when hitting the barbed wire,and causing Strong to miss his move. After a bit of back and forth, TNT (who has progressively become more bloody around the face) manages to get the Cobra Dinamita on but Strong breaks the hold by ramming TNT back first onto the barbed wire. TNT makes a charge at Strong, but Strong dodges and TNT goes neck first into the barbed wire. This allows Strong to pin TNT and retain the Universal championship. Carlos on commentary says that Strong was lucky, he feels that TNT wasn’t beaten by Strong but by the barbed wire. Chicky does not agree with Carlos.
After this match, Strong would move on to some new challengers, while Chicky would have other plans for TNT.

MD: This had a big match feel, especially the back half but it was also a bit of a blowoff, it seemed. That meant it was shown on TV with a forward-looking eye to the Invader vs Ivan Koloff feud (I think) and there were some almost jarring inserts of Koloff during the violence and blood. I think a key to making a barbed match work is to spend the first few minutes building up a wariness towards the wire by staying away from it. The limitation of room to move creates for a fairly unique atmosphere and builds a sense of dread. Here, they went to it too early maybe, and the first half of the match was all about trying to press a face up against it and holding back. Making it worse was Strong’s long hair that made it hard to see if he was bleeding or not. Midway through, though, Strong really gets TNT across the wire, and once he opens up, the match opens up big as well. TNT’s big comeback was on Strong missing a move off the ropes because TNT got his back caught on the wire, which is poetically grisly stuff. They built to the cobra, but here Strong had the ultimate equalizer, the ability to charge TNT back into the wire. From there, he sidestepped a charge and dropped him neck first onto it, and I continue to be impressed by how well they protect people in these. That was a great banana peel finish where you can blame the wire, not TNT, for the loss.

EB: Next time on El Deporte de las Mil Emociones, we circle back to our original August 1989 starting point. Steve Strong faces two different challenges, one from the resident monster of Puerto Rico for the past 12 years, the other a big name that had recently arrived to Puerto Rico.

El Deporte de las Mil Emociones Master List

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Tuesday, October 17, 2023

Espectáculos Promociones Panama: Master List

MD: We're looking at a bit of a break from Panama to cover some personal stuff. That said, for a while I wanted to put together at least a rudimentary master list of what we've done so far, through FFF and Espectáculos Promociones Panama. I know Blogspot is not the best for this sort of thing so here's a list. Someday we'll go back and try to source out dates and have a chronological list for everyone and really make sense of the footage, but for now hopefully you find it useful. Check out all of the EPP posts for the context and pictures and go out of your way to see Exterminador and Bunny Black and Sergio Galvez and Sandokan and the guys that you know. Stylistically, it's a fun middle ground between Mexico and Puerto Rico and there's a lot to discover.

Going through the FFF stuff again, I do think it's likely we'll revisit some of it at some point, because the story of Park in Panama or Gigante Tataki or the Brazos deserve Graham's historical treatment. In the meantime, hopefully footage keeps dropping so we build up a backlog of more matches to watch. 

Found Footage Friday:

12/17/21

  • El Celestial vs. El Tahur
  • Gemelos Infernales 1 y 2 vs. Gavilán de oro y La Cobra
  • Puma y Lobo Negro vs. Estrella Blanca y Antorcha II
  • Chamaco Castro vs. Tiburon Negro
  • Gemelo Infernal III vs. El Barón
2/11/22
  • Sergio Galvez/El Tahur vs. Kato Kung Lee/Celestial 1988
2/18/2022
  • Sandokan vs. Principe Island 
4/1/22
  • Sandokan vs. Rocky Star
6/10/22

  • Cirujano de la Muerte vs. Emperador 1988
11/11/22
  • El Barón y Jaguar Kuna vs. Satánico y Gemelo Infernal 3
  • Sandokan/Ricardo Díaz/Antorcha 1 vs. Kronos 2/Gemelo Infernal 1/Gemelo Infernal 2
12/9/22
  • Sandokan/Kato Kung Lee vs. Gigante Tataki
  • Sandokan/Olimpico vs. Gigante Tataki (Hair Match) 
12/23/22
  • Solar vs. Sergio Galvez
12/30/22
  • Sandokan vs Principe Island (LA Park) 1988
1/6/23
  • Principe Island I (LA Park) vs. Principe Island II (Super Parka) 1988
1/13/23
  • Principe Island I (c) vs Sandokan
1/27/23
  • El Idolo/Ursus/Celestial vs. Gemelo 1/Gemelo 2/El Tahur
  • Los Brazos (Brazo de Plata/Brazo de Oro/El Brazo) vs. El Idolo/Celestial/Ursus
2/3/23
  • Los Brazos (Brazo de Plata/Brazo de Oro/El Brazo) vs Gemelos Infernales/El Tahur 
Espectáculos Promociones Panama
  1. Introduction
  2. Solar/Antorcha vs. Sergio Galvez/Joe Panther
  3. El Africano vs El Cobra
  4. Sandokan (c) vs El Africano
  5. El Idolo vs Celestial
  6. El Barón/La Cobra Vs Bunny Black/El Ciclón 5/15/87
  7. El Barón Vs Bunny Black (mascara contra mascara) 5/30/87
  8. Silver King/Máscara Negra vs Sergio Gálvez/El Cirujano de la Muerte 5/15/87?
  9. Kendo vs El Tahur 5/30/87
  10. Mary Varela/La Gata vs La Baby de California/La Hiena de Jalisco 7/30/89
  11. Blue Panther/Gemelo Infernal I/Tahur vs Kato Kung Lee/Baron/Celestial 1/17/87
  12. Sandokan/Celestial/Emperador vs. Principe Island/Cirujano de la Muerte/Idolo
  13. Gemelos Infernales vs Gran Darazín/Flamarion 1988
  14. The Legend of Sandokan: At War With Anibal
  15. Idolo/Exterminador vs Sandokan/Emperador June 1988
  16. Idolo vs Exterminador (Chain Match) July 1988
  17. El Idolo vs Exterminador (mascara contra mascra) 7/17/88
  18. Hombre Araña/El Celestial Vs El Androide/Joe Panther 10/2/88
  19. Idolo vs Kendo (mascara contra mascara) - 2 October 1988
  20. Impacto/Halcon Vs Atila Jr./El Satanico November(?) 1988
  21. Satanico/Atila Jr. vs Impacto/El hijo de Urracá - November/December(?) 1988

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Monday, October 16, 2023

AEW Five Fingers of Death 10/9 - 10/15

AEW Dynamite 10/10/23

Bryan Danielson vs Swerve Strickland

MD: Bryan Danielson likes to lie. He's also on his last real run (unless he's lying about that; we don't think he is). He's also had a relatively fragile year and a half. His arm injury in the Okada match is something he's referred to as his worst injury in a single match ever. It makes every match we do have with him, especially on a week to week basis, all the more special.

The evolution of emotional investment in wrestling is a fascinating thing. Forty years ago, fans were invested in seeing the babyface get revenge on the heel. Twenty years ago, a lot of our circle was interested in seeing their favorites actually pushed and be put over. In the last few years, people seem invested on the match hitting correctly and "star"-worthy and being able to say that you witnessed a great or canonical match as it happened.

When we're watching Danielson right now, our emotional investment is helplessly tied to the fear of him getting hurt. That isn't about his athleticism or his professional; it's about us being human and seeing it multiple times over the last few years (and not just with him but with people up and down the roster) and knowing that this is the last chance we have of getting to watch him so frequently.

And Danielson, pro that he is, can use that. People argued that he used it in the Okada match (teasing a head injury to help cover for his actual arm injury) inappropriately. You can make a case one way or another about that; I downplayed it given the circumstances in my review. Here though, it was something more benign but that still gave the crowd a sinking feeling in their stomachs, one that brought them down so that he could build them up once again, which is really what heat in wrestling is all about, and something that's hard if you're just chasing immortality and glory for your match.

A lot of words to say that for a while there, I pretty much bought into the rib injury. He landed one way and sold another, back to front. It was just haphazard enough and he was doing such a good job at going back to it in between moves and to slow himself down that for a little while there, he had me and while it was a very meta sort of engagement, one that wasn't about a babyface being healthy enough to beat a heel, I was still engaged. I was still leaning a little closer towards the screen.

When Danielson hit the turnbuckle, ready to charge back in for another shot, and subsequently collapsed, I was relieved instead of disheartened, because that's the moment I was sure he was just selling. Imagine a car careening off the road, two hands clenching the wheel tightly, going over bumps and almost tumbling over itself once or twice, only to meet up with the road once again. That's what happened here. After that, everything was smooth sailing, but synapses were popping and senses were attuned. The match was back on the road but you, the watcher, were coming off that emotional high and everything heading towards that finishing stretch was more exciting and vivid than it might have been otherwise. You valued it all the more because of your sense of relief. That's what I experienced here. I hadn't been entirely on board at the start (and a lot of that was on Swerve's sideways approach to everything, which slowed down the early matwork past the point of enjoyability for me) but once the ribs came into play, the match caught me and never let go. Chalk it up to top notch selling from a man who loves to lie, even to a crowd that legitimately cares about his well-being. It also makes for very interesting contrast with the Christian match, which didn't have that additional metatextual layer at all, but more on that after a brief check-in on how Eddie is doing.

ROH 10/12/23

Eddie Kingston vs Serpentico

MD: There was an Eddie Kingston vs Minoru Suzuki match on Tuesday, but I really don't have a lot to add. You can picture basically the whole match without seeing it. I liked that they more or less sold impact more and more as the match went on. The early chops were shrugged off in a way that the later ones weren't, which is logical and makes sense. There was just a little more of "Eddie Kingston, Ace" in here even in just how he was able to finish of Suzuki in the end and I was glad to see that.

I haven't touched on anything on ROH TV for a while either. If I had time, I would have written about Athena vs Hirsch from last week; they matched up well size-wise and Hirsch seemed like a unique opponent in letting Athena stretch her considerable athleticism as much as possible. Frankly, Athena should probably be the fifth Finger because of her exceptional combination of intensity, execution, and being in the moment in her reactions all the time, but I'd just have to say those last few words over and over again every week and there's not much there. Her squashes are great; I love seeing how she works the Magic Forearm into her matches, and she deserves exposure, but there's not a lot for me to write about on a weekly basis that isn't simply apparent.

That brings us to Serpentico. I love Serpentico. Talk about a guy who is completely comfortable in his own skin, probably with the best perspective in the entire company. He knows exactly who and what he is and exactly who and what he should be. Within those confines, he tries to be as creative as possible, but never in a way that harms the overall match or what he's there to accomplish. Part of being great at wrestling is knowing what not to do and when not to do it and he's able to walk the line between over the top antics and the match's ultimate goal extremely well. This was to facilitate a future match between Angelico and Kingston, which sounds great. It was a Proving Ground match (Eliminator but with a 10 minute time limit and challenger's advantage in case of a draw). The basic story was one of hierarchy. Serpentico was quick, daring, and crafty. If Eddie caught him, it wasn't going to be good. He went so far as to hit him with the chops in the corner, but eventually Eddie did catch him and while he survived a shot or two and was able to kick out, he really put over the Stretch Plum as nasty and soon found himself tapping. What I liked was that all of Serpentico's offense was in the front couple of minutes. This wasn't a case of him getting caught but then having a big comeback. Instead, when Eddie put him down, he really put him down, which is one of those things you want to see out of an ace. Definitely looking forward to Eddie working the mat with Angelico when they run that.

AEW Collision 10/14/23

Bryan Danielson vs Christian Cage

MD: It's very easy to take Collision for granted. For all that it was supposed to be or might have been, what it has consistently allowed for is long (two commercial breaks long) main event segments on a week to week basis that don't exist elsewhere in wrestling. These can be big 8-man. They can be long tags. They can be for a title or not. They can be a singles match like this.

I'm chosing my words carefully here. There was nothing particular clever or innovative about this match. That's not to say it wasn't smart. It was extremely smart. Things were earned. Things were built to. They let almost every moment resonate. Christian is so good at linking bits of offense with interactions with the crowd and a sort of seething, methodological purpose. I've said it before, but it doesn't feel like the same sort of "spots" almost everyone else in the company are doing, but just an organic, wrathful attempt to hurt his opponent. And Danielson, as we've seen him do so much so recently, reacted to the moment.

Yet nothing in this match couldn't have existed twenty years ago, maybe even thirty. Yet it got as much reaction, thorough, earnest, heated, as anything I've seen in AEW this year. They were a few chants for Christian early, but they didn't linger. He made sure of that. There was one "This is Awesome", after a dive that was earned and a pause in the action that followed. There were no Fight Forevers. Nothing like that. Instead they milked a simple countout attempt where fans in the front row helped Danielson up and the crowd completely ate it up. They went hard. There were some big bumps. They leveraged the hurt arm and Christian was doggedly focused upon it. But they didn't go over the top like you'd see in so many matches that tried to run up a score past five stars.

So, it wasn't necessarily clever or innovative or any single thing we hadn't seen before. Yet, believe me when I say this: it was unique and it was special. Some of that was just in how thoroughly and unabashedly it leaned into those traditional elements; patiently, consistently trusting in the eternal and the primal over the ephemeral, running an experiment it working beyond all expectations. But it was also this: Up until this year, I'm not sure this match could have ever existed in this exact form. In decades' past, even a main event match wouldn't get this sort of time on TV. If it did, there would have to be something over the top to justify it. It would have to be more thoroughly obscured under the veil of sports entertainment trappings. On the indies, it would have been impossible; the sheer length and scope would have led to excess, whether through greed or insecurity.

It took these wrestlers, in this moment, in this setting, on a show that neither made but both saw the potential in, in a company that neither made but that allows for the utmost in creative freedom, to let all of their years of experience and all of their trust in one another, in the crowd, in the manipulative art of pro wrestling, for something so simple, straightforward, and serene to come into being. This felt like where Pro Wrestling should have always been headed, back to the beginning and forward to the future. 

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