Segunda Caida

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

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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Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Espectáculos Promociones Panama: More Atila Jr. (Mystery Solved!) and His Pal Satanico! Panamanian Impacto! El hijo de Urracá!

Satanico/Atila Jr. vs Impacto/El hijo de Urracá - November/December(?) 1988

MD: Another pretty complete tag. I have a much better sense of the Satanico/Atila Jr. act after this one. They have matching jackets here and very much come off as an interchangeable unit. They still feel like the Gemelos to me, with a sense of being swarming nuisances, but they're a little more dangerous over all. For instance, when they have control of Impacto in the segunda, they really hone in on the leg with one rapid-fire stretch/pull/yank after the other. They had plenty of tandem kicks and knees. I wouldn't say that they were a completely well oiled machine as there were a couple of wonky bits where they didn't seem to know what they were trying to do. Overall, while Atila, Jr. looked better on the mat, this was more of a high-energy Satanico showcase overall.

Meanwhile, they were quick to stooge and feed and base and did mostly well in that role. Impacto was a little all over the place. He did a bound into the ring to start and immediately seemed to hurt his leg, to the point where his partner moved him to the corner. Then he was fine a couple of minutes later (though maybe that did explain the leg focus later in the match... but you wouldn't know it from the selling and what came before and after?). He had some nice flowing armdrags (primary credit to the rudos here) and these absolutely bonkers diving lawn dart headbutts towards the end where he hit a weird angle and just bounced off.

Said partner was El hijo de Urracá and this is our first look at him, named after a Panamanian folk hero. No idea if there was another Urracá and he was his son or if he's supposed to be the spiritual son of said folk hero, but I liked him here. He had some interesting stuff when facing a 1-on-2 scenario against the rudos, a few little finesse bits that they fed into and based for that I've never seen done quite that way and a nice, similar transition into a submission to win the primera. Solid fire overall too and a good connection with the crowd. I wouldn't mind seeing him again and I'm curious what Graham digs up, if anything, now or in the future.

GB: I’ve got a lot of diddly squat to offer here. Just a couple quick anecdotes and not much more, honestly.

Firstly, Atila/Exterminador reached out to me and through him we can confirm this Atila Jr is the real McCoy. They seemed rather pleased that this part of their history hasn’t been forgotten and were amazed we have videos and photos of their time in Guatemala and Panama. I had lamented before of how he joins fans in attendance at ringside with only the old wrestling guard recognizing who he is. I feel grateful that, if nothing else, Matt and I can restore some joy to a luchador whose career is paramount to the success of lucha libre in at least two countries.

Secondly, I believe El hijo de Urracá is the son of the 70s Panamanian luchador, Indio Urracá. They’re a semi-regular on the cards but not nearly as prominent as you’d assume they’d be based on the name. Not as high on the cards as say Indio Ibeorkun, for instance. Perhaps the gimmick didn’t fit his style, much like it doesn’t quite suit Hijo. The real Urracá was a leader of what is now modern-day Panama. A fierce protector, Urracá has become a legendary figure for his guerrilla warfare like resistance against Spanish colonization, leading the Ngäbe-Buglé people in multiple battles and thwarting Spanish conquest for years. He has since become a symbol of indigenous resistance and Panamanian pride; a symbol a little lost in translation between the ropes here. There are moments where things go right, as Matt alludes to but, for the most part, El hijo de Urracá feels more calm and hesitant than he should be. In these 2-on-1s he hits back with a headbutt or two to shift momentum but it takes him some time to move to the second move of his arsenal. Satanico/Atila try and make up for it by adding their own movements but it’s all a little jarring. If he had been any other name I’d probably have no quibble here but you have to play to your gimmick.

Less harshly, I’ve started to come around on Impacto. He’s not someone I think we can go to bat for, but he’s a lot more entertaining in this match. Not having to focus on the “history” of the match or trying to build canon has allowed me to come into this with the goggles of a fan again and I love the dumb fun he pumps out here. The lawn dart headbutt has to be seen to be believed. A completely buffoon thing to do but just so memorable. As a high-flyer babyface that had to get over in a territory with better flyers, this was the way to do it. Not that it was a great choice for career longevity, of course, but when Matt mentioned “a spot” I immediately knew what he was going to say next. If you thought he had to retire a few years later due to injuries, you’d be right! Cut down in his prime (I’m guessing a complete rookie here in 1988), Impacto seems to retire less than a decade into his career. In the grander scheme of things, his highest career accolade would most likely be in 1996 when he and his partner el Patriota won the mask (though I’d assume hair?) of Rosa Salvaje (Rey Demonio) and Adrian el Exotico (Andy Barrow). That’s where his trail runs cold and I believe he retired.

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Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Espectáculos Promociones Panama: Idolo vs Exterminador 3: Idolo! Exterminador! Mascara contra Mascara

El Idolo vs Exterminador (mascara contra mascra) 17 July 1988

MD: Definitely a fitting finale to the feud, this had a lot of what you'd want from a high stakes apuestas match in front of a hot crowd with a national hero putting it all on the line. Exterminador has been something of a baffling case to both Graham and I since he comes off as extremely talented. He bumps all over the place, is full of energy and drive on offense, and jumps off the screen with character. He hits all the marks here from an early ambush to hiding the object to flying into turnbuckles and poles and tossing Idolo into chairs before gnawing at the mask and Idolo's skull.

This tended to be fairly back and forth throughout, especially once the object was no longer in play. There was that primera beatdown and a comeback where Idolo got to use funky martial arts chops on the outside as Exterminador spasmed all over the place, but most of the rest were just the two of them beating on one another and tearing at each other's mask. In the tercera, there were any number of dramatic submissions (with Idolo quick to power out) or pin attempts (some strong back and forths here). By the end, the masks were so undone and ragged that there was one spot where I half thought they'd end up wearing one another's mask.

Exterminador's mask was better set up to get bloody and there was one point where, after a posting, he ended up under the ring to help things along. All of it got the crowd into exactly the right mood and when Idolo hit his armtrap belly to belly and just held it there forever, for a pin, for long seconds after the pin, the crowd erupted with kids dancing in the aisles as the arena became a jubilant riot scene. Exterminador would lean into his defiance (for maybe it was a double pin?) and in the post match studio interview would set up his final match on the tour, but this was a nice trilogy to have under his belt and a triumphant return to the side of the angels for Idolo.


GB: What’s in a name? For Raul Torres it was both everything and nothing.

Despite coming from a wrestling family, Raul rather had his sights set on another one of Mexico’s exotic spectacles, bullfighting. The glamor of having an arena chocabloc full of fans staring only at you captured young Raul so he started his training in 1968 with the hopes of being Mexico’s next big icon. There was something to the young man that his trainer gravitated to. He had an unmatchable charisma and “flame” inside him - he had the hallmarks of a diamond in the rough. However, his trainer would tell him that bullfighting wasn’t able to release the spirit he possessed and he was destined for lucha libre. Raul ignored this and continued plying his craft in the bullring. Admittedly, he saw some success and would continue training in the sport for many years before those around him started piling on the injuries. Not wanting to be left in a wheelchair, Raul refocused his energy onto another sport that had got his uncle, Atila, great admiration and public attention - lucha libre.

A rookie in 1982, Raul was intent on making his own way in lucha, taking on his own gimmick as opposed to one that took legacy from his uncle. He was content in working lower on the card, absorbing the adulation of the crowd around him. He had to put in many nightly hours bullfighting so the gruel of wrestling wasn’t much for him. As the years passed and the gimmicks changed, Raul struck gold on his third gimmick - that of “Exterminador”. The qualities of a self-made, rough fighter fit his persona well and it seemd a character he could inflect all of his energy into. He would couple with León Negro and the duo would become a whirlwind of a hit in their local city, Mérida. The local promoter Fallo Solis was all too happy to book the two as it meant, week after week, more bums in seats than he had ever seen. Life was going well for Exterminador until León Negro quit wrestling to pursue a full-time career. The end of the duo certainly put the brakes on Exterminador’s success but he was still motivated to reach his destiny and continued fighting.

Not long after the split, a South American businessman took notice of Exterminador’s talent and offered him a fat cheque to wrestle around South America. Knowing this was his ticket out of Mérida, and likely path to superstardom when he came back to Mexico, Exterminador leapt at the opportunity. He traveled through countries such as Colombia, Venezuela, Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, working his way up the card and fighting their local heroes. He was thousands of miles from home but he was honing his craft and playing to big crowds across a milieu of different match styles and succeeding at all of them, month after month, year after year. He had two major pit stops before returning to Mexico and the local fame he so desperately sought; namely Guatemala and Panama.

By 1985, he found himself in Guatemala. The homeland of the revered Rayo Chapin - the “real” blue legend they told the Mexican. By this time he was already a name some recognised. His debut created some hubbub. Perhaps a little shorter than some had imagined, Exterminador was every bit as ferocious as the legends that preceded him.  In no time, he was posing himself a threat to the masks of local Guatemalans and travelling foreigners much higher up the card back home.


Soon enough, as his bookings went, it was time for Exterminador to step up and face the local hero. After winning 50 masks, nobody really believed Rayo Chapin could be defeated. However, if there was ever one man, it was Exterminador. He laid out a challenge for Chapin’s Campeonato Centroamericano de Peso Medio (what a mouthful!) and made mincemeat of the champion. After three thrilling falls, the crowd was left stunned. Exterminador was the new champion. Maybe Chapin had finally met his match.

Rayo Chapin’s tag team partner, the Salvadorian Ciclon Cuscatelco, would seek revenge by offering his mask against Exterminador, which he would lose in two straight falls on December 15th 1985. This infuriated Rayo Chapin. The mask match was on. Rayo Chapin was not to be outclassed and laid it all on the line in a mask/career vs mask/title match set for the 29th of December 1985. One of the biggest matches of the 1980s was set. Yet it never happened.

Rayo Chapin was a no-show for the event and Exterminador seized the opportunity. He claimed the local legend was scared of him and took his bags and ran. “¡Qué te parece! Ese Rayo Chapin es un cobarde con suerte” (“What do you know! That Rayo Chapin is a lucky coward!") said Exterminador with a chuckle in an interview. He’d go on to say that Chapin knew he would be defeated and couldn’t bare the embarrassment. In actuality, Rayo Chapin had a double-booking in Panama (coincidentally!) at the time and chose to honor that instead. Of course that issue couldn’t be communicated with fans and instead the reasoning was left that promotions had to cease to allow focus on the concurrently running “Juegos Centroamericanos de la Paz” (a regional athletics competition). As Exterminador had violently beaten up Rayo Chapin mere days before, in a Christmas Day angle, the fans never bought this so they had grown to believe the words Exterminador was espousing about their hero -  “lo que no se imagina es que yo, El Exterminador, volveré por su máscara y ni Dios ni nadie podrá salvarlo de ser exterminado“ (“what he doesn't imagine is that I, The Exterminator, will come back for his mask, and neither God nor anyone will save him from being exterminated”)

Luckily, Exterminador was juggling multiple feuds at the time and the local promoter saw opportunity with the young upstart Astro de Oro who was being regailed as the “find of the year” and a newcomer many promoters felt could be the next Rayo Chapin or El Arriero de San Juan.

Exterminador’s feud with Astro de Oro had started quite early on in 1985, in February to be precise, when they’d encounter one another in a triangular mask/mask/hair match with Diablo Rojo. Exterminador laid out Rojo and then set his sights on Oro, who he pinned to take the match, leaving Oro/Rojo to duel it out. Much like his win over Rayo Chapin, the crowd was stunned. Before this match, nobody had pinned Astro de Oro. Yet Exterminador had. Defiantly. Astro de Oro, a blue-eyed tecnico would resort to the dirty “martinete” to retain, sensing danger to his streak..

A streak that would last mere months when Exterminador took it for himself. Astro would wager his mask against one of Exterminador’s two titles where he would finally get his win back on the 4th of November 1985. The fans rejoiced, the beast had been momentarily slain. Could he be the one to take the mask, they thought?

On the 2nd of March 1986, the fans would get their answer in a match billed as the “fight of the year”. While Astro de Oro had been undefeated, a mask match was new ground for him. The only apuesta he had won by this point was against Diablo Rojo and that was due to Exterminador’s doing. He was at a monumental disadvantage in the eyes of the fans, but they held hope as the two fighters were 1-1 in singles competition. It was champion against champion, mask against mask.

After a violent three falls, Astro de Oro emerged victorious, gripping the mask of the fallen Mexican, as the crowds pushed him to the heavens. Their David had slain Goliath. In that moment, the biggest name in Guatemalan history was born.

Exterminador would wrestle at least a few more months into 1986 before packing his bags, this time as a tecnico and compadre to Astro de Oro. I’m not sure what happened in the two years between Guatemala and Panama but his earthquakes had rippled back into Mexico and a magazine had an entire two pages dedicated to his triumph abroad and that he was a surefire star for either EMLL or UWA whenever he chose to return. I do know that he had travelled to Venezuela and Puerto Rico during his stint so it might have been here. I also know that he suffered a clavicle injury around this time and, perhaps, that delayed him heading to Panama for the feud we’ve been covering here. Whatever the case, he was equally responsible for a huge cultural moment in Panamanian wrestling (Idolo’s turn, second and final match vs Sandokan) and his mask was a massive boon to Idolo’s already impressive list of accolades.

From here, Exterminador returned to Mexico. He was destined to be a star, and newspapers talked him up as such, but something didn’t sit quite right. He wasn’t used to wrestling unmasked and felt it too awkward to capture his character. Fate would see him injure his knee within weeks of his return to Mexico, cutting off his momentum.

In part because he yearned for a mask, his brother offered him the Atila Jr name for when he finally made his in-ring return. Raul didn’t quite feel so comfortable forging on in a legacy he never built but they signed the papers and registered his licence. This would be his downfal, despite all the print chalking him up as this massive future star.

Promoters loved him but were apprehensive about booking him. The Atila name carried enough weight that just his mask put him in the upper part of the card. However, local promoters felt they didn’t have a star big enough to offer against him and he hadn’t yet made a splash locally to justify a chance at the big leagues. Thus, Atila Jr found himself floundering. All the years, blood, sweat and tears he had shed were for nought. He’d return to Guatemala in the 1990s and his feud against Verdugo(?) did gangbusters but fans were a little confused by the name as they had their own Atila (and Atila Jr). It seems to this day people get the two Atila Jrs confused.

In hindsight we can argue Exterminador/Atila/Raul’s Mexican career was a massive fumble. We cannot predict “what ifs” but there’s enough evidence to suggest he’d have more likely swum than sunk on the big, Mexican stage if he had kept to his guns in forging his own path. This painful lesson would be passed to his son, Doberman, who he ensured would not carry on a “family legacy” but rather go by their own merits.    

After four heart attacks, Raul is now unofficially retired from wrestling. Still a fan of lucha libre, he visits local arenas to witness the weekend’s fights. However, it’s only the “old guard” that recognise him from the ring. Fans will jeer and chant alongside him, not knowing the importance of the man they’re sitting by. One of the greatest unsung heroes of Latin America would see his fame dwindle into obscurity.

What’s in a name?

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Tuesday, August 15, 2023

Espectáculos Promociones Panama: Idolo vs Exterminador 2: Idolo! Exterminador! A Chain Between Them!

Idolo vs Exterminador (Chain Match) - July 1988

MD: A Chain match! At some point I'll stop gushing on this, but the fact that we have a three match series on tape from 88 with an iconic turn, a bloody chain match, and the mask match is just amazing to me. I feel like even with Mexico we don't have a ton of situations where we have a three match feud that ends with a mask match from the late 80s. It's not like we have a ton of 1980s chain matches from Mexico either.

So it's always great to see a gimmick match as part of a big feud from another culture. It's funny here especially as you get halfway through before realizing that either pinfalls or four corner touching work to win. That's a testament to the first ten minutes being as close-combat and gritty as possible. They spend the first five minutes doing nothing but choking each other with the chain and jockeying for positioning in believable and interesting ways. Then the next five minutes are more focused on hammering one another due to the fact neither can get away, more choking, and mask ripping and biting. It's only after that where they start trying to touch corners and continuously pull one another down.

By this point, they're bloody and battered and there's a sense of wild desperation to things. Idolo was fresh off his rudo stint and still willing to get down and dirty, absolutely meeting Exterminador where he was fighting. When they realize that neither party can get an advantage by pulling the other, they fight to the outside, and here, even though the scene is obscured by arena placement, it's a combination of nasty whips into hard surfaces, errant chairshots both from the person doing the beating and the one trying to protect himself, and this awesome little video slip where Idolo just disappears off the screen as Exterminador pulls him down. That gives him the advantage he needs and he's able to get Idolo back in and after a clutch fireman's carry and some confusion on which corner he needed to touch, he takes the match to heat him up as much as could possibly be before the mask match.

I loved the escalation of this, starting from a point of strangling one another, moving to punching and mask ripping, then to winning, then to trying to put one another away as violently as possible. It makes so much sense, but I'm not sure I've ever seen a chain match quite like this. The crowd was a steady buzz during the close combat stuff but they went up for the corner reaching and became the usual near mob scene when they hit the floor or brawled after the match. Certainly, this was a way to build excitement for a mask match!

GB: As Matt mentions, it’s rather special to have pretty much the entire feud here on tape, for quite a number of different reasons. I believe there might be a singles match lost along the way but the big strokes are all here for us to enjoy.

For all intents and purposes, this is the only on-tape look into Idolo’s signature booking against foreigners. We have a spattering of mask matches lying around, but nothing is presented in full as it is here. His calling card all began with Steve Clements in May 1970 when Idolo would challenge Clements for the NWA European title (the title Idolo kept for a few years and “unofficially” unified with the NWA World Middleweight title in his match against Guajardo). As a way to spice up the rivalry, and to play into Idolo’s more “rudoistic” nature, the promoter of the time (Manuel Jose Hurtado) set up a succession of gimmick matches that Idolo would need to survive before he was awarded a title shot. The debut was simple and pretty straightforward by how we know Panama to go - a tag match where things break down and the feuding pair take umbrage to each other. Next, Idolo would face Clements in an “unsanctioned” no referee, no rules match to prove he had the chops to hold an NWA title. While “Sin arbitraro” isn’t all that uncommon a match-type in Panama, it was already a high-stakes affair, the final pitstop before a mask match, so the addition of a follow-up singles match was new to the Panamanian audience. In order to ramp up the violence, Don Hurtado would introduce a four-corners “chain match” that saw Idolo take the win and the right to challenge Clements for his title, pitting his mask against the Brit’s championship. Idolo was already a fan favourite at this point so it wouldn’t really cement any legacy, however, this title win kept Idolo’s momentum going and allowed a sure-fire recipe for booking success for promoters bringing in foreign talent to take on the local champion.

While it may have taken us a few go-rounds to get into understanding Idolo’s appeal, it wasn’t quite the slow burn for fans in Panama. They took to him like hot cakes. But what were/are we missing? Well, as Samy de la Guardia described Idolo, he had what few others fighters had, he had "ángel” (a Spanish term of endearment for someone with special charm) and that charisma was what the fans latched on to. Although he might have had money behind him, Idolo had quite a humble background to his character. He was an all-star athlete and Olympic wrestler introduced to wrestling via his good friend, Shazán. While he would get his formal training through La Amenaza (the man he substituted for in his professional debut) at the Gimnasio del Colegio Javier, Idolo loved training with Shazán at the latter’s Academia de Lucha Libre which was nothing more than a basement room across the road from the local ice cream parlor.

Idolo was tough and unafraid and it was this pluckiness that would catapult him into the annals of Panamanian lucha libre after a hard-fought victory in July 1965, simply three years into his career. Colombia’s Furia Roja had been running rampant throughout the territory and was leaving Panama’s prized tecnicos in fear of his challenges. None of them dared to stand up to his mask challenge, and, as much as fans willed on their supposed heroes, these wrestlers continued showing their yellow spines. That was until Idolo answered the call turning tecnico in the process after a career as a rudo’s rudo, not quite in the vein of a bloodthirsty Gálvez, but rather in the “skillful strength” of Chamaco Castro. When Idolo prized off Roja’s mask, thousands of fans roared his name. This was when Idolo as “leyenda viviente” (living legend) was born.


There would be a slight recapture of that moment in the Exterminador feud as Sandokan willed Idolo to fight alongside the tecnicos once more - for the glory of Panama if for nothing else. Just prior to their tag match we covered last week, Sandokan faced off in the last of only two singles matches between him and Idolo. While we could deride the decision of leaving a huge money match on the table in a hair/mask match, both singles matches had their reasons. The first came after Sandokan dropped his mask and didn’t need to be as protected. He was tasked to give the rub to Idolo as the true “champion” of Panama in a hard fought match that went to four falls (1st Sandokan, 2nd double-pin, 3rd and 4th Idolo). Their second encounter in May(?) 1988 was to lay the ground for Idolo’s turn. It might be easier to imagine the two as Goku (Sandokan) and a more misguided than evil Vegeta (Idolo) at this point, with Goku egging on Vegeta to “do the right thing” in fighting the lurking evil together (Parka/Exterminador). Of course, Idolo does, as we saw him embrace Sandokan in the tag match lead-in. In the eyes of the fans, it was all she wrote for Exterminador (who’s importance in ushering in a South American boom we’ll cover next week).  

So, as we finally “get” Idolo, that issue is more on us and how we are voyeurs of this world, devoid of the cultural impact it had on those around it. It’s pretty difficult to convey just how much Idolo and Sandokan meant to Panama’s pop culture. Many children feared hearing their parents scream “Not even Sandokan will save you from this beating” after they had done something wrong. Idolo was on billboards and busses across the country for years after his death. While it seemed the media wanted to shun wrestling in favor of boxing, its fans never forgot their roots.

After a long fight against cancer, Idolo passed away on the 4th of August 2009. Over 500 hundred fans flocked to the cathedral to witness just a glimpse of his coffin as it passed by in the funeral procession. Wrestlers old and young carried him to the el Jardín de Paz where he was laid to rest with his iconic black and orange mask.

So, no matter what Matt and I might think, these two men were real-life superheroes to an entire generation. 

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Tuesday, August 01, 2023

Espectáculos Promociones Panama: Idolo vs Exterminador 1: Idolo! Exterminador! Sandkan! Emperador!

Idolo/Exterminador vs Sandokan/Emperador (June 1988)

MD: I have to admit that I've spent a couple of months just wondering what the big deal with Idolo was. You can read from Graham's history posts that he was up there with Sandokan, if not definitively above him, as the top start of the territory, but we've been seeing a bunch of lukewarm rudo performances where he's outshined by the people he's teaming with again and again. He did carry himself like a star and like someone important, and the fans reacted accordingly, but there was a spark missing. Thankfully, we have a place to try to find it here with the Exterminador feud and this is a great start. This began with me more or less reaffirming my priors albeit with a glint of hope and ended with me starting to see the light (even if it might simply be the light at the end of the tunnel of Idolo's rudo run).

Right from the get go, Exterminador stands out more than Idolo. He brings a kid into the ring before the bell, flips in and out of the ring on tags, has some very fun chain wrestling with Sandokan, takes an atomic drop by spasming through the ropes and all over the floor. Just a lot of charismatic body language as he bumps, feeds, stooges, and batters Sandokan around the ring. Idolo honestly looks pretty good here in shorter exchanges despite it all, with a clear smoothness and familiarity with both Emperador and Sandokan, but he can't help but be overshadowed by a guy wrestling for the back row like Exterminador is.

That's especially true once the story of the match kick in and we begin to get the rudo miscommunication spots. They have to hit each other at least eight times and each one seems to matter more than the last. By the middle of the segunda, Exterminador has gone from being apologetic to begging off (which led to a funny moment of him hugging the ref and cheapshotting Sandokan) to trying to prove himself by taking all the offense, to trying to steal shots from Idolo as he got way out of hand. It boils over with an absolutely amazing turn as Sandokan comes back and someone starts interfering for Exterminador and everything begins to break down with the rudos coming to blows and Idolo, with the cheerleading and help from Sandokan and Emperador, starts mauling Exterminador around the ring and ringside area as the fans begin to mob in excitement.

When watching this, I had no idea how long Idolo had been a rudo, but it's obvious he had once been a beloved hero and there's building pressure during this post-match chaos as Sandokan and Emperador have their hands raise and continue to throw Exerminador back into the ring as they egg Idolo on. Throughout it Idolo has stopped caring about them and is solely focused on Exterminador building the suspense more and more until, after clearing the ring once and for all, Idolo and Sandokan embrace and the already wild crowd goes ever more so. I've mentioned before but sometimes with this old footage from a culture not at all our own, this stuff that has never been spoken about in our circles, that isn't part of some "canon" we all know like, for instance, Santito turning rudo, well, it can feel like sneaking into someone else's family gathering. Sometimes you get the sense that this isn't for you, that you don't belong, but here, it's impossible not to feel the elation of the crowd and the excitement of the moment and to share in the universality of pro wrestling at its most emotional. This was a huge, important, iconic moment and we're so fortunate that we've gotten to share in it, just as we're fortnuate that there's a chain match and a mask match to come.

GB: Exterminador would grace Panama roughly the same time as La Parka, with Parka obviously squaring off with Sandokan and Exterminador being the Mexican for Idolo to beat. By all accounts, this is either one or two weeks after the Sandokan/Parka mask match placing it toward the tail end of June 1988. It’s a relatively brief feud, culminating on July 17, but it saw its fair share of violence and hostility. The main matches (this tag, a chain match, and the apuesta) we are lucky to have on tape and will write them up in the coming three weeks.

As Matt eloquently put it, this was a huge cultural moment for Panamanian wrestling. Their hero, El Idolo, would turn tecnico after I believe his final run as a rudo during his peak. Cards on the table, this post was to be a recap of what led up to this moment. The plan was to recap a few questions, most especially: “Why had Idolo turned rudo to begin with?”  “How long had he been rudo?” and “What caused the return to the tecnico side?”  Unfortunately, the trail ran cold on me and I’ve seemingly exhausted every possible avenue. In terms of information, El Idolo is possibly the most written-about wrestlers out of Panama. So much so, in fact, that he has his own website covering his career. Yet, the information is more fanciful. Nothing quite detailed enough to glean.

Panama is an incredibly proud yet protective territory. I've mentioned it before but there's a very insular network going on where even local fans are gatekept in a sense. I do believe a lot of it is due to bad experiences with foreign writers who seemingly used Panama for their own gains, whatever that may be. Sammy de la Guardia has referenced some previous writers as "pirates of history" and Don Medina has taken great exception to what he believes are frauds in wrestling journalism. Those guilty are big names; ones that, if you're a follower of lucha, will have definitely heard of and might have read. It's daunting in that sense as I'm just one man, writing on a blog for the first time. I don't have credentials or authenticity to my name. These posts are my portfolio of evidence to that end. My hopeful key to getting to the fabled historian I keep hearing of but never encountering. All in the bid to share as much as I can of the beauty that is Panamanian lucha. Thus, dear reader, we will need to hold off on the big turn for this week in hopes that I can cast my net wider to those in the know.

Look, if this feud was as simple as just Idolo and Exterminador, I'd feel a bit better in connecting dots that may not be there. After all, Exterminador was just a statistic. Another notch on Idolo's belt. Number 31 of 78 (40 masks, 38 hairs). And although I have a small sense of the background and believe it similar to Idolo’s first tecnico turn (which took place during his feud with Furia Roja where he would take the Colombian’s mask in July 1965), it would be wrong of me to offer my guess work here. Not on something so important such as the reunion of Sandokan and El Idolo.

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