Segunda Caida

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

Friday, October 31, 2025

Found Footage Friday: BRAZOS~! CASAS~! COTA~! WAGNER~! SATANICO~! GARZA~! PANTERA~! CARAS~! FIERA~!


Bronco/Máscara Mágica/Pantera vs. Astro Rey Jr./Guerrero De La Muerte/Mocho Cota CMLL 2/23/96

MD: Roy's uploaded a bunch recently and we'll hit some of it. I'm not going to say no to new Mocho Cota, even 1996 Mocho Cota. He's a step slow, but what he does with that step is still great. He'll bump to the floor off a dropkick and then careen towards a little kid, halting at the last moment and menacing him with his missing fingers. What a guy. He also fed into rudo miscommunication as you'd imagine, so they kept things brisk, moving, and fun. According to Rob, this was a couple of weeks before Pantera jumped to AAA. He was matched up with Guerrero here early and looked good the whole way through, especially down the stretch where he got to stand tall at the end with the last pairing, post-dives, hit a great dive of his own, and then come back in to win the thing, which is honestly not a structure you usually see. He also drove the comeback, so he was certainly being featured. Mascara Magica was paired with Cota and they did ok, even if you got the sense that maybe he was still trying to figure it out a bit. You take Pantera and Cota out of this one and it wouldn't be as engaging (even if they did wildly different things) but as is, I enjoyed it.


Los Brazos vs. Negro Casas/Dr Wagner Jr./Rambo CMLL 3/15/96

MD: Apparently Brazo de Plata and Negro Casas really wanted to work with each other on this night, because they put on one hell of a show. Porky's fist was laser focused to Casas' face and it was great. Just the most brutal, mean-spirited, single-minded punches you'll see, no matter if Casas was standing, on the ground, in the ropes. And of course, Casas would just slide back into the ring at full speed only to get walloped again. They had an early exchange too where Casas did a reverse leg sweep and then Porky did the same in return. Great stuff. Porky had his shoulders bandaged and that made him a target overall. They primera had a great bit where the rudos, two at a time, tossed one Brazo after the next off the top rope. Then they tried Porky with all three and got squashed and pinned. Perfect comic build and timing. The segunda had them really hone in on Porky's shoulder, double teaming him and forcing hum to the floor. The remaining Brazos held their own for a bit, but Rambo pulled out an object and bloodied El Brazo and it became an inconclusive mauling. This was great while it lasted though.

ER: You go into this excited to see whatever happens between Super Porky and Negro Casas and then all of the Porky/Casas interactions turn out to be even better than you expected. The whole thing is great but everything that Porky and Casas do - especially to each other - is better than you expect and that means it's all time great. There is one especially great exchange between them that is like extravagant lucha morphing into shootstyle. No, this isn't UWFi, but damn when Porky gets swept and ankle picks Casas on his way down I flipped. Porky aimed carefully guided punches at Casas's face a dozen different times and Casas kept falling for them in bigger and bigger ways. Porky would knock Casas down and lean his weight on him and throw punches from half mount. It all builds to one of the most incredible ways to end a caida, when the rudos press slam El Brazo and Oro off the top turnbuckle. Two men handled them, but all hands were required on deck to press Porky. They all backed him into the corner and Porky started throwing potato shots at everyone, flat footed lefts and rights. Casas gets hit so square that he banana peels all the way to the opposite corner. When all three rudos finally get underneath Porky to slam him, they wind up crushed underneath. 

The segunda shows Porky as one of wrestling's great Targets. Rambo and Casas target his taped up shoulder. Injured Porky is one of my favorite salesmen in wrestling, his movements feel so suddenly real but delivered by the incomparable physique of Porky. He has one of the most sympathetic faces in wrestling (and here he doesn't even cry!) and the way he plops on his butt and kicks his legs while Negro and Rambo and stomping and kicking him is like a giant baby getting stomped out. 

Rambo is always great in matches like this. He's great during bumping for tecnicos (loved him hopping on his back across the ring after a Brazo de Oro quebradora) and then becomes the most violent rudo during the segunda. His wrapped fist shot to Oro was so good it held up in slo motion, and when he gigs El Brazo he really gets the blood flowing. Rambo knows several ways to open a cut, slamming Brazo's face into his boot in the corner as blood gets all over it, then starts kneeing him directly in the cut repeatedly. I wish the DQ had happened in the tercera so we got the full set of falls, but this was great stuff.   


Dos Caras/Héctor Garza/La Fiera vs. Bestia Salvaje/Dr Wagner Jr./Satánico CMLL 4/3/96

MD: The primera here was a super fun two minutes. First Caras and Fiera mowed through Bestia and Satanico with double teams, including a Hart Attack of sorts on Satanico. Then Wagner got the better of them with a flying double clothesline and Garza flew around for him before hitting a clutch roll up. From there, they did one of those multiman submissions where the third guy kneels on the shoulders of the person/people being stretched. You almost never see the tecnicos doing that and Garza paid for his hubris with Wagner pulling him off so he took a nasty bump into the ropes and then got posted, but the tecnicos still took the caida. 

The segunda started with in and out exchanges, with Wagner getting the best of Fiera and then everyone basing for Garza (who had to make frequent comebacks admittedly). They went around with it until Wagner ended up dangling from the ropes on a great bump/stooge spot, before the rudos finally took over. Wagner finished Garza off with both a superplex and a top rope splash, one after the other, doing it all himself (well, Satanico held Garza down at the end, not that it was needed). The beatdown that followed was short and nasty, with Satanico driving his foot into Garza's groin as the other rudos held him and chewing on his fingers. He meandered too close into the tecnico corner and they turned it around for some final exchanges, some rudo miscommunication, and then a triumphant tecnico victory including Wagner walking around forever with Caras on his shoulder holding an armbar before they finally rolled forward. As fun as you'd expect with guys this talented. 

ER: This had a great ramshackle feel to it. Tight rudo team who all had different ways of bumping cool in a large flat CMLL ring. It's a powerhouse rudo team with three workers who were all cool in different ways in 1996. Wagner got to show off his power, Bestia got to show off his speed and his grace while being built like Vincent Pastoricito, Satanico got to show off his cunning and sadistic leadership. But where they're at their best, is coming together to assault sweet young Héctor Garza. I don't know why Garza's magic didn't work in the United States. You watch his work in Mexico before his US run and his tecnico connection to crowds is so obvious, and it's just not there in WCW or WWF. His babyface presence and charisma mostly vanished on US TV. 

He was brought in to both WWF and WCW with plans on making him one of the pushed ones among his niche, but both bailed on him quickly. In WWF he was a two month foreign babyface firebrand, a busted experiment that stumbled so the later-that-year Taka Michinoku foreign babyface firebrand push. He was given the big solo in all the early WCW trios matches but never connected as even a top 5 luchador babyface with any WCW crowds. The charisma always instantly returned in Mexico and it's evident here. Any time the rudos focus on Garza the match becomes laser focused and Important. He is a tecnico muse to each rudo and inspires them to increased punishment. Satanico and Wagner seem like they take joy in assaulting Garza and I think Garza connects the way he does with Mexico crowds because some felt that sadistic joy and either felt he deserved it for being too pretty while other felt he was too pretty to deserve it. Wagner's top rope superplex and Superfly splash on on him was a real highlight, some real Welcome to the Big Leagues moment, and Garza in Mexico was still great at being the victim of those moments several years into his career. 


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Friday, January 14, 2022

Found Footage Friday: CMLL at the Olympic 5/28/94

Thanks to the great Roy Lucier we got a CMLL HandHeld from 1994!


Magneto/Benny Carranza/Sombra de Plata vs Terror Chicano/Crazy Boy/Renegado Estrada


PAS: Undercard no name lucha is the most watchable kind of anonymous wrestling. I haven't heard of any of these guys and wasn't inspired to deep dive on any of them, but we had some nice armdrag exchanges, a couple of solid C+ dives and a guy in Kiss makeup who took some nice monkey flips. Absolutely nothing to complain about. 

MD: This was fun but got cut off short, though in a believable way given the build. The primera had a really solid pairing between Mando and Lover Boy where they took it to the mat and Mando didn't eat him up completely as he had a tendency to do. Tornado Negro spent the entire fall goading Chavito, who chased him around the arena, including spurring a big brawl where Mando accidentally took out someone in the crowd. In general, Bradley looked like he belonged, stooging big early and then just killing Chavo between the segunda and tercera with a pile driver and huge chop. If I read the results right, this was Spicoli pulling double duty as Los Mercanarios had led things off and he was game here, showing off some power and flair. It all got cut short after Mando big comeback when Chavo lost his cool again and pulled off Tornado Negro's mask. Mando made sure to get some extra attention post match trading blows with Lover Boy on their knees. It made sense, it probably fit into the overall card, but as a standalone I would have liked a real finishing sequence.


PAS: Mercenarios are Tim Patterson, Bill Anderson and Louis Spicolli. They had some nice looking bullying offense, one of them won the first fall with a nasty top rope Bret Hart forearm, another one had a great fist drop. The Technicos didn't really hold up their end of the bargain, they were really were ground bound and their punches looked weak. I am into the Mercnarios, and need to track down them against better opposition. 


Piloto Suicida/Jalisco/Hijo de Solitario vs Panico/Super Boy/Capitan Oro

PAS: This was a really fun undercard lucha match with the massive standouts being Super Boy and Suicida who were regular So-Cal dance partners. Super Boy should really have been a big star, but outside of some cool MPRO matches and a random couple of WCW matches he was mostly just an underground king. Super Boy hits a killer fatboy Superfly splash to win the first fall, has a very cool rope running exchange with Suicida in the second, and catches a wild Suicida dive in the third. Everyone else were fine workman like luchadores, but you could really tell Super Boy and Suicida were special 

Los Brazos vs Mocho Cota/Emilio Charles Jr/Bestia Salvaje

PAS: Welcome to the WON Hall of Fame Los Brazos. This was a great example of what these guys brought to the table, especially the incandescent Super Porky. The first fall was this killer rudo team trying and failing to solve the Porky problem, at one point Porky is carrying two rudos in his arm with one on his back, and he ended the fall with a wild falling senton, like a kid jumping back first on his bunk bed, except the bunk bed was three rudos. The fake heart attack is a classic Porky spot, and the rudos got a ton of heat for not stopping their attack even when Porky was getting CPR. I love the Brazos so much and every new match is a little gift

MD: Great showcase Brazos match against one of the best stooge rudo sides of all time in front of an amazingly game crowd. I wouldn't say they leaned into the heat quite as much as they could have but they were roaring for everything the Brazos hit. As much as I love Cota and as great as it is to see him go up against Porky, the standouts were probably Bestia and Oro who were just zooming around the ring. It was just spot after spot all enhanced by the rudos' reactions and the crowd's buzzing. What heat there was came after Cota dropkicked Porky in the chest and they brought out the EMTs, with the rudos attacking them anyway. Porky's sell where he was just stumbling around ringside crashing into chairs was amazingly tasteless in the best way. Eventually, he decided it was time to finish, so he rushed back to the ring and they had their comeback and the finishing sequence, which included a huge Brazo dive. I think there are only a handful of matches with this specific rudo side on tape so one more is a great addition and they couldn't be more perfect opponents for the Brazos.

Vampiro/Ultimo Dragon/Rayo de Jalisco Jr vs Black Magic/Negro Casas/Mano Negra

MD: Fairly good, by the books match, with a lot of Casas vs Dragon, at the height of Dragon's flipping prowess and plenty of Vampiro being Vampiro and Rayo being Rayo, but admittedly to the hot crowd's delight. I'll say this about them. They knew what to do here to get over. Vampiro especially had a sense of what he wanted to do and Smiley was game to help him. None of it looked all that pretty but it overall worked. Rayo, on the other hand, could just bounce about and flail his arms as people bumped around him and the fans would go wild, so what are you going to do? To be fair, he did hit a tope on Mano Negra at the end, but I think I summed up the rest well. No, the appeal here was Casas and Dragon. Sometimes it was a little too smooth, those one counts where they're already on their feet moving to the next thing, but for the most part, their exchanges were lightning fast in the best way, with Dragon defying both basic anatomy and physics in some of his escapes. When the rudos took over in the segunda, I liked how they used the open space around the ring to the fullest, but overall it wasn't super memorable and the comeback was Rayo having enough and deciding to just come in and interfere which had to follow Porky recovering from a heart attack, so maybe they should have thought it through more. The arch on Dragon's German Suplex to finish Casas was beautiful though and Casas was especially engaged and entertaining for all of the post match foolishness.

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Friday, May 07, 2021

New Footage Friday: SANTO! CUCHILLO! SLIM J! POSEY! BUCK! HANCOCK


El Hijo Del Santo vs. Cuchillo El Toreo 10/30/88

PAS: This is available from Santo's Patreon. It's pretty clipped up which is a shame, but what we got is a Santo 80s mask match which is pretty undeniable. Cuchillo seemed pretty replacement level. He had some nice brawling, missed a flip dive, but this was a Santo show, and what a show it is. Santo turns the mask red, flies into the hard chairs a couple of times, and hits a gorgeous plancha headbutt where he just levitates in the air before landing with real force. I also loved the start of the tercera, where Santo is coming forward with such fury that Cuchillo tackles a fan just to try to get away.

MD: 12 minutes, clipped, of a lost Santo mask match. I was a little wary during the primera as it was heavily clipped, to the point where you couldn't really get a sense of it, but everything else was great, clipped or no. Momentum shifts in old lucha often start at the end of one fall and carry into the next. It's always a big moment for Santo to lose a primera; here it was with a tie-up pin out of nowhere. What followed was a segunda where Cuchillo smelled blood and immediately went on the attack. Santo tried to fire back but the ref slowed him down and allowed some fouls. This is where we got the mask ripping and bloodying of Santo you'd want in a match like this. We miss the absolute moment of comeback but see the aftermath, first in Santo getting the pin with a tope headbutt off the top and an insult to injury legdrop, and then the bleed into the tercera where he chases Cuchillo into the crowd to create a chaotic scene with bodies flying and gets his revenge mask ripping in. I t builds to some good nearfalls and a nice Santo dive before a bloodied Santo dodges a top rope flip and locks in (with tangible effort) the caballo for the win. Again, it wasn't the ideal look at this match, but it's worth it just to see Santo's red hot fire at the start of the tercera.



Ultimo Dragon/El Dandy vs. Negro Casas/Mocha Cota Monterey 1990s?

MD: Any new Cota is a good thing in my book, and a match like this with a unique pairing and a different than normal setting is even better. Don't get me wrong, new Casas is new Casas and new Dandy is new Dandy but with them we just have more. That said, while we do get a nice stretch of Cota vs Dragon on the mat, where they cycle well enough from one thing to the next for a unique pairing, and we absolutely get a brilliant moment with Cota that I'll talk about later, the best stuff here is definitely Dandy vs Casas. They seem to be working with a healthy respect for one another at first, moving in and out of holds, doing a little bit of repetition and mirroring with a caught leg bit throughout their sequences, just smooth as silk all around, a nice balance between respect and mean-but-mutual grittiness. Everything comes to a head when Dandy has Casas set up for a tapatia and Cota comes in with a kick. Casas feigns being pissed as Cota lays on the mat posing proudly like the malignant goblin that he is. Casas ultimately leans into it for a rudo ambush (as Cota claps from the outside) that gets reversed by the tecnicos to the end of the fall. It's all we get for this but ten+ minutes of these for is definitely better than nothing.


Brody Chase vs. Mike Posey vs. Slim J vs. CB Suave vs. Billy Buck vs. Stryknyn vs. BJ Hancock Anarchy Wrestling 11/25/14 - GREAT

PAS: This is an elimination gauntlet cage match for the Heavyweight title, with each match going five minutes. This was an all cage match show (let's hope the War Games main even shows up someday), so this wasn't the wild brawl that you expect from an Anarchy cage match, but more of a workrate match. Still, this had some very good moments. Slim J was tremendous in his two sections, he comes in after Posey beats former Crockett job guy Brody Chase, and tools Posey with fast takedowns and amateur rides. Posey catches J off the top ropes with a knee to the stomach and works the body a bunch, before J reverses a submission into a choke for the tap. They worked well together and I want to track down more of that match up. Buck and Stryknyn had a good face versus face section. Buck is one of the better guys in 2010s Cornelia wrestling, and I have seen him mostly as a heel, but he is a great traditional face too. The Buck versus Hancock final section was pretty good too, full of big moves, like a top rope Samoan drop and some cool near falls, and Hancock countering the superkick with a low blow was awesome 

MD: I ended up liking this a lot. It had some things working against it. The blood and guts was going to be in the main event (a War Games) so while this was in a cage, the cage was mostly used to help with some top rope moves and to add a sense of urgency. That urgency was important due to the five minute limits on the matches. If that limit was hit, both guys in would be eliminated. It was a problem when you had fresher guys in there since most matches just don't end in five minutes period, but they worked it pretty well, with wrestlers making mistakes they might not otherwise. It also let them do the false finish to put heat on the heel champ and shine up Buck. I think what I found most impressive here is how they weaved in the history over the last few weeks: Chase's knee had been damaged previously by Posey, which made the self-damage done by the kneeling powerbomb (a spot I've never seen done quite like that) work; Hancock had previously hurt Buck's neck, which made the pile driver the focus for the final pairing. I thought the guys who got time in here were fine, but I did want to see more of Slim J. He looked absolutely great when he came in and started riding Posey all over the mat. I like how he lost the offense vs Suave by getting tossed into the cage on his rope assisted headscissors (a move he used successfully on Posey). Some of the cage assisted spots looked good, especially the huge Samoan drop off the top in the title match. I could nitpick a thing here or there (like Posey using his spell-out-his-name legdrops on Slim J a couple of minutes after missing a legdrop off the turnbuckles on Chase) but overall, I think it was a difficult match to put together and as a total package (layout, wrestling, announcing) it worked out well.


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