Everything posted by Jetlag
- Otto Wanz
-
Otto Wanz
Doesn't look like much of a worker and got pretty bloated toward the end of his run (actually was a fairly athletic dude before the mid 80s, who did a neat Santo headscissor), but he was in a handful of spectacular bouts. Of course it's hard not to have a spectacular match when you are facing guys like Murdoch, Slaughter or Vader, but I like the style and big match atmosphere Wanz brings to these bouts, and his willingness to get demolished deserves a lot of credit. I was surprised to see how good he looks in early matches, against lesser opponents and on smaller shows, making his popularity understandable. He has quite a bit of footage available so I think it's not insane to consider him.
-
Ashura Hara
Same deal as T. Ishikawa. Old sumo asskicker is among my favourite types of japanese wrestlers and this guy is next to Tenryu for me. Hara uses about 3 moves but I love him for the little things. For example, he is among my absolute favourite guys ever at receiving kicks. There is a tag with Tenryu against Kitahara and someone where Kitahara unloads his arsenal and Hara is out of his world great getting clocked in his head, ear or barrel chest. His performance in the 1993 tag with Fuyuki against Hashimoto and Ohara is almost all headbutts but it's one of the best tags I've ever seen. I believe unlike Ishikawa he also has a handful singles matches very much worth watching. A guy who did simple things and created awesome moments. Wonder what his IWE stuff is like.
-
Takashi Ishikawa
Probably won't convince anyone, but I like this dude more than about 3/4ths of the guys nominated. Really good second fiddle player to the stars and manages to steal the show from guys like Jumbo and Choshu. Don't know how good his AJPW run exactly his, but his post 1990 work as lumpy-surely old bastard who will kick you in the eye is among my favourite things to watch.
-
Trauma II
He reminds me a bit of the BattlARTS guys. Mostly indy career with not a lot footage available, cool innovative-uncooperative hybrid style mixing lucha and shootstyle matwork with stiffer than hell brawling. Doesn't show up on a regular basis anywhere, aside from the golden BTJr handheld run in 2010, but always pops up and wows you by turning someone's ankles inside out. Got insanely good in 2009, having one of the best IWRG singles matches ever against Zatura. His 2010 interactions with Black Terry may be among my favourite things Terry has done that definitely wasn't all Terry. That he is able to be among the best workers in the world in years where only a handful of handhelds are availalbe speaks volumes. I imagine if he joined CMLL his stock would skyrocket much like Hechicero's did.
-
[1993-01-15-JWP] Plum Mariko vs Commando Bolshoi (Submission)
This deserves some comments. These two had a studio TV match the year before that was really solid. But this is a different story. Bolshoi has evolved from Kid into Commando and added a bunch of flash submissions to her arsenal. The last match saw Plum putting Bolshoi away with a bunch of flash suplex moves, Plum deserves a ton of credit here for making Bolshoi look like the real deal. She ties her leg up in a nasty fashion on the buckle and can't do much in the match after that but is able to reverse some of Bolshoi's submission attempts. Most of the match is about tight submissions, knees and stomps. Really good finish in this match, both girls seem really underrated.
-
[1993-08-29-PWFG] Duane Kozlowski vs Yuki Ishikawa
This was a hell of a little match. Duane is a beast and the story of the match is Ishikawa coming into his own and really stepping up the fight. Big crowd reactions to basic spots and they really emphasize the struggling over the basic holds and throws. Ishikawa really wants the win here. Killer finish.
-
Dr. Cerebro
He always had a great punch, great matwork and a brutal tope, so I'd say he was very good before peak IWRG. There's his stuff with Hijo del Santo and he consistently looks good to very good in the limited pre-2009 IWRG that I've seen, getting the most out of guys like Gigolo Americano, so he is more consistent than Freelance (disappointing matches) and has more stuff and more variety than Chico Che. There's a tag with Cerebro Negro against Virus and Suicida I've uploaded that is very much worth a look if you want to see what he could do. 2009-2011 he's off the charts for sure, benefitting from being around talented dudes but also carrying scrubs into high end matches.. Also, he is talked about in old DVDVRs as the craziest matworker around.
-
Akitoshi Saito
Him vs. Honda, Kobashi and Marufuji are among my favourite NOAH singles matches. Great tag worker with a nice unique dynamic to Akiyama and Inoue. I'd actually be interested in going back and checking out his 90s work. There's a super intense rookie match vs. Orihara somewhere, and I also remember a good outting from him against Koichiro Kimura in W*ING of all feds during his rookie year.
-
The Nomination Thread
Nominating Otto Wanz via OJ's european wrestling list Takashi Ishikawa via 90s forum and SC WAR reviews http://segundacaida.blogspot.de/2010/08/segunda-caida-declares-war.html Ashura Hara via AJPW 80s and the above SC Dr Cerebro and Trauma II http://segundacaida.blogspot.de/2010/06/complete-and-accurate-black-terry.html
-
MEN'S Teoh
Underrated dude. His Terry Funk tribute is spot on and his technical stuff he can do very well. If you look at him vs. Shinzaki you'll notice he was really good in his second year of wrestling already. Problem is he was lost in the shuffle in the 2000s due to being forever undercard in lousy Big Japan. I remember him trying his damndest to get a good match out of Sekimoto in front of a dead crowd, also had a few fun lucharesu outtings with his stable of spotty service boys and arguably the best BJW tag with Mashimo et al. What he needs is a Togo-like run of indy veteran goodness and it just didn't happen in that volume. A shame because he's a secret fave of mine.
-
Your Top Texans & Cowboys
Great thread. Guaranteed to make my top 100: 1. Terry Funk 2. Stan Hansen 3. Dick Murdoch 4. Barry Windham 5. Tully Blanchard On the edge 6. Steve Austin 7. Kerry von Erich 8. Dusty Rhodes Probably won't/need to rewatch 9. Mark Henry 10. Dory Funk Jr. 11. Dusty Rhodes 12. Cowboy Bob Orton 13. Bruiser Brody Guys I need to see more of before I can rank them - Dutch Mantell - James Storm - Ted DiBiase - Tito Santana - Kevin von Erich
-
Who has the trifecta as a HOF candidate?
Fujiwara it is
-
[1999-12-03-AJPW-Real World Tag League] Kenta Kobashi & Jun Akiyama vs Stan Hansen & Akira Taue
Damn this was good. Hansen firing up and slapping the fuck out of people and forcing everyone around him to match his rage is a well beloved formula and Hansen as an old guy adds a nice different angle to it. Parts of this felt like the Baba/Rusher tag from 10 years earlier. It's trite to talk about Hansens selling and charisma but him putting over his opponent's strikes (to the point where he had people believe he was knocked out by a random Kobashi chop) and gathering considerable response for basic moves was a thing of beauty. By the end the whole crowd was dying to see the lariat and the eventual payoff gets a crazy response. Also I've never ever heard Kobashi getting heel responses like he did here. THAT is how good Hansen was. I also dug Taue as an understated second man on the Hansen team working deliberately heelish. Insane last minute with Akiyama once again bringing it all out for a lightning fast victory.
-
Meiko Satomura
I really dig Meiko and I thought she had been nominated before. She's not flawless but for me is kind of like Ikeda as someone working mostly in their own niche, having a great series of matches with a specific dance partner (Kong in this case) under her belt and plucking away throughout various time periods and promotions, except she's still going really strong. Great moveset and she has that rare intensity that makes you buy her character and what she does. At her best she's about on the same level as Hokuto and Kong.
-
La Fiera
Fiera vs. Negro Casas Lucha meets WAR. This was about as stiff as any mexican match I can remember. Both guys were trading kicks square in the face and it was great. Casas' selling was pretty spectacular but I especially loved Fiera finding different ways to crack Casas' skull with nasty spin kicks. Watching his performance here reminded me a lot of an elbow-less Misawa. Both guys faceplant horrifically on missed dives. Nothing like a super simple, gritty lucha brawl.
-
Perro Aguayo Jr. (July 23, 1979-March 21, 2015)
Apparently two other workers on the show were injured before and it took the doctors a while to get to Perro because they were still busy with these. This is also the reason they had to improvise a table as stretcher to carry him away. The box/lucha comission is usually extra strict about lucha shows in Tijuana, so normally they would've been able to handle this. Terrible series of coincidences.
- Mighty Inoue
-
Great Kabuki
Seems like a really underrated worker to me. You could argue Tenryu took his trademark style from Kabuki - as you can find the nasty kicks to the face, stiff punches and general recklessness in his matches before. Looked great in a 70s style tag in IWE and is really good as tough old tank in AJPW and WAR tag up until 1993, so ideally he has about 15 years of being really good. I need to take a closer look at his career but right now he's already above Mutoh for me.
-
The Nomination Thread
I'd like to nominate Mighty Inoue and Great Kabuki via 80s set
-
Jim Breaks
If you haven't seen any Breaks, go and use OJ's list as a starting point, eg: Jim Breaks vs. Adrian Street Jim Breaks vs. Johnny Saint Jim Breaks vs. Vic Faulkner Jim Breaks vs. Young David (Davey Boy Smith) Are all online. If you have seen everything OJ listed, go and watch everything else you can find (like with any other worker, really).
-
Top 5 - Matches to Watch!
El Dandy vs. Pirata Morgan https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WIc62hVvGw vs Angel Azteca https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0fLKAa3QFU vs Satanico https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uMpe0N7GRvg vs Negro Casas https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2HM7e2I-hs vs Negro Casas vs El Hijo del Santo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ga7GQP0R8U0 Yoji Anjo vs Norman Smiley https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YZ_ZvmEt5s vs Masakatsu Funaki https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZSABUJNAjA vs Tamura https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DkMf0YTDowY vs Sano http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?9tlioo64yhjd511 (thanks Ditch) vs Tenryu (thanks Ditch) http://theditch.us/TenryuVsAnjoh7-21-96.avi Alexander Otsuka vs. Daisuke Ikeda (thanks Ditch) http://theditch.us/OtsukavsIkeda11-5-97.avi vs. Sugiura https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Dc6h-zIXmw vs. Yuki Ishikawa (thanks Ditch) http://theditch.us/IshikawaVsOtsuka9-11-05.avi vs. Yujiro Yamamoto http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xa4wjb_alexander-otsuka-vs-yujiro-yamamoto_sport vs. Hikaru Sato http://lenny.theditch.biz/20100318-RJPW_AlexanderOtsuka-vs-HikaruSato.wmv Marty Jones vs. Terry Rudge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6YW9Xcp07s vs Dynamite Kid https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MLyO790es-I vs Mark Rocco https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZbSfSe5NUw vs Finlay http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x9bzuq_fit-finlay-vs-marty-jones-england-4_sport vs Johnny South https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tj72Fh0zSVE La Fiera vs. Babe Face https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXH2Dt0bj30 vs. Tiger Mask II https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMLArroZpxU vs. Jerry Estrada https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wVvPiNvOEyM vs Atlantis https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TxSfUcExs0E vs. El Dandy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=91lNwe06y8I
-
[2015-01-11-Oz Academy] Tsubasa Kuragaki vs Kagetsu
This definitely exceeded expectations. Joshi is this weird style where two no-name workers can have a kickass match out of nowhere and rookie/vet matches tend to be better because of the difference in ranking, and that was the case here. Kagetsu is a butch looking rookie* in the vein of Toshiyo Yamada while Kuragaki is a powerhouse, with a cool moveset who throws these nasty Tenryu-ish "Fuck you, punk" lariats. This does a tremendous job avoiding all the usual pitfalls of joshi while building a match that gets better and better and leads to some real dramatic selling. Even the usual pesky little brawl on the outside wound up leading to a meaningful transition and set up some great (and neatly sold) armwork. Loved Kagetsu bouncing off the mat after taking the Yokota/Asuka superplex bump off the top, loved the reckless flying over the guardrail armbreaker, loved Kagetsu attempting to murder her opponent by landing repeated BattlARTSian rotten melon kicks to her head. Also worth pointing out that while Kagetsu got in a lot of offense on Kuragaki, it always felt like an uphill battle for her. This on first watch feels like a slam-dunk MOTY for japanese wrestling. *actually, she made her debut in 2008 but is 22.
-
[1999-02-13-AJPW-Excite Series] Hayabusa & Jinsei Shinzaki vs Tamon Honda & Jun Izumida
I watched the full match. Haven't seen the previous match in a while, but while this didn't have the blood it felt shockingly great. Izumida looked great as a tough bruiser cutting off the flying team. Him and Honda trying to crack Shinzaki's skull throughout the first half of the match was great, loved his ultra stiff bicycle kick and diving headbutt. Builds to a really great finishing stretch with some extremely well timed spots and a slightly different structure than tag matches usually have, Honda's selling was just amazing and his suplexes were killer, but that's not news. Hayabusa was a little annoying but mostly relegated to hitting high spots which he does well. That Shinzaki feint leading to Hayabusa hitting a springboard moonsault across the ring was one of the best I've ever seen. Nice symmetry finish to conclude their feud.
-
[1995-01-02-AJPW] Mitsuharu Misawa & Satoru Asako & Jun Akiyama vs Toshiaki Kawada & Akira Taue & Yoshinari Ogawa
Great little 6 man with lots of hatred going on here. Asako and Ogawa had some sort of feud going on and the match begins in a chaotic fashion with Team Misawa even triple teaming their opponents. Kawada ends up getting shafted by Akiyama and eats a super nasty exploder, but Akiyama is quickly isolated and made to pay dearly. Tons of nasty shots in that section, and Kawada does this awesome heel spot where he steps on Akiyama's head as he reenters the ring, such a simple but effective dick move. Ogawa continues to be really aggressive by working over Akiyama's mid section in really violent fashion, then later on turns into Mini-Kabuki and decks Asako with a wad of stiff looking punches to the face. Aggressive bully Ogawa is weird to watch. This was a good way to spend 20 minutes.