
Everything posted by C.S.
- Dean Ambrose Am I missing something?
-
WWF TV Aug 8-14
I loved the way Dean completely buried the fuck out of Lesnar for being such a lazy prick. I'm so over Brock and his over-inflated push. I'm actually rooting for Randy Orton to win their match, even though I know that's bad, because Orton is the absolute worst candidate to be the one who finally goes over Lesnar. Austin blindsiding Dean at the end was a bit weird, but Dean handled himself very well and reacted like a pro, even though he was obviously taken aback.
-
Quarterly Feel Good Poll
Current favorite wrestler to watch: Shinsuke Nakamura. His presence is magical. Last fun match you saw: Johnny Gargano vs. Tomasso Ciampa (CWC first round) Wrestler you want to see more of: Shinsuke Jack Gallagher. This seems to be more about up-and-coming young guys, which I was too tired to realize last night, so I changed my answer. I think we'll be seeing a lot of Shinsuke regardless, thankfully, so no point putting him here. Last live show attended (if applicable/different from last time you answered): A WWE house show a few years ago headlined by a Cena vs. Miz Streetfight and Punk vs. Del Rio. Evan Bourne returned (between Wellness violations) and wrestled Dolph Ziggler in a very disappointing match. Ryback was also here, before he returned to TV. Match you're most looking forward to watching: Shinsuke Nakamara on the main roster vs. Seth Rollins, John Cena, AJ Styles, etc. Hell, even Dolph because they're both "flamboyant." Last fun interview/promo you saw: I guess Cesaro's "shoot" about his placement on Raw Last interesting thing you read about wrestling: Pat Patterson's book. It's fantastic! Last worthwhile podcast you listened to: Legends With JBL with Booker T. Will be watching Stone Cold Podcast with Ambrose tonight. Most fun you've had watching wrestling lately: CWC Favorite recent post on this board: Instead of a post, here's a thread I love and wish got more attention - Under-the-radar wrestling book recommendations Favorite thing about the wrestling landscape in the past three months (if you live in the past, then go with your past three months of time-traveling): A tie between the rise of Shinsuke and the CWC.
-
WWE Network... It's Here
A lot of great points in this thread. Just want to quickly respond to this for now: How long ago did JBL write that? Like much of America, he's most likely changed his mind since then. A tweet from April 2015: I'd say that's more WWE's bad for giving him a column where he was allowed to espouse his views uncensored in a way that wouldn't draw the company a dime and only potentially turn paying customers off. Probably why stuff like that is no longer done.
-
Conor/Roman drama thread
Was I the only one hoping this was about Roman Reigns and Conor of The Ascension? :\ Anyway, a bunch of wrestler tweets about this in one place: http://stillrealtous.com/ric-flair-chris-jericho-aj-styles-sheamus-respond-conor-mcgregor/
-
WWE Network... It's Here
I read both Booker T books and still found the JBL interview compelling stuff. Nothing "new" maybe, but it was still great to hear it in this setting. BTW, as hit or miss as Ride Along has been (at worst, it's been a complete bore), the episode with Jericho/Henry and AJ Styles/The Club is worth watching - mostly for Jericho and Henry. Wish the entire episode had been about them. AJ/Club weren't nearly as interesting because they were obviously kinda limited and hamstrung by what they couldn't talk about - e.g. most of their careers. Even though Jericho and Henry was obviously a bullshit setup for the show (they had never ridden together before), it was still a fun listen.
-
WWE Network... It's Here
Surprised there hasn't been more mention of this here. Is it because it's JBL, who internet smarks are conditioned to hate? Anyway, it was brilliant. In fact, I consider Legends With JBL to be hands down the best show on the Network. There was some ridiculous hate thrown Michael Hayes's way after that episode of Legends With JBL, just because Hayes is usually unlikeable and has a checkered past, but I thought he came across great and very honest with JBL. You couldn't convince some people here of that though. They were so predisposed to hate Hayes that their judgment IMO was severely clouded and compromised.
- NXT talk
-
Your most "Against The Grain" opinion on wrestling
Mountain News WYMT: "Beautiful" Bobby Eaton reportedly missing
-
Your most "Against The Grain" opinion on wrestling
Not my posts, of course. But don't worry, I'm pretty sure the OP posts to several boards and picks and chooses which responses to use.
-
Hyperthetical: you find Vince's personal diary dating back to 1983
Hard to pick just one, so I'll suggest a few: - Snuka murder situation - Triple H and Stephanie getting together - Vince Russo leaving - Shane leaving I almost put CM Punk leaving, but I doubt he lost much sleep over that. Punk's departure arguably pushed Bryan's ascension forward, but it had no negligible effect otherwise IMO.
-
Your most "Against The Grain" opinion on wrestling
Truthfully, the Tensai gimmick was tone deaf and dead on arrival no matter what his alignment was.
-
The WWE Global Cruiserweight show
That's true too, but regardless of the history or reasons, they still raised the bar and gave everyone else something to aim for. They also opened my eyes. To be honest, they've done nothing for me as a tag team in NXT. I had no reason to care about them before the CWC. (I'd never seen Gargano before NXT and had only seen Ciampa once.) Other than Gargano vs. Ciampa, these were my favorite matches in the tournament: Jack Gallagher vs. Fabian Aichner, Kota Ibushi vs. Sean Maluta, and Brian Kendrick vs. Raul Mendoza. I'm probably forgetting one or two other standouts, but in all of my examples, both guys shined. That hasn't been the case with every match in the tournament IMO.
-
The WWE Global Cruiserweight show
Nese is 38 years old. He's had plenty of time to develop a character. Anthony Bennett, at 21, is already leaps and bounds ahead of Nese in that department. I'd question Nese's instincts here, not "The Kid Who Don't Play." We're going in circles here, so let's just agree to disagree on this. Anyway, my thoughts on this week's show: - Rich Swann vs. Jason Lee was underwhelming to me. Swann didn't impress me as much as I was hoping, but to be fair: 1. This was Swann's first match after a shoulder injury. 2. Swann has his character and mannerisms down pat. Awesome stuff. 3. I'm sure Lee was suffering from the dreaded jetlag. Seriously though, the commentators missed a major opportunity to go into Swann's anger when his facial expression turned because they were too busy droning on about Cena speaking Mandarin. Who gives a fuck? - Noam Dar vs. Gurv Shira was nothing special, and the wrong guy won - only because Dar is the first WWE wrestler ever born in Israel. Not sure why that matters but it was a major talking point and something they obviously see value in - for this round at least. My only hope is that they see more upside in The Bollywood Boys as a tag team and sign and push them that way. - Jack Gallagher vs. Fabian Aichner was great fun, and contrary to the silly comment that was posted earlier, I liked Aicher even though he had muscles growing out of muscles. In any other match, Aichner would have been the star. He's the perfect example of someone making the most out of this opportunity even in loss, which is something that not everyone in the tournament has done IMO. As for the winner, Gallagher was amazing. I love everything about the "Extraordinary Gentleman." His wrestling style, his look, his character, his mannerisms. No one else would be able to make those trunks, boots, and ridiculous little mustache work, but Jack Gallagher pulls it off. - Wow, wow, WOW at Johnny Gargano vs. Tomasso Ciampa. They showed that they're among the most seasoned wrestlers in the tournament with an incredible match that told a brilliant and brutal story. Easily the best match of the CWC thus far. I cannot say enough good things about it, and I hope both men's stocks have risen considerably because of it.
-
Your most "Against The Grain" opinion on wrestling
I totally concur. I even started this "Microscope" thread in defense of Douglas.
-
Your most "Against The Grain" opinion on wrestling
Just to add to this: I run counter to most of this board because I think being "just a worker" means nothing, and I actually look down on those types of wrestlers. They don't draw money, they don't bring in fans, they don't build the business in any way. Character, charisma, and storyline are all incredibly important - vital - components of a wrestling match and of a wrestler. Someone who is "just a worker" and has nothing else going for him is damn near useless to me on a major league (WWE) level. That's why I'll value - for example - Anthony Bennett (the "Kid 'n Play" wrestler) over Tony Nese (the muscular guy with zero character at this point) from the Cruiserweight Classic. With time and seasoning, Bennett will have the far bigger upside.
-
The WWE Global Cruiserweight show
I never said Nese was the problem with the match, so don't put words into my mouth. I don't give a flying fuck about Nese's muscles either. His character - if you can call it that - is bland as fuck. Being a "worker" alone gets you nowhere in WWE. You know that. And as a worker, let's face it, Nese is hardly elite by the standards this tournament has set. We're not talking about Kota Ibushi here. Bennett has tremendous upside as a character and personality. He's still young, so there's no reason to think he can't or won't improve in the ring over time.
-
The WWE Global Cruiserweight show
Other than maybe 4 or 5 of the truly elite, most of these guys would die an instant death on Raw - Cruiseweight division or not. Bennett is one of the very few who could stick around for years to come. Future World Champion? No, but I see far more upside in his character and act than I do someone like Tony Nese.
-
Under-the-radar wrestling book recommendations
Read a sample of this on my Kindle last night. Really well-written and compelling stuff. I remember it being posted here at the time, so I'm not sure why I never bought it. Any reason to get the Kindle edition over the physical book? (Glossy photographs, etc.?) Some others I've read recently: - I really doubt this is under-the-radar, but the new Pat Patterson book - Accepted: How the First Gay Superstar Changed WWE - is excellent. It covers everything, from his childhood to Legends House. There are a couple of instances of homophobia or discrimination where he doesn't name the perpetrator because he doesn't want to give them the satisfaction of seeing their name in print, and you kinda wish he'd go into even more detail at times (especially about the Alley Fight with Sgt. Slaughter), but those are nitpicks. One person he does go into detail about is Ray Stevens, who gets an entire chapter dedicated to him. It's a fantastic book overall, and it will probably end up being the best wrestling book of the year. I highly recommend it. - I also finished Ali vs. Inoki, and it's a bit dry but quite good. Goes into wrestling a lot more than I expected - including quite a bit of detail about side characters in the story, like Freddie Blassie. The Kindle version has formatting issues though - missing dashes and words clumped together likethis - so the physical version might be the way to go, assuming that doesn't also have the same problems. I've made the author aware, but a fix has not been issued yet. I hope they just don't ignore it. Really drives me crazy when this happens on Kindle books. Ring of Hell was a catastrophe in this regard, and the butthead author and publishers of that completely ignored me. Looks like it's not even on the Kindle store anymore. That's one way to solve the problem, I guess. Still wish I had gotten a refund at the time. Thankfully, the Ali vs. Inoki author acknowledged me and said he was unaware of the problem but would be looking into it, so I really hope a fix is forthcoming.
-
NXT talk
Shinsuke Nakamara is amazing. Even in a nothing match against a hopeless jabroni like Wesley Blake, he was still awesome. The mannerisms alone are such money. TM61 did nothing for me. They seemed like a couple of bland jobbers. Then again, I thought the same about The Revival at first, and they're amazing now. If NXT has proved anything, it's that they can turn "workers" into a more complete package - Becky Lynch is another perfect example of that. I wasn't sold on No Way Jose at first, but they've added layers to his character since then. I really dig his angry side and "crazy eyes." Makes no sense from a storyline perspective for Aries to target him - what does Aries get out of it? - but Jose should be able to carry him to a fun match. Kota Ibushi wasn't nearly as impressive against Buddy Murphy. He was still good, mind you, but his match against Sean Maluta in the Cruiserweight Classic was far more compelling, and he felt far more important in that setting. The CWC entrance and graphics don't work well with NXT's presentation. A throwaway show overall, but still fun. BTW, I assume that weird wolf vignette was for Ember Moon.
-
The WWE Global Cruiserweight show
I forgot to mention Anthony Bennett. I really liked him and I kinda thought he should have won. He would likely go a lot further on Raw or Smackdown than Tony Nese ever will. Hope he's not seriously injured.
-
The WWE Global Cruiserweight show
Zack Sabre Jr.'s tights are way too small for his body. He needs to go up a size. Just saying. Wrestling-wise, I really liked his unique style, but it definitely felt a bit low key for the "THIS IS AWESOME!!!" obnoxious smark Full Sail fans. Bryan even acknowledged as much by pointing out things that he said would not necessarily wow a crowd but impress other wrestlers. The Kendrick-Mendoza match was a lot of fun, but I really hope the "pretty face" stuff for Mendoza was meant ironically, because that is one ugly pug-looking motherfucker. I still think the commentary is mostly fine. Some flaws and growing pains, but still miles ahead of what we see on the main shows. The only thing I don't like is how Mauro and Bryan telegraph every single winner. It makes all of the matches too predictable. BTW, did anyone else notice that Ciampa and Gargano were referred to as "former" tag team partners? What's the deal there? They're supposedly getting an NXT Tag Team Title match against The Revival at Takeover: Brooklyn (or so I'm assuming).
-
WWE TV July 25 - July 31
I kinda hope the Finn-Jericho rumor is BS and the actual feud will be Jericho-Roman. I can see Jericho convincing Vince that he's a strong enough heel to turn the fans and get people cheering for Roman.
-
WWE Battleground
Too long, but Orton seemed natural, comfortable, and smooth for once. I liked it.
-
WWE Battleground
Geez, Backlund sold that slap like he got shot out of a cannon. LOL at Young looking at his hands in shock like Backlund used to do. Nice reference to 1994.