Everything posted by dawho5
-
[1991-09-26-UWFi-Moving On] Kazuo Yamazaki vs Yoji Anjo
I thought it was at the very least a good look at two different strategies. Anjo was going in just fishing for something to work, throwing things out there willy nilly. Sometimes it worked, other times it got him caught. Yamazaki was fighting defensively and waiting for a big opening before he let loose with much. Then he started getting behind in points and had to get more aggressive. Nothing super great or even above good, but I won't say anything bad for it.
- 8 replies
-
- Sapporo
- UWFI
- September 26
- 1991
-
+2 more
Tagged with:
-
Dave Meltzer stuff
I never said anything about not trusting her claims. I fully believe her. I said that the way she handled the problem was wrong and would not lead to a solution. And please believe me when I say that this is a problem that needs solving sooner rather than later.
-
Dirt Sheets
Damn good way to start in a new arena!
-
Mid Atlantic Championship Wrestling Jan. 86
Renegades getting the win is a nice twist. I'm sure the Bolsheviks won't be back to cause any trouble later...
-
Wrestling Culture: Greatest Wrestler Ever Reaction show
I hadn't thought of it that way, but it makes sense. And pro wrestling is much more positively looked at in Japan even without the shootstyle elements as heavily involved in the mainstream wrestling style. I know we all love All Japan with the 4 Pillars, but a lot of the Japanese fans had to re-get into it after Baba and Jumbo were out of the main event picture. It wasn't a HUGE period of time, but there was a lull there. It's not like there was a ton of martial arts/shoot elements involved in AJPW during the Baba/Jumbo years.
-
Wrestling Culture: Greatest Wrestler Ever Reaction show
I think it has long been admitted that Japanese wrestling is the closest in form to American pro wrestling. I thought Dylan was absolutely correct in the reasons for it. I'd say there are still cultural aspects of Japanese wrestling that a lot of fans don't get. The biggest one I've heard/seen is the more martial arts style kicks. They are either looked at as some kind of effeminate, lesser way of fighting or "cool". I think one thing that ties certain aspects of all male wrestling together is that machismo that leads to strikes being exchanged. It is way overdone in a lot of instances, but it is a common thread through all of it.
-
UNIVERSAL WRESTLING FEDERATION (UWF)
King of the Mountain was grrrreat! Luger and warrior teaming up would have been a big highlight for the fans.
-
Wrestling Culture: Greatest Wrestler Ever Reaction show
I thought that your view of the final top 20 was dead on. If the only wrestling in the world was in the U.S. and Japan, yes that is a perfectly fine list. But you look at Mexico and I'll just do a hypothetical. What if el Santo lost his mask in a match? Would the Mexico City police force be enough to quell the riots? I doubt it. And you're telling me that kind of fanatical devotion to a babyface doesn't warrant a place in the top 20 wrestlers ever? I think that lucha, WoS, shootstyle and yes, even joshi are highly under-represented. I barely like joshi. Getting through a lot of matches is a massive grind for me. But if you tell me that Arn Anderson is somehow more important to wrestling as a whole than somebody like Dump, Bull and Aja (who are all very skilled workers in-ring), I'd immediately argue that is not the case. I don't have to like the style to see that. I'd even go as far as to add things like Puerto Rico and the lucharesu stuff, even if I don't care for Dragon Gate at all, to those other styles. I get not putting Invader 1 and Colon on that list. But somebody like Invader 3, Ron Starr and Chicky Starr would have made a ballot for me no question due to the work I've seen from them in PR. Maybe lower end as we don't have a crap ton of footage, but still there. Your views on All Japan surprised me. I mean, I was at one time a HUGE advocate of it as the best wrestling ever. And if you go up to 1994 I'd still agree with that. But the decline of the promotion and the way people seem to shrug off the signs of it are things I have had trouble dealing with. And I go farther than that in saying that it poisoned pro wrestling as a whole when many of the more overt aspects of it were borrowed without the more subtle parts that tied them together in a meaningful way. I'm pretty sure I get an eye roll when I say things like that from most, so it surprised me that you seemed to look at it along the same lines. So yeah, in a perfect world we do get people like Jimmy Breaks, Casas, Santo, Aja, Akira Hokuto, Devil Masami, Fujiwara, Maeda, Chicky Starr, maybe even Ultimo dragon since he did pioneer a style all his own on most of the ballots because people watched all of these different styles and recognize that even if they did not love the styles, they can see who the people are that pushed those styles to their limits and made them what they are. They really mastered the style according to the expectations the fans demanded and to me that is where a list like this should have been. What else is wrestling about?
-
Wrestling Culture: Greatest Wrestler Ever Reaction show
Yeah, like I said, I agree with a lot of the points you make. And I understand that maybe your view of how things had gone informed that very heavily. I've made mistakes myself like that. That kind of post from me is never about "you guys owe us" anything. The point I really wanted to make was what you got out of it. In the end those discussions would have been nice to have. Maybe the time for them is passed and maybe the people who at the time wanted to have them have moved on. But I think there are things that can happen that put more light on the areas that GWE indicates it needs to be shined in. And maybe, here's one I didn't really account for, it's up to new posters to find that kind of thing on the board and figure out how to drive things forward. It's not always on the old "opinion-makers" I guess is the word to continue doing that. So my comments in that direction are a little off-base. I do maintain that if you and some others truly had wanted to keep PWO as something you participated in, you could have. If that was not your desire, so be it and I won't tell you that it has to happen. One thing this discussion has shown me is that I should maybe take some of my own advice.
-
Mid Atlantic Championship Wrestling Jan. 86
Stud Stable moving on is the right choice, although i would have liked to see them face the Nightmares. Backlund/Sheik is a fun program for the jingoistic stuff, but they could both go when they wanted to. Looking forward to a less interference-ridden match between Taylor and Pritchard. Both are really good wrestlers and could gain a lot from a chance to just go for 10-15 minutes.
-
Wrestling Culture: Greatest Wrestler Ever Reaction show
I never listened to this right away. Didn't participate in the polling largely due to not willing or able to put the time into things like joshi, WoS, lucha, etc. My opinion was that if I didn't put enough time to represent all of the different wrestling styles from around the world on my list accurately, it would be a list that I personally would find myself disagreeing with a lot as time went on. So I get your complaints about the final results. I think that if you weren't going to put in that time, at least enough to get some names somewhere on your ballot, you should not have voted. That being said, I think it's a cop-out to say all of that and refuse to discuss it on the board. I think that issue with PWO not being the same, too much MDA since the GWE project from a few months back stems from that very attitude among the people who could have made the difference. If you look at it, a vast majority of the people who drove those kinds of discussions seem to have removed themselves from anything resembling a real debate about what happened with the GWE and why. And I'm not going to tell anyone they have to have that discussion, nor will I be the one to initiate it because I did not take part. But I will absolutely tell you that, tired of even the idea of bringing it up as you may have been, you should have after a few months. Coming back a year or so later and not liking what you see is a direct result of your walking away or not saying anything. It's going to seem like I am down on you or what you have to say. But I truly think there is a lot of merit to it and it is something that should have been discussed. Maybe now is the time for that, a lot of wounds will have healed. Yes, they may open back up. But it's the god damn internet so get over it. If you want something more out of the site, make it happen. Nobody else will do that for you. I have said this kind of thing more than once and it's because PWO is the only board I would ever call home anymore. And people like you, Loss, goodhelmet, Parv, etc. all contributed to making it what it is. Maybe you didn't notice that's what you were doing when you were just talking wrestling with people you liked talking to or knew had a point. I'd hazard a guess that is something that is missed by most of the older posters who don't post much anymore. But I would also say that a mirror would be the exact place to look for the reasons why. Edit: I forgot to mention that, as surprising as it may be, my view of All Japan lines up almost 100% with Dylan. It is a subject I would be 100% open to exploring because from the end of Ditch's best of 2000s Japan poll to now it has cast a huge shadow over how I look at wrestling.
-
All Japan Pro Wrestling
Shame that Maeda was not brought in. Fujinami vs. Maeda was a great match and for more than just Fujinami's contributions.
- [1991-09-22-WWF-Wrestling Challenge] Interview: Sgt Slaughter
-
[1991-09-23-FMW-2nd Anniversary Show] Atsushi Onita vs Tarzan Goto (Barbed Wire Cage Bomb)
I'm not a fan of deathmatches. I do, however appreciate the way they really play to the gimmick of the match from the bell and don't stop. I also appreciate how everyone in the ring sells the explosions. Onita is really good at getting people behind him when he's selling. Very good for the genre.
- World Class Championship Wrestling Jan. 1986
-
Dave Meltzer stuff
I don't think that pushing things to social media because you are scared to go to the police is a viable option. I get that it's going to be tough to get justice. But there is a 100% guarantee that nothing happens to the attacker if this is all you do. Social media can't put a guy away or make him stop doing this kind of thing. And yes, aiming all of that bile at somebody else (in this case an enabler) only serves to make things more murky and harder to deal with. I'm not saying there are easy answers. I just know that what did happen was the wrong way to handle it. Part of the problem with this idea of men within "the wrestling business" getting away with things like this is that it becomes this self-perpetuating issue. Nobody has done anything, so why assume they will? I'm 100% sure every time you go in with a defeatist attitude like that you're going to lose. This is said with no animosity towards the young woman. I think that in a bad situation she made a bad choice. It happens. If the things she had to (and will have to in the future if she continues to be involved) deal with are going to stop it has to start with somebody making a stand. And it's not anyone on the internet that's going to make that happen.
-
[1991-09-22-WWF-Wrestling Challenge] Barber Shop: Ric Flair & Bobby Heenan
I appreciated Heenan doing the interview. Anything that can be done to get Beefcake to shut up is fine by me. And let's be fair, they killed Flair off before he ever got there. He was never a real threat to Hogan. So pretending that he should be treated differently once he gets to the WWF is just silly.
- [1991-09-22-WCW-Main Event] Danger Zone
-
[1991-09-21-TWA-Autumn Armageddon] Terry Funk vs Kevin Sullivan
You know, I'm pretty sure the Devil has to be involved with that much hairspray. Crazy brawl that kind of works for me. If there are any two guys who can pull off the wandering around the building brawl it's these two, even if that type of match does not appeal to me. Terry taking a swing at some fans right before the end was pretty nuts.
-
Mid Atlantic Championship Wrestling Jan. 86
Magnum just has the Horsemen's number of late. First Tully and now Arn. Really solid card and I would guess most everybody went home with a smile on their face.
- [1991-09-21-WCW-Saturday Night] Lex Luger and Tom Zenk
- [1991-09-21-WCW-Saturday Night] Barry Windham vs Mr Hughes / Barry Windham and Lex Luger
-
Japan Wrestling Association January 1986
I really liked all of the 6 man matches, the UWFi and Tenryu/Hara ones the most. I was also a fan of the alternate match. Even if Yatsu seems like he's gotten himself in a rut.
-
[1991-09-21-USWA-Memphis TV] Dutch Mantell vignette / Interview: Billy Joe Travis / Dutch Mantell, Eric Embry & Eddie Marlin
Most of this has been covered, so I'll just say that the crowd was incredible here. They were really fired up and reacting big to everything. Eddie Marlin eithe rmade his face really red when he was being choked or Embry knew when the camera was going to be on him and made sure it was legit at the time. And that guitar shot was all kinds of brutal.
-
[1991-09-21-WWF-Superstars] Funeral Parlor: Ric Flair & Bobby Heenan
I agree the setting is all wrong. Why have Paul Bearer giving those goofy facial expressions in the background (great as they are) while this hyper serious threat to Hogan is materializing? Part of being a maverick (which Vince definitely is in wrestling) is stepping outside of your comfort zone when the situation demands it. It seems like Vince only truly did that when his back was up against the wall. Otherwise he had this very limited view of what could be done and what worked.