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Ma Stump Puller

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Everything posted by Ma Stump Puller

  1. Ma Stump Puller replied to Grimmas's topic in Nominees
    Yeah vice versa about Muto post knee destruction funnily enough. You get more of a focus on less workratey stuff, but far more engaging matches as a result because they have to focus on making the smaller stuff count. Their 2001 match together was basically that philosophy coming to a head, and as a result it's one of their better (if not the best) outing between the two as a result, despite it not having any crazy spots.
  2. Ma Stump Puller replied to Grimmas's topic in Nominees
    He had multiple stinkers with Nishimura during G1 stints so that's him mostly disqualified for me lol. Always felt better as a tag worker than a singles, especially post neck-explosion. Him alongside Hashimoto and Muto? No contest as to who is where on my list, Chono is definitely not getting far compared to those two.
  3. For obvious reasons, I can't go over a 60 minute match bit by bit so I'm just going to have to mention the highlights and elements of this match. Obviously most of the people involved can't really do the big epics to the quality of their early 90's six man shows anymore (especially Misawa, whom while still obviously very good, was noticeably starting to pace himself far slower) but this was VERY good, as you'd imagine. Hase being here really shakes things up in terms of interactions: he's a solid hand as well so it helps to have someone who's not as fatigued throw down with everyone else; seeing him swing Taue like he's nothing is pretty nuts, and having the guy be so dazed afterwards that he goes to the wrong tag corner and gets socked by Kawada is a awesome little spot: him and Kobashi have some really solid exchanges as well, with him selling top notch for his offence. Hase isn't the MOTY performer or anything, but he is a solid hand that seems to be relieved that he's actually working a big match as opposed to jobbing out Johnny Smith or Shiga. Akiyama is also quite good, being nearly there in terms of hanging with the main guys but not quite hitting the mark: he can go toe to toe with them but he can't properly reel his opponents enough that he can get any proper advantage, namely only getting big shots when his opponent is softened up by someone else, or he's stealing their offence. Taue positions himself as the big bully as per usual but he gets his ass kicked a lot here when he tries to push his luck, especially against Kawada and Misawa whom are able to get past his offence and really beat him down despite throwing virtually everything at them. There's a bit maybe 20 minutes in where I think Kawada was legitimately KO'd after a very stiff brainbuster: the guy goes completely limp and everyone else has to cover hard for him, delaying everything. Even when Kobashi tries to throw him in the railing outside to stall for time the guy can't even move any, he just falls over. Maybe that's just him selling amazingly well but it was pretty scary to see regardless, even if they do make it into a great angle by having him try to survive everyone's attempts to finish him off and him doing anything he can to stop such a thing happening despite having little life in his body. Oh yeah, Kobashi is really great here, either being the big leader and heading up the heavyweights in big strike exchanges, or saving guys like Akiyama from Kawada and the rest of his team by himself. You really get the impression that he's the really big deal here with how much he's able to pull out: him and Taue doing a Doomsday Device-lite assisted top rope chokeslam? Throwing Misawa around for a huge Orange Crush? Fantastic shit in general. When the second half gets into gear with everyone hitting double team moves was also pretty awesome to see, albeit it does turn into a bit of a finish-spamming sequence with everyone hitting big moves over and over until the time limit. In short, don't go into this expecting a perfect match: while this is still extremely solid, it lulls in places and definitely suffers from the length being disproportionate to the heat as the crowd never truly bites and goes nuclear: you'd expect a classic Kings Road amping of escalation, that next level just never comes for them where anything could finish the match off. Perhaps that says more about how fan expectations for bigger and more dangerous matches were starting to show than it does about the match itself as a fault, nevertheless it does start to hurt the quality. Even then it's 60 minutes with some of the best workers of the 90's, it was never going to be terrible.
  4. Just stumbled on this, time to throw out some recommendations Izumida/Kawada 21.03.1998 Kashin/Greco 12.04.2003 Nakanishi/Bas 02.05.2002 Yasuda/Fujinami 19.07.2002 Otsuka/Tiger Mask 30.12.1998 Asian Cougar, Kamen Shooter Super Rider & Tanomusaku Toba/Daisaku, Yuki Nishino & Yusaku (especially based) 20.11.1999 junji.com./Super Rider 01.03.2001 Tenta/Warlord 15.12.1993 Takayama/Matsui 02.12.1997 Funaki/Suwama 08.04.2011 Sawada/Fujita 29.08.2015 Oba/Honda 24.04.2010 Akiyama/Funaki 27.04.2013
  5. He can be quite good and his undercard WAR association material is super high-end, but at the same time this guy just stinks cards out sometimes. I swear, almost every AJPW match I seen of this guy sucked. Johnny Smith and him stunk the joint out with a uber boring mat-work oriented match, him and Kawada can't get a good grove on for their showing and it feels really awkward, it's just a messy affair. That soured me on him a fair bit as I'd much rather put on someone who was consistently entertaining (Don Arakawa, for instance, never had a truly five-star match but he was always on the ball in everything I seen of him) than someone who could be very hit/miss.
  6. I wouldn't stick him on a top 100 but I can totally see why people would given his longevity and entertainment factor: he's one of those guys you could pick out nearly any random match of his and you'd find something fun and/or good about it. Like even right now he'd had some pretty decent outings in random E-tier indies like Kyushu Pro or whatnot. His shit in SMASH and other money-mark promotions also showcase his ability to get people you've never heard of over and how he could work anywhere on the card, at first working mostly the opening match and then later on the main event when they needed a good draw. It always helps that him and Nishimura (another guy with that ability to make nearly anything look great) have a pretty stellar series of matches.
  7. For the record this is a worked shoot: every major MMA site does not list this as a legitimate contest, which is a good thing because this like Takayama/Takahashi 2011 match (which is somehow on their records???) isn't trying to be one. It's instead a pretty robust 5-minute sprint in a cage at some random indie, starting off with a few minutes of the two wangling between side and full mount respectfully between the other. Nothing special here (especially given Ikemoto is a kickboxer, not a grappler at all) but Ike keeps his defence solid despite Funaki being a fiend with some of his snappy transitions. Funaki pulls guard and uses it as a way to try to wangle his opponent into some sort of arm submission, but Ike rolls out and throws out some slaps to escape. It's there that we get the better parts of the match as the two have some good back and forth striking exchanges: Ikemoto being the more eager guy to throw while Funaki bides his time for counter-strikes, landing flush with a good few shots to the face. Funaki beats his ass with some hard leg shots before landing some knees to the head in a clinch and kicking him for a knockdown. Funaki runs in to try to finish his opponent off as soon as possible, but Ike responds with a palm shot to the side of the head and some of his own strikes before doing one of the sickest cage-spots I've ever seen as he springs off the cage itself for a spinning spike-DDT into Guillotine. This spot alone is worth checking out, it's amazing. He cranks the submission as much as possible until Funaki wiggles out and slaps the guy in the face and eggs him on. Ironically Ikemoto is a lot more inclined to rein back his shots compared to his opponent, who just whacks him hard, and the finish comes fairly quick as Funaki lands a surprise rolling wheel kick to KO his opponent. It's definitely not a high-end for either man, but for a super quick pseudo-UFC outing, I thought it worked fairly solid. Outside of the incredible cage assisted DDT bit there's never anything truly great, albeit the match itself is still paced out super strongly and Funaki brings some good fire to this alongside Ikemoto, who is definitely one of those guys who really should have more footage on him because he's a immensely talented guy. Fun match all in all.
  8. IIRC the reason why Muto trimmed down and was going for the Jr heavyweight title was due to him having another knee surgery which put him on the shelf for a good long while, so he naturally wasn't as bulky when he got back into things (and probably to help his knees as well, him as a heavyweight doing moonsaults 24/7 was half the reason why they got busted in the first place) The kayfabe reason was that Muto wanted to get the one title in AJPW that he hadn't won yet so there's a extra bit of drama to things than just a regular title match. Solid post: definitely dig out more Jamal matches though, dude is a beast. He's got his Umaga-intimidation shtick pretty well defined even this early in his career but unlike Umaga he's more varied and can do some really cool big-man spots and top rope stuff like moonsaults and whatnot. His Kawada (2004) and Sasaki (2005) matches are worth searching out.
  9. When he's on the ball and motivated his work there can be really quite solid, which only makes his tremendously bad W-1 stint even worse by comparison because it's so obvious he just doesn't care.
  10. Shown in full. A fun six-man that helps to establish the big players as of now, as well as some of the up and coming. Crowd are mixed going in as Omori and Akiyama have a amateur wrestling stand-off before Kobashi gets in and gets a sneaky elbow smash after Omori doesn't clean break, leading to him staggering and knocking down the big man. Hansen is really good for 51 here, even if it's mostly because he's in with guys like Kobashi who he can just feed off for days, the lads have a great strike exchange. Also appreciate that Kobashi is so above him here that Hansen needs to cheat with eye rakes and illegal headlock punches to get the advantage: he can't just power through his offence like prior years, he has to actively pull out some cheap antics; this is a dynamic they've established for years by now, but it's still cool to see in action. We also get Taue working over Kobashi until a Misawa tag, which leads into a cool spot that has Taue lift up Misawa from a front headlock to the top rope, allowing Hansen and co to hold him down for Omori to start beating him up. Him and Misawa exchange strikes, but it's obvious that his elbow is way more effective, knocking him down after a few big shots. Akiyama tries to follow that up but eventually gets overwhelmed by some outside brawling, leading to the trio working over him for the second half. Akiyama naturally does a good job selling for everyone before countering a Omori dropkick, leading with a Kobashi hot tag. Omori gets some time to show off his resiliency as he shakes off some big chops, but eventually gets floored. It's interesting seeing him being placed in the underdog role as he has to endure getting worked over by the trio, chopped over a table on the outside, and basically rely on Hansen and co to at least even the score a bit: he's good, but he's not quite top tier yet. He's certainly more over than you'd expect throughout and he leads into a nice Hansen hot tag. There's some clever work on his behalf as he cuts off the more agile offence from Misawa before getting double teamed by the latter and Kobashi, which gets the crowd very much behind him as a result. It's also cool to see Taue at the end land multiple Baba signature moves as a solid tribute before leading into the usual road to the finish, with Omori noticeably getting well protected by having everyone have to get Kobashi out of a big Dragon Suplex counter at the very last minute for a crisp near fall. He lands a top rope knee but a Hansen assisted Axe Bomber is countered into a Half-Nelson, leading into a Tiger Suplex and Burning Lariat for the win. This is mostly business as usual for a starting year show but Omori is very noticeably being bumped up to be someone who can brawl with the top guys, even if he's not winning against them anytime soon: one wonders had Misawa and co stayed if that would've resulted in a significant push of any sort. Hansen puts in a inspirited performance, probably one of his last truly solid showings before his drastic breaking down and unplanned retirement later this year: this alongside the Tenryu singles are the last watchable matches I'd recommend looking at. Everyone else puts in a fairly par the course routine, with Kobashi and Akiyama impressing more generally. Good action paired with a steady pace that doesn't tire, these definitely get missed more and more as I went though the state of AJPW in 2000.
  11. Yuji Nagata defends the AJPW Triple Crown Title I was worried about this one when it was announced seeing Nagata doesn't have someone like Miyahara there to work the faster-paced bits as well as having to work as the champ instead of the challenger, so there's increased standards as opposed to being a one and done match. Ishikawa wasn't going to win this in a million years given he's equally looking rough, so this was already a match with a big hill to climb. The start of this was all about Nagata trying to find gaps in his opponent to exploit: he tries for arm work, and fails. He tries cranking Ishikawa's head with submissions, but fails. He tries rattling him with forearms, but fails, mostly because his forearms are still terrible. He even tries doing some outside brawling sthick, but Ishikawa simply picks him up and goes for a really nasty apron foot stomp. Nagata sells the foot stomp like death, and equally does so when it keeps getting targeted afterwards for more damage. Eventually Nagata finds something when he intercepts a charge with a knee shot to the leg, which allows him the small grapevine to hone in on holds and submissions. It's a excuse for him to lie down basically but it also works as a way for him to take charge here without relying on shitty forearms. Stiff headbutt and Ishikawa goes for a properly insane apron spot as he does his powerslam piledriver to Nagata there, which even with the obvious assistance and being fairly slow was crazy to see. This gives Nagata a excuse to lie down for a few minutes for a count-out tease before getting back in. Ishikawa keeps control with more solid forearm shots. They have to do the silly top rope Exploder spot (because every big-time Nagata match needs it now, apparently) so he goes up to the top rope for no reason other than for Nagata to counter and then do what he does; really bad and transparent all things considered. Dub spot for more rest time afterwards. They go for the usual "no selling/exchange finishers" bit but are so gassed that they can't even no sell properly, so they weirdly spring up after a small delay after each move with a very lethargic pace. Another dub spot after a bad running knee. Ishikawa goes for some really bad-looking knee strikes for a near fall before doing another piledriver for another one. Splash Mountain powerbomb attempt is resisted, Nagata gets hit with a lariat anyway. Second looked really bad as Nagata couldn't get up properly, so it almost looked like Ishikawa was going for a Ganso Bomb instead for a uncomfortable few seconds before they recover and it goes as planned. Nagata lands a rogue knee shot to the head and works the arm with his usual wacky Nagata Lock shtick but this also goes nowhere, Ishikawa doesn't sell any of it afterwards, it's just a excuse for Nagata to do his goofy face and run though another spot. Finish simply has Nagata doing his usual bombs and them exchanging forearms, which Nagata loses again. Ishikawa lands a back suplex and a knee to the head but doesn't go for the pin (???) so that Nagata can win with a rolling wheel kick and two backdrops when he tries for a random extra knee strike. The two tried well here, however I thought this was incredibly disappointing for a main. They paced this in a way to give lots of breathing room and it really shows near the end when they are stumbling and fumbling a lot, because they are trying to do a "big epic" match when they simply can't measure it out by this point. Nagata can still work, don't get me wrong, but there was no real aim behind his stuff; he worked the arms and then the legs, did nothing with either outside of crowd-popping spots: it felt like a caricature of the guy, which is fine for generic 6-man tags, for a Triple Crown main event it doesn't work, idk if Nagata is just used to working his usual safe routine due to years of mediocre NJPW material making it muscle memory. Ishikawa has never been a favourite of mine but you could tell he was really trying to make this solid as much as humanly possible on his end, doing a bunch of big stuff and hitting really hard with some of his strikes. He might have been enough to carry this maybe 5 or 6 years ago to something better, but by this point he's really past that level physically. It's a shame, really, because I can see these two having a possibly great match if not for the need to pace this way beyond the limits of both of them for the sake of making the match long when this could've been perfectly suitable as a 15 minute run.
  12. This got caught on fancam and it's a surprisingly good romp for a fairly nothing Carny Block. As expected, this turns into a generic David/Goliath matchup for the first few minutes, with Taue throwing his weight around and Ogawa having to use his smarts and tricky arm-work to keep him busy. While it's obvious the two have a way to go before they get into their primes, they manage to work a pretty good pace that's more grounded and based around Taue trying to out-grapple Ogawa and obviously failing at it with some surprisingly flush technical spots like doing the Inoki/Gotch triple arm drag sequence and Taue trying for a scoop slam that gets rolled over into a armbar instead. While this had the potential to be boring, Ogawa's arm-work is actually pretty great even this early with him relying on not just the busted arm but clever uses of leverage via that arm to get him into bad positions to wrangle it more. Eventually Taue is able to get his angry Baba Jr chops off alongside getting his size over, using a lot of power moves and cranking the neck to establish his own work. Ogawa's plan B is to throw punches and hope for the best, which...also doesn't go well for obvious reasons. Him landing a second rope dropkick was cool though. It was also nice to see some early Ogawa antics as he counters a fallaway slam into a small package and gets his snap neckbreaker on for a 2 count. Taue's first suplex is countered but his follow-up DDT isn't, and from then on in it's just a traditional Taue bomb-fest until he wins with the chokeslam. Not anything amazing or exactly out there for AJPW especially in 1992, but a nice, compact showing that really showcased two emerging talents well, even if Taue is still growing as a performer and has a few hiccups here and there with how he tends to lumber around with very numbly movements. Ogawa is flavourless as a generic underdog but his actual ring-work is more or less the same as it would be in a few years bar the Rat-Boy shtick (and some well-needed pushes) His arm work is robust and his comebacks are well-timed while not making his inevitable loss incredibly obvious like a lot of underdog matches tend to do. All in all, a decent showing and one of the very early bright spots for baby-Ogawa.
  13. If I could just make one extra suggestion, I'd absolutely suggest checking his match with Takayama (29.08.2002) it's a very rare underdog Fujita match and done pretty well
  14. Basically sums up the entire Taka/Suzuki tag run to a tee here. Very weird reign
  15. Definitely depends on how you judge RINGS stuff, because that's about 70/80% of his stock. He hits quite hard and knows how to grapple but other than that there's a lot of featureless material and half-hearted entries. Outside of the Kojima match in that 2002 Champion Carnival match (and I honestly think Yoji Anjo got a better match out of Koji there anyway for the time) he has a sloppy draw with Anjo and a boring match with Barton, with the rest of his AJPW 2002 being featureless tags. He's had maybe one or two properly great matches in the last 20 years. Talented sure, but unless we get access to all of the Futen matches he had he really isn't getting on a top 100 in my mind.
  16. Remember when Dick Togo actually wrestled? I sure do. This was a semi-final match so Togo wasn't pushed a ton (as he'd be working the finals) but Ogawa's style also means they could do a lot without it being super exhausting or high-impact. The result was a lot of really well-put together technical work where the two basically had a Catch-style masterclass where they got over duelling over arms and heads, some seriously smooth transitions (like there's one where Togo tries escaping out of a hammerlock by going the other way and Ogawa immediately responding by snapping on a standing rolling double wrist-lock that's just seamless, legit near perfect in execution) and a general pace that was definitely slow, but that actually played well into getting the crowd into this with some really positive responses and big cheers. Togo does a Nishimura handstand to escape the headscissors and Ogawa just dumps his head on the floor; the second attempt is successful and Togo takes the legs to go into a impressive Bow and Arrow submission. The second half had a bit more color as Ogawa was working Triple H style Indian Deathlocks alongside head cranks while Togo had to pull at the hair, throw chops, and sold hard to reverse the leverage and finally escape, which was surprisingly solid for a extended sequence of just the two sitting in a hold. The two default to throwing Memphis-lite closed-fist punches at the other but Ogawa uses his slippery counters to keep control and land his usual signature spots to try to snap the win. Togo cleanly counters a second backdrop into a crossbody and lands a flush sunset flip, leading the two to spam near-fall flash covers before Togo snaps on his Crossface off a rolling cradle attempt; despite Ogawa trying to escape via tricky pin-falls via reversing the leverage into a School-Boy alongside attempts to roll to the ropes, Togo keeps finding ways to get back into the submission and Ogawa is eventually forced to tap when he runs out of gas. This was a crafty match that did a lot despite the length: only 8 minutes, if you can believe it. Usually saying something was longer than it actually was is a insult, but in this case it really isn't: the two had some solid chemistry going hold to hold here and understood the assignment, making a solid showing out of a match with not a lot of actual bumps. Really enjoyable work that blended old-school grappling with some good flavour to mix it up didn't even need 10 minutes to be good.
  17. This YT channel recently stuck up a couple early Fujiwara matches with WoS guys if that's up your alley. It's nothing amazing or anything, but helpful for sure.
  18. This got some fairly harsh reviews for being very long and very slow. The first complaint I'll definitely agree with: Ogawa tends to get ambitious on C-tier shows (the near 30-minute NOSAWA match, the 40+ minute Kaito match, etc) and this was no different in length, clocking in at 23 minutes. The second? Not so much. This was not as good as their 2020 title bout but solid enough for a C-tier touring show. HAYATA is obviously wanting pieces out of Ogawa as well, and does so by trying to crank the same bandaged leg that Ridgeway had his hands on just a few days ago because, you know, long term ring psychology is sometimes a thing. Ogawa's counter is eye work if you can believe it, consistently raking and tearing at the eyes to try to get the guy off his leg. Ogawa definitely had his hands all over this match by the length and amount of carefully worked, smart wrestling that was on display; it helps that HAYATA was a kinda-sorta Ogawa project, so he's familiar with this more prolonged style and knows how to make it interesting, while speeding things up to showcase his youth advantage, eating up a lot of time to showcase that. Eventually Ogawa is able to block a dive to the outside and he uses that opportunity to then throw HAYATA's arm into the turnbuckle post to soften it up. Ogawa's work on the arm was entertaining while also being able to showcase his leg selling by not going for big fancy technical showcases and instead mostly working dirty, wrapping the arm up in the ropes and punching it, going for stomps, etc. He does some technical work but it's mostly playing to a more Hansen-lite scrappy brawling style than his usual pace. The way that he makes basic stuff like a knee drop on the arm so much more painful by rubbing the knee on the joint or bending at the fingers are small touches, but they go a mile in making the fairly long control segments seem more fresh. That bit where he had one foot on HAYATA's fingers and the other cranking the arm over the top rope was a pretty sick spot. They get back to a regular (ish) pace as Ogawa relies on hip tosses and key locks to keep his younger opponent on the mat, and he gets real desperate when HAYATA starts to climb out of the hole with more reckless tactics, going for chokes and that nifty ducking low blow when the guy tries for a dive. None of those stick and eventually Ogawa gets wasted when the pace climbs up with HAYATA landing a bunch of decent high-spots to get the crowd going. The arm work gives Ogawa pockets of room to work with; I especially liked HAYATA deliberately botching a handspring due to his bad arm to build the drama for the finish, which has Ogawa's double wrist lock get countered into a small package mid-move for the sneaky win. I think they could've easily taken a few minutes off this: the control segments are a little too long, and definitely start to drag by the third extended one as HAYATA isn't nearly as good as his opponent in making that work seem interesting. however, this was mostly pretty good drama, I'd say. Ogawa's limb work and selling are masterful and while he obviously can't go at HAYATA's pace, that's used as a storytelling device to showcase how he has to use more smarts and Rat Boy-isms to try to snatch a win via limb damage and slowing down the match. Not as compact and technically impressive as the Ridgeway match, but the two still had a pretty solid affair if you can stand more of a slower paced 70's AJPW feel to things. Another fun showing for the vet.
  19. I remember checking this out a while back! It's their attempt to try and redo a similarly bloody affair between Tenryu/Muto in the 2002 Carnival: doesn't quite get to those epic levels despite a bigger bladejob, but it was refreshing enough for what it was. It led to some solid outings from Kojima against guys he typically wouldn't have faced in his "Loser Revival" gauntlet, so it worked for what it was. Glad you enjoyed it.
  20. Takada is a young gun with some already good stuff under his belt, and he's wrestling Tiger with a big handicap due to a broken arm (allegedly) which he sustained in a untelevised bout against Fujiwara. This plays into the start as he gets a bit too compliant in stand-up and ends up getting battered with a combo of sharp kicks from Tiger, which allows him to wrestle his opponent to the mat and attempt a cross armbreaker, countered by Takada excellently into his own, which he's almost able to end the match right then and there if not for him locking his hands together for dear life. He has to give up his back, which results in Takada applying a nasty Misawa-style neck crank until Tiger gets up and throws out a backdrop, taking control with some nasty gut kicks. I love how Tiger also pulls out some goofy pro-wrestling moves here as well, namely his Tiger DDT and flipping senton; not as wild as he was in 1984 where he was basically just doing all of his NJPW shtick, but every now and then it comes though in the form of goofy moves. He then gets on a legit headscissors which Takada has to scramble to the ropes for. He tries to get back on top with his kicks, but Tiger is way too experienced for that and blocks many of them, showing him up with a three kick combo, knees in the clinch, and some elbows. Takada's back has been taken, he's under a ton of pressure and his strikes clearly aren't cutting it, so he decides to hit low and try to Kimura his injured joint (which looked incredibly painful, credit to Sayama's selling for once) but he hits the ropes. He doesn't break clean and hits a super high-bar belly to belly, looked great. He tries again at the above, but Tiger escapes and throws a knee drop at his head for his troubles. Once again, Tiger dominates in stand-up, landing more big kicks to floor Takada. He tries to take his back again, but he expertly rolls at the right time to not only counter, but also to apply a cross armbreaker. Tiger barely escapes but manages to pick him up like he weighs nothing and plop him at the ropes despite his broken arm lol. A lot of the second half is based around Takada just consistently aiming with hawk-like focus on Tiger's bad arm, relentlessly hunting it down on the mat and wearing it out in submissions. The crowd REALLY get behind him when he's in peril and his desperate scrambles for the ropes every time play to that greatly, especially when Takada heels it up a bit with wrapping the arm in the ropes and punching it like a dirty 80's Southern heel. Tiger hits a solid Tombstone Piledriver into a cross armbreaker but gets countered again, having to head to the ropes. His kicks finally get to Tiger as his bad arm simply can't bat them away anymore, and Takada knows this, hammering his opponent with strikes relentlessly despite being incapable of really doing much to defend. Tiger refuses to concede and tries to fight on but Takada just won't give, and the ref calls the match off when Sayama is incapable of fighting further. A fantastic early UWF match with some solid technical work alongside some big Korakuen heat as Tiger keeps getting big breaks, but his arm just presents him sealing the deal. Takada is solid on the mat: a bit shaky in strikes but it works to play up the experience gap between the two. Sayama plays a superb underdog, namely in his selling and timing of big comebacks, which is one thing that makes this particularly unique in that it's a match where I can actually praise that. One thing I'll particularly mention is that UWF 1.0 matches suffer real badly from being way too long (even on this card nearly every match was 20-25 minutes long, which even for something as potentially awesome like Finlay/Yamazaki is pushing it) but this was robust and barely went 10+, which helped the pacing and made this a lot more palpable. I'd say this was slightly ahead of its time in that regard. Takada definitely gets led to something great here though, especially given his later matches aren't as good as this one.
  21. Loads of fun: I love watching Ogawa singles matches because he mostly gets to show off his talent that you usually don't get to see much in the usual trashy tags he shows up in and it's still a ton of said talent despite the guy being 56. With the build from the Muto show I expected this to be a short brawl but thankfully we get a smartly worked match where the two got over their hate for the other while actually wrestling and not doing sloppy brawls on the outside and/or blading, because, you know, you can get over those things without the need to just do that all the time. Ridgeway isn't much look-wise however his wrestling is really sinister and calculated, focused around little mean moments like hair pulling to maintain momentum on a headlock or doing a inverse Dragon Screw to mess up Ogawa's knee. Ogawa sold great and really got over his younger opponent as being a lot to handle, ultimately only getting the advantage when Ridgeway tries taking him outside and exposes his arm to a few nasty stomps. Ogawa works the leg outside but not much comes of it as they mostly go for the arm instead. They threw in some heated stuff on the outside as the two threw each other around. The bit in the ring where Ogawa tries for his usual eye pokes and Enzuigiri counter only for Ridgeway to snap his leg into a ankle lock was really well done, as was him sticking it on the ropes for a vicious stomp afterwards. The bit later with the Cravat holds into the arch and rolling Achilles Tendon was masterful, amazing old-school work right there. Ridgeway getting even meaner when he tries to break Ogawa's finger when he attempts a escape with his arm and forcing a rope break was also a solid addition. Ogawa's only chance is to focus on the damaged arm, but every attempt to do so is swiftly answered. The two steal stuff from the other as Ridgeway applies a figure-four and also stops Ogawa from trying to bend his finger in a nice little touch. Ridgeway even does a cool little modified version of the Ogawa Enzuigiri when his leg is caught, only it's a rad knee strike to the head instead. Last 2 minutes were tense as anything as Ogawa tried to pull off a upset with the usual Rat-Boyisms but Ridgeway just had him cornered with the bad leg and a few incredible technical reversals and a sustained ankle lock get the tap out. This was a pretty solid showing from the two that also really got over Ridgeway as a dominant technical force while showing how much he's learnt from his former mentor in how much he overtly pulled from his playbook here to get the win. Ogawa always brings matches back down to this really great WoS-lite format where holds and submissions actually matter, it's great. Definitely worth the watch; if every NOAH card just had Ogawa working singles matches he'd probably get something great out of all of them, somehow.
  22. Ma Stump Puller replied to Grimmas's topic in Nominees
    Definitely controversial for sure. Like many big-men wrestlers he's more of a bar of quality for other workers as to how much they can get out of him rather than anything he could do himself: I remember watching some of his spectacle matches against Kobashi and Sasuke and definitely enjoying them, but at the same time Ake as a worker is very limited, got better when he was more conditioned and actually leaned out a little later on, even had a fairly solid AJPW run (as you can see from almost all of the recommendations being from then) however I never seen him as a top worker bar the fact he could use his size well in matches. Is he bad as a wrestler per-se? Not really, but at the same time he has a wealth of bad to really rubbish showings. I like him, for the record, but I'm also not going to stick him on a top 100 list. Bob Sapp has more of a chance of getting on than he does, has the exact same positives, and Sapp has about as many good showings if not more while lacking the dregs that Ake has.
  23. All right ok, some of Funaki's comeback stuff is fucking dreadful looking back on it. His W-1 run is probably one of the worst examples of the dude just not giving a shit for nearly all of his matches bar when he's working with people that he likes like Shibata or whatever, he has like a trio of matches with Takayama that are the pits, just lazy UWF-nostalgia baiting with silly Muto-style booking on top. The less said about him working with crappy TNA talent and his weird shoot-work with Marufuji and the like, the better. He does get post-IGF Kendo Kashin to a entertaining match so that's something at least.
  24. Dope idea for a project, there's a ton of good matches hidden in seemingly nothing C/D shows, and some wrestlers have some of their most fun showings doing these kind of sprint TV tapings
  25. I usually don't bump these but very very recently someone somehow found a intact pro-shot version of the Kawada and Takayama match after 20+ years! Pretty wild to see in action, there's a lot more to value out of the match when it isn't all, you know, green. Check it out. YT link Backup in case of removal (no sound)

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