Everything posted by ohtani's jacket
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RIP Mocho Cota
That's too bad. One of the things about Cota that doesn't really come across in the footage we have is that he used to rent random costumes from fancy dress shops and wear them to the ring each week. You can see it a bit in his AAA run after he was released from prison.
- [1992-02-29-UWFi-Sekai Gannen 3rd] Hiromitsu Kanehara vs Masakazu Maeda
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Top 500 of the 90s In Progress
Got through another block of 50. The matches I enjoyed most: 398. Kiyoshi Tamura vs Kazuo Yamazaki (UWFI 10/23/92) 389. Steve Austin & Brian Pillman vs Marcus Bagwell & 2 Cold Scorpio (WCW Worldwide 05/08/93) 381. Mitsuharu Misawa vs Toshiaki Kawada (AJPW Tokyo Dome 05/01/98) 370. Mitsuharu Misawa & Kenta Kobashi vs Steve Williams & Johnny Ace (AJPW Excite Series 03/04/95) 360. Toshiaki Kawada vs Gary Albright (AJPW October Giant Series 10/25/95) 351. Kazushi Sakuraba & Masahito Kakihara vs Gene Lydick & Steve Nelson (UWFI 06/10/94)
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Why does puro get so much love? Why does lucha get so dismissed?
Is there such a thing as a hardcore WoS fan who looks down on lucha fans looking down on Japanese wrestling fans looking down on US wrestling fans?
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Why does puro get so much love? Why does lucha get so dismissed?
Eddie wasn't that great in Mexico. I don't think it's a case of WCW luchadores like Psicosis or Juventud where you can argue that they were better in Mexico than they were in WCW. Eddie, for my money, improved while working in WCW. I'm not even sure how much Eddie in Mexico you've seen beyond wanting to make a flippant comment, but it's difficult for me to imagine he looked great compared to Casas carrying him in Juarez, Apolo Dantes looking every bit the same son of a "legend" in '91, or working with Santo in '94.
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Why does puro get so much love? Why does lucha get so dismissed?
The same applies to european wrestling. European wrestling never received any of the awards you are talking about there. I also just looked over the last 2 pages of the ***** / **** 3/4 matches thread and there were only 2 or 3 matches from europe there compared to almost everyone having matches from mexico in their list. In fact, lucha is much better represented than WoS or CWA. On the 90s yearbooks, there were only a handful of european matches but dozens of mexican ones. Actually there is near zero discussion on 90s european wrestling. Jim Breaks, probably the most beloved WoS worker, didn't even make the Top 50 in the GWE, while the two top rated brit guys all worked extensively in the US and japan. OJ has written a lot about it on this site but there's not much more discussion than that compared to the endless talking about lucha. Otto Wanz vs. Vader is almost never mentioned as one of the best feuds of the 80s. Wanz and many other deserving euro workers still are' in the WON Hall of Fame. Could it be? Are people not giving european wresting a fair shake? Is there something going on? Do I need to ignore people who praise 90s AJPW and El Dandy but don't even know the likes of Mile Zrno or Alan Kilby? Did the british not import enough US cultural hegemony? Is Meltz a US imperialist? Or could it be that people largely just don't like it/don't feel inspired to get really into it? I think it's as simple as that most people in these circles got into wrestling through North American wrestling. Japanese wrestling is really very similar from an in ring standpoint. The match structure, the moves and holds used and even a lot of the wrestlers themselves (particularly in the 89s and 90s) are familiar to a North American wrestling fan. It's just so much more accessible. The Lucha and European styles are different beasts entirely. Someone used to US wrestling has to pretty much 'forget' how wrestling works when watching Lucha or WoS/CWA. Personally, I watched British wrestling first as a child before being exposed to WWF/WCW later on. I think it's easier to go that way than the other direction. On the other hand, I've always found Lucha more difficult. I've watched a fair few highly regarded matches but just can't get into it at a deeper level. I guess it's like if you speak Swedish, you can have good shot at understanding things in Norway or Denmark but if you went to China you'd have to start from the beginning. It's all just speaking, listening and reading but some languages are easier to flit between than others. I think it's not just the style but the world or "universe". The worlds of NWA, AWA, Mid-South, AJPW, NJPW, even Memphis and Puerto Rico are all interconnected, part of the same universe. Like DC comics or something. Each promotion is like a title within an overarching universe. I guess in this analogy WWE would be Marvel, especially after Vince hermetically sealed it off. Flair in 91-2 is a huge crossover event. NWO is an even bigger one. Lucha and WOS and Wanz don't belong in these universes, they are like I dunno Valiant comics, whatever, some unconnected publication. That's the easiest way I can think to explain why they get less attention typically -- beyond just the style / taste stuff we've talked about. Different tangent but I kind of like the idea that WoS is similar to British comics like 2000 AD or Viz w/ French catch being similar to those French comics that fund the Toulouse rugby team, or Asterisk or Tintin (even if that was Belgian.) But Japan has a robust comic book industry that doesn't quite fit the shared universe analogy. If anything, the success of Japanese comic books further highlights the commonly held belief that the Japanese are very good and copying (and improving things) as opposed to coming up with original ideas. This may be why some fans feel as though Japanese wrestling perfected the wrestling they grew up with, particularly disgruntled fans.
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Why does puro get so much love? Why does lucha get so dismissed?
Perhaps a better way to approach this is how lucha fans can help to make lucha more appealing or accessible for new fans. Other people have spelled out why Japanese wrestling has always been more appealing to hardcore fans than lucha; the one thing I would add is that when I first started branching out, and became interested in wrestling from other countries, much of the groundwork had already been done for Japan. You knew which tapes to get because of jdw's pimping posts, DVDVR, etc. It didn't matter whether it was All Japan, New Japan juniors or Joshi, all of the information was out there. Lucha these days is a million times more accessible in terms of how much content is online. Ten years ago there was very little lucha uploaded onto the internet. Where it's lacking is the narrative detail. I tried really hard when I was doing the Lucha History Lessons stuff to find more information about lucha history by doing rudimentary searches in Spanish. People will never be able to follow lucha the way they follow 90s All Japan through commercial tapes and season sets, and the Misawa narrative and Kawada narrative, but if they know as much as they can about Sangre Chicana (for example), who he was and what he was doing in the early 80s, then I think it makes a difference because it creates greater excitement than the name being thrown out there. Before I ever ordered a tape, I remember getting excited about constantly "hearing" the name Kawada or Misawa. You heard it so much that you felt like you were missing out on something by not being part of the tape trading circle. The only luchador that was build up that much was Santo and even then it wasn't comparable to Liger. This hasn't been a very articulate or well thought out post, but I think you have to give people a reason to be excited about lucha.
- [1992-01-17-USWA-Kennett, MO] Jeff Jarrett & Jerry Lawler vs The Moondogs
- [1994-06-10-UWFi] Kazushi Sakuraba & Masahito Kakihara vs Gene Lydick & Steve Nelson
- [1995-11-25-UWFi-All Out Contend Battle III] Yoji Anjo & Yoshihiro Takayama vs Masa Chono & Hiroyoshi Tenzan
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[1995-02-06-AAA] Juventud Guerrera & Fuerza Guerrera vs Rey Misterio Sr & Rey Misterio Jr
#353 On the plus side, this is the most "lucha" of the lucha matches that have been listed thus far. I think the ref is probably the best thing about this bout. He's exactly the sort of ref you'd expect to be reffing lucha. As for the rest of the bout, I witnessed a more disjointed and uninspired version of the bout that Loss described. I thought it lacked the genius of great lucha and didn't have a single beat I'd describe as a Fuerza Guerrera Moment. Rey vs. Juventud was okay, but they had better matches elsewhere. A draw was a fitting result in this as neither team took the bull by the horns and the whole thing felt like the warm up to the main event for ,me. The rematch is more direct but has even less narrative focus. Granted, it's kind of difficult for me to think of Juventud as Fuerza's son since Fuerza himself seems so ageless. And Fuerza vs. Misterio Sr. doesn't seem like a rivalry as such. That leaves Rey vs. Juvie as age group rivals, and a more important match-up than Fuerza/Misterio Sr, MO. The younger workers deliver here, but they had better singles matches than this and the veteran workers didn't steer the action hard enough, to be fair.
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[1995-03-04-AJPW-Excite Series] Mitsuharu Misawa & Kenta Kobashi vs Steve Williams & Johnny Ace
#370 The first thing I noticed about this was that the file length was 44 mins long. That reminded me of back in the day when you'd order a 3 hour custom comp in EP mode and 44 minutes would take up a huge chunk of your comp. How times have changed. I have no idea whether I've seen this or not, but I do know that I really liked it. Long All Japan matches are an immediate turn off to me but this kept me engrossed for a good 35 minutes. Johnny Ace did an unbelievable job of sustaining his accuracy and level of performance over 30 mins+ , and while Williams didn't look in the best of health compared to his '94 run, he still brought a huge degree of intensity. Probably the best thing about the bout is something that doesn't work in every match in Japan but worked here, and that's the aggression and disrespectful attitude that the Americans brought. There are times when you watch a match like this and the Americans will trash talk and the Japanese wrestlers will ignore them and go through their thought processes, but Williams managed to rile Misawa and get his ire up. That added another wrinkle to All Japan (Misawa vs. Williams, that is) and was in all honesty more meaningful than anything Misawa vs. Hansen ever offered. Not sure I agree with Loss here that the match as split into the two feuds/match-ups. I thought there was an even amount of action between all four contestants and that it was an exceptionally well-worked tag match outside of the framework of native vs. native teams that dominated All Japan from the Choshu invasion onward. Better than any of the Wiliams/Gordy vs. Misawa/Kawada tags from memory and maybe the best native vs. foreigners tag of the 90s.
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[1995-10-25-AJPW-October Giant Series] Toshiaki Kawada vs Gary Albright
#360 It's been many a moon since I last saw this. Great match. One of Kawada's best. The thing I like about it most is that Kawada's not trying to work shoot style. The only weapon he takes into the fight to contend with the newcomer's style is the armbar. Aside from that, he uses a lot of his signature offence even in the submission wrestling. The bout is made by the fact that Kawada has the grittiest style of the big four and is a great seller. I especially liked the way he sold the Albright German he tried to pop up from. More wrestlers should try popping up and collapsing. That's a smart spot. I also liked the headscissors counter he did. It was a great counter but still felt like a pro-wrestler finding their way in the dark against a "shoot guy" unlike the shoot trained counters that the UWF guys would do. At no point did it seem like Kawada was anything more than an All Japan trained pro-wrestler trying to adjust to a guy with an entirely different fighting style, and I thought he did a beautiful job of conveying that.
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[1991-09-04-AJPW-Summer Action Series II] Mitsuharu Misawa & Toshiaki Kawada vs Jumbo Tsuruta & Akira Taue
#372 I've always liked Misawa & Kawada vs. Jumbo & Taue as a match-up, so I thought I'd treat myself to a rewatch of this. 1991 All Japan was a simpler style of wrestling than the years that followed but Misawa & Co. were younger, and quicker, and more athletic. They weren't as banged up as in the years to come and there was a crispness to their work than you don't find in their later work. The best thing about this match is watching Kawada and Misawa deal with the Jumbo problem. They try their damnedest to knock his block off and for once they actually succeed. The only misstep in this was Misawa's tape falling off. They took forever to tape his shoulder up and it was about as effective as if they'd used the pre-match streamers. This wasn't as deliberately epic as a lot of other All Japan tags but more fun, IMO.
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[1995-03-26-AJW-Wrestling Queendom: Victory] Lioness Asuka vs Yumiko Hotta
#357 Another match not watched in donkey's years. This was kind of an experimental MMA style bout. Not the first of its kind in Joshi but definitely the most well known. It reminded me a bit of those Don Nakaya Nielsen fights from the 80s in that it was clearly dated but still retained some of its novelty value. A few things hurt it. Firstly, there were no rope breaks and they were allowed to fight on the outside. Secondly, the submissions were sold like regular Joshi submission holds, which meant that they lay in the holds forever. This was particularly hard to watch having just seen some higher end UWF-i. The stand up fighting was better than the submission wrestling, though they used too many pro-wrestling moves down the stretch. Thankfully, they returned to striking and Hotta's kick at the end was brutal looking. I thought this was watchable but it wasn't something I particularly liked. There's plenty of better hybrid stuff from the 90s in my view.
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[1994-06-10-UWFi] Kazushi Sakuraba & Masahito Kakihara vs Gene Lydick & Steve Nelson
#351 This was another match I was skeptical about. Shoot style tags remind me a lot of doubles in tennis. I love tennis, but I really, if ever, watch doubles. The only time I really watch doubles is if I'm watching tennis live. But this was an excellent match. The reason it was so good was that everyone knew their role. Nelson was clearly better at selling than Lydick, and better at reversals and counters, but Lydick looked more dominant on the mat. And so Lydick looked good working from on top while Nelson did most of the selling. Likewise, Kakihara was the better striker on his team and Sakuraba better at mat work. You didn't see too much stand up work from Sakuraba and not that much ground work from Kakihara. Really disciplined match in that respect. Post match buzz and all, but it's hard to think of a better midcard match that's shown up on the list thus far.
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[1993-02-13-UWFi-Final Battle] Nobuhiko Takada vs Kiyoshi Tamura
#367 This wasn't as exciting as the Yamazaki fight, but it was a different sort of match. Here the promising up and comer took on the top dog, who was meant to be his superior in every way both in his striking and groundwork and submissions. The work was pretty at times but laid out in a fairly obvious way. You knew exactly when Tamura would get each of his "hope spots," so to speak. It was effective in terms of where Tamura was at in terms of mounting a challenge against Takada but point blank obvious in terms of its delivery. One thing I'll say for it is that Takada looked better on the mat than usual. Other than that, my main takeaways were that Tamura clearly improved his striking ability as he matured, and for whatever reason bookers and promoters were never afraid to job out poor old Yamazaki.
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[1995-11-25-UWFi-All Out Contend Battle III] Yoji Anjo & Yoshihiro Takayama vs Masa Chono & Hiroyoshi Tenzan
#355 The work here wasn't that great but they made up for it with plenty of spite. Anjoh was such a dick in this. He's such a smug little prick. You love him and wanna see someone wipe the shit eating grin off his face all at the same time. Surprisingly, that person you want to see do the grin wiping is none other than Chono. I came out of this wanting to see the Chono/Anjoh singles matches, which is not something I expected going in. So, thumbs up to this.
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[1997-10-03-Promo Azteca] El Hijo del Santo vs Psicosis
#388 I can't say I'm a fan of Psicosis acting like a member of the NWO. That's not the Psicosis I get a kick out of. The action here is pretty good; but it's very much a house show version of the touring Santo show, and a 1997 Tijuana version at that. The stuff you'd expect to look good looked good, but the general tone was toward house show lucha, and I have a hard time seeing how this comes close to the top 10 for an extremely stacked year in lucha.
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[1997-03-03-WWF-Raw] Owen Hart vs Davey Boy Smith
#387 This was all right, but I think its rep over the years is largely built on the fact that it was a good match in the WWF at a time when good matches were rare. Being heel vs. heel doesn't really help even if Davey Boy was positioned as the face in Europe and Owen was meant to be working heel. Davey Boy comes across as strangely neutered to me unlike, say, his big win at Wembley in '92. I was a huge Owen mark back in the day and this was the kind of match we wanted to see that proved that Owen could work a **** match, and Davey was a guy who always kind of bordered on being accepted as a good worker, so there was a fair bit of goodwill towards this match, but I think there was a little naivety too in claiming that this was "scientific" or overly "technical". I can only believe that from a WWF fan's perspective and not from anyone who's branched out a bit.
- [1995-06-09-AJPW-Super Power Series] Rob Van Dam vs Dan Kroffat
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[1997-05-18-WCW-Slamboree] Ric Flair & Roddy Piper & Kevin Greene vs Scott Hall & Kevin Nash & Syxx
#384 When I first saw this listed, I immediately thought: "this can't be that good." But it really is that good. In fact, it's perfectly laid out for what it is and delivers in spades thanks to the synergy between the hometown crowd and the energy of the performers. I honestly thought there wasn't a single thing they should have changed. It was arguably the perfect match involving a non-wrestlerr and coincided with the perfect storm of Flair's return. And as Loss said, the NWO were super professional. Great stuff all round.
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[1993-12-05-UWFi] Vader vs Nobuhiko Takada
#380 I must be softening in my old age as I thought this was all right. It clearly delivered as a big match spectacle even if the stuff with Thesz was bollocks. It was never going to be a great shoot style match since the extent of Vader's matwork was lying on top of people and Takada's ground game was a weak point of his, but the stand up portions were good and Vader gave Takada a fair old clip. The finish came a bit too soon for my liking as the bout was just warming up, but Takada's corner called it by shouting that Vader was tiring. Weird hearing Vader holler like a stuck pig during the post match ceremonies. Takada laid on the charm on the mic. All in all a decent match with a lot of big moments.
- 14 replies
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- UWFI
- December 5
- 1993
- Vader
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[1998-09-11-AJPW-Summer Action Series II] Jun Akiyama vs Yoshinari Ogawa
#383 This was the first match from the list that I thought was just "there." I've never been on the Ogawa bandwagon and I'm not much of an Akiyama fan either, so your mileage will vary, but to me there wasn't anything special about this at all. I get liking the match if you're really into Ogawa, but if you're not then it's a lower tier All Japan match.
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[1998-05-01-AJPW-25th Anniversary Show] Mitsuharu Misawa vs Toshiaki Kawada
#381 I really liked this. It may have been Kawada beating up a banged up Misawa and the result may have come too late for some folks, but when you hear the Japanese call and the crowd erupt it's pretty special. To me it felt like Misawa's injuries meant they reeled things in and had a really solid minimalist bout. I don't know how I'd feel if I watched it in its linear context, but I watched their 7/93 match a few days ago and then this and I didn't think there was any tremendous drop off.