Tuesday, February 11, 2020

A Quick Guide for Free Matches on Youtube


With all of the wrestling streaming services we have available its very easy to follow the wrestling that you're a fan of, and all of them offer free trials so you can check them out to see if you do like them. But the biggest problem with all the streaming services isn't how much you can afford, but how much time you have to take advantage of those services. I have NJPW and follow AAA on twitch and even then I miss shows, so its hard to justify having more than one wrestling subscription. But the plus side is that there is youtube, which has some of everything for you to watch. A bunch of companies put up random matches to get people interested in their shows and some used that as their primary way to distribute their matches before streaming became an option. Finding the best places for wrestling on youtube isn't the easiest, and you can end up with clipped matches, or matches split into a bunch of parts that don't autoplay after each other, so I'm here to find the matches to watch for you on the site.

To start this guide I started as I often do when wanting to watch fun wrestling and I searched Rey Mysterio Jr. The more I think about it I'd probably have Rey as the best wrestler of all time, and you can't go wrong with watching one of his matches.

Rey Mysterio Jr. vs Psychosis

The first fall starts with some classic lucha exchanges before becoming a nice technical wrestling display. They trade holds, pin attempts, and keep the action going fast while grappling. They also go for some stuff that doesn't seem to work the way they had hoped, but they keep going and it works well in the match. Rey slips on the ropes and falls back to the mat, but he was supposed to miss anybody so it's okay. He dodges a Psychosis spinning kick in the corner then attacks the leg and gets a quick submission for fall one. For some reason AAA replays the messed up rope move. Psychosis powers out of a Rey submission attempt and reverses it into one of his own and takes control. Rey successfully bounces off the ropes, but Psychosis catches him into an electric chair drop, follows with a moonsault and wraps him up in a submission to tie it at one fall a piece. The third fall starts fast with Rey hitting more of the offense you expect from him, Psychosis misses an attack and ends up on the outside and Rey hits a huge springboard somersault plancha. Psychosis is jealous and sends Rey to the outside then does a suicide dive over the top rope and crushes Rey. Both mens seconds come over and check on them after every dive and that's a touch I really like. Rey avoids a corkscrew plancha and Psychosis takes out Juventud. Rey hits a big tornado DDT and locks in a modified abdominal stretch to get the win.
9/10

Unsurprisingly these two men had a really good match together. It's less formulaic than the standard lucha 2/3 falls matches now and built up in a nice way. The first fall they're doing lots of mat work and trying to get an advantage or a quick pinfall then the second fall they're going for some big stuff, but still trying to get that pinfall. The third fall is a bunch of big moves and huge dives the match becomes awesome then. I've seen better matches between these two men, but this is still a match that's well worth watching.

Rey Mysterio Jr. vs. Psychosis

Rey is unmasked in this match and that makes me sad. This doesn't have a date, but must be early 2000s since it's post WCW, but before WWE and Rey getting his mask back. They taunt a lot more in this match and the first fall skips any mat work and they hite some big moves and Psychosis crushes him with a powerbomb then the top rope legdrop for the pin in fall one. Psychosis waffles Rey with a chairshot and sends him to the outside then does a suicide dive into a chairshot from Rey. Psychosis trips Rey on the top rope and goes for a hurrincanranna, but Rey powerbombs him off the second rope and wins the second fall. The match cuts off during the third fall, damn fan cams.
7/10

This is an interesting match even without the finish to see them evolve their style. They don't do the mat wrestling to start and what's an even bigger change is them playing to the crowd a lot more. They're bigger names now and people know their moves so they can play them up and get the crowd excited for what they're going to do. It's definitely a more US hybrid of lucha which makes sense after the time they spent in WCW. Not as good of a match as the first one, but that's hardly a fair comparison. Not much can follow that up. You can see Rey trying to get bigger as he's trying to get into WWE and he's definitely a lot more muscular than he was in the first match and most of his time in WCW. But I don't want to just talk about Rey, because Psychosis is also really good at wrestling and definitely overshadowed by coming up to WCW with Eddie and Rey. His top rope leg drop is beautiful and his dives aren't as acrobatic as Rey's, but he always goes all in on them like Rey does. Watching any of the matches between these two guys is always great, because they are two dudes who just work together perfectly and even when one of them botches something they immediately know how to work it into the match and make it not seem like a mistake which is one of the most important skills that is often overlooked in wrestling.

Matt Riddle vs. Mia Yim

The announcers treat this like an even match up and the wrestlers do as well and I really like that in an intergender match. A lot of back and forth trades early in the match before Riddle takes an advantage with his rolling gutwrench suplexes, which I think is a bad call, because the bump people take on that just doesn't look that good. Also I don't know much about hair, but Mia Yim's hair cut looks fucking dope here. Mia hits a Canadian Destroyer off the second rope and Riddle kicks out at 1 then hits his finishing sequence of moves.
7/10

This was my ideal intergender match as it doesn't matter that they are different genders. It's just two bad ass fighters going after each other. It also features my favorite thing which is a bunch of suplexes. A lot of nice strikes from both wrestlers and hard hitting action. Mia Yim is so good and her going to WWE is definitely one of my saddest departures from the indies, or companies I feel like watching. I haven't seen a lot of Riddle matches and everytime I'm impressed by how well he's transitioned from MMA to pro wrestling. A lot of people who do that transition put too much emphasis on their MMA time and Riddle it really feels like he knows he's a pro wrestler now and he is just great at the parts of it that MMA would make somebody really good at pro wrestling.

Larry Hamilton vs. Jack Hart

I tried to search for the Florida Brothers from Dragongate, but got a bunch of Championship Wrestling from Florida matches so I figured I'd watch one so lets watch some classic wrestling. Hamilton is in the black trunks and Hart is in the orange/yellow trunks. There are some interviews at the beginning I skipped to the match, but I love the VCR scramble going on at the bottom of the screen. Its a pretty simple 80s style match with pretty basic lockups and wrestling, but still well done stuff. Apparently Hart is a perenial jobber who is struggling for that first win, which means I might keep searching him now to find that win happen. Decent back and forth work between the two men and Hamilton hits a nice looking pair of dropkicks before winning with with a bridging Okana roll.
5/10

This may seem like a weird match to highlight and I agree, but it also kind of highlights what's great about wrestling on youtube that matches like this that didn't matter from two guys I've never heard of before are just out there for people to find and watch. Plus both of these guys are smooth in the ring, they don't do anything crazy, but everything they do, they do it well. Hamilton's dropkicks are good for wrestlers now let alone what they normally looked like in the mid 80's. Plus its a nice short match that gives you a taste for what was on wrestling tv then as they always saved the best shows for exclusively live shows they built up to or occasional special big tv shows.

The British Bulldogs vs. Joe and Dean Malenko

British Bulldog is wrestling this match as a junior heavyweight! I'm so used to him being a big power dude from WWE and WCW this is awesome to see. He is still a big muscle guy, but he's pretty acrobatic in this too. On a similar note its weird to see Dean Malenko as the smaller more agile guy coming from knowing him mostly how he wrestled as a cruiserweight in WCW as the bigger, not lucha guy. Holy shit! Dean Malenko hit a reverse 'rana. It wasn't as intense as the ones now a days, but he did that. There is so much good hold for hold wrestling in this in between parts where a wrestler has an advantage and pushes it with a series of big moves and tries to get an advantage and the win during the middle part. I love how this match builds up. Its real technical to start, lots of submissions and maneuvering for position and then they slowly start to find openings and eventually the Bulldogs find one as Davey Boy hits Joe with a tombstone piledriver and fails to get the three count, but starts to wear him down with submissions. Joe Malenko gets a kneebar on Davey Boy and Dynamite Kid comes in and stomps Malenko, but Malenko just redoubles the pressure then bridges the hold afterword ignoring the kick is so good. Dean hits a german suplex in this that is my ideal german suplex and all his stuff is so crisp, which makes his sloppy reverse 'rana so funny to me. Everything I've seen him in he hits everything so text book and clean, but that move wasn't really in any text books then. Joe hits a northern lights suplex just as crisply with as nice of a bridge as Dean did earlier in the match. Dynamite Kid counters a victory roll with a pin of his own and just barely gets a three count.

10/10

Holy fuck I love this match! I've never seen it before or heard people talk about it, but it's so fucking good. A bunch of great technical wrestling exchanges, smooth move transitions, great suplexes and slams from everybody involved. Just clean work from everybody involved and I'm so glad I found the match before this because there was a clip about the Malenko Brothers so I searched them and found this match and here we are. Just a simple story of two great teams wrestling each other and one finds the one crack in the teams plan and gets a quick pinfall. Dean Malenko has always been one of my favorites who is underated, but all of these other guys just shot back up into contention. Dynamite Kid is a noted great wrestler, but his career was ended before I started following wrestling so I always forget about him and Davey Boy wasn't as good as he was here in WWF and WCW. This is just four great wrestlers in their prime having a great match.

Da Hit Squad, SAT & Divine Storm vs. Special K

This match is a fucking weird spotfest match and the announcers tell us that and its so good as that. This is the perfect match to watch and make fun of with your friends while enjoying the good spots. Also Special K are a group of people who do drugs. This is a 7 versus 7 match and its following up Xavier vs. Paul London which was a great match. All of Special K is in the ring with Mikey Whipwreck and look they're going to attack him, but he drops to the mat and Special K makes 6 dives to the outside at the same time. Mikey Whipwreck betrays the SAT and the rest of the team and hits all of his teammates with a stunner. Special K isolate Quiet Storm and beat the shit out of him in the ring and keep his teammates out of the ring. We have a tower of doom spot with four guys doing a powerbomb and like ten dudes getting powerbombed and suplexed and of course some of them land on each other. It's ugly, but fun with its audacity. People keep kicking out of huge moves, it's a 7 vs 7 match have a teammate instead of them kicking out of a finisher. The finish of Dan Maff hitting a top rop burning hammer is fucking awesome though.
3/10

This match is just a string of spots in a row, but as a fourteen person match that works better than just a tag match or a singles match. This works a little better as a match when its not watched with the rest of the card because it had to follow two great matches. These guys all try some big flips and they all seem to work pretty well which isn't always the case for them as they try a lot of difficult stuff. Despite being way bigger they don't really let Mack and Maff base for the flyers, but whatever it all still is pulled off. The thing that really hurts this match is that its aged and now the high flyers do so much more stuff than what these guys did and the only point is the flashy moves and it loses its effects from that. While I don't think its much of a match it is still fun to watch