Monday, April 13, 2020

Wrestling Without a Ring


The big buzz coming out of Wrestlemania is about the two heavily produced and edited matches. Undertaker vs. AJ Styles in the Boneyard match and The Fiend vs. John Cena in the Firefly Funhouse Match. To a lesser extent Edge vs. Orton and Gargano vs. Ciampa also had this same feeling with the filmed and edited nature of the matches. All of those are very different experiences and a lot of people are talking about how revolutionary they are for wrestling. They're not, and they won't be. Wrestling is largely a live performance that thrives off fan interaction, it's not the first time this kind of thing has been done. DDT runs shows in weird places all the time, but they have fans and the show is whatever happens without any editing. The closer comparison to me is all of the stuff from the Hardy complex. At least for the Boneyard match. There is nothing in wrestling to compare to the Firefly Funhouse Match.

The thing that really differentiated the Boneyard match from any Deletion match was WWE's production values. They used them very well here. Impact did cool stuff with what was at the Hardy's compound, but they don't have the resources that WWE has and it was cool to see a match done with that budget. Thnside of WWE production is there camera work. Specifically the shakey cam handheld and moving the camera with the wrestling taking a blow as well as having a shit ton of cuts at all times. This match has a lot of nice touches in it. Despite not having a ring both men's entrances are great. Undertaker's is helped by the fact that I love Metallica and I really enjoyed his pause to have his graphic show up like it was a grindhouse film. The best aspect of the WWE production over the Hardy matches isn't just the building specifically for the match, but the lighting setups. With the Hardy compound matches they use headlights and a couple of big lighting setups they have, but it's all in the shots as well as lighting up the scene. WWE uses the lights better as you never see the sources of the light and they help to let 'Taker appear out of nowhere.

One thing both of these matches do right is having a soundtrack to the match and adding sound effects as well. This is a thing the two less cinematic matches WWE had both failed to have and felt more awkward for. Those being Edge vs. Orton and Gargano vs. Ciampa. The second of which is made even weirder for not having commentary, although that might not be much weirder than the first having really quiet overly serious commentary. Although the ambiance of the crickets behind everything when Ciampa and Gargano brawled outside was nice.

The biggest failing of the WWE matches is that they are built and performed more like a fight scene from a movie, but don't get shot the same way. Of the three matches Edge vs. Orton was probably shot like a normal match and went straight through and didn't really take advantage of it being filmed. The other two definitely were, but they weren't shot in a way that took much advantage of that. Ciampa vs. Gargano used it at least once that I could tell where Ciampa did an air raid crash from the top rope to the outside, probably onto a crashpad. Then cut to another shot of them crashing to the floor from probably a more sane height. But using cuts isn't the big difference from filmed fight scenes in movies. The action and shots aren't blocked out to look cooler in general. Its not live, there are no fans you can plan your shots better. When Gargano does a suicide dive you can have him go right over the camera using a crash pad or whatever and cut to another angle where he really takes Ciampa out. But they don't really utilize that stuff. There isn't a single shot in any of those three matches that looks as cool as the scene from Tag Team Apocalypto where the Hardy's and the Rock and Roll Express shoot fireworks at Decay and Andrews and Everett filmed from a crane or drone shot swooping overhead.

All three of the WWE examples are very serious fights as well. And none of them have as drastic as stakes as the Deletion matches tend to have. They are all about proving how tough they are, or that they still have it, the Apocalypto match is going to blow up the Hardy's hometown if they don't win the match. The Deletion matches have a sense of humor and aren't self serious which, as these matches tend to be longer, gives the viewer a nice break from the intensity. Matt is getting pinned and the boat, Skarsgard, moves and knocks Trevor Lee off him to break up the fall. Plus the biggest feature of the Hardy compound is the Lake or Resurection which reverts people back to their old gimmicks when they get knocked in. Shane Helms gets knocked in and comes out as Shane from 3 Count and makes Lee and Andrews dance with him. They get mad and superkick him back into the lake and as the match goes on Helms comes back as the Hurricane and helps Matt beat them up. It's not all punching and yelling at the other guy to stay down or shit talking them about how they're not good enough. For me the Deletion matches still have more of the flow of a wrestling match and don't feel like as much like an action movie fight scene and are just more fun to watch.

The same can't be said for the Firefly Funhouse Match. How much this is a match and not an extended promo/skit can be debated, but it definitely can't really compare to the other matches in this piece and is probably unreplicatable. Part of it stems from WWE lucking into the story by having Cena beat Wyatt at Wrestlemania that hurt his momentum, and the fact that Cena has such a storied career in WWE also helps build it up. This is a psychological examination of who Cena has been throughout his career and what that says about him and uses the lense of past superstars as well as previous iterations of his character. The writing is deft throughout with a bunch of humor, and real feelings. None of the sections over stay their welcome and they move quickly from scene to scene with every culmination of a scene helping lead to the next one before Wyatt becomes the Fiend and hits Cena with a Sister Abigail and gets the win. It was perfect, but WWE won't be able to do it again, and neither will any other wrestling company that tries to make this kind of thing work, which hopefully they won't.

Not every one of these cinematic style matches works. Largely because the people who filmed and made them don't know why anything is shot the way it is in movies and television. Or they don't have a strong idea of what they are trying to do. The Deletion matches worked because they were fun and the people behind it wanted to do something that was a wrestling match you can't do in a ring. Anybody can make this kind of thing work if they have an idea. Undertaker vs. Styles worked because WWE had a bunch of production value put into the match. Cena vs. Wyatt worked because Cena is a good actor, which is a big factor that's going to be missing in every other version of this match. Most of them are going to end up like Orton vs. Edge and Gargano vs. Ciampa in that they will be overlong slogs of matches that substitute moving slow and playing hurt with emotion. Without fan reaction a lot of selling loses a lot of its appeal. The wrestler isn't appealing to the crowd for support so it falls apart. Unless they do what fight scenes do when the good guy is getting the shit kicked out of him and have a flashback to show where he gets support from its not going to work the same way.

The biggest factor in making cinematic wrestling matches, or matches without a crowd, good is realizing that it changes how wrestling works. If that's not done you're going to end up with matches that feel empty. The key is making sure you compensate for the lack of audience in some way. Some kind of soundtrack mixed with commentary would be the most effective way so it still feels familiar to the fans watching. It's definitely a style of match that has to be used sparingly and needs to be done well more often than not or it will quickly wear out its welcome, and frankly the WWE might already have worn it out there.

Monday, March 16, 2020

Youtube Wrestling Match Playlist


Time to watch more random wrestling matches on youtube and let everybody know they can watch them for free.

Colt Cabana vs Kikutaro

Aah, terrible handheld footage of matches, you love to see it. Comedy matches require that the wrestlers be good at wrestling. I think its something that is often overlooked when comedy wrestling is denigrated. They have to be good in the ring and great at making a connection with the fans. These two are great at that. Cabana provides a lot of the technical wrestling mixed in with the comedy bits, but Kikutaro excels at the comedy stuff. Him failing to be good at British wrestling unlike Colt is great.
6/10

This is just fun stuff. Colt does some good wrestling and they both provide a lot of comedy and they get the ref involved in a good way. I was going to say a fun way, but the ref taking a kick to the junk probably wasn't that fun. The breakdown into a Sumo match was fun and capped off by Cabana just dodging and not participating in it. The finish was great. Cabana locks in a standing Anaconda Vice and Kikutaro fights back to his feet and keeps pumping the crowd up, then just taps out.

Nick Gage vs. G-Raver

They trick the viewers by starting off with some simple mat wrestling, but Nick Gage gets bored of that quickly and tells G-Raver get to the thumbtacks. A few small bumps on the tacks then some brawling outside before returning to the ring. Nick Gage hits a really nice Northern lights suplex onto the tacks for a two count. G-Raver makes a comeback and hits a meteora. Then puts Gage on the top and sets up a trashcan with a chair on top covered in thumbtacks. He climbs up top and Gage fights back then chokeslams him off onto the contraption. Gage puts thumbtacks in Raver's mouth and hits a bootscrape then piledrives him on the tacks for a two count. Gage follows that up with a piledriver, an elbow to a mouth full of tacks, then a powerbomb on the tacks.
6/10

Thumbtack matches are one of my least favorite versions of deathmatches since they're not that visually impressive compared to going into barbed wire or going through lighttubes. Still this match offers some good looking spots and both men go at it pretty hard. The nice thing about this match is that they build it up slowly before hitting the bigger moves. They don't just go from huge spot to huge spot which can be a real flaw in a lot of deathmatches.

Joe & Dean Malenko vs. Steve Williams & Terry Gordy

Williams demonstrates his power by lifting Joe into the air while he's got an armbar, but Joe flips him back down into the armbar again to avoid the slam. Early on the story is set as its the speed and technical prowess of the Malenko's against he power of their opponents. We get a reversal of roles as Dean and Steve go for a test of strength, but Steve jumps up and hits an enziguri. Terry Gordy comes in and stomps Dean to break up a submission and the crowd boos, but Dean holds on and Joe comes in and stomps Steve to cheers, good stuff. There's some brawling outside the ring we miss, but as we get to the end of the match there is a ton of cheating from Gordy and Williams and the crowd is incensed. The Malenko's keep trying for comebacks and have the crowd behind them. Dean fucks up a top rope move and after some reversals Steve Williams does a nice rollup to get the pinfall.
7/10

This match moves along pretty quickly despite following the AJPW style of the beginning being a lot of technical wrestling that doesn't mean a lot in the long run. It help that this match has a nice heel vs face dynamic and the Malenko's are super over for a foreign team. This isn't a super crazy match, but I like how the Malenko's wrestle and I haven't really seen much of Terry Gordy as a wrestler when he was in his prime. This match didn't do much to impress me, but he did fine in it. I like that this is a fan cam match, just to show newer fans what people used to sit through to see matches from indies and Japan before all these convenient streaming sites existed. This is actually pretty good camera work from the person filming it. It's very steady, they can't move around to get better angles and there is some time spent looking at the back of the lady in front of them's head, but still pretty good work. It's also cool to see that the smaller guys weren't just being overpowered and had the control for a lot of the match if it wasn't for the cheating from the other team. Don't be surprised to see any of these four guys in future iterations of this. I might try and skip Dean for a week or two at least.

Megumi Kudo vs. Shark Tsuchiya

I searched this because Megumi Kudo created my favorite move in wrestling the Kudo Driver that I used as my finisher as a backyard wrestler. Megumi comes out in full entrance regalia for a barbed wire match so that's dope. And the way it's set up is that two sides have barbed wire ropes and the other two sides have no ropes, so this should be interesting. Kudo's rocking the one long one short leg pants loook which is super cool on her. The non-barbed wire sides have barbed wire boards on the floor so that makes more sense and both women try to push the other off the edge early in the match to no avail. Kudo hits the ropes first and its not just barbed wire we also get an explosion and she's in trouble already. Kudo takes a beating and starts to make a comeback only to get pushed into the barbed wire again, this time face first. Now Shark has a scythe and cuts her forehead open. This is not starting well for our hero. Kudo revereses an attempted throw by Shark sending her over the edge and into the barbed wire boards on the side with an explosion. Kudo hits a beautiful high angle tiger driver for a two count. Shark blocks a Kudo Driver and when Kudo goes for a hurrincanranna she blocks it then powerbombs her to the outside onto the barbed wire boards. Shark hits a series of nice high angle belly to back suplexes the last of which literally folds Kudo in half, but still only gets a two count. Shark hits some more big moves, but can't get a finish. Kudo gets to her feet and Shark charges at her and Kudo grabs her and hits a flatliner into the barbed wire and they both fall over after the explosion and Kudo gets a three count.
8/10

I really liked this match. It does one of the things that I emphasized earlier is key to a deathmatch and that is a crazy bump has to mean something in the match. I would have rated this higher, but I really didn't like the finish. Just felt really flat. Everything building up to that was good though. I love the bigger heel who is dominating with power and the face who won't give up. There's some really slick wrestling throughout this match and the postmatch stuff is great because they just play Kudo's theme on repeat and it's got a banging guitar solo. Kudo's gear being all white is nice because a lot of it gets singed by the explosions and really helps sell the damage she took which she does a great job of selling as well. It's a really good match and don't be scared by the 40 minute run time a decent amount of that is postmatch stuff, plus both women get a full entrance. I feel like I'm underselling how good Shark is as a powerhouse heel as well. She does a great job and I saw other matches between the two so you'll definitely being seeing more of both of these women in future blog posts.

Andre the Giant vs. David Nivens & Angel Rivera

Nivens fails at several shoulder blocks and tags Rivera in who puts in some fruitless headbutts before Andre lifts him up and sets him on the top rope. Andre hits the biggest atomic drop ever on Rivera, Nivens tags in and gets taken down by Andre's strength in a handshake. He fails at a powerslam and Andre hits him with a n atomic drop. Andre drops Nivens with a shoulder tackle then grabs Rivera as he runs in with a press slam onto Nivens then sits on Rivera's back for the three count.
3/10

It's just a squash match, but its a fun one to watch. It's basically a comedy match and the crowd loves Andre hilariously squashing these two dudes and its fun to watch. Nivens has a very tragic hair cut, that doesn't matter, but it has to be said. I love the look of the smaller promotions studio show with a small audience and the interviews being done at ringside right after the match.

Dusty Rhodes vs. Bruiser Brody (2/3 Falls) (Don't Watch This Match! Or at least don't watch it thinking it will be good.)

Brody keeps powdering to the outside to avoid Dusty's jabs. Lots of taunting from Dusty and the crowd loves it. Dusty hits the bionic elbow early and Brody stumbles around to the outside. This ring is as unstable as fly by night indy ring. Dusty whips Brody into the corner and the whole thing shakes. Brody stomps Dusty in the face three times then hits the knee drop to get the first pinfall, and the ref does the least enthusiastic count I've ever seen. He's barely tapping the mat. Dusty crawls under the mat to trick Brody and takes him to the outside then hits back elbow then an elbow drop for a three count. They brawl back and forth, Brody gets the advantage and does the Huss chant and taunt. Dusty hits a good looking dropkick. Brody knocks Dusty down with some high boots to the midsection. Dusty starts to fight back with punches and both men are down against the ropes. Dusty is punching Brody and Brody lifts him up and over the ropes and gets disqualified so Dusty wins. After the match Brody ties Dusty up in the ropes and keeps beating him up. Dusty escapes and fights back and Brody goes outside and heads to the back.
1/10

This match fucking sucks. This was just a bunch of punches and shitty kicks and man did I hate it. I thought about taking it out of here, but I watched it so I might as well talk about it and one thing about watching the older wrestling is appreciating the better stuff we have now. I know Dusty has had good matches because I've watched them and I've heard good things about Brody so how boring this was surprised me. The crowd loved it though, but I don't get it.

Terry Funk vs. Bruiser Brody

This match already has more wrestling than the last one as Brody hits a powerslam then locks in a submission after some brawling. They're on the outside and Brody grabs a chair and hits Funk in the side of the head with it. Funk is bleeding from the side of his head or maybe his ear already. Brody lifts Funk up for a piledriver and Funk fights it by waving his legs, but Brody doesn't care and drops him headfirst to the mat. Funk is in trouble and grabs a side headlock and hits a back kick to the dick of Brody that sends him to the outside. Funk lifts up a table and slams it onto Brody's back. Brody is bused open now from being run face first into the ring post. Funk grabs a side headlock and gets a belly to back suplex for his trouble. Funk fights Brody down from the top rope then hits him with a bunch of punches before locking in the step over toe hold that Brody eventually kicks him out of. Funk fights back with headbutts and they go to the outside where Brody throws a table onto Funk's head. Each Man's tag team partner comes in to help and the match gets thrown out. Brody and Hansen beat up Funk some more, but Dory comes in and delivers some terrible chair shots to even things up and then a bunch of chairs are being thrown around before another wrestler comes down to clear them out of the ring, but they're just brawling around the arena grabbing chairs and hitting each other.
7/10

If it wasn't for the DQ finish this would have gotten a better rating. This is the fun kind of brawl you would expect from these two names. A really solid match between the two men and a lot of fun brawling on the outside. This is the Bruiser Brody I've been told about and it's the classic Terry Funk I've always known, just younger. Love Japan's general disregard for foreign objects when they aren't used in the ring. I think it's a good philosophy more places should adopt.

Jake Atlas vs. Priscilla Kelly

The two avoid each others moves for a bit, then Kelly uses the speed advantage with some lucha armdrags to get the advantage before Atlas connects with a big lariat to take control. Atlas keeps trying to use his strength advantage and gets cocky and taunts only for Kelly to fire up and start chopping and kicking him. A back and forth on the arpon lets Kelly hit an STO then get a nearfall then hit a big slam after missing in the first time. Atlas hits a huge Yakuza kick, then goes for a move that's countered by a reverse 'rana. Atlas escapes a Panama sunrise then makes a comeback. Kelly kicks out of the cartwheel ddt, but an elevated double arm DDT puts her down for the count.
7/10

A really fun match from these two, with a lot of cool looking spots and some nice hard hitting action. I haven't watched a ton of Atlas matches, but he might be one of the best at taking a reverse 'rana in the business. Kelly more than holds her own in the match as well and throws out a lot of high flying stuff as well as delivering some nice strikes. Sad I didn't pay attention to Atlas before he signed with WWE, but at least Kelly is still around doing cool stuff on the indies.

Jake Atlas vs. Jungle Boy
https://youtu.be/fu9LPxvDZRw

Tons of counters and roll up attempts to start the match. Jungle Boy gets the advantage when Atlas catches a hurrincanranna from him, but Jungle Boy goes over the top with a code red. They go to the outside and Jungle Boy hits a suicide dive. They go back in and Atlas gets control of the match and hits a german suplex on the apron before going back inside the ring. Lots of fast paced, back and forth action. Jungle Boy tries to go up top, but Atlas hits stops him and hits a brutal back rake. Atlas hits a burning hammer and only gets a two count. Atlas hits the cartwheel DDT, but Jungle Boy rolls through and hooks Atlas's legs for the three count.
8/10

Not quite as intense as their PWG matchup, but damn good anyway. These two are going full speed the whole match and hit everything crisply. A great indie sendoff for both of these guys before going to WWE and AEW.

Genchiro Tenyru vs. Bruiser Brody
https://youtu.be/ffYcnumm32A

Slow pace to start the match as both men are looking for the one strike or opening that gives them the advantage. Tenyru seems to find it first with an enziguri, but Brody gets up backs him against the ropes and chops the fuck out of him. It's a Bruiser Brody match so they go to the floor and he starts to cheat a bit and slams Tenyru's head on a table then smacks him over the back with a monitor. Back in the ring and he hits a nice stalling vertical suplex. Tenyru gets the advantage and starts to focus on the leg with submissions and kicks to slow Brody down. After Brody takes him down with a dropkick Tenyru tries to fight up and from his knees just starts throwing chops on the injured knee of Brody. Love little things like this. They go outside again, this time it's Tenyru's idea and he attacks the knee with the ringbell and wraps it up in the guardrail as well. Brody counters a piledriver by rotating further over and landing on Tenyru's chest. Brody makes a comeback and hits a big diving knee off the top, but rolls out of the ring because he aggravated his injured leg. Tenyru follows him outside and goes for a piledriver or a powerbomb that looks terrible and both men are down outside and get counted out.
7/10

Damn AJPW matches not having a winner. A classic AJPW style match. Lots of back and forth basic wrestling to start the match a couple of big moves and when somebody gets the advantage they target a body part and start going for submissions. It's definitely not a style for everybody, but when its done well it's very good. This is mostly a display for Tenyru with Brody getting worked over for most of the match, but both men play their roles well in this match. The non-finish is a bummer, but probably would have worked a bit better if Tenyru had at least hit the move he wanted out there right.

Friday, March 6, 2020

AEW Revolution Review


Nothing like a super timely review of a pay per view six days after the event happened. But I wanted to write about the show so here we go.

Dustin Rhodes vs. Jake Hagar

I did not care for this match. I hate Jake Hagar and his style isn't made exciting by fighting another big guy so he can't manhandle his opponent. This match also went longer than it really felt justified in happening. Dustin tries, but it just wasn't an interesting match going in.
3/10

Sammy Gueverra vs. Darby Allin

Love that the match started off fast and with lots of brawling ringside. Sammy hits a 630 splash from the top to the outside through a table before the match even started and it looked awesome. A fun fast paced match that told its story and did it in a short time.
6/10

Young Bucks vs. Page & Omega

This match was fucking awesome. So many great false finishes that were built up and so believable for every one of them. I was reacting out loud watching it by myself on my computer. It was a great match, but it was also paired with a great story about the Elite breaking apart. It makes sense that Matt would be the Buck to go too far as he has his injured back and Omega and Page went to town on that injury early in the match. Tons of twists and turns, action on the ramp was great and it was just great to watch. I would like to write more eloquently about this, but I can't do it justice, just watch it. After the match Hangman does the most perfect tease of a betrayal on Omega.
10/10

Nyla Rose vs. Kris Statlander

The match was a little awkward, apparently because Statlander was getting over the flu and it showed. Still a pretty good match between the two even though they almost messed up the superplex, but they both got over safely. The finish of the avalanche powerbomb was impressive by Rose, as she basically did it off one leg as she stepped over the ropes.
5/10

MJF vs. Cody

Cody was never that impressive in the ring, but he knows how to compensate for that by telling the best stories in the ring and being good enough at wrestling to have great matches. I haven't really seen MJF wrestle a ton so I don't know how good he is at that, but he plays his role very well here. There is a ton of shenanigans and fuckery from MJF and Wardlow, Brandi and Arn do a good job of trying to counter it. Cody gets a good run to build up his near win, before outside action distracts the ref to allow MJF to punch Cody with the ring. MJF attacking the broken toe of Cody really helps highlight why he made him wrestle a cage match before facing him one on one and was a perfect touch to the match. On rewatch this probably won't be as cathartic and fun to watch, but at the time it was great.
8/10

PAC vs. Orange Cassidy

A great juxtaposition with Pac's intensity and Cassidy's shenanigans. This went pretty much how I expected and it was great. Cassidy surprised Pac by being an actual wrestler at first, but still mixing in his I'm not trying that hard stuff. Pac destroyed Cassidy for a bit then got a comeback and it was just a good back and forth match between the two. Cassidy got distracted and beat, but fun stuff while it lasted. Looking forward to seeing more of this Cassidy on AEW and this version of Pac has been fantastic.
9/10

Moxley vs. Jericho

A great brawl between two guys who are great at that. A lot of fun stuff in the crowd and ringside before they get into the ring and have a good match there as well. Jericho evolving his style as he's gotten older has been great. He can still pull off his lionsault, but he can't do the fast paced sprints anymore and has gone from a chicken shit heel to a cheating son of a bitch heel. Moxley lives for these kind of wild brawls so it worked great. Moxley revealing he could see from the injured eye before getting the win was very over the top and well done. Just a fun, cathartic match between these two.
8/10

From the second match to the top of the card this was really good stuff. The women's title match was a little rough, but I'd rather the real knockdown fight between Statlander and Rose happen later in her run anyway so I'm fine with that. Just great matches everywhere on the card and they were all different styles and kinds of matches and that's what makes AEW so fun to me. There are pure work rate matches like the tag match and then great sports entertainment stuff like MJF vs. Cody. Darby and Sammy provided a great spotfest, Cassidy vs. Pac gave us some good comedy and damn good wrestling, and the main event was an epic brawl. No matter what you're looking for in a wrestling show you're going to be able to find some of that on AEW. If you haven't already you should find a way to see this show.

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


Wednesday, January 30, 2019

KENTA is Back!


Hideo Itami has requested his release from WWE and been given it. It makes sense as he hasn't done anything of note in WWE. Partially because of injuries and partially because he never got good at English promos which will always hold somebody back in WWE. Plus his style doesn't really fit with WWE at all. Which, as his twitter name change tells us, means that KENTA is back. When I first found out about indie wrestling and specifically RoH I didn't know much about Japanese wrestling except that it existed. As RoH grew they started to with Pro Wrestling NOAH and had wrestlers interact with some of the bigger names and KENTA was one of those wrestlers and he made a big impact on me. He's the wrestler that got me into Japanese wrestling and led to me being such a fan of NJPW, even though he never worked there.
His tag team with Naomichi Marafuji was the touchstone I used to find matches on youtube. I'd find good matches with them and then search their opponents and keep spreading my knowledge of Japanese wrestlers. The Junior Heavyweight style and their matches got me to buy my first NOAH VHS as well. KENTA & Marafuji vs. Ricky Marvin & Juventud Guerrera was the reason I chose that show and it was worth the whole cost. It took me a little longer to get into the heavyweight style in Japan and appreciate the other matches. The fact that I only had a VHS player when I was home from college during the Summers stopped me from ordering too many VHS and the Japanese shows didn't really come out on DVD.

The matches between Marafuji and KENTA cemented my fandom. The two men work perfectly against each other and know exactly what the other is going to do when. They both excelled at the Junior Heavyweight level, but when Kobashi and Misawa were nearing the end of their careers those two were the big stars of the promotion and they had to move up in weight class. Marafuji more successfully put on the weight, but KENTA always had a style that fit in with the heavyweights better with his stiff kicks.

Once he left for WWE his time in NXT was marred by injuries that kept him sidelined before he moved up to 205 Live. I have missed most of this part of his career as I don't watch WWE stuff much. I reupped my subscription so my friend could use it for Royal Rumble on his birthday so I watched his match against Cedrick Alexander which was really good. I've heard his feud with Mustafa Ali has some really good matches that I want to check out as well.

More than anybody else who has left WWE I'm looking forward to what the future holds for KENTA. A return to NOAH seems really likely. The company sustained him early in his career, and Naomichi Marafuji is still there. However there are other options. If he wants to return to Japan I'm sure NJPW is willing to give him a good deal. He has tweeted about how he loves Ring of Honor as well and they have a working deal with NJPW that would allow him to work with both companies. If he just wants to work in the US there is always All Elite Wrestling. I'm sure they would push him, but he already took a chance on a new company once in his career, who knows if he's willing to do it again. The only thing I'm sure of is that wherever KENTA ends up I'll be ready to watch the next stage of his career and wait for him to be back at the top of the card where he belongs.

My favorite match of his will probably always be his match against Roderick Strong in RoH because I got to see it live. I never thought I'd have the chance to see him in person so it made the four hour trip to Detroit a no-brainer. It was a really good show and was a ton of fun. It wasn't the best match on the show, but it was what got me to make the trip and will always have a special place for me. So if you've only seen him in WWE and want some suggestions on matches to watch just ask me on twitter I'll be more than happy to give you some ideas.

Sunday, January 13, 2019

Exploring NJPWworld: The Steiner Brothers

Watching an old Steiner Brothers match, specifically the one against Road Warrior Hawk and Kensuke Sasuke (https://njpwworld.com/p/s_series_00114_1_8) which is a really good match even though I didn't review it, which inspired me to really go through the back catalog of matches that NJPW has instead of just watching the recent stuff. I avoided any of the singles matches and just stuck to their early tag team work in NJPW, especially as a counter to what I remember of them from WCW during the attitude era.

Steiner Brothers vs. Manabu Nakanishi & Kensuke Sasuke

Pretty standard tag match from two good teams here. It's fun to see Nakanishi back in his prime instead of the slow moving guy he is now when he shows up in NJPW. Scott and Nakanishi start the match with some grappling in real amateur wrestling style. Eventually Nakanishi gets an advantage then hoists Scott up for a big powerslam. Scott rolls out of the ring to recover then comes back in and hits a big exploder suplex. The match goes back and forth with a mixture of powerful strikes and big suplexes from each team before Scott lifts Nakanishi up on his shoulders and Rick hits the bulldog off it. A really good standard tag match from the two teams. Not a crazy main event type match, but just good wrestling.

6/10

Steiner Brothers & Keiji Mutoh vs. The Outsiders & Masahiro Chono

A fun six man tag match between the two teams. Back and forth early with everybody paired off to fight in turn. Eventually Scott plays the face in peril for the good guys and Rick gets a hot tag where he t-bone suplexes everybody. The heels start to just come in whenever and use the numbers advantage as Scott is still down and out from the beatdown to get the advantage. The Steiners manage to hit an electric chair bulldog on Hall, but his teammates come in and save him and four of the men brawl to the outside. Rick gets the advantage in the ring and climbs to the top for a bulldog on Hall, but Nash climbs onto the apron and punches him a couple of times to stop him. Hall grabs him off the top and hits an outsider's edge. Mutoh breaks up the pinfall then Chono throws him onto the ramp and they brawl out there. Nash rolls into the ring and hits a jackknife powerbomb and Hall covers Rick for the three count. At one point Rick came off the top for a crossbody block and Scott Hall caught him and hit a fall away slam. Scott Hall is really strong is what I'm trying to get at.

6/10

Steiner Brothers vs. Vader & Bam Bam Bigelow

A good tag match between these two teams and three out of the four guys really get to highlight what makes them great. Scott does too, but he's a little sloppy in this match and doesn't look that great, although he does a good job of playing the face in peril in this one. He did that in the previous match I talked about, but in that one Chono was the big hero, in this one we get to see Rick get a hot tag and he's impressive. Because of what Scott looked like in his biggest run we always think of him as the strong one, but Rick looks really impressive in this one. He hits a really good backbody drop on Bam Bam at one point. Bam Bam and Scott start the match off with a lockup that ends with a beautiful enziguri from Bam Bam. He spends a lot of this match proving he's agile for his size which is fun to watch. Vader looks good in the match as well and hits a brutal powerbomb on each of the Steiners that just barely falls to get a three count. Bam Bam hits a big rolling senton on Rick and would get the pinfall, but he had knocked the ref over on the powerslam preceding it and when he helps the ref up Rick grabs him with a belly to belly suplex and gets the three count.
This match would have been a bit better if Scott had been on his game, but he slipped coming off the top once, his frankensteiner was sloppy, and he just looked a little off. Thankfully his job was to get beat up most of the match so it worked out pretty well. And as I said earlier its cool to see Rick get the showcase in a match from these guys. Vader and Bam Bam were both killing it for their part as well. Just good stuff from those three guys.

7/10

Steiner Brothers vs. Hiroshi Hase & Keiji Mutoh 1994

This match is great. Back and forth mat wrestling to start between Hase and Scott. They eventually move to stand up and Scott grabs a single leg, but instead of a takedown just suplexes Hase over his head. Rick and Mutoh tag in and Rick just acts like a dog for a bit and pretends to pee on Mutoh then grabs a single leg and bites Mutoh who complains to the ref. Lots of back and forth wrestling between the teams here. Eventually Mutoh and Scott are the legal men and Mutoh throws Scott out of the ring onto the ramp and takes him down with a suplex then runs about twenty yards up the ramp then comes down with a clothesline on Scott. Rick comes over and Mutoh suplexes him and Hase runs up the ramp then comes back with a clothesline. Back in the ring Mutoh gets armbreaker on Rick who rolls him over onto his back then slowly lifts him up and hits a belly to back suplex, some guys can just lift a big guy up in that short armbar position quickly, but damn it looks impressive when Rick slowly hoists him up and over. Rick gets a tag and Scott comes in hot. Hase gets tagged in and we start to build to the finish. Scott starts hitting big moves and that culminates in him hitting a Steiner driver and getting so excited about it he starts taunting the crowd. I don't blame him it was perfectly hit. Scott lifts Hase up and starts slapping him and hitting steiner-lines, but Hase refuses to go down for a couple of them. Rick grabs Mutoh off the apron and brawls with him ringside. Scott picks Hase up on his shoulders and Rick comes off the top with a bulldog. Scott makes the cover and gets the three count just before Mutoh comes off the top rope to break it up.
Great back and forth action and lots of great work from all four men in this match. Which isn't really surprising considering who they are. I kind of forgot how good Rick Steiner was as a wrestler, because he didn't do much in WCW. I kind of undersold the offense that Mutoh and Hase got in, because I'm too focused on the Steiners, plus they hit a lot of suplexes and I love a good suplex. This is the kind of tag action that I love to see and definitely a match to check out.

10/10

Steiner Brothers vs. Hiroshi Hase & Keiji Mutoh 1995

This match is the follow up to the previous one at the next years Tokyo Dome show. This match builds up more slowly and has some nice callbacks to the match that occurred the year prior, but never builds up to the high points of the previous match. I like when Mutoh takes Rick outside for the ramp run clothesline that Rick ducks it and Scott nails Mutoh with a clothesline, and Mutoh runs almost the entire ramp this time. He is tired by the time he gets clotheslined. Early in the match we get the Steiners hitting a stereo gorilla press slams and Mutoh and Hase rolls to the outside and Hase gets a kiss from a fan who I'm assuming is his wife. Rick goes outside and gives a fan a kiss on the cheek that she is not into. Scott plays the face in peril for a large part of the match with Hase and Mutoh working on his legs. Rick gets a hot tag and cleans house for a bit. Scott gets back in and goes for a steiner driver, but Mutoh counters by landing behind him and lifting him up for a tombstone. It breaks down into chaos for the end of the match and we get Scott going up for the DDT off the shoulders of Rick, but Hase counters with a victory roll for two then Mutoh climbs up and hits a hurrincanranna to take Scott off the top rope. Hase hits a northern lights suplex and gets the three count just before the kick out.
A good match, but not as fun as their first encounter. Everybody's got some good stuff and it builds up to the climax so for a certain kind of fan this match might be more entertaining than their first encounter. Its still a really good match though, just not the great match that the first one was.

8/10


Everything I watched of the Steiner Brothers on NJPWworld was worth watching. It went from well done basic matches to top notch main event caliber tag matches against some of the best talent from Japan. Their style blends amateur wrestling with the pro style very well and the explosiveness of their suplexes is great. Their tag team maneuvers are really good and are what really elevated them above most of their opponents, who don't really have anything special going on with their team work beyond just being good wrestlers. Definitely a good dive into the back catalog and hopefully some of the other ones I do will be as much fun.

Friday, January 4, 2019

Wrestle Kingdom 13 Review

If I was a more professional type of reviewer I'd probably rewatch these matches and grade them, but I also like just going with my gut instinct on how I feel about matches. I've definitely seen very different opinions on some of the matches than mine, but I think that's a good thing, especially since different people look for different things from their wrestling anyway. So without further ado enjoy my review.

Hangman Page, Yujiro Takahashi & Marty Scurll vs. Lance Archer, Davey Boy Smith Jr & Minoru Suzuki vs. Chuckie T, Beretta & Hirooki Goto vs. Yuji Nagata, Jeff Cobb & David Finlay vs. Togi Makabe, Ryuske Taguchi & Toru Yano

Miscommunication gets the Bullet Club team eliminated early after some decent six man action between them and the team of Nagata, Cobb and Finlay. Ton of fun stuff between that team and Best Friends and Goto. Great stuff from Nagata. Cobb avoided attempted double team offense from the Best Friends then hit a double belly to back suplex on them. Cobb and Goto go after each other with a lot of big boy offense and Finlay gets a rollup after a missed Chuckie T moonsault. Unsurprisingly the Suzuki-Gun team makes short work of the other team although we got some awesome stuff between Suzuki and Nagata first. Yano and Taguchi do their shenanigans, but Makabe provides the muscle for the team and keeps them in the match. The ref is distracted and Yano hits a double low blow on Killer Elite Squad and Yano gets a rollup for the win. A lot of fun stuff from all the teams here. One of the benefits to a gauntlet match like this. A lot of short matches and everything is the best stuff from the teams.

6/10


Kota Ibushi vs. Will Ospreay

This match was fucking awesome. They started off with a bunch of fast paced sequences dodging each other a bunch. Then they countered a bunch of stuff. Ospreay got a really good counter on Ibushi going for the golden triangle moonsault by getting on the apron and kicking him while upside down. Both guys got a cool dive in and Ibushi hits one of the best german suplexes I've ever seen. This match has several call backs to his match with Nakamura including Ibushi blasting Ospreay with a huge Boma Ye. They get physical with some hard strike sequences and Ibushi takes the advantage until Ospreay stops him on the top rope and hits a cheeky Nando's kick. While Ibushi is upside down in the corner this match hits its next gear. Ospreay sits down and starts slapping him until Ibushi fights back then the slaps get stiff then Ospreay just stomps his face a bunch. Ibushi keeps getting the advantage, but Ospreay won't stay down for the three count and keeps avoiding the Kamigoya. Ospreay hits a back fist to the back of a kneeling Ibushi's head then hits the storm breaker for the three count. This match was so fucking good and I can't believe it's how they started the show. These guys do amazing counters throughout, reference a great match from Ibushi's history, and lay in some super stiff strikes. I loved it.
10/10


Yoshinobu Kanemura & El Desperado vs. Roppongi 3K vs. BUSHI & Shingo Takagi

Fine match between these three teams. Pretty quick one so we get a lot of high speed action from everybody and a lot of chaos. Roppongi 3K got a lot of the offense in this match including stopping Kanemura and Desperado from misting both of them with superkicks, but Shingo is too strong for Sho & Yo and nails a bunch of Pumping Bombers before hitting his finisher and getting the three count.
6/10

Tomohiro Ishii vs. Zack Sabre Jr

Zack Sabre Jr is suffocating in this match and is right on top of Ishii with submissions the whole time and comes really close to getting the submission in the first minute like he said, but Ishii refuses to tap. Sabre goes after the right arm of Ishii and takes away his offense so Ishii can't get everything behind his forearms and clotheslines. ZSJ gets his submissions locked in again, but this time when Ishii escapes he uses headbutts to the chest to stop ZSJ. Ishii starts hitting some big moves, but Sabre goes back to the injured arm and eventually gets an abdominal stretch he turns into a double armlock for the submission. Really fun match between these two guys and its cool to see Ishii play the overmatched wrestler when he's that much bigger than his opponent. Plus Sabre's relentless submission game makes it very believable.

8/10

Guerillas of Destiny vs. EVIL & Sanada vs. The Young Bucks

Fun three way tag between these teams with the Guerrilla's teasing fair play at the start of the match. Back and forth action amongst all the teams throughout this match. Sanada looks very good in this match and hit some good plancha's on the Bucks. Fale and Jado come in an get stopped and we move into the fast paced finishing section of this match with LIJ hitting a magic killer and then Sanada gets a moonsault for the win. Fast paced and got some good stuff done in the match and Sanada looked like a star in it.

7/10

Cody vs. Juice Robinson

Brandi keeps interfering and distracting the ref early in the match before getting thrown out from ringside. Cody throws Juice into the guardrail then they trade finishers a couple of times. They punch each other a bunch before Juice hits some big left punches then hits two pulp frictions for the win. The interference didn't really flow or mean anything in the start of the match and then it just devolved into trading finishers and didn't have any kind of flow to it.

3/10


KUSHIDA vs. Tajii Ishimori

Our first slower more deliberately paced match, although these guys definitely moved fast and made a lot of counters at first. KUSHIDA went right after the arm of Ishimori to set up the hoverboard lock, but Ishimori had it scouted and countered with a lot of submission work on his own. Both guys had counters for each others moves, but Ishimori has more in the tank and finally manages to his the bloody cross and get the three count. Pretty good match, but I think I was really wanting more from it as well. Definitely good, but not the showcase I was hoping for.

7/10


Kazuchika Okada vs. Jay White

A really good match between these two. Okada comes out recharged as the Rainmaker and has some offense early until Gedo distracts him and Jay White takes advantage and hits a belly to back suplex over the ropes to the floor then smashes Okada's back into the guardrail and apron repeatedly before taking it back into the ring and hitting a beautiful Urinage. Ged tries to interfere and Okada stops him and throws him to the outside and does the running crossbody block over the guardrail onto both men. They get back into the ring and have an amazing exchange of countering each others trademark moves back and forth. Okada finally hits a rainmaker then goes for a second one, but White stops it and hits a blade runner for the three count. Just great wrestling from both of these guys and it told such a good story and we'll see if Okada falls back off the rails after losing the match. Was really surprised it was over after just one blade runner. Made it a really effective finish to the match.

9/10


Tetsuyo Naito vs. Chris Jericho

The match went longer than it had to, but it was still good. Naito took advantage early and hit a piledriver on the ramp and kept control until Jericho got his hands on a kendo stick and laid into Naito. Jericho took Naito to the outside and DDT'd him onto a table and put a hole in it. Jericho controls the match whenever its a brawl and Naito would take the advantage when it was about athleticism and wrestling. Naito gets his hands on the kendo stick and uses it like a baseball bat to really nail Jericho a couple of times. Jericho brings in a bunch of chairs and goes for a powerbomb onto them, but Naito counters it with a DDT. Naito his a german suplex onto the chairs and a destino, but Jericho still kicks out. Jericho hits a mule kick to the dick on Naito then a codebreaker, but Naito kicks out. Naito charges for another codebreaker, but Naito lifts him up and drops him head first onto the exposed turnbuckle then hits a destino for the win. A long match with some good brawling and stuff, but it definitely went too long and never really hit the high levels of brutality that Jericho's recent no dq matches have done and it just felt lacking. It was a good match, but not great.

7/10


Kenny Omega vs. Hiroshi Tanahashi

This match was excellent. It told a great story overall and stuck with it. Omega is the better athlete. He's younger and in better shape and both of them know it. Omega goes after Tanahashi early and fast, but Tanahashi has experience and a fuck ton of fighting spirit and he's not going to stay down. Omega draws a target on Tanahashi's back and stays there. Tons of forearms to the lowerback and he when he takes Tanahashi to the outside he hits a belly to back suplex onto the apron then powerslams him over the guardrail and onto the announce table. Which he follows up with a beautiful springboard moonsault over the guardrail. Tanahashi finds his openings as well which generally involve catching a leg of Omega and hitting a dragon screw leg whip on him. There's some beautiful sequences between these two in this match and I like the second time they end up on the outside instead of fake throwing Omega onto the table and into the ring Tanahashi fakes throwing him in and puts him on the table. He climbs to the top and goes for a high fly flow to the outside that Omega avoids and Tanahashi crashes through the table to the floor. The battle continues back in the ring going back and forth, but with Omega having most of the control, but Tanahashi refusing to stay down. Omega hits a series of good V-Triggers and goes for the one winged angel only for Tanahashi to counter with a beautiful reverse 'rana. Omega gets a dragon suplex off the top rope and goes for the one winged angel again, but Tanahashi counters with a reverse fame asser sort of move then hits a slingblade and a High Fly Flow for the win.

This match had that big match feel and they lived up to it. They did some crazy spots. They did some great wrestling. There was lots of counters and just great wrestling. Most of all it told the story well. Omega is a great wrestler and athlete, but Tanahashi refuses to lose. He's proud of his country and his style of wrestling and he doesn't like that Omega has bad mouthed those things so he's not going to lose to him. Tanahashi takes enough damage to stop anybody else, but he keeps kicking out and fighting back. An awesome main event to a great show.

10/10

Overall: Watch this show, it's great. There's only one match that is bad and its at least short so it's got that going for it. It starts and ends with great matches and has good stuff throughout it. Compared to a lot of previous Wrestle Kingdoms this felt pretty quick and easy to watch as well. A very well paced show that mixes in a lot of different types of matches for you to watch.