Showing posts with label 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2012. Show all posts

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Random Perrito Shit from AAA

AAA Rey de Reyes 2012
 (2012/03/18)

4-WAY for 2012 Rey de Reyes: Jack Evans vs. Hector Garza vs. Hijo del Perro Aguayo vs. LA Park

Oh man, what a bad match! One would probably never guess based on talent involved, but the match was truly bad, and it’s all because of AAA being the worst here. We got some solid stuff before the first elimination, which happened after Jeff Jarrett hit LA Park with a guitar. On the entrance stage far away from the ring. With fucking Karen being involved. The guitar wasn’t even smashed. Guitarshot suddenly means a killshot, after three million wrestlers kicking out of it in various places. So now the one and only LA fucking PARK has to lose like some rookie geek to advance a shitty angle? FUCK! YOU! It was all downhill from there. Ringwork blending in with shitty booking, everyone looking bad and lazy, etc. The only somewhat saving grace was Hector repeatedly interfering and messing with referee during Jack Evans’ pin attempts on Perro. That shit was legitimately funny and the only reason why I didn’t DUD this crap. Such a mess, just a vintage AAA clusterfuck.

bad

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Averno/Titan x4

So… I’ve always wanted to give this feud a proper watch, but just kept forgetting, smh. They faced off five times mano a mano, IIRC, and I found four matches and checked them. Can’t find the fifth one, from January 2014. Waddaya gonna do… Now, the right thing to do would be watching two or three prelude trios before every singles match to “get” the whole picture, but as of now I don’t feel like it, mainly due to its time-consuming nature.

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Random New Japan


New Year Golden Series 1980

(1980/2/5)

WWF Junior Heavyweight Championship: Dynamite Kid vs. Tatsumi Fujinami ©

Very rough, very physically demanding match, absolutely flawless in execution, shit was tight and technically sound. Fujinami entered the match with a cut on his forehead and DK took advantage of it every time when on verge of losing the mat game. These two were so damn physically prepared and fit here, it felt like they could’ve wrestled for three hours straight. Great finish too.

****1/4


Champion Series 1985

(1985/6/11)

WWF Championship: Tatsumi Fujinami vs. Hulk Hogan ©

Oh look, it’s Vinnie Mac inside the ring, announcing this sports entertainment match! Sheeeeit, Hulk is much bigger than Fujinami (a former Junior after all), but the size and power advantage alone are not enough to defeat the tough No. 2 of New Japan, hence Hogan bringing it down to the mat and trying to hang with Fujinami in his own game. So cool seeing the Hulkster busting out various armbars and other pace-controlling holds. Fujinami was, naturally, working from beneath and his comebacks fired up the fans every time, but really, they were chanting for Hogan too, and quite loudly and heavily I must say. Too bad they kinda botched the lariat finish, but still, this was a great match overall and should serve as a rock solid counter argument against all the “Hogan shit wrestler” (whatever the fuck that means) cocksuckers.

****1/4


IWGP Champion Series 1987

(1987/5/18)

IWGP League 1987 – Block B: Masa Saito vs. Akira Maeda

Five minutes of crazy awesomeness. The key part of success was actually Super Strong Machine laying a horrific beatdown on Maeda just when he was about to enter the ring, shoving him into the ringpost few times and busting him wide open. It looked like a legit cut, not a bladejob. That turn of events suddenly gave Masa Saito a significant advantage, and he sure as hell took the chance, Maeda got his ass kicked properly here, I’ve never seen something like this before. One helluva brawl, short and sweet.

****


Fighting Spirit Series 1988

(1988/10/27)

Antonio Inoki vs. Crusher “Bam Bam” Bigelow

Most of this was messy as fuck.

**


G1 Climax 2008

(2008/8/15)

Masahiro Chono & Kurt Angle vs. Shinjiro Otani & AJ Styles

I have never bothered to check this one before, silly me because this was tons of fun. Everyone delivered, even Angle, even the veteran Chono, but the undisputed MVP was Shinjiro F’N Otani, my god, he owned everyone out there, especially the crowd. Angle and AJ had a fun rivalry that year, their match-up here was damn good, also Chono’s charisma and badassery were just all over the match, great stuff, super enjoyable.

****


G1 Climax 2008

(2008/8/16)

Hiroshi Tanahashi & AJ Styles vs. Shinsuke Nakamura & Kurt Angle

Fun, vivid tag, but the one from the night before had Otani in it, and this one didn’t, that’s the key difference. Nakamura was painfully average here, Angle and AJ worked another round of their beef, and Tana and Angle were building towards their eventual one-on-one match. And holy shit, Angle actually beat a wrestler by using Olympic Slam, go figure!

***1/2


Resolution 2009

(2009/4/5)

IWGP Heavyweight Championship: Kurt Angle vs. Hiroshi Tanahashi ©

I have never actually seen this match before, despite it sleeping on my disk for three years now. Eh, waddaya gonna do… Good match, the opening stage with them rolling on the mat trying to outcatch each other and with two strong headlock sequences was the best, it was nice. The rest was good enough, simply a mixture of regular Angle & Tana matches, with obligatory signature spots such as suplexes, ankle lock reversals, HFFs, etc. Nothing out of order, just stuff good enough. What really made the whole thing for me was Tana’s fantastic post-match selling of the ankle lock damage, I fucking love when wrestlers do that.

***1/2


Masahiro Chono 25th Anniversary

(2009/10/12)

IWGP Heavyweight Championship: Shinjiro Otani vs. Shinsuke Nakamura ©

Excellent title match and forgotten gem of modern New Japan, the veteran and Junior Heavyweight legend of the company comes back to fight the representative of some other, modern era, and he’s going all in. Superb work by Otani here, incredible crowd control by using his retro signature spots and also reminding everyone of the great late Shinya Hashimoto, he drew massive sympathies throughout the match, and the crowd bought into a chance of him winning the strap. Nakamura was good too, but damn, the challenger was just on a whole other level of swag.

****1/4


Best of the Super Jr. XIX

(2012/6/10)

BOSJ XIX - FINALE: Low-Ki vs. Ryusuke Taguchi

The opening phase with Low-Ki setting up his pace was awesome, as he was just chopping and kicking the shit out of Taguchi, stretching him on the mat, etc. Felt like a rookie punishment match. Eventually, Taguchi finds few ways to stay alive, mostly via smart reversals. However, Low-Ki is a vicious beast and we got an awesome ringside sequence that culminated in a great table spot reversal that fucked up Low-Ki’s midsection. He sold it great, favoring it all the way until the end. That proved to be the key for Taguchi’s victory, in the finishing run Low-Ki missed the phoenix splash and Taguchi was free to wrap it up with a series of moves, with the last two of them targeting Low-Ki’s hurt midsection. Excellent, tight match with a smart layout and simple structure.

****1/4

Sunday, February 8, 2015

Rey Cometa Apuesta Matches


CMLL 79 Aniversario

(2012/9/14)

Mascara vs. Mascara: Puma King vs. Rey Cometa

Good match that could have been so much better with a talent more suitable to Cometa’s abilities, because Puma King simply wasn’t good here. He had his moments, sure, but overall he sucked the life out of the match and just – wasn’t good. Cometa, on the other hand, was excellent in everything he did, whether it was emotion or execution, you name it. Impeccable high flying. He not only saved the match from being bad, no, he actually elevated it to the point where I can call it a good match, which means this was a totally Rey Cometa carryjob. Retrospectively, I can’t believe they had Puma going over here, because now, more than two years later, Cometa is way more appreciated and gets better spots on cards, meanwhile Puma King is still wrestling very low and if he retired tomorrow I imagine no one would miss him. So naturally, this big win they gave him seems like such a waste. Vintage CMLL!

***


CMLL 2013/3/15

Cabellera & Mascara vs. Cabellera & Mascara: Rey Cometa & Stuka Jr. vs. Okumura & Namajague

Fantastic match executed insanely well on every front, this was a true war of wrestling philosophies, Mexico vs. Japan, shit man, I enjoyed everything. All four guys worked hard and sold amazingly, but still I gotta give it to Namajague, dude was on fire in this one, the sequences and chemistry with Cometa were unbelievable. It was lucha high flying taking on puroresu strikes, but with both guys mixing it up and “stealing” from each other’s entities. The Japs were vicious and relentless on offense, sometimes even malicious, the tecnicos’ comebacks were paced and executed tremendously, and the climax of the match with Cometa and Namajague fighting for everything with their eliminated partners freaking out at ringside, the crowd going ballistic… Smashing shit, I’m telling ya.

****1/2


CMLL 2013/4/26

Cabellera vs. Cabellera: Rey Cometa vs. Namajague

Forty days after the epic double mask/hair match, here is la revancha, Namajague is maskless and even more vicious than before, therefore Cometa is about to enter the world of pain. They proved their captivating chemistry from the previous lucha de apuesta wasn’t an accident, they fucking did it again here. Superb hair match with lots and lots of punishment, drama, crazy dives and just overall great wrestling.

****1/2


CMLL 81 Aniversario

(2014/9/19)

Cabellera vs. Cabellera: Rey Cometa vs. Cavernario

I had this at ****1/2 originally, but fuck it man, I gotta bump it up now, the match is perfection, incredible star making performance by Caveman. Sure, he had some great performances and matches before, but this was that X factor moment, he delivered and got over big time on the same show that had Atlantis and Ultimo Guerrero fighting in a mask vs. mask match, just think about it. In a couple of years when he moves to WWE or something like that after being a star in Mexico, this is the match people are going to name as “career defining”. That is, of course, if he doesn’t crush his knees, and he will if he keeps performing that ultra dangerous splash to the floor. God, I hope he wears double fucking diapers around his knees.

Anyway, what a match! Yada-yada-yada… I’m spent, ****3/4 it is.

****3/4