Saturday, May 30, 2020

Throwback Match Reviews: Super Tiger vs Yoshiaki Fujiwara (UWF) (12/05/1984)

Super Tiger vs Yoshiaki Fujiwara (UWF) 12/05/1984


This was a great follow up match to the one they had earlier in the year. They picked up where they left off in that previous match. They go after each other right away. Tiger was excellent in this match. His strikes were brutal and his grappling was smooth. The mat work in this match was great because it had major importance to the overall match. There was only one part that was a little slow and it hurt the match a little. Fujiwara was also great here. He tried to slow down Tiger with his submissions. The match flowed very naturally despite the slow portion of it. The closing 7 to 8 minutes of the match were incredible. They absolutely battered each other. The finish was also great with Super Tiger just beating Fujiwara down to the point the referee stopped the match. Although there was the element of honor that a lot of shoot wrestling presents, they did a great job portraying some animosity between them. It was well balanced that way.

Final Rating - ****¼

Friday, May 29, 2020

Throwback Match Reviews: Kazuo Yamazaki vs Nobuhiko Takada (UWF) (12/05/1984)

Kazuo Yamazaki vs Nobuhiko Takada (UWF) 12/05/1984

Overall I will say this is a great match despite some flaws that I found with it, particularly due to the style of match. A large portion of this match was very slow and boring. A lot of the mat grappling was very badly done. When Takada had Yamazaki in a hold Yamazaki showed little to no effort to escape. He looked like he was just letting Takada try different holds on him the way you would with a younger sibling when you were kids. This is something that is present in a lot of matches in this shoot style of wrestling. It does not look like a struggle, it looks like cooperation. The crowd proves this theory as they only reacted when the match left the mat. During the mat grappling portions the camera would sometimes point at the crowd and everyone looked bored to death. You really can’t say that they were focused on the work. They were just waiting for something to happen.

Once the match kicked into the next gear it really got good. The mat work in this portion was really great because it was the opposite of the mat work earlier in the match. Both men wrestled with intensity and urgency. The grappling was clean and the strikes were impactful. Yamazaki’s performance was excellent. His comebacks were exciting. Whenever he fought back the crowd went nuts. Takada was a proper dickbag here. He did everything to suppress Yamazaki’s momentum. One spot I really enjoyed was when they were sparring and then went to a neutral position and Takada just slapped Yamazaki. The dynamic between the two was clearly defined and was consistent throughout the match. The finish saw Yamazaki pick up a quick pin with a bridging German suplex. It was a great pay off to the story they told in the match.

Final Rating - ****

Monday, May 25, 2020

Throwback Match Reviews: Super Tiger vs Yoshiaki Fujiwara (UWF) (09/07/1984)

Super Tiger vs Yoshiaki Fujiwara (UWF) 09/07/1984

This was a good match. Super Tiger’s offense was really great. He did everything with great intensity. Fujiwara’s control periods early on were really boring. He didn’t do anything of interest. Going back to the same well after it not working initially and not doing anything to change it was kind of dumb on his part. Super Tiger’s comebacks were well done. They were the things that the crowd really got into. After a while the action from both ends picked up. Fujiwara’s submission holds began to have more effect. Tiger ended up making Fujiwara tap for the victory. 

Final Rating - ***½

Throwback Match Reviews: Antonio Inoki vs Riki Choshu (NJPW) (08/02/1984)

Antonio Inoki vs Riki Choshu (NJPW) 08/02/1984

This is a match where both roles were played to perfection and the story was told through the actions of the wrestlers. Inoki at this point is undoubtedly the ace of the promotion and has had years of success at the top. Choshu comes in as the future of the company. He is the underdog looking to dethrone the king.

The opening stretches serve to put both wrestlers at the same level. The mat work is very good and very smooth. One negative here, and it’s one that affects the entire match, is that this portion lingered on for too much. I didn’t mind the mat work later on because it was crucial to the story of the match. There was a bit too much down time here and 5 or 6 minutes could have been cut down. Choshu’s first application of the Scorpion Death Lock garner’s a great response from the crowd. The build up to that first hold paid off in a big way. 

This was a major transition in the match. For most of the rest of the match there was a great back and forth struggle that told a great story. Choshu had some fiery comebacks and offensive stretches which included a couple of other applications of the Scorpion Death Lock and some great suplexes. Everything he did was explosive and intense. These moves exemplified Choshu’s character. He’s the enthusiastic underdog looking to get a major victory. Inoki responded to Choshu’s offense with some masterful technical wrestling. It was very interesting watching him try different ways to escape the Scorpion Death Lock and also wear Choshu down with his own submissions. This illustrated Inoki’s veteran status in this promotion. The mat work here, as opposed to the mat work earlier, weighed very heavily. It contrasted Choshu’s work emphasizing both men’s characters. 

The match ends with Inoki out wrestling Choshu. He puts him in the Octopus Stretch and converts it into a pin. It was a great way to end this match. It tells the story of Inoki being the veteran ace and it protects Choshu to an extent as he is sort of defeated by his own ambition. It leaves room for improvement for Choshu. Another aspect about that match that also added to the drama was the crowd. They were hot from the start. Whenever a big transition occurred, like when Choshu locked in the Scorpion Death Lock, they erupted with excitement. They loved both guys and would cheer one when the other had the advantage. Overall this match is an all-time classic although it had its faults.

Final Rating - ****¾

Thursday, May 21, 2020

Throwback Match Reviews: Iron Sheik vs Sgt Slaughter (WWF) (06/16/1984)

Iron Sheik vs Sgt Slaughter (WWF) 06/16/1984

This was a pretty good brawl. Both men were in a blood feud so this was a natural step in the series. It was brutal and bloody but at times it was a little silly. For example the overdramatizing of certain spots like the windup punch and at the end when both wrestlers crawled for Sheik’s boot are out of place in a match that’s supposed serious. The selling in this match was for the most part pretty good. Like mentioned before the overselling at points was unfit for a match like this. The crowd was hot and that definitely added to the atmosphere. 

Final Rating - ***½

Monday, May 18, 2020

Throwback Match Reviews: Kerry Von Erich vs Ric Flair (AJPW) (05/24/1984)

Kerry Von Erich vs Ric Flair (AJPW) 05/24/1984

This was a pretty boring match. I found myself drifting off and going to my phone throughout the whole thing. It was two out of three falls for the NWA Heavyweight title... in Japan. The crowd likes both guys but they’re not fully behind either one. The action, especially in the first fall, was slow. It picked up later in the match, particularly in the last few minutes. There was nothing really to this match. I liked the way the first fall ended with Kerry using the claw to pin Flair. Flair won the second and third falls to win the match. This match was just here to get the title off of Kerry but not do it in Texas where the fans would probably riot.

Final Rating - **¾

Throwback Match Reviews: Austin Idol vs Jerry Lawler (CWA) (04/27/1984)

Austin Idol vs Jerry Lawler (CWA) 04/27/1984

This was for the AWA Southern Heavyweight Championship. It was a Steel Cage match and hair vs hair. The match starts with Idol cowering away from Lawler. Lawler immediately goes after him. For a supposed blood feud the action really isn’t that brutal. There have been way more brutal Jerry Lawler matches with much lower stakes. The match was very slow at the beginning. It picked up a little when Lawler began to make his comebacks. The selling was pretty good here. Tommy Rich ran in after the referee had been knocked out. The problem with that is that he waited a good while under the ring even after the referee went down. It was kind of dumb. Rich and Idol double teamed Lawler and Idol gets the victory. The best part of the matches happens after the match when the crowd nearly riots when Lawler is getting his hair cut off.

Final Rating - ***

Sunday, May 17, 2020

Throwback Match Reviews: 5 on 5 Gauntlet Match (NJPW) (04/19/1984)

Animal Hamaguchi, Isamu Teranishi, Kuniaki Kobayashi, Yoshiaki Yatsu, Riki Choshu vs Antonio Inoki, Kengo Kimura, Nobuhiko Takada, Tatsumi Fujinami, Yoshiaki Fujiwara (NJPW) 4/19/1984


This is a phenomenal gauntlet match. Probably the best gauntlet match of all time, which is not saying much. It is an hour and fifteen minutes long but none of this match feels long mainly due to the layout and execution of it. Each (we’ll call them) fall contributed something to the match while at the same time is able to stand on its own. The flow of the match was outstanding. Each fall directly led into the other. The finishes all made sense to the big picture. The performances of the wrestlers were outstanding. Everyone played their part to perfection. The crowd was hot throughout the entire thing. There was not one moment of silence in this match. It had a big fight atmosphere. Antonio Inoki’s team (Seiki Gundan) and Riki Choshu’s army (Ishin Gundan) were in a hot feud at the time and this was the culmination. 


We start with Kuniaki Kobayashi and Tatsumi Fujinami. The first thing I notice about this match is the incredible atmosphere. It really does give this match an aura of high importance. The fans are rabid for this first fall. Kobayashi rushes Fujinami at the bell and we get the match on the way. Fujinami slows him down with some perfectly executed mat work. The hate between the two teams becomes apparent in the first sequences of the match when Fujinami does not do a clean break when Kobayashi gets a rope break. The work here is really good. Kobayashi begins to work on Fujinami’s arm which is something that affects the match later on. This portion finishes off hot with Fujinami putting him away with a german suplex. In a vacuum this is a good little seven minute match but as a building block for a larger match it falls just short of brilliant. 


There is a lot happening in this next fall. Two separate stories are being told at the same time. Isamu Teranishi is next up for Ishin Gundan. He starts the match by targeting Fujinami’s arm. His work on the arm is very creative. One example of that is when Fujinami has him in an abdominal stretch he grabs his arm and puts him in a sort of arm lock while still in position of the hold. Teranishi effortlessly transitions from hold to hold in order to damage Fujinami’s arm. It was some excellent submission wrestling. Also the intensity in which he attacked the arm underlined the animosity between both teams which is a recurring theme throughout the match. Teranishi makes a great first impression on me since it’s my first time seeing him wrestle. His work here highlights his strongest characteristics: his focus and his intensity. Fujinami’s performance in this fall is also genius. He does a great job selling his pain and the work being done on his arm. His facial expressions paint the picture for the viewer of the pain he is experiencing. There is one point where he goes for the german suplex but his arm gives out and can’t hold onto Teranishi. This reinforces Teranishi’s arm work by showing that it is affecting Fujinami’s performance. Fujinami’s selling does double duty as it also exemplifies his own resilience. He is able to withstand the pain and still be able to find a different way to win the fall. He puts on a sharpshooter and Teranishi has no choice but to give up. Two different stories were told here by the same match but it was the individual performances that distinguished them. 


Yoshiaki Yatsu was next in the gauntlet. I also really like this fall for what it was. It was short but accomplished what it needed to in order to keep the flow of the match running smoothly. Yatsu immediately attacks Fujinami’s injured arm which demonstrates great psychology and reincorporates the arm work. Yatsu wins by count out when he ties Fujinami up in the ropes by his foot while the rest of his body is outside of the ropes. This also was brilliant because the only way Fujinami could escape was to use his arms but one of those arms was badly damaged thus his failure to escape. What was a simple little spot reinforces all of the work done earlier on the arm that led to Fujinami finally being eliminated.


Next up was Nobuhiko Takada. This was another fall where if it was a standalone match it would be great. Being placed after the quick decision in the previous fall was perfect. Fujinami being eliminated brought down the mood but Takada’s flurry of offense was a jolt of energy that reinvigorated the intensity of the match. The two had an amazing back and forth battle here. Yatsu hit some great suplexes on Takada. The action was impactful. These sequences elevated the match to a different level. It was an effective transition to this next part of the match. There is a sense of desperation from Yatsu due to the fact that his team was down one guy. Takada on the other hand was at an advantage and wanted to rush Yatsu and get him on the ropes. We get a deeper look at Takada as he shows his passion and fire but still has to learn to focus his attacks. Yatsu was able to take advantage of his ambition and put Takada away with the lariat. This fall recharged the pace of the match and also helped maintain the momentum. 


Kengo Kimura is up next for Seiki Gundan. Not much happened in this fall but the fact that it was short and compact makes it fine. Kimura wore down Yatsu after his previous battle against Takada. The action towards the end of the fall was great. Yatsu had some great comebacks and Kimura’s offense was very good. Kimura’s composure here is reflective of his team’s status throughout the match. Seiki Gundan is either one wrestler ahead or has the fresher man in the match. Kimura’s work displays his team's position in the match. He puts Yatsu away with a leg lariat. 


Animal Hamaguchi comes out next. Hamaguchi plays the psychological game with Kimura. He taunts him and avoids him which enrages Kimura. Kimura loses composure and Hamaguchi goes to work on him. Hamaguchi unleashes some powerful offense on Kimura to wear him down including some nasty headbutts and a flurry of dropping elbows. Kimura has some hot comebacks. He gets in some great looking leg lariats, suplexes and piledrivers. This fall is a turning point in the match for Choshu’s army. Before it was Seiki Gundan who were the more calm and focused group. Not only does this fall put both teams on equal standing on the scoreboard, it puts them on equal footing in terms of mentality, which is apparent immediately in the next fall. 


Yoshiaki Fujiwara comes out next and just begins to unload on Hamaguchi. This demonstrates the new dynamic of the match. It also shows how big of a threat Hamaguchi is when the team that was level headed throughout most of the match was now the desperate one. This gets really heated. Both men absolutely batter each other. Fujiwara attempts to give Hamaguchi headbutts of his own but it backfires. Hamaguchi showed some solid psychology by targeting Fujiwara’s forehead cut. Fujiwara did everything to slow down Hamaguchi including an attempt at the armbar which got a big pop. The fight spilled to the outside and Fujiwara switched his gameplan on the fly by going for the countout win. This reinforces the new mentality of Seiki Gundan and Hamaguchi’s danger. Fujiwara would rather get counted out with Hamaguchi than to let Inoki wrestle two more wrestlers. Fujiwara’s satisfactory expression after they both get counted out supports this. His sacrifice has a great effect on the rest of the match.


With both wrestlers in the previous fall counted out Antonio Inoki and Riki Choshu both came out fresh. It starts out hot with Choshu going right after Inoki. Inoki takes the match to the mat after that. He does some good mat work that wears down Choshu and affects the finish of the match. Choshu has some great comebacks including a lariat and a scorpion deathlock for a near finish. Inoki responds with a flurry of big moves and puts Choshu in the octopus stretch for the ref stoppage. This was a great way to finish this match. Fujiwara’s sacrifice earlier is validated here. Inoki gets the chance to prove his skill without having either he or Choshu go through another wrestler to fight. Choshu showed great fire in his comebacks and escape attempts. Inoki demonstrated his dominance through his mat work. It was a great way to cap off this match.


This match was perfect. Everything that was done was done for a reason. There was no down time. The mat wrestling elevated the match and the wrestlers. Everything played off of each other and made sense to the grand scheme. The crowd and atmosphere was amazing and the wrestlers did an excellent job in each of their roles.

Final Rating - *****

Saturday, May 9, 2020

Throwback Match Reviews: Greg Valentine vs Roddy Piper (Mid-Atlantic) (11/24/1983)

Greg Valentine vs Roddy Piper (Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling) 11/24/1983

This was an awesome brawl. The dog collar gimmick can get silly but here they used it to its full potential. Everything they did with the dog collar was violent and nasty. The blood pouring down Valentine’s face and down Piper’s ear was a great visual and added to the brutality. The psychology in this match was also very sound. It was two guys who hated each other beating the shit out of each other.

Final Rating - ****

Throwback Match Reviews: Ric Flair vs Harley Race (Mid-Atlantic) (11/24/1983)

Ric Flair vs Harley Race (Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling) 11/24/1983

This was a good match with some high stakes that were reinforced all throughout. What stuck out the most about it was the atmosphere. The rabid crowd, the steel cage and lighting all contributed to a big fight feel. The work was also pretty solid. Flair as always did a great job selling his beating. His comebacks were hot and intense. The physicality in this match also stood out. The finish came a little out of nowhere and left a lot to be desired. Wasn’t bad by any means but definitely was anticlimactic. 

Final Rating - ***½

Friday, May 8, 2020

Throwback Match Reviews: Ric Flair vs Jumbo Tsuruta (AJPW) (06/08/1983)

Ric Flair vs Jumbo Tsuruta (AJPW) 06/08/1983

This was a great match with a little questionable finish that ultimately did not hurt the match any further. It was a 2 out of 3 falls match for the NWA World Title. Let’s get the bad parts out of the way first. The first 20 minutes or so were very boring and very uneventful. Nothing of note happened and nothing built towards anything later in the match. It was your standard trading holds and selling. A lot of time could have been cut from this match. Another thing that bothered me about this match is the outcome. Jumbo was up one fall to none when the time limit expired. I feel like he should have won instead of it being a draw. It was anything atrocious enough to ruin the match but it was a little dumb. One last thing that I’m nitpicking here is Flair applying the Figure Four to the wrong leg. He’d been working one one of Jumbo’s legs but applied the hold on the other one. That took me out of the match a bit.

The match saw two amazing performances from both wrestlers. Jumbo began to unload on Flair with everything. Flair’s selling here was outstanding. Flair’s selling highlighted Jumbo’s offense. Everything looked painful. There was some color on Flair’s face that also made everything look brutal. All of Jumbo’s offense and control periods are uplifted further by the rabid crowd. The selling in this match after the first twenty minutes was great and consistent. Like I mentioned before Flair’s selling was great but it’s the fact that he was doing it throughout the entirety of the match, even when he was on offense. Jumbo also did a great job selling his leg that Flair worked on the entire match. Even when he was dishing out offense he remembered to clutch his leg. All that work led to a Figure Four spot. Despite it being applied on the wrong leg it was an amazing spot. The look of pain on Jumbo’s face as Flair continues to damage the leg really sold the spot. Flair’s desperation as time is running out and Jumbo refuses to give up or stay down plays up to Jumbo’s resilience as a babyface. 

Had we been given a sensible finish and cut some down time this great match could have been an all-time classic.

Final Rating - ****¼

Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Throwback Match Reviews: Dynamite Kid vs Tiger Mask (NJPW) 04/21/1983

Dynamite Kid vs Tiger Mask (NJPW) 04/21/1983

Unfortunately this is one of those matches that is hurt by expectations. There have been other matches in wrestling history that have been more overrated than this one but this one sure is baffling.

The first half of the match is great. It builds towards what I thought the direction of the match was going in. All of the development that Dynamite Kid went through in previous bouts was culminating here. He was able to keep up with everything that Tiger Mask was doing. There were moments of frustration where he began to lose composure but was able to fight through it and remain focused. At times it even felt though as Tiger Mask was the one that was letting his frustration get to him. They had their usual exchanges of holds and moves but it felt more urgent here given everything both wrestlers have gone through at this point. It builds to both wrestlers throwing everything at each other. The action was heated and hard-hitting but at the same time it was done so effortlessly. The atmosphere also contributed to the feeling of high importance. This great first portion of the match prevents the entire match from being bad. 

The match comes to a grinding halt when they both get counted out and the match ends. They spend a lot of time trying to get the referee to restart the match. It really took me out of the match. Everything they had done earlier in the match felt like it was pointless. The flow was ruined. They spent too much time on that portion. The match picked up from there. The crowd definitely helped get the match back on track. After all the time it took to get the match restarted and the effort it took to get the excitement up, the match again ended in a double countout. The reason to do a restart is so that we can get a definitive outcome to a match. So the finish makes the whole “restart the match” portion of the match ultimately meaningless. 

Although there were some questionable booking calls in this match, the body of the match is great enough to call this a great match, even though it’s massively overrated.

Final Rating - ****

Sunday, May 3, 2020

Throwback Match Reviews: Stan Hansen vs Terry Funk (AJPW) (04/14/1983)

Stan Hansen vs Terry Funk (AJPW) 04/14/1983

Brutal is the only word to describe this match. Stan Hansen brutalized Terry Funk. Funk had some great comeback moments that received great crowd reactions. The match ending my disqualification did not bother me as much because neither wrestler looked bad from it. Dory Funk Jr ran out to make the save for Terry. Hansen took a couple shortcuts so it did not make Funk look bad. There really isn’t much to say about this match but it was great.

Final Rating - ****

Throwback Match Reviews: Don Kernodle/Sgt. Slaughter vs Jay Youngblood/Ricky Steamboat (Mid-Atlantic) 03/12/1983

Don Kernodle & Sgt. Slaughter vs Jay Youngblood & Ricky Steamboat (Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling) 03/12/1983

This was a great tag team war for the world tag team titles in a cage match. The stakes were high as it was a title match and the Steamboat/Youngblood team was on the line. The struggle to get the upper hand was great. Youngblood doing everything he can to survive his opponents viscous attack was great and the crowd shrieked every time he reversed or fought back. That eventually led into a Kernodle/Slaughter control period that was brutal. They beat them and bloodied them. It was very entertaining. The hot tags in this match were molten. Steamboat and Youngblood’s comebacks were incredible. The lariats that were thrown in this match by both teams looked viscous. Everything piece of offense looked like death. 

The structure of this match was conceptually good but wasn’t well executed. The first third of the match was very slow and could have easily had parts cut out. Nothing really happened. If that was reduced the match would have flowed smoothly from the back and forth exchanges to the heel control period to the babyface comeback to the finish. It stopped this match from being an all time classic to being just a great match.

Final Rating - ****

Throwback Match Reviews: Kerry Von Erich vs Ric Flair (WCCW) (12/25/1982)

Kerry Von Erich vs Ric Flair (WCCW) 12/25/1982

This was a very good match bordering on great that was kind of ruined by the predictable nonsense that ensued during it. From the start I knew that Michael Hayes and Terry Gordy were going to get involved in the match. It was very distracting and at times counterproductive to what they were trying to accomplish. The part where Kerry would not break the claw even though Flair had his foot on the ropes was bad because Kerry started arguing with Hayes even though Hayes was in the right. That is where Hayes' influence fails. He’s supposed to be the bad guy because of his interference in the match but he is as close as unbiased as any special referee could be in this type of match. At worst he is a bit aggressive in his officiating. 

The main part of the match was actually great. The structure of the match was very good. The early back and forth struggles where Kerry would seem to have the upper hand but Flair would counter or reverse were great. They effectively built up to the next phase of the match. Kerry finally gets control of Flair and proceeds to beat him from pillar to post. This is where Ric Flair shined. His selling in this portion of the match was incredible. Kerry’s offense is very weak-looking. Aside from a decent looking punch none of it looks that impressive. But Ric Flair sells his ass off for Kerry. The blood, the bumps, the glassy-eyed look all create the illusion that Kerry was about to kill this man. 

After this we got the Hayes interference that I mentioned earlier and that led to the finish. It was dumb. Thanks to Terry Gordy Flair was able to get some nasty offense in. Kerry was beginning to look like Flair. While Flair laid on the mat looking like he just got mauled by a bear, the official checks on Kerry and decides he can no longer go. Usually I enjoy matches that end by ref stoppage but this was ridiculous. Flair was far more beaten up than Kerry was. The referee should have called it way before if he was that concerned about the safety of the wrestlers. 

Despite the annoying interference and the stupid finish I still would say this is a good match considering that the majority of it was great.

Final Rating - ***½