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NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair vs Wahoo McDaniel - CWF Battle of the Belts 9/2/85 First Fall: If you wanna watch a great individual Flair carryjob performance watch this match. He takes a very old and limited Wahoo McDaniel and creates magic through his selling. There is a top wristlock battle in the beginning but then it is exactly what you would expect a chopfest. Flair is taking bumps, running over cover and selling his face like his life is dependent on it. He gets an eyepoke and starts working in on Wahoo, but Fonzie catches him using the ropes on a pin attempt. Eventually Wahoo chops him back down. Wahoo, Flair takes a ridiculous bump into the front row. Wahoo has a nice drop toehold. He works the leg and Flair is just hollering like he is in the worst pain imaginable. Flair tries his best to fight fire with fire, but Wahoo just keeps chopping him down. Flair eventually gets him to the outside where he drives the arm into the steel post. This gives Flair his first advantage. Thus far they have established Wahoo has a lethal chop and Flair needed some outside help to gain control. Flair works the arm really well. Nice tight armbars and wristlocks. He uses the ropes liberally and even uses some finger manipulation pulling on the pinky. I love Wahoo's desperation headbutt to break Flair's control. Flair sells this shot so well. He goes back to the arm, but Wahoo chops him down with his free arm. Wahoo goes tenaciously for the pin but cant keep Flair down. Flair looks to be in trouble and does not have an answer for Wahoo's standup game. He tries to create movement coming off the ropes but gets caught in the sleeper. WATCH FLAIR SELL THIS SLEEPER! So, so, so good. I love his fingertips were just brushing the ropes as he was fading. He gets counted down to three to give Wahoo the first fall. Flair through selling has created a compelling match out of a dude who pretty much can only chop. Second Fall: Flair tries to come out roaring, but Wahoo is fighting back. Wahoo ducks a chop and blisters Flair with his own. Wahoo goes for a side headlock and then slips into a sleeper and Flair desperately gets the ropes before it is fully applied. He powders. He trips Wahoo up from ringside. He pulls him over time to work on the leg. Flair knows down 1-0 and with the sleeper almost applied again that he needs to get his ass in gear. Great legwork from Flair and he applies the Figure-4. There is a cut and he is trying to apply it again, but nothing doing so he goes to his other offense: elbow drop, kneedrop, suplex, but Wahoo keeps getting his shoulderblade like an inch off the canvas. Flair is getting pissed. Here come the chop battles again. Fonzie gets bumped on a shouldertackle. Flair hits a short knee that may have been below the belt. He throws Wahoo head first into the steel post twice busting him open. A kneedrop on the open wound and Flair ties the match back up. Great Flair performance here. Back against the wall, he turns up the heat and gives one of his better control performances. Relatively brutal way for him to pick up a fall. Yes, cheap because he needed the post, but more violent than a cheap schoolboy with his feet on the ropes. I really liked the Flair vs Wahoo match that is from a month prior but that one was like 20 minutes or so from Mid-South. I am really impressed that they have been able to keep my attention now for 38 minutes. Third Fall: Given Flair now has it tied and they are late into the time limit, I expected him to wrestle more conservatively but he opts for the good offense is the best defense strategy and pays for it. He goes for a suplex right out the gate, but instead is blocked and suplexed. He tries to go back to the outside, which has been his best friend: hurt Wahoo's arm, leg and head using the outside. However, this time Flair is busted open against the post. Wahoo does his Wardance and chops Flair. It looks like Flair has squandered all his advantage from the second fall. SLEEPER! This is how Wahoo won the first fall. Flair is fading...can he get the ropes...fading...he kicks off the ropes...he lands on top of Wahoo...1-2-3! Wahoo didnt let go! Flair retains. Way better than it had any right of being. Flair is The Man! ****1/4
- 2 replies
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- Ric Flair
- Wahoo McDaniel
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The climatic conclusion to the Best of World Class Countdown! Missy Hyatt read my blog & Kevin Von Erich thanked me for my kind words. Wow! Mark Out City Baby! I live a crazy cool life. For me, these are basically love letters to Kevin Von Erich because I think he is one of the most unique pro wrestlers I have ever seen. No one wrestles like Kevin Von Erich. He is always struggling against his opponent. He is always throwing himself into every move with reckless abandon. He is perpetual motion. He personifies "Think shoot, but work". He told me today in a message that his Dad told him "Always fight back" and that he never forget. Talk about taking your Dad's advice to heart! His two Championship matches against Harley Race & Ric Flair that make this countdown are two of the best of either man's career (in my opinion it is the best Harley Race match ever) because Kevin is Mr. Pugnacious and he is always fighting back making his opponent earn their offense. The edition features the Von Erichs against the Dynamic Duo and the Freebirds. Also there is ONE match of the 12 that does not have a Von Erich in it (ok Kerry is the ref), who spoiled the clean sweep? In addition, there is a bonus match from Joe Blanchard's San Antonio-based promotion Southwest Championship Wrestling that I included. Check it out! Aaaaaaaahhhhhhh I am still marking out! http://ridingspacemountain.blogspot.com/2018/12/pro-wrestling-love-vol-26-best-of-world.html?m=1
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Midnight Express vs Barry Windham & Ronnie Garvin - World Championship Wrestling 5/16/87 US Tag Team Titles Tournament Finals Watching all this Crockett, I am fiending for sorme Midnight Express. At this point, we are in the Eaton & Lane version of the Midnight Express. That version did not seem to explode into the great workrate team until the following year against Fantastics. Who were they working the rest of '87? The RNRs? Road Warriors? I really enjoyed this as a great Southern tag team match with a double face in peril. Nothing too fancy just a great meat & potatoes match. The beginning was very intense some great lock-ups. I liked how Garvin's first instinct was to bully Eaton into his corner so he could tag in BW and who punched Eaton in the face. Eaton throws a great punch, but he also knows how to sell it. Barry Windham is a match up nightmare for the MX as he much bigger and longer than the MX. Windham bullies Lane no problem. The MX get a lucky break when Garvin is knocked loopy on a shouldertackle spot. The MX is able to take advantage begin to work over Garvin in earnest. I love how pugnacious Garvin is. Look at that drive in his leg while he pushing Eaton towards his corner in a headlock. It does not look like Eaton is just letting him, Garvin is really straining himself. Eaton hits Alabama Jam for two. Lane hits a double stomp and then chops Garvin. Bad idea. Eaton tries the same thing and Garvin wakes up. Garvin beats the shit out of Eaton here comes BW. Good house of fire. SUPERPLEX! That was a great superplex he really threw Eaton. Windham goes up top again and misses the kneedrop. Lane comes in and starts doing his Karate and we enter the second face in peril. BW is definitely better at selling. Nothing spectacular just a solid heat segment. Eaton & Lane are still a pretty new tag team I dont think they have quite hit the stride they would hit in 1988 together. Chemistry can take a little while to develop. Eaton misses his top rope elbow drop. All Hell Breaks Loose! The ref goes down, there is tennis racquets and steel chairs! Watch it to check it out, it is a good crazy finish. The end result is that Midnight Express are the new US Tag Team Champions. I thought this was a great Southern tag match with two good face in perils it was missing the usual great MX offense or MX stooging to really put it over the top, but still a rock solid match. ***3/4
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[1987-01-20-NWA-Worldwide] Ric Flair vs Barry Windham
Superstar Sleeze replied to paul sosnowski's topic in January 1987
NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair vs Barry Windham - Worldwide 1/20/87 BW had the Nature Boy beat the week previous when the Four Horsemen got involved and saved Flair's title. This is the very famous return match that I watched a ton when I was a teenager because I had the Ric Flair DVD set. First Twenty Minutes: I am surprised the Florida match is the more heralded match now that I am finally watching them back to back. I thought this one had the better narrative. There are more touchstones like Windham's side headlock and Flair's arm work that gave the action a sense of purpose without losing any the intensity and attrition of the Florida match. Here when Windham outwrestles Flair it is always to get back to that side headlock. Flair tries to chop his way out of trouble and get the party started, but Windham just rallies. He kicks ass and hits a dropkick. Flair has to powder. Windham does a great job of mixing the technical with the fists. I liked that the way Flair was able to take over on Windham was on the outside. He could not best Windham on the inside either via wrestling or striking. He needed the outside and throwing Windham into hard metal objects to take command of the match. That really illustrates that Windham is the better pure wrestler and Flair needed to cheat to get an advantage. At this point, Flair begins his work on the arm and also attacking with some big, meaty chops. I love a strong Flair heat segment. Windham fights back with punches, got to make Flair earn it so Flair trips him with a drop toehold and goes for a half nelson pin with the feet on the ropes. I love the struggle. Each man is making the other work for it. Windham's selling is just as great as in the Florida match. He sold Flair's punch to the face so well, theres a chop he sells with the spit flying out of his mouth as he collapses and as a said in the Florida match theres nobody better at taking the over the top rope bump. He takes a backflip and then hits the railing. These two have some great stand up battles. Windham re-earns control just by punching his way out of trouble and Flair does a great job selling all this with plenty of Flair Flops and just a general sense of being overwhelmed. Flair takes that wicked shoulder first bump into the top turnbuckle. This is when those two great moments of Barry Windham selling happen. Nice hope spot for Big Barry as he floats over on a suplex and hits a lariat for two. Flair hits trademark back suplex which is his setup for the Figure-4. He uses the ropes, but gets caught. I have liked this so far more than the Florida match. It has the elements of Florida I liked the great Windham selling and the fists, but there feels like there is more progression and more structure. Last Part: I think what Flair is better at than anyone else is creating a sense of drama and tension through little moves. Flair never has long control segments one way or the other. Everything is broken up by little moves. Some people see this chaos as a lack of psychology. I see it as being far more realistic. If someone is kicking your ass, you are going to throw out a short knee or throw out a desperation punch or chop. It forces the opponent to earn their offense. He also makes sure his babyface never dies. How many times have see see a heat segment go on and on? It does not make the babyface look resilient. It makes the heel look like a choke and even worse the match can look credibility. Flair by always calling for hope spots ensures his babyface never dies and that benefits himself and the match overall. Coming out of the Figure-4, Flair is thinking leg, but Windham keeps fighting back and even gets a sunset flip. So Flair tries to further sap his energy with a sleeper but Windham slips out. Flair keeps pressing, but misses a kneedrop and now Windham works on the leg to set up the Figure-4. Flair creates an atmosphere of excitement because of the unpredictability. Windham has taken a lot of punishment but he is clearly very much in this. The last five minutes is a barrage of Windham nearfalls: missile dropkick, lariats, cradles, backslides, vertical suplex, but he cant muster his patented floatover after execution of the move. Ultimately the time limit expires and Windham comes up short. I liked this a lot even moreso than the Florida match. I thought Flair looked strong and needed to use the outside to gain control. I thought there were plenty of great stand up battles between these two and Windham's selling was great. The finish stretch was very compelling and dramatic as Windham raced against the clock to pin Flair's shoulders to the mat. Definitely a US Match of the Year Contender. ***** Re-watched this after the Crockett Cup match and this totally smokes the Crockett Cup match. I agree with everything I said, but I am upping my rating to the full *****. -
To me no feud defined the first half of the 80s in the United States more than Ric Flair vs Von Erich Boys. Flair had such a great dynamic with each of them. Also there's plenty of Freebird vs Von Erich matches and the Dynamic Duo vs Von Erich's. It is basically a Love Letter to Kevin Von Erich! Pro Wrestling Love Vol. 25: World Class Edition! http://ridingspacemountain.blogspot.com/2018/12/pro-wrestling-love-vol-25-best-of-world.html?m=1
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NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair vs Barry Windham - CWF Battle of the Belts II 2/14/86 Ric Flair coming out to Easy Lover is so iconic. Probably the most famous match out of Florida since I dont believe we have much of Florida from its Golden Age. First Half: To me what makes this match special is Barry Windham's selling. Without a doubt, this is a Ric Flair Championship formula match. We see Windham outwrestle Flair early. He bests him tests of strength, amateur grappling and countering holds. Windham ends up with a nasty mat burn or bruise somehow. Flair has a weird accident running the ropes where his head snaps against the top rope. Flair tries to use motion and chops to take control, but still nothing. Windham does not fall for being lured into the corner. Windham is willing to punch Flair lights out. Windham gets a nice series of moves: Boston Crab, Suplex and Abdominal Stretch. He runs into a knee charging into the corner. It was here I was most impressed with Windham as his selling was superb. I liked that Flair did not immediately take over. He went for a suplex but Windham fell on top of him because Flair was still not strong enough to carry his weight. Flair throws him out and Windham takes a hard bump on the ring steps. I am sure Flair forgot those were there. Big chop and Windham is busted open when Flair slams him into the guardrail. Flair is looking good in control. He misses the kneedrop and Windham slaps on the figure-4. Flair is so good at selling the figure-4. Flair makes the ropes but Windham starts pounding away with rights. The other dimension Windham adds to this match is that he is a good puncher too. Windham misses a dropkick and Flair is able to back over. He locks in a Figure-4 headlock to recuperate and make Windham carry his weight. Windham escapes out the back. So far this is definitely a classic Ric Flair title defense and a contender for Match of the Year, but I have not seen anything that says this is Top 100 of all time material yet. Second Half: Watching more, I think what Windham brings besides A+ selling is the ability to add brutality, violence and a sense of attrition to the Flair Championship formula. Steamboat thrives on energy and speed to generate heat and buzz. Windham is more about punching Flair hard in the head and ramming Flair into the post to draw blood. I like how Flair was so committed to the piledriver he gets the first one for two. He desperately wants to get back to it, but Windham keeps countering. Lariat and now Windham regains control. Like I said the pace does not pick up, but the violence does as it is all fists and blood. Flair gets a desperation inverted atomic drop where Windham fires off a punch before collapsing to the mat in a heap. Great selljob. Flair uses the sleeper to cement his advantage. Windham escapes that only to eat a suplex. Flair goes for the leg. Figure-4! Windham is really putting on a selling clinic. He turns it over. The last ten minutes is something truly special. I think the moment that captures the match is when Windham misses his kneedrop. The pain and agony is etched on his face while Flair who escaped is hobbling over. It has been a true war of attrition. I love Flair's double stomp. Why did he ever stop doing that move. The ref gets bumped which allows Flair to chuck Windham over the top rope. Is there anyone better at taking that bump than Windham? I dont think so! He just melts across the apron and it looks painful as hell, but it never hurts him. BW will not be denied! MISSILE DROPKICK! No ref, bullshit! They run through some great Windham nearfalls: Sleeper, Lariat and floatover suplex. I was biting on everything, really hot series of neafalls. Windham goes for another lariat, but Flair ducks and comes back off the ropes and it is the crossbody over the top rope. They take turns yanking the other from the apron and it triggers the double countout. Stone cold classic. Just pitch perfect Championship Wrestling. Flair's formula works and it is perfectly suited for Windham who is so damn athletic. Like I said Windham was selling great and I liked the feel of this match. To me this falls short of those classic Flair Championship matches against Steamboat, Kerry Von Erich & Terry Taylor. It has a shot at the Top 100, but it is on the bubble. ****3/4
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[1983-07-09-MACW-Charlotte, NC] Roddy Piper vs Greg Valentine
Superstar Sleeze replied to shoe's topic in July 1983
NWA US Heavyweight Champion Greg Valentine vs Roddy Piper - MACW 7/9/83 Great discovery by the Network. I need to read more about this feud. The ear psychology is already in play as Piper has his ear bandaged and is looking to take an ear for an ear. The open strike exchange is red hot. Piper just overwhelms Valentine with overhand chops and fists. Valentine powders and Piper spits on him. It is on like Donkey Kong! Piper is incensed and Valentine is apprehensive. Piper has that look in his eye like he is really gonna hurt The Hammer. The Hammer rocks him with some of is famous big elbows. Piper powders then explodes back into the ring. It was furious! Great moment where the crowd went wild. He jabs the fingers into the throat of Valentine who powders and chokes. You know you are over when the crowd does the sound effects of your strikes for you and Piper is over. Valentine tries to cover up but Piper is throwing every limb and body part he can at the Hammer. He is one whirlwind of anger. Piper goes for the ear, but Valentine blocks and a short knee leads to a gutbuster. This Valentine's first sustained offense and it comes as cutoff as Piper was finally going after the ear. I love Valentine so much. He is such a stiff badass. Piper does the 'ol Three Stooges poke to the eyes. Valentine begs off. Piper wrenches the ear and punches the ear! For an ornery bastard, Valentine can be such a great cowardly stooge as he begs off while Piper goes to work on his left ear. Valentine retaliates by clawing at Piper's bandaged ear and then just hammering him with big forearm blows to the bad ear. Piper headbutts out of desperation, but The Hammer just brutalizing the head and ear of Piper. This is definitely a Valentine match lots of standup and brawling. HOLY SHIT! In the spot of the match, Valentine takes Piper's head and bounces the side of it off the post. Then he just grinds the bad ear against the steel. I love how Valentine can switch from sadist to coward at a drop of the hat. Valentine is beating the tar out of Piper, but notice Piper never bumps. He stays on his feet because he is the valiant babyface. He might be hurt and he might be discombobulated but he is a tough son of a bitch. There is some great boxing in the corner with Piper ducking and dodging setting up his own punches then he TACKLES Valentine and hits a massive kneedrop. He gets his receipt throwing Valentine ear-first into the post and now it is back to work on the ear. Double juice! I love the standup towards the end where they are just firing away at each other and Piper goes to the middle turnbuckle to throw a punch and that finally takes The Hammer off his feet. VALENTINE EXPLODES! He tackles and chokes Roddy. Roddy scrappy as ever fights back and chokes Valentine and then is going to bite his ear, Valentine has him by the throat, it is a battle of wills, Piper wins and PIPER BITES HIS EAR! WOW! It is spills to the outside and Piper dives on him form the apron. Valentine is just trying to survive and escape. Piper gets the rope that separates the fans from the wrestlers. He wraps it around Valentine's throat, he rubs it first, OW rope burn and then HANGS HIM! Valentine foams at the mouth. The locker room clears to break Valentine free, but Piper keeps breaking free to attack Valentine. Drenched in hate. Piper was a man possessed in this. Valentine knew he pissed off Piper and was trying to survive throughout the match. Terrific standup slobberknocker. Some of the best stand up exchanges you will ever see. I loved the ear psychology. Piper wanted to injure Valentine's ear and Valentine could use Piper's ear as a cutoff. The finish was insane. You really believe Piper wanted to kill Valentine. A must-see match that helps make the Dog Collar classic that much more special. ****1/2 -
NWA National Heavyweight Champion Tully Blanchard vs Ronnie Garvin - Great American Bash 7/26/86 Taped Fist Match Some people really like their Worldwide contest earlier in the year for the National Title (a Georgia title inherited when Crockett absorbed Georgia). I found to be way too long and all over the place. The narrative was really hard to follow. This was a pretty basic and fun match. It is round-based, three minute rounds. It is treated more like a boxing match. Tully & JJ are the kings of these gimmick gaga matches. They have so many tricks up their sleeves. Tully looks to charge before the bell and is backdropped still in his robe and with the belt around his waist. Garvin KOs before the bell. Blanchard is laid out with the robe and belt still on. Dillon dumps water on him and fans him with a towel. Blanchard gets his ass royally kicked for the first two round. It is just Garvin pummeling him and Blanchard being the best stooge ever. Dillon busts out smelling salts to revive Blanchard. Blanchard is even more of a chickenshit gimmick than Flair ever was. Blanchard shows signs of life in the third round as he yanks the trunks causing Garvin to go head first into the corner. He follows Garvin to the outside but takes a swing at Wahoo and is atomic dropped into a fist! Blanchard is out cold on the outside at the end of third round. I love JJ throwing the water. Tully is back to getting his ass kicked. Garvin is holding him up so he take extra shots. Dillon tries to stop the count. He throws water in Wahoo's face and slips Tully some knuckledusters. Wahoo and Garvin are busy with JJ. Blanchard KOs Garvin with the foreign object. They are both down. Blanchard gets up before 10 and retains the title. This is more of a fun gimmick match with lots of bells and whistles. It is really the Tully & JJ show more than a violent slugfest. Enjoyable way to spend 15 minutes. ***1/2
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[1987-11-26-NWA-Starrcade '87] Ric Flair vs Ron Garvin
Superstar Sleeze replied to Microstatistics's topic in November 1987
NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ronnie Garvin vs Ric Flair - Starrcade 1987 Steel Cage "Garvin Sucks! Garvin Sucks! Garvin Sucks!" not exactly what you want to hear when your babyface world champion is making his shine in the main event of your first ever pay-per-view broadcast. Dusty & Nikita were played out. They could have gone all in on Barry Windham. I still like my out of the box idea of turning Ric Flair babyface and setting him up against Tully Blanchard & Four Horsemen. It was clear here that the fans wanted to cheer Flair and I dont think that just because they disliked Garvin. I love the Flair vs Garvin feud. I think it is one of the most underrated feuds in history. Garvin was consistently the number three face in Crockett and a member of the Risky Bidness boys. People act like Ronnie Garvin was some nobody, but he was a constant Flair challenger since late 1985 and they set the wheels in motion for this to happen in early 1987. Do I think it was bad booking? Yes, but this did NOT come out of left field. It is Flair vs Garvin so this is WAR! I like the all out, balls to the wall fire fight they have on TV in 1985, but this is a great classical Championship match. I just love the sound of flesh on flesh, man on man that Flair vs Garvin brings. Flair gives as good as he gets but Garvin always overwhelms him. I love they come up with different variations of this. Garvin chopping him down or bieling him or the Flair Flop. The best one is Flair chops Garvin hard and Garvin STRIKES HIM DOWN! I dont if Flair snap back bumped or Garvin just hit him so hard he had to go down. Flair looked completely overwhelmed. So he goes low to the balls. Really good Flair heat segment. Lots of chops, taunting and great leg work in the lead up to the Figure-4. That was a nice climax once Garvin turns it over that they dont immediately go to the comeback even though you know it is coming. You see Flair tries to up the ante and throw Garvin into the cage, this backfire and he goes into the cage. This is Garvin's open. Flair gets cuts open bad. Garvin slams him off the cage a bunch. Garvin gets his own figure-4 which is always a crowd pleaser. Then we hit the finish a ton of nearfalls for Garvin including a cross body from the top, Hands of Stone but the ref was out of position and a sunset flip from the top which is how he won the title. However he gets hotshotted into the cage for the Flair victory. Really strong physical kickass match between these two that was very efficient. Plenty of that flesh on flesh violence that we have come to love from these two but with some classical tropes of a heat segment and big time comeback centered around the cage and busting Flair open. A fitting ending to one of the best feuds of the 1980s and even though I think it is the wrong choice, I am happy that Ronnie Garvin got to call himself World Heavyweight Champion. ****1/2- 3 replies
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- Ric Flair
- Ron Garvin
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I really dont think there is a wrong order when it comes to the Sting/Vader trilogy and then put Rude/Steamboat Ironman on top, I just dont see Wargames '92 even as a top three match in its own year. Memphis Pt. 2 here you go... Lawler takes five out of the top six spots. Click to find out who is able to stop Lawler from running the table (hint: they are FABULOUS!). Lawler vs Dundee is obvious, but do they finish number one? Which Lawler match has what I consider the best heel finish in Memphis history? Which match do I declare is Lawler's true masterpiece? All this and much, much more in Pro Wrestling Love vol. 24. https://ridingspacemountain.blogspot.com/2018/12/pro-wrestling-love-vol-24-best-of.html
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Four Horsemen (Ric Flair, Lex Luger, Arn Anderson & Tully Blanchard, JJ Dillon) vs. The Dream Team (Dusty Rhodes, Nikita Koloff, The Road Warriors, Paul Ellering) - WARGAMES I Definitely one of the best WARGAMES matches of all time. Much, much better than Wargames II and overall it had a lot more energy & zip than the other ones that I have seen. The Road Warriors remain the best suited for this environment. Road Warrior Animal may have gotten one of the loudest sustained roars I have ever heard in my life. That was enough to power the city of Greensboro. Animal must have been jacked! He was just steamrolling Anderson & Blanchard. Then he did his two spots with Blanchard lawn darting him to next ring and the sit up spot. I thought Dusty vs Arn was a better five minute opening. Dusty was ballshotting and flipping off the Horsemen. Also, Dusty used the roof of the cage twice. You know Dusty wanted to be the first to use the roof since that was his innovation. Tully & Arn stooging for the Double Bionic Elbow before settling in to work the leg was good. I covered Animal. Flair was a ton better in this. I love when just jumps on somebody. There were ballshots galore in this match. Flair was definitely in the right mindset here, just brawl mode. I liked Flair trying to cut Nikita off at the pass at the door by raking the eye. This made the Double Russian Sickle all the sweeter. Koloff was just Sickleing everything he saw. Luger came in and started beating on Nikita and then moved on. I really liked the fact they did TWO Spike Piledrivers on Koloff, who had a n injured neck remember he had a neck brace on at the Crockett Cup in April. Some actual strategy! Hawk came in and not quite as good as Animal, but was just a wrecking ball of energy. I love the Road Warriors! JJ was of course completely ineffectual. Paul Ellering brings in his spiked wristband, which I dont love. It is too small. When you have eight behemoths and two managers, two ring and a massive cage, you should have something HUGE so everyone can see. I feel like that Spiked Wristband is too small. DOOMSDAY DEVICE~! JJ breaks his collarbone. They ram his head into the cage and he surrenders. I feel like that finish was still anti-climatic, but the energy level was through the roof. This did NOT feel like a battle royale, much, much better. ****1/4
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Ric Flair, Lex Luger, Tully Blanchard, Arn Anderson, War Machine vs Dusty Rhodes, Nikita Koloff, Road Warriors & Paul Ellering - WARGAMES II 7/31/87 Yeah so I am the WARGAMES hater. I just feel like it is a lot of battle royale brawling. I like blood, but seeing wrestlers with Crimson Masks is not enough for me. I hate being a downer because I do think the concept is really cool. Wargames '91 and '94 are legitimately awesome. I just felt again I was watching a battle royale with a lot of meandering. I mean at one point fucking Flair called for a bridge out of a pin spot with Nikita. I love Flair to death, but what the fuck was that. Lets run through some highlights. Dusty vs Arn was a good opening. Arn is a great stooge and Dusty has a lot of fun offense. Arn gets busted early. I love Dusty's reaction to AA going for the leg. He gets the hell out of Dodge and regroups. Arn goes for the eyes so The Dream goes for the balls. Dusty rakes Arn's face against the cage. Definitely a great, violent five minute opening. War Machine (Big Bubba Rogers) is the replacement for JJ. I like Bossman, but he was useless in this match. Hawk is in next. I will say the Road Warriors are incredibly well-suited for this match. To me they really shine in this environment. Wargames is all about hitting your spots and then moving on. Hawk & Animal have BIG spots. Flair is in next. Flair is terribly suited for this match. He does not have big spots. It would have been hilarious if he came in and took of bunch of bumps and squandered the advantage. Flair has to ballshot Hawk to make him sell. Nikita comes in. I expected him to be like Roadies and be great at this but he kinda just alright. Hawk and Nikita both no-sell piledrivers. Thats kinda unfair to the Horsemen that they are just going up against invincible humans. Tully comes in and attacks Dusty. Interesting Dusty has been in there the longest and is bloody. They leave War Machine against Hawk & Nikita that does not go well. Animal comes in and rules! Tully does sit ups into the cage, which is the only spot I ever remember from these Wargames and then Animal finally lawn darts into the next ring. Luger comes in and it is pretty non-descript. Ellering comes in with a spiked pad. Why the fuck is Paul Ellering manhandling Ric Flair? Jesus. Animal has the spiked pad and War Machine submits in anti-climatic fashion. The Road Warriors were the MVPs of the match and Dusty vs Arn was a good five minute match. Other people probably likes this way more than me, but I thought was just pretty alright. ***
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Ric Flair & Lex Luger vs Ronnie & Jimmy Garvin - World Championship Wrestling 6/27/87 The Network describes this as a dream match. I mean it is a very good match dont get me wrong, but I dont think anyone ever had sweet dreams of seeing the Garvin teams up against Flair & Luger. Jimmy Garvin is SO weird as a babyface. He is such a scummy scuzzball heel that I just cant accept him as a babyface. He does not seem to know how to adapt. I have a morbid curiosity to watch Flair vs Jimmy Garvin matches because what formula would he use. Jimmy Jam is too big for the Koko Ware/Ricky Morton formula. He is not good enough for the Steamboat formula. He does not hit hard enough for the Ron Garvin/Wahoo formula. If he uses the Nikita/Hawk/Musclehead formula that would be hilarious and I bet he would. Anyways, this is awesome because it is Ric Flair and Ronnie Garvin just beating the ever loving shit out of each other. Ronnie Garvin hits Flair so hard that he causes Flair's chest to bleed. What is interesting about this match is there not much in the way of a traditional face in peril. It is very even all the way. The babyfaces have the advantage for the most part. It is really the Ron and Ric show early. Jimmy Garvin relies on side headlock. Luger looks good. Luger comes in and hits a powerslam on Ronnie Garvin. Luger actually took to wrestling very fast. He was already very good by 1987. Ronnie Garvin BITES Lex Luger's nose. Ronnie Garvin would be over in my Dad's family. Ronnie suplexes Flair back in. Ronnie Garvin is pugnacious as heel. He is reminding me of Kevin Von Erich. We get back from commercial. Luger holds Ronnie for Flair and Flair absolutely RIFLES Ronnie with a chest. Wow! Ronnie comes back and just grabs his beak and beats the shit out of him. Flair Flip! They just blast each other on the floor. I mean watching Ronnie Garvin vs Ric Flair is like the best thing on Earth. It is funny they were using Jimmy Garvin & Precious as a short term feud to build to a Ronnie Garvin title run. Flair being obsessed with a woman is a pretty plausible storyline. 1987 Crockett is so weird with Jimmy & Ronnie Garvin as the top faces because Dusty and Nikita were played out as challengers for Flair. I think they should have turned Flair babyface and went with a Flair vs Blanchard program as an outside the box idea. There is a weird Luger leapfrog botch. Ronnie Garvin tenaciously tries to roll up Luger. Luger gets kinda pissed and says get over here pipsqueek and hooks in a headlock and bullies him into the corner. Flair hits a kneecrusher and figure-4! Jimmy Garvin saves. Luger and Flair beat on Ron Garvin on the outside. There is no heat segments at all as Ronnie tags out. The Horsemen finally do have a semblance of control as both Garvins seem tuckered out. Backbreaker by the Total Package for two. Flair misses the elbow drop and here comes Ronnie Garvin. HOLY SHIT! Those chops by Rugged Ronnie! WOW! Nails Luger! Melees ensues. Flair goes after Precious randomly. JJ tries to go all Caveman and hoists Precious on his shoulder. Dusty & Nikit save. The Horsemen beat up the ref and throw him out the ring. Ronnie Garvin press slams Flair off the top. Ronnie KOs Luger with Hands of Stone and Jimmy Garvin hits the BrainBuster as Ronnie Garvin counts three. This will set up all Flair vs Jimmy Garvin title defenses on the Great American Bash tour. Jimmy Garvin as a babyface is just so wrong. Flair vs Ronnie Garvin is gold! Really interesting layout no face in peril, no hot tag. It felt like a brawl that was just even. It was NOT my turn, your turn. It was just a fight. ***1/2
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NWA US Champion Magnum TA vs Ole Anderson - World Championship Wrestling 12/28/85 Very much in the vein of a Greg Valentine vs Ronnie Garvin slugfest. I love how unclassical this match is. There's no shine or heat segment. It is just a barroom brawl. I think Magnum's first wrestling move of the match is a dropkick 15 minutes in. He spent the first 15 minutes just punching. His right is sweet. I have seen this match and others of his before, but I never really thought of him as an all-time great puncher, but I would have loved to have seen him in Mempho because he was that good. His selling of exhaustion is also really damn good, but to me Ole Anderson is the star of this match. Ole was hitting all the right notes in this match. In a straight stand up slugfest he got overwhelmed every single time. He was great at choosing between staying up, taking a knee or taking a bump. When he did take a bump did that crowd go crazy. Ole's only respite was to got to the eyes. Every time, it looked like Magnum was going to run away with the match he would go for the eyes. Sometimes he would really claw at those eyes to stop Magnum from knocking his jaw off. Ole on top was a mean sumbitch. He was using the ropes and crossfaces to brutalize Magnum. He threw his own mean punch. I was surprised all over again that Ole never really went after the arm. This was a stand up slugfest through and through. The barroom brawl fight was more and more apparent as the match progressed because how desperate men got. Ole was yanking the trunks to send Magnum crashing to the floor or how he would clinch him to avoid any more punches. Magnum would just throw punches with reckless abandon. I loved them trading blows from their knees late into the match. Another favorite spot was Magnum was driving the shoulder into Ole's stomach and on the third one Ole just pulled up his knee sending Magnum down to the canvas. That was this match. It was gritty war of attrition. There was nothing pretty about it and you could probably count the number of wrestling moves on one hand, but it was very gripping and compelling. The twenty minute time limit expires as Magnum pins Ole, but Jim Crockett comes out to say there must be a winner. Arn trips Mags so Dusty drops Arn. Ole gets distracted and Magnum pins him. I think the Belly to Belly would have been far more satisfying and there was no reason to protect Ole the singles wrestler, but whatever still a fine finish. What an episode of TV because the Flair vs Garvin barnburner is also on this show. It is amazing that this not even the best match on this show. Magnum & Ole put on a great organic barroom bar that felt like a real war of attrition by the way they sold it. ****
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NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair vs Nikita Koloff - JCP 8/11/85 "The Road To Moscow Will Be Paved In Gold" In the Summer of 1985, Ric Flair was in feud with the Russian Nightmare for the World Championship down in Mid-Atlantic. It is weird to think of Ric Flair as the patriotic babyface going up against the foreign menace. However, when you think about who is a better representation of Capitalism than the OG himself, The Nature Boy. Ric Flair as the babyface against a monster heel is a great pairing and he really makes it work here. They are clearly building to a steel cage match as Tony brings it up many times and the match ends in a double countout. That steel cage match would be the famous one where the Horsemen unite for the first time and Flair turns heel and they break Dusty's leg as the set up for Starrcade 1985. As for this match, it is fun for the novelty of seeing Ric Flair as a babyface and he has some good spots. I really liked how Nikita threw Flair off hard on the lock up twice. On the third time, Flair pulled away early and Koloff did a face plant. Flair did his strut and Wooo! Very fun moment. I thought Koloff's heat segment was pretty pedestrian. I liked the idea of Flair doing a move to Nikita and collapsing but he did too early on. He had taken three shoulder tackles and one bodyslam. I think he went into oversell mode too fast. Still cant fault someone for trying to make it interesting. It made more sense later on in the match when he did it again. Koloff stuck to the bearhug and bodyslam. Nikita was at his best biting, choking and clawing at Flair. Flair ended up getting busted on a post. One thing I like about Flair matches is that it is almost never shine-heat-comeback-finish. He usually breaks things up. So we get a mini Flair comeback where he comes flying off the top and then gets the Figure-4, but Nikita rakes the eyes. Flair now really cranks it up. Beautiful suplex and the kneedrop but this gets a big kickout. Koloff hits a weak Russian sickle. The crowd does not really react nor does it react to the kickout. I cant tell if it was a fuck up or if they were trying to protect the finish. Koloff goes for the real deal when Flair is on the ropes and ends up going careening over the ropes in an impressive bump. Flair rams Koloff into the post. The finish is lukewarm. They do Flair's crossbody where they both tumble over the ropes for a double countout. Tony says the ring cant contain them we need a cage to keep it in the ring. Perfectly fine match, plenty of Flair electricity to keep you entertained but you are missing anything if you never seen it. ***1/4
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Superpowers (Dusty Rhodes & Nikita Koloff) vs Horsemen (Lex Luger & Tully Blanchard) Crockett Cup 1987 Finals Does this match exist in full? It is JIP at the ten minute mark and we only get to see the heat segment and the finish. But what a heat segment it is. The next time someone (*cough* Meltzer *cough*) says Lex Luger cant work I am going to tell them to watch this and then tweet me in the eye and say they he cant work because brutha Lex Luger can fucking work. Nikita was wrestling with neck brace. He sickles Tully over the top rope. On the outside, JJ rips the neck brace off and Luger goes to town. Elbows to the neck and driving the neck into the railing and the top rope. He steps on the throat. There is a bandage left around the neck that Luger uses to choke Nikita. He is urgent. Diving for pinfalls and cutting Nikita off from Dusty. This is really the Lex Luger show as he is just dominating this heat segment and showing get urgency, passion and drive. I would be remiss not to mention how good Nikita is at selling all this. We get a shoe shot from JJ on the outside. The heat segment ends when Nikit catches Tully coming off the turnbuckles. Here comes The American Dream with Bionic Elbows for everyone including JJ! Melee ensues. Dusty throws The Total Package into the post, Blanchard hits JJ with the shoe, however Blanchard is going to try to break Nikita’s neck with a piledriver but Dusty comes off the top with a cross body. I cant really rate this match since I only watched half the match, but this is really great. I could see if we had the whole thing that is a contender for one of the best tag team matches of the 80s because of how damn good the heat segment was and we get a clean, feel-good finish. As is, this is totally worth it to watch Lex Luger and Nikita Koloff work a clinic of a heat segment and for the raucous, feel good finish!
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Ric Flair & Arn Anderson vs Dusty Rhodes & Ronnie Garvin - Worldwide 2/22/86 I remember Austin raving about this match way back when because of Dusty giving Baby Doll a kiss and then saying what the hell and giving Garvin a kiss. He thought it was the funniest and damndest thing he ever did see. In the moment watching it in action, I was popping as much as the crowd. WHAT A CROWD! Talk about sustained heat. They were not in the ring for a long time, but they sure as hell had a good time! Anytime, Flair and Garvin are lighting it up, it is a helluva time. I loved Flair flopping about sixty seconds into this as he is going for the tag, missing the tag, Garvin yanking him back up by the trunks just to chop him down. Dusty hits the double bionic elbow on the Horsemen and that leads to the kissing spot. Flair finally makes a tag to Arn after two Flair Flops and a whole lot of bumping. Garvin hits the sleeper on Arn, but he backs into the Horsemen corner. There is not much of a heat segment as Flair cannot contain Garvin for long and takes a back drop. Dusty yanks him into the corner and wraps his leg around the post as revenge for the leg breaking angle. This does not lead to much. The finish is pretty nuts. Dusty goes for the figure-4 and Arn saves. This brings Garvin in and in the fracas he nails Flair with the Hands of Stone and Dusty pins the World Champion in a tag match. The Risky Bidness Boys celebrate like Dusty has actually won the World Championship. Great booking as the crowd popped huge, Dusty gets a pinfall on Flair and Garvin looks like a big time star as it was his right hand that put Flair down. So now when Flair vs Garvin goes around the horn people will believe that Garvin has a puncher's chance. Tons of fun, definitely watch for Dusty & Flair's antics, but also some amazing booking. ***1/4
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I dont know what it is, but I I get close to finishing a project in this case, WWF 1988-1992, and just cant close it out and I get a hankering to watch something different. I have learned to go with my instincts otherwise I stop enjoying what I am watching. The Horsemen (Ric Flair, Ole & Arn Anderson) vs Dusty Rhodes, Magnum TA & Manny Fernandez - Worldwide 12/21/85 The height of the Original Horsemen as this is post-leg breaking angle and Starrcade 1985. I dont know if they are officially the Horsemen yet but Flair & Blanchard do a spot promo for Philly where Flair says Dusty puts his leg on the line when he goes out there against him. Dusty was twerking before twerking was cool, daddy. Lots of gyrations & vibrations from the American Dream early on. Flair vs Dusty in the ring is just electric. The match itself is a ton of fun and chicken soup for the pro wrestling fan soul. Arn is a bumping and stooging master. Great shine. Arn & Manny are so energetic. Dusty is so charismatic. Flair eats some offense from Dusty and then a press slam from Magnum. Back from break, Magnum is getting beat up and Flair busts out the double stomp. Why did he stop doing that? Thats such a great move. Manny gets the tag and again Arn is bumping for him. Arn pulls Manny's trunks so that he falls into the Horsemen corner. That's smart tag team wrestling. Pretty good heat segment on Manny. Flair hits a nice vertical suplex and then spits at Dusty. Great spot. A really good hope spot is Manny back dropping Flair but he back drops him into the Horsemen corner so that Arn is able to get the tag and cut Manny off from making the tag. Great use of tag team psychology there. Nice interesting wrinkle in this match as there is no hot tag! Manny hits a flying burrito goes for the cover and this triggers the melee. In the fracas, Arn wallops Manny with a steel chair and Ole pins him to win the match while Dusty has Flair in the figure-4. The Horsemen jump Dusty and look to break his leg again with a chair, but Magnum makes the save. A really fun Crockett six-man tag team match with a ton of heat. Just six great characters going out cutting loose. I really liked the chaotic finish and how there was no hot tag. ***3/4
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On the Third Day of Christmas, your true love gave to you, Pro Wrestling Love: The Memphis Edition because who the fuck wants Three French Hens! When I was a kid I rented a 1980s Memphis VHS from Video Horizon because "Macho Man" Randy Savage was on the cover. On that video, Savage piledrove Ricky Morton of the Rock 'n' Roll Express through a table and I remember thinking that was the most batshit insane thing I ever saw. Memphis Wrestling was hardcore blood & guts wrestling before ECW made you believe they invented the style in the 90s. Memphis Wrestling is a perfect microcosm of pro wrestling with its outrageous colorful gimmicks and it is reliance on bloody brawls. Inside you will find out about Randy Savage & Poffos' invasion of Jerry Lawler's Memphis Wrestling, Lawler challenging for the World Championship against Curt Hennig & Rick Martel, hell even the "Nature Boy" Ric Flair makes a pit stop in Memphis to defend his version of the World Heavyweight Championship. All this and much, much more in Pro Wrestling Love vol. 23! https://ridingspacemountain.blogspot.com/2018/12/pro-wrestling-love-vol-23-best-of.html
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[1992-08-29-WWF-Summerslam] Bret Hart vs Davey Boy Smith
Superstar Sleeze replied to Loss's topic in August 1992
WWF Intercontinental Champion Bret "Hitman" Hart vs "British Bulldog" Davey Boy Smith - WWF Summerslam 1992 We talk about Ric Flair carrying broomsticks to great match, but in no match is the phrase "carrying a broomstick" more apropos than here where Bret Hart carries Davey Boy's mindless body to not just a great match but the best match to take place in the WWF in 1992. It is very clear that Bret is forced to work into a chinlock to call the next sequence and then return to the chinlock to do much the same. Bulldog was sloppy at times and I would imagine very dangerous to work with. Bret looked pissed in his usual understated manner. Some of those strikes coming off the ropes looked extra stiff. The boot in the corner looked brutal. Then the Bret plancha to the floor may have been the most dangerous Bret spot ever because Davey Boy was out of position and Bret just said "Fuck it" and then yanked him down by the neck. Bret basically was getting in his payback for Davey Boy being blowed up and forgetting the entire match. Since we are in full Bret Hart ring general mode, we get a superb NWA Champion touring match. Bret was the heir to Lou Thesz and should have led the NWA into the 1960s with his amazing penchant for thriving as a champion in babyface vs babyface matches as a subtle heel in hard fought contests. Things like being subtly outwrestled early and resorting to a hard back elbow to escape a hammerlock is so old school I love it. Nowadays thats a meanginless spot, but built right you can come off like King Prick. Of course, a lot is added that "NWA Champion" Bret Hart is taking on the Hometown Hero, British Bulldog in front of the rabid Wembley Stadium so it adds that NWA touring Champion feel of the match. I thought the shine was pretty good and I think Davey Boy was still coherent at the time. The shove that sends Bret spiraling out of control to the floor was superb. Bret sold it well and it really put over the British Bulldog as a force to be reckoned with. Bulldog working in and out of an armbar while going for early pinning combinations was a smart way to put him over as a challenger looking for a win. The Crucifix Pin is always over in my house. Like I said, Bret was very chippy in this match in contrast to Bulldog working holds & pinning combinations. The Brain posits that these two are on equal footing because neither man is too bright. He was resorting to hard back elbows and a stiff kneelift ala Nick Bockwinkel. It is these subtle touches that heels Bret in the match, but not in the long term once the match is over. The silver lining of Bulldog being a zombie was that Bret was forced to put himself in positions to overcome Bulldog's offense. Usually Bret would ragdoll his opponent but here he actually set Bulldog in motion and then would cut him off masterfully. Bret quashing the next Crucifix pin attempt was great. That boot in the corner was stiff as hell. I really liked Bret's bulldog. There's a great sequence where Bulldog press slams Bret off the top rope but then misses an ugly splash from the top rope. Bulldog ends up on the outside and thats where the crazy Bret plancha happens. Theres a very obvious moment where Bulldog is zonked out of his mind as he is just standing taking Bret's offense and Bret cant get him to bump until he hits a dropkick and Davey Boy's instincts kick in. Bret is so good at offense and just grinding out a match. He is in his element after the plancha cemented his advantage. Bret cant negotiate the pinfall after any of his Five Moves of Doom so he resorts to bieling Davey Boy by the hair and this draws the ire of the partisan British crowd. Great spot as Bret really puts Bulldog as the wronged babyface. Bret goes back to the chinlock to call a sleeper sequence. The "three arm" drop is such an epic moment in wrestling and signals the Bulldog comeback. Bulldogs blows a spot they have done a thousand times in Hart Foundation vs Bulldogs matches where Bulldog military presses Hart and falls back with him so that he crotches himself on the top rope. Like I said it was probably very dangerous for Bret to be working this match and I was surprised he let Bulldog press slam him again. Delayed Vertical and Running Powerslam only get two. Usually this would be the death knell for the hometown hero. Hit your finish and kickout means the heel is taking this. Bulldog hits a superplex for two. Bret is really calling for all the stops. One thing I noticed in this match was there was a lot of rushing. They were not really milking the moments as much as they could and I think it is because one was a zombie and the other was freaking out that he was in there with a zombie. Bret's Bridging German was a cool spot that you dont see often from him. Bulldogs kicks out and as they lied in a heap Bret applies the Sharpshooter! Honestly, if you didnt the finish but know the rhythm of pro wrestling with Bulldog blowing his wad (running powerslam) this should be the finish. I feel like Bret was working the smarts here in a good way. Bulldog makes to the ropes and then the iconic finish with Bulldog kneeling down on a sunset flip attempt for the win and a MASSIVE ROAR is let out from the British Faithful! Bret proves why he is one of the all-time great ring generals here as he works the touring NWA champion babyface vs babyface match against a Hometown Hero Zombie. There are too many chinlocks (that are more jarring in how they break the rhythm) and general sloppiness to say this contends as one of the best matches of all time. Still, even with no sliding scale this match is incredible. Bret is the king of the babyface vs babyface match playing the subtle heel to perfection here. The match is built perfectly I loved how Bret had to earn his heat segment in the middle match. So many cutoffs and it was the plancha really won him that control. The finish stretch was electric and I loved the Running Powerslam nearfall before the Sharpshooter. I think that really added to the drama. One of the best individual performances in the history of pro wrestling as Bret Hart proves why he is an all-time great in the business. ****1/2 -
The Rockers vs Rougeaus - 10/89 London, England This is pro wrestling. I know pro wrestling can be a lot of things, but this really captures the fun, light-hearted aspect of wrestling that develops into a dramatic story: can Shawn Michaels make the tag? It is such a simple hook. I often feel compelled to dig deeper to prove that this is a more impressive match. In this match, it is beauty is how shallow it is. It is two pricks trying to show up the good guys. The good guys goofing on the bad guys and having fun at their expense. The crowd is laughing along right with them. This level of entertainment and fun is what is missing from most WWF face control segments. Until the pricks can grab a handful of hair, then it becomes a dramatic effort from Michaels to get the hot tag to escape an incredible onslaught from the dastardly, underhanded bad guys. The amount of offense Michaels takes and his selling is the drama that most their WWF heat segments are missing. The go home stretch calls back to the opening with the good guys using the bad guys own dirty tactics against them to pick up the victory. Who are these guys and what did they do with the Rougeaus? The Rougeaus have been the most underwhelming tag team that I have seen in my viewing. Their heat segments tend to be borefests and Raymond seems devoid of any charisma. In this match, the Rougeaus look like the best WWF heel tag team ever in this one match. They stooge and bitch out like the Busters and they have the offense of the Midnight Express in this match. I understand the beginning can be tedious for some, but I like bullshit. You will see that Marty does want to lock up twice, but each time Jacques calls him a chicken and goads him into doing the relatively easy feat of athleticism. I am a sucker for heels that congratulate themselves over simple feats. However, now the Rockers get the idea how they can really show up the Rougeaus with Shawn's moonsault and shaking the ropes for Jacques. How much Jacques throws his head being rammed into the top turnbuckle is awesome. I laughed again (only thing I laugh at each time). I love how Jacques scurries away into the protective embrace of Raymond. The MX used Cornette to bitch out for them, but here the Rougeaus do it themselves. The leg work is incredible and the best Rockers control segment with all the switches without tags. Jacques, the ref and crowd just make this segment so great and another stretch where I can not stop smiling. Then while Jacques is arguing, Marty will let Raymond to get to the corner, but Jacques wont be there. Then when Jacques makes a mad dash for the corner, Marty yanks him away. I just love that stuff. Hell, even Raymond is great for all his work within this hold and constantly keeping it moving. Eventually, Jacques grabs Shawn's hair and Raymond rams a pretty nice knee into Shawn's back transforming this match from light-hearted to a dramatic affair. Already, you can tell Rougeaus are game for what I consider the best heat segment in WWF 80s tag wrestling. Shawn takes his Flair Flip bump into the turnbuckle and bumps huge off a double chop. The stars are just aligned in this match as Shawn is having his best FIP and the Rougeaus are just fucking on. Raymond's savate kick sends Shawn tumbling over the top rope and they start working on Shawn's back. They do the Boston Crab/knee combo and then Raymond throws Shawn onto Jacques' knee. Seriously, where the hell have these Rougeaus been. "We are really seeing the Rougeaus at their absolute best." - Tony. Tony always knows what's up. Jacques does a fake clap for a tag and the crowd boos the shit out of him. I love this crowd! Raymond busts out the rolling short arm scissors into a pin combination and Shawn reverses. I love this match! Jacques knees Raymond by accident and lets out a nice, hearty "Fuck!". Here comes Marty doing his best Rick Martel. Hands above his head, so energized just hitting anything in blue and yellow including the Mouth of the South. Raymond trips him from the outside allowing Jacques to get a piledriver. Now the Rougeaus go for the coup d'grace the Megaphone, but Shawn is able to get it and hit Jacques for Marty to get the pin. Once again, the Rockers give the Rougeaus a taste of their own medicine. I love the MX/RNR Wrestlewar '90 match and I really don't think this is far off of it. This is my pick for the best WWF tag team match of all time (Austin/HHH vs Benoit/Jericho is close). It has the best control and heat segments with an actual, logical finish with a really good transition that bridges light-hearted with dramatic. The criticism I know is that there is a lot of bs in the beginning, but I enjoyed it and it played into the control segment well with the Rockers still fucking around with the Rougeaus and it sort of fuels the Rougeaus fire to really kick their ass even though they were the ones that instigated it. Shawn is really off the charts selling and bumping for the Rougeaus. I liked this finish stretch even more than the Paris match because it is not trading piledrivers. It is actually using the Megaphone against the Rougeaus. It is really fighting fire with fire. From showing up Rogeaus at the outset to using their Megaphone against them and everything in between, the Rockers proved they could beat the Rougeaus at their own game. ****1/2
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RIP Crossface Chickenwing The Rockers vs Fabulous Rougeaus - Paris 10/13/89 I love the London match but I have never seen the Paris match. They cut out a lot of the bullshit from the beginning of the London match and get right down to brass tacks. This is a total gaga-fest. It is all character-driven camp that I just lap up with a spoon. It is fun personified. Sorry, I have been unfortunately listening to a lot of Gorilla recently. There was a funny bit where Gorilla & Lord Al were talking about wrestling Paris twenty years ago and how the shady promoter had since died and Gorilla said good riddance. I popped. Like I said earlier, very campy with lots of bullshit and gaga. The Rockers clear house. Jacques really loves to Woo-Hoo! He was going great bumping and stooging. I loved how he crawled back to the corner after taking his licks and then held his older brother's hand. Hug to a chorus of boos. I love this Parisian crowd. The Rockers trap Raymond in a toehold but they switch out with a tag and this gets Jacques red hot. It is all very funny to watch. Jacques is great to watch. Then they start letting Raymond get close to the corner but Jacques would abandon the corner to complain. Then by the time Jacques would get back they would yank Raymond back to the center of the ring. I really liked all this. Jacques pulls Shawn's hair on a criss cross he turns around and Raymond nails him in the back with a wicked high knee. Now the Rougeaus act like they are King Shit. Jacques gets on his back just to kip up. The hug in the center complete with butt slaps is amazing. That got some real heat That cracked me up. Tons of cheating. Tag rope choking. Double teaming. Switching without tagging. I loved the Camel Clutch but instead of a chinlock it is just a hair pull. Very entertaining heat segment. We get the false hot tag. This really had all the trappings of good tag wrestling. Miscommunication spot leads to the hot tag. The Parisian crowd was giving Marty Hogan-esque sound effects for his punches! Wow! Jacques takes a wicked bump off a kneelift and then Marty beats up Jimmy Hart. Marty gets a backslide but no ref and it is a clear 3. I am loving this. Every trick in the book. The finish is great. Jacques uses the hair to reverse the Irish Whip, Raymond trips Marty this enables the Jacques piledriver, quite a bit of cheating was needed to get there. The ref goes over to admonish Raymond so Shawn comes in and throws it back in the Rougeaus faces by piledriving Jacques and putting Marty on top. I love how this was like a big dick-waving contest. Who could out-taunt each other? Who could out-cheat each other? The Rockers ended up beating the Rougeaus by making them taste their own medicine. I highly recommend this. ****1/4
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[1992-04-14-WWF-Munich, GER] Randy Savage vs Shawn Michaels
Superstar Sleeze replied to Loss's topic in April 1992
WWF World Heavyweight Champion Randy Savage vs Shawn Michaels - WWF Munich 4/14/92 I have always meant to watch this match and somehow it slipped through the cracks. After the first five minutes, I was thinking to myself how is this not talked about more. They did a Savage formula comeback which means setup move->Elbow Drop-> Finish. It feels abrupt and abridged at the end thus I can see why this is not considered a Match of the Year contender, but it was definitely on its way to being just that from the shine. Savage is putting on a selling clinic before the match even starts as he is selling the injury from Mania VIII. Michaels must be over the moon as this is his first big break as a heel. The Savage/Sherri dynamic is great. The shine may be the greatest shine I have ever seen. Tons of leg dives from the Heartbreak Kid. Savage is avoiding them like the plague. Even Sherri is swiping at the leg from ringside. It really puts over how the deck is stacked against the Macho Man. I love how desperate Savage is to keep his leg away from Michaels. He quite literally is willing to claw at Michaels to keep him away as he rakes his eyes at one point, great verbal selling from Michaels. I love how Savage throws a chair in the ring to buy himself time and how he is hitting one-legged punches and clothesline. The double axe handle spot is great. The way he sells before and the after is just excellent. The spot where Michaels runs into Sherri on the apron is a great way to climax the shine. Michaels finally gets a hold of Savage and hits a kneecrusher. Michaels is really quite good at working over the leg. All the favorites...I thought he was a little too reliant on the figure-4. I would have liked to see him attempt his finish (a back suplex at the time) just to make it feel like he was trying to win the match. Savage pushes him off on the 3rd figure-4 and then hits a one-legged clothesline and Top Rope Elbow Drop. The shine was a ***** shine and the heat segment was damn solid with Michaels showing he can control a match and Savage working so well underneath. If the finish was not so abrupt, this would be rated much higher, but still I highly recommend watching this. ****- 28 replies
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Hate to deny you brutha, but I do that on purpose because I hate when people skip the review and just go to the bottom for the star rating. How do I know this happens because I am guilty of it. It became too cumbersome to re-write reviews for this so I just copy & paste them from PWO so you can just go find the rating from the original post. Sorry for the inconvenience. Happy Boxing Day! There is no complaining when you are talking Pro Wrestling Love especially when you are discussing the treasure trove that is the WWF between 1984-1987. The top of the list is pretty boring, full of usual suspects. I mean Savage vs Steamboat basically ushered in the modern era of workrate and Slaughter vs Sheik is one of the greatest brawls of all time so there's a reason there are boring choices. However, that back half has some really interesting choices: Bob Backlund & Bruno Sammartino making the Top Six in 1984 & 1986 that's pretty wild. I bet I got your attention so click the link and find what the hell those ol' fuddy duddies did to get a place on the most prestigious list of them all, Pro Wrestling Love's Top Six Best Matches of WWF from 1984-1987! All this and much, much more! https://ridingspacemountain.blogspot.com/2018/12/pro-wrestling-love-vol-22-best-of-wwf.html