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Everything posted by Jetlag
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Show #5 (12/9/2003) came out with a watchable undercard that was more about the curious rather than the actively good. The mysterious CRAFTER M comes out and engages in some very good exchanges with the befuddled Manabu Hara but ends up winning quite decisively. No less befuddling is the random appearance of future Kings Road imitator Kazushi Miyamoto in an amusing match. Namekawa/Ito was quite scrappy and stiff but ends rather abruptly. Especially liked the nasty leg kicks. The same goes for Ueyama/Mishima which hints at a really great match but ends in about 5 minutes with Mishima targetting Ueyamas bad leg. Sakata/Sasaki was going for a similiar vibe as Sakata/Ito from June. Methodical shootstyle matwork with building intensity that mostly came from Sakata punishing Sasaki with those heavy hands. Lots of knuckle grinding too. Would've been a very good match with a slightly more exciting finish. The main event was just a great match with tremendous intensity and sense of danger. Fujii had destroyed everyone up to this point and Tamura sold him as a legit threat, fighting like mad to escape his German Suplex of doom. Some great standup from Tamura and Fujii came across as a bull rushing through with his power. Loved him just picking up a clearly resistant Tamura for the waterwheel drop. About as good as a fully developed 7 minute epic as you can have.
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Do yourself a favour and make it a priority to watch this match asap. Literally one of the most awesome brutal spectacles I've ever seen. It starts out with Tenryu chopping Kabuki in the throat in the middle of an exchange, leaving him suffocating on his back, which sets the tone nicely. The early Orihara sections were pretty fun, as every couple minutes he would try something stupid and get punished swiftly. Kabuki & Kitahara end up putting a massive assbeating on him. Kitahara looks like such a killer in this match, just walloping everyone with kicks left and right and dealing them kicks to the eye and the skull, and Kabuki looks great aswell, dishing out extra mean punches and kicks. It also helps that you can really whip Orihara around, he would eat a neckbreaker and his head would just bounce off the mat. Oriharas initial comeback was pretty much perfect as he ditches his junior offense and just tees off with reckless kicks. Later he would hit these great looking dives. His springboard crossbody is an example of a perfectly timed highspot. Tenryu wasn't in the match a ton but he would occasionally walk in and remind you who he his. Earlier Kabuki had blindsided him so, after he Orihara hit a dive and left Kabuki prone outside Tenryu would casually stroll over and clock him with a chair. It's these kind of moments that help make this sort of match so much more intense. Tenryu going mad with the pre-PRIDE soccer kicks, not letting off and leaving Kitahara bloodied is why he's Top 5 all time. Note how he would also put over his opponents, with Kitahara almost KO'ing him and Kabuki pretty much beating him silly with the punches and super kicks. What a fucking match, I wouldn't be shocked if this ends up in my All Time Top 10 as far as tags go.
- 3 replies
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- great kabuki
- koki kitahara
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(and 4 more)
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Absolutely brutal, blood drenched spectacle. The early going sees Kitahara establishing himself as a dangerous striker by chasing Ishikawa around some with his kicks. Ishikawa makes the mistake of running the ropes and gets brained with a high kick. To add insult to injury, Kitahara puts him in the Scorpion Deathlock (something Ishikawa used to do to piss off Choshu himself). Pretty stiff opening, but it's tame compared to what's to come. Ishikawa gets the advantage when he hits his great sumo charging shoulderblock. Soon Ishikawa goes to town on Kitaharas bandaged eye, hitting some punches that felt like they were intended to draw hardway blood. Ishikawa proceeds to just demolish Kitahara with some of the most brutal stomps, punches and kicks ever filmed. Kitahara is someone who can both dish out a beating and sell very well, and soon he is limping around with his vision clearly impaired like a beaten dog. The ending run is actually pretty hot with Kitahara making a big comeback kicking Ishikawa in the face repeatedly and hitting a huge moonsault aswell as narrowly avoiding a dangerous piledriver. However he soon falls to Ishikawas swatting lariats and gets brutalized even worse with PRIDE level stomps and knees. The finish felt like something that should happen in more matches. Brutal brutal match.
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Slow paced match, but I'd say there's enough of two tubby guys cracking eachother hard to keep this entertaining. The early exchanges here are pretty fun as obviously these two work really snug, and Ishikawa also hits the worlds greatest plancha early on. There were also some nasty suplex bumps from these big guys. The submission stuff was filler, but it lead to a transition. Both guys would use these nasty short kicks, very pro wrestling style, looks hurty and nobody really does those anymore. By the end this gets pretty epic with Ashura Hara selling the beating he took huge. He would hit a suplex, but be unable to continue because he was too beaten up. So he would just rely on Ishikawa coming too close and then brutally clock him with lariats and headbutts. Obviously there are lots of great lariats in this bout. Hara launching himself around ruled including just flying out of the ring, totally unexpected and looked great. This largely worked because it was built around Ishikawa being really great at brutalizing someone and Hara being really great at putting over a beating. Credible finish. This kind of „bloated guys stiffing eachother“ has become en vogue again recently with the BJW roidheads and WALTER so forth but I'd say this was better than 99% of those matches.
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Only a 6 minute match where the ref blows the finish, but I'd still say this is must watch due to a sick bladejob and it's basically two big bellied stocky guys slapping the shit out of eachother. There really needs to be more Black Cat footage as his strap drop and punch comeback was quite epic. Kurisus chair shots, headbutts, punches etc. are up there with the most violent in history. Kurisu making his way to the ropes doing pushups while in the Scorpion Hold looked rough for a semi in shape middle aged guy.
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- masanobu kurisu
- black cat
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(and 3 more)
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Show #5 (12/9/2003) came out with a watchable undercard that was more about the curious rather than the actively good. The mysterious CRAFTER M comes out and engages in some very good exchanges with the befuddled Manabu Hara but ends up winning quite decisively. No less befuddling is the random appearance of future Kings Road imitator Kazushi Miyamoto in an amusing match. Namekawa/Ito was quite scrappy and stiff but ends rather abruptly. Especially liked the nasty leg kicks. The same goes for Ueyama/Mishima which hints at a really great match but ends in about 5 minutes with Mishima targetting Ueyamas bad leg. Sakata/Sasaki was going for a similiar vibe as Sakata/Ito from June. Methodical shootstyle matwork with building intensity that mostly came from Sakata punishing Sasaki with those heavy hands. Lots of knuckle grinding too. Would've been a very good match with a slightly more exciting finish. The main event was just a great match with tremendous intensity and sense of danger. Fujii had destroyed everyone up to this point and Tamura sold him as a legit threat, fighting like mad to escape his German Suplex of doom. Some great standup from Tamura and Fujii came across as a bull rushing through with his power. Loved him just picking up a clearly resistant Tamura for the waterwheel drop. About as good as a fully developed 7 minute epic as you can have.
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[1987-04-27-NJPW] Antonio Inoki vs Masa Saito
Jetlag replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in April 1987
Weird and wonderful spectacle. They start out wrestling straight, with lots of cool amateur style grappling. Saito gets the advantage when he looks in his awesome Prison Lock. He continues focussing on Inokis legs, with Inoki resisting against the Scorpion Deathlock with all his might. Saito proceeds to take a few pages out of Choshus playbook and destroys Inoki with lariats, backdrops and Scorpion holds. Inoki looks badly beaten up and is seemingly done, so Saito proceeds to punish him some more by dropping him crotch first on the ropes. This humiliation wakes up Inoki again, he catches Saito with the abisegiri. Now things get really whack as Inoki has the ropes removed (he is the boss after all) and starts beating down Saito. A brutal posting later and Saito is gushing blood and eating punches and Ezugiris left and right. Sneaky Hiroshi Hase who is seconding Saito hands hima pair of handcuffs and he and Inoki are chained together. The good times don't last long for Masa Saito though as Inoki is soon back to brutally beating him down with punches, headbutts and elbows. Both guys are coated in blood by now and Inoki is pounding away at a motionless Masa Saito until Hase throws in the towel. Quite the epic spectacle as this was a mix of quality wrestling and a violent bloodbath, altough the handcuff/rope removal stuff felt a little forced. -
[1980-09-25-NJPW-Bloody Fight Series] Tatsumi Fujinami vs Kengo Kimura
Jetlag replied to Loss's topic in September 1980
Insanely tight matwork in this contest. While there's not a lot of spectacular moves, they really make up for it by working every exchange with maximum resistance and caution. Really sinking into hammerlocks or yanking at the leg. I liked how Fujinami didn't lose his cool in this one when he got slapped. The rope running and strike exchanges feel really frantic and dangerous. A double dropkick spot actually comes across as cool!! It builds to an epic last third with awesome blood, dives, one of the most brutal piledrivers ever, great momentum swings etc. I know a long grappling heavy between two guys in black tights is tough to get into but this is potentially the greatest junior match of the 80s.- 7 replies
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- NJPW
- September 25
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(and 5 more)
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The 3rd show (6/29/2003) comes with the usual decent undercard action with nothing in particular standing out but the last 3 matches are the good stuff. Sasaki/Mishima is pretty much your workrate shootstyle done right, innovative athlete vs. Decent little guy is guaranteed to be something and this was slick and smooth with plenty of cool moments while feeling thoroughly competitive. Mishima feels way ahead of the curve but Sasaki manages to be actually competitive with him and lasts up until the last point. Last couple exchanges were pretty intense. Probably would have been a great match if Kyosuke Sasaki was a little better at selling his near defeat. Then Ito/Sakata is just something else as Sakata had found his personality when beating Okubo with his fists on the last show. Starts out intense from the get go with some hard shotais. They then move through some methodical matwork and soon the hands start flying again cranking up the intensity. Knuckles grinding in the face, kidney punches, Sakata just slapping Ito silly with palms and Ito getting really fired up. Really great nearfalls near the end which are all made by Itos body language, I also liked how Sakata almost seemed flustered when Ito would start gaining the advantage or prevent a move. Great stuff. The main event was a really great quasi-squash with Fuke coming out swinging wildly only to get outclassed and destroyed by calm superior Tamura. This is how an ace behaves. Show Nr. 4 in the U-Style catalogue (10/6/2003) was really fun even without the established guys. You had squash machine Fujii getting in troube for the first time, with Echigo showing lots of spunk and rushing him to actually put him in peril here and there, and everyone else showing lots of promise. Hara/Okubo was a really cool, lengthy match that never dragged. Hara seemed to be leading the dance early on, teasing his german suplex, but Okubo got fired up and the crowd got behind him big time throughout the bout. Probably the most color he has shown in U-Style so far. Slick grappling throughout and they deliver a hot finish with the time running out as Okubo tries for an armbar. They do a restart and go for broke. Ito/Ueyama was a really interesting match. You had Ueyama, who is a really explosive worker, dominating early on, landing this awesome shotai/body shot combo in the corner and getting the advantage on the mat. So Ito stomps on his face and gets a yellow card and thinks „well might as well“ and starts kicking the hell out of Ueyamas bandaged leg. He even punches at the leg on the ground. Ueyama starts limping and getting more cautious while fighting back valiantly resulting in some tense moments with the finish being a standout. Pretty unique stuff for a shootstyle bout that worked extremely well. The other matches were fun too with the finals being a frantic scramble that felt like it had a lot at stake and could work anytime. Really cool show which elevates everyone involved. Actually, Ueyama was out of points, so grabbing the ropes would have done nothing. He simply refused to tap and the referee stopped the bout. Very good finish.
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Kitahara/Kawauchi was basically just a gritty uncooperative streetfight. Kawauchi was more aggressive and overzealous here so Kitahara just absolutely beat his ass in between taunting him. Short but good stuff that the fans got really into and I hope this isn't the last I see of Capture International.
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Kitahara/Kurashima was a nifty little battle. Kurashima is naturally at home on the mat and Kitahara is actually willing to work the mat against him. However Kitahara has the advantage because he is a bastard. Kitahara brutally kicks him in the jaw while exchanging leglocks and follows with more boots to the face. Kurashima makes some desperation takedown attempts until Kitahara catches (captures) him for the tap.
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- capture international
- koki kitahara
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(and 3 more)
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Johta/Mineno was another rounds match only this time they had MMA gloves. Why the rounds? Hey, look these ring girls (mat girls?) are totally HOT! They got Capture International style bikinis!!! The match was really good as these two just kick the hell out of eachother and also have good grappling and throws. Basically the worlds greatest worked Shooto. It works because there's no back and forth strike trading, just two guys throwing and evading really fast and aggressively. Little premature ending as this was only half as long as their boxing gloves match, but the finish was pretty damn brutal so what the hell.
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Oh but this match is a goodie. You have Tomohiro Ishii pre-Choshuism and CAPTURE boy since the beginning, aswell as the unseen should-have-been-a-star DAISAKU (Shimoda) and his twin brother YUSAKU (Shimoda and half a dozen other names) rocking the gloves and ready to throw down. I'll never understand what motivates these indy guys to get punched in the face in a basement in front of 70 people but I'll always enjoy watching. This goes about 6 minutes and it's basically all 4 guys kicking the crap out of eachother. Really liked the lumpy boys who like to kick hard sections between Ishii and YUSAKU and the attempted fraticide between YUSAKU and DAISAKU was pretty brutal aswell. Daisaku has some huge kicks and thai knees while Yusaku sticks to more traditional pro wrestling stuff punches and knees stuff executed with a CAPTURE sized vicious streak. Also really liked Ishii in his Kawada wannabe tights flying at Kitahara with huge kicks. By no means is this intelligent or well rounded pro wrestling, it's arguably shootstyle in it's most primitive form, and that's why I love it and want to see every single match in this style ever done. So Kitahara if you're reading this there's someone who cares, and Kitahara's neighbours if you are reading this please break into his garage and steal all his VHS tapes for us and don't get spin kicked in the face doing that.
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- koki kitahara
- yusaku
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This is our sole taste of 90s Capture International. It's Aoyagi working a somewhat regular undercard match against Kitahara's boy Nihao (who would go on to be in U-Style – CAPTURE can get you somewhere). Aoyagi working holds isn't quite the same as Aoyagi working a crazy spectacle, but I probably liked this better than Aoyagis undercard work in Wrestle Yume Factory. Aoyagi sure does give Nihao the business with stiff kicks and punches to the mid section and there is one truely brutal near KO. The finish is a really nice moment too. I didn't get a ton from Nihao here but he looked fine.
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The debut show (2/15/2003) had a decent undercard with Ito/Ueyama being the one standout match to deliver some high end shootstyle action. Ueyama feels very Tamura inspired with his almost dance like knee grinding and position switching on the ground. The match obviously had lots of good matwork with the opening exchange being perhaps the dopest on the show, and then Ito, after almost getting submitted, starts doing his dismissive mugging and "I will bite you" grin. Lots of feisty palm strikes.
- 2 replies
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- hiroyuki ito
- ryuki ueyama
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The main event was obviously the best match and had everything a Tamura match entails. The good thing about U-Style is that they didn't do straight up UWF or RINGS worship but instead it was this exciting new take on shootstyle with faster pace, shorter matches and submissions being more important. Great mix of slick, athletic matwork with intelligent pacing and strong standup sections. Tamura comes across as a very dangerous force but he mostly works even with fellow RINGS leftover Sakata. Sakata is someone who seems to rough his opponent up a little more than average, it didn't come across strongly here but he had his moments. Really liked how tough the body shots here felt. Whenever Tamura shows vulnerability Sakata goes after him and his crazy desperation assault after almost getting KO'd was the highlight of the match. Some really great submission nearfalls while keeping it believable.
- 1 reply
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- kiyoshi tamura
- wataru sakata
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(and 3 more)
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[2003-04-06-U-STYLE] Kiyoshi Tamura vs Dokonjonosuke Mishima
Jetlag replied to superkix's topic in April 2003
The main event was just an insanely fun match with Mishima coming in as an outsider to Pro Wrestling and winning everyones hearts with his tricked out wonky holds and kicks. Not a master Tamura carryjob but with him you cannot have a bad shootstyle match and a worker like Mishima is must watch. Crazy handspring kicks that look credible and weird pull-his-torso-apart submissions, the man had it all. -
The second show starts with your usual decent undercard. Ito/Yoshida was a very basic opening match which had the simple story of Yoshida going for the same takedown over and over until Ito starts preventing it until he catches him. Yoshida didn't add much aside from one nice hold for a cool nearfall. Hara/Echigo was a nice long match that was also not super flash but they kept it moving and kept working small highlights into it with Echigo landing nice throws and Hara getting nice near K.O.s and making a nice rush in the last minute. Nothing mindblowing but I liked it and stuff like this helps the audience to respect the workers and the rules more. The Fujii match was another squash and while he is not an impressive squash machine it was amusing to watch him slap the tattooed goon to death. I did not like Murahama/Sasaki much as Murahama is the Minoru Tanaka of this promotion with his tendency to do soft matwork and contrived spots. Kyosuke shows potential but this was at best watchable. Okubo was way over his head in the Semi Main Event. I actually would have liked Sakata to squash him to reassert his dominance but they start working throwaway shootstyle before Sakata decides to brutalize him some with hard slaps, knuckles in the face etc. Bread and butter rookie/veteran stuff with Okubo getting his token nearfalls but it ended up being fine. The main event was just an insanely fun match with Mishima coming in as an outsider to Pro Wrestling and winning everyones hearts with his tricked out wonky holds and kicks. Not a master Tamura carryjob but with him you cannot have a bad shootstyle match and a worker like Mishima is must watch. Crazy handspring kicks that look credible and weird pull-his-torso-apart submissions, the man had it all.
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This is the last Capture footage which is from Kitaharas YouTube channel. There is also a highlight video which has more clips that seem to be from matches in the 90s. I have no idea why you would have this stuff filmed and leave no trace of distribution but god knows what is going on in a guy like Kitaharas head when they start a promotion like this. Masashi Aoyagi vs. Nihao (Capture 7/4/1999) This is our sole taste of 90s Capture International. It's Aoyagi working a somewhat regular undercard match against Kitahara's boy Nihao (who would go on to be in U-Style – CAPTURE can get you somewhere). Aoyagi working holds isn't quite the same as Aoyagi working a crazy spectacle, but I probably liked this better than Aoyagis undercard work in Wrestle Yume Factory. Aoyagi sure does give Nihao the business with stiff kicks and punches to the mid section and there is one truely brutal near KO. The finish is a really nice moment too. I didn't get a ton from Nihao here but he looked fine. Koki Kitahara & YUSAKU vs. Tomohiro Ishii & DAISAKU (Capture 5/30/2000) Oh but this match is a goodie. You have Tomohiro Ishii pre-Choshuism and CAPTURE boy since the beginning, aswell as the unseen should-have-been-a-star DAISAKU (Shimoda) and his twin brother YUSAKU (Shimoda and half a dozen other names) rocking the gloves and ready to throw down. I'll never understand what motivates these indy guys to get punched in the face in a basement in front of 70 people but I'll always enjoy watching. This goes about 6 minutes and it's basically all 4 guys kicking the crap out of eachother. Really liked the lumpy boys who like to kick hard sections between Ishii and YUSAKU and the attempted fraticide between YUSAKU and DAISAKU was pretty brutal aswell. Daisaku has some huge kicks and thai knees while Yusaku sticks to more traditional pro wrestling stuff punches and knees stuff executed with a CAPTURE sized vicious streak. Also really liked Ishii in his Kawada wannabe tights flying at Kitahara with huge kicks. By no means is this intelligent or well rounded pro wrestling, it's arguably shootstyle in it's most primitive form, and that's why I love it and want to see every single match in this style ever done. So Kitahara if you're reading this there's someone who cares, and Kitahara's neighbours if you are reading this please break into his garage and steal all his VHS tapes for us and don't get spin kicked in the face doing that.
- 3 replies
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- koki kitahara
- capture international
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This was the best of the Forgotten Kawada TC Defenses I watched today and a borderline classic. And the reason for that is, of course, Osamu Nishimura. Nish often gets branded as a novelty worker who just does tribute matches imitating Dory Funk Jr spots, which is simply not true, as he does a bonafide job working a true Kings Road style match against Kawadas strike based style here. Not forcing him to work his trademark style at all, just building a really good match around his signature spots while educating the crowd on the importance of Backslides and Abdominal Stretches, telling a story and all while never losing his composure. The opening sees Nishimura ambushing Kawada and targeting his leg, they then proceed to work a basic exchange, Kawada goes for a cheapshot but Nish blocks him and hits back, showing he's prepared. They continue in this vein, with Kawada lacing into Nishimura with strikes only for Nishimura to fire back on him, often punching or headbutting him in the eye. This causes Kawada to actually get fired up and look like a dangerous striker against Nishimuras more toned down offense like getting punched and headbutted in the eye actually shook him after years of getting elbowed, kicked, chopped etc. There is some excellently executed legwork and a flawless build to a Figure 4 which was full of struggle and great. Kawadas selling was pretty hit and miss as per usual during this period but I actually thought it was acceptable. The finishing run was really great, well put together stuff with plenty of neat spots and I thought it was largely carried by Nishimuras amazing charisma, he is such a wrestling master with how he manages to work his stuff with so much urgency, he really yanks on Kawadas neck when he goes for a sleeper, he would also go from an Abdominal Stretch to a pin to an armbar trying to force the tap, like he was trying everything he knew to get that win. His bumping is also up there with the best of the 90s death seekers, as when he takes a back suplex his head and feet touch the ground at about the same time but he folds his neck up. I thought his performance here was close to Hondas GHC challenge in 2003. Kawada had one of his better nights on his TC run too, I really liked how he would sell Nishimuras finer strikes and really liked the Octopus Hold into Stretch Plum as a Fuck You to Nishimuras lineage. Great stuff and one of the few matches where you'll see Kawada carried.
- 2 replies
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- september 3
- osamu nishimura
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(and 3 more)
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Pretty by the numbers japanese big match but not bad. Sasaki gets the advantage using his power early on, finisher on the floor, some limbwork ensues, lots of stiff shots etc. It's a formula that works and these two are good at it. Sasaki is pretty fly here hitting a big plancha to the floor and really walloping Kawada with potatoes. There is some neck work which ends up not being of much importance but leads to some fun moments. Sasaki cosplays 90s Kobashi by chopping Kawada in the neck and hitting flimsy bulldogs, it also leads to a pretty sick piledriver. Kawada was halfway into lazy mode as he had some nice transitions such as kicking Sasaki in the face when he tried his silly facebuster or slipping underneath for the cheap powerbomb, but he would also just go back on offense at other times. Kind of dumb finishing stretch, but not offensively dumb.
- 2 replies
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- 2005
- january 16
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Man, I had no idea Frye challenging for the Triple Crown was a thing. Judging from Fryes workrate here he really should've been IWGP champion. The first half of this was mindblowing – Frye did a great job selling for Kawada, while also engaging in some of the most violent punch exchanges in pro wrestling history. Really great stuff with Kawada getting rocked repeatedly and desperately trying to shut the MMA fighter down. Unfortunately the way Kawada completely dominated Frye in the second half and no sold all his comebacks was terrible and killed the match.
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Most overlooked match between two big names in japanese wrestling history? I never even knew this one happened. It was a pretty fun match, altough far in the shadow of their 2000 encounter. You get those two smacking and punching eachother a lot, so that is really fun of course, and also some of Crazy Tenryu with him throwing chairs and making use of the Spider Suplex etc. Unfortunately Lazy Kawada was in effect here with him ignoring some fun legwork Tenryu was doing and no selling his way back on offense later, he also seemed to have a lot of light on his enzuigiris. On the other hand, him coughing after getting chopped in the throat was a nice touch. Perfectly good match otherwise.
- 2 replies
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- 2004
- january 18
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I'm gonna join in here for a bit. I've seen bits of U-Style but never the whole thing in one go, so I'll have a go. The debut show (2/15/2003) had a decent undercard with Ito/Ueyama being the one standout match to deliver some high end shootstyle action. Ueyama feels very Tamura inspired with his almost dance like knee grinding and position switching on the ground. The match obviously had lots of good matwork with the opening exchange being perhaps the dopest on the show, and then Ito, after almost getting submitted, starts doing his dismissive mugging and "I will bite you" grin. Lots of feisty palm strikes. I don't remember Kyosuke Sasaki being a "crazy matwork" type but he had to bring it against the bigger RINGS veteran Namekawa and he had some cool stuff. Especially liked the Triangle Chokes. I didn't care much for Murahamas cute spots and hokey selling and Okubo was seriously bland. There is a big difference between Murahama selling a near submission and Hiroyuki Ito or Sakata doing it. The main event was obviously the best match and had everything a Tamura match entails. The good thing about U-Style is that they didn't do straight up UWF or RINGS worship but instead it was this exciting new take on shootstyle with faster pace, shorter matches and submissions being more important. Great mix of slick, athletic matwork with intelligent pacing and strong standup sections. Tamura comes across as a very dangerous force but he mostly works even with fellow RINGS leftover Sakata. Sakata is someone who seems to rough his opponent up a little more than average, it didn't come across strongly here but he had his moments. Really liked how tough the body shots here felt. Whenever Tamura shows vulnerability Sakata goes after him and his crazy desperation assault after almost getting KO'd was the highlight of the match. Some really great submission nearfalls while keeping it believable.