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Jetlag

DVDVR 80s Project
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Everything posted by Jetlag

  1. Jetlag

    Yumiko Hotta

    This is one of the stupidest things I've ever written. I mean, I still stand by much of it, but I've come way around on Hotta. When she's on she's become one of my favourite workers and I don't care anymore how stupid or dangerous she is. I'm not sure if there's enough to justify her on a Top 100 considering she still has some stinkers and from what I've seen her 2000s stuff is atrocious. Still, I love me a good senseless Hotta match.
  2. It's probably Buddy Rose. You might also give outsider consideration to Jackie Sato or Jaguar Yokota if you like their style. The World of Sport situation is a bit frustrating for individual workers, while we have lots of excellent wrestling most guys only show up on TV a handful of times per year, and we don't even have all the TV.
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  6. Jetlag

    Johnny Rodz

    Him having a thread was really unpredictable!
  7. He's really good, but I wish he had more than a couple good undercard matches and that Lightning Kid match. Surely he has to have had more matches in the style of the Waltman match in the US? I want to dive more into his Michinoku Pro stuff but I will gladly skip all Yone Genjin matches.
  8. Amazing nomination, but I think Riki Senshu has the better matches.
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  10. It's weird. Togo probably has more great matches, but he also has a ton of stuff where he is merely solid. Being one of the most commonly booked Japanese wrestlers probably brings that. And he also has some unfortunate Kurt Angleish/overkill tendencies that crept into some of his matches. That said, he has a ton of excellent stuff. But Dick Murdoch feels more special. I'm leaning Murdoch but I'd rather not vote.
  11. Someone made a challenge on Twitter about workers who had great matches in 4 decades and I noticed Fugo is part of this small and illustrious circle of elite workers. FUGO OF THE DECADE: 90s - w Makoto Saito vs. Cosmo Soldier & Takeshi Sato, WYF 6/10/1997 2000s - w Takao Ohmori vs. Manabu Nakanishi & Mitsuhide Hirasawa, Z1 2/17/2008 2010s - w BUKI vs. Yuki Ishikawa & JOHTA, EXIT 7/14/2018 2020s - w Hiroaki Moriya vs. Tatsuhiko Nakagawa & Hiroyuki Iwahara, FU*CK 1/3/2022 Footage is a bit of an issue, notably he started showing up more in the 2010s as DVD releases of these craptastic indy shows started making their way on our Google Drives. That said more and more has been seeping out, for example Fugo sent a 30 minute match against Keita Yano to his buddy to randomly to put on youtube with no description, and as stuff continues to seep out over the next 3 or 4 years I can see Fugo ending up with a pretty decent spot on my list. You know someone is a special talent when they have a great match on a FU*CK show, for crying out loud.
  12. Jetlag

    Makoto Hashi

    I can't think of any of Hashis peers that are clearly better than him. Hashi in NOAH is insanely consistent, and when looking at his biggest matches I'd say he's easily better than the likes of Marufuji or KENTA. There's plenty of random midcard stuff where Hashi is bringing it hard. I remember a completely random opening match against Takeshio Rikioh that would be like, the 5th best match to happen in 2022. I can't think of many wrestlers in NOAH clearly better than Hashi aside from the big name guys who got to work epic main event matches much more often. Kikuchi? Honda? There's Saito, and I am hesitant to say Saito > Hashi because Saito's had a lot of solid but forgettable matches. Going back through under the radar NOAH matches, Hashi may easily be the best guy to watch. And I haven't dived nearly as deep into it as I intend to. I wouldn't be shocked if Hashi makes my list next time.
  13. I'm pretty sure you are confusing Shinichi Nakano with Shunji Takano there, at least as far as the teaming with Great Sasuke part goes.
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  15. I can't think of more high quality competition for Yoshida to face than Hiromi Yagi. Aja Kong and young Ayako Hamada weren't too shabby, either.
  16. These are the main matches. I recall maybe 1-2 other matches worth watching, but I can't remember the names of the opponents. Just check out any footage of him you can find, I guess.
  17. Sonoko Kato seems like a good contender. I think her story was that an injury derailed her career. She's had some good matches in the 2000s, but nothing on the level of other contemporaries like Meiko or Ayako Hamada, or what her early work was hinting at. There seem to be a lot of early GAEA workers whom this applies to due to retiring early. Chihiro Nakano, Rina Ishi, Hiromi Kato etci...
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  19. Jetlag

    Demus 3:16

    I did a post on Demus today diving into his pre-2010 work: https://reverseviperhold.blogspot.com/2022/07/gwe-watching-demus.html The Dorada and Bam Bam matches were damn great. It stands out how Demus has no problem stringing extremely complex stuff together even in relatively unimportant throwaway matches. He may not have a large resume of outstanding classics, but his average hitrate is pretty damn high.
  20. Jetlag

    Gilbert Leduc

    No discussion on Gilbert Leduc. Crying shame, because the guy is damn great in the 70s still. He has the bloody HENKER feud which is fascinating plus some gritty old technical matches against the likes of Bert Mychel. Insanely strong resume of great matches really considering we only have about a 20 match snapshot of his career, really. Not only is his technical ability great but his stoic fire when it's time to stand up and beat the shit out of someone is awesome.
  21. Jetlag

    Kagetsu

    No comments on Kagetsu? The 2015 match against Kuragaki is a sleeper match and, for my money, one of the finer joshi matches of the decade. The rest of Kagetsus work from what I've seen has its ups and downs. Nothing yet that delivers on the promise of that 2015 match, but I've not given up hope on finding more good stuff. Part of the problem seems to be him spending so much time in STARDOM, a promotion where it seems the things I value in wrestling are generally treated as of lesser importance and I don't really care for the brawling and comedy stuff. On average, Kagetsu is a solid modern day kickpad worker though.
  22. Jetlag

    Hideki Suzuki

    God no, that Funaki match was horrible. I'm starting to understand why people think shootstyle is garbage when matches like that are being pimped. I blame Funaki who is such a paycheck collector at this point but Suzuki wasn't exactly pushing him either. On the other hand, I watched his match against Keita Yano from this year. It was better, but far from touching on greatness. I was surprised he gave Keita a lot in that. Hideki clearly has some talent in him, but mostly falls short of producing classics. I've noticed he's pretty much a pure Billy Robinson tribute wrestler at this point and it seems to limit him since he always just busts out the spots. He's pretty good with them but other workers get so much more out of doing a 70s act.
  23. That punch exchange at 3:30 between Vachon and Rougeau Sr. with Vachon bleeding from his eye was pretty sick. Too bad there's no proper footage.
  24. Shinichi Nakano Easily overlooked Japanese undercarder who went from being a great tenacious underdog in AJPW and SWS to doing a heroic job carrying his own scummy WYF promotion, which is a story I'm really invested in. He also has some awesome feud under his belt participating in WYF vs. Shin FMW and WYF vs. WAR. Great outmatched hero type of guy, who also looks really good doing hard nosed technical wrestling and being a psycho potatoeing lower ranked guys. He''s grown to be one of my favourite Japanese heavyweights of the 90s, having a few Black Terry-like performances working his ass off on tiny shows, and he has a number of great matches from 1988-1997, possibly earlier than that depending on if I can find any of his New Japan matches. Footage is a bit of an issue but right now I'd say for someone who didn't make tape much he has a really strong body of work. w Shunji Takano vs. Ricky Fuyuki & Toshiaki Kawada, AJPW 7/19/1988 vs. Genichiro Tenryu, WAR 1/23/1996 w Masayoshi Motegi vs. Tarzan Goto & Ryo Miyake, WYF 7/16/1997
  25. Wow, where the hell did that come from? Really good match, as much a piece for Devils greatness as Kandoris. With early JWP and LLPW being hardly watched, Kandori has to be one of the most discoverable Japanese workers.
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