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Everything posted by superkix
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Not much of a match. Day gets an early fireman's carry, and he and Takada do a little scramble but Day is pretty dang clueless on the mat, which is the running theme with these singlet-wearin' gaijins. He kind of inadvertently will get an advantage on Takada, while Takada does a lot of maneuvering into position but loses whatever he was trying for. A lot of lame takedowns from Day, who tries for a leglock but Takada counters and taps him with one of his own. Meh.
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This is clipped down to a little over 3 minutes from a 20+ minute match but I guess, the Tamura/Anjoh interactions are your main selling point here. Tamura snaps off a neat twisting suplex, and then the finish with Anjoh grabbing the armbar off Tamura’s takedown attempt was pretty slick. Not much else to say about it.
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[1992-03-17-UWFi-E=MC2] Mark Silver vs Masahito Kakihara
superkix replied to Loss's topic in March 1992
The last few minutes with a bloodied Silver fighting pissed against Kakihara who still isn't holding anything back despite probably breaking Silver's nose is the best part of an otherwise long and tedious match. Silver has some cool throws and at this point, is likely the third best gaijin behind Albright and Scott at this point.- 11 replies
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Prime Alexander Otsuka could do anything.
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[2004-02-04-U-STYLE] Kiyoshi Tamura vs Tsuyoshi Kohsaka
superkix replied to Loss's topic in February 2004
I love a slow burn when it's done right and these two know how to do just that. The tension builds to the initial takedown before Tamura starts maneuvering his way around the mat. TK isn't as spry as Tamura but he's still scrappy and able to grab a hold whenever while still doing a little fancy maneuvering himself. Cool stuff from Tamura as usual, including a great front necklock counter, and TK busting out a bunch of great kneebars trying to submit the hometown hero. Loved the part where he's got Tamura in a kneebar, Tamura tries punching his way out and then TK creeps up and pops him in the face with slaps. The scrambling intensifies, the striking picks up, especially from Tamura, who lays into TK with big body knees and killer head kicks. And in the end, they're dancing around the mat, trying for a few different things in a final attempt at victory. Tamura's single leg crab doesn't do the trick but he's ultimately able to snap off the jujigatame for the submission.- 10 replies
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- U-STYLE
- February 4
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(and 4 more)
Tagged with:
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U-STYLE (2/4/2004) Hiroyuki Ito vs. Hajime Moriyama Whoa, suddenly Ito has really great knees and kicks, and Moriyama's just trying to grab a choke without getting kicked in the head. Nothing but a squash but Ito looked more aggressive here, taking Moriyama down with a nasty slap before taking him out for a good following a series of hard kicks. Kyosuke Sasaki vs. Crafter M A fun exhibition-y shoot maestro match (if that makes sense) between the masked trashbag pants-wearing Crafter M and Kyosuke Sasaki, who of course, knows how to do-si-do on the mat. Lots of counters and reversals before Sasaki starts taking the kicks to him, downing him with a great solebutt. Crafter can only try and legwhip him down to find a submission on the mat because, as we've all learned, his strikes stink. Eventually he gets a deep Fujiwara armbar takedown and stays in control of it, trapping Sasaki with the headscissors when he tries to escape. Cool moment. Sometimes it seems like Crafter will somehow roll himself into a hold, or accidentally trap Sasaki with something but in the end, after more kicks, Sasaki grabs the armbar for the win. Dokonjonosuke Mishima vs. Manabu Hara This was a fun Mishima highlight reel as Hara gets outclassed in just about every department (except his German suplex, of course, which he hits here back-to-back). Mishima quickly gets him in the submission that won him his last match but Hara escapes. He catches Hara's kick and turns into a pretty sweet legtrap belly-to-belly. He uses a cool hammerlocked hanging necklock. The final submission was cool, with Mishima snapping Hara over with a suplex, grabbing the leg and then cranking on it until Hara gives up. Ryuki Ueyama vs. Kazuki Okubo Lots of love taps to open before Okubo finally decides to get a little feisty with his slappy slaps and big lunging knees. But Ueyama is quick to respond with hard quick smacks of his own. Okubo appeared more confident here, especially on the mat, catching Ueyama in a calf hold and dropping down with the kneebar, and then rolling him up into a leglock. Ueyama's octopus-style final submission with him grabbing limbs to finish Okubo off was cool but otherwise, a decent enough match-up. Yasuhito Namekawa vs. Naoki Kimura Not much of a match. Namekawa dominates and although he's not very good, he’s aggressive and mauling and smothering, and finally KOs poor Kimura with a nasty high kick to the head. Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Tsuyoshi Kohsaka I love a slow burn when it's done right and these two know how to do just that. The tension builds to the initial takedown before Tamura starts maneuvering his way around the mat. TK isn't as spry as Tamura but he's still scrappy and able to grab a hold whenever while still doing a little fancy maneuvering himself. Cool stuff from Tamura as usual, including a great front necklock counter, and TK busting out a bunch of great kneebars trying to submit the hometown hero. Loved the part where he's got Tamura in a kneebar, Tamura tries punching his way out and then TK creeps up and pops him in the face with slaps. The scrambling intensifies, the striking picks up, especially from Tamura, who lays into TK with big body knees and killer head kicks. And in the end, they're dancing around the mat, trying for a few different things in a final attempt at victory. Tamura's single leg crab doesn't do the trick but he's ultimately able to snap off the jujigatame for the submission. An easy recommendation.
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U-STYLE (12/9/2003) Kazuki Okubo vs. Naoki Kimura Welp, Kimura continues to improve as a shoot-stylist - this time, on the mat. After a brief but feisty strike exchange, Kimura and Okubo roll around on the mat and Kimura manages some cool stuff, snagging limbs, countering throws with hanging necklocks, using a backpack-stule sleeper to down Okubo before finishing him off with the armbar. Okubo was decent here and although the actual set up tot he finish was pretty sloppy, he picks up the win with an armbar after some struggle. Kazushi Miyamoto vs. Ryu Echigo Miyamoto's got the look down but he doesn't really work the U-STYLE well. Echigo looked way better in all departments, from striking and takedowns and I really liked him grabbing the ankle hold counter out of Miyamoto's ankle hold. But after a German suplex, Miyamoto KOs him with a lariat. Manabu Hara vs. Crafter M Crafter M is a masked shooter nerd in garbage bag pants but when he's working the mat, he's not half bad. But boy, his strikes stink. Coolest moment of the match goes to Hara and his incredible German suplex but not much of a match otherwise. Yasuhito Namekawa vs. Hiroyuki Ito Even less of a match, which is disappointing, considering Namekawa's recommended debut match. Other than a few good strike exchangess between the two of them, Ito looked weak in there, lacking his usual spunk. And Nakemkawa was kind of just there...but he wins in the end with the choke sleeper. Dokonjonosuke Mishima vs. Ryuki Ueyama Decent match-up between these two but not as fancy-dancy as one might expect. Mishima immediately targets Ueyama's bandaged right leg with hard ass kicks and they follow that up with a nice scramble, on the ground, with Ueyama snagging a deep sleeper and forcing Mishima to the ropes. The finish was also pretty sweet, as Mishima catches the foot and sets up for an STF before turning him over in a grounded rear waistlock with the bad leg trapped. Wataru Sakata vs. Kyosuke Sasaki A slow, methodical burn but recommended viewing, with Sakata still being a dick and Sasaki his usual crafty self. I liked the stalemate opening with Sasaki showing off his canvas skillz. Sakata gets a hell of a leg trip in the corner but can't follow up on the mat. He lacks Sasaki's finesse and works more of a bully smothering style. He's like a less refined Hideki Suzuki. The striking picks up and Sakata punishes him with mounted palms and body bunches. When he tries for the double wristlock, Sasaki counters with the armbar. When Sakata tries to get away with forearm rubs, Sasaki gives it right back to him. At some point, Sasaki gets busted open and Sakata overhwhelms him with knees and smacks him down for the KO. Had the groundwork been a little more interesting, this would have a great match but it's still good and worth a watch. Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Katsuhisa Fujii This is a big test for young Fujii, whose looked dominant in his 2-4 minute squashes but will he fare as well against the master Tamura? The contrast of power vs. technique is one of my favorite match-ups and they do a good job of establishing that here. This felt the most UWFi Tamura of any U-STYLE match thus far, with Fujii using his strength and throws to break him down. I loved Tamura wildly fighting out of the German. Fujii always manages to grab a few holds, which aren't elaborate or anything, but fit the theme of trying to break Tamura. Tamura stuns him with a high kick to the head and keeps sweeping Fujii's leg but Fujii fights back and finally hits the German on Tamura (even though Tamura really doesn't want to get German'd). Tamura retaliates with kicks and this time, defends with a front necklock and when Fujii tries for a second German, Tamura takes him down with the double wristlock for the submission win. Fun match and an easy recommendation. That's it for 2003. MVPs for the year are Tamura, Sasaki, Sakata and Mishima. Up next, 2004. Duh.
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Ryota Hama
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U-STYLE (10/6/2003) This was a one night tournament to decide Kiyoshi Tamura's next challenger and probably the most easily skippable show thus far. Nothing outright bad but nothing memorable. Katsuhisa Fujii vs. Ryu Echigo Hot opening with Echigo coming at Fujii with a bunch of baby strikes but when he tries to rush him with a big knee, Fujii catches him and plants him with a modified uranage before laying in with the big open hands. Another Fujii squash but with Echigo at least trying to a grab a few submission holds, only for Fujii to power out each time. A couple suplexes later, Fujii advances via KO off his German. Kazuki Okubo vs. Manabu Hara Not as good as their previous match but still pretty decent, as they both have good chemistry together. Hara brings out Okubo's spunkiness and Okubo makes Hara work. Okubo's once again plays the fun underdog, getting taken down by Hara but fighting his way out to put Hara on the rocks. The match goes the full 15:00 and so it gets extra time, Okubo comes out of the gate kicking but Hara dumps him with that awesome high-angle German of his and tries to go for the sleeper, but Okubo breaks away and KOs Hara with a messy flurry of strikes. Kyosuke Sasaki vs. Naoki Kimura Easily Kimura's best match in U-Style at this point and probably the MOTN. Kimura opens with a nice quick barrage to take down Sasaki. The matwork is much faster-paced, thanks to Sasaki, but Kimura does a pretty good job of keeping pace. Kimura manages a belly-to-back takedown but can't follow up, with leads to Sasaki downing him with a series of kicks. The finish was neat, as Sasaki rolls him up with a front chancery and than hops onto the jujigatame for the submission. Hiroyuki Ito vs. Ryuki Ueyama Ueyama is back in purple -- without his belts this time -- and after a bit of dancing to start, he drops Ito with a combo of quick slaps and body punches. Ueyama is very slap happy throughout the match but Ito dishes out some too, with his bigger slaps and elbows. He gets a yellow card for kicking Ueyama on the ground. During the backhalf of the match, Ito stays on Ueyama's taped right leg with stiff kicks, keeping him staggered and trying to submit him on the ground. Nothing super captivating on mat and the finish was lame, as Ueyama taps to a leglock within arm's reach of the ropes. Katsuhisa Fujii vs. Kazuki Okubo Even more of a Fujii-dominate match as he immediately takes down Okubo with a suplex and bullies him from the front mount with big open hands. Okubo doesn't really get much of anything in terms of offense before Fujii KOs him following back-to-back German suplexes. Kyosuke Sasaki vs. Hiroyuki Ito A match that starts off plenty hot, with Ito using big kicks and knees, and Sasaki using his technical prowess with slick takedowns and leglocks. But the match slows down in the back half as they struggle over submissions. Ito is pretty rough around the edges and does better from a vertical base but he takes Sasaki down to his final point before getting caught in the finishing armbar. Katsuhisa Fujii vs. Kyosuke Sasaki Uh oh, this is Fujii's longest match to date but it's against on of the early MVPs of U-Style in Sasaki. This was a pretty fun much and right around there with the Sasaki/Kimura match in terms of quality. Fujii is big and uses his size to his advantage but Sasaki is fiery and comes out strong, getting German suplexed by Fujii but turning it into an armbar upon impact. Fujii snagging the arm with his legs was great but in general, he isn't the smoothest cat on the mat. That's not necessarily a bad things because of how he works the match, throwing big hands and jumping knees and suplex throws and shoto camel clutches. Sasaki can only really try and submit him on the ground but that isn't so successful here. Fujii hits another German and Sasaki immediate pops up, only to get submitted with a poorly applied rear choke. Not a very good finish to an otherwise fun match.
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My interest level in this is zero but good for Cody and his gang.
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Oh my god, Wataru Sakata is such a complete dick in this match and every second of it rules. Ito becomes quite the underdog by the end of it. But to open, they're not playing around with their strikes. Once Sakata gets him on the mat, he's rubbing his wrist taped wrists in his face and hammering him with body shots. He takes him over with a nice Saito suplex before walloping Ito with big open hands from the front mount. Oh, Ito dishes out some too but not as hot as Sakata. He rubs his fists in Ito's face, pops him with a few more nasty body shots and then tries to break him with the double wristlock. Ito fights out and gets a little revenge on Sakata, taking him to the ropes with an armbar. I like that he keeps trying to do what Sakata has done to him but Sakata just gives it back to him twice as hard. After some more elbow washes and nasty palm strikes, Sakata puts him in the single leg crab. The fans chant for Ito to escape but as he reaches for the ropes, Sakata drags him back to the middle and submits him. Another great match and easy rec.
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Mishima's just so much fun to watch in there and Sasaki is a great counterbalance. Real competitive, seamless grappling with some snappy strikes and tons of awesome takedowns and transitions. Sasaki tries to dominate early but Mishima uses his cleverness and slick movements to escape. Mishima dishes out plenty of big high kicks and spin kicks, and his snap German suplex was great. Sasaki is hanging with Mishima on the mat and later, with the strikes, and by the end, they're down to their last point. They're slipping and sliding all over the mat, trying to grab a hold. Mishima chops him down to a knee with kicks, snaps him over with a suplex into a front neck chancery. Sasaki survives it but finally taps to a dope rear ankle hold. Terrific match and an easy recommendation.
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U-STYLE (6/29/2003) Ryu Echigo vs. Naoki Kimura This was a long nine minutes. Kimura already isn't one of my U-Style favorites but Echigo has potential and he looked strong in the finish, hitting a front suplex > German suplex > armbar. But the first half was more or less a stalemate, the takedowns were kind of lame and the groundwork wasn't very exciting. There were some decent strikes but not enough of them to make this very interesting. Katsuhisa Fujii vs. Tomohiko Yoshida So far, Fujii hasn't wrestled a match over 3:00 and again, this is another squash but damn, if Fujii doesn't seem like the total package. Great look, unrefined, stiff and tempestuous. He's a dude who seems like he would've killed in Inoki-era NJPW. When a German suplex doesn't do the trick, Fujii KOs him with the dragon suplex. Yup, my kind of dude. Manabu Hara vs. Kazuki Okubo Hey, it's the best Manabu Hara U-STYLE match thus far. Much more spirited than the usual Hara fare and Okubo has more of a fire lit under his ass than he did in the Sakata match. He goes after Hara's legs with kicks, peppers him with better palm strikes from the guard. Hara's more giving but still gets to show off, delivering his pretty German suplex into the rear choke and using a really nice double leg takedown. They try more stuff on the mat, with Okubo managing an armbar and a hanging necklock. The finish sees them trading a ton of kicks and strikes before Hara snags the surprise armbar for the win. Pretty decent match, could go either way. Kyosuke Sasaki vs. Dokonjonosuke Mishima This may be my favorite U-Style match so far. Mishima's just so much fun to watch in there and Sasaki is a great counterbalance. Real competitive, seamless grappling with some snappy strikes and tons of awesome takedowns and transitions. Sasaki tries to dominate early but Mishima uses his cleverness and slick movements to escape. Mishima dishes out plenty of big high kicks and spin kicks, and his snap German suplex was great. Sasaki is hanging with Mishima on the mat and later, with the strikes, and by the end, they're down to their last point. They're slipping and sliding all over the mat, trying to grab a hold. Mishima chops him down to a knee with kicks, snaps him over with a suplex into a front neck chancery. Sasaki survives it but finally taps to a dope rear ankle hold. Terrific match and an easy recommendation. Wataru Sakata vs. Hiroyuki Ito Oh my god, Wataru Sakata is such a complete dick in this match and every second of it rules. What a great companion piece to the Sasaki/Mishima match. Ito becomes quite the underdog by the end of it. But to open, they're not playing around with their strikes. Once Sakata gets him on the mat, he's rubbing his wrist taped wrists in his face and hammering him with body shots. He takes him over with a nice Saito suplex before walloping Ito with big open hands from the front mount. Oh, Ito dishes out some too but not as hot as Sakata. He rubs his fists in Ito's face, pops him with a few more nasty body shots and then tries to break him with the double wristlock. Ito fights out and gets a little revenge on Sakata, taking him to the ropes with an armbar. I like that he keeps trying to do what Sakata has done to him but Sakata just gives it back to him twice as hard. After some more elbow washes and nasty palm strikes, Sakata puts him in the single leg crab. The fans chant for Ito to escape but as he reaches for the ropes, Sakata drags him back to the middle and submits him. Another great match and easy rec. Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Takaku Fuke Again, another match that could go either way but it's not really much of a match -- more like Tamura beating the shit out of Fuke, which is cool, too. Fuke tries to rush him and overwhelm him with strikes but once Tamura explodes on him in the corner with a quick strike combo, it's the beginning of the end. Tons of great strikes from Tamura. One of the highlights comes when he blocks Fuke's takedown and drops him with a knee. By the end, Fuke is staggering and Tamura puts him out of his misery for the TKO.
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my wife and i started watching Nathan For You on Hulu and the haunted house episode, the owner looks like he could be Kane's brother
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Waiting for the Switch version
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U-STYLE (4/6/2003) Hiroyuki Ito vs. Tomohiko Yoshida Decent opener -- Yoshino with some love taps, Ito responding with some tough love slaps. They transition to the mat and maneuver around looking for an opening but Yoshida lacks the confidence and experience needed to take control. For example, he slides in for a single leg takedown but gets caught with a rear naked choke and then Ito starts popping him with front mount slaps. Ito's the better striker of the two and more willing to try things on the mat. When Yoshida tries for a neck crank, ito has a great counter for him and ends up tapping him with a triangle. Manabu Hara vs. Ryu Echigo Echigo got a little more time to shine here against Hara but again, possibly due to Hara's lack of captaining skills, the match meanders. That being said, Echigo got some nice takedowns and throws. Definitely an improvement from Hara's first match but still not great. Katsuhisa Fujii vs. Naoki Kimura Another fun, short Fujii squash with tons of quick opens exchanged to start before Fujii takes Kimura down with knees and kicks. Kimura's able to get a takedown and try for the rear choke but can't get anything going before Fujii lays into him with more hard kicks and KOs him with the German suplex. Takehiro Murahama vs. Kyosuke Sasaki Murahama's really great in his straddling shoot-style/pro-wrestling role, and Sasaki does a good job of playing to Murahama's strengths, as well as his own. He's got some pretty slick matwork to counter Murahama's more feisty approach and I liked his flying armbar. At times, they're constantly switching and reversing holds, trying to sustain something long enough for a submision. When Murahama comes at him with hard kicks, Sasaki uses a double leg takedown just to col him down. But Murahama has a little mean streak in him with his stricks and gets more and more aggressive with them as the match progresses. Loved when he tries for the irish whip and Sasaki holds onto the ropes to block it, kicking Murahama down and taking him to the ropes with a leglock. Also he gets a nice reverse armbar counter to the first German suplex attempt but in the end, Murahama hits it and taps him with the armbar. Easy recommendation. Wataru Sakata vs. Kazuki Okubo This had some cool moments and served mostly as a solid Sakata showcase but it felt pretty heatless through most of the match as Okubo doesn't really fire back.Again, it seems like an issue of confidence and Okubo not being sure of himself. Slower start as Sakata works a more smothering style on the mat but when he's up on his feet, he shines. He fires off a nice belly-to-belly suplex into the rear guard and lays into Okubo with some hard open hands and kicks, especially when he's in the front mount. There's a fun moment where he's got Okubo in a leglock and Okubo is trying in vain to slap his way out of him. Sakata cuts Okubo's forehead with a strike and submits him with a pretty gnarly-looking single leg crab. Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Dokonjonosuke Mishima Can you image if Mishima had a Matt Riddle-like run through the Japanese promotions in the mid-00s? He has such a unique presence and this was a terrific little match-up, with Mishima showing off his quasi-capoeira style and judo throws against Tamura's slick-as-catshit counter and matwork. Mishima manages some hard slams and I really liked his takedown into the headscissors, transitioning into the armbar. Of course, Tamura's great here as the master, tip-toeing out of trap attempts and scoring takedowns>submission holds. The struggle on the ground was conveyed well, although because Tamura's is king, there are times when he looks bored at Mishima smothering his leg with a hold. Heading into the finish, an exhausted Mishima comes at Tamura with a palm thrust but Tamura is able to take him down into a necklock, flipping him over into the armbar and cranking it on for the submission win. Easy recommendation.
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[2018-08-18-NOAH-Kawasaki Festival] Takashi Sugiura vs Go Shiozaki
superkix replied to nivvad's topic in August 2018
These guys like to hit each other hard and do it for half an hour. Shiozaki is underrated and really could've benefited from the NJPW feud that never happened but he gives his all here and Sugiura dishes it out. Sugiura throws some of the best-looking elbows anywhere and he delivers some real nasty ones here, especially when Shiozaki's down in the corner. If anything, this match benefited from a lack of crazy big spots and an overkill finish. Shiozaki's picturesque moonsault and Sugiura's running knee in the corner>deadlift superplex combo was plenty big for this kind of a match. Sugiura proves that he can still go hard in the paint for his age and Shiozaki bumps big and sells hard for him throughout. I really liked him trying to withstand the punishment toward the finish before Sugiura resorts to the headbutts. Probably the best NOAH match of the year? At least, from what I've seen, which hasn't been much. -
Not really watching much modern stuff aside from a few things here and there. Mostly watching stuff for Fighting Network FRIENDS, and doing a chronological viewing of UWFi and U-STYLE.
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We're back again for Kakiride 2! Direct link is HERE! https://fightingnetworkfriends.podiant.co/e/368b14e355aeee/ to stream, or subscribe to the RSS feed. You can also find us on Apple Podcasts. FNF 020: Slappy Kaki Returns! (Kakiride 2 Mini-Episode) The anniversary episode? Who cares, Kakihara is back with his second annual Kakiride show! Is it as good as the first? Is Hideki Suzuki the best in the world? Will Tatsuo Nakano ever age? Will Yoshiaki Fujiwara always remain the GOAT? Brennan and Andy test a newer, nicer microphone and record IN PERSON over at Brennan's new place, for this somewhat shorter episode. No 3rd segment here, just a deep dive and look at the sequel to the show that started the podcast in the first place - with a lot of love to our main dude, Masahito Kakihara. Topics discussed: WE HAVE A NEW SHIRT! Check out the Bigcartel page. Monterrey, Mexico and where we have been Is wrestling any good? Doubtful! Kakihara, Kakiride and all that it entails. & More? Follow us on Twitter: @fightfriends @trillyrobinson BigCartel: http://fightingnetworkfriends.bigcartel.com Email at: [email protected] Instagram: @fightnetworkfriends Youtube at: http://tinyurl.com/FightFriends Pre-orders for the new shirt are open at https://fightingnetworkfriends.bigcartel.com/ til Friday.
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I really enjoyed their first tag match and the rematch felt like a different match entirely but was almost the perfect complement. The vets jump the younguns early on and try to take out Nomura with a Doomsday Device but Nomura's able to roll up Suzuki in an armbar. Love pissy Nomura with his slaps and kicks to Suzuki. The exchanges between Suzuki and Abe were also heated and fun, with Abe trying to shoot in on Hideki and Hideki later grabbing his face in the ropes and bootscraping him. Hideki is so shitty with Abe and it's awesome. There's a real great moment where Nomura runs in and knocks down Hideki, then slaps Sekimoto in the face before running away. Sekimoto chokes Abe with a t-shirt and when the ref gets on him, he whips the referee with it. After some hard body shots, Hideki belly-to-belly suplexes Nomura but Nomura's able to trap the arm and fights to get the full extension. He continues going after the arm with kicks and armbreakers but Hideki counters with a neat cradle takedown into a small package. Sekimoto is still one of the best charismatic power dudes out there. He eats a bunch of slaps from Nomura/Abe and gets dumped with a German suplex, which leads to the finish. Nomura fights out of Sekimoto's German attempt, slaps the shit out of him, but gets caught in an extra big powerslam from Sekimoto. Really fun tag match.
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In a similar vein to the RINGS thread but...with U-STYLE. I'm taking a break from my UWFi deep dive (mainly because I'm not looking forward to watching a 25+ minute Tom Burton match) and picking up U-STYLE with the first seven shows. It's Tamura and a bunch of young studs shoot-stylin' around in what I could only describe as a BattlARTS/RINGS mashup. I'll keep a running list of recommended matches to dip your toes in. 2003 Yasuhito Namekawa vs. Kyosuke Sasaki (2/15/2003) Takehiro Murahama vs. Kazuki Okubo (2/15/2003) Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Wataru Sakata (2/15/2003) Takehiro Murahama vs. Kyosuke Sasaki (4/6/2003) Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Dokonjonosuke Mishima (4/6/2003) Kyosuke Sasaki vs. Dokonjonosuke Mishima (6/29/2003) Wataru Sakata vs. Hiroyuki Ito (6/29/2003) Wataru Sakata vs. Kyosuke Sasaki (12/9/2003) Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Katsuhisa Fujii (12/9/2003) 2004 Kyosuke Sasaki vs. Crafter M (2/4/2004) Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Tsuyoshi Kohsaka (2/4/2004) Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Kyosuke Sasaki (3/13/2004) Hiroyuki Ito vs. Kyosuke Sasaki (8/7/2004) Alexander Otsuka vs. Ryuki Ueyama (8/7/2004) Masahito Kakihara vs. Yuki Ishikawa (8/7/2004) Yuki Ishikawa vs. Crafter M (8/14/2004) Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Hiroyuki Ito (8/14/2004) Alexander Otsuka vs. Kiyoshi Tamura (8/14/2004) Yuki Ishikawa vs. Hiroyuki Ito (10/9/2004) Ryuki Ueyama vs. Seichi Ikemoto (10/9/2004) Dokonjonosuke Mishima vs. Crafter M (12/7/2004) Yasuhito Namekawa vs. Kyosuke Sasaki (12/7/2004) Ryuki Ueyama & Seichi Ikemoto vs. Kiyoshi Tamura & Takaku Fuke (12/7/2004) 2005 Frank Shamrock vs. Daisuke Nakamura (11/25/2005) Kyoshi Tamura vs. Josh Barnett (11/25/2005) U-STYLE (2/15/03) Katsuhisa Fujii vs. Ryu Echigo This is the Katsuhisa Fujii show and it's okay because the Fujii show has everything I like: suplexes, kicks, slaps, knees, armbars. He wrestles like a UFO guy and even has a bit of that Murakami scowl. Short but fun squash and in the end, he dumps Echigo with a German and taps him with the armbar. Manabu Hara vs. Naoki Kimura Manabu Hara has never been one of my favorite BattlARTS guys and he has trouble controlling the flow of the match in an engaging way. Kimura clearly hasn't worked very many 'worked' matches so there's a ton of slower ground-based struggle. The strikes aren't really there. Not a very exciting match, save for Hara's finishing German suplex KO. Yasuhito Namekawa vs. Kyosuke Sasaki This was a blast -- a much more scrappy, spunky fight, which I love. Namekawa has a great look and presence, and he's much bigger than Sasaki so he can slam him down with spinebusters and snappy belly-to-belly suplexes and cool cradled throws. He gets a yellow card for kicking Sasaki on the ground so we now know he's a bad boy. Sasaki tries some fancy things on the mat and ends up managing something out of the attempt. He gets a nice roll up into an ankle hold and hits a German, trying to transition into the armbar but Namekawa is quick to get a foot on the ropes. There's a heated little front mount slap battle before Namekawa uses a...unique dragon screw for the takedown and finally taps him with a cool legtrap armbar/facelock combination. Easy recommendation. Ryuki Ueyama vs. Hiroyuki Ito Ueyama looks like a million bucks with his royal purple and two belts. He's pretty slick in there in a Kiyoshi Tamura kinda way...but he's no Kiyoshi Tamura. Loved the opening with a fiery palm thrust exchange and nice blur of back-and-forth counter wrestling. Then it settles into a more defense-based match with occasional strikes. The striking escalates late into the match as Ito starts dishing out shots and rocks Ueyama with a head kick. They fight over an armbar and trade more strikes before Ueyama slides into the surprise heel hook for the submission. Some neat spots. Takehiro Murahama vs. Kazuki Okubo Murahama, the babyfaced rookie phenom from the year 2000, is here and he just wants to pro-wrestle. This is a pretty fun match and worth checking out to see Murahama running the ropes and hitting enziguries. I like how Okubo is the spoiler in this match, trying to keep it pure shoot-style. He knows his way around the mat and actually looked a bit cleaner than Murahama. But Murahama's department is striking and his strikes were snug. But Okubo also snaps off some great lanky-legged kicks. There were a couple of hiccups along the way but the finishing stretch was really good. Good drama with Okubo's calf hold and then Murahama destroying him with the German before locking in the armbar for the submission. U-STYLE really loves German suplexes. . Kiyoshi Tamura vs. Wataru Sakata King Kiyoshi wants to start off with a handshake but Sakata says no with a slap to the face. Really good match that escalates throughout. There's a lot of jockeying for position early on, with neither really getting the advantage. Sakata tries for a swanky handspring transition but he can't catch Tamura with a hold. Tamura takes him to the ropes with an armbar and then dumps him with the waterwheel drop and puts on the single leg, turning it into a kneebar and sending him back to the ropes. They slaps it out as Tamura tries to take control of the leg again but when he tries to turn him over, Sakata's able to grab the leglock and send Tamura scrambling. Tamura's kicks and knees looked great as he downs Sakata with a combo and his selling of Sakata's own kicks and knees was terrific. Sakata wins with the rear neclock as he should. Easy recommendation.
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it's gotta be Big Show in the Waterboy or Randy Savage in Spider-Man. but the real answer is probably Don Frye in that Godzilla: Final Wars.
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Great shoot-style match with Hideki bringing his heavy, aggressive grappling and Nakamura the slick maneuvering and takedowns. I love how Hideki bulldogs his opponents into a corner. He throws a nice belly-to-belly suplex and when they're the mat, he's grabbing limbs and trying to hurt Nakamura. Nakamura uses a rope break to avoid the German and manages to take Hideki to the ropes with his single leg takedown into the cross heel hold, and then with the armbar takedown into the armbar. Hideki's too much for him though and in the end, in true UWF fashion, Hideki KOs him with a German suplex>dragon suplex combo.