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PeteF3

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Everything posted by PeteF3

  1. Solo Cups! It's like a high school party.
  2. Good TV match, though it must be noted that the heat machine was out in full-force for this, another Owen/Mero match at the end of a long taping cycle. Plus the match got overshadowed by 9 million people on commentary, including interjections from Pat Patterson and Gorilla Monsoon as there was as much focus on the "return" of Razor & Diesel as on the match. Mero looked really good here
  3. Terrific match! Probably the #2 GAEA match of the year so far. Uematsu has fully taken over Sakie Hasegawa's spot as joshi's Ricky Morton, except she's already better offensively than either Morton or Sakie. Just full of energy. The pace is pure joshi but the layout is almost Crockett-esque, between the babyface double-teams and heel cut-offs, cheating, and double-teams of their own. There's also a crowd-brawling segue in here where Uematsu even gets to show off a bit of a mean streak, so maybe she's joshi's Brian Pillman instead. Loss mentioned that GAEA didn't make the set because they couldn't find a Lorefice/PUNQ/whoever rating higher than ***1/2. That's perfectly fair, as that's about where I'd top out on my ratings of the best matches of '96. It can't touch AJW's highs, but the young talent in the promotion seems to have lots more promise than AJW's, the crowds are hotter, and the action is more consistent if not nearly as high-end.
  4. No idea who the other ladies are, but they actually take most of this. One of them (sorry, no indication given as to who was whom) does a lot of cool takedowns and leg work, and oddly enough KAORU has a greater advantage when both opponents are in together. Eventually they resort to actually shoving the referee on near-falls in lieu of doing traditional pin saves. KAORU looks to be on her way to putting one of them down with a la majistral, but the partner tips the cradle over and the handicappers actually pull off the upset (???) win. Hardly essentail viewing but a fun match with a surprise finish, which you don't always get in joshi.
  5. This was on FLIK's recommended GAEA list and you can see why, as it involves a major joshi star against a top-quality worker. Yamada blitzes Nagayo at the start, and is about to go for the Gory Special Bomb in the early going. Nagayo rolls through with a neat counter and applies an anklelock and...gets the tapout at 1:51?? And it's a one-fall match, too. Both women say something on the mic afterward. Is this part of a deeper story? Nagayo jobbing out the AJW worker? Weird. I guess the big story comes afterward, as Nagayo introduces Akira Hokuto to the audience, in what was probably seen as a big deal at the time.
  6. "Kane the Undertaker" was a name that only existed in matches and segments that were taped before Survivor Series, including a few squashes and an Update. He was already just "The Undertaker" by the time Survivor Series aired live.
  7. I was underwhelmed by this. This WarGames felt more like a contractual obligation than a logical booking move. It's not the worst of the '90s WarGames or even close, but the highlights are pretty scattered. Ric Flair going nuts and low-blowing everyone is the high watermark, as well as seeing Farmer doing a pretty authentic Sting impersonation even if it draws "WE WANT STING" chants. Good heat for the post-match but it, like a ton of upcoming Savage beatdowns, goes on for too long. It's no wonder Savage wanted out of this program.
  8. Just the finish here, but it's good chop-down-the-tree stuff and the SLAM! Gigantic, monster pop for that. Nick Patrick has a loooong conversation with him while Savage is busy with Hogan and the Outsiders, and he's ganged up on and pinned.
  9. Was this part of the PPV or on Main Event beforehand? Seems way more effective to run it on TV. A terrific recap, in any case. "WCW WarGames, a match that has been part of its tradition, now becomes a part of its survival."
  10. Goddamn I want to see this ladder match.
  11. This starts off slow, but Tenryu is so good at projecting a character, and putting over the idea that he's making Takada come to him, that it doesn't matter. This turns into a war, like a worked version of Rutten-Funaki, with both guys beating some fire and passion into the other. The stand-up strike exchanges have turned into a cliche in Japan but the chop vs. kick battle really works here, enhanced by the nasty cut over Tenryu's eye. The ending *does* come off a little nonchalant, and again reminds one of Pancrase, though I doubt that was the intention. Still a terrific match that lives up to its dream match billing.
  12. Dreamer's had 16 concussions in 14 months, and somehow isn't a vegetable today. Pretty much a total puff piece, but an effective one. "Mr. Dreamer, your promotion appears to have the momentum of a runaway freight train--why are you so popular?" Even the editing seems like it was done by ECW in-house. Missy has fallen apart quickly--sheesh.
  13. Francine and Shane Douglas are in an indoor pool talking to Gary Wolfe's personal trainer about the extent of his neck injury. Fonzie reveals the reason why Joey Styles grew a moustache. D-Von wanted to turn the Dudleyz hardcore--and now Buh Buh Ray officially seems to be a threat. Big Dick Dudley grunts. Shane and Francine have moved to the ocean. Lance Wright hawks a t-shirt. More antics from JT and Guido by the Rocky statue. Brian Lee is teaming up with the Eliminators. Steve Williams stares into the camera. Taz is going to beat some fear into somebody. Divine Brown is back, and her opinion of Stevie Richards hasn't improved. Lance Wright has an unfortunate run-in with a boom mic--"Now I know how Missy feels." Alfonso rants about Johnny Smith. Don't expect headlocks and drop toe holds from the Gangstas. A drugged-out-looking Lori Fullington wants Sandman to die. Teaming up Doc & Gordy again seems like a strong selling point for an ECW show, I must admit. I like Perry Saturn's motivation, too.
  14. Stick it to the censors! I think they were still hoping to run that Pillman vs. Shane match, as we're rapidly nearing the ECW-WWF working relationship.
  15. I do like the idea of DiBiase as "The Boss," but I question if he really fits in with this group. No Giant, which of course is a faux pas and a sign that the booking was both brilliant (the fake Sting angle) and chaotic at the same time. Also in an old-school touch for a new-school angle, this is naturally cut behind a steel cage, as all pre-cage-match promos should be.
  16. There was JUST enough doubt here (the canned-sounding Sting dialogue, the weird robe that the real Sting never wore, the rain) to have us think that maybe it was a fake Sting--but we didn't know for SURE it was fake. And even if it WAS fake, was that kayfabe fake or "Sting wasn't available for the angle" fake? So many intriguing questions coming out of this, and such brilliant execution all throughout the night. We established the NWO was in the parking lot already, we established there was a 6th man, Nick Patrick may or may not have been involved with this, etc. Hard to believe this is WCW we're even talking about.
  17. Loved Patrick putting Gene in his place. We get highlights (or the entire match) from a brilliant finish the previous week, as Patrick disqualifies Luger for bumping into him on the opening lock-up, leading to the chase and stolen squad car. Meanwhile, the Outsiders, Hogan, and Giant are plastering flyers over cars in the parking lot, while DiBiase is talking to someone inside a limo. Hmm, can't be any of the 4 other members of the NWO...
  18. Not having seen WarGames I do hope Arn does something to live up to the fire-and-brimstone promos he's cutting.
  19. "Nightmare Matches" at the Big One--first Woflie has to face the Dundees in a handicap match, then he teams with Jesse James Armstrong to wrestle them in a barbed wire match with the loser getting painted yellow. Doesn't get much more Memphis than that.
  20. I'm no MMA expert but I did have the same observation Childs did: this was hurt by the ban on punching and ground striking. As a result, when things went into the mat, we got a lot of fumbling around and stalemating but not a ton of action, and for awhile I was wondering what this was doing here--the early Pancrase stuff I understood, and worked as a non-worked companion piece to the other shootstyle stuff of the early '90s. That said, the last five minutes of stand-up striking, are hugely dramatic and are as exciting as any worked shoot, and Bas' finishing knee is a true holy-shit moment. This really does illustrate how cooperative even the most no-frills matches are in UWFI and RINGS, but it also shows the appeal of real fighting in the end. Ultimately I'm glad I saw this.
  21. Sid teams up with some Special Olympians to win a tug-o'-war against an elephant. That elephant should have known better than to tangle with Sid in Sid's natural environment, the softball diamond. JR hypes up a 50,000-crowd for an Exhibition Stadium show, which seems a tad exaggerated. Meanwhile Mr. Backlund makes his return, and hypes up the man who will win the "WWWF Champion." But first, a man he has a lot of abomination for, but a man he respects as an amateur and a professional: The Iron Sheik! Ross: "I thought the Iron Sheik was in a home somewhere!" Sheiky still knows how to get heat after all this time. JR and Kelly shit all over this and Sheik is cut off by a commercial break.
  22. This was kind of disappointing, in comparison to the previous bouts between these two. Bullshit finish as well, though it's understandable as Mero was already pegged for the finals and Austin can't be doing jobs now. Even still, it wasn't well-executed or built up to. Pillman on commentary hypes up an interview at Mind Games with Bret Hart, and also teases that he and Owen have reconciled. Interesting development--I thought Bret wasn't officially signed until October or so, but they're already building up the big Bret/Austin clash to the point where you'd think it was a done deal.
  23. It isn't JIP, but there is a cut after Hansen levels Kobashi with the tope (or the power bomb on the floor--I forget which) and they go back to being inside the ring. Anyway, yeah, this was spectacular and an out-of-nowhere MOTYC. And from the looks of it, Hansen's last great singles match. He's past the point of being able to take big bumps, so he and Kobashi rely on stiffness, timing, and smart work instead, to this match's credit. I've read criticism of Kobashi for not carrying himself as an ace, but he does that here--from the moment he jumps Hansen before the bell, he comes off as the aggressor and the champion here, while in a reversal for this feud Hansen comes off as the guy needing to prove something. He gets in his share of licks, though, and Kobashi does some fantastic punch-drunk selling. Then Hansen almost tops him when he accidentally Lariats the post, which is the turning point of the match. He gets in a super-hot near-fall when he hits Kobashi with a right-armed Lariat, but it's not the "correct" arm and it's not enough to put Kenta down. Kenta going for the Lariat at the end and Hansen having to play keep-away, and failing, is a wonderful, beautifully poetic capper to this match and this rivalry. It feels every bit as impactful and sea-changing as Aja putting down Bull Nakano with the guillotine legdrop. In comparison to the 7/93 and '94 matches, this seems like a Lost Classic.
  24. Shit, with Bret giving them an "in" with that show, that's probably exactly what they did.
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