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Everything posted by MikeCampbell
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A big shocker on Collision last night with The whole tournament has made for some great TV over the last couple of weeks. Also, Lio Rush and Action Andretti seem to be splitting off from Top Flight. And the biggest takeaway from the segment is that Leila Grey is the best promo of the whole lot of them.
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Between last night and the PPV, Excalibur has thoroughly beaten us over the head with the notion that Danielson's career as "a full time in ring wrestler" is over.
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I saw on Twitter that Jacobs was one of the people against the idea of pushing both Daniel Garcia and Takeshita. Which makes the booking at Wrestle Dream extra interesting.
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[2002-04-07-NOAH] Jun Akiyama vs Yoshinari Ogawa
MikeCampbell replied to Jetlag's topic in April 2002
This is a match that's benefitted from hindsight and perspective. People lost their minds when it happened, but it really wasn't all that big of a deal. Between Kobashi's long layoff, Nagata's credibility being a goose egg, and NOAH's inability to elevate anyone as a credible threat, Jun had already run out of real challengers. So Akiyama losing to Ogawa in this way doesn't really hurt him at all. Hell, four years later he lost the GHC to Marufuji in a similar fashion (although it was a much longer match), so if anything, this established him as being vulnerable to flash pins and cradles. -
I checked out Death Before Dishonor on a delay this morning (watching Rampage with my father takes priority on Friday nights). It was honestly a pretty good show, overall. The only real black mark on it was the six-way TV Title match. It was a complete trainwreck, which makes me wonder if Atlantis Jr. just isn't very good, to have a real match with any of them, or if TK just wanted to get as many dudes on the show as possible to justify their employment.
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[2004-05-03-WWE-Raw] Chris Benoit vs Shawn Michaels
MikeCampbell replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in May 2004
I have to echo everyone else's posts on this one. This is a super great TV match, with Shawn deferring to the champion, and working his style of match. Benoit works this like it's still 1997 and he looks at Michaels, but he really sees Kevin Sullivan (sans the trips to the bathroom). I'm seriously trying to think of another post comeback Shawn match that even sniffs this one, and I'm drawing a blank. The finish is beyond awful, but the last thirty or so seconds don't do anything to tear down what Shawn and Benoit built up for the first 27:30. -
From what I can gather, this is Yutaka Kobayashi's pro debut, I can't find any sort of pro wrestling background on him, only MMA stuff. And it's quite a debut, even if it's a fifteen minute broadway. His matwork is very quick and smooth, very reminiscent of a young Kiyoshi Tamura. The match has some extended mat periods, but never feels lazy or like they're using the holds as an excuse to rest and kill time. Kobayashi is clearly the better mat worker in this case, and Izuchi manages to more or less not lose, but hitting a series of kicks culminating in a head kick that take a point, and staving off the juji-gatame long enough for the time limit to hit just as Kobayashi gets it locked in. Even without winning, the match establishes right out the gate that Kobayashi is someone to keep an eye on, and that he can be a problem for anyone on the UWF roster.
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AEW TV (02/07 - 02/10) Here she come now saying Mone Mone
MikeCampbell replied to The Thread Killer's topic in AEW
This Hangman/Swerve deal has got to be the best "double turn" since Bret and Austin in 1997. Even before the finish, where Swerve wanted to keep going and Hangman peaced out, there were hints about it. Hangman hit the DDT on the guadrail and rolls in and tells the ref to count him out. Swerve hits the Deadeye through the table and then quickly gets Hangman back into the ring so he can win the match the "right" way. I'm loving this BCC/CMLL stuff, although I do wish they didn't rush to get some of the lower card dudes involved quite yet. It just reeks of AEW not wanting to beat any of the BCC guys, but it's not like they can keep the feud hot by always having their guys go over. Danielson is working the NJPW show on 2/11 and the NJ/CMLL tour starts on 2/12. Cubsfan hypothesized that perhaps Hechicero will be in the front row on 2/11 and will have some sort of confrontation with Danielson. I'm beyond happy for Sting, a guy I've been watching since I was six years old (and I just turned 41), getting one last title run before he hangs it up. I just worry that it means we'll get another title run from Matthew and Nicholas, and their neverending parade of bullshit. -
[2004-02-04-U-STYLE] Kiyoshi Tamura vs Tsuyoshi Kohsaka
MikeCampbell replied to Loss's topic in February 2004
In a freaky coincidence, I just happened to watch the match on the date of its 20th Anniversary. It's been the best U-STYLE match I've seen by a fucking mile. There's an undercard match between Kyosuke Sasaki and Crafter M that almost seems to be their attempts to pay homage to Tamura and Kosaka, but that comes off like an exhibition. This feels like a real contest. It's the first time in the history of the company that Tamura has truly looked like himself.- 10 replies
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I'm thinking the same thing. And it's actually for the best, IMO. Perry has been gone for so long that any return outside of him being the Devil comes off like a retread. Let him spend a few months in NJPW and then do something to build up to Forbidden Door and cut a scathing promo on how the company did him wrong, and hopefully create a buzz.
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I had to work at the crack of dawn on Sunday, so I wasn't able to watch live. I figured I'd watch it after work. Then, I get a text from my father at about 8:00 that morning telling me that Joe was the new champion and that Adam Cole was the devil. And there went all my urgency to watch the show. I did finally watch it this morning. Adam Cole leading a heel stable is a movie that we've all seen before, but I'm still OK with it. With MJF out for a bit, they have feuds with Hangman and the Acclaimed that can be used to fill up some time until Max is ready to come back. When the lights went out, I just rolled my eyes. It's way too overdone at this point. Hell, having the masked guys line up on and the floor and Cole hitting him with the crutch would have been better, and probably gotten a bigger pop.
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[1990-05-28-UWF-Fighting F] Nobuhiko Takada vs Tatsuo Nakano
MikeCampbell replied to superkix's topic in May 1990
This just never comes together at all. Takada doesn't seem to be in the mood to do fuckall with Nakano, a far cry from what Yamazaki did with a few weeks before. Nakano hits a huge German and Takada just leaps to his feet and starts blasting him with kicks to show everyone who the man really is. 18 minutes for these two was just way too long, they could have chopped this down to six or seven and probably not lost much. -
So the first AEW Triple Crown will be decided between Eddie Kingston, who came up with the concept of the title being a Triple Crown, started the tournament going 0-2, and came back to win his block by beating the same man who proclaimed him to be "a bum." And Jon Moxley, who has a long history with Eddie Kingston, including a feud over the AEW Title, which Eddie never won, and after becoming allies, became rivals again this year. Baba or Chosyu couldn't have booked this any better.
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I also had Garcia getting the upset to keep Brody out of the semi's. I was originally thinking that Claudio would upset Bryan and Kingston would beat Andrade to give them all a tie, but your way sounds a lot less chaotic.
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[1990-05-04-UWF-The Memorial] Kazuo Yamazaki vs Tatsuo Nakano
MikeCampbell replied to superkix's topic in May 1990
Yet another example of the fact how great a worker Yamazaki was at this time. He more or less wrestles himself here, he puts himself into positions for Nakano to do simple counters (such as lower his base to prevent the German so Nakano only needed to shove him down to get a back mount), and he absolutely sells his ass off and makes it seems like Nakano actually has a prayer of winning this match. Of course, he's Kazuo Yamazaki and he knows that he can end it whenever he wants, which he does after a couple of hard kicks and a legbar. But it's a total blast watching him look like Nakano's bitch before that. After this match Maeda faced Funaki and Takada wrestled Suzuki, and both of those matches are surefire insomnia cures. -
I really wanted to like this, because they both sell like death when Nagata works the knee and Ishikawa works the ribs, but both body part segments were just filler and had no impact on the finish at all, and their execution was godawful, even Nagata's armbar toward the end looked like he was exerting next to no real pressure on Ishikawada.
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This isn't even ten minutes long, but it's a brilliant match. It perfectly plays off of ther earlier tournament matches that Ito and Aoki had that got them to the finals, and the end result is the morality play that pro wrestling is supposed to be. This isn't going to get the attention, or amount of dicussion (for better or worse), that Cody Rhodes vs. Roman Reigns from WrestleMania did. But, unlike Cody, Takanori Ito was able to "finish the story." While I sat in front of my laptop trying to piece together what all I wanted to say about this match, it got me thinking about the mentality of only wanting to see the "best" matches (and for the record I am just as guilty as anyone else of having that mindset), and this is a prime example of why that's a flawed way to look at things. If I was to show this to someone who hadn't seen any of the earlier tournament stuff, they'd probably come away having enjoyed the match (depending on their overall opinion of shootstyle) but they'd miss the context of why a lot of the little things that Aoki and Ito do worked so well.
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This is, without a doubt or any hint of exaggeration, the worst match I've seen this year! Picture Roderick Strong vs. GUNTHER in a chop battle, with nobody bothering to sell, and that's what this looks like. It gets absurd to the point that Ishida does a running boot to the corner (like Sami Zayn's finisher) and T-Hawk just stares back at him, completely unphased. Then it turns into some sort of "tribute" the latter day Misawa/Kobashi matches with them throwing each other with suplexes and popping right back up. Just complete garbage!
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I'm making my way through this show to review for my website, and I have to disagree with the part that I bolded above. I'm 5/7 of the way finished, and I'd say it's actually been fairly memorable. Okubo certainly stepped up for both of his matches and the Ueyama/Ito match was a nice affair with some traditional pro-style storytelling and smartly takes advantage of the UWF-style rules by putting over Ito, and doing it in such a way that it doesn't make Ueyama look bad at all. What's most diappointing, with the benefit of hindsight, is that the tournament itself almost feels like a waste when one knows what's going to happen in the next few months. It's clearly designed as a vehicle to get Kyosuke Sasaki over, which it certainly accomplishes, but it could have been done so much better and been made to matter long term. Fujii sticks out like a sore thumb amongst the people involved. There was no reason for him, with his Vader/Albright in UWFI push, to be lumped in with this crew. Replace him with Yoshida or Murahama and let Sasaki win the whole thing and cement him as the next "guy" as far as the Tamura trainees goes. The Tamura vs. Fujii match (which happened in December) could have easily taken place on this show. Hell, after the Tamura match Fujii was done in the company for nearly two years anyway.
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Two wrestlers known for their stiffness, and they don't disappoint! The thing that stuck out the most to me was the crowd, epsecially one woman who was super high pitched and vocal in her support of Wahoo. It reminded me of watching a Jay Strongbow match on an old Coliseum Video and the crowd was vocal but a good portion of their support was done through 'war cries' for him. None of that stuff here. Just traditional crowd heat, which I'm very tempted to compare to the 1992 Can Ams vs. Kobashi/Kikuchi classic, wanting to see their guy win.
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For whatever it's worth, this is easily one of my favorite Inoki matches (and I've never really been a fan of his work). I can absolutely see the Ikeda/Ishikawa comparisions. This feels "legit" in a way that Inoki's 'different style' fights the faux MMA stuff he did in the 90's and 00's never did to me. The crowd was hot throughout and when Oki's headbutt busted him open, the phrase "unglued" doesn't even do it justice.
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[2022-03-05-GLEAT-LIDET-UWF-Ver. 2] Daisuke Nakamura vs. Daijiro Matsui
MikeCampbell replied to corwo's topic in March 2022
This is closest that I've seen a Lidet UWF match come to feeling a UWF match from the old days. The work is simple, but very well done. Nakamura has the striking advantage, Matsui has the advantage with his throws, and they use the mat to settle the tie. Neither seems out of their element on the mat, and they're both able to knock off points with their submissions just as well as with their striking/throwing. Nakamura wins after throwing kicks at Matsui and taking him by surprise with a flying juji-gatame, but Matsui's loss doesn't cause any hit to his aura or credibility, and it feels like a rematch between them could just as easily end with Matsui winning.- 1 reply
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[2022-03-05-GLEAT-LIDET-UWF-Ver. 2] Tetsuya Izuchi vs. Yu Iizuka
MikeCampbell replied to corwo's topic in March 2022
For a 39 second match, they certainly packed a lot of intensity into it. Iizuka jumpstarts with a flying knee and when Izuchi gets back up, he unloads with more strikes. Iizuka shoots in for a takedown and throws himself right into Izuchi's knee and his lights go out. It certainly begs for a rematch (if GLEAT ever decides to run another Lidet UWF show, since we're coming up on five months since the last one), and leaves questions about both of them coming out of this. Was this a fluke strike or was Izuchi ready for it? What does this say about Iizuka after his second straight main event loss?- 1 reply
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[2003-06-29-U-STYLE] Kiyoshi Tamura vs Takaku Fuke
MikeCampbell replied to GOTNW's topic in June 2003
This was just complete domination by Tamura. He shuts down Fuke with middle kicks and quickly burns through all of his points, despite strikes not even being Tamura's primary strength. After two matches against lower card workers, where he genuinely found a way to work with them and make them look good, Tamura wrestles one of his contemporaries, with a decently long run in Pacrase, and just decimates him. Ideally, Fuke should have pushed Tamura further than Sakata and Mishima were able to, and possibly set himself up to be the U-STYLE version of Yamazaki, the guy who the upstarts go through before they can challenge The Ace. But, if anything, this makes Fuke look no different than the likes of Naoki Kimura or Kazuki Okubo.- 1 reply
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- kiyoshi tamura
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