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The Beginner's Guide To British Wrestling
ohtani's jacket replied to ohtani's jacket's topic in Megathread archive
More random shit: Steve Logan vs. John Elijah (mid-80s) Think crotch-o-vision only exists with Joshi handhelds? Think again! It's kind of hard to tell what's going on in a bout when you're having a sneak peak at Stevie Logan's butt he entire time. Logan's butt looked pretty good, not sure about the bout. Alan Dennison vs. Rick Wiseman (5/28/83) Last few moments of a bout that had "better luck next time, Ricky Wiseman" written all over it. Pete Lapaque vs. Danny Boy Collins (2/2/84) Lapaque delivers a fair-sized beating to Collins then Danny Boy wins on one of the quickest count-outs ever. Big Daddy/Andy Blair vs. King Kendo/The Spoiler (9/16/87) Kendo and The Spoiler were being managed here by Dr. Monika Kaiser, a German woman who was allegedly a taxi driver from Leeds. She showed plenty of thigh stepping into the ring and Walton seemed to fancy her. His exact words were "slicey," and yeah, I had to look that up too. Kaiser berated Daddy in German, Daddy took care of business, and the Spoiler was very nearly unmasked. Haystacks showed up at ringside for the next bout and they teased Haystacks/Daddy II for the millionth time. Surely, they didn't think that would turn things around in '87. A bunch of local kids flooded the ring to join the "easy" chants and tell Haystacks what a wanker he was. From a safe distance of course. Mick McManus vs. John Naylor (11/18/80) Tally Ho Kaye vs. Pat Patton (11/18/80) Tally Ho Kaye vs. Young David (11/18/80) Chris Adams vs. Mick McManus (11/18/80) These were heats for the 25th Anniversary Knock Out Trophy that would eventually be won by Al Kilby. It was new footage, but don't get too excited because they're short tournament bouts followed by two quarterfinals where the first to 10 throws advances to the semis. The McManus/Adams bout was hokey as shit as McManus was leading 9-1 before Adams' comeback. Mohammed Butt vs. Barry Douglas (10/15/86) This was shockingly decent considering how awful Butt was and how boring and bland Douglas could be. Maybe I was in a trance while watching it, but the slower pace seemed to help Butt work through his holds. Pat Roach, John Elijah & Jamaica George vs. Giant Haystacks, Scrubber Daly & Rasputin (12/16/87) Poor old Jamaica George. Even in a six-man tag he was the one taking a beating and that was with Walton reminding us constantly of how good looking he was. I wonder if woke up in a cold sweat having nightmares about Stax. Of course what he all wanted to see was Roach kick the shit out of Stax, and of course we didn't get to see it. Same old bullshit when it came to the big man's booking. -
I get the Fat Elvis stuff, but if there was one guy who looked like a modern day samurai it was Hashimoto. He could have slot right into an NHK costume drama. If you ask me the sole reason he rose to the heights he did was because of his bushido. I can't think of a single Japanese star who had the same aura. Plenty of them were tough, plenty of them were stoic, and plenty of them commanded respect, but none of them had the same fire. Plus his theme music was really, really cool.
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The Widowmaker gimmick wasn't exactly tailor-made. He was basically a blonde, more athletic version of Outlaw Ron Bass. When he did a similar sort of gimmick in '93 he was badass. I'm indifferent to a lot of his longer singles matches, especially where he's a babyface, but I love his early 90s heel work and he was a great tag wrestler.
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There's no doubt that Breaks captivated audiences more than Grey. Breaks was pretty special in the 30+ year history of wrestling on ITV. His TV appearance record is testament to that, and he essentially rivals McManus when it comes to presence, but when you think of what Grey accomplished as just a kid from Peckham, London, it's almost more impressive in a way. The Grey who debuted in the early 70s could have been like any number of debutantes who fade away as their pushes dwindle, but Grey became a mainstay as a face, which to me is a huge indicator of skill.
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I haven't counted how many Cortez bouts there are on tape, or how many I've seen, but I guess it's between 20-30. The only problem I have with saying that's enough for me is that I like him far more in the 80s than 70s, and he jumps to All-Star, which means bye-bye footage. He's also deceptively old in the footage we have, so it's hard to pinpoint his prime and all that. But he's just do great in his early 80s run. I don't know how much of that run is still unearthed, but I'd jump to see any of it.
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A few things: If such a rabbit hole existed, Myers would be far from the first guy I'd choose. I find it hard to believe there are a ton of entertaining Myers matches out there when so much made tape already. I don't see how he's joined to the hip with Grey. Grey clearly has more good matches on tape than Myers. If you ever hear Myers speak, you may have a different opinion of whether he could get over in certain territories. No mention of Iron Fist? I'd love to know what people think of his Bruce Lee ripoff compared with Cool Clive, the West Indian.
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I have a love/hate relationship with Rocco that's really a love/indifference relationship since I can't muster such strong feelings anymore. But take that '76-79 period and isolate it, and I'm as onboard as I am with early Dave Finlay. I like some of his 80s stuff. I think the Steve McHoy match is a great testament to his ability, and the long Kung Fu match from Reslo is one of his better bouts. There's also a catch weight with Pete Roberts (from memory) that's one of the best bouts of 1980. But the free reign he got away from Dale Martin and Joint Promotions was almost too much for a guy who already wrestled like a loose canon. Dylan alludes to him being sloppy or mechanically deficient. The word is that he was just as manic to work with in the ring as he appeared to the viewer. In other words, he was kind of just going berserk. The one thing I can't ignore about him is that Rocco/Jones is an all-time great in-ring feud. I've seen four of their 70s bouts and not much else compares in British wrestling or anywhere else in terms of a 70s rivalry. And it wasn't just that Jones was s great talent. Rocco was a perfect foil. I don't feel as strong Saint, for example, despite his matches/rivalries with Breaks or Grey. Rocco vs. Jones is a cornerstone for my WoS fandom, and I can't underestimate that when it comes to Rocco.
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Roach is one of the best big men ever. How many other big men could work the judo throws he could, take it to the mat, and look so good in forearm smash contests? A lot of the footage we have of him is from when he was older, and he slows down as the years go by, but even his early 90s stuff is fun, and I don't think there's ever been a better "bear with an angry head" in wrestling than Pat. I wish we had more of his 70s heel work, but he's one of the better heavyweights of the period we do have footage from.
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Tibor is a British wrestling God to me. He reminds me of Volk Han in a lot of ways, not only because of his grappling skill but because of his background. There's a footage issue, but the 60s stuff we have of him isn't far removed from his 70s work. It's basically the Casas effect that Matt D often describes -- younger Casas is more athletic and does everything a bit faster -- but the mind was stll strong in both guy's veteran stage. Voting for him is only justifiable on the grounds of pure talent, but it's Tibor Szakacs. The man was s God.
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Roberts would make my top 5 British workers list for the 80s without much hesitation (the only four being Breaks, Grey, Jones and Cortez.) His 70s work is good as well, but the 80s were his peak, and he has a strong case for being the best worker on TV in 1985. The big knock against him is his complete lack of charisma aside from the familiarity that comes with watching him dozens of times and knowing when he's angry and when he's fired up. As a worker, he was exemplary. Great technique and skill. Could wrestle and brawl with equal aplomb. Perhaps the best thing about him was that he was surprisingly good in roles you wouldn't expect like the feud with a heel Bridges and fighting the foreign menace of a guy like Indio Guajaro. Of course there are some disappointments (Jones vs. Roberts has never really clicked for me), but he has a large volume of work for a guy who spent so much time abroad each year.
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Daniel Bryan announces his retirement on twitter.
ohtani's jacket replied to Death From Above's topic in Pro Wrestling
There are different types of seizures. The seizures that everyone is imagining when they think of Danielson's condition are grand-mal generalized seizures where the person loses consciousness and begins convulsing. It's possible that he had partial seizures with different symptoms. -
I'd hasten to add that I'm sure there are people who watch his work from Reslo or CWA and think it's great.
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I don't know how the St. Clair sucks narrative started. I remember Dean saying he'd never see a good St. Clair match but that was mostly based on his work in Japan. The thing about his later work whether it was for All-Star, or Reslo, or Eurosport, or CWA, was that the European wrestling landscape had changed and the expectations were different. You couldn't really work the old-school British style anymore and had to incorporate the standard Japanese and American spots into your work, which St. Clair did with aplomb.
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That was a great post, Dylan, and made me wish you posted more since I'm not that au fait w/ Twitter and podcasts. I'm glad to see someone turn a critical eye on McManus. The ghost analogy is apt. What we're doing with McManus is taking the kind of work where you'd usually say "and he was still doing good stuff after his prime" and using it to formulate our entire opinion of his worth. There's a few things I'd say about that '74-78 footage we have of him. Firstly, if you compare him to the other 50s & 60s wrestlers that wrestled through to that era, McManus stands out as better than most of them. There wasn't that much adaption in WoS. Guys who wrestled through to the late 70s were essentially working the same as they always did. The average TV bout was a four round showcase of a top star. There was an increasing amount of showmanship as the 60s transitioned into the 70s and a new decade took hold, but the difference between McManus in the 60s and 70s is largely athletic along with the fact that his legend grew over time. I don't think McManus was ever one of the better pure workers. My impression is that the likes of Pallo and McManus were generally seen as showmen. I have a copy of their famous Cup Final Day match and McManus looks like the far superior worker, but I don't think he was as good as dozens of other Brit/Euro workers. The feeling is that Preston shot on him for underlying reasons. But there's still something magic about him in the 70s. It's hard to compare him with Nick Bockwinkel as he seems like a cartoon in comparison. It's hard comparing outsiders w/ WoS guys. I'm sure Billy Robinson matches on WoS weren't as serious as his 70s All Japan matches, for example. My barometer w/ McManus was always how does his matches with X worker compare with X worker's bouts with other wrestlers and generally McManus comes up trumps. There's a trade off, obviously. I don't think McManus could have had as good a series w/ Davey Boy Smith as Breaks did, but I don't think Breaks/Kung Fu could ever be as good as McManus/Kung Fu, and as much as I love Breaks carry jobs, beating Breaks wasn't quite the same as beating Mick. Breaks was a far better worker than McManus, but McManus was basically the top heel in the territory until the Daddy/Haystacks era took over and that's not for nothing. As for a defining series of matches, I'm not convinced that McManus vs. Pallo is it despite popular opinion. I don't know if he has one on tape. What he does have is multiple matches with Saint and St. Clair that prove the McManus formula worked more than one time. Repeat doses ought to count for something, IMO.
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Alan Kilby vs. Tony "Banger" Walsh (2/17/82) I was excited to see this turn up. Sure it only lasted two rounds but it was fun while it was lasted. They could have had a really nice four rounder, but Walsh was a disqualification waiting to happen, and with two public warnings against him, his pearl harbour on Kilby after Al took the opening fall was enough for Kwango to throw the bout out. It reminded me of when my mate and I in New Zealand would pop for heels that marched to the beat of their own drum. Interesting that Walton mentioned that Walsh was writing a book given his infamous expose. Kilby was in such great shape in the early 80s. He didn't get to show his wares here, but what an awesome talent.
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Dave Finlay vs. Chic Cullen (10/15/86) This was a 20 minute duration contest with two falls, two submissions or a knockout to decider the winner. Many of the spots were familiar from the British Heavy-Middleweight title fight, but Finlay was utterly dominant here. Despite being the champ, Cullen was totally outclassed. He made the briefest of comebacks to take the first fall then the editor did a bit of time shaving by shortening the second session so it looked like Finlay replied straight away. With two minutes remaining, Cullen signaled to the ref that he couldn't come out of his corner for the third session and Finlay won on yet another technical knockout (this time the ribs.) That led to a pretty solid promo from Finlay warning the boys not to mess with the best and claiming that losers are the scrum of the earth, but wouldn't it have made sense for the champ to gut out those final minutes and frustrate Finlay? You'd think so, but this was Dale Martin, not All-Star, and apparently they didn't give a fuck.
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Not yet but there's always a chance Arthur Psycho will upload it.
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I don't see how 1998 was all that different from 1997. The difference between Bret vs. Austin at Wrestlemania XV and the earlier stuff would have been the neck injury.
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Dave Finlay vs. Chic Cullen (9/17/87) This slipped under my radar for years. I figured it was 1987, Finlay was annoying, Cullen hadn't looked good in the stuff I'd seen post-85, it was an All-Star match, and the TV was clipped to shit once All-Star began sharing the bill. But, far from being a throwaway TV match, it was a British Heavy-Middleweight title fight that took up the entire episode of wrestling. Title matches didn't air on TV often but the few that did were stone cold classics. I had high hopes for this when All-Star pulled out all the pageantry that a British promotion could muster in the late 80s. Kellett was pulled out of the crowd to wave at the fans, and Dave Taylor's father and grandfather (famous wrestlers in their own right) were invited to present the winner w/ the title belt. The tension was thick, the pre-match promos solid. Cullen had his fingers taped. Finlay had been hunting him for months. It was a Northern Irishman vs. a Scotsman, and they were ready to go. The great title fights threaten to get out of hand. That's how it was with Rocco and Jones and Ben and Kilby and that's what they teased here. Finlay sauntered up to Cullen and gave him a little nudge to the forehead the way a stag might and Cullen gave him a Scottish kiss. They did this great spot where Finlay tried to follow through on a posting by springboarding off the ropes and Cullen caught him with a dropkick. That fired Cullen up and the crowd. At that point, I was thinking "this is pretty great." Title matches generally went 12-15 rounds, which meant the workers were legit buggered in the later rounds, so you have to make concessions for that. The ring set-up was weird as well. The match took place in an auditorium and the ring was set up on the stage. What that meant was that any time they fell out of the ring (on the hard camera side) they risked falling off the stage. Finlay took the bump early on, but after that it became a mildly annoying scaffold match style tease and a pesky distraction from the in-ring drama of a title match. Even so, it was shaping up as pretty special for 1987 and I began thinking '87 MOYTC for Europe, but the finish... I'm a believer that you should be able to go over clean in a title match regardless of whether both guys are stars and the winner is a heel. Here they had Cullen save face by having him injure his face. Finlay caught Cullen coming off the ropes with his knees then caught him coming off the ropes with a nasty knee lift. The ref wouldn't let the fight continue and Finlay took the title on a technical knockout. Poor Chic had to sell that his cheekbone was broken, which is a difficult thing to fake with no swelling. I wouldn't say the finish left a bitter taste, but it wasn't the kind of finish you want to see after watching two men wrestle the half hour and put the brakes on it being a stone cold classic.
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I haven't heard of it, but that doesn't mean it wasn't legendary by any stretch of the imagination. The other three are reaches. I love the Virgil/DiBiase SummerSlam match more than anybody I've ever met, but Virgil wasn't hot by '91 standards.
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Can't say I've heard of the Mr. R feud or even the JYD one, so can't speak for them being legendary, but Ted had a high profile run in All Japan? Ted was instrumental in getting Dustin over? Virgil was one of the hottest babyface acts of '91?
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One 70s Jumbo match I really like is the 3/5/77 Robinson bout. On one hand, it's a bit like watching an adult play tag with a child as there's no doubt in my mind that Robinson was a superior wrestler to Jumbo, but Tsuruta does a good job of hanging with him. It's a snappy bout that doesn't over stay its welcome and full of action. Worth watching if you want to see Robinson flex his muscle.
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Fair enough. The only ones I'd strongly disagree with on that list are Jordan, Kidd and Turpin. I don't think Thomson is as good as St. Clair either, but I can't think of five great matches the former three had.
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Who are the other guys? Van Buyten is incredible, but like Sarjeant he doesn't have enough footage.
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St. Clair is an interesting case. When I first started watching WoS, I thought his work was too loose. Then I thought he was a decent foil for heels like McManus, Kincaid and Bond. And then I thought he was a legitimately good worker. He'll always have my respect for continue to improve and work hard during the late 80s and early 90s when there wasn't a "WoS" anymore. I wish he had stayed w/ Joint in the early 80s and not gone to All-Star so we'd have the same volume of matches from him as Roach, Singh and Steele, but money changes everything. I can think of at least five great St. Clair matches from the WoS era, which ought to have him knocking on a top 30. I'd like to see MM's list.