tcg91
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Everything posted by tcg91
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Easily one of the best sub 10 minutes matches that I have ever seen. The beginning wasn't great or anything, but it quickly picked up and Magnum sold his forehead so well that the female teenagers sitting front row were horrified by the scene. Great work on the cut by DiBiase and a very hot crowd in this, including a cool way for Magnum to set up the belly to belly. I really wish this had a tighter start and maybe a few more minutes down the end, as things were going really well at one point ***1/2
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Fine title match, but a letdown, considering their skills and their proved chemistry. This didn't work because Flair couldn't work as a "full heel" (as Kerry was not over enough in Japan), but Kerry also sucked as a heel, so it was a half ass deal. Solid stuff anyway, even going through the motions it was still these two, but this didn't feel special or anything due to the lack of crowd support. Fine Flair legwork in the second half, while the claw selling was also good thanks to Jumbo putting it over 2 days earlier. Not a fan of the finish, it was a very anticlimatic title switch ***
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What an absolutely amazing match. Jumbo was extra motivated, while Kerry (who in All Japan was always a letdown to me), clicked big time with Jumbo's fire, as the champion worked as a babyface against the aggressive native challenger (who was going to get cheers anyway). The first fall was as good as any "clean" match can be, Jumbo felt above the champion and was hitting him hard enough to bust him open. Long and dramatic tease of the claw, as Kerry finally managed to apply it to win the second fall, while Tsuruta sold the move as complete threat. Jumbo wanted to avoid another claw and started destroying Kerry's hand with the same hate he would reserve for Misawa in the later years, which was amazing. Non-finishes are a pity, especially when the contest was so great, but this one was well done thanks to the claw counter outside the ring ****1/2
- 7 replies
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- AJPW
- Jumbo Tsuruta
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This was a good match, but it didn't blow my mind. I thought Flair looked really good here and did all he could to help Race, who seemed a bit off at times, probably not in great shape. Flair worked as the heel, dictating the pace of the bout, but the selling wasn't great all around and there wasn't major heat on the match, despite the good crowd support. It went better once Flair worked on the leg. The finishing stretch was fun and the clean finish was a pleasant surprise, especially because Race didn't look like a threat at that point ***
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[1984-05-21-WWF-MSG, NY] Sgt. Slaughter vs Iron Sheik
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in May 1984
This was very similar to the match they had on May 19th, but much better than that one, thanks to a roaring MSG, good work by the announcers and Slaughter's fine selling. This time Sheik controlled the bout thanks to a loaded boot, which was a fun concept and made Slaughter bleed heavily from his forehead. Slaughter was great at selling his desperation and lack of control, while carrying rage and a bit of vulnerability in his comebacks. They repeated the silly referee non-finish, but this was leading to a proper blowoff and so it was that it was I guess ***1/2 -
Short brawl, but it was a good one anyway. Sheik had a lot of heat here and knew how to annoy the fans, but he also sold big time for Slaughter, who looked like a total badass. Slaughter bled from his shoulder at one point and Sheik was hitting really hard, I wasn't even sure the cut was planned, but the announces covered it very well here. The famous Boot Camp match is only days away, so they naturally have a non-finish here, even though the referee skitch wasn't that great. A fun and successful skirmish match ***
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JIP. A fun Memphis brawl, that was short and solid. Not sure why the announcer used the name "Stagger Lee" when talking about "Koko Ware", as JYD was nowhere to be found... so, yeah. Koko actually ruled here, his stuff with Gilbert was wild and they had the best interactions of the whole match. Unfortunately, they all started fighting on some sort of platform, which led to a non-finish, despite the match stipulation. I mean, the brawl was fun, but that's not even the point here **3/4
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[1984-05-13-AWA-St. Paul, MN] Jumbo Tsuruta vs Rick Martel
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in May 1984
Good match, but I kind of felt bad for them as the crowd didn't care that much. Jumbo as the invader champion was a good concept and he was a fine bastard heel, but he didn't generate enough heat unfortunately. Nice bout from the beginning, lots of struggle and counters on the mat, as Martel bumped around to get some sympathy from the crowd. Jumbo targeted Martel's upper body and this got the match going, despite never reaching the expected drama level. I liked how the finish protected Jumbo, before leading to the clean title change, which finally got a good pop from the crowd ***1/4- 2 replies
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- awa
- awa world heavyweight title
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These teams had great chemistry and it was obvious here, even though their feud only just started. The crowd was super hot here too, the Rock & Roll got pops even for high fiving and the heels generated tons of heat. This was not an all time great bout, as they stalled a bit at the beginning and the finish could have been better, but the heat segment on Morton was terrific, thanks to his great selling and the way MNX cut the ring in half for the whole time. When it came to just listening to the crowd and reacting in the ring, this was as better as you could get in 1984 ***1/2
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[1984-05-11-WCCW-Dallas, TX] Kerry Von Erich vs Ric Flair
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in May 1984
I actually liked this better than the very famous (and definitely more exciting) title change from the previous week; it was shorter, tighter and told a better in ring story. Flair grew frustrated as he lost the "champion's advantage" and Kerry seemed just too good to be beaten, but the Naitch's frustrations only favoured Kerry due to his better brawling skills. Flair finally went to the legs later on and managed to get an opening, but he was too impatient and Kerry beat him again with a roll up, like he did the week before taking Flair's out of his element of long and meticulous matches ***1/4 -
[1984-05-07-WCCW-Fort Worth, TX] Kerry Von Erich vs Terry Gordy
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in May 1984
I think I have never seen this before and it felt like a decent deal, having Kerry defending the World Title in his home territory against a long time rival. This was on par with the shot that Gordy had at Ric Flair the year before, as Gordy failed to impress on a 15+ minutes plus singles bout, the match was never great when the challenger was in control of the pace and couldn't brawl much. Kerry's armwork was good and so were the struggle segments, but Gordy's heat segment was probably longer than it needed. Nice flashy finish **3/4- 2 replies
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- Kerry Von Erich
- Terry Gordy
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[1984-05-06-WCCW-Parade of Champions] Ric Flair vs Kerry Von Erich
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in May 1984
This was special, very special, due to the title change and the match being dedicated to David. But it was not even the best Flair/Kerry bout, very far from it, and it looked like a simplistic and basic way to get to the finish that the crowd was dying to see. It was still these two, they had enough chemistry and skills to make this solid, despite not being their best work. I would have loved a countout tease or something to make the fans gasp, but oh well, finally Kevin managed to beat Flair for the title after 2 years of proud attempts *** -
This was a great bout and Breaks worked his butt off, both in the ring and with his whiny character, looking like the best nemesis for the teenage sensation Collins. No matter what he did, Breaks just couldn't catch a break against the brave Collins and got extra whiny and aggressive, getting the crowd, the referee and even the announcer against him. Breaks finally started to gain some momentum with his usual armwork, Collins sold really well (especially when bleeding) and started punching back his rival, as his respect and good manners progressively faded during the match. Very strong bout, the finish was too flashy for me but it definitely made sense due to Collins' underdog nature ***3/4
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[1984-04-23-WWF-MSG, NY] Bob Backlund vs Greg Valentine
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in April 1984
This was a good bout, they had 20+ minutes and showcased some solid matwork from the very start. Granted, at times the action wasn't super exciting, but I liked the reverse psychology of working on the body part that the other usually favours (Valentine gets on the arm, while Backlund focuses on the leg), as it highlighted their competitive nature. Unfortunately, Valentine kind of forgot to sell the leg during the last part of the match, where he was the one hitting Backlund's leg; and also, the finish was clean but quite clumsy, leaving a bad taste in my mouth after such a promise beginning *** -
This was amazing and a incredible accomplishment, as it lasted 65 minutes and it never dragged once thanks to the gauntlet stipulation, plus the crowd was hot the whole time. Things like Fujinami having 3 different style of bouts in 20 minutes or the final Choshu/Inoki matwork ruled more than anything and deserved the spotlight, but the hour was full of little precious details and dynamics (Hamaguchi's aggression against a fresh Fujiwara or Takada taking too many risks against Yatsu), that made every pairing matter and made this 60+ minutes bout so easy to watch and love. It just falls a bit short of 5 stars because, while the first 20 minutes and the last 15 are excellent, most of the central part of the match is "only" very good ****3/4
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This was JIP and somewhat clipped. Such a fun match, as Watts returned to the ring to face Jim Cornette's MNX and teach them a lesson, along with a JYD in disguise. The match goes as one would expect, with the MNX bumping big time for the babyfaces and then building the crowd's anticipation during the heat segment. The heels were put over as a force, as they managed to dominate the legendary Watts before the last few minutes, with tons of drama following the blind tag sequence. As expected, Watts and Lee overcame the odds with a clean finish and the crowd exploded. Very easy to watch and appreciate this match ***1/2
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Knowing what UWF would become, a Hamada vs Aguayo match on their show was a bizarre, but intriguing, concept. Unfortunately, the crowd wasn't very used or into this blood and guts lucha match, which was a shame as it wasn't bad at all. Absolute crazy at times- Aguayo was super aggressive on poor Hamada, cutting his forehead and working on it with a pair of scissors (!), but they rarely got the crowd to be fully invested in the bout. Unfortunately, the non-finish was quite anticlimactic as well despite their efforts ***1/2
- 3 replies
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- April 11
- Perro Aguayo
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[1984-04-09-CWA-Lexington, KY] Jerry Lawler vs Randy Savage
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in April 1984
Like the previous ones between these two, the match was good but it didn't blew my mind. Savage had to adapt to the usual Lawler stalling start and he did it quite well, despite the matwork sequences not feeling like anything special; very nice transition to the brawling and the selling was also good, including all the segments that took place outside the ring. Great drama when a simple rib punch by Lawler manage to change the momentum of the bout. Hot finishing stretch, but the finish was horrible and not even well executed *** -
JIP, the first 2/3 minutes were missing. As one would expect, the technical quality here was very good, but unfortunately Brisco worked the arm for quite a bit and then they gradually forgot about it. The Flair formula got a twist here, as Naitch was very careful because of how dangerous his opponent was on the mat, so he didn't get to Brisco's leg until later on, as Brisco kept countering pretty much everything. Quite animated finish for a '84 bout, but the flash finish well suited the match, in typical Flair fashion ***1/4
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[1984-04-06-Houston Wrestling] Mr Wrestling II vs Magnum T.A.
tcg91 replied to shoe's topic in April 1984
I liked this, they had good chemistry and 2's ability to be a good heel surprised me here, as he was really popular with the fans only a few weeks before the start of his feud with TA. Smart match, as 2 knew TA's skills and worked on his arm for a long time, trying to keep his former partner grounded as his only way to compete with TA's fire and strength. 2 controlled this well and TA showed good selling, then driving the crowd crazy when his comeback started. Funny and quite smart non-finish, as 2 tried to hide a weapon in his mask, but then dropped it. This was a classic veteran vs freak of nature youngster ***1/2 -
This was a good angle overall, but not much of a match apart from the first few minutes. Andre dominating the heels was fun and their heat segment on the giant was good, he bladed deeply and the selling was actually very interesting as everyone got to look good. The bout stalled a lot with the stretcher job and everything, but continuing this as a handicap match was quite a surprise and it went well for another bit. At that point Andre's return was pretty much obvious, but the crowd loved it, too bad that the non-finish was quite rushed as things seemed very promising ***
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[1984-03-31-WWF-Philadelphia, PA] Tito Santana vs Greg Valentine
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in March 1984
Good match overall, but a bit disappointing, considering their skills. Santana was great at selling, his whines and face expressions really put over Valentine's blows on his ribs area and then on his knee. You could tell that they had chemistry, but that this was hold back a bit, as Valentine never went too deep with his legwork and never even attempted the figure four once, which also surprised Gorilla Monsoon. Very dull finish, as the bell rang for the 20 minutes time limit at like 15 minutes, shocking the announcers and making Santana look quite bad, as he never started a comeback **3/4 -
Slightly clipped, as there were some cuts here and there at the beginning of the match. This was a good one anyway, the best parts were easily the ones where the heels beat down the babyfaces in a relentless way and, also, despite the usual silly tag rule. Blackwell stole the show, using the structure very well and then selling Crusher's limited comeback. The blood got heat and the crowd also helped with their support, the finish was nice to see despite Gagne not executing it too well ***1/4
- 2 replies
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- Sheik Adnan Al-Kaisse
- Crusher Blackwell
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This was more "fun" than "good" in a traditional way, as it was fun indeed to see Baba working on Hansen's arm and the crowd reacted to everything, in hope that this would stop the gaijin's lethal lariat. However, Baba's offense looked very bad at times and Hansen had to do all he could to sell it decently. At least they kept this short and Hansen made the match with his flawed reaction, as he only had one good arm and this helped Baba in his brawl with the champion. The non-finish made sense too, as they will wrestle again down the road **3/4
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[1984-03-17-MACW-Boogie Jam '84] Ric Flair vs Ricky Steamboat
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in March 1984
Slightly clipped. Unfortunately, the copy I saw had Matt Striker and Steamboat on commentary and they talked over the vibrant crowd, mostly speaking about everything except the match itself. The first part of the match was great, Steamboat worked on Flair's head persistently and controlled him, but Flair looked great as one of those football teams that is off the ball, but never really seems in danger. Flair takes over at like 40+ minutes in, but this is where the match failed to get to the next stage, as the Naitch's offense wasn't that great or particularly focused, he tried many things without consistency. Nice set of nearfalls over the last minute and huge drama, as Steamboat technically won the title, but it didn't count at 60:01. Excellent two thirds and good finish, but the last 15 minutes were dull ***1/2