tcg91
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[1982-10-08-Houston Wrestling] Terry Gordy vs Dick Murdoch
tcg91 replied to shoe's topic in October 1982
Nice little 12/13 minutes match, as Slater had to work another match that night and they didn't go all out here. Still, it was a decent one and young Gordy had tons of offense, it's incredible to think that he was only 21 here. Slater was such an underrated babyface, he put over a simple headlock very effectively and the Houston fans were behind his comeback, which was flashier than expected (including a headscissor?!). The punches were really fun too, but the finish was absolutely flat and anticlimatic, Gordy did so well and then a simple elbow took him down *** -
Absolute great crowd, this is Santo's retirement match after all and the atmosphere is quite appealing. The match itself, however, wasn't that great and it's one of those Rock/Hogan deals where the circumstances made the match better, despite the action not being the greatest. There was some goodness here and there, mostly because Aguayo stole the show, taking Solitario's mask off and bleeding all over the place on the tecnico's comeback. But the rest of it was quite chaotic, too much going on at the same time, and a bit of a let down. It would have been nice to see more stuff from Santo and see the rudos bump for him, but we never got down to only two men in the ring ***
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A great spectacle and a furious brawl, even though I feel like they could have done even better together. The slugfest was simply top notch, so so many great punches and even the slightest detailed mattered, like their face expressions, body language, holding the ropes etc. Hansen's control segment on Funk was also good, but already a few notches down, despite the crowd's positive response. Funk's selling was on point, as usual, but Hansen could have done more here and never took this to the next level. Also, I didn't care for the finish, not much because of the count-out itself, but it was quite confusing and the referee bump looked a bit clumsy. They'll do much better in 1983, but this was a precious stepping stone ***1/2
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This was fun and a good little match, but it didn't blew my mind. I get protecting the babyfaces, but abusing the over the top rope rule as a DQ in the first minute of the match is quite poor in terms of spectacle. The rest of the match was pretty damn good, despite being shorter than usual. Lucas is one of those guys I haven't seen enough of, but he was solid and Morton looked great in his energic comebacks. Gino's hit and run tactics were also great and led to the piledriver finish ***
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The first 5 minutes of the match were clipped, so we got 15 minutes instead of 20. This was a good bout, but a bit frustrating at times because it could have been so much more. Gagne clearly held the match down and it's a shame, because the challengers were on form and ready to go, especially when paired against Brunzell. Very nice selling from Martel, but his initial rest hold sequence with Gagne wasn't the best, for one. Clever finish and, yes, Gagne redeemed himself with a great dropkick for a cool spot ***1/4
- 1 reply
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- AWA
- AWA World Tag Team Titles
- (and 7 more)
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[1982-08-15-WCCW-Wrestling Star Wars] Ric Flair vs Kerry Von Erich
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in August 1982
This was absolutely tremendous, starting from the initial presentation. Everything was simple and made sense, like Flair fighting for minutes to get out of a simple chinlock that Kerry would apply repeatedly. Like every good Flair formula match, the local hero looked great and the booking of the Dusty/Gary finish was genius, because Kerry was robbed despite actually submitting the champion. Once the legwork kicked in, with Flair already 1-0 up, the drama was incredible and the crowd got fully behind Kerry when he looked desperate. The "figure four into clutch" counter was one of my all time favourites and Flair's blood added so much to the finish. Absolute great bloody slugfest in the last fall, the DQ finish is almost a shame, but they both looked exhausted and furious ****1/2 -
[1982-08-14-CWA-TV] Ric Flair vs Jerry Lawler
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in August 1982
The whole segment was great, especially because an impromptu World Title match was not the norm in 1982, but the match itself was "just" good. Classic Flair formula, but there was no stalling as the 10 minutes time limit forced them to go straight to the point. Lawler looked really good here, with an energic comeback and a classic underdog spirit. The live studio atmosphere made this cool, but the lack of a big crowd and the stipulation limited the greatness of this. Smart non finish that keeps the door open for a rematch, even though they won't have one, which is a shame *** -
Definitely the best one of the series, at least so far. They toned this down and decided to sell properly, the crazy spots were still there, but they really meant something this time. Even the usual cliché motions looked way better, Dynamite looked really aggressive and Mask sold the legs well, which affected his following comeback. Apart from a botched armdrag, there was none of the sloppiness they have shown against one another. Mask finally used a dive on Dynamite, which he failed a couple of times, and this was the turning point for him. Really sick and effective finish, clean and decisive for Mask, this time he was the one to use the tombstone on his opponent ***3/4
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[1982-08-01-AJPW] Jumbo Tsuruta vs Harley Race
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in August 1982
This match gave me the impression that it was originally clipped and that they only showed the second part on TV, because the beginning was incredibly boring and it didn't accomplish much of anything. Then, the match got bloody and definitely better, especially when they started brawling all over the ring. I couldn't see much chemistry in the limb work and Race definitely looked off and not in great conditions, Jumbo kind of saved this by bumping around and selling the cut later on. Still a clean title change was a pretty rare finish at the time *** -
A good match, despite a few issues here and there. The initial matwork was decent, they had a solid approach here and Jumbo was good at coming across as the champion that refused to be an underdog. The tension led to an amazing brawl, that was way better than the beginning of the bout, Jumbo bled like crazy and showed a lot of fire. Mascaras covered the basics well and was quite over too. Now, I have a huge issue with the whole "5 more minutes" stipulation, if then it leads to another draw or non-finish, but it is what it is and the last few minutes were actually very entertaining ***
- 2 replies
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- Jumbo Tsuruta
- Mil Mascaras
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(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
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This was a good match, but something didn't click for me. My problem with the bout was the lack of a constant focus: Fujinami worked on Murdoch's arm, but Murdoch focused both on the leg and the neck of his opponent; a bit too much for a 20 minutes match, they switched gear too often for my liking, even though the action wasn't bad by any means. It went better towards the end, as Murdoch only focused on the leg and Fujinami sold it well. Not enough strikes, which is a shame as they had great exchanges. The non finish was well done, albeit quite predictable with 2024 eyes ***1/2
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This was a bit weird, but good after all. Looooooots of stalling in the first fall, they barely touched each other in the first 5 minutes, but at least Stomper got a lot of heat from a very hot crowd, which definitely carried the match from that point onwards. So yes, the beginning was quite slow and even frustrating to watch at times; but, once the brawl was on, this started ruling on so many levels. It's a shame that Slater never got a major chance to be a top babyface in a top territory. Of course, the finish sucked as well. This really didn't need to go 30 minutes, I hope to see a shorter rematch ***
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This was nothing but a very beautiful piece of business. It was 15 minutes of these two going toe to toe in the ring, catch style, without nonsense action or moves. Really realistic battle, everything mattered and nothing felt forced. Piper was amazing in his frustrated attempt to keep up with Brisco on the mat and then he gradually started to cheat more and more, still to no avail on most occasions. The struggle in the headlock sequence was incredible and Piper sold his frustration really well. Brisco looked like a lethal robot and never showed any sign of weakness; the bag of coins finish fitted both characters and also gives a nice finish to the story of how desperate Piper was ****
- 8 replies
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- mid atlantic
- 1982
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(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
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A very good match, but watching Houston footage without Paul Boesch on commentary is proper weird. Very solid start, of course Bock called most of the match and Morton's selling was good, despite not being at the peak he will find during the R&R days. The champion focused on Morton's neck all along, which got him the upper hand initially. Nice fire form Morton in his comeback and the crowd loved it. I am not a fan of any referee interjection, this one went too far as well, but at least they protected Morton and he got to look good because of the unlucky loss ***1/2
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I am not a big fan of Scaffold Matches and this was no exception, as they usually end up looking quite clumsy and with some (obviously needed) forced cooperation. The 2/3 falls deal is weird too, you ideally want fans to be pumped about a single big bump from the scaffold, but here they got 3 in 15 minutes and so none of them meant that much. Dundee was impressively agile on the structure at times, but the action was quite dull and slow most of the times. Gordon Solie didn't seem into it either, which is saying something **
- 3 replies
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- memphis
- scaffold match
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(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
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[1982-06-18-NJPW] Andre the Giant vs Hulk Hogan
tcg91 replied to paul sosnowski's topic in June 1982
This ruled! Hogan was so over and Andre decided to work as a heel here, he did it really effectively and the crowd got heavily involved. Hogan's strength got put over as a big deal, especiallu if compared with Andre's size and power, the Giant also sold quite a lot for him. After Andre finally took over, Hogan showed his desperate side and even went on the top rope (!), trying everything to stop the monster from assaulting him. Hogan's rage led the match to a double bump and double countout, which worked well given the circumstances *** -
This was quite refreshing from Joint Promotions, as the rounds can sometimes hurt the flow of the match at times, but there were no interruptions here. As usual, Breaks stole the show with his attitude and armwork, he was a blast while arguing with the crowd and the referee. Lots of snugness from him and good selling from Turpin, even though his action was a bit sloppy at times. I know it's a traditional thing, but I hate JP referees not counting the pinfalls like "normal referees", it takes a lot away from the experience. Good and surprising finish, this was a nice little match ***
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A great match and a really outstanding NWA World Title defence formula for Flair. Jumbo was put over in a great way, he completely dominated the champion on the mat and with the strikes, but was maybe too calm and he didn't have the killer instinct to win the match. It took Flair 20 minutes to finally get some heat on the challenger's leg and then Jumbo managed to reverse that as well in only a few minutes, it really looked like a night where nothing could go wrong for him. Great double countout tease, in an era where it was a very common finish; the double pinfall was also a genius move for the way it happened, but execution of the suplex was a bit too clumsy ****1/4
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They had a really nice brawl and it worked as a very strong angle, more than a classic match, as it was too short to be a blowoff between the two. Rose was such a good heel that fans were now cheering Borne, despite his anti hero attitude and words. It got blood and Rose's beatdown on Borne was fantastic, in and outside the ring, after everyone making fun of his weight. This was clipped here and there, which was a shame, but it all made sense given where they were going ***1/4
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This was unique. Not my cup of tea, but definitely unique and good in its own way. Brody and Stomper just brawled and destroyed each other with chairs for 5 minutes, all around the ring and also in the fans' seating areas. It got bloody and of course the poor referee couldn't do much about it, so half of the rosters comes down to finally set Brody and Stomper apart. Again, I can't call it a great match, but it was cool ***
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[1982-06-04-WCCW] Harley Race vs Kerry Von Erich (No DQ)
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in June 1982
Really good match and, with a more fitting stadium/crowd, it would have probably been ever better. It felt important, as a title shot to the World Title was on the line here. Kerry came out of this, at least in the eyes of the Texan fans, as a peer compared to Race. He took all of his punishment and still managed to win, albeit in an almost lucky was, but still clean in the middle of the ring. The No DQ stipulation was used to allow extra aggression, fights at ringside and heated sequences, instead of using lots of weapons. Race conducted the match with a good pace, even though I wasn't fan of a couple spots, like the 1 count after a piledriver just in the middle of the match; but the rest was all well done, they both bled as Kerry never gave up and used his fists to avenge Race's punishment ***3/4 -
Of course, this was not on the level of their 1989 matches, but it was still a good bout. Steamboat showed fire and was actually in the hot seat for a long time, so this was a bit different from a typical Flair touring title defence (despite Ricky not being a territory regular). One of the highlights was listening to a man with a raspy voice cheering for Flair and trying to keep up with all the fangirls chanting Steamboat's name. Flair changes his formula and this should be seen by the ones that accuse him of wrestling the same match every night; he gave Steamboat lots of offence and even the finish protected the challenger ***1/4
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This wasn't too good. Lots of unexciting limb work, which is fine I guess, but one would expect a 10/12 minutes Junior Heavyweight match to be a bit more interesting. Mask was a bit sloppy and got a few things wrong, both in execution and while conducting the match, their chemistry wasn't the best. Anyway, they managed to keep this short and simple, with a clean finish to boot **1/2
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This was nothing special, to be fair. Yes, lots of interesting details (Bobby Heenan was great at ringside and JYD had a massive pop with his entrance), but the action itself wasn't extremely good. Paul Boesch was really good on commentary, also moaning on some silly fans throwing objects in the ring. Dog was hitting hard, but something didn't click despite Bock's ring presence. The finish was quite of a genius spot, when Heenan counted the pinfall instead of the referee to deceive JYD, I liked it so much that the DQ ending felt perfectly fine **1/2
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[1982-04-21-AJPW] Dory Funk Jr vs Bruiser Brody
tcg91 replied to Superstar Sleeze's topic in April 1982
Considering their styles and limits, this was fought very smartly and was way better than what I imagined. A bit of stalling at the beginning, but Dory handled most of the actions and so it wasn't that bad, despite the lack of exciting action. Brody did very well later on, when they brawled all over the place and it got bloody, this was probably the best singles Brody had in a while. He also bumped a little bit, mind you. Not the strongest finish, but it was a clean title change at least ***