Jump to content
Pro Wrestling Only

rainmakerrtv

Members
  • Posts

    3590
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by rainmakerrtv

  1. Sorry to ask a dumb question, but what is a "homestead" territory?
  2. I think Luger peaked from a working perspective in 1989-1990 but I think he was at his hottest in 1997. I was actually talking about Flair's last great solid run, not Luger's.
  3. Listening to the podcast, I was thinking that the first half of 1990 with the Luger series was the last run of Flair as the fountain of great matches. After losing the belt to Sting, there were still some great matches but they were more scattered. His last world title run before the jump didn't have a whole lot to it, the WWF run had a few great matches, after he jumped back I don't think he had those periods of lots of great matches like he did in the 80s.
  4. I have read of a match Andre had with Savage during his first World Title reign in, I believe, Los Angeles that was touted as a great late season Andre match. Can anyone vouch for this?
  5. Just talking up my own little patch of ground here, these were my favorite matches from C*4 in Ottawa this year : Hacker Scotty O'Shea vs Speedball Mike Bailey , Rise Above, January 19, 2013 Josh Alexander vs. Christopher Bishop vs. Lionel Knight, Rise Above, January 19, 2013 Michael Elgin vs Speedball Mike Bailey , Level Up, March 9, 2013 Super Smash Brothers vs Checkmate, Domination 2K13, April 27, 2013 Hacker Scotty O'Shea vs Speedball Mike Bailey, Fans Bring The Keyboards Match, Comination 2K13, April 27, 2013 I heard good things about the Scotty O'Shea vs Josh Alexander vs Mike Bailey 3 way match from Crossing The Line in June, but I wasn't able to make that show and haven't seen the DVD yet.
  6. If it is the same comp I have, you are in for a real treat. My favorite comps are the ones that tell a story, and that one does a good job telling the story as well as having a lot of hot matches.
  7. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a password protected forum. Enter Password
  8. Anybody know what happened with Tama's release? I remember thinking at the time that the Islanders were the team of the future, they were on such a hot streak. Instead, Tama gets swapped out for Sivi Afi, the Islanders fizzle out and we end up with King Haku.
  9. Parv, I am not part of the his own success argument...but my whole point was that everything he's done is around something he grew up with and was familiar with....that isnt a "genius" to me....I think he gets too much credit for doing one thing incredible well and fucking up countless others with money..... A genius can be a damned fool outside their field of specialization.
  10. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a password protected forum. Enter Password
  11. I never figured Iron Sheik's cup of coffee in WWF in Summer of 1988. There didn't seem to be any role for him and he was in horrible shape.
  12. Because his nickname was 'fabulous" ? Read the obit again. Especially the prt about who's doing the service. We were no selling it. Not entirely surprised Fulton became a man of the cloth, given the multiple mentions of his faith in the ROH shoot interview (not that it was annoying, just he did bring it up a few times).
  13. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a password protected forum. Enter Password
  14. Nah. Warrior, Johnny Ace. The guy I've never heard anything against was Bobby Eaton. Even Steamboat has a few guys who aren't big fans like Honky. But Eaton, I'm scratching my head and can't find one reference of a guy speaking badly about him. Johnny ace is pretty bad, and it's really varied how bad he is. Warrior, on the other hand, most people say that he was quiet and just kept to himself. Buzz Sawyer. Only person I ever heard of who liked him was Bobby Fulton, and I think they grew up together. I've frequently heard people run down Warrior, such as Dibiase, Snake and Bret Hart (in his book, at least, don't recall if he said anything about him in his shoots.) Only person I've heard say he was a good guy was Warlord, who frankly just seemed like a good ole boy who liked everyone.
  15. Done.
  16. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a password protected forum. Enter Password
  17. Something about Bret seems to inspire brand loyalty, at least with me. He was my first favorite wrestler. Since then, I have seen a wide variety of wrestling ... better technicians, more consistent performers. But Bret remains in my Top 5 favorites list because , in spite of everything that has happened over the years, he remains My Guy, in the same way some sports fans have Their Team, no matter how much they might lose.
  18. Sheamus = Irish Mick Foley ?
  19. I thought the really telling thing with them was watching how the Commonwealth angle in Southwest played out. There was a short run in there where Luke was on his own, and he's actual a really exciting, violent brawler. And then Butch shows up...and he's not. At all. And they start teaming, and Luke starts working down to Butch's level. Really weird thing to find out about two guys I used to not be able to tell apart at all. As to the topic at hand..."really dislike" is probably too strong a term, but I was always very "meh" towards Bull Nakano. I honestly can't put my finger on why that is, but her work leaves me cold in ways that, say, Aja Kong's doesn't. You have to see the Sheepherders in Memphis. They were at their best there with Johnathan Boyd being really great. But wasn't that a completely different team? It wasn't Luke Williams and Butch Miller, it was Jonathan Boyd and Rip Morgan (and later Bigfoot ... I've seen some listings saying Bigfoot *was* Rip Morgan, but I distinctly remember Boyd saying he was a replacement for Rip. Can anyone get a definitive word on this?)
  20. In my view the objective standards best set was All Japan, but my favorite was Memphis. Maybe what put Memphis over Mid South for me was that I was expecting Mid South to be great, but for some reason I wasn't expecting as much from Memphis so it was more of a pleasant surprise.
  21. Re Murdoch's punches One thing to remember is not just that Murdoch had great punches but he had great worked punches. Funk would straight out pop people in the forehead. I remember JJ Dillon talking on a Bix podcast where he said something to the effect that he was always terrified watching those punches come in but they always had light contact. He knew just how to pull them and still make them look great.
  22. goodhelmet's Four Horsemen set was a great source for me for filling in a lot of the cracks in the storylines from having previously just seen the commercial tape. Granted, it is pretty huge. Was there any particular storyline reason for the Barry Windham vs. Rick Steiner match?
  23. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a password protected forum. Enter Password
  24. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a password protected forum. Enter Password
  25. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a password protected forum. Enter Password
×
×
  • Create New...