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Matt D

DVDVR 80s Project
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Everything posted by Matt D

  1. Matt D

    Haku/Meng

    Shawn also had to worry about being the top draw and cutting halfway decent promos and such. All roles have demands. Bill's judgment on Shawn's success aside, that's actually my exact point. All roles do have demands. I'm not saying that I completely know that Haku could have performed as well in a main event role because of what I've seen him do elsewhere, just like I don't know that some main eventer couldn't have done what Haku did as a heel gatekeeper who had to eat a lot of jobs. The point is that they're different roles with different demands, different opportunities, and different challenges and I think both are worth examining when looking at a wrestler. You can learn a lot about a wrestler from the gatekeeper role and you can learn different things from a main event role, and I'm not discounting one or another for the sake of this project.
  2. Have you written about Santo at length anywhere Will? I'd be curious to read that if so
  3. Matt D

    Ricky Morton

    How do you feel about his 91 heel run, Kris? There were a metric ton of TV tags and six mans and he has two fairly big singles matches that got time with Gibson and Pillman.
  4. That's a really good question, but when you look at how I then apply the information, it's very much me looking for patterns and a general sense of understanding wrestling how I want it understood and then executing that understanding in different situations. It's not necessarily about ranking a bunch of performances from 1-10. It's much more holistic (which may not mean what I think it means). But what I need is enough data, enough INPUT for me to make an ultimate decision. That's what quantity means to me in a project like this. I don't care if Windham's career was all that. I care about if I think he's ultimately a greater wrestler than everyone else. (I'd probably end up saying no because I don't think he dealt with his physical breakdown well and that shows a lack of understanding, ultimately. But that's not necessarily because he didn't have great matches late in his career. It's because I'm not convinced by the footage we do have with him. That's sort of the same thing but it's also sort of not. I give Boss Man a ton of credit for his late career 2-3 minute matches because they show me something. I might feel differently if I had more Turnbuckle Championship Wrestling though, re: Windham. That's not the point though). Now if I was just a great match guy then I'd probably be in a much more tenuous position if I was making this same argument, but I'm very clearly not. It's not about me giving a ranking for stats. It's about me ultimately deciding who I think understands and executes what I think is greatness in wrestling. Maybe you could deconstruct what I do and find a statistical way of expressing that, but it's not how look at it. The total picture isn't one of numbers for me. It's also not that I just look at talent. It's like writing a dissertation on a wrestler. I take from matches as my primary sources. If they didn't do something (or avoid doing something in the ring), and usually multiple times, I don't have anything to go on.
  5. I understand that's one school of thought. To me, though, the question is which of the two is the better wrestler, not which of the two have the higher number of great matches on tape, and I feel like we have enough of Bock in varied situations to win that argument. We could have a thousand matches of Flair performing at a high level and fifty of Bock performing at a high level and if I feel like Bock's level is higher than Flair's, then he's a better wrestler. That's on me thinking I'm a good enough judge with the smaller number of matches (which is still a lot and still in a number of varied situations). People can disagree obviously. I need exactly as many matches as I need to figure out what I need to know. To me, that's the only point of quantity when it comes to this project. Now, maybe one thing I need to know is work over time, but you can get that with x number of matches over x years, or what not. At the end of the day, i need enough footage to decide which is the greater wrestler. Having more matches where I see evidence that someone is NOT the greater wrestler than the wrestler I have less (but plenty of) matches with probably hurts you more than it helps you, to be honest.
  6. So the argument is that he did stuff that I think Bock did better but he did it not quite as well many more times! I'm kidding. I'm a long way off from giving a final verdict on Flair.
  7. I didn't realize you thought Flair did anything well. I kid, I kid. I think Flair's great at a ton of things. The joke I could give here is that "No one makes bad wrestling more entertaining than Ric Flair" and that he's the Gorilla Monsoon of great matches, but that be disingenuous. Any criticism I have of Ric is strictly on a "Is he the GOAT?" level. I never question that he should be in the argument.
  8. Matt D

    Current WWE

    I'm kind of frustrated that Baltimore seemingly only gets TV tapings or PPVs. I want to go to a house show but I don't want to trek out of my way for it. Also, it's nigh impossible for me to hit something on a Sunday or Monday night but a Friday or Saturday night would be doable.
  9. Matt D

    Mark Henry

    That's also pretty underrating the first ten years of Henry's career.
  10. Matt D

    Roddy Piper

    I almost hate to say this, but I think I'd have to watch WCW era Piper to really get a good handle on things. I love him in 79-80. I love what I've seen from San Fran. I think he was amazingly dynamic in 84-85. There are a couple of his babyface WWF matches I love (vs Perfect and Hart), but there are gaps and I have the feeling that he was a guy who coasted at points. I need to see more to really hammer that down though. I think he could make my ballot, potentially, but I'm not sure where.
  11. Matt D

    Your own Criteria

    To add to that (and I've been in and out this afternoon, so some replies have been shorter than I would have liked), I do think there are some people that think a match can't be great unless it's also big. People have different definitions for that term (and probably for "big" as well).
  12. All that said, I wasn't kidding that I wasn't going to start heavily looking at anything til the new year. My dance card is pretty full up with how I've stretched myself, and that's before all this 50s stuff dropped. But I'll start looking at 96 with Liger, absolutely, thanks.
  13. I've seen extremely little of ace Liger but I'm looking forward to seeing some of this stuff.
  14. Matt D

    Your own Criteria

    The criteria being listed here in the last few posts, mainly.
  15. Matt D

    Your own Criteria

    Who's the best wrestler never to have a "Great match" by that criteria? Haku, for instance, has, at the least, some heel Islanders stuff (the singles match vs Martel is an awesome TV match), the cage match vs Slaughter/Blackwell (ranked extremely high on the AWA best of the 80s), and maybe Survivor Series 89, and probably quite a bit that aren't on the top of my head. I think those count by the criteria just posted.
  16. Matt D

    Your own Criteria

    I could see Aries getting in the bottom of some people's ballots?
  17. Matt D

    Haku/Meng

    Also, I love the reasoning here. It wasn't Haku's job to have GREAT MATCHES, but his job was in many ways harder with far more constraints than let's say 1996 Shawn Michaels, for instance.
  18. Matt D

    Mark Henry

    One of the most interesting arguments in this thing, to me, is going to be Blackwell vs Henry. Blackwell's much more in your face and Henry is much more subtle.
  19. Matt D

    Haku/Meng

    Is there a bunch of Montreal Haku that's awesome that I haven't seen?
  20. I'm going to push hard for Bock, because, frankly, I think almost everything Flair does well, Bock does almost as well if not as good or better, and he does most of the stuff Flair doesn't do as well, much, much better.
  21. Matt D

    Mark Henry

    Frankly, I can't imagine a list like this without Henry on it somewhere.
  22. Matt D

    El Dandy

    I say this on a completely selfish level, but the more matches are online for some of these guys, the more in depth they can be examined. That's one takeaway I got from reading the Dandy feud list.
  23. If I had to turn in a list today, it'd either be Bockwinkel or Rose, but I have a long, long way to go.
  24. Matt D

    Aja Kong

    I haven't done the legwork on Aja yet, but I think this discussion raises an interesting question. How much credit do you give someone for working a style that the crowd appreciates or what they want to see even if certain elements of it goes against what you think good wrestling is? The logical conclusion to this is Davey Richards or some really successful garbage wrestler. What's the difference between Aja working a match that's perfect for her crowd and Davey working a match that's perfect for his? They both take quite a bit of care and understanding. I think we, as a community, brutalize some people for that and then use it to downplay and rationalize away things we don't like when it comes to others.
  25. Matt D

    Jeff Jarrett

    The biggest standout feud is Jarrett/Lawler vs the Moondogs right? I think Moondog Spot is pretty much unquestionably a better candidate than Jarrett.
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