Boss Rock Posted May 26, 2021 Report Posted May 26, 2021 Looking at that pace working championship matches, it's amazing his body didn't give out sooner. I guess landing on his shoulder added years to his career.
soup23 Posted June 25, 2021 Report Posted June 25, 2021 February 83 is a good month for Flair with what we have on tape. No classics or even great matches but he works three distinctively different world title matches in three promotions. World Class vs Gordy has him as defacto face due to heat on Freebirds. Flair plays this off well as being ancillary in the whole feud. He has a demeanor of seeing there is a lot of shit going on and not wanting get directly involved. St. Louis vs Brody is a Ric vs bigger opponent template match but it goes an hour and Ric finds interesting ways to ground Brody and keep the match interesting. Florida vs Scott McGhee is most impressive. A no name challenger in the biggest match of his life. Ric plays it slow just looking for an opening and not going into deep waters against the inferior opponent. This match has no leg work by Flair and sure enough once Scott wipes out on a big charge in the corner, Ric suplexes him and wins clean.
Mantaur Rodeo Clown Posted August 14, 2025 Report Posted August 14, 2025 It's been four years since the last post in this thread, and I still haven't seen a good argument for why Flair shouldn't be considered Top 5 of all time at worst. One of the most complete packages in wrestling history, and has remained in high esteem despite having his career picked apart and scrutinized more closely than nearly anyone else in contention.
Ricky Jackson Posted August 15, 2025 Report Posted August 15, 2025 I think the 2036 vote (if such a thing happens) will see Ric back in the mix for a top spot, but 2026 feels like a "he finished 1st last time, so not too enthusiastic about pimping him this time" year (plus I think too much Nature Boy Behaving Badly in the media over the last decade has dented his reputation a bit)
Owen Edwards Posted August 15, 2025 Report Posted August 15, 2025 Top 5 comfortably. I don't believe in making cases against, though.
DMJ Posted Friday at 05:45 PM Report Posted Friday at 05:45 PM TheBean commented in the Non-Thread Worthy thread that he wouldn't be surprised if Flair fell out of the top 10. I'm not sure I'd go that far, but I don't think he'll be number one. Fair (to Flair) or not, I do think there is a threshold for how great one can be professionally at their peak and how much out-of-ring antics/post-peak performance can tarnish a legacy. Flair has both things working against him. Since 2016, any remaining "That's just Ric being Ric" goodwill has been thoroughly eroded away from the discourse about him and, to the second point, we also now have a wrestling landscape where guys 45+ are still putting on great matches. Flair's resume of good matches from roughly 96' to his retirement is pretty thin. Yes, there's better training now, wrestlers work considerably less, sports medicine has improved a ton in the past 20 years...but I think it can also be fairly said that Ric Flair was not a guy that was particularly great at adapting as he aged (and certainly not as well, say, AJ Styles or Rey Mysterio, who are both as old as Flair was in the latter half of the 90s, have plenty of bumps on their bump card, and routinely put on very good TV matches when called upon). Chris Jericho is 55 and for all the hate he gets, it's much easier to pull fun, quality matches from his past 5 years than it is to pull them from Ric's last 10. CM Punk is 47. Claudio is 45. I'm certainly not arguing that any of these wrestlers are better than Ric at their peak (though I think Styles and Mysterio will land in my top 12), but I do think these factors might play into how he ranks this year. Simply put, Flair being great for 10-15 years used to be much more impressive than it is now because we have guys like AJ, Rey, Punk, Jericho, La Parka, and probably a whole slew of Japanese and lucha wrestlers I don't even know about that have great matches spanning twice as long.
TheBean Posted Sunday at 04:42 PM Report Posted Sunday at 04:42 PM I think your points with Rey, AJ Styles etc al. combined with Ricky Jackson's above are what leads me to believe he might be out of the top 10. It all depends on who's voting (duh!) but there could be a lot of people that don't like "non WWF 80's wrestling" and could be bounced out. I think the 2016 results had that X factor so I'm keeping that in the back of my mind. If I just think about PWO folks and similarly minded people then I think you're 100% right. If there's no anti-80's/old school wrestling or other surprise then I'm thinking: #1 Funk, #2 Hansen, #3 Danielson, #4 Flair, #5 Hijo del Santo, Rey Misterio Jr, Misawa/Kobashi...someone around the top 5 last time.
Tetsujin Posted Monday at 02:29 PM Report Posted Monday at 02:29 PM While I also believe he will fall, I can only see Danielson, Funk, and the Pillars (sans Taue) ranking higher than Flair this time.
TheBean Posted Monday at 09:51 PM Report Posted Monday at 09:51 PM Yeah I could see Misawa & Kobashi ranking higher this time. I feel like 90's guys are going to edge out 80's guys just from a "who's participating" perspective too. I think that goes into the mix with Flair a very small amount. Probably the smallest since he stayed on TV in the 90's, 2000's and beyond where a lot of "80's" workers were wrapping up or already done. That was my view regarding Steamboat being done in 1994 in the other thread. Hansen, who might be on the bubble for top 5 in your view is an interesting case. I think his position this time may depend on how people view his pre-Kings Road/4 Pillars work in AJPW, not to mention his NJPW, Puerto Rico, AWA etc. stuff. I think you have a point there.
highflyflow Posted yesterday at 02:33 AM Report Posted yesterday at 02:33 AM If I was a betting man, I’d put money on Danielson, Funk, Hansen, Tenryu and Kobashi to all finish above Flair. After that, though, is anyone’s guess.
Mantaur Rodeo Clown Posted 16 hours ago Report Posted 16 hours ago On 1/10/2026 at 4:45 AM, DMJ said: Fair (to Flair) or not, I do think there is a threshold for how great one can be professionally at their peak and how much out-of-ring antics/post-peak performance can tarnish a legacy. I mean if anyone is trying to argue this, they can safely be ignored as they are clearly a moron. Lest this entire exercise become some sort of competition of who can be the biggest moral scold. Quote Flair has both things working against him. Since 2016, any remaining "That's just Ric being Ric" goodwill has been thoroughly eroded away from the discourse about him and, to the second point, we also now have a wrestling landscape where guys 45+ are still putting on great matches. Flair's resume of good matches from roughly 96' to his retirement is pretty thin. This remains an exception, not the rule. There are plenty of 45+ wrestlers getting around on the indies who are putting on terrible matches. Quote Yes, there's better training now, wrestlers work considerably less, sports medicine has improved a ton in the past 20 years...but I think it can also be fairly said that Ric Flair was not a guy that was particularly great at adapting as he aged Yes, you seem to have outlined the exact reasons why it is much easier to wrestle well into your 40s today than it was in the 80s and 90s. The work schedule alone would have literally, not figuratively, but literally killed several more wrestlers if it was still as strenuous today. Ric Flair should not lose points for the shifting economics of the business enabling a healthier work environment today. Quote (and certainly not as well, say, AJ Styles or Rey Mysterio, who are both as old as Flair was in the latter half of the 90s, have plenty of bumps on their bump card, and routinely put on very good TV matches when called upon). Chris Jericho is 55 and for all the hate he gets, it's much easier to pull fun, quality matches from his past 5 years than it is to pull them from Ric's last 10. CM Punk is 47. Claudio is 45. All of those wrestlers still have fewer bumps on their bump card than Flair at their age. They also have one fewer plane crash. CM Punk? Are you kidding me? He left pro wrestling for seven years! I note, Flairs best 10 matches also easily clear the best 10 matches of everyone you mentioned. He was simply never asked to put on very good TV matches for much of his peak, because that was not the business model. Quote I'm certainly not arguing that any of these wrestlers are better than Ric at their peak (though I think Styles and Mysterio will land in my top 12), but I do think these factors might play into how he ranks this year. Simply put, Flair being great for 10-15 years used to be much more impressive than it is now because we have guys like AJ, Rey, Punk, Jericho, La Parka, and probably a whole slew of Japanese and lucha wrestlers I don't even know about that have great matches spanning twice as long. You didn't mention the obvious point, which is that even when Flair was able to still go, he was de-emphasised in booking and never put in a position to have long, good matches like older wrestlers are today. He was already considered over the hill by the early 90s (Spartacus lmao), just a couple years removed from putting on what are considered possibly the greatest matches ever. That would simply never happen in today's world, and guys like AJ/Rey benefit greatly from it. Kenny Omega is a shell of his former self, and is still treated and booked like the man who was wrestling Okada and Naito in 2017. Flair, when given the chance, could still produce into his late 40s, and was clearly put in a support role not designed to show him off as a great wrestler by the time he returned to WWE.
TheBean Posted 9 hours ago Report Posted 9 hours ago Is there a consensus of when Flair's great matches start and when they end? I think to be even considered top 10, a wrestler should have a 20 year span of consistently great matches*. If we can agree that Flair has 20 years of consistently great matches then, any crap matches/years afterwards can be "excused" because it is a business/job after all. That applies to everyone. BUT I don't think Flair's longevity for the sake on not wanting to retire should be a positive either. If he's got 20 years of quality and 15 years of crap then, I think those 15 years should be used against him when looking at other wrestlers with 20 years of quality but retired, went to the mid card etc.. (Using 15 years as an example). Again that applies to everyone. *consistently great matches, I mean NOT just a great PPV match one year. At least great matches every PPV, big show, tour, very good TV matches etc. Perhaps a classic per year etc. 7 hours ago, Mantaur Rodeo Clown said: when Flair was able to still go, he was de-emphasised in booking and never put in a position to have long, good matches like older wrestlers are today. He was already considered over the hill by the early 90s (Spartacus lmao), just a couple years removed from putting on what are considered possibly the greatest matches ever. That would simply never happen in today's world, and guys like AJ/Rey benefit greatly from it I don't believe he was de-emphasized or had a quality drop in the early 90's. Having watched a bunch of WCW 1994 last year, Flair was given opportunities and definitely used them. He had a couple fantastic matches with Steamboat, one being an hour or so. He had a great series with Regal although intentionally chopped up into multiple matches (Marquis Queensbury matches). And he was working Hogan in PPV main events. So I think AJ & Rey don't benefit more than Ric (or Hogan for that matter) did. They just happen to have longevity & consistency of quality like Flair. I mention '94 because this might be the last year where he has the quality wrestling & opponents, and one could argue '74-94 are his 20 yrs. If this is the year/period when you were thinking when saying "early 90's" then sorry! 🙂 Also, not sure if this was your intention so apologies if it's nitpicking but long matches don't necessarily equal good matches. I want to but won't hold Flair Broadway matches against him at this point (same with Danielson, if not draws then long matches) while physically impressive, it didn't always yield a better match. I mention those two because the long matches became their trademarks.
highflyflow Posted 8 hours ago Report Posted 8 hours ago I really just have never bought the idea that Flair's had "15 years of crap" or any kind of detracting statement in regards to the twilight years of his active career; the idea that his WWE run is considered a negative for him, and a strong negative at that, is baffling to me, because I consider him to be a reliably solid member of the Ruthless Aggression era and honestly one of the better wrestlers on the roster period. I guess if you compared Flair in 2005 to Flair in 1985 then he doesn't stack up in comparison but...why would you do that? Flair at 56 is not gonna look the same as Flair at 36. I still think he had matches ranging from solid to genuinely great with the likes of Eddie Guerrero, Randy Orton, Chris Benoit, Shawn Michaels, Big Show, Mick Foley, and Triple H.
Mantaur Rodeo Clown Posted 4 hours ago Report Posted 4 hours ago 3 hours ago, highflyflow said: I really just have never bought the idea that Flair's had "15 years of crap" or any kind of detracting statement in regards to the twilight years of his active career; the idea that his WWE run is considered a negative for him, and a strong negative at that, is baffling to me, because I consider him to be a reliably solid member of the Ruthless Aggression era and honestly one of the better wrestlers on the roster period. I guess if you compared Flair in 2005 to Flair in 1985 then he doesn't stack up in comparison but...why would you do that? Flair at 56 is not gonna look the same as Flair at 36. I still think he had matches ranging from solid to genuinely great with the likes of Eddie Guerrero, Randy Orton, Chris Benoit, Shawn Michaels, Big Show, Mick Foley, and Triple H. If you take him on his own merits in 2005 as a different wrestler rather than a guy who is 30 per cent of what he used to be in 1989, he's perfectly entertaining. There's been a bit of talk that Flair didn't adapt his style to modern sensibilities, but I think he did what he could. The little hardcore phase he had in 2006 for instance. He leaned into his "dirtiest player in the game" far more, as he couldn't trade headlocks and arm drags for 55 minutes anymore. And even at 56, with all the wear and tear on his body, he can still go out there and work at Kurt Angle's pace, which is notoriously go-go-go. Ric Flair vs Kurt Angle - WWE RAW - June 27, 2005 Is he gassed at the end of it? Of course. But the crowd is still red hot for him, and lose their minds for a VERTICAL SUPLEX IN 2005. Honestly, if you let him wrestle someone who actually worked a hold now and then to let Flair breathe, it probably would have been even better. 4 hours ago, TheBean said: I don't believe he was de-emphasized or had a quality drop in the early 90's. Having watched a bunch of WCW 1994 last year, Flair was given opportunities and definitely used them. He had a couple fantastic matches with Steamboat, one being an hour or so. He had a great series with Regal although intentionally chopped up into multiple matches (Marquis Queensbury matches). And he was working Hogan in PPV main events. So I think AJ & Rey don't benefit more than Ric (or Hogan for that matter) did. They just happen to have longevity & consistency of quality like Flair. I mention '94 because this might be the last year where he has the quality wrestling & opponents, and one could argue '74-94 are his 20 yrs. If this is the year/period when you were thinking when saying "early 90's" then sorry! 🙂 Yes, sorry for not making myself clear. I merely picked the early 90s to show that some promoters (Jim Herd) clearly thought he was over the hill. But he still had great matches (Vader, Steamboat, Savage) in the early 90s. His de-emphasis came post-nWo, which makes perfect business sense, but makes it more difficult for his GWE case. The lack of TV time (3 hours initially to modern day WWE's approximately 186 hours of weekly content) means he was naturally going to be pushed into the background. But between a turn away from in-action (more run-ins! more!) and angles that did no one any favours (like getting committed to an insane asylum), I don't think we can lay the blame at Flair's feet and say it was because he couldn't go anymore. He says himself his confidence was shot by 2001, wrestling in a T-shirt on the final Nitro out of shame. I don't think that it's unique to Flair either. I don't think late 90s WCW is used to promote Bret Hart's case, or Curt Hennig's case, or Macho Man's case.
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