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Posted

Pretty simple. I'm gonna watch one match for every wrestler who made the top 100. I'll pick the highest match from cagematch that I haven't seen (and can find online.) Feel free to join me, tell me I'm wrong, whatever you like. 

#100  Chris Hero

So, the highest ranked Hero match on cagematch is some elusive German indie match. Therefore, I'll go with:

Chris Hero vs. Bryan Danielson (PWG, 9/4/09)

I like this look for Hero. I'm used to watching him clean shaven, wearing the blue Superman t-shirt. I don't know who originated this look on the indies, but he reminds me of Steve Corino. Danielson looks like Luke Skywalker with a beard.

I've seen a lot of comments about this being unfocused. It's true that they move from one section to the other, starting with what some folks would call a matwork section (to me it was more holds than matwork), then potato shots, big moves and strikes. I've never wrestled a match, but I imagine it's easier to break it down into sections in your head. You run the risk of telegraphing things for fans who've been around the block a few times, but I'm willing to cut them a little slack. The strikes weren't as popular among reviewers as the early mat portions, but I really liked the ear shots. I wish more wrestlers would take a page out of Hero's playbook and mess with a guy's ears. It's better than the twisty shit he does on simple moves. I get why wrestlers like to get a little showy with moves, but if you're a big guy just drop an elbow or knee. You'll get more mileage out of it in the long run. 

The size difference bothered me early on. I kept thinking that Hero should just beat the crap out of Danielson, so I was actually happy to see Danielson crank thing up. The two things Danielson had going for him here were high impact strikes and nasty looking submissions. The best in the world shit drives me crazy. I know it's a gimmick, but the fans are so slavish about it. You're wrestling in front of a 100 fans. You're not the best in the world. You're the best indy worker to make tape. Still, everybody takes that shit seriously. The whole story revolves around Hero having to prove that he's better than Danielson even though he's the champ. It's too bad they deliver a regular sort of bout instead of a match for the ages. Regular Hero/Danielson isn't bad, but can't live up to the hype. I liked this moment-to-moment, and I thought the finish was cool, but I dunno what they smoke on cagematch to rate this so high. Whatever it is, it must be the best in the world. 

 

Posted

I watched this one relatively recently and it sticks out like a sore thumb for me in that it's a PWG match I really enjoyed.  (I am allergic to PWG audiences, commentary and in-ring at the best of times).

 

I really appreciated the structure and I felt it was a clear three act match which was nice and easy to follow, and for a long match was pretty engaging throughout.

I recall the pivot in the match of Danielson getting on top before being cut out by the chair shot being very effective and how the dynamic shifted in terms of who was in control / vulnerable.

Think this match succeeds in spite of the setting and if I recall it was in Danielson's last hurrah before signing with WWE so acted as a bookend / homage to his indie career.

Great thread idea by the way.

Posted

Great thread, hope you get through the whole list. It's been a while since I watched the Hero/Danielson match, but I remember it feeling really well paced for a match that long, with awesome crowd.

Posted

#99 Tully Blanchard

cagematch users don't rate Tully Blanchard matches very highly. There were a couple of cool looking NWA matches, but of course the highest rated match I haven't seen is a Brain Busters vs. Rockers match. The rules are the rules. I've seen Brain Busters vs. Rockers matches before, but I couldn't tell you which ones, and it's not a matchup I hold in particularly high regard. 

Brain Busters vs. The Rockers (WWF, 1/23/89)

This started with a typical WWF heel-in-peril section, which I guess you'd call an extended shine (if that's the word you're supposed to use.) Then the heels took over and there was a Shawn Michaels face-in-peril section. Michaels made the hot tag, pandemonium broke loose, and the Brain Busters cheated to win. Solid match, but there was nothing great about it. They probably ran a variation on the following night, and the night after that.

It's more of an Arn showcase than a Tully bout. That doesn't surprise me. Arn hadn't peaked yet as a worker or a stooge, but he was still better suited to WWF wrestling than Tully. Tully feels like a quintessential 80s wrestler. It's hard to imagine him transitioning into the 90s. They may be because we didn't actually see it, but what was Tully's ceiling in 90s WCW? Does he join the Dangerous Alliance? Fill Orndorff's role? If Arn had stayed in the WWF, I can see them using him in a midcard role. At least for a year or two. Tully was such a product of 80s brat pack and yuppie culture that it's hard to see him being successful in any other role. The Rockers, on the other hand, seemed primed for a run as WWF tag champs. It's too bad that Vince lost interest in the tag division during '89. 

Posted

I think Tully fits perfectly into the Dangerous Alliance. As you say, he's a real product of yuppie culture, so mobile-wielding super-yuppie Paul E Dangerously feels like the perfect manager for him. I can absolutely imagine Tully in the 92 War Games match as well. Only question is whether he replaces Eaton or Larry.

Posted

I remember a 1995 Tully vs Fujinami match that was surprisingly great for such a bizarre pairing and time. Tully displayed his usual strengths while also giving his performance a more serious tone, less cartoony and more sports-like. I think he would have been really awesome if he worked through the 90s full time.

Posted

I'd never even considered Tully as part of the Dangerous Alliance in '92 but it's now shot up the top of my list of things that never happened that I wish I had a time machine to somehow rectify personally.

I love the Rockers/Brainbusters series. That 1/23/89 match is like a top 5 WWF/E tag ever for me. 

Posted

He was given the boot in the end for his incompetence anyway. I reckon Tully would've just hastened his removal and then they end up getting 12 minutes at Beach Blast to work a ***1/2 classic. I'm okay with that. 

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