I love a good 80's handheld match. Some can be a drag to sit through based on the operator, others are little hidden gems and I think this fits into the latter category. Tons of heat between Takada/Maeda and Fujiwara, but especially between hot-head Nobuhiko Takada and old iron-head Yoshiaki Fujiwara. Osamu Kido is the low man on the totem pole and things slow down whenever he's in the ring but, for the most part, he manages to fit in with these guys and does some neat stuff on the mat. At one point, he's got Takada in a leglock and when Takada struggles, Kido kicks his opposite foot to put the pressure back on Takada. Later on, he's able to catch a back kick from Takada and take him down into the single leg crab. But man, once Fujiwara gets in there vs. Takada, the match sizzles. Takada starts cracking Fujiwara's legs with kicks, Fujiwara gets pissed and smacks him down. Against Maeda, Fujiwara immediately takes it to him with body blows before Maeda and Takada work him over with stiff kicks. He's able to slip out of Takada's suplex attempt and take him down with the Fujiwara armbar but he can't get the submission. Maeda German suplexes him and goes into a crossface chickenwing but Fujiwara whips him off and re-applies the hold himself. The finishing stretch between he and Takada is just as nasty as when they started and I loved the actual finish, with Fujiwara catching a kick, stomping out the opposite leg, and then submitting him with the leglock.
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
Saturday, June 23, 2018
Vader vs. Shinya Hashimoto (NJPW, 4/24/89)
This was a one night tournament to crown the new IWGP Heavyweight Champion, with Vader and Shinya Hashimoto reaching the finals. Vader had already wrestled two matches at this point: the first against Masahiro Chono and then a tough semi-final match against Tatsumi Fujinami. Hashimoto, on the other hand, had already gone through Riki Choshu and Victor Zangiev (an awesome match). Hashimoto doesn't have time for Vader's hollering and smoke-spewing elephant head. He immediately goes after the injured arm of Vader, which Fujinami had worked earlier in the night. Vader does a good job initially of keeping the arm behind him but Hashimoto's able to snag it and Vader has to pop him with a spinning backhand. The tension between these two is pretty damn great and when Hashimoto lets loose with the kicks to the arm, Vader sells it terrifically. Vader does such a good job of playing the vulnerable monster in Japan who is scared (legitimately) of submission holds. Hashimoto works the double wristlock and he's able to avoid an avalanche in the corner to hit a few over-the-shoulder armbreakers to set-up the wristlock again. Vader bodyslams out of the hold, building some momentum, which includes a big dropkick, but when he goes up top, Hashimoto stops him with a spinning heel kick and once again goes back to the best shot he has at winning: that injured arm. But Vader is often able to clobber his way out of trouble and does so here, punching Hashimoto in the face and hitting two lariats, the second enough to score the win following an awkward hesitation by special guest ref, Lou Thesz, on the three count. A simple story of finding the dragon's weakness and exploiting it but in the end, the dragon eats the knight.
Thursday, June 21, 2018
Vader vs. Kiyoshi Tamura (UWFi, 6/10/94)
In the wake of Vader's passing, I've decided to revisit his run in UWFi from 1993-1995. That SUPER run is, of course, best known for his classic series against Nobuhiko Takada but I've been watching all the little matches (aka squashes) and one of the best is against Kiyoshi Tamura. Tamura, confident in his ways, slaps Vader before the bell because...well, that's just what you do to the monsters in your life, right? Tamura's strategy is an obvious one: take Vader down at the kneecaps. Kick kick kick until he crumbles. Vader's able to catch him with a few shots but then Tamura lets loose a series of slaps and high kicks. For a big dude, Vader's selling is terrific here, as Tamura hacks him down and puts him in a kneebar. Vader struggles to find his mark as Tamura continues kicking, again using that kneebar to take Vader to the ropes. In the end, however, Vader's able to club him down, slam him, and hit the big powerbomb for the TKO victory. It's the old shoot-style David vs. Goliath and it rules.
Sunday, June 17, 2018
Shinjiro Ohtani vs. Masato Tanaka (ZERO1, 7/13/01)
These two dudes seemingly had a whole slew of matches together in ZERO-ONE, many of which were, at the very least, GOOD matches. This one is a personal favorite because it's compact and simple yet smartly worked without overstaying its welcome. Tanaka is a pudgy little house of fire to open, putting Ohtani on the rocks until Ohtani dropkicks the knee and starts working the holds. When Ohtani ties the leg up in the ropes, the fans let him have it and he basks in their boos. Tanaka's selling is terrific throughout the match, as he tries to boot and slap his way out of a leglock to no avail. When Tanaka starts to build some momentum, Ohtani ducks an elbow and hits a German suplex hold for two. And then he goes back to attacking that knee, keeping his holds locked in even after a rope break. Loved Tanaka hobbling over on one foot, trying to cut Ohtani off on the top rope before eventually superplexing him off, which sets the stage for the bomb-heavy finishing stretch. Tanaka goes on an offensive run, trying to finish Ohtani off with the Diamond Dust but Ohtani survives, dumping Masato with a couple of release dragon suplexes before putting him away with the Spiral Bomb. Good stuff!
Labels:
2001,
masato tanaka,
puroresu,
shinjiro ohtani,
zero1
Thursday, June 14, 2018
Genichiro Tenryu vs. Keiji Mutoh (AJPW, 6/8/01)
For the most part, a great match, although deliberately paced. I liked the convulsive start with Mutoh hitting the knee before the match sort of hiccups along. The ground stuff is whatever filler but I liked the in-between stuff: the pacing around, the wincing, the missed dropkick attempt by Mutoh, the snap backdrop from Tenryu. Mutoh starts going after the leg but Tenryu’s able to counter a suplex attempt into an apron brainbuster and follows up with a tope. Then, of course, Mutoh hits the dragon screw from the apron to the floor to return to the legwork. Look, I love Mutoh’s legwork, even when it goes nowhere: the dropkicks to the knee, the endless dragon screws, the double stomps. Tenryu’s legwork…eh, not so much, though I do adore the Texas cloverleaf. But the finishing stretch is really good stuff, with Tenryu hitting a spider German suplex, a brainbuster, a frankensteiner, and plenty of punches and chops. The knee from Mutoh to counter the Northern Lights Bomb was sold so well by Tenryu, and it takes two Shining Wizards and a moonsault to put the champ away.
Labels:
2001,
ajpw,
all japan,
genichiro tenryu,
keiji mutoh,
puroresu
Friday, June 1, 2018
Masanobu Fuchi vs. El Samurai (NJPW, 6/6/01)
More often than not, Masanobu Fuchi rules. El Samurai has the capacity to rule but in general, he rules less so. He did not necessarily rule here against Fuchi, although the match itself was a lot of fun. Primarily because of Fuchi. This thing starts off with Fuchi hitting a backdrop and Samurai flying around before it settles into some classic Fuchi matwork. Loved him scooting across the mat with Samurai stuck in the headscissors and of course, the wishbone leg split. Samurai rubbing forearms while he's got Fuchi in the clutch is a old-school heel shenanigans, which I enjoy, but then Fuchi shuts him down with backdrop after backdrop after backdrop after backdrop after backdrop after backdrop after backdrop. That's seven, right? Samurai was toast after that.
Labels:
2001,
el samurai,
masanobu fuchi,
new japan,
njpw
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