Wednesday, 29 July 2015

All Star Wrestling 03/10/14

Browsing through YouTube the other day, I realised there were loads of full wrestling shows put legally online, just waiting for two-bit bloggers like me to review them. I found this show, put online by Dean Allmark himself, with Jushin Liger making a rare appearance for All Star Wrestling. I've even linked to the show at the bottom of the page. Consider it an interactive review, or something

Andy Simmons vs JD Bryant
It feels like a long time since Simmons was the butler for the Duke of Danger in the team Hampton Court. Here, he’s just normal wrestler Andy Simmons, facing a guy in Bryant who is using “Yes” chants to get himself
over. This was a fun opener, really liked the early part with them fighting over an armbar. Simmons thinks he’s escaped, then runs into an armdrag and is trapped again. I also dug Simmons high impact knee to the stomach, and the way Bryant countered a second attempt with a rollup. I kinda wish Bryant would spend more time selling and less time clapping when hit by a move. The end seems Simmons rush the corner and get hit with a second rope dropkick for the win.

 
David Finlay vs Danny Collins
Good  to note that Collins still looks in surprisingly decent shape, and he cuts a promo referencing his battles with Finlay’s dad by saying he’s going to take out revenge for all the blood he shed. Collins works this as the grizzled veteran grounding young Finlay. I did love the way Collins disingenuously offered a handshake
only after getting dropkicked down by Finlay. Collins again shows his veteran smarts after getting a public warning for dropping Finlay throat first on the ropes by concentracting his attack on the neck and shoulders. Love the way he uses the ring apron as a weapon. Finlay looks promising, but shows his inexperience when
he has to make comebacks: they always start off fired up, but within a few moves he’s locking in a chinlock. He does get a really nice nearfall from a sunset flip, which I nearly bought. We start getting time limit countdowns,
which kinda telegraph the finish. Indeed, we get to the final minute and, despite a few frantic pin attempts by Finlay, we get a draw. Both men shake hands afterwards, and I enjoyed this. Collins looked great and Finlay, though green, showed promise.

Thunder vs Dean Allmark
Thunder is the son of Coventry’s own World of Sport representative Tony “Banger” Walsh. There is a contrast in size and strength here, with Thunder being considerably bigger. He hiptosses Allmark like he’s trying to
drill him through the mat. His selling is a bit suspect though, responding to an Allmark dropkick by wobbling like a drunk man slipping on a banana skin. Allmark hits a lovely springboard moonsault for two. The end comes rather too quickly, as Allmark goes to the top rope, only for Thunder to shove the ref into the ropes, crotching Deano. A superplex gets the win for Thunder.


Joel Redman vs Justin Star
I love the way that Redman is still announced as a WWE star (as opposed to “former WWE star”). I’ve not seen Star before, and he does things I like and stuff I dislike. He does some fun stooging on defence, especially when Redman is outsmarting him in the early stages, and he does show impressive strength to catch Redman from a crossbody. However, his strikes are both weak-looking and over-exaggerated and there are a few moments in the match which don’t make sense. For example, despite having worn Redman down and being in control of the match, he allows Redman to wander around outside the ring to recover. When Redman tries to enter, Star punches him, breaking the count and giving Redman more time to recover. Redman is a really fun offensive wrestler, so it’s not for the best that he spends most of the match selling, but his comeback is really good and he gets the win with a big spinebuster and a superkick.

Jushin “Thunder” Liger vs Robbie Dynamite
This is slightly surreal, watching Jushin Liger wrestle in front of the family-orientated All Star crowd, a lot of whom will have no idea who he is. They work a really fun mat section to start off with Liger having a slight (but only slight) advantage, annoying Dynamite. Dynamite resorts to strikes, but gets sent out and nailed with a Liger cannonball from the apron. Liger isn’t phoning this one in. Dynamite catches him coming off the ropes and cradles him up into a Falcon Arrow in one slick movement. Looked great. Dynamite works him over, but Liger comes back with a palm strike and a Koppo kick from the corner. Dynamite gets knees up on a top rope splash and hits a stomach-buster, which I love, concentrating his attack on the same area. Dynamite takes a risk, which backfires as he misses a plancha. Liger hits a top rope rana for two, then a palm strike and brainbuster for three. Really good match. Liger put in a good shift here, when he could easily have gotten away with phoning it in, and Dynamite looked his equal in defeat. Really great.


Saturday, 18 July 2015

WCW SuperBrawl II 1992

Time to continue with my (slowly-moving) WCW 1992 project. This is the first time I've seen this show (WCW PPV's didn't get any UK broadcasts in the day), so I'm looking forward to this immensely. A great commentary team of Jim Ross and Jesse Ventura do a really good job here too...
 
Brian Pillman vs Jushin Thunder Liger
Really great choice of opener to pump up the crowd. They didn’t really seem aware of Liger before the bout, but this crowd soon were going nuts for the action, pretty much from the moment Liger hit a graceful moonsault press to Pillman. I loved the struggle for Liger’s surfboard, which Pillman evaded twice – really put the move over as a threat. Liger works over Pillman’s legs following a missed knee charge in the corner, with a figure four causing real damage. Pillman is thrown to the floor, with Liger hitting a great rolling cannonball from the top. If I’ve one real issue, it’s that Pillman was barely able to stand from the figure four, and this was even before getting hit with the cannonball, yet right away he comes back with a springboard clothesline, showing no ill effects from either Liger move. I do like the way that PIllman ramps up his aggressive streak from this point, suplexing Liger to the floor and hitting a big dive from the top. This builds to the finishing stretch, which sees a number of very close nearfalls, with a Liger German suplex being the most convincing. However, Liger misses a top rope headbutt, and Pillman rolls him up with a bridging pin for three.

Marcus Alexander Bagwell vs Taylor Made Man
The Taylor Made Man really was a totally unsubtle Million Dollar Man rip-off, even down to the tuxedo with a gold trim he wears to the ring here. Bagwell is still played up as a rookie, but despite a few flubs on landings and reversals, he looks good here. Bagwell is mainly selling, as the veteran Taylor controls most of the bout after suckering Bagwell in and throwing him through the ropes. Loved the big gutwrench powerbomb from Taylor, and he hits a great top rope splash for two. The end sees an over-cocky Taylor getting rolled up for three, and I loved how Bagwell’s celebratory momentum sees him fired off the ropes and into a Taylor forearm for a post-match beatdown. Decent bout.

Ron Simmons vs Cactus Jack
Fun power sprint. I love the energy Simmons shows from the start, he just moves exceptionally well in the ring. Jack takes a nutty bump early, catching his neck in the ropes after diving through them. Momentum changes to Jack’s favour as he hits the double arm DDT, but it’s not a finisher yet, so he doesn’t bother pinning him. Big diving elbow to the floor by Cactus looks nasty. Simmons takes a bg bump, missing a 3-point stance and flying through the ropes onto the ramp, but he quickly rebounds to hit a vicious looking spinebuster onto the ramp. Back inside, Simmons catches Cactus from the second rope with a powerslam for three. Really enjoyed this.

Van Hammer & Tom Zenk vs Richard Morton & Vinnie Vegas
Good to see the Patron Saint of this blog, Tom Zenk, in action. Ventura gets in a few choice barbs on commentary, saying every Vinnie he knows wears bad suits, and in a jibe at the WBF, says no-one makes money on bodybuilding…”even Vinnie knows that”. The opening Vegas/Hammer section is pretty dull, Hammer looks a bit lost at times and Vegas isn’t the man to carry him. In contrast, Zenk and Morton work really well together, with a fun Zenk pescado leading to him hiptossing Morton on the floor in a heavy bump. Hammer becomes face-in-peril, and I did enjoy the heel double-teaming, with Morton directing traffic by holding Hammer in place for Vegas’ offence. The double-teams are basic, but effective. Zenk gets the hot tag, and looks great coming in, hitting a swank bodyslam on Morton for two, before pinning him with a sunset flip out of the corner. This was fine.

Barry Windham & Dustin Rhodes vs Steve Austin & Larry Zbyszko
Zbyszko had famously broken Windham’s hand by slamming it with a car door at Halloween Havoc 91, giving him the “Cruncher” nickname that Ventura loves to repeat on commentary. We get a melee to start, and I loved Windham dominating Austin only to throw him to the corner to tag Larry in. Windham looks great here, nailing Zbyszko with a sweet lariat and a fucking great DDT. It takes some interference by Austin throwing Windham over the top rope to finally give Zbyszko some respite, and Windham promptly hurls himself outside again with a missed lariat. Windham making sure his fingers are tightly locked before breaking a sleeper with a chinbreaker is great attention to detail. The heels then work a fun heat section on Rhodes, with Austin managing to repeatedly cut off Rhodes with clotheslines. It’s therefore fun when Dustin is finally able to avoid one by ducking and nailing a stungun instead. Windham comes off the top with a big lariat for the win. Predictably fun tag bout.

The Steiner Brothers vs Arn Anderson & Bobby Eaton
The second of three consecutive Dangerous Alliance matches, this time for Eaton/Anderson’s tag titles. This is a match of high impact moves, not just by the Steiners, but also from Eaton and Anderson. Steiners dominate early with a lovely overhead belly-to-belly on Eaton, followed by a sick looking tilt-a-whirl slam on the entrance ramp. The Alliance basically have to withstand this barrage until Eaton hits a mid-air low blow on Rick, as he attempts the top rope bulldog. This doesn’t last too long, as Scott is soon tagged in, and I love the desperation of Arn having to sacrifice his partner by ramming Scott’s head into Eaton’s just to get a sustained control. The Alliance have some great looking offence here: Anderson nails a great DDT and, in a sweet spot, Eaton gets thrown from the top rope onto the rampway with a Rocket Launcher splash. Rick gets the hot tag, and a fantastic nearfall when he slams Eaton on a Doomsday Device attempt. After all this, it makes sense that the DA need a cheap ending to retain their titles. After Anderson blinds him with powder, Rick hits a big suplex on the referee. Scott hits a Frankensteiner on Eaton, which is counted for 3 by a replacement ref, but the original ref recovers to disqualify the Steiners and keep the titles with the Alliance. One of the rare times I’d describe a fuck-ending as great, but I thought it fit the match perfectly. Really enjoyed this.

“Ravishing” Rick Rude vs Ricky Steamboat
This is for Rude’s US title, with Paul E Dangerously and Madusa banned from ringside. Steamboat is still allowed to be accompanied by his ninja though. I reviewed this same pairing earlier this year in the Royal Rumble 88 review, but this is light-years ahead. For example, both matches feature lengthy periods of Steamboat working the arm, but this time he mixes up the offence, clanging Rude’s arm around the ringpost. He also uses the arm as a focal point for comebacks, kicking Rude there in order to escape a barrage in the corner. Rude sells it really well too, hanging limply on his offensive runs. He twice instinctively hits clotheslines with the arm, but makes sure to sell the pain, and on the third clothesline he swaps arm. Love that stuff. Rude works the neck of Steamboat with a piledriver and spinning neckbreaker, which obviously sets up the Rude Awakening. Rude’s big mistake here is making soft covers which aren’t going to get him the win. It gets a little rest-holdy towards the end, with Rude locking in a camel clutch and two chinlocks, but Steamboat makes a fun comeback, with a great diving clothesline to a seated Rude. Second cheap ending in a row is a little disappointing though, as Steamboat gets whacked in the head by his ninja, suspiciously holding a Paul E-esque mobile phone, which gives Rude the win. A post-match segment sees Missy Hyatt go to Rude’s locker room, accidentally revealing Paul E indeed being the ninja.

Sting vs Lex Luger
This is for Luger’s world title, and you can tell Ross and Ventura know Luger is leaving soon. Luger had used all the dates on his WCW contract and had barely worked in 1992, and they’re all over him, pointing out how he lacked ring fitness and how he was sweating far more than Sting. Despite this, we had a pretty high tempo opening. Loved Sting hitting the Stinger splash, but Luger rebounding out of the corner with a big clothesline. Massive German suplex by Sting, which looked great. Sting always brought great energy around this time, and I loved his high leap to get more elevation on a leaping DDT. Luger hits the piledriver, but Sting kicks out at two. Sting makes a great fired-up comeback, starting off with some dazed blows, but getting more and more worked up with each blow that connects. Sting flies over the top rope, and Harley Race goes to piledriver him on the floor. Sting reverse and backdrops Race onto the floor. Luger doesn’t know about this, and turns around straight into a Sting top rope crossbody for the win. Really fun match, good logical ending and a massive pop for the new champion. No complaints here.

Wednesday, 8 July 2015

Kaientai Dojo 20/08/2012

Kotaro Nasu vs Ayumu Honda
Pretty fun opener. Honda is pretty slight, but he gets an early advantage by locking a cross armbreaker on early, which Nasu sells really well. Nasu even sells the pain while on offence, while Honda uses it as a focal point to regain control when Nasu rallies. I really liked Honda being disorientated following a roll-up, which allowed Nasu to hit a Shining Wizard for two. There’s a great fight over a second crossarmbreaker, before Nasu gets a two count following a big punt. A back suplex gets the win for Nasu. 

YOSHIYA, Saburo Inematsu, Boso Boy Raito & Bambi vs Ricky Fuji, Toshima Pacquaio, Jonathon Bader & Miss Mongol
Utterly throwaway intergender 8 man tag, which is JIP. Of note is Fuji looking totally out of shape and half-arsed, despite an admittedly good delayed brainbuster on Inematsu. Everything breaks down and Raito hits an acid drop on Bader for the win. 

Daigoro Kashiwa vs Kaji Tomato vs Yuki Sato
This is for Kashiwa’s UWA Middleweight title. Tomato seems to be working your usual “cheerleader tomato” gimmick. Of the three, Sato looks to be the best, working a nice comeback flurry after being double-teamed and looking really crisp on offence. Kashiwa seems to be working a “hard head” gimmick, hitting lots of headbutts and causing opponents to sell after hitting him in the bonce. Tomato hits a lovely flip dive to the floor. The end sequence is a fun flurry of offence, despite Tomato botching a springboard, and the end was cool: Tomato locking an Octopus stretch on Sato, only for Kashiwa to roll both men up for the win. I’d like to see more of Sato.

TAKA Michinoku vs MEN's Teioh
Pretty by-the-by match here. I did like the opening part, with Teioh working over TAKA’s wrist and fingers, and I enjoyed TAKA selling the work when trying to hold himself up o a headscissors. Teioh does feel a little off pace, and it’s obvious in places where TAKA is having to wait for his offence. The end sees both guys trying to get the win with roll-ups, and I dug the variety of different pinfalls used before TAKA got the three by tying Teioh up.

Hiro Tonai & Shiori Asashi vs Kengo Mashimo & Ryuichi Sekine
This is for Mashimo & Sekine’s Strongest-K tag belts. This kicks off at a really fast pace, breaking down from the start before Asashi misses a pescado and Sekine nails a cool big-guy suicide dive. Tonai and Asashi are much smaller than the champions, so it’s a battles of speed vs size. We clip to things being a bit more organized, with Tonai working over Mashimo’s arm. Mashimo is soon able to isolate Tonai, and a decent heat section is worked on him. Loved the close hot tag tease following a nice springboard rana by Tonai. When the hot tag is made, Asashi looks pretty good, especially driving Sekine face first to the matt with a diving knee from the top rope. They even managed to take a spot I hate, the “fighting spirit” strike exchange, and make it fun, with Mashimo resisting all Asashi’s chops, only to get caught with an eyepoke. Tonai and Asashi then isolate Mashimo, using their speed to keep on top of him, and hitting repeated blows to the arm. There’s a really exciting false finish as Tonai nearly makes him tap with armbars and armbreakers, really struggling to keep him from the ropes, before Mashimo picks him up with the old Bob Backlund reversal. The home stretch is great, with Sekine getting a good few numerous convincing nearfalls with some vicious kicks, before getting caught in a bodyscissors rollup to give Tonai and Asashi the titles. Not sure how much was clipped, but everything here was great, and the Mashimo/Sekine team were excellent.

Daisuke Sekimoto vs Yuji Hino
Battle of two big guys here, and the match has a real feel of two heavyweight fighters trying to wear each other out. They spill out early, and have a strike exchange, which Hino wins. Back in the ring, he cockily starts slapping Sekimoto in the head, an arrogance that backfires as Sekimoto hits a huge German suplex from out of nowhere. This totally changes the course of the match, as Hino seems to be knocked for six. He tries chopping Sekimoto from the mat, but they’ve lost all of their bite and Sekimoto just shrugs them off. I loved the Boston Crab locked in by Sekimoto, as Hino really sells his struggle to reach the ropes. Both guys feel like mirror images of each other, a point proven by Hino hitting his own German suplex from nowhere, only this one is followed by a mad looking tope. Really great hang time on it. This considerably weakens Sekimoto, who is no longer quick enough to block or reverse moves effectively. Both guys get frog splashes for two, again showing the mirror images theory. It’s ultimately Sekimoto who prevails, nailing Hino with a bridging delayed German for the win, but it felt like both guys had been in a real struggle. Really good match.