Sunday, October 21, 2018

Pro Wrestling Love Compendium

Hey yo Stud Muffins & Foxy Ladies

Subject: A compendium of the Pro Wrestling Love Archives so that you you can easily find all the great pro wrestling that has been discussed and analyzed as part of the Pro Wrestling Love Project.

Objective:  Break up the Greatest Match Ever Project (hosted at http://gweproject.freeforums.net/) into more manageable chunks to help me build my Top 100 List for the project.

Motivation: Contribute to the discussion around these matches to enrich my own understanding of pro wrestling, give a fresh perspective for old matches, and discover great pro wrestling matches that have been hidden by the sands of time.

LINKS ARE IN ITALICS UNDERNEATH HEADING



Articles

Podcasts

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 1: The Best of WWF 1993-1997 Part 1

Best of WWF 1993-1997

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 2: The Best of WCW 1995-2001 Part 1

Best of WCW 1995-2001 Part One

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 3: The Best of WCW 1995-2001 Part 2

Best of WCW 1995-2001 Part II

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 4: The Best of Pro Wrestling NOAH 2000-2004 Part 1

Best of Pro Wrestling NOAH 2000-2004 Part 1 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 5: The Best of Pro Wrestling NOAH 2000-2004 Part 2

Best of Pro Wrestling NOAH 2000-2004 Part Two

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 6: The Best of Puroresu (the non-NOAH edition) 2000-2004 Part 1

Best of Puroresu (Non-NOAH) 2000-2004 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 7: The Best of Puroresu (the non-NOAH edition) 2000-2004 Part 2

Best of Puroresu (Non-NOAH) 2000-2004 Part II

 Pro Wrestling Love vol. 8: The Best of Pro Wrestling NOAH 2005-2009

Best of Pro Wrestling NOAH 2005-2009

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 9: The Best of Puroresu (the non-NOAH edition) 2005-2009

Best of Puroresu (Non-NOAH) 2005-2009

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 10: The Best of WWF 1993-1997 Part 2

Best of WWF 1993-1997 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 11: The Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1980-1984 Part 1

Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1980-1984 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 12: The Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1980-1984 Part 2

Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1980-1984 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 13: The Best of WWF Attitude Era 1998-2001 Part 1

Best of WWF Attitude Era 1998-2001 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 14: The Best of WWF Attitude Era 1998-2001 Part 2

Best of WWF Attitude Era 1998-2001 Part 2


Pro Wrestling Love vol. 15: The Best of Original UWF 1984-1985

Best of Original UWF 1984-1985

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 16: The Best of WCW 1991-1994 Part 1

Best of WCW 1991-1994 Part I

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 17: The Best of WCW 1991-1994 Part 2

Best of WCW 1991-1994 Part II

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 18: The Best of UWF REBORN 1988-1990

Best of UWF REBORN 1988-1990

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 19: The Best of WWE 2002-2004 Part 1

Best of WWE 2002-2004 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 20: The Best of WWE 2002-2004 Part 2

Best of WWE 2002-2004 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 21: The Best of WWF 1984-1987 Part 1

Best of WWF 1984-1987 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 22: The Best of WWF 1984-1987 Part 2

Best of WWF 1984-1987 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 23: The Best of Memphis 1983-1989 Part 1

Best of Memphis Wrestling 1983-1989 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 24: The Best of Memphis 1983-1989 Part 2

Best of Memphis Wrestling 1983-1989 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 25: The Best of World Class Championship Wrestling 1983-1989 Part 1

Best of World Class Championship Wrestling 1983-1989 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 26: The Best of World Class Championship Wrestling 1983-1989 Part 2

Best of World Class Championship Wrestling 1983-1989 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 27: The Best of AWA 1983-1990 Part 1

Best of the AWA 1983-1990 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 28: The Best of AWA 1983-1990 Part 2

Best of the AWA 1983-1990 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 29: The Best of Mid-South Wrestling 1983-1987 Part 1

Best of Mid-South Wrestling 1983-1987 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 30: The Best of Mid-South Wrestling 1983-1987 Part 2

Best of Mid-South Wrestling Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 31: Best of WWF 1988-1992

Best of WWF 1988-1992

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 32: Best of 90s New Japan Pro Wrestling Heavyweights Part 1

Best of 90s New Japan Heavyweights Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 33: Best of 90s New Japan Pro Wrestling Heavyweights Part 2

Best of 90s New Japan Heavyweights Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 34: Best of Other Heavyweight Puroresu 1989-1995 (Not NJPW Or AJPW)

Best of Other Heavyweight Puroresu (Not NJ/AJ) 1989-1995

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 35: Best of TNA Wrestling 2002-2009

Best of TNA Wrestling 2002-2009

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 36: Best of WWF 1978-1983 Part 1

Best of WWF 1978-1983 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 37: Best of WWF 1978-1983 Part 2

Best of WWF 1978-1983 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 38: Best of NWA 1983-1987 Part 1

Best of NWA 1983-1987 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 39: Best of NWA 1983-1987 Part 2

Best of NWA 1983-1987 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 40: Best of US Wrestling 1977-1982 Part 1

Best of US Wrestling 1977-1982 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 41: Best of US Wrestling 1977-1982 Part 2

Best of US Wrestling 1977-1982 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 42: Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1997-1999 Part 1

Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1997-1999 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 43: Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1997-1999 Part 2

Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1997-1999 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 44: Best of Junior Heavyweight Puroresu 1989-1999 Part 1

Best of Junior Heavyweight Puroresu 1989-1999 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 45: Best of Junior Heavyweight Puroresu 1989-1999 Part 2

Best of Junior Heavyweight Puroresu 1989-1999 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 46: Best of World Championship Wrestling 1988-1990 Part 1

Best of WCW 1988-1990 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 47: Best of World Championship Wrestling 1988-1990 Part 2

Best of WCW 1988-1990 Part 2

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 48: Best of Other Heavyweight Puroresu 1996-1999 Part 1

Best of Other Heavyweight Puroresu (Not NJ/AJ) 1996-1999 Part 1

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 49: Best of Other Heavyweight Puroresu 1996-1999 Part 2

Best of Other Heavyweight Puroresu (Not NJ/AJ) 1996-1999 Part 2

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 50: Top 100 WWF/E Matches of 1978-2014

 

Top 100 WWF/E Matches of 1978-2014

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 51: Best of WWE 2005-2009 Part 1

 

Best of WWE 2005-2009 Part 1

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 52: Best of WWE 2005-2009 Part 2

 

Best of WWE 2005-2009 Part 2

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 53: Best of WWE 2010-2014 Part 1

 

Best of WWE 2010-2014 Part 1

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 54: Best of WWE 2010-2014 Part 2

 

Best of WWE 2010-2014 Part 2

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 55: Best of WWE 2010-2014 Part 3

 

Best of WWE 2010-2014 Part 3

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 56: Best of WWE 2010-2014 Part 4

 

Best of WWE 2010-2014 Part 4

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 57: Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1993-1994 Part 1

 

Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1993-1994 Part 1

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 58: Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1993-1994 Part 2

 

Best of All Japan 1993-1994 Part 2

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 59: Best of ECW1993-2001 Part 1

 

Best of ECW Part 1

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 60: 25th Anniversary  of 6/9/95

 

Greatest Match of All Time: 6/9/95

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 61: Best of ECW1993-2001 Part 2

 

Best of ECW Part 2

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 62: Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1995-1996 Part 1

 

Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1995-1996 Part 1

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 63: Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1995-1996 Part 2

 

Best of All Japan Pro Wrestling 1995-1996 Part 2

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 64: Best of Puroresu 2010-2014 Part 1

 

Best of Puroresu 2010-2014 Part 1

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 65: Best of Puroresu 2010-2014 Part 2

 

Best of Puroresu 2010-2014 Part 2

 

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 66: Best of Lucha Underground 2014-2018

 

Best of Lucha Underground 2014-2018

 

PWL Vol.1: Top 25 TNA/Impact Wrestling Matches of All Time Part 1 w/ Jerome(El-P)

 

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-5wwux-f3d63d

 

PWL Vol.2: Top 25 TNA/Impact Wrestling Matches of All Time Part 2 w/ Jerome(El-P)

 

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-sugne-f445a7

 

PWL Vol.3: Top 25 TNA/Impact Wrestling Matches of All Time Part 3 w/ Jerome(El-P)

 

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-a9etu-f445f6

 

PWL Vol.4: Top 25 TNA/Impact Wrestling Matches of All Time Part 4 w/ Jerome(El-P)

 

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-kbkz4-f4466f

 

PWL Vol.5: Top 25 TNA/Impact Wrestling Matches of All Time Part 5 w/ Jerome(El-P)

 

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-g2j6c-f4469c

 

PWL Vol.6: Top 100 WCW/JCP Matches of All Time Part 1 w/ Justin(JKWebb, MilkyWayChamp)

 

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-qpcpd-f46cb9

 

PWL Vol.7: Top 100 WCW/JCP Matches of All Time Part 2 w/ Justin(JKWebb, MilkyWayChamp)

 

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-uerts-f697a2

 

PWL Vol.8: Top 100 WCW/JCP Matches of All Time Part 3 w/ Justin(JKWebb, MilkyWayChamp)

 

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-38saw-f74b66

 

PWL Vol.9: Top 100 WCW/JCP Matches of All Time Part 4 w/ Justin(JKWebb, MilkyWayChamp)

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-zjifv-f77834

PWL Vol.10: Top 100 WCW/JCP Matches of All Time Part 5 w/ Justin(JKWebb, MilkyWayChamp)

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-gehkb-f778bb

PWL Vol. 11: Top 25 Best Japanese Shoot-Style Matches Part 1 w/MarkoutMountain Matt (Cap, Markout Mountain)

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-6tt2u-f9d8e0 

PWL Vol. 12: Top 25 Best Japanese Shoot-Style Matches Part 2 w/MarkoutMountain Matt (Cap, Markout Mountain)

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-rqedx-f9d8e1

PWL Vol. 13: Top 25 Best Japanese Shoot-Style Matches Part 3 w/MarkoutMountain Matt (Cap, Markout Mountain)

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-3guva-f9d8e4

PWL Vol. 14: Top 25 Best Japanese Shoot-Style Matches Part 4 w/MarkoutMountain Matt (Cap, Markout Mountain)

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-yka82-f9d8e9 

PWL Vol. 15: Top 25 Best Japanese Shoot-Style Matches Part 5 w/MarkoutMountain Matt (Cap, Markout Mountain)

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-zpxbg-f9d8f1 

PWL Vol. 16: Top 25 Japanese Matches of 2000-2009 Part 1 w/Mike (dawho5)

https://www.podbean.com/eu/pb-68d57-fd5d59

PWL Vol. 17: Top 25 Japanese Matches of 2000-2009 Part 2 w/Mike (dawho5)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-e7xtm-fd5d60

PWL Vol. 18: Top 25 Japanese Matches of 2000-2009 Part 3 w/Mike (dawho5)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-s62dm-fd5d67

PWL Vol. 19: Top 25 Japanese Matches of 2000-2009 Part 4 w/Mike (dawho5)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-h5t24-fd5d6c

PWL Vol. 20: Top 25 Japanese Matches of 2000-2009 Part 5 w/Mike (dawho5)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-jh2h7-fd5d70

PWL Vol. 21: Top 25 WWF Matches of 1988-1997 Part 1 w/PeteF3 (PeteF3, machina25)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-tzv3j-100c956

PWL Vol. 22: Top 25 WWF Matches of 1988-1997 Part 2 w/PeteF3 (PeteF3, machina25)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-bx682-100c965

PWL Vol. 23: Top 25 WWF Matches of 1988-1997 Part 3 w/PeteF3 (PeteF3, machina25)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-hifpf-100c9c0

PWL Vol. 24: Top 25 WWF Matches of 1988-1997 Part 5 w/PeteF3 (PeteF3, machina25)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-u528f-102fd13

PWL Vol. 25: Top 25 WWF Matches of 1988-1997 Part 5 w/PeteF3 (PeteF3, machina25)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-wgixy-1031b68

PWL Vol. 26: Top 25 WWE Matches of 2010-2014 Part 1 w/Stacey (Jimmy Redman, WomenSportSyd)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-afxz4-10444e2

PWL Vol. 27: Top 25 WWE Matches of 2010-2014 Part 2 w/Stacey (Jimmy Redman, WomenSportSyd)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-4uask-104ae49

PWL Vol. 28: Top 25 WWE Matches of 2010-2014 Part 3 w/Stacey (Jimmy Redman, WomenSportSyd)

https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-2awnz-104ae4d

PWL Vol. 29: Top 25 WWe Matches of 2010-2014 Part 4 w/Stacey (Jimmy Redman, WomenSportSyd)

PWL Vol. 30: Top 25 WWe Matches of 2010-2014 Part 5 w/Stacey (Jimmy Redman, WomenSportSyd)







Friday, October 19, 2018

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 18: Best of UWF REBORN 1988-1990 (Nobuhiko Takada, Yoshiaki Fujiwara, Akira Maeda)


Hey Yo Stud Muffins & Foxy Ladies,

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 18:
The Best of UWF REBORN 1988-1990

Objective:  Break up the Greatest Match Ever Project (hosted at gwe.freeforums.project.net) into more manageable chunks to help me build my Top 100 List for the project.

Motivation: Contribute to the discussion around these matches to enrich my own understanding of pro wrestling and give a fresh perspective for old matches and even hopefully discover great pro wrestling matches that have been hidden by the sands of time.

Subject: This eighteenth volume of Pro Wrestling Love is the Top 6 countdown of the best matches to take place in UWF REBORN from 1988-1990. As with most Akira Maeda moves, this is all started with a shoot kick. Maeda kicked Riki Choshu, a main eventer and booker, for real and this led to his firing. After Original UWF closed, Maeda & Co. invaded Antonio Inoki’s New Japan. Maeda was forced out of New Japan after this confrontation and restarted UWF with Nobuhiko Takada and Kazuo Yamazaki. Satoru Sayama (Tiger Mask) did not invade New Japan and founded the first Japanese shootfighting promotion, Shooto, which may be the first successful shootfighting promotion in the world. Yoshiaki Fujiwara would stay with New Japan until 1989 when he jumped ship to his natural habitat. UWF REBORN much like its predecessor, Original UWF, burned bright but burnt out quick. They drew 50,000 fans to the Tokyo Dome no small feat using the old Rikidozan/Antonio Inoki strategy of inviting Western shoot fighters to Japan to do jobs. UWF folded in 1990 when the principal stakeholders could no longer get along. The final straw was Maeda’s refusal to work Genichiro Tenryu’s SWS promotion claiming it would damage the UWF and its wrestlers credibility. Thus the promotion folded and in 1991 three promotions sprang forth from its collapse: Nobuhiko Takada’s UWFi, who would later found PRIDE FC, Yoshiaki Fujiwara’s PWFG, whose students would found Pancrase and BattlArts, and Akira Maeda’s Fighting Network RINGS.   You can revisit past Pro Wrestling Love Volumes at ridingspacemountain.blogspot.com. You can check out the full version of these reviews in ProWrestlingOnly.com by going to the forums and finding the folders associated with the date of the match.

Contact Info: @superstarsleeze on Twitter, Instagram & ProWrestlingOnly.com.

Best Match Of All Time?


Honorable Mentions

Akira Maeda vs Nobuhiko Takada – 11/10/88
Voted the greatest Japanese Shoot Style Match of the 80s by DVDVR and revered as a classic of the genre, this comes in as an honorable mention because I found the front half of this match dreadfully dull. The second half is incredibly dramatic with an amazing comeback story narrative. The second half is wrestled at a ***** level, but I just couldn’t rate something highly when the front half is so boring. Definitely check this out and let me know what you think.

Akira Maeda vs Kazuo Yamazaki – 5/21/89
One of my more against the grain opinions is how boring I find Akira Maeda. He has all the charisma of a potted plant in my opinion. He does nothing for me on the ground. He is good for a pretty good kick or takedown every once and awhile. He is the antithesis of Fujiwara who drips with charisma and is always doing something interesting. In my opinion, this is Maeda’s best match as Yamazaki drags it out of him by being so explosive and forcing the boss’ hand to fight back.

Top Six Matches of UWF Reborn (1988-1990)

#6. Masakatsu Funaki vs Yoji Anjoh – 6/14/89

Cool to finally get a feel for some of the UWF II midcard after much pretty much nothing but combinations of Maeda, Yamazaki and Takada. The energy of this match is off the charts. Funaki bitchslaps Anjoh at the bell and IT IS ON! Amazing stand up fight brawl ensues. Anjoh hits some crazy kicks in this. There is a mule/spinkick that catches Funaki flush at one point that looked just nasty. There were some wicked headbutts too. It really should have been scored as a knockdown. This was some really great catch wrestling as you can see how they are taking down one another and positioning them for submissions. Everything is fought for and earned. I loved how many strikes there were in the mounts and the holds. They were constantly whacking each other in the face on the mat or kicking out the legs during standup takedowns. There was plenty of good pro wrestling too. Like Anjoh doing a half crab but standing on the other knee. I forget which one I think it was Anjoh kicked out of a deep heel hook by using his free leg to kick Funaki in the face. Thats how more people should have gotten out of the Anglelock. At one point Anjoh was going back for the single crab and Funaki's free foot just flies up and catches him flush in the face for a knockdown. I loved how Anjoh on a rope break for Funaki forced the ref to count Funaki down even though Funaki had already run out of rope breaks and it was going to be scored as such. It was a psychological thing. Funaki comes roaring back. Gets a Butterfly suplex and I mark out for the Butterfly Lock as that was my finisher growing up. It is actually a legitimately painful hold if you dont believe me my younger brother will attest to it. I would put my younger brother over like 90% of the time, but the couple times I would go over, it was with the Butterfly Lock so it was cool to see Funaki apply it here. We even get a Samoan Drop! The finish is insanely quick. Funaki gets a wicked legsweep. I am a mark for legsweeps, but as they go to the mat, Anjoh is able to apply a hammerlock or chickenwing it is unclear to garner the submission victory. As much as I like shoot style and now that I have watched a good amount, I still find myself having trouble rating it. Conventional pro wrestling, I am rating on narrative, character development, energy and emotion. Here I still dont have much in the way of a criteria. I find these matches are not as sticky. Conventional pro wrestling is easier to remember because it is a story. So point A causes point B causes point C so it becomes easier to remember because there is a logic. I dont want to say this devoid of logic, it is just clear to me. That being said I really enjoyed this because of the energy, struggle and ferocity. I am giving it a monster rating of ****1/2

#5. Nobuhiko Takada vs Bob Backlund – 12/22/88
UWF Reborn Match of the Year, 1988

A weird dream match that happened that no one besides me thinks as a dream match. These are two of my all-time favorites hooking it up in their prime. I used to watch the shit out of this but it had been four years since I seen it.

First ten minutes: Bob Backlund is fucking great isn't he? Takada throws a check kick to say this ain't the WWF anymore. Backlund takes a bunch of kicks to the face because he is a man. Then catches one and dumps Takada on his ass. Then dances around because he is Bob Backlund. Lots of great struggle on the mat. At first I was worried Backlund would have the amateur wrestler in MMA problem where he can take down at will but can't finish. He gets a good leg bar early. I like how he clasps his hands on the cross armbreaker. Thank you! He forces a break with a tight Camel Clutch. Takada comes back with a leg bar to force a rope break. Takada throws a bunch of Muay Thai knees in the clinch and Backlund responds with a back Suplex to get a down. Backlund throws his weight on an armbar to force another break. Takada tries to pop up so Backlund pops him in the mouth with a wicked right forearm to get another down. Takada Fucking Unloads. Kicks, back Suplex more kicks and Backlund is finally considered down and ref starts his count. Absolute war thus far. 

Second ten minutes: Slowed down here but the struggle is so intense. Dripping with effort on the mat. I love how Backlund's solution to everything is to Bridge out on his neck. Cross armbreaker bridge out. Full mount bridge out. Heel hook bridge out. Backlund was selling and working like a horse for everything. He lost a break on single leg crab. Takada realizes he can't handle Backlunds freaky strength on the mat so just kicks him in the face really hard and draws blood from the nose and two more counts from ref. 3-2 on downs favoring Takada. Takada wants a Suplex so Backlund gets a ferocious hip block takedown and drops into an armbar. Bob Backlund shoot style is awesome.

Last Five Minutes: insane finish run. Backlund gives Takada a shiner. He was fucking popping him with those forearms. Big Butterfly Suplex by Backlund! FU OUT OF NOWHERE BY BACKLUND! Sleeper! Crossface Chickenwing? Can't get it. Backlund gets legbar and Takada just wails on him in the face with his free leg. Takada kicks the dog shit out of him. Single leg crab doesn't get down. Backlund is bloody and Takada is bruised. Deep double wrist lock by Takada and the ref calls the match for Takada TKO. Backlund is confused and it is the Iron Sheik all over again. 


This was wicked exciting. It is not the prettiest or most logical match. But shit is always going down and the struggle for holds is ferocious. Once Takada explodes Backlund's nose the match becomes a total banger. They just ripped into each other. Anyone who has seen Backlund/Valentine knows Backlund is made for this style. God I wish Valentine wrestled in UWF! Huge feather in Backlund's cap showing why he is one of the best.

#4. Yoshiaki Fujiwara vs Kazuo Yamazaki – 7/24/89

I was kinda dreading this because it is 30 minutes and I dont think shoot-style should go more than 15. I know, I know who am I to doubt Fujiwara?

First Half: Really fun front half. When we discuss shoot-style we dont use the word "fun" that much but this was fun. The best spot was Fujiwara feigning a knockdown as if to say "You really think you had me down for a nine count from what little kick to the midsection?". Fujiwara was such a jackass. After being a dick about faking a knockdown, he lures Yamazaki into the corner and headbutts him instead of giving him a clean break.  Then he just unloads a barrage of stiff body shots that puts Yamazaki down. Yamazaki gets back up and only takes a couple more body shots before he is down again. I know that was just the last 3 minutes or so of the first half, but what an incredible three minutes. I enjoyed the work prior to that. Fujiwara delivered a nasty headbutt in the opening lockup. Destroyed Yamazaki in the kick game. There was a great moment when Yamazaki had a kneebar and Fujiwara thinks about a rope break. He thinks better of it. He puts his forearm on the throat of Yamazaki and cracks him with a palm strike. What an asshole. Guess what, he counters into his own leg lace and Yamazaki has to use his rope break. Delivered a badass Fisherman's suplex. So was this a squash? No. Yamazaki was able to counter a Fujiwara armbar and attempt his own. His best moment came when Fujiwara hit the a Fisherman Suplex and didnt know what to do next. Yamazaki was able to get a double wristlock then choke, Again, Fujiwara proved to be better as he was able to get a really deep toehold. When Yamazaki tried to use his free leg to free himself, Fujiwara grabbed that and put Yamazaki in a really deep toehold. I hate, hate the term carryjob. But man reflecting on what I watched and writing this, it does feel like a Fujiwara carryjob, but damn if it hasnt been fun as fuck so far. 

Second Half: Yamazaki looks like such a tool in this match. He is throwing spinwheel kicks that barely connect and Fujiwara just looks down on him like "What the fuck is wrong with you?" Fujiwara is able to get back to back leg submissions that force rope breaks and so he scores another down. I literally say out loud, "Yamazaki you suck, do something" at this point. I finally realize he is throwing the axe kick as feint to set up a roundhouse kick. He finally connects with one to mush but Fujiwara is back up at nine quickly to say that one didnt phase me that bad. Yamazaki kinda spooks Fujiwara with a couple kicks and you can tell these actually affect Fujiwara because he roars back and a couple swift body shots for the fourth knockdown. Fujiwara is such a cocky prick. He announces he only needs one more knockdown and holds out one finger. Yamazaki has such body language at this point. He looks like a man that is defeated and has no fight left in him. At one point, a firefight breaks out and he catches Fujiwara with a kneelift that stuns Fujiwara and scores a knockdown. I am rooting hard for Fujiwara at this point and would hate to see him choke. Yamazaki delivers a brutal headbutt and pops Fujiwara in the mouth so hard he bloodies him. OH SHIT! It is on! Fujiwara just starts leading with his head. He is a fucking Yamazaki-seeking missile. He cracks Yamazaki hard under the eye, I think drawing blood and a TKO victory. Wild finish!

If someone says Yoshiaki Fujiwara is the greatest pro wrestler, I wouldnt bat an eye. This is the Fujiwara show and just enjoy it. What knocks this down from the tippy toppy and thought Yamazaki was just a load in this match and didnt contribute much. Fujiwara was glorious in this match. Watch him work! ****1/2

#3. Yoshiaki Fujiwara vs Nobuhiko Takada – 10/25/89

I have preached this so much and I think this a perfect example of the mantra "The drama should be in applying the hold not escaping the hold". This front half of the match just drips with struggle. It has a huge fight feel. Two equals taking each other very seriously. There are so many quick, sudden movements on the mat as they each are trying to gain the most advantageous position for a finishing submission. Takada ends up in a legbar and he is immediately selling and lunging for the ropes and gets the break. Thats great psychology. There were so many holds exchange that were half-applied, but once one was fully applied the mood changed. It became very serious. You can see how Takada's game plan changed immediately. He started throwing kick after kick to the left leg of Fujiwara. Takada's forte is stand-up. There is another great moment on the ground. Takada has his hands clasped and Fujiwara is just on top of him. To the untrained this looks boring, but God is it tense. As soon as Takada breaks his clasp, Fujiwara will pounce. Takada has to break his clasp because Fujiwara is in control. In a shoot fight, Takada is fucked. Since this is shoot-style, we can suspend our disbelief and believe Takada knew that Fujiwara would try for a double wristlock and thus could counter into the cross armbreaker. Takada's move was fully applied and Fujiwara's was not and thus it is Fujiwara scrambling for the ropes. Again the tension and the drama is in who can apply the hold, once the hold is applied it is a mad dash for the ropes. That is how you respect the hold. Takada goes back to work on the legs. Fujiwara tries to throw his own kicks, which was never his forte. If he is going to throw a strike, it is a headbutt BANG! Thats what we get, it is a delayed register, but Takada goes down in a heap for the first knockdown. The symmetry in this match is incredible. Takada responds by finally chopping down the old cherry tree with his kicks as Fujiwara is forced to take a knee from a flurry of kicks for his first knockdown. Fujiwara tries to scissors the legs but Takada sits outs and now Fujiwara has no leverage. Single leg crab, great labored breathing from Fujiwara he struggles to ropes. Amazing selling from Fujiwara and he is easy pickins for Takada who cracks him in the leg again for a second knockdown. Takada opens a big lead as a wild roundhouse kick to the midsection and then one to face sends Fujiwara reeling into the corner. Takada overwhelms him with kicks to the head for the third knockdown. Takada falls prey to another headbutt in a knucklelock. Why would you ever knucklelock with Fujiwara? Especially this has been his most successful strategy. Takada goes for a knucklelock, but then thinks the better of it crosses over such that his right hand will be linked with Fujiwara's right hand which should take some of the power away from a headbutt. Takada gets another wild roundhouse kick, but this time cant follow up in the corner. He cups Fujiwara in the ear on a lock up which is a receipt for the headbutts in the lock up. It is now 4-2 Takada! Do or die time for Fujiwara! You know what that means! Kidney punches and body shots! 4-3! Takada tries to use the ref as a shield as he knows Fujiwara is lying in wait, but to no avail. Takada weathers the storm and almost has Fujiwara off his feet...only the ropes are holding Fujiwara up when...Fujiwara lunges forward and butts him with his head! IT IS 4-4! Next knockdown wins! Takada kicks out Fujiwara's leg for the close victory. The ref seems uncertain to call it a knockdown, but to be consistent has to and Takada wins via TKO. 


The crowd is a bit confused because it was a judgment call. Based on the calls earlier in the match it was definitely a knockdown, but it was NOT a definitive knockout blow. Clearly that was on purpose these are two of your three biggest stars and you want rematches so there has to be some protection. The opening matwork was engaging and compelling for the reasons I outlined above. The stand up portion of the match was intensely dramatic. Great selling from Fujiwara, awesome strategy from Takada and then Fujiwara mounting a massive comeback using basically just headbutts and kidney punches was crazy. Definitely one of the best shoot-style matches ever that had pro-style elements (Fujiwara's leg selling and Takada targetting a body part) and I think it was those pro-style elements that made me like this so much. Maybe Takada's best match ever

#2. Masakatsu Funaki vs Tatsuo Nakano – 7/24/89
UWF Reborn Match of the Year, 1989

Funaki should have been a massive star in puroresu in the 90s. Funaki vs Tenryu, Funaki vs Takada, and Funaki vs Hashimoto should have been huge draws. 


Holy shit! What a match, I thought the Anjoh match was great, but this was superb. Balls to the wall for ten insane minutes. It is just a wild shoot style brawl. Nakano is a huge favorite. The crowd is red hot and they are chanting for Nakano throughout. The first three minutes are brutal and electric. Funaki explodes Nakano's face with palm strikes. Funaki gets cut right under the eye by a vicious knee and it looks like he is crying blood. It is unconformable. Funaki gets spiked on his head because he refuses to go over a take down at one point. The trainer has to tend to Nakano. Nakano is the first one to score a knockdown as he escapes a leg lace and blasts Funaki in the head with a kick. Funaki is one of the best shoot-style sellers I have ever seen. He comes up woozy. Who knows if he was selling? Funaki's matches always incorporate really cool organic throws. I love him not letting Nakano complete a Dragon Leg Screw and just stomping on his head. Yes! Yes! Yes! Pro wrestling needs more of this. Pro wrestling should not be easy. Funaki gets a wild spinkick that pops me and then a back drop driver for his first knockdown. That spinkick would make Kawada jealous. He nailed it. Nakano is a bloody mess in the single leg crab. Nakano is kind of a humpty-dumpty looking muthafucka. Trainer is back in. Nakano says he is ready for more punishment. This has been a war. I could see Inoki absolutely loving this. This is Inokiism at its finest. Funaki attacks the knees once the trainer leaves. Nakano thrust kick creates separation and then a roundhouse kick to the head downs Funaki. Wicked suplex/DDT from Nakano. Funaki EXPLODES~! Palm strikes, headbutts and in his furious flurry he leaves himself open for Nakano counterattack who pops him with a knee. This is an insane ending just a wild brawl. Nakano throws a snap German Suplex into a Single Leg Crab and Funaki writhes out. Funaki picks Nakano up and just does a wicked Somersault Alabama Slam! WOW! DEEP BOSTON CRAB! Liontamer-esque and Nakano has to tap out. WOW! I am speechless. A shoot-style brawl that just delivers in spades.

#1. Yoshiaki Fujiwara vs Nobuhiko Takada – 10/25/90
UWF Reborn Match of the Year, 1990

I love Fujiwara! I love Takada! Does it live up to the hype?

First Half: Fujiwara is a genius. Best defense is a good offense. Takada definitely relies on his stand up game and especially his kicks to establish his offense. Fujiwara takes that away by being so damn pugnacious. From the opening bell, he is lunging at him headlong with headbutts and attacking the body. Takada is covering up as best he can and just trying to weather the storm. Takada is going for holds more out of defense and trying to break Fujiwara's momentum more than anything else. The double wristlock out of the German and the heel hook was to save himself from the barrage of headbutts. It was almost like Takada was trying to get his wits about him. The leg work which i usually find boring as hell in Takada matches was great here because of how much struggle there was. Fujiwara's snarl and labored breathing added so much as did Takada's facial expressions. My favorite moment of the match thus far was when Fujiwara had one hand on Takada's throat and then started throwing headbutts to break the submission. Great selling from Takada. I brought this up in October 25, 1989 match is how well the drama was built in the application of the holds. In the next ground grappling session, once Fujiwara locks in a kneebar Takada is scrambling for the ropes and selling it upon standing up. That puts over the move and invests everyone in the match. Also, I really loved how Takada was not completely overwhelmed. An important point in the match was when Fujiwara had him in a wicked toehold. Takada's first instinct was rope break, but he stands up and blasts Fujiwara in the ear to earn a knock down. Thats a huge swing from losing a rope break to knocking your opponent down especially a head shot. Takada came to fight. That really sold me. Fujiwara roared back. He got a knockdown in the corner with a series of WICKED palm strikes, I mean brutal. Then he got on top of Takada on the ground not to apply a hold, but rather just butt him with his head hard many times. Until the ref called him off and started his count. Thats when the match really changed. Takada had his bell rung, but so did Fujiwara it looked like to me at least. You can only deliver so many nauseating headbutts before the damage takes a toll on you. Fujiwara could no longer follow up and here came Takada with the same strategy from last October lay in those wicked kicks to the left hamstring. Fujiwara is trying to block and go on offense but as we go into the second half, Takada has built a lot of momentum targetting that leg with his patented kicks. Can Takada complete the comeback or will Fujiwara hit that miracle headbutt for the win? 

Second Half: Has Takada ever looked better on top? He was a stone cold killer in this. The kicks always look phenomenal, but in addition his palm strikes and kneelifts were brutal. Fujiwara really withstood quite the barrage before going down. Takada was just blitzing him. When Fujiwara did finally go down that look of dejection was just sad. He popped back up, but you knew Takada was rolling. I thought Takada's big mistake was going back to the ground. I get changing it up and using the the stand up game to set up a submission, but he kept getting countered. He got caught twice taking Fujiwara to the ground both times it ended a rope break. Guess what Fujiwara was up 3-2 when it felt like Takada had all the momentum. Takada only had himself to blame. The ultimate sequence when in the leglocks Takada just starts mercilessly kicking Fujiwara in the face until the ref is forced to call a down. I actually felt bad for Fujiwara. Even though earlier in the match he pulled the same shit in the match where he headbutted Takada into a submission, I felt bad for Fujiwara. Then all of sudden in the corner, Fujiwara came alive body blow after body blow forcing Takada to protect CRACK! Wicked headutt fells Takada...fuck this prick Fujiwara and fuck him for making him feel sympathy. I was hook, line and sinker at that point. Takada looked like a world beater but is down 4-3. I loved the selling after this. Fujiwara had his shit-eating grin and Takada is doing a great knocked loopy sell. Takada just keeps kicking, just keep kicking. Kidney kick has Fujiwara reeling and a kick to the bad leg AND IT IS 4-4! NEXT KNOCKDOWN WINS! Can I stop to stay how much I LOVE THIS POINT SYSTEM! It makes the matches so dramatic and it really creates drama down the stretch. Fujiwara has this MASSIVE GRIN on his face as he is luring Takada into the corner. Takada takes the bait...Fujiwara reverses position...he is working...fuck I cant believe Takada is going to lose...Takada kneelifts...Fujiwara body shots...BIG LEFT KNEELIFT TO THE HEAD ROCKS FUJIWARA...HUGE RIGHT KNEELIFT...DOWN GOES FUJIWARA! DOWN GOES FUJIWARA! Takada beats Fujiwara at his own game and much more definitive finish than their October 1989 classic makes this an easy ***** and one of the best shoot-style matches of all time. 

Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 17: Best of WCW 1991-1994 (Sting, Vader, Rick Rude, Ricky Steamboat)


Hey Yo Stud Muffins & Foxy Ladies,

Pro Wrestling Love vol. 17:
The Best of World Championship Wrestling 1991-1994

Objective:  Break up the Greatest Match Ever Project (hosted at gwe.freeforums.project.net) into more manageable chunks to help me build my Top 100 List for the project.

Motivation: Contribute to the discussion around these matches to enrich my own understanding of pro wrestling and give a fresh perspective for old matches and even hopefully discover great pro wrestling matches that have been hidden by the sands of time.

Subject: This seventeenth volume of Pro Wrestling Love completes the Top 12 countdown of the best matches to take place in World Championship Wrestling from 1991-1994. Originally, I wanted to go from July of 1991 to July of 1994. July of 1991 is when Ric Flair the most important, biggest star of Jim Crockett Promotions and WCW left for the WWF after a dispute with Jim Herd and management. July of 1994 is when Hulk Hogan debuted in WCW. Both are landmark events in WCW history and bookend what I consider the classic Turner era of WCW. The year 1989 still feels very Crockett. With Flair’s departure, it really feels like a fresh promotion. The returns of Rick Rude and Ricky Steamboat in November of 1991 are the shot in the arm for WCW to lead it to its best in-ring year in 1992. Of course, the debut of Hulk Hogan changes the complexion of WCW forever shedding its Southern roots and becoming a national promotion. For ease, I chose to use the calendar years of 1991-1994. You can revisit past Pro Wrestling Love Volumes at ridingspacemountain.blogspot.com. You can check out the full version of these reviews in ProWrestlingOnly.com by going to the forums and finding the folders associated with the date of the match.

Contact Info: @superstarsleeze on Twitter, Instagram & ProWrestlingOnly.com.


Rest In Peace, Brutha

In the first volume of Pro Wrestling Love, I talk about how I wanted this to a celebratory series of Pro Wrestling. However, while I do love Pro Wrestling, I do not love every pro wrestling match. Probably my most controversial opinion about wrestling is that Wargames 1992 pitting the Dangerous Alliance (Rick Rude, Steve Austin, Arn Anderson, Bobby Eaton, and Larry Zbyszko) vs Sting’s Squadron (Sting, Ricky Steamboat, Barry Windham, Dustin Rhodes, and Nikita Koloff) is merely a great match, not a classic. This is usually heralded as the greatest match to take place in WCW in the 90s and while I enjoy it. It just doesn’t do much for me. It is such a highly acclaimed match that I wanted to give my thoughts on it in full. It is a bit of a ramble as I was using this writing to try to ascertain why I did not feel as passionately about this match as so many others.

Dangerous Alliance (Rick Rude, Steve Austin, Arn Anderson, Larry Zbyszko, Bobby Eaton) vs Sting's Squadron (Sting, Ricky Steamboat, Nikita Koloff, Barry Windham, Dustin Rhodes) 
WrestleWar 1992 WARGAMES

We all have those opinions. That just dont jive with the rest of the crowd. That one movie, that one song, that one TV show that everyone else loves, but you think yeah it is great but there's a hundred or so movies or songs or TV shows that are better. It is not that you think it sucks. It is just you think it is great, but it is not the best thing ever. Everybody kinda looks at you like you got three heads when you say it. Wrestlewar '92 Wargames is that match for me. It is a great match, 100%. But match of the decade in the US. Nope. Match of the decade for WCW. Nope. Match of the Year for WCW. Nope. I am not ever sure it is my Match of Night, I really like that Steiners vs Fujinami&Iizuka match. What makes this so weird for me is that I am usually the dude with the opinions in the opposite direction. Like this match totally rocks, why does no one talk about it. I am not the guy who cries about things being overrated. What is also weird is this is like the least polarizing match of all time. Like everyone loves it. 

So there is one big thing I inherently don't like about WARGAMES is that you miss a lot of stuff. I don't like missing stuff. This is why I dont like three ring circuses. I want all my attention invested so I can understand the plot and action/reaction. I will say this WARGAMES does better with plot than most stuff. You have Larry Z as the only wrestler who did not turn the tide in the favor of his team and ultimately screw the pooch at the end. Also, they have the Sting/Koloff hug which got a big reaction. WARGAMES are more about action than plot. Another thing is the universe of gimmick matches, I prefer street fights to cage matches. Dont get me wrong there are many great cage matches that I will vote for my GME but overall I think it is a restrictive, claustrophobic atmosphere that wrestler has to overcome compared to the freedom of a street fight. Now add ten men instead of 2-4 and you have only increased the claustrophobic nature and thankfully someone was smart to add a second ring or they really would have been fucked. WARGAMES follows a great formula. It is basically a string of hot tags. People love hot tags. I thought Steamboat, Dustin and Arn really stood out. I find that there is always a 30-60 second lull before the next entrant though. I remember watching Larry Z was in a figure-4 towards the end of the match and I just was not moved at all. Like why should I care? I feel like in a single or tag match they would have built so much ground work for me to care. I have given WARGAMES '91 and '94 high ratings. '94 was really carried by the Rhodes family reunion. '91 I thought Brian Pillman and Barry Windham gave outstanding performances. Here a lot of people bled when did the cuts happen. I am pretty observant person I cant even tell you when half bladed. In a way that match almost feels incomplete. There are things I loved I remember really liking Rude tearing at Steamboat's nose. I really liked those hot tags. I think I know what it is. There is a lack of connectivity. It feels like a collection of exciting one minute spurts rather than a great match as a whole. I am sticking with that. ****1/4 

#6. Dustin Rhodes vs Bunkhouse Buck – Spring Stampede 1994

Just a down home, Southern brawl that is a totally lost art in today's pro wrestling landscape. Incredible match. The Brain was gushing over this match talking about how this was the wrestling he was raised on. It was not the wrestling I was raised on, but damn if it was not the wrestling I truly love. Dustin sets the tone perfectly coming flying over the top rope onto Buck from the ramp. He just whups Buck, who is great at selling. It is so weird watching Jimmy Golden and Robert Fuller just absolutely own WCW in 1994 putting on the best quality act in the promotion. Dustin crashes and burns on the crossbody attempt. Now it gets real good. Parker choking Dustin with the handkerchief and then Buck absolutely blasts Dustin with a stick. I mean that thing went flying into the crowd. Dustin is bleeding and of course wearing a white Texas shirt. Buck chokes him and tries to destroys the leg, but Dustin fights back. Dustin is such a fucking good babyface. Powder to Buck! Buck responds by whipping Dustin with a belt while he is standing. Holy shit! He is rifling him. God Bless This Match! Buck gets caught up in the ropes and here comes Dustin with a MONEY firey comeback. He blasts him with his belt buckle drawing blood and then with the heel of his cowboy boot. This is so damn Southern! Then he whips Bunkhouse Buck like the dog he is. Bionic Elbows in the corner complete with crotch thrust! BULLDOG! Parker is in the ring and Dustin whips him. Dustin seems to have command of the match, but Parker gets a pair of knuckledusters to Buck who cleans Dustin's clock for the win. Brain makes a big deal about a Rhodes losing a Bunkhouse match, which is pretty legit shocking.


There is a moment between beating Parker and where Parker gives Buck the foreign object that match seems to lose its way. That aside, fucking incredible heated Southern brawl. One of the last of its kind. Looking forward to the rest of the feud!


#5. Ric Flair vs Ricky Steamboat – WCW Saturday Night 5/14/94 
Vacant WCW World Heavyweight Championship
WCW Match of the Year, 1994

Flair and Steamboat put on one last classic before Steamboat's forced retirement that contends with the Ladder Match and Bret/Owen for American MOTY. The Spring Stampede match was wrestled a little too straight for me and had its lulls. This really felt like a high-octane match with plenty of cool new spots that built on the classic canon of Flair/Steamboat. Flair playing the heel more strongly in this match avoided them playing it too straight and added more dynamic elements to the match. It also never feels like a nostalgia match. They still are wrestling at a very high level. It is a cardio tour de force and they are adding spots and nuances to their already well-developed series.


I love, love the amateur riding sequences that usually start their matches. They just see where it goes and when Flair picks an ankle he turns it over into a half crab, but then misses the flying knee on Steamboat's knee. It is so organic and logical, but when has Flair ever picked an ankle and gone to the half-crab. It manifested itself naturally out of the riding sequence. Flair is so good at creating movement in his matches to let his opponent shine, the press slams and armdrags were great ways to establish Steamboat's control. However when there is motion, there are times to take advantage. A well-timed Flair punch to the gut ends Steamboat's energetic work. From there, it is 1989 again, baby! Flair hits wicked chop after wicked chop. Flair has such an underrated punch. There is one punch after inverted atomic drop that just looked so picture perfect. You gotta love Flair in the corner. It has to be either Flair or Vader as the greatest corner wrestler ever. Steamboat is milking this for all its worth and I thought the Center Stage crowd was behind The Dragon during the entirety of this match. Every time Steamboat starts to light up Flair they are ready to get behind him. These are some amazing chop exchanges, lots of fire and fury behind them. One of my favorite spots ever was when Steamboat had taken so much punishment that he nearly collapses on the apron, but catches the ropes. I love, love that spot. Someone needs to crib that for a big time match. (2017 me is marking out so hard for these chop exchanges)

Among the many things I love about this match is they forget the crux of the match. It is for a vacant championship. There is no championship advantage. So both men are very aggressive and very offensive. Not only that, they are always going for pinfalls to catch their man unawares, but they also work hard to negotiate their pinfalls. Flair is using amateur cradles and jackknifes (using the ropes for leverage when he can) while Steamboat is using flash. Their goal is to win the match and you win the match by pinfall. There is no wasted motion in excessively beating someone up because a mistake on a home run could cost you the title. So many times you will see a disconnect from the story of the match and the action nowadays. Flair and Steamboat always remember that is about pinning a man's shoulders down for a three count.

Flair looks to sap all the energy out of Steamboat with a nice long sleeper and the crowd really gets behind the Steamer at this point. They move to the next chapter of the match where Steamboat works over the knee. It begins with a Flair Flip to the outside only to catch Steamboat in the midsection when he comes off the ropes with a chop only to fall prey to a Steamboat suplex on the floor and then float over on a Steamboat suplex and Flair misses a kneedrop. Thus begins the awesome part where Steamboat builds to applying the figure-4 on Flair. So many times the babyface just slaps on the figure-4, which gets a pop, but for Stemaboat to work over the knee to build to it just made it that much better. I am still a sucker for stuff like Flair pushing Dragon away during a series of chops only to do the Flair Flop. (Im rewatching this in 2017 and sprucing up this review. I popped again for this Flair Flop.) 

Back from commercial break, The Steamer misses a top splash and Flair immediately double stomps him in the abdomen. Flair is still selling so fucking well. Delayed vertical and Flair is still selling like a million bucks. Flair goes for multiple pinfall attempts, but still cant negotiate a win. Flair hits the knee crusher and now we go to school! The ref catches him using the ropes for leverage so he goes for the kneecrusher again, but Steamboat hits an enziguiri. I loved the Flair Flip where he actually ducks the chop on the apron, but gets nailed coming down from the top rope. Huge mark out moment! At about the 35 minute mark, they are still flying around and they do the bridge spot because they are Cardio Gods. Steamboat gets the superplex, but Flair foot on the ropes. Steamboat was the king of the frenetic finish. He is flying off the top rope. He is throwing a ton of cradles at Flair. I am outta breath just watching all this unfold. I loved the finish with the flying around during a criss cross 38 minutes in and Flair headbutting Steamboat in the midsection on a leapfrog attempt. It is simple but stays true to the match being about getting the pin at all costs. I think if Steamboat actually sold it more with writhing it would have helped.

The constant thread throughout the entire match was two champions trying to win the match by throwing out everything they had in their arsenal. From beginning to end, it was about negotiating a pinfall. They occasionally lost their way in order to fit in Flair signature bumps and spots, but overall they stayed true to the match. I thought right up to Flair's figure-4 at 30 minutes they were wrestling at insanely high level and had me totally hooked. The first Flair press slam was when they kinda lost it and it started to peter out. I think if they went 32 minutes instead of 36 minutes this would be a perfect match. That's my nitpick complaint. I loved how Steamboat was just pouring it on at the end. Top rope chops, constant motion. You see Flair throw these wicked chops and then nearly collapse. Steamboat had Flair down from almost sheer exhaustion. He was trying to sap Flair's energy with a barrage of quick cradles, but his plan backfired because when he is not able to get high enough on his leapfrog and Flair is able to get the win. They were such equals in every way that it was just a small mistake that separated them. I have this ahead of the Ladder match, just behind Bret/Owen as the number two match in the US during 1994. It is just an excellent championship style match that I wished still existed to this day. 


#4. Sting vs Vader – Starrcade 1992

"That's got to be depressing as hell when you do the move and the other guy's up first" - Jesse Ventura, Vader covers on after a Sting Suplex.


There was a period of time when this was my favorite match of all time and still is one I will just give it a spin when I need a pick me up. A couple years ago, one of my cousins (11-12 years old at the time) was getting feisty about whether pro wrestling was real and was on the verge of ruining it for my younger cousin. I played this match and he was totally hooked all over again and thought Vader was the toughest badass to ever walk the planet. He still talks about Vader to this day. I love this match.

It is almost the ideal David vs Goliath match with Sting giving his career performance in this match.From there the very beginning, he conveys the daunting task that stands before him. He is not going to cower, but he also realizes the gravity of the situation. When he tries to unload with punches early and Vader shouts back the classic "NO PAIN!" "NO PAIN!", I still get chills. Unlike the Great American Bash, there is no hot start for Sting. Vader is going to bulldoze him and throw him around at will. Sting tries to run at him and is that awesome Vader body attack. It is one of my favorite spots in wrestling. Vader takes a page out of Akira Taue's book and Vader drops him throat first across the ring ropes. Sting starts to stick and move. He avoids the clotheslines and hits a Kappo Kick, jumping Kawada kick! Vader was really good at selling the missed clotheslines and the beautiful German suplex and making it believable. They both spill to the outside and the crowd is rocking! Vader takes off the match and starts swearing. The front row loves this and gets on his case. Sting comes flying over the top to crash down on Harley and Vader.

This brings me to my favorite part of this match and that was Sting's strategy. Jim Ross starts off the broadcast explaining Sting was going to try extend the big man and fatigue him. Jesse pointed out if the victory presents itself you got to take it. Sting amalgamates both points into a perfectly wrestled match. When the opportunity was present after the Kappo Kick, he was absolutely suffocating Vader. It was a full court press, giving Vader minimal time to recover. Sting simply would not be denied as he fought through Vader's counters to hit DDTs and apply the Scorpion Deathlock. It was only Vader's size that saved him from a quick exit. It is crucial how urgent Sting's actions are because it sets up the big turning point. He goes for the Stinger Splash on the railing and eats steel. Now that full court press has backfired and Vader smells blood. What follows may be one of the greatest exhibitions of selling in wrestling history as Sting was just so on point with modulating selling throughout the rest of the match.

Vader dominates Stinger, but not all the credit can go Sting's way. The fact that Vader was selling the effects of Sting's offense allowed for the comeback to make more sense. Vader was beating the shit out of Sting with clotehslines, strikes and splashes, but Vader was not staying on Sting as well he should have because he was recovering from the attack. Sting looked resilient and the finish was not jeopardized by overkill in the heat segment. I loved Vader being overzealous on a pinfall after a splash that basically pulled Sting's shoulders off the mat. My favorite moment of the match and my favorite Ventura call (quoted above) was Sting finally gets a suplex, but it takes so much out of him that Vader is able to cover him. That is a totally ingenious spot! Sting now executes the second part of his strategy as he retreats to a corner and puts his arms up to block. Vader is throwing heavy blows, but is not landing as much damage. This whole segment is so dramatic. You can actually see the shift in Vader and Sting. Vader is being sapped of his power and Sting becomes emboldened as Vader no longer has much behind his punch. Now Sting is punching Vader in the face. He has him rocking! He has him reeling! He knocked him down! Samoan Drop! FLYING STINGER SPLASH! 1-2-NO! Can David do it? Harley is nervous for his investment and tries to buy time for his charge. It works as Vader clobbers Sting from behind. Damn, it was a good run. Vader splashes Sting from the middle rope, but he bounces off instead of hooking a pinfall. Vader is beside himself. He goes again, but this time from the top and Sting is able to catch him with a slam and cradle to win!

Sting wrestled the match of his life. His offensive strategy was pitch perfect as discussed and his selling was even better. At beginning, he sells the enormity of the task, in the middle he sells the beating, but he is still defending himself. Then as he is staggering around with his arms up trying to drain Vader was absolutely perfect. Then when the moment was right he mounted an electric comeback. Vader was no slouch himself and was timing his offense perfectly for great damage, but also to make a Sting comeback credible. My slight qualm that keeps this from the tippy top is that the finish is clearly just Vader doing a flying somersault. It takes a bit of steam out of the match, but still one of the best matches in the history of pro wrestling.


#3. WCW World Heavyweight Champion Vader vs Sting – SuperBrawl III Strap Match
WCW Match of the Year, 1993

Often it is overstated when a commentator says a wrestler is trying to end his opponent's career, but here you really feel that to be the case. Vader is the World Heavyweight Champion, but this is a non-sanctioned strap match. Just as Vader lured Sting into the White Castle of Fear, he lured him into this match. With no championship to lose, Vader could all out assault Sting, his archnemesis, and effectively eliminate him from the title hunt. Like in the other Sting vs Vader encounters, Sting had to survive and find a way to thrive in this environment.


I love the elimination of a babyface shine at the outset. They set the tone that this is Vader's match and he will dominate Sting. He was throwing him around and whipping him at will and splashing him. NO PAIN! WHOS DA MAN! FLEX CITY! Vader's bully arrogance is his fall and Sting pulls the strap causing Vader to punch himself in the balls. Why you punching yourself? Sting with some nice punches and a big splash from the top of his own. Time for Vader's receipt with the lashes of the strap (he could have hit him harder). One of the more famous moments is when Harley blades Vader's back. Sting throws Vader down on the outside. This establishes Sting is strong enough to carry Vader to all four corners. In a neat moment, he attempts to do just that around the outside, but Vader uses the strap to pull him into the railing hard. OW! Sting hits a Samoan Drop, but he is clearly worse for wear and Vader hits some his Vader Body Attacks. Sting misses his top rope flying splash and finally Vader takes over.

I think that is what this match does so well is it takes so much for one man to earn control. Vader had to whip Sting into railing, hit two body attacks and get out of the way of the splash. During Vader's control, Vader missed a VaderBomb, crotched on the top rope and did a somersault off the top. It made the match feel like a real war of attrition. Sting felt desperate. The way Vader arose from each big bump made him feel like a massive monster. Vader was kicking the dogshit out of Sting. He did not settle for just one VaderBomb, never really attempting to win the match, but rather pounding Sting at every turn. Victory for Vader meant the end of Sting not just touching four corners. Vader hits a massive superplex and finally looks to try to win the match, but Sting hooks the bottom rope with his feet. Vader beats Sting mercilessly in the corner and then pulls him for more Vader Body Attacks, but on the third one Sting hits a KAPPO KICK! The great equalizer that kick has stunned Vader before. Release German! A Beauty! DDT! Everything is to the head to destabilize him. Sting SNAPS~! He beats the shit out of Vader in the corner who blades his ear, which even nastier than his back! Sting hoists the big man onto his back and the ref is bumped. Sting carries around three corner, but trips over the ref on the fourth corner. Damn! Sting has collapsed after that surge of energy. Vader lands with his ass right down on Sting's lifeless carcass. Vader feeling he had destroyed Sting carries him around three corner, but on the fourth Sing holds onto dear life and kicks Vader into last corner. Vader may have won the match but it is Pyrrhic at best as he is a bloody mess and does not look like a winner.

Vader escapes with a win is not the finish I would have gone with. I think a Sting victory makes a lot of sense here especially since Sting never got that big victory over Vader. The story they were telling was Vader trying to destroy Sting and Sting desperate to survive. In my opinion, either Sting survives the beating and takes the victory OR he falls short Vader squashes with his ass and wins the match. This whole trying to protect Sting was lame, Vader already looked like a bloody mess the kick back into the corner was just lame. A total war of attrition and really compelling and dramatic. Loved all of Sting's hope spots and Vader just keeps getting back up. You really feel a sense of hopelessness before the Kappo Kick. It is hard to generate that in wrestling knowing a comeback is coming, but here they do a great job. Sting's comeback is AWESOME! Definite classic and easy 1993 US Match of the Year!


#2. WCW US Champion Rick Rude vs Ricky Steamboat – Beach Blast 1992 Ironman Match

You know what always surprises me about this match is how it is never touted as the first Ironman match ever. It is, right? Like I cant think of anything before. That's a big deal and no one talks about that. This really shows the difference between WCW and WWF. WWF would be putting this new gimmick over huge. You listen to Jim Ross call this match you would think Ironman matches are a weekly occurrence. There is no discussion about how the strategy of this match differs from a routine one fall match. Honestly, I am starting to believe even Michael Cole is better than Jim Ross.

First Fall: Tremendous textbook execution of elementary pro wrestling. I don't think doing the obvious things right is lauded enough. It could have been so easy for Steamboat to lose focus or Rude to blow off selling. This match is exemplary it is commitment to body part psychology. Rude tries to jump Steamboat at the bell and pays for it with a gutbuster. The way Rude sells his ribs you know this is not a register, but that he is seriously hurt. Steamboat zeroes in on them. We do not think of Steamboat as a great on top worker, but he was phenomenal here. Great creative moves that incorporate movement, charging shoulder, throwing Rude into a belly flop and holds like bearhug and Boston Crab. I loved the splash after the Boston Crab. It was a team effort as Rude was really giving one of the best sell jobs ever. It was never sympathetic either. You wanted to see Steamboat pour it on. That's tough for a heel. I loved the finish with the flash knee. You ram your head into someone's hard ass knee that sure as heel can knock you out for three. Great finish. Steamboat gets his shine, we have a thread to weave the falls together, but somehow by luck the heel gets a quick pin and the babyface is in an early hole. That's great pro wrestling.  

Second Fall: Jesse has a tremendous hockey analogy. Steamboat is like the team that has had ten shots on goal, but nothing to show for it. While Rude's first shot when in. I loved the balance between urgency and pain from Rude. Rude Awakening as he fights through the pain for the second fall. This is a lot better than I remembered and I already remembered it as a classic.

Third Fall: Rude hits a backbreaker. Jesse says Rude should tie up Steamboat and run the clock out. Rude does the exact opposite and hits a flying knee drop. Perfect. He gets DQ'd but Jesse & JR knows what he is doing.

Fourth Fall: Rude gets his fall back with an inside cradle. JR & Jesse think after that Bombs Away Knee Drop that the Dragon is toast.

Fifth Fall: This match is a competition of who can sell the ribs better. This match should be shown to every aspiring wrestler because it really shows the nuanced differences between how a babyface and heel should sell a body part injury. It is hard to articulate, but watch how Steamboat sells the ribs how much more sympathy garners in you as a viewer and how much more you want him to make that comeback. We see some flickers of fire from the Dragon as he tries to attack the ribs of Rude, he hits some wicked chops and even gets the Electric Chair Drop (a Rude bump favorite), but at each turn Rude snuffs out the comeback whether with his favorite camel clutch or knees to the midsection on a splash. The finish to this fall is riveting. Rude gets a wicked piledriver, but only two. He goes for the tombstone, but they do that trademark WCW tombstone reversal spot and it is Steamboat who nails it to get his second decision. It is a nailbiter with 12 minutes to go!

Sixth Fall: A superplex and a double clothesline are great spots to put over the grueling contest and the eveness around the ten minute mark. Steamboat gets a backslide for a three count. It is all knotted up with ten minutes to go. You gotta believe next fall wins!

Seventh Fall: Steamboat goes for pinning combination barrage. It is hot and heavy! Rude slows him down with a jawbreaker. Taunting and posing with one arm because his left side hurts so bad. Rude is thinking Rude Awakening, but Steamboat steals his finish, foot on the ropes! Great nearfall. Steamboat builds momentum only for Rude grabs a sleeper. They milk this bad boy. Great selling by Steamboat and great job by Randy Pee Wee Anderson checking Steamboat's eyes. Steamboat hulks up and kicks off the buckles to get a pin!

Eighth Fall: Rude is besides himself. Electric 30 seconds as Rude keeps bowling Steamboat over four times and each time Steamboat kicks out. No decision rendered as time expires. Steamboat wins 4-3!

Small detail is I would have Rude get three of those nearfalls, but with about 10 seconds left have Steamboat get the last offensive move a chop and send Rude on his back as the bell rings. You want your babyface victor to be standing tall at the end of the match. Not on his back. It is a small detail, but I think the match a lost a little something because of that. I have seen this a bunch and already had my star rating in my head of ****3/4, but they really impressed me and I am going the full monty *****. I think it was a combination of tremendous selling from both men, great pacing throughout, and a ton of well-built drama. It is easy to lose your attention in 30 minutes but they had me the whole time. At worst, a top five WCW match of the 1990s. It could be the best, Sting vs Vader and Eddie vs Mysterio are the other contenders. I will have to mull this over. 

#1. WCW World Heavyweight Champion Sting vs Vader – Great American Bash 1992
WCW Match of the Year, 1992


What I love about this trilogy is that any order of the matches is the correct order they are all so awesome in their own way. For me, when I first watch these as a teenager, it was Starrcade '92 that stuck out to me. Then in college it was the brutality of the Strap match, but for the past couple years it is this one that is my favorite. In my mind, this is the perfect David vs Goliath match. You always believed Sting, but in the end he does himself in. These matches are always so selfless. Vader gives as much as he gets. Sting puts over the new monster heel huge. Early on when Sting is getting rocked, that does so much for Vader's credibility and makes him a mountain for Sting to climb. When Vader misses the charge and Sting explodes with the suplex and then big clothesline, the place comes unglued. Because he earned it. They made Vader an unstoppable force and here was Sting overcoming that challenge. I loved Sting's response to Vader's knucklelock challenge to stomp the foot. It made so much sense for Vader to reset and force Sting into his game, but Sting outfoxed him. It leads to another great flurry. Also, I love how much struggle. Vader just doesn't take it. He still hits that Vader body attack. He is giving a lot to Sting and making Sting look like a superstar, but also getting his. Then comes the massive sitdown splash. You can hear the air not just evacuate Sting's lungs, but the building. How about that for an emphatic transition to a heat segment? You all know I am a mark for transitions and that has to go down as one of the best. Vader's posing was always one of my favorite things. FEEL NO PAIN! Vader is so great working on top and bruising. He makes clobbering an art. Stealing the Scorpion Deathlock was a great spot especially letting Sting muscle out. Sting's fiery comeback coming out of the corner with fists of fury when all hope looked lost was rousing. KAPPO KICK! That always gets me. What a great fucking move! DDT! I love that Sting is going for headshots to rock the Big Man. He has taken a lot of punishment he needs home runs. The Fireman's Carry is just damn impressive. German Suplex with Bridge looked fantastic. Your blood is really pumping during all this. You really believe Sting has a chance to slay the monster. Stinger Splash. I love how kicks Vader into the back to set up the next. He is so keyed up he overshoots his target and busts himself open on the turnbuckle. Wow! What a finish! Vader throws him down with a powerbomb to seal the deal. It is funny that Vader was just a one month transitional champion for Ron Simmons, but in the short term that's all this was. The match is so great and Sting/Vader trilogy has become the stuff of legend that this match seems so much more important than it actually intended to be. That is a true testament to the workers in this match who gave an A+ effort bell to bell. Sting was the consummate babyface looking the monster in the eye, marching forward and never backing down. Vader is the stuff of nightmares that Wooly Mammoth that can KO you in one shot. I loved how smartly the shine was built with Sting overcoming Vader early in raucous fashion. Then that transition to the heat segment where the sitdown splash was a metaphor for how every fan in that building felt. Then that absolutely tremendous finish so much excitement and drama. When pro wrestling is done this well, it is hard to beat.