Stan Hansen vs. Akira Taue (AJPW Champion's Carnival 4/11/94)
Very good match and an excellent Stan Hansen performance, who's tasked almost with being the babyface working from the bottom (Stan Hansen!), but some of Taue's offense being pretty soft dragged this down a little. Hansen has busted ribs from a prior match in the Carnival, so I couldn't say Taue dominating came too easy, it's just, yeah, he looked a little loose here. He gets Hansen in a corner pretty quickly to go for the ribs, and it was a bit flat that Hansen's clubs and knees - that were supposed to fail him fighting out of there - looked better than anything Taue did that early. To be honest Taue almost looked like he was waiting for Hansen to come out of the corner, and Hansen almost looked like he was waiting for Taue to go apeshit on him. Taue at least does basically (maybe literally) nothing but target those ribs, and switches his offense up a lot when the advantage isn't in question, including getting pissed enough to use the ropes or guardrail. Hansen had a few really neat tricks to create distance, but it takes Taue missing an elbow drop for Hansen to get his chance. Awesome transition spot where he just launches himself at Taue like a bull, before touring him on the outside. One of his best bits of selling came there where he tried to suplex Taue on the concrete only to just yell in pain from overexertion. I don't think Hansen's really got a rep a great seller, but that's only because he's more known for reigning blows on people himself and normally not having to sell very long. He's a great, great seller, and it's basically the driving force behind this match being as good as it is. There is not a moment, not a single span of three seconds where he allows you to forget he's a wounded animal. Who holds their arm towards their ribs during a knee drop? I loved every moment he had to hunch over and rest his arms on his thighs because even being upright properly hurt. The injury also made a really interesting Hansen finish stretch where he was struggling to pull of the kind of moves that would normally lay somebody waste and give him all the time in the world. Even when the one throwing pins down, it almost felt like luck that he was even with Taue by then. The wrestler that man was.
Bret Hart/The British Bulldog vs. Owen Hart/Bob Backlund (WWF Action Zone 2/26/95)
Had this on the backlog forever and finally decided to check it out. I'd have to say that wiithout TWO damn ad breaks, and with a slightly longer end stretch and this could have been legit great. What we get is very close though. Owen Hart isn't an all time great worker to me but he's actually a little underrated for how many tag partners he could mesh with. I really dig him with Yoko, with Koko, and with Davey, and here he is with middle aged and crazy Bob Backlund and they both kill it. Maybe worth noting that "middle aged and crazy" Bob Backlund is merely half a year older than Brock Lesnar is now in December 2021, by the way. But anyway the heel team has some fun as hell stooging, and it's not often you get to see Ace Bret just decking any guy who runs in like he's Dusty. An early sharpshooter attempt on Backlund gets Owen to run in and create the Bret FIP with both guys zoning in on Bret's leg. A bit strange they went for the leg considering they teased how powerful the crossface chickenwing was, but who cares? The FIP itself was actually super awesome thanks to how focused the heels were on the leg (those wishbones!), and Bret barely standing the whole time, which did wonders to put it over. Shout out to Bret trying to club his way out of a hold, but Owen only getting go once Bret gets a roll up out of it, showing THA SCIENTIFIC WRESTLER he is. The heels get the faces a phantom tag, and later, in a classic heel team fashion start to hit a downward spiral on a failed double team move. Which was especially cool since it told a little story of how they were doomed the minute they stopped going for the leg. I'm not a Bulldog fan but his power man offense makes a great hot tag and I was actually more excited for him to get in than I would be most. Again the match ended too quickly while it was still hot, but Bret getting some revenge on Backlund for Survivor Series and refusing to let go of the sharpshooter on the outside was worth it.
Josh Barnett vs. Tiger Ruas (GCW Bloodsport 10/22/21)
I think I've seen enough Daniel Makabe matches to tell me he's not really for me. The promise is there, but he comes off, too much of the time, as a guy grapples to be countered, so that there can be "back and forth action." I watched one of his matches from a few months ago right before this, and felt that as much as ever. Barnett vs. Ruas is not that. This is two muscular athletes finding advantages, grittily struggling, and reacting to holds like they're in danger. Even some of the small additions like Ruas throwing in some crossface forearms or palm strikes to throw Barnett off felt significant in getting a good hold on. Told a neat sub-story about Barnett trying to get on top to use his weight too, which eventually worked well for him, forcing Ruas to switch up strats and strike at the head. Ruas was apparently a WWE guy for years but to be frank I'm not sure I've ever heard of him. No way he got to work anything like this over there but if he's up against Drew Gulak I bet it was a goody. This wasn't exactly ground-breaking shoot style or anything new, but a real good ten minutes.
Randy Savage vs. Jake Roberts (WWF This Tuesday in Texas 12/3/91)
If this had been even 10 or 12 minutes instead of 6 I'd be convinced it'd be up there with the best of WWF matches around this time. Roberts was just brilliant levels of scum by this point and that Hellwig jackoff can suck all the dicks he was too homophobic to suck for killing Jake's title run. His pre-match promo is outstanding, and Savage of all people can't even follow up, but stops bothering when he hears Jake's music, so he can run off and blindside Jake down the entrance way. Remember how WWE could actually feel like non-synthetic humans making natural decisions? Again, the match is 6 1/2 minutes but it's scrappy and mean-spirited and Roberts goes for the arm that the cobra had chewed on. Roberts tearing at the tape on the arm while Savage tries to pull at his face was a great highlight. This is just one of those matches where the execution isn't especially unique or interesting, but every move picked and placed just almost could not be better. The post-match is absolutely amazing with Roberts, after *promising* Jack Tunney he won't have the snake at ringside, in fact has it under the ring, and goes to pull it out on Savage again. Elizabeth comes sprinting down the entrance way and Jake's reaction before he notices who it is is like a spider jumping from mortal danger. Once he realises, he gets that smarmy little smile and begins taunting them both, with Elizabeth putting in probably her most outwardly vocal performance. Then *the* moment happens that I won't spoil just in case but let me say it does not even at all involve the cobra in the bag. A real good six minute match, but combine that with the pre-match promos (seriously, I have to say again, especially Roberts'), the post-match having all time heel work, the also excellent post-match promo from Jake ("IT FELT SO GOOD I SHOULD HAVE HAD TO PAY FOR THAT!"), the overall snake bite angle, and this, as far as I'm concerned, is one of the best things ever aired by WWE.
Very good match and an excellent Stan Hansen performance, who's tasked almost with being the babyface working from the bottom (Stan Hansen!), but some of Taue's offense being pretty soft dragged this down a little. Hansen has busted ribs from a prior match in the Carnival, so I couldn't say Taue dominating came too easy, it's just, yeah, he looked a little loose here. He gets Hansen in a corner pretty quickly to go for the ribs, and it was a bit flat that Hansen's clubs and knees - that were supposed to fail him fighting out of there - looked better than anything Taue did that early. To be honest Taue almost looked like he was waiting for Hansen to come out of the corner, and Hansen almost looked like he was waiting for Taue to go apeshit on him. Taue at least does basically (maybe literally) nothing but target those ribs, and switches his offense up a lot when the advantage isn't in question, including getting pissed enough to use the ropes or guardrail. Hansen had a few really neat tricks to create distance, but it takes Taue missing an elbow drop for Hansen to get his chance. Awesome transition spot where he just launches himself at Taue like a bull, before touring him on the outside. One of his best bits of selling came there where he tried to suplex Taue on the concrete only to just yell in pain from overexertion. I don't think Hansen's really got a rep a great seller, but that's only because he's more known for reigning blows on people himself and normally not having to sell very long. He's a great, great seller, and it's basically the driving force behind this match being as good as it is. There is not a moment, not a single span of three seconds where he allows you to forget he's a wounded animal. Who holds their arm towards their ribs during a knee drop? I loved every moment he had to hunch over and rest his arms on his thighs because even being upright properly hurt. The injury also made a really interesting Hansen finish stretch where he was struggling to pull of the kind of moves that would normally lay somebody waste and give him all the time in the world. Even when the one throwing pins down, it almost felt like luck that he was even with Taue by then. The wrestler that man was.
Bret Hart/The British Bulldog vs. Owen Hart/Bob Backlund (WWF Action Zone 2/26/95)
Had this on the backlog forever and finally decided to check it out. I'd have to say that wiithout TWO damn ad breaks, and with a slightly longer end stretch and this could have been legit great. What we get is very close though. Owen Hart isn't an all time great worker to me but he's actually a little underrated for how many tag partners he could mesh with. I really dig him with Yoko, with Koko, and with Davey, and here he is with middle aged and crazy Bob Backlund and they both kill it. Maybe worth noting that "middle aged and crazy" Bob Backlund is merely half a year older than Brock Lesnar is now in December 2021, by the way. But anyway the heel team has some fun as hell stooging, and it's not often you get to see Ace Bret just decking any guy who runs in like he's Dusty. An early sharpshooter attempt on Backlund gets Owen to run in and create the Bret FIP with both guys zoning in on Bret's leg. A bit strange they went for the leg considering they teased how powerful the crossface chickenwing was, but who cares? The FIP itself was actually super awesome thanks to how focused the heels were on the leg (those wishbones!), and Bret barely standing the whole time, which did wonders to put it over. Shout out to Bret trying to club his way out of a hold, but Owen only getting go once Bret gets a roll up out of it, showing THA SCIENTIFIC WRESTLER he is. The heels get the faces a phantom tag, and later, in a classic heel team fashion start to hit a downward spiral on a failed double team move. Which was especially cool since it told a little story of how they were doomed the minute they stopped going for the leg. I'm not a Bulldog fan but his power man offense makes a great hot tag and I was actually more excited for him to get in than I would be most. Again the match ended too quickly while it was still hot, but Bret getting some revenge on Backlund for Survivor Series and refusing to let go of the sharpshooter on the outside was worth it.
Josh Barnett vs. Tiger Ruas (GCW Bloodsport 10/22/21)
I think I've seen enough Daniel Makabe matches to tell me he's not really for me. The promise is there, but he comes off, too much of the time, as a guy grapples to be countered, so that there can be "back and forth action." I watched one of his matches from a few months ago right before this, and felt that as much as ever. Barnett vs. Ruas is not that. This is two muscular athletes finding advantages, grittily struggling, and reacting to holds like they're in danger. Even some of the small additions like Ruas throwing in some crossface forearms or palm strikes to throw Barnett off felt significant in getting a good hold on. Told a neat sub-story about Barnett trying to get on top to use his weight too, which eventually worked well for him, forcing Ruas to switch up strats and strike at the head. Ruas was apparently a WWE guy for years but to be frank I'm not sure I've ever heard of him. No way he got to work anything like this over there but if he's up against Drew Gulak I bet it was a goody. This wasn't exactly ground-breaking shoot style or anything new, but a real good ten minutes.
Randy Savage vs. Jake Roberts (WWF This Tuesday in Texas 12/3/91)
If this had been even 10 or 12 minutes instead of 6 I'd be convinced it'd be up there with the best of WWF matches around this time. Roberts was just brilliant levels of scum by this point and that Hellwig jackoff can suck all the dicks he was too homophobic to suck for killing Jake's title run. His pre-match promo is outstanding, and Savage of all people can't even follow up, but stops bothering when he hears Jake's music, so he can run off and blindside Jake down the entrance way. Remember how WWE could actually feel like non-synthetic humans making natural decisions? Again, the match is 6 1/2 minutes but it's scrappy and mean-spirited and Roberts goes for the arm that the cobra had chewed on. Roberts tearing at the tape on the arm while Savage tries to pull at his face was a great highlight. This is just one of those matches where the execution isn't especially unique or interesting, but every move picked and placed just almost could not be better. The post-match is absolutely amazing with Roberts, after *promising* Jack Tunney he won't have the snake at ringside, in fact has it under the ring, and goes to pull it out on Savage again. Elizabeth comes sprinting down the entrance way and Jake's reaction before he notices who it is is like a spider jumping from mortal danger. Once he realises, he gets that smarmy little smile and begins taunting them both, with Elizabeth putting in probably her most outwardly vocal performance. Then *the* moment happens that I won't spoil just in case but let me say it does not even at all involve the cobra in the bag. A real good six minute match, but combine that with the pre-match promos (seriously, I have to say again, especially Roberts'), the post-match having all time heel work, the also excellent post-match promo from Jake ("IT FELT SO GOOD I SHOULD HAVE HAD TO PAY FOR THAT!"), the overall snake bite angle, and this, as far as I'm concerned, is one of the best things ever aired by WWE.