El Satanico/El Dandy/Emilio Charles Jr. vs. Atlantis/Javier Cruz/Angel Azteca (EMLL 5/11/90)
youtube.com/watch?v=fSFz-jdj4Tk
Figured I'd squeeze in one other Dandy vs. Azteca trio before The Big One, and it's a very worthy one to choose. Though if I'm honest it felt little more like Dandy and Atlantis were rivals in the match instead of Dandy/Azteca, despite being a week away from the big title match. I don't know if Satanico's team here was full rudo yet but like the March trio I watched, I certainly got the impression they had disdain for the opponents whenever they got shown up during the graceful, very rule-abiding exchanges. Which was a fair bit especially in the first fall, ranging from Dandy taking shit to his arm to Satanico taking shit to his leg. Speaking of which, Cruz kinda fucked up what he was going for while targeting Satanico's leg, but that gave Satanico the perfect excuse to finally reverse something into an armbar. Which he kind of fucked up on purpose because he was still shaking the leg away, giving me the perfect excuse to tell you he's an elite seller. Also one of the only people ever to make the bulldog look good to me. The aforementioned Dandy/Atlantis exchanges was the best match up, but Azteca was definitely smooth as hell. Its crazy how little of that guy I can tell you about after 1990. I loved him selling a Charles clothesline by holding his throat like he was choking, too. I wish Charles got a more offense in the match actually, though seeing him sell Cruz's backbreakers was a delight. The closing moments of each fall had everyone in sync even if it can be kind of questionable why everyone comes in without breaking up the pin already happening (though, again, graceful and very rule-abiding!). Not a MOTYC but if you're to watch EMLL 1990 then essential viewing still.
Bull Nakano/Grizzly Iwamoto vs. Aja Kong/Bison Kimura (AJW 8/19/90)
youtube.com/watch?v=WWkzPJdSFK0
Ok so if I have this right, Bull is your monster ace, Kong is your hopeful monster ace and Grizzly and Bison are on either side for some reason I dunno. And they all have animal names. They probably did a bit too much in this match, I lost track of piledrivers and I'm not sure that cane had much use considering Grizzly and Bison couldn't even take each other out with it. Kong and Bison are at one point whacking Bull with it and she's showing how much it doesn't bother her, which may have been great, if we hadn't already seen the lower ranked women also not get taken out by it.
The good, though, was extremely good. I liked every match up here, and the Kong/Bull hostility trickled down well to Grizzly and Bison. Bison was screaming while attacking Grizzly like they were dating and she caught her cheating. Lots of hair pulling early and the four of these women certainly had a lot of combined hair to pull at. Bull was mostly dismissive of Bison, shrugging off a lot of what she did and bloodying her up. She throws her to Kong's corner at one point, Kong tags in, and we get a stare off before this incredibly awesome moment where Bison dropkicks Bull out of thin air....which Bull of course shrugs off and proceeds to kick the shit out Bison for. Kong kinda tries to stop Bull but eventually just lets it happen, maybe to leave Bison in the deep end and see how she swims. At the time of watching, I had wished that the outcome of that was an actual Kong/Bull interaction, but it leading to Grizzly/Bison round...3 or whatever, at least allowed Bison have some offense again, and we got our moment upcoming so maybe it was better this way. Kong vs. Grizzly didn't feel like quite the slaughter Bull vs. Bison did, but I think maybe the point was that Kong was using Grizzly as a punching bag to shove it in Bull's face, instead of actually being as enthusiastic to kick the shit out of someone the way Bull was. Bull doesn't even try to stop the double teaming against Grizzly until Kong and Bison are both biting her bloody face, which results in them getting to bite Bull's face when she tried to intervene. The small sliver of double teaming against Bull worked, until it didn't, and then we finally get the proper Kong vs. Bull 1v1. It starts off AMAZINGLY as Bull hits a follow up clothesline, and Kong does the weeble-wobble stumble-bumble selling as well as I can possibly imagine it ever being done, at least in this context. She stumbles all the way to a turnbuckle corner and we get a rad shot of Bull's reaction and Kong's smile before they clash more and Kong does go down again. Kong catches Bull with a spinning backfist though which popped people big, and then struggles to get Bull up for what you may possibly call a suplex (but Kong might not as she slams the mat and screams in anger on the kick out). The frustration between the teams builds from there and we start getting more weapons, some arena brawling, and kick out interruptions. I thought it built very naturally (even if, like I said, not every interaction is great), so I think they missed a bit of opportunity for the match to end and its highest heat point by getting back in the ring and working a little too 'normally' after too brief a moment of real chaos. The finish was fine in booking I thought, at least with the little information I have about this promotion in 1990, but the energy was at its flattest of the entire match. All in all I think I'd say like 80% a really great match? I can see myself keeping it in the top 25 for how much I appreciated the violence and story threads running through it.
The Midnight Express vs. The Southern Boys (NWA 7/7/90)
One of the things that separates this from other similar tags I think is how much of a bruiser team the (Wild-Eyed!) Southern Boys come across as in their shoulder tackle, kick-heavy offense. Smothers is so fun to watch here, landing several awesome kicks but somehow making most of them unpracticable in some way. Catching Eaton on the outside with a bit of a fakeout was a huge highlight. The karate bit is perfect, Lane getting those successful shots in only to have his leg caught - and have a look on his face like he forgot that maybe he's not in the dojo right now - not only got a reaction, but actually worked as a tiny bit of 'different style fight' amongst the wrestling (albeit in a humorous way). Smothers wanting to kick everything that moved after that and almost knocking Cornette's teeth down his throat until Cornette bolts it off the apron was the cherry on top. The blind tag during the roll up was terrific and Smothers takes some great barricade smacks, including one where Lane just recklessly shoves him off of the apron. MX were especially tenacious and hasty on top. Eaton's selling after his Alabama jam was awesome. Loved Lane taking some time to taunt Smothers whenever he could. Smothers pulling the ropes so Eaton somersaults to the outside was a great little hope spot. Armstrong's bump on the rope ruled. Great heat on the nearfalls. Cornette looked like a kid who failed a Dracula Halloween costume. If you mentioned everything good about this match you would just have to run a play-by-play of it. Endlessly rewatchable classic.
Bull Nakano vs. Aja Kong, Cage (AJW 11/14/90)
youtube.com/watch?v=zuyCD_UurvQ
This was a lot. A lot of weapons, a lot of others getting involved, brawling on the outside. A decent bit of blood. I guess a decent match, ultimately. But like man, a lot of weapons. I liked the match the most when the two were swinging at each other not long before it started (Kong and Bull that is, which I guess I have to specify here thanks to what was happening on the floor). Kong lands a huge backfist while Bull is on the turnbuckle and Bull just flops all the way down behind between the ropes and the cage. Kong hits umpteen more of them following that and its only until Bull is fed a pipe through the cage that she looks like she has a real hope of getting her (now bloody) head back in the game. I liked the message it sent that the true ace is getting so rocked by the wishful ace that she had to resort to outside forces, but when I say "I liked" I mean I liked that addition of a foreign object. I didn't necessarily like all of them. Actually truth be told I found some of the weapon moments in this kind of lame and backyard-ish; reminded me a bit of those crappy NXT women's Wargames. Not that Mandy Rose was gonna go stabbing Cora Jade's arm with a pair of scissors in any of those (though maybe that would have made Cora Jade sell the arm more believably, ZING). There were definitely some standout moments like Kong almost choking out Bull with the rope but they were suffocated in what honestly felt like kind of a mess. I also really don't think this benefitted from escape the cage rules at all. These two do the Stand And Fight thing well so having them to dash against the action to climb away never looked right to me. Lead to head scratcher moments too like Bull having Kong trapped with a chain and not even trying to escape, despite earlier trying to tie Kong to the ring ropes (with the rope rope), and attempt to escape, only to for Kong to slip out immediately. Honestly I didn't even understand why it was a cage match until I remembered what the finish was. Frustrating match. I will say this, I wish I didn't know the result before watching it. ((I will spoil it ahead so if it matters to you then duck out now if you're reading)). It was 1990, tides were changing in wrestling. Warrior gave Hogan his first proper main event loss in forever and took the title from him clean. Misawa dethroned Jumbo as All Japan's #1. Jushin Liger became the first real junior ace since Tiger Mask. The three musketeers were being solidified as the future of New Japan. But over here, Aja Kong could not yet topple Bull Nakano.