few trios in the Satanico vs. Tarzan Boy feud
El Satanico/Rey Bucanero/Ultimo Guerrero vs. Tarzan Boy/Olimpico/Antifaz (CMLL 1/14/00)
Pretty awesome, mostly out of control trio. I was gonna watch the Tarzan Boy vs. Rey Bucanero match I remember loving but it was actually taped in 1999 so I won’t count it for 2000. Luckily, I also remember this being a winner and yes it absolutely was. Most of the first fall is the rudo team bullying Tarzan Boy and repeatedly grabbing him by the hair while keeping the other two out. They had a great Pack of Dogs energy to them if a pack of dogs were more interested in torture than food. Felt like they had the plan from the beginning but it was also too wild not to be called on the fly. Tarzan Boy was never the most memorable guy to me but he made for an effective defiant main man tecnico; had moments like trying to swing kicks at Satanico while Bucanero held him (by the hair of course). The comeback came quickly near the end of fall two and I love Ultimo Guerrero’s reaction to being pinned like there was no way he assumed that lead could have been blown. Tarzan Boy only really gets one dive in (even then he looks wiped doing it) so he gets a little fireball of a moment in the third fall standing up to Satanico after being thrown around which was cool, even if not really feeling like the highlight it could. He gets some proper offense in in the ring not long later but we still have a few matches to go to get the big one so none of this needs to feel like a payoff (the finish was perfect I thought in this regard too). I actually really liked the dive train near the end too, which is rare, felt very frantic and almost unsafe with barely any time in between the dives.
El Satanico/Rey Bucanero/Ultimo Guerrero vs. Tarzan Boy/El Felino/Antifaz (CMLL 1/21/00)
I wasn’t surprised to see the rudo team get the jump again, but I was surprised to see Tarzan Boy bloody before the video graphics during the introductions even seemed to be over. They tie him to the ropes and don’t give one shit about being disqualified for the first fall. They just keep rabidly going at him, only stopping to take out Antifaz or Felino when either attempts to break it up. They’re like the Shield if the Shield were lead by a fifty year old violent psycho who solves problems by chewing on foreheads. I liked the tecnico comeback more in this one than the previous tag, if only because it had more heat and Tarzan Boy was more outwardly chaotic from the get-go of it, especially helped by him already bleeding. It was the kind of comeback that could end a match this hot, which was needed because of the actual finish. We get a nice Ultimo vs. Antifaz and Felino vs. Bucanero set of 1v1s and the dives to lay them out until the main course arrives again. And then it arrives cold and with a hair in it when Tarzan Boy looks great for a moment until a low blow dqs the rudo team again. But I pull the hair out and eat it cold because if there’s anything I’ve learned binge watching 80s WWF it’s that I really do not dislike dq finishes in lead-in matches. Sometimes they properly underline how out of control something or someone is and work ideally as a bit of build itself. And ultimately, while Tarzan Boy vs. Satanico was the main course of this match, the entire match is still an entrée to what’s coming up. A great, BONKERS trio.
El Satanico/Rey Bucanero/Ultimo Guerrero vs. Tarzan Boy/Olimpico/Tony Rivera (CMLL 1/28/00)
Tarzan tries to make this one go different by sprinting in after Satamnico right away, and bless him for the effort, but he barely gets anywhere as he still feels like a gazelle running in to kick a single hyena out of three. The hyenas take it more to the outside than in the previous weeks’ matches which made for an awesome bit of escalation, and then even ramp up the insane indidivual moments as Bucanero and Guerrero lift up Olimpico and straight up dump him on his FUCKING head right on one of the attendance seats. It did not look like anyone, whether executing the move or taking it, paid attention to the fact the man had a spine. When they get Tarzan Boy in the ring, the two of them wrap some kind of rope around his neck and arms and hold it out almost like he’s being crucified so Satanico can openly punch him in the head. They get dq’ed and the camera turns to Tony Rivera whose leg is stuck in the gap in one of the seats, which obviously gives one of the rudos free reign on him as well. Everything is just falling apart for the tecnico team and it's crazy to watch. There’s unfortunately an ad break between where we return to Olimpico on offense (would have liked to see some transition) but it didn’t matter either way as Satanico comes back with a bottle and smashes it on Tarzan’s head, ending the match. A very short match (though who knows the actual length with the ad break + potential clipping) but utter chaos and I may have to give it a spot on my top 25 of the year just for what it was. CMLL ran and absolutely tremendous trio of trios these three weeks with this feud. My only potential negative is I wonder how the hair match can live up to the tension they’ve built.
El Satanico/Rey Bucanero/Ultimo Guerrero vs. Tarzan Boy/Olimpico/Antifaz (CMLL 1/14/00)
Pretty awesome, mostly out of control trio. I was gonna watch the Tarzan Boy vs. Rey Bucanero match I remember loving but it was actually taped in 1999 so I won’t count it for 2000. Luckily, I also remember this being a winner and yes it absolutely was. Most of the first fall is the rudo team bullying Tarzan Boy and repeatedly grabbing him by the hair while keeping the other two out. They had a great Pack of Dogs energy to them if a pack of dogs were more interested in torture than food. Felt like they had the plan from the beginning but it was also too wild not to be called on the fly. Tarzan Boy was never the most memorable guy to me but he made for an effective defiant main man tecnico; had moments like trying to swing kicks at Satanico while Bucanero held him (by the hair of course). The comeback came quickly near the end of fall two and I love Ultimo Guerrero’s reaction to being pinned like there was no way he assumed that lead could have been blown. Tarzan Boy only really gets one dive in (even then he looks wiped doing it) so he gets a little fireball of a moment in the third fall standing up to Satanico after being thrown around which was cool, even if not really feeling like the highlight it could. He gets some proper offense in in the ring not long later but we still have a few matches to go to get the big one so none of this needs to feel like a payoff (the finish was perfect I thought in this regard too). I actually really liked the dive train near the end too, which is rare, felt very frantic and almost unsafe with barely any time in between the dives.
El Satanico/Rey Bucanero/Ultimo Guerrero vs. Tarzan Boy/El Felino/Antifaz (CMLL 1/21/00)
I wasn’t surprised to see the rudo team get the jump again, but I was surprised to see Tarzan Boy bloody before the video graphics during the introductions even seemed to be over. They tie him to the ropes and don’t give one shit about being disqualified for the first fall. They just keep rabidly going at him, only stopping to take out Antifaz or Felino when either attempts to break it up. They’re like the Shield if the Shield were lead by a fifty year old violent psycho who solves problems by chewing on foreheads. I liked the tecnico comeback more in this one than the previous tag, if only because it had more heat and Tarzan Boy was more outwardly chaotic from the get-go of it, especially helped by him already bleeding. It was the kind of comeback that could end a match this hot, which was needed because of the actual finish. We get a nice Ultimo vs. Antifaz and Felino vs. Bucanero set of 1v1s and the dives to lay them out until the main course arrives again. And then it arrives cold and with a hair in it when Tarzan Boy looks great for a moment until a low blow dqs the rudo team again. But I pull the hair out and eat it cold because if there’s anything I’ve learned binge watching 80s WWF it’s that I really do not dislike dq finishes in lead-in matches. Sometimes they properly underline how out of control something or someone is and work ideally as a bit of build itself. And ultimately, while Tarzan Boy vs. Satanico was the main course of this match, the entire match is still an entrée to what’s coming up. A great, BONKERS trio.
El Satanico/Rey Bucanero/Ultimo Guerrero vs. Tarzan Boy/Olimpico/Tony Rivera (CMLL 1/28/00)
Tarzan tries to make this one go different by sprinting in after Satamnico right away, and bless him for the effort, but he barely gets anywhere as he still feels like a gazelle running in to kick a single hyena out of three. The hyenas take it more to the outside than in the previous weeks’ matches which made for an awesome bit of escalation, and then even ramp up the insane indidivual moments as Bucanero and Guerrero lift up Olimpico and straight up dump him on his FUCKING head right on one of the attendance seats. It did not look like anyone, whether executing the move or taking it, paid attention to the fact the man had a spine. When they get Tarzan Boy in the ring, the two of them wrap some kind of rope around his neck and arms and hold it out almost like he’s being crucified so Satanico can openly punch him in the head. They get dq’ed and the camera turns to Tony Rivera whose leg is stuck in the gap in one of the seats, which obviously gives one of the rudos free reign on him as well. Everything is just falling apart for the tecnico team and it's crazy to watch. There’s unfortunately an ad break between where we return to Olimpico on offense (would have liked to see some transition) but it didn’t matter either way as Satanico comes back with a bottle and smashes it on Tarzan’s head, ending the match. A very short match (though who knows the actual length with the ad break + potential clipping) but utter chaos and I may have to give it a spot on my top 25 of the year just for what it was. CMLL ran and absolutely tremendous trio of trios these three weeks with this feud. My only potential negative is I wonder how the hair match can live up to the tension they’ve built.