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"The Great Muta" Keiji Muto


Grimmas

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One of the most influential wrestlers of his era and that is as a Japanese wrestler working in a major US promotion for not even a full year.

 

I remember going to loads of shows in 1989 and watching fans in awe of what Muta was doing in the ring because he was so athletic plus had a great look.

 

Then watching him go back home to Japan where he would become a megastar and working in some of the most memorable matches of the decade was great.

 

Muta's rebirth in 2001 was one of the great comebacks ever as he had his new look and rejuvenated in the ring becoming one of the hottest performers in the business was amazing to watch because a lot of us thought he was basically washed up in 2000.

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Muto's problem at times was that he suffered an identity crisis as he couldn't decided whether he wanted to be himself or his altar ego. Muto was also his worst enemy in that regard because working as Muta he had to do the moonsault in every match which killed his knees and aged him way earlier than he was.

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  • 6 months later...

Even now, when he is completely broken down Mutoh is a guy whose stuff I make sure to check out (the big matches at least, I have no desire to watch unmotivated Mutoh). I don't really think any of his current/recent stuff is great, but he always brings certain ideas and moments to matches that I find interesting. He deserves credit for managing to work around his limitations and doing so in a captivating manner. A few years ago I'd have said I hate him and there's no way he'd make my top 100. Now I'm not so sure. Pretty much all of the criticism I had against him still stands but I've seen him in too many great matches to just outright ignore him.

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  • 4 months later...

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"... and even if he's a lazy worker, and the Muta was certainly that

-- quite possibly the laziest in Japan... which would place him high

in the runnin' for laziest worldwide -- but sometimes there's a worker...

sometimes there's a worker. Wal, I lost m'train of thought here."

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There are plenty of good Mutoh performances out there. I just watched his 1991 G1 match with Vader that was damn fine, and his performance was right there neck and neck with Leon's. I seem to recall someone in the yearbook threads at that point having Mutoh in the running for his Wrestler of the Year.

 

The problem is that was 1991. Mutoh wrestled forever after that and has plenty of matches that people could point to when he was just a dog.

 

Hence why folks ages ago came up with the Good Mutoh / Bad Muta reference point:

 

"This was rocking as Good Mutoh showed up."

 

"Of god lord what a stinker - Bad Mutoh showed up for this one."

 

That he'd dust off the moonsault at the end didn't redeem a match where he laid around and didn't want to do much.

 

Is he the laziest wrestler ever? I think folks are just having fun tossing that at him to get across that he was far too often a lazy worker.

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It amazes me that this is a world where some people will still defend Big Daddy, yet a guy who takes a buncha bumps and does moonsaults in almost every match can possibly be considered the laziest of all time.

 

No-one defends Daddy the worker. He is more culturally significant in his home country than Muto though.

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It amazes me that this is a world where some people will still defend Big Daddy, yet a guy who takes a buncha bumps and does moonsaults in almost every match can possibly be considered the laziest of all time.

 

He's not the laziest wrestler of all time. That's called hyperbole. Who the fuck knows who the laziest wrestler of all time is? Doing moonsaults doesn't mean a thing. If anything the moonsault is a crutch because Muto knows he doesn't have to do a whole lot else as long as he goes out and hits THE BIG MOVE. He's a talented guy who can be very good but he totally coasts on his athleticism and charisma. There are plenty of matches where he doesn't do much and simply lets his opponent go through some offense while he takes it in the least compelling way possible until its time to hit his spots. There are times where he acts as is he'd rather be anywhere else and can't be bothered to take notice of the match that he's involved in.

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It amazes me that this is a world where some people will still defend Big Daddy, yet a guy who takes a buncha bumps and does moonsaults in almost every match can possibly be considered the laziest of all time.

 

No-one defends Daddy the worker. He is more culturally significant in his home country than Muto though.

 

 

Culturally, the US has never seen anything like Big Daddy.

 

The closest comparisons are Rikdozan and El Santo - both are much bigger than Daddy though. However when Daddy passed it was front page news on all the tabloid newspapers, and was the lead story on BBC and ITV news on the day.

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He's a talented guy who can be very good but he totally coasts on his athleticism and charisma.

Not the worst things to rely on as a wrestler

 

 

Yeah I love when a wrestler does a few high spots, plays to the crowd here and there and then does nothing else but look indifferent to his opponent whose trying to have an actual match for the other 17 minutes of a 20 minute match.

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  • 2 months later...
  • 1 month later...

When I was a kid I always had the impression Muta was this great legend. Watching old 89 NWA footage where "the Japanese attacked Ric Flair" at GAB made me believe that. With that aura that I believed, I also assumed he was a great worker. I hadn't seen anything though. After seeing some of his work over the years it just doesn't seem likely at all that he'll make my ballot. He's still fun in 89, but not really close to great. I like him alright on the 80s NJ set when he shows up, but he's so unpolished and lesser than everyone else that it doesn't mean much. I've barely scraped his 90s stuff aside from the 90 Hase match. That IS a GREAT match to be fair. Although, I remember liking Hase in it just as much if not more. I might take a surface glance at some of his 90s-00s work, but he never has fit the bill of a great wrestler to me. Fun at times, inadequate at others. I can appreciate someone who sells a kid's punch (that's Muta right), but not enough that jumps out as much as top 100 level output.

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  • 5 years later...

Muto is someone I plan to a deeper dive on because he definitely seems like a controversial pick. From the little I've seen, wrestling as himself he could be great but as Muta he relied too much on the gimmick and charisma. And while I haven't seen any of the matches, his current run as NOAH champ has been super polarizing.

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