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Superstar Sleeze

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  1. I am pretty sure Inoki won the match by countout after a top rope flying knee to the floor. Antonio Inoki vs Seiji Sakaguchi - NJPW 4/21/78 MSG Series The opening match in the MSG Series, successor to the World League and precursor to the IWGP & G1 Leagues. Don’t be fooled by New Japan World this is not the Final, the final pits Inoki vs Andre on 5/30. I have not seen too much of Sakaguchi. It is his size that leaps off the page but not much else. Perhaps as I watch more of him, I will grow to appreciate him more but he seems like a solid hand. The match started as a pretty good Ace vs Second Banana technical contest with tempers flaring but they progressively lost steam down the stretch so this settled into the good, not great territory. The opening 30 minutes was surprisingly very Sakaguchi heavy on offense. Inoki really could not get much started. Besides an open salvo Saito Suplex that caused Sakaguchi to powder and some leg work, Sakaguchi stymied Inoki at every turn using his size, technique and most importantly his willingness to bend the rules and roughhouse to his advantage. The holds and amateur style takedowns and defense are a wrestling Purist dream. There is a great back heel trip by Sakaguchi on a rope break. That’s what I mean by blending the purity of amateur style with the storytelling of the professional style showing gamesmanship. There’s early warning signs. Each man chokes the other a little bit ;) but the ref is on it. Sakaguchi romps and stomps. Inoki wants to pull Sakaguchi out to the floor but can’t pull the trigger. It is Sakaguchi who finally lets it rips with strikes and wiping Inoki out with two wedgie style piledrivers. The ref doesn’t not count the pin because used the tights illegally to execute the move. God bless 1978 Japan! Sakaguchi hits an Atomic Stomp and even grabs the Octopus Stretch as time expires at the 30 minute mark. I thought this was great. I do have some issues with Inoki’s selling. He was doing a lot of not selling which is different than no selling. He was NOT registering the pain of the previous move or hold. He was just living onto the next one. On the flip side, Sakaguchi registered the pain of the Saito Suplex powdered acknowledged Inoki almost got him, realized it was kill or be killed and came back stronger. That’s a proper register. Inoki was being dominated but he was not very compelling underneath. They restart the match and this 10 minute stretch is not very good. They lose all the steam and storyline thread of the previous 30 minutes. Predictably it is Inoki’s turn to get on top. He dominates with holds and a Bombs Away Knee. It feels really heatless. He does clock Sakaguchi with a sick mule kick. This ten minute overtime ends with an Inoki figure-4 as time limit expires. I am assuming since they finished with Sakaguchi applying Inoki’s hold in the first period that the figure-4 is Sakaguchi’s hold? Am I right? Third reset not surprisingly this is quick. Inoki does his famous sliding kicks to the big man as they go out the ring. Inoki shoved him into the post and hits a BOMBS AWAY KNEE DROP FROM THE TOP ROPE TO THE FLOOR! Sick finish. Normalize countout finishes again in pro wrestling. There is some good stuff no doubt but it is hard to call this more than good. The heat just isn’t there and there is a lack of progression. The Bombs Away Kneedrop At the end is sick but feels tacked on. They had not worked the match to a fever pitch yet. ***1/4
  2. NWF Heavyweight Champion Antonio Inoki vs Kintaro Oki - NJPW 10/10/74 Jet lag is a bitch (no not that Jetlag, he’s a boss) I am in Japan lying awake after that bitchin’ Inoki/Kobayashi let’s do another. The other thing is I got a cold a couple days ago before I left and it has complicated things. My nose was like faucet on the plane today. Now I’m congested as fuck. Heard the name Oki, don’t think I have seen him wrestle. I knew he was Korean. I didn’t realize he was the same class as Inoki and Baba was basically their third wheel. I thought this was fantastic. Inoki fucking clocks Oki before the bell; dude still had his robe on. The real Jetlag pointed out Oki wouldn’t shake his hand, which I didn’t catch. I just thought Inoki was being a dick. Was this interpromotional? Was Oki IWE? The hate between these two is palpable. This is brutally uncooperative in the best way possible. They are just tussling but can’t land anything. Inoki is looking to end this early with two Octopus Stretch attempts both stymied by Oki.’When Inoki does take Oki down he just grinds his forearm into Oki’s jawbone. It is nasty shit like that. Each pops off a great Suplex into a pin. Then what makes the match unique Oki goes low into the breadbasket with a couple butts. Then he follows up with a headbutt that rocks Inoki. A curious thing happens…Inoki does not immediately go back on offense. He takes probably four or five more brutal headbutts before one of them knocks him Out of the ring to a BIG reaction and Oli celebrates like his victory is academic. Inoki is trying to fire himself up but Oki is pouring on the headbutts. For once Inoki looks in danger, Oki hits a headbutt for two. He winds up and cracks Inoki with a headbutt which busts Inoki open. INOKI FIRES THE FUCK UP!!! Huge punch, Saito Suplex for the win! Awesome match really unique and entertaining. I am wondering if they were trying to open Inoki up hard way because he kept checking himself for blood (it also looked he was trying to blade himself a couple times). I think it was too perfect on the windup headbutt that was the one that drew blood so it was probably a blade. Anyways killer finish! Definitely give this match a spin. ****
  3. NWF Heavyweight Champion Antonio Inoki vs Strong Kobayashi - NJPW 12/12/74 Konnichiwa from Japan! Writing this from Hakone, jet lagged six ways from Sunday. I had Naito vs Tsuiji all teed up from Sakura Genesis and I was like is that what I really want to watch? Look I know that’s what I am going to get come next Monday but fuck it I fell in love with Japan because of shit like this. This matches rules. HARD~! Hot Take: Wrestlers nowadays sells way too much. They undercut the credibility of their comeback and can grind matches to a halt with their overselling. I went to WrestleMania last weekend and I thought Gunther vs Sami Zayn was a top match of the weekend on the back of a hot closing stretch but that beginning was pretty bad. Zayn was selling two minutes in like they were in minute twenty. There are levels to this, brutha. Watching this match was a breath of fresh air. It was all register, register, register. They would register to get the crowd hot and fire up. The heat was explosive in this match. Very fun Inokiist opening to start with Inoki nailing two Big DROPKICKs to start, 1-2-3! Just like that the match is over. No wait Kobayashi had his foot clearly over the bottom rope since like one but ref was locked in on the shoulders. Big brouhaha leads to the match restarting. From there, it is just brilliant 70s wrestling. Kobayashi is the roughhouser extraordinaire. Kobayashi is competent on the mat but would rather by romping and stomping. While Inoki is working holds with vim & vigor. Inoki starts throwing feigned closed fists. Kobayashi retaliates with a top wristlock takedown into stomps to Inoki’s head to force him to powder. Inoki doesn’t oversell. He sells it enough so you know what you watched was roughhousing. It was not illegal but it was not clean either. Inoki comes roaring back with a Butterfly Lock and a Cravate. The ref breaks up the Cravate because Kobayashi is claiming choke. Again the way Kobayashi collapses sells the choke. Inoki defends himself by putting the hold on the ref. I love it. Inoki goes to crowd Kobayashi in the corner but Kobayashi cheap shots him and again uses punches and stomps to force Inoki to powder. Inoki comes back again working holds like his signature Indian Deathlock weigh Back Bend which Kobayashi uses chokes to get out of. Inoki converts that into a Bow & Arrow but they are in the ropes. Kobayashi crowds in the crowd with shoulder tackles and in his best near fall hits a Billy Robinson Backbreaker for a two count. Here is my one criticism this is where Inoki did need to sell more and let Kobayashi pour it on to take this to the next level. Instead we have Inoki double legging and taking it back to a Boston Crab. I know this is what drives some people crazy about Inoki is that he does not sell enough. I can appreciate early in that he registers and fires back but I do wish there was a 2-5 minute stretch in the back end where he’d give more to his opponents. Anyways that’s a nitpick because the FINISH FUCKING RULES! Inoki just clocks Kobayashi with a punch. Kobayashi walks away and just punches the turnbuckles as if to say to the ref what fuck are you going to do about that when he realizes nothing they just slug it out in awesome fashion. This ain’t no 21st Century New Japan Strike Exchange this is an old school out and out brawl! It gets even better from there! Inoki goes for a flying head scissors but Kobayashi falls backwards into the ropes and they take a NASTY bump. Inoki slams Kobayashi’s head into post. Teasing the Countout win which I would have loved. Kobayashi is busted open comes back in the ring pissed off and ready to throw down. Inoki cleans his fucking clock with a right and two Octocpus Stretches later wins! What a fucking fight! This has everything you want: well-defined characters that act according to their traits, struggle, urgency, a shit ton of heat and memorable plot points that rage to a climax. Call me an old crotchey man, call me crazy but they don’t make pro wrestling matches like they used to BABY~! ****1/2
  4. IWGP Heavyweight Champion SANADA vs Tetsuya Naito - NJPW 1/4/24 Wrestle Kingdom 18 The hunt for a halfway decent New Japan 2024 match continues. Granted, I am doing this with express purpose of watching wrestlers I will watch in Japan at Korakuen Hall on April 22nd so watching Danielson in New Japan does not do me much good. Plus I am super familiar with Danielson so I dont need to watch him to prep for him even if he was to wrestle on that night. Anyways, never have been a Naito guy and nothing has really changed for me. He does not have much in the way of charisma nor does he do anything unique. Destino may be the worst finish of all time. It is so clunky and ugly. SANADA is like the most almost athletic wrestler of all time. Watch him try to do Misawa Tiger Feint at the beginning or the Poisonrana at the end, he just barely accomplishes them and they are ugly as sin. There's enough wicked athletic wrestler in this day and age, it is a losing battle for him. He should focus on something else. Honestly, the finish run basically mindwiped me and I cant really remember what I wanted to say even though I finished this match about ten minutes ago. Opening: Weak chain wrestling. The feign some dives. The match opens up with Naito hitting some hard back elbows to the neck and a hiptoss where SANADA's neck lands on Naito's knee. SANADA sells this well, even going to one knee on some hope spot chops. He moves into position a little early on the Slop Drop into some Lucha submission. As I expected, this match had like 20 minutes left so SANADA clearly oversold here as what was to come. Second segment: SANADA all of sudden has a ton of energy and moves out of the way a charge. Dropkick to the knee. Does some leapfrogs, dropkick. Splash to the outside. This would have been a great shine. Or he could not sold so much at the beginning. SANADA drops down into a Dragon Sleeper. He goes for the Moonsault early. Lands on his feet. He scrambles for another move but Naito sweeps the leg, dropkicks him and then a Reverse Neckbreaker off the guardrail to the floor for an 18 count. That sequence from the missed Moonsault->Neckbreaker on the floor was TREMENDOUS! It was the best sequence of the match. It demonstrates they could wrestle a great match, but they could NOT put it together. Third Segment: Naito snaps off a Top Rope Frankensteiner. SANADA hits a dropkick and then they tussle and he hits a Magic Killer off the top rope. They pissed away a lot of good work in that sequence. I think this is where the Poisonrana comes in. Moonsault eats the knees. First Destino and we enter the Finish stretch Finish Stretch: This was dreadful. First it is JIP wrestling. You could just JIP right to the missed moonsault and you would have missed nothing. The first 15-18minutes of this match do NOT matter. It is just a bunch of my turn, your turn finishes. Oh they steal each other finishers! Naito hits a bajillion Destino's. SANADA has an inverted Sister Abigail he hits plus some Shining Wizards and Moonsaults. It is pretty much mindless shit. I think when I enter Korakuen Hall I will be so overwhelmed by emotion I wont care what is put on in front of me, but New Japan looks fucking washed from where I am sitting.
  5. Yota Tsuji vs Hirooki Goto - NJPW 3/20/24 New Japan Cup Finals I am so excited to see pro wrestling in Korakuen Hall that New Japan could deliver a total shitburger that I will still be elated, but if I am to be objective, this has been very disappointing to see what is going in New Japan. I heard the Finals would be a lot better than Semifinals, but I am still not seeing it. Besides his big ass smile, I dont see what Tsuji has going for him. I am only two matches in so I will keep an open mind, but there is nothing about him that jumps off the page. He is just another dude that does the same things as everyone else nowadays. Goto is Goto. He is old stalwart. First highspot came about five minutes in, it was a suicide dive by Tsuji. The opening 5 minutes of customary New Japan feeling out was nothing to write home about. No fire in the lock ups or takedowns. Tsuji's control segment was pretty by the book. Bodyslam, body scissors. I found it funny Goto was doing these desperation chops and fall down to one knee after about 7 minutes of action, a suicide dive and a bodyslam. I mean credit for doing a traditional hope spot, a dying art, but dude how about you wait for Tsuji to do something actually devastating. Goto caught Tsuji with a lariat on criss-cross. He did his standard Goto spots. There was absolutely terrible criss-cross spot that was just so overly complicated and unnecessary. Pretty bad New Japan strike exchange. The finish run was not very good. Usually I expect the finish run to save this match and justify the lavish praise heaped upon these mediocre matches, but this was not even good by Cena/Owens standards of 2015. It was my turn, your turn dreck. Tsuji hits his one cool move that weird jumpy thing that leads to double stomp to Goto's head. Guess what next move Tsuji hoists Goto on his shoulders guess what Goto comes alive and puts Tsuji in a sleeper. Man, could they at least come u[ up with a better transition. The headbutt strike exchange was good. I think this may have been earlier after the terrible criss-cross, but there was a terrible moment where Tsuji just hopped up on Goto's shoulders to eat a move. The actual finish was decent. Goto went for some Rainmaker variation and Tsuji hit a spear which was cool. I am not thrilled with yet another wrestler using the Spear but Tsuji does his more look like a spear takedown. If you like today's style of wrestling, I am sure you will like this. I am not here to rain on anyone's parade. I just call em as I see em. It was a disappointing match.
  6. So obviously we have to go to Ribera. I see there are two locations. Which one is better from a pro wrestling history & memorabilia perspective?
  7. Yota Tsuji vs EVIL - NJPW 3/18/24 New Japan Cup Semis Same crowd as Sanada & Goto, a bit more energy for this match particularly Yota who I have never seen or heard of before. Is Yota a candidate to be the next Ace? He seems solid. Between him & Sanaa’s I don’t see a huge difference, Yota may be a bit more charismatic. Never EVIL before but heard of him. I liked this better than Sanada/Goto but it wasn’t without its faults. This one told a clear story: the dude named EVIL is well Evil. He pulls hair, he exposes turnbuckles, he ball shots, he has friends (is that Dick Togo? It is Dick Togo) beat up Tsuji. So Tsuji has to fight from underneath and overcome the odds and has his own friends help him out. The issue was with the execution. A lot of it felt heatless like they were just going through motions like it was a dress rehearsal. Both beatdowns at the beginning and the end were atrocious. I’d be ashamed to be apart of that. Both some oomph behind those stomps, sneer, do something. The crowd clearly liked Yota but the match did him little favors. Once the match was officially started after the first beat down. There was a buzz to Yota’s offense. EVIL stymied that with a HARD shove into the railing that toppled the ring announcer. I like the hair pulling and the exposed buckles but the way Yota was going into them was ginger. Yota got his hope spots in with a couple stomps. EVIL took back over don’t remember much and I just watched the match. EVIL took the Bret Bump into the exposed buckles which I LOVED! EVIL hit him hard. This should led to fiery comeback but they pissed around with a terrible strike exchange. Yota hit his big finish but nailed the ref with it. Here comes Evil’s boys and this beat down sucks too. They focus on Tsuji’s testicles but Evil can’t pin him. SHINGO I believe comes out cleans house and Yota wins. This could have been great all the pieces were there but it was so heatless in execution.
  8. I was watching Beetlejuice for the first time on the plane back from Dublin. Noticed there was a pro wrestling match while the mom was sleeping, what match was on?
  9. UPDATE: I bought tickets using BuySumoTickets and received confirmation they purchased tickets for me to go see New Japan in Korakuen Hall!!! I am so excited that I am getting to see pro wrestling in Korakuen! We are also going to Sumo too, which should be pretty cool. I watched a New Japan match from a week ago and noticed that 2/3rds-3/4ths of the crowd was in masks. Should I expect to wear a mask at all times in Japan or only when I am sick? Thank you everyone for the recommendations! I am so excited for this trip!
  10. SANADA vs Hirooki Goto - NJPW 03/18/24 New Japan Cup 2024 Semis I leave for Japan on April 13th. Time to get my ass in gear! Hirooki Goto still wrestles?!? Wow! SANADA has a great look, not sure he has IT. I thought he was perfectly solid just didn’t jump off the page for me. I thought he’d be a lock to win since he was a recent champion & Goto is a vet but they went with the upset. It is still cold in Boston so this is going to be short. Pretty heatless match overall. Nothing bad per se but nothing great. Standard New Japan start with Mat wrestling which I appreciate. Looks like Goto is going to take control first with a clotheslining Samara over the top rope but very All Japan transition here with drop toe hole into the guardrail and then piledriver on the floor. That was the peak of the match. Lame Sanada control. Lame Goto transition on a lame cross cross. Stock Goto stuff. The criss cross stuff in this match was not good. SANADA who I believe is a Mutoh student at the very least he worked Wrestle-1 with Mutoh uses a lot of Mutoh moves such as the Shining Wizard & Moonsault. I did like the Dragon Sleeper with a body scissors. There was an especially bad New Japan strike exchange breakdown. The finish stretch was pretty standard New Japan does 90s All Japan style bomb throwing. This came off well and heated. The crowd finally got into it. I liked Sanada’s use if quick pins to discombobulate and set up offense but eventually he got caught by two big moves from Goto. I’m probably harsher sounding on it than I felt while watching. I didn’t think either guy really stood out and they didn’t tell a real story. It was not like one guy was fighting from underneath (SANADA was on top more I reckon), no limbo psychology, no tempo psychology. It was just hit your spots with weak transition and a standard finish run. Nothing bad, nothing great. It just was.
  11. Kazuchika Okada vs Tetsuya Naito - NJPW 8/13/23 Woah Sleeze is reviewing a match after 2015, what the fuck?!? Look, New Japan could present a shitburger in Korakeun Hall and I would still be on Cloud 9 watching pro wrestling in Korakeun. I get chills and emotional just thinking about the fact I will get to do that, BUT I might as well do a little research and see what is going on in New Japan to enhance the experience. I figured I'd start with last year's G1 Climax Final. Naito is definitely the more over of the two. I watched this while walking in 32F weather, it is a 34 minute match, so rather than a blow by blow account. These are the thoughts I had while watching it. Pros 1. Pacing. I thought both Okada & Naito did a great job pacing this 34 minute match 1a. Segmentation was really well done. They had significant control segments with clear transitions in momentum. Action had consequences 1b. Tempo was a double edge sword, as you will see it will be in the Con section, BUT I did appreciate they took their time. This was not a perpetual motion match. Neither Okada nor Naito was running the whole time. They let things breathe. It did not feel like they were do a rehearsed choreography or stage blocking. 1c. They took what their opponent gave them. Nothing drives me nuts more than an opponent getting into position for the next move. Here that did not happen. I am so appreciative of it. They used a snapmare or a bodyslam to position their opponent how they wanted them. Or if thats where the opponent was that is how the spot flowed. 2. Neck Psychology - The neck psychology was strong throughout. It was a good touchstone for the match. 3. Highspots - Okada has his highspots down pat. The dropkick to the wrestler sitting on the top rope, the Tombstone, the standard dropkick, Emerald Flowsion and the Rainmaker. He is a Bret Hart style wrestler. You know the beats, you look for the beats, the beats are safe and any deviation to the beats is interesting. As you will see in cons there was not much in the way of deviation. I think Naito has improved since I last watch him, but in all honesty he does nothing for me. Besides Tranquilo, what does he do that shows charisma or anything of the way sparking excitement? Cons 1. Transitions while clear were neither interesting nor eye-popping. Okada seems to like catching a charging Naito as his transition which is fine. A charging opponent should lose that battle 9/10 times, but it was not something that excited me. It was just ok we are transitioning to the next segment. Naito seemed to like to use running and speed to create his transition such as the swinging DDT. This kinda goes into my #2 point. I think the match could have been edited so that some of the selling was not oversold so much to make some of the transitions more meaningful 1a. The lack of missed moves also hurt the match. Missed moves are easy ways to create openings for the wrestler working underneath. The first meaningful missed move was 30 minutes into the match and was the Stardust Press which levelled playing field for the finish run. 2. Modulation of selling. They oversold too quickly in the beginning which undercut some of the early transitions. 3. If they were going to wrestle downtempo, they needed to tell a more interesting story. I love a good midtempo jam such as Tenyru/Mutoh '01, but you can NOT be hitting every single highspot cleanly. You need to deviate from the norm. 4. Individual Charisma - This was a pretty soulless match. I am not the biggest Okada fan, but he has some money matches against Tanahashi. That's because Tanahashi is the paint to his blank canvas. Okada has a formula/structure (Tanahashi does too) but Tanahashi brightens it with his colorful charisma. These two are just as vanilla as they come. 5. Finish Run - This is what I was most shocked about. I expected the last 5 minutes for them to go all out and then I'd be like yeah the first 30 minutes was solid, but in typical Japanese fashion that last 5 minutes rocked hard, but even that felt pedestrian. Pretty standard Okada finish run with the swing your partner round & round bullshit which can be good or can be lame. It was more the latter this time. It is not really a bad match per se. It is just kinda there. I am interested to see what people give it as a rating. I bet it was lower than your normal New Japan match. My estimate would be 4 stars which is low for New Japan. I am going three myself. I am going too look up what was considered their best last year and give that a shot. *** UPDATE: VOW MOTY Rankings had this at #16!?!??! WOW! Ok so I am way off base. I need to know what others think about this match.
  12. Hey yo, so I got married recently and we are taking our honeymoon to Japan. I cant go to Japan and not see 1-2 wrestling shows while I am over there. Not to worry my wife is going to AEW Big Business in March and both nights of WrestleMania, she has definitely become a fan during the course of our relationship. So I had a couple questions about seeing pro wrestling live in Japan. 1. How do you see when & where upcoming shows will be? I figure my best bet to see wrestling is in Tokyo or Osaka. We will also be going to Kyoto, which I assume is not exactly a pro wrestling hotbed. So I know I cant be picky if New Japan is not running in Tokyo or Osaka when I will be there, I am definitely willing to watch All Japan, NOAH or DDT, what have you? 2. How do you buy tickets for the event? 3. Any tips or tricks either for entering the venue or watching? Any other advice is appreciated. Oh we are going from April 13th-28th. Thank you in advance!
  13. WWA World Heavyweight Champion Baron Von Raschke vs Andre The Giant - WWA 10/23/72 A rare full match! TV match it seems from the worlds tiniest wrestling ring. WWA was Dick The Bruiser’s Indianapolis promotion where he was champion for most of the 60s and last champ in 1971. Bruiser did wrestle in St. Louis and AWA around this time. Baron seems like he was the main heel as he was on his third title reign, the first being in 1970. He has Bobby Heenan but before he was the Brain he was the pretty boy. Wilbur Synder the innovator of the Abdominal Stretch is out to protect Andre because Andre doesn’t speak English. Baron clocks Synder with brass knuckles before the bell, busting him open this leaning Andre on his own. Of course the gargantuan Andre needs no help. My big takeaway from this match is most Giants are miscast as heels. They should be babyfaces used to bash in your most hated cowardly scoundrel to roaring applause. Omos, the dude with Apollo Crews and Satam Singh would all benefit from babyface runs at the outset of their career to establish them as forces of nature and only later turn them heel to feed then to the Ace Babyface. Andre is a lot of fun to watch at this point. It is a lot of the Andre staple spots. Stepping and standing on his opponent is always impressive. Surprised Baron got a kick out after a backbreaker. Heenan trips Andre. Baron takes the eyes. Synders recovers and applies the Abdominal Stretch twice but Heenan breaks it up. On third one, Andre Charles Heenan off to a roaring crowd. Not a great match but a cool historical curiosity.
  14. AWA World Tag Team Champions Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens vs Dr. X & Andre The Giant - AWA 10/7/72 It is just to pleasant to watch Nick Bockwinkel. At less than 5 minutes, there’s not much to analyze. It seems like Andre is a surprise guest. They do a fun spot where Bock rapidly u-turns from Andre into an X headlock. They run an X FIP. Andre’s hot tag is phenomenal. It is amazing how agile and fluid he is. Andre wins. A cool curiousity.
  15. NWA World Heavyweight Champion Jack Brisco vs Harley Race - CWF 6/8/74 An abridged walk today. Looking for something short & sweet. At 8, 9 minutes of footage no rating but still very revealing. Coming off watching so much WWWF footage from the mid-70s. This is night & day. I think what is most revealing is the Southern workrate style is pretty much fully realized at this point. Compared to the WWF style of romp em stomp em with power holds, in 90 seconds you’ll see a back body drop, piledriver, and a missed diving headbutt. You see some big bumps. I counted three different Suplex variations. Superstar Graham brought the big bumping North so that’s not uncommon but the offense is very different compared to WWWF. The other thing to note is how fully realized Harley Race. This is 1974 so he already did his stint as the transitional champion between Junior and Jack but all the Harley staples are there. Big bumps, begging off, tons of bombs and high spots. He does the Harley bump booking the top rope and the press slam off the top. These clips show you there is not much novelty to what Flair and Steamboat were doing in the Mid-Atlantic in the late 70s through the 80s. BUT ORIGINALITY IS OVERRATED! Watching Harley here there are so many Flair spots but it is how Flair does them that makes him better. It is Flair charisma, his unique organic fight or flight reaction to pro wrestling that underpins everything he does that makes him the GOAT and makes Harley look stilted and forced. It is not a Lu what you do. It is how you do it. That’s why Originality is overrated. Sadly we don’t get the finish. Cagematch says Brisco wins but not how. Interesting clips.
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