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Oct 13 2011, 05:49 AM
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#1
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Group: Admins Posts: 23,853 Joined: 4-February 05 Member No.: 19 |
Talk about it here.
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Dec 27 2011, 11:51 AM
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#2
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Group: Admins Posts: 23,853 Joined: 4-February 05 Member No.: 19 |
Even better than the June match. They go to a 30-minute draw, and it's awesome to see Hayabusa slowly building a following. The crowd was much more animated and even in love with Hayabusa than they were just two months before. Kudos to him for rebuilding FMW in his image through his work in the ring. That's pretty impressive. I think going into the yearbooks I expected him to be a garbage-happy guy who blew a lot of moves and had some nice highspots that he could sometimes hit well -- think the Japanese version of Sabu. But he's a much more complete, talented wrestler than that. Classic wrestling match. It may surprise some to hear it, but the best non-gimmick stuff in FMW was every bit as good as any promotion in the world except All Japan. I don't know that there was much output at that level at this point, but they were more than capable of hitting that level on good days. This is another match with old style slow build focused on a body part -- in this case either guy's arm. They do some really nice matwork and build to a great series of highspots for the last 10 minutes or so. What puts this match above the match in June is the way they create so much doubt over the outcome. The draw genuinely surprised me, because there were quite a few *really* close calls. As far as feeling the crowd and timing their kickouts to get the biggest reaction possible, these guys are pros. Hayabusa also gets in a beautiful springboard moonsault to the floor. This is the traditional junior dynamic of high flyer vs base guy transferred to a heavyweight style, and it works really well. But what's cool about Hayabusa is that he can stay on the mat with Oya as long as Oya wants and hold his own, then kick it into high gear to distinguish himself as a star. I am really high on this.
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Dec 27 2011, 05:24 PM
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#3
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Group: Members Posts: 1,537 Joined: 8-January 11 Member No.: 33,427 |
Their previous match a couple months back was a title match to crown a new Brass Knuckles champ, the top title in the company at the time after Onita vacated it when he retired. After winning the match Hayabusa said he didn't want to win it like that and instead wanted to prove himself more so this match is part of the tournament they had to crown a new champ.
QUOTE I think going into the yearbooks I expected him to be a garbage-happy guy who blew a lot of moves and had some nice highspots that he could sometimes hit well -- think the Japanese version of Sabu. But he's a much more complete, talented wrestler than that. Heh, guessing your only previous experience was his 94 J-Cup match & the ECW abomination tag (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif) Yeah he's a billion times better then what you'd exspect going off stuff like that. My favorite wrestler of all time. QUOTE It may surprise some to hear it, but the best non-gimmick stuff in FMW was every bit as good as any promotion in the world FMW's a funny thing. Back when I was first getting into puro they used to get tons of love from certain segments of the online fandom then for whatever reason they stoped getting talked about as much and now newer fans don't pay much attention to it but yeah i'll put the best FMW up against anything else from any other company, All Japan included. The promotion really peaks in 97 going into 98 & 99. 2000 falls off tho still plenty of good matches and I just finished watching all of 2001 which kinda sucked at the start but was actually a great year from about May/June on. 2002 nose dived again but there were only 4 or 5 shows that year before the company closed tho there's been lots of quality stuff from the post FMW groups as well, WMF/WEW/Apache, etc... |
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Dec 28 2011, 06:27 AM
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#4
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Group: Members Posts: 4,080 Joined: 2-June 08 Member No.: 897 |
FMW's a funny thing. Back when I was first getting into puro they used to get tons of love from certain segments of the online fandom then for whatever reason they stoped getting talked about as much and now newer fans don't pay much attention to it but yeah i'll put the best FMW up against anything else from any other company, All Japan included. At one point, Mr. Gannosuke was easily a top 10 worker in the world to me. Just a great worker. FMW remains one of my favourite promotion ever. From the fascinating Onita years, to the goofball Fuyuki stuff which still delieverd lots of good matches (because they had a good crop of workers), and the peak in between when they had to redefine their product after Onita left, FMW was all over the map of wrestling style, always with a little garbage flavor to it, but not as much as some would think. Hayabusa at his peak was an amazing worker. Ohya & Kanemura were excellent. Kudo was a top 10 worker at her peak. Masato Tanaka, although damaged by his ECW stint for a while, was a superb worker. Shoichi Arai was at one time the best ring announcer. Just a unique promotion with a terribly sad ending. |
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Jan 8 2012, 11:50 PM
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#5
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Group: ECW Project Posts: 6,066 Joined: 15-January 07 Member No.: 283 |
Reading all this really makes me want to watch the shit out of some FMW
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Jul 12 2012, 10:16 PM
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#6
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Group: Members Posts: 2,376 Joined: 17-January 07 Member No.: 296 |
I've been down on most of the FMW i've watched but this was really good. Oya was awesome and Hayabusa stayed with him good.
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Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 18th May 2013 - 01:24 AM |