So, I am back after a long absence from typing ramblings onto this webpage for all of you to see. I can't really give any excuse other than I just haven't made time for it. But, I just got done with my school semester, so here's hoping some free time allows me to post more stuff on here. And I decided, what better way to come back then to start some "Retro Reviews", where I look back at wrestling events of yesteryear. To start it off, I watched WWE's No Way Out 2004, hailing from the famous Cow Palace in San Francisco, California. So, let's get into it, why don't we!
We start off this show with, of all things, recent
Playboy cover girls Torrie Wilson and Sable entering the ring to do an
introduction for the PPV. We will obviously get into
it a bit later in this show, but WWE really must have had a problem with
figuring out how to buy time for their Raw and Smackdown exclusive PPV’s. Not to mention, Sable, while
pretty and all, has an ungodly shrill voice. It’s a wonder anyone found it a
good idea to actually give her a microphone. This was ungodly bad, but it moved
into a very awesome video package that recapped the feud going into the main
event between Eddie Guerrero and Brock Lesnar. One of my favorite things about
looking back at old shows is seeing these retro hype videos that they would do
for PPV’s. They were always my favorite part about the lead-up to a show and
WWE really hasn’t matched the ones from this era, in my personal opinion. But
besides that, explosions happen, it’s Hugo Savinovich’s birthday, Michael
Cole’s tan is weird and we are on with the show.
Showing posts with label Wrestling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wrestling. Show all posts
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Monday, March 25, 2013
What Wrestlefan Watched Vol. 2: AIW's Hard Hits And Big Flips
![]() |
The Aftermath Of A War Photo by Paul Stratoti |
Hello blog readers. Long time no see. Yes, it has definitely
been a while since I took the time to type some of my heads inner workings onto
here. I wont come up with some elaborate excuse as to why I haven’t posted. My
schedule has been ridiculously crazy and I have been doing a lot of cool
things, so much so that I haven’t shown this blog any love in a while. First of
all, I got to write for an awesome website called “The Mandible Claw”, curated
by the great Danielle Matheson. I also wrote an excerpt for Danielle’s
acclaimed “Best & Worst Of TNA Impact” column for With Leather. So go check
out both of those through the links below, especially “The Mandible Claw”,
which features tons of amazing pieces from awesome people. I am still in shock
that a couple paragraph piece I wrote about the douchebag “Say Something” guy
is on the same website where Chikara’s Ophidian listed his Top 5 bad horror
movies. It’s a weird dream of mine that I never thought existed until now. But,
the point is, I am here now and I cannot wait to keep writing. So let’s jump
right into it.
I have mentioned before on this blog about Absolute Intense
Wrestling out of the Cleveland area, and how great they have become at
releasing a steady stream of content to their audience through Youtube and
other forms of social media. Too many companies fail to embrace their internet
community by dolling out content, whether it is in-ring action, promos, teasers
etc. But AIW has made sure to not shy away from releasing tons of great videos
for their fans, and as of late they have released a couple of full matches from
their past events. I gave them a watch and I thought they would be perfect
discussion topics for another edition of “What Wrestlefan Watched”.
The first match I witnessed was released by AIW to hype
their most recent “Girls Night Out 8” event, which from what I hear was a giant
success with it being AIW’s first iPPV. So as a treat, the company released the
match between American turned Joshi stars Hailey Hatred & Jenny Rose from
“Girls Night Out 6”. I have seen very little of both Hatred and Rose but they
definitely opened my eyes with this encounter. This was the first appearance
for Jenny Rose in AIW, which made it very difficult for the crowd to get behind
her in the early goings, since she would be facing home grown talent in Hatred.
Both ladies are the definition of “hard-hitters”, providing some cringe worthy
moments, including one of the hardest short arm clotheslines from Hatred that I
have seen in a while. Both competitors switched throughout between striking and
technical wrestling, and after a series of near falls, Hatred was able to put
away Rose with a nasty tiger suplex.
Monday, February 18, 2013
What Wrestlefan Watched: Super Juniors And Quality Over Quantity
I am for all intents and purposes what you would call a
“wrestling nerd”. And being such a nerd and also being super young, I am
constantly looking for new, cool stuff that will peak my interests when it
comes to that multi-faceted, wonderful thing that is pro wrestling. That’s why
I’ve started a hopefully reoccurring post on this blog called “What Wrestlefan
Watched”, where I talk about a match, segment or something interrelated with
pro wrestling that I found interesting. So, let’s get into it.
Recently, because of the great stuff that I have seen from
them recently, I have been diving into tons of New Japan Pro Wrestling, a
company rich with lineage and one that I thinks does a perfect job of
intertwining aspects of sport into pro wrestling. One of the examples of this,
which they do every year, is the Best Of The Super Juniors tournament, which is
a round-robin tournament that compiles some of the best junior-heavyweights in
the world, competing for a future opportunity at the IWGP Junior Heavyweight
Championship.
I just got done watching the first night of the 2011
tournament, a show that features great matches like Davey Richards vs. Prince
Devitt in the main, TAKA Michinoku vs. The Great Sasuke as well as the
legendary Tiger Mask taking on TJ Perkins, all of which we’re entertaining
contests. However, the one I want to talk about may be overlooked by some when
watching the entire event, but it is the one that stood out to me.
*Match Begins At 31:34*
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
NWA-Branded Outlaw Wrestling New Years Revolution Run-Down
Am I Standing By The One And Only Funaki? INDEED! |
This past Saturday, I had the pleasure of attending the National Wrestling Alliance affiliated Branded Outlaw Wrestling event entitled New Years Revolution, held at the Woodlawn Gym in San Antonio, TX. This group will be running events for exactly one year next month, and I have first-hand witnessed them constantly improve in that year, so I thought it would be a good idea to give my thoughts on this show. Their last event of 2012 was stellar, so there was a lot to be expected for their first of 2013, so here we go.
Labels:
ACH,
BOW,
Indie Wrestling,
NWA,
NWA-BOW,
Ray Rowe,
Run-Down,
San Antonio,
Talent,
Texas,
Wrestlefan,
Wrestlers,
Wrestling
Saturday, January 12, 2013
A Fan's Guide: Tips To Being A Indie Wrestling Fan
![]() |
A Couple Of These Guys Should Probably Read This Column |
Ok, this is a post that I actually wanted to do for a little
while now. I’ve seen a lot of blogs that deal primarily with the product that
is on television or the independents. Even on the podcast I am apart of (The
Wrestling Mayhem Show), that is what a majority of our time is spent talking
about. While there is definitely a place for it, I wanted to make this blog
from the perspective of a fan, so I thought it would be a great idea to give a
guide of what to do as a independent wrestling fan. Some of these apply to
mainstream pro wrestling as well, but these are mainly meant for attending
independent wrestling shows. Luckily, Texas has some really awesome wrestling
fans that I have gotten to know, and they really don’t need to learn these
rules. But I hope that these things that I have learned from frequenting the
independent scene can be passed onto others who want to be even better fans.
So, lets start it off.
Labels:
Chanting,
Fans,
Guide,
Indie Wrestling,
Merchandise,
Rules,
Tips,
Wrestlefan,
Wrestlers,
Wrestling
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
A Great Wrestler Does Not The Indies Make
![]() |
He's Not The Greatest Because He Did It For Less Money |
In case you didn’t know, this is Antonio Cesaro, the current
United States champion of the WWE. And if you follow me on the internet, you
will know that he is one of my favorite wrestlers currently on WWE television. I’ve
said before that I will wait throughout whatever WWE wants to place in front of
me for three hours on a Monday Night (including John Cena quite literally
pooping on peoples parade), just to get to the Antonio Cesaro match and watch
him go straight beast mode on someone. He has brought great matches out of some
not so great wrestlers, to the point where I am actually excited for the match
he is having on Main Event with The Great Khali of all people. But as many of
you know, Antonio Cesaro use to go under a different alias. He was once Claudio
Castagnoli, former multi-time champion in companies such as Ring Of Honor,
Chikara, Pro Wrestling Guerilla, Combat Zone Wrestling and many, many more. And
in those companies, Claudio exhibited all the traits that made me such a fan of
him currently.
This brings me to the point of this post. I follow
independent wrestling a great deal, to the point that I am the spear-header for
the indie wrestling news segment on the Wrestling Mayhem Show. When my fellow
Mayhem Show co-hosts bring up a name of someone they have heard of for the
first time, I am usually able to give them a brief synopsis of the stuff that
they have done and some of their attributes. It’s very pro wrestling
hipster-esque of me, but I like to share my knowledge with other people. But
let me say that just because I spend a great deal of my time following
independent wrestling and wrestlers, does not mean I automatically think that
all indie wrestling is great.
Normally, I tend to get behind certain wrestlers as opposed
to certain companies. While certain companies on an independent level can be
defined as better than others, there is great talent intermixed throughout, and
that also goes for televised wrestling products. However, I do feel very
strongly that in order to develop your own opinions about what is good and what
is bad, you need to see a little bit of everything. I watch everything from
WWE, to TNA, to local promotions, to promotions states away, to international
promotions, because your best pro wrestling experiences and your worst teach
you about what you love and appreciate. That being said, not every indie
wrestler is the greatest pro wrestler in the world. I’ve been to small
independent shows where the best on the show is still not as great as WWE’s
worse and vice versa. At the same token, just because a wrestler is on
television does not automatically make them better than someone wrestling in
front of only a fraction of the crowd.
And just because you have wrestled for those smaller crowds
does not mean you are automatically my favorite. Take for example Dean Ambrose,
the newest arrival from the independents to WWE television. As much as I appreciate
Ambrose, while I followed his stuff on the independent scene, I was never that
compelled by his work in the way most other fans were. A large portion of it
occurred in Combat Zone Wrestling, and looking back on his matches, they were
no different than a lot of the infamous wrestling that occurred in CZW at the
time. Then there are his widely talked about promos, where he pulls his hair,
rubs his face, talks in a mumbling voice and then starts to scream, and at
times I found them more comical then truly serious. One of my favorite examples
of this is a promo he cut for a IPW storyline he was doing with Drake Younger,
where Moxley continually harasses and gropes this female interviewer and says
weird stuff to make you think that he is crazy. When I watched it for the first
time, I couldn’t help but laugh the entire time because of how ridiculous it
was, which was not the goal of the promo. Rather than me thinking he was a
deranged psychopath who is dangerous, I thought he was ridiculously hilarious
and over the top. And just because something makes you laugh in wrestling,
doesn’t always mean its good.
Don’t get me wrong though. I am very happy for Dean
Ambrose’s recent success and opportunities in a company that pretty much every
pro wrestler desires to be in. But I tend to hear a great deal about how
bringing in Ambrose to the main roster is a way for the WWE to make the
internet wrestling community “wet in the pants”, and for me, that’s just not
the case. The same goes for Cesaro, who I would be enthralled with whether he
was wrestling in front of 18,000 or 180. Claudio Castagnoli and Antonio Cesaro
are the same phenomenal wrestler and no sole company that he has worked for has
defined him. However, I am still devout in keeping up with the independents and
talking them a great deal. But that is because they are the ones that need
people talking about them. WWE doesn’t need us on the internet discussing their
on-goings to be successful. In fact, they may be more successful without. I am
lucky enough to see amazing independent athletes like ACH, Davey Vega or Rachel
Summerlyn every month, and I make a strong effort to tell as many people as I
can about them. But they are as much my favorite wrestlers as the likes of
Cesaro, Damien Sandow, Daniel Bryan, Cody Rhodes and so many others on TV.
Overall, the moral somewhere within this is to love the
wrestlers you wish to love, no matter how the environment around those
wrestlers defines them. Great wrestlers are great wrestlers and bad wrestlers
are bad wrestlers. I encourage you to explore all of the wide variety that
professional wrestling has to offer and decide for yourself which are which.
Those are just my thoughts. I would love to hear what yours
are so leave a comment telling me what you think. What equates a good wrestler?
Do you tend to follow wrestlers or follow companies?
Until then,
The Wrestlefan
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Why Am I A Wrestling Fan?
Hello people of the internet. You may know me as Eamon, that
guy who 95% of his posts on Facebook and Twitter are wrestling related and you
get irrationally angry about it. If that describes you… then go away. But if
you follow me on the internet and don’t completely hate when I talk about
people rolling around in tights and kneepads, welcome! This is the place where
I will now post all of the things going on in my head in wordy paragraphs and I
hope you enjoy it and have some fun. Because that is what it’s all about. I
spend my Tuesday nights talking about this sport, or art, or this fake thing
that’s super gay and is not as cool as MMA or whatever you believe, and I want
to continue doing that and this is my vessel to do so. So lets tell some
stories, share some memories and have a conversation about this multi-faceted
thing that is pro wrestling.
I thought it would be good to start off by going over my
journey to becoming a pro wrestling fan, something that has become a very
important and long running descriptive quality of me.
I’m pretty sure a lot of fans are able to pinpoint the exact
moment where they saw it for the first time and became enthralled with it.
Getting to know a ton of people who became wrestling fans back in the late
80’s-early 90’s, they’ve mentioned to me that seeing guys like Hulk Hogan or
Randy Savage for the WWF, or guys like Ric Flair or Sting for WCW sucked them
into loving pro wrestling. In case you didn’t know, I did not grow up in that
generation, and because of that I tend to get tons of crap, as young wrestling
fans usually do. The reason I tend to not care too much about the downfall of
the legacy of Hulk Hogan in TNA is because I never grew up as a “Hulkamaniac”.
Hulk Hogan truly never mattered to me when I started watching because I was
never able to understand how at his age he could still hold his own with the
tough stars of the WWF/E at the time. As you could see, even at a young age I
began to show my narcissistic personality at times, but let me explain the
reasoning behind my immediate love for wrestling. I was flipping through
channels in early August of 2002 and stumbled upon an episode of Raw in
progress, where Triple H and Shawn Michaels were trying to figure out who
attacked Michaels on a previous episode in the parking lot and slammed his head
through a car window. I remember them showing the image of a bloody Shawn
Michaels being put onto a gurney and sent to the hospital and, being barely 9
years old, thinking how gruesome it was. Then Triple H was in the ring to talk
to Shawn Michaels via satellite to try to figure out who had done this to
Shawn, when Shawn revealed that police officers gave him footage of the attack
from one of the security cameras. After showing the grainy and unrecognizable
footage, Shawn noted that due to the advancements in technology nowadays (which
is immensely funny looking back at it in 2012), he was able to enhance the
footage to reveal that his attacker, was none other than…wait for it… TRIPLE H!
They then cut back to a stone-faced Shawn Michaels who says, “It was you,
Hunter”, which Triple H rebuttals with a line that is engrained in my memory to
this day, “You’re damn right it was me!”, said in his very own Triple H way.
![]() |
My First Memory |
Now if you listen to me today, I tend to give those two guys
a lot of crap (mainly Triple H who even after losing an END OF AN ERA WAR with
The Undertaker has been back and is still gonna be back to kick the
diverticulitis out of Brock Lesnar, but that’s for another blog post), but that
moment kept my young eyes glued to the television and captivated me in a way
nothing else had before. There was drama, a line between good versus evil,
gruesome imagery as I mentioned before and I became hooked. It’s funny to see
how I’ve advanced from mostly only caring about the drama played out in the
ring, but the thing that got me into wrestling were two guys talking to each
other. However, they followed up with more drama and intrigue in an amazing
street fight at Summerslam 2002, which I still believe is one of the best
matches those two have had. Those images that were stuck in my head of a bloody
Shawn Michaels in the parking lot, were followed by Triple H raising up his
sledgehammer and striking down with vengeance across the back of Shawn like
something out of Gladiator. But since that moment, I have never waned from the
product or had a period where I stopped watching, whether people told me to or
not.
![]() |
My Inspiration |
So that brings up the question of how my parents reacted to
this newfound love of pro wrestling. Well, as it is the case most of the time,
they reacted very differently. My father, the minute he saw that I was
interested in it, jumped completely on board. While I was following the modern
day guys that I was seeing on television every week, my dad was showing me
videos of his favorites when he watched, guys like Ric Flair, Dusty Rhodes and
The Von Erich’s. He shared stories with me about how when he was working as an
orthopedic cast technician, he made the cast for Sting when he tore his patella
tendon at Clash Of The Champions 10. He always promoted and encouraged my love
for it, whether it was sitting with me every Monday night to watch Raw, taking
me to any event that was in town, or just sitting down and discussing the
current storylines and where we thought they were going. He was usually right
and I was usually wrong. But because he spent his time doing those things, not
only did it fuel my love for pro wrestling, but also it gave the two of us a
connection we probably would not have had otherwise. My father passed away over
5 years ago from pancreatic cancer and I still feel that connection I felt with
him while he was still with us, due to having wrestling in my life. I honestly
feel that if I didn’t spend my time engrossed in following this crazy interest,
I’d end up on a completely different, and probably not well-adjusted, path.
While my father encouraged my love for professional
wrestling, my mother was not as positively receptive, as should be expected
with most mothers. Funny enough, she actually took me to my first live
wrestling event ever, which was a Smackdown house show in 2002. The reason she
took me was because the company that she worked for was sponsoring the event
and she was able to obtain free, floor seat tickets, which made me a happy,
young child. If you ask her to this day, she will tell you how that was the
first, and the last time she will go to a show with me. Since that day, I would
have to go with either my father or our old next-door neighbors who had a
daughter who’s favorite wrestlers were John Cena and Randy Orton because they
were so damn oily and ripped… so you can tell whom I preferred. And I feel that
the reason my mother disapproved of this interest of mine wasn’t even because
of the violence that was involved with it. To my parents, I always tended to be
considered the promising one. I always came home from school with good to great
grades, focused a great deal on my schoolwork and would at times be very hard
on myself for not achieving the best. And I think that my mom felt that if I
focused my time on something that she did not understand the point of, I would
be losing all of that. When I was younger I got upset with her over thinking
that, but now I am able to understand it. My mother never went to college and
was lucky enough and worked hard enough to gain a successful job where she was
able to support her family, and she did not want her children to have to
struggle the way she did to gain that success. Luckily, nowadays my mother is
more approving of this thing that I am passionate about because she has seen
how much it has done for me, especially the stuff I do every week with the
Wrestling Mayhem Show. She has understood the joy it has given me, the great
people I have met because of it and the fact that it keeps me very happy. Whether
she supports it or not, I still love her to death, because your family is
definitely much more important than the things you like, but involving myself
in following, watching and studying pro wrestling has given me something to
appreciate, and it makes me happy to know people who I hold so highly, approve
of the things I hold so highly as well. Now as far as getting her to another
wrestling show, that may take some more work.
Well that’s it. That’s a start to this fun project I plan to
contribute to once or twice every week. There are still tons to talk about and
discuss and I hope you will be there to discuss it with me. Feel free to leave
a comment telling me what you think, and also you can always send me pro
wrestling you think I should watch for a little column I like to call “What
Wrestlefan Watched”, that I will be doing on this site.
Until then,
The Wrestlefan
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)