Terry Funk vs. Dustin Rhodes (03/11/1989, PWF): I found this one on YouTube and had to look it up on Cagematch to discover what "PWF" was - a short-lived Tampa "territory" owned by Dusty Rhodes, Steve Keirn, and Mike Graham (essentially the successor promotion to Florida Championship Wrestling). Anyway, Terry Funk in 1989 was awesome. He is accompanied to the ring by Oliver Humperdink. Before the match begins, Funk goes into the audience and argues with a fan and then breaks up a pro-Dusty Rhodes sign (and stomps on the guy who was carrying it!). Awesome. Dustin dropkicks Humperdink as soon as he gets in the ring, sending him to the floor in a crowd-pleasing move! In comes Funk, looking mean as hell, and the two men lock up. Funk throws some chops and sends Dustin into the ropes and then out of the ring. Funk brings him back into the ring with a suplex and then gives him a basic piledriver for 2. Dustin kicks out with such force that Funk goes flying out of the ring. Funk comes in and maintains control with a headbutt and then some rights and lefts. Rhodes counters by whipping him into the corner and Funk bumps over the top rope and onto the floor! Wow. I think there's an awkward cut but, regardless, when we return to the action, Funk is back in control. Rhodes tries an inside cradle but Funk kicks out and hits him with a sharp elbow before sending him back to the floor. Funk sends him face-first into the table and Dustin takes it beautifully, doing a blade job on the floor to sell it. Funk breaks the count and then comes back out but Dustin is heated now and sends Funk into the table and then dishes out some more punishment in the ring. Dustin's back elbow off the ropes isn't pretty and only gets him a 2 count. Scoop slam by Dustin and then another and then a snap suplex and a fist drop. Dustin hits him with a series of right hands and Funk goes flopping to the outside through the middle rope. Funk climbs to the apron and Dustin hits him with another series of fists and elbows before running him face-first into the post. Brilliant selling by Funk as he stumbles to the floor. Funk comes back with some strikes of his own and then makes his way into the ring. He unwraps the tape around his fist and uses it to try to choke Dustin out, bringing him all the way to the mat. Humperdink gets on the apron to allow Funk to do even more choking as the ref tries to get him to get back down. Funk delivers another headbutt and then another before tossing Rhodes back to the outside. Funk inexplicably tries to climb out of the ring over the top rope, leaving himself vulnerable to be shaken up-and-down on the top rope for a bit of a comedy spot. Dustin comes in and hits a back body drop but only gets a 1 count. Elbow off the ropes by Dustin and then an elbow drop, but Humperdink stops the count! Rhodes wails on him before he can escape but Funk then wraps a chain around Dustin's ankle and pulls him over to the ropes. The referee calls for a DQ but Rhodes is stuck, the chain around his ankle being held by Humperdink. Funk batters his knee with some seriously wicked chair shots! So cool. Some babyfaces - is that the Nasty Boys? - run out to prevent Funk from doing any more damage. That was really good stuff. Terrific performances by Funk and a very young Dustin Rhodes, hot crowd, this was a hoot. (3.5/5)
El Hijo Del Santo vs. Psicosis (02/16/1994, AAA): This was for Santo's WWA World Welterweight Championship, a title I don't know much of anything about, and was a 2-out-of-3 falls match. I'm a bigger Psicosis fan at this point than I am a Santo fan, which is a statement that I'll knowingly admit exposes my lack of appreciation and understanding of lucha libre as Santo is considered a legend in the genre (while Psicosis is more well-known in the US due to his run in WCW). The first fall happens pretty quick with Santo hitting an electric chair from the corner. Psicosis gets the second fall (I don't remember quite how) to tie things up before the third - and easily the best - fall of the match. At this point, the match feels much more heated and both guys start busting out more "high stakes" offense and working a faster pace. The finish is a bit messy and cheap, though, as Santo tumbles into the referee (Tirantes, who I've learned was often used as the "heel ref") and, despite covering Psicosis for the visual pin, gets disqualified. As titles can change hands by DQ in AAA (I think?), Psicosis wins the title too. Over on ProWrestlingOnly, I was a little surprised to read quite a few match reviews as this didn't strike me as a remarkable match worthy of much discussion. That seems to be the general consensus over there too as most reviewers felt like it didn't really "click" and Santo and Psicosis didn't have the kind of chemistry one would've hoped for with Santo being a more scientific worker and Psicosis shining in shorter, more spot-heavy contests. (2.5/5)
Yoshiaki Fujiwara vs. Shinigami (07/16/1997, WDF): I'd seen very little Fujiwara and no Shinigami before this match. Shinigami is described as a "Japanese Fake Undertaker" in the lone review of this match on ProWrestlingOnly. Over at Cagematch, there's also only a single review of this match and it basically just gives credit to Shinigami for even attempting to keep up with Fujiwara, a legendary, straight-forward grappler who seems to be treating this match like a "rib" to some degree, going through the motions to make Shinigami look strong at times, but also very clearly unfazed by his opponent's far-from-realistic offense and presentation (Shinigami's work revolves around a dreaded "claw" submission). Not bad, but not good. I'm glad I watched this to learn about yet another small Japanese promotion I'd never heard of before - Wrestle Yume Factory, which translates into Wrestle Dream Factory. (2/5)
Kota Ibushi vs. Tetsuya Naito (04/06/2019, NJPW): A "Holy Shit" chant breaks out before Naito and Ibushi even lock up, which shows how amped the Madison Square Garden crowd was for this. They start things with a fun, super fluid sequence before Ibushi gets some sustained offense in and Naito has to regroup outside. Naito hits a dropkick that puts Ibushi on the floor and then sends him into the barricade (and a stagehand). Naito does it again and then puts him into the front row. Naito gets into the ring, but Ibushi breaks the count. Naito hits a stiff back below and then a beautiful combination of trips and kicks in the corner. A neckbreaker gets him 2 and Naito keeps the pressure on but eventually gets halted by an Ibushi dropkick. Some dueling chants follow. Ibushi hits a flurry of strikes and kicks and then a standing moonsault for 2. He goes for a German Suplex but can't get it. Naito pops him up and over into the turnbuckle and then a running flying boot for 2. Ibushi's selling could be considered overdramatic if Naito's offense didn't look so terrific. Naito hits a devastating pair of reverse DDTs into his knee, a move I've never seen before and is totally sick. They go up top and Naito goes for a headscissors but Ibushi slips through and delivers a Pele Kick that puts Naito onto the apron. Ibushi hoists him up in a waist lock, lifts him off his feet, but then gets pulled onto the apron himself. Hurricanrana off the apron to the floor by Ibushi! Wow. He follows it up with a double stomp for 2 back in the ring, but Naito comes out with an excellent tornado DDT a minute later to even things up. Naito gets him up to the top rope for a hurricanrana and then hits a move known as Gloria, which is a ridiculous hammerlock into a side slam. He only gets 2 for it, though, and misses a forearm off the ropes soon after, allowing Ibushi to hit a huge clothesline. Ibushi delivers some stiff kicks to the back that send him back onto the apron. Ibushi brings him back into the ring with a crazy deadlift German suplex! Holy cow. That looked like it could've paralyzed Naito. Somehow it only gets 2. Ibushi hits a straightjacket German suplex for another 2 count and goes for his finisher but Naito counters. They each go for ridiculously risky piledrivers and sort of "stumble" into one in which Ibushi lands incredibly awkwardly on his neck. Its hard to watch, especially knowing Ibushi's injuries today. Somehow Ibushi kicks out, though, and both men struggle to get to their feet. On their knees, Ibushi and Naito trade forearms, working their way back to their feet. Naito spits in Ibushi's face, kicks him in the midsection, than delivers a nasty kick to the face! Damn. Ibushi comes back with a huge palm strike! Reverse-rana by Naito and then the Destino! 1...2...Ibushi kicks out! He goes for another one but Ibushi counters it and then clocks him with a kick to the head. Ibushi hits two running knees (after a little bit of a Nakamura impression)! He attempts a Last Ride but Naito hits him with some punches and Ibushi has to settle for a sit-out powerbomb! Kamigoye by Ibushi! New IWGP Intercontinental Champion! This was very, very good, though parts of it were hard to watch because of how risky and dangerous some of the spots were. Then again, it was undeniably entertaining and one has to respect how far they were willing to go to deliver an unforgettable match. (4/5)
Will Ospreay vs. Mark Davis (06/03/2026, AEW): This was part of the 2026 Owen Hart Tournament and was the main event of a Dynamite episode. Ospreay started out strong with a head scissors and some punches in the corner. Davis cut him off with a body slam but ate an enzigiuri. Davis came back with a back body drop and a senton. He applied an abdominal stretch as the crowd rallied behind Ospreay, who broke out with some punches and then hit the handstand flip kick. Ospreay's forearm from the top got 2. Ospreay delivered an armbreaker and then a dropkick off the ropes that sent Davis to the floor. Ospreay went for a pescado but Davis moved so he dropped to the floor. Davis whipped him into the barricade and then attempted a powerbomb but Ospreay climbed to the top, seemingly wanting a moonsault. Again Davis walked away but Ospreay chased him down and hit a hurricanrana on the floor. Ospreay rammed Davis' head into the desk and called for a Tornado DDT but got turned inside out with a release suplex onto the top of the table. Cool. Davis followed it up with some forearms on the floor and then an awesome hip attack in the corner against the barricade! That looked brutal. Davis rolled Ospreay into the ring and hoisted him up to the top rope for a super stiff superplex. Davis played to the crowd instead of putting on a legit cover and then applied a simple headlock. Ospreay got to his feet and fought out but got cut-off with another back elbow and a body slam. He went for a senton but Ospreay saw it coming and got his knees up, only for Davis to slug him with a big right hand to the chin. Ospreay tried some chops and then some right hands but again got cut off by a simple knee to the gut and then a beautiful running fist in the corner straight to Ospreay's chin. Davis hit another forearm to the chin but Ospreay used the ropes to climb to his feet in the corner. Davis beat him down once more and then guerilla press slammed him halfway across the rings off the top rope! That was cool. Davis got another near falls soon after and then delivered some brilliant chops that knocked Ospreay to the mat. Ospreay fired up, though, taking some heavy, heavy blows but staying on his feet and responding with forearms of his own and then a kip-up and another enzigiuri! Kawada Kicks by Ospreay! Superkick to the face! Pele Kick! Both men were out but Ospreay got to his feet first and called for the Hidden Blade. Davis met him with a clothesline but Ospreay caught him with a series of kicks and then the flying spinning guillotine kick for 2! Ospreay hit a German suplex for another nearfall as the crowd broke into a "This Is Awesome" chant. Davis stumbled around and grabbed the top rope, which Ospreay caught with a stomp. Ospreay applied the juji-gatame (armbar) but Davis powered out of it and turned it into a powerbomb! He then lifted Ospreay up by his legs and dropped him with a piledriver! Holy cow. That was nasty. 1...2...kick out by Ospreay! Ospreay rolls under the bottom rope and goes to the apron, blocks a piledriver, goes for one of his own, can't get it and hits some Kawada Kicks before getting clotheslined back into the ring. Davis went for a piledriver once more but Ospreay countered it into a hurricanrana off the apron and onto the floor. Ospreay got back into the ring first and hit Davis with an out-of-nowhere dropkick as he was getting back in the ring! Styles Clash! 1...2...kick out by Davis! Ospreay went for the Cutter but Davis blocked it. Davis accidentally hits the ref with an enzigiuri! Ospreay hits the Hidden Blade but there's no ref to make the count...1....2....3.....4...in comes Baretta and El Clon of the Don Callis Family! Garcia and Yuta make the save! Lance Archer runs out and takes them out with a crossbody, but here comes Castignoli! Brian Cage is in the ring and hits the F-5 but PAC comes in to take him out. Davis flips PAC out of the ring but Ospreay hits the Oscutter! 1...2...but Jake Doyle pulls the ref out of the ring! Doyle takes Ospreay out...but then Marina Shafir jumps on his back! Doyle slams her down but Moxley shows up and takes him out with a Paradigm Shift and then a double clothesline with Shafir. PAC comes flying off the top to the floor, taking everyone out! Ospreay applies a double underhook onto Davis but Fletcher shows up and delivers a nasty half-and-half dragon suplex! Fletcher pulls out the screwdriver....but Takeshita pulls him out of the ring! Takeshita and Fletcher duke it out on the floor! Davis has the screwdriver but Ospreay knocks it out of his hand with a Hidden Blade and then hits one dead-on to the face! 1....2.....3.....4...still no ref! Remsburg shows up to make hthe count be he's too late! Ospreay tries for another Hidden Blade but Davis counters it into a jumping piledriver! 1...2...Ospreay kicks out! Davis comes off the ropes but Ospreay does some flying and manages to catch him in the juji-gatame! Davis taps! Wow. The last few minutes of this match were ridiculous and (arguably) overbooked, but this almost had Attitude Era vibes to it with the feel-good ending after countless run-ins and appearances that make me fairly excited for what I assume will be the inevitable Don Callis Family/Death Riders Blood and Guts match this summer. (3.5/5)
Devil Masami vs. Itsuki Yamazaki (05/16/1985, AJW): After a quick handshake, Yamazaki hits a crossbody and then a sloppy springboard splash to the outside, taking the fight right to Masami. She sends her into the table and comes back into the ring, still fired up. Masami can't even get in the ring before Yamazaki is stomping on her, forcing Masami to pull her back to the floor and send her into the table. Bodyslam on the table by Masami and then a choke! Masami pulls her backonto the apron and suplexes her into the ring for a 1 count as Yamazaki bridges out. Perfect back suplex by Masami and then an eye take across the top rope. Masami claws at her eyes on the mat in full control. Masami shows off her strength with an impressive guerilla press slam and then a powerbomb that looks like it could've paralyzed Yamazaki. It only gets 2, though, and Yamazaki gets in a hope spot out of the corner with a sunset flip for a nearfall of her own. Masami tries for a powerbomb but Yamazaki rolls her up again for another 2. Masami hits a backbreaker, still full of confidence, but Yamazaki rolls onto her stomach to prevent a pin attempt. Masami pulls on her hair and then applies a surfboard (loved the struggle there as Yamazaki's second [I'm guessing Noriyo Tateno, the other half of the Jumbing Bomb Angels] tried to pull her to the ropes). Yamazaki rolls to the floor, selling the damage, and then eats an electric chair when she gets back in the ring. Yamazaki gets a second wind, though, and hits a dropkick and then a crossbody off the top for 2! Sunset flip off the top...1....2...kickout! A sit-out powerbomb by Masami cuts off her flurry of offense and Masami follows it up with a double underhook backbreaker. Damn! Masami sends her to the ropes and is met by a crossbody. Yamazaki delivers a piledriver, but Masami gets her foot on the rope! Yamazaki misses on a senton from the top and Masami hits an impressive high-bridge German suplex to finish her off. That was really good, though Yamazaki was a bit sloppy at times. Masami was excellent, though. Maybe not "must see" - and the post-match hug/celebration is a bit weird considering how vicious the battle was and how much pleasure it seems Masami took in hurting her opponent - but firmly above-average and recommended viewing for those wondering why 80s/90s joshi has a reputation for being ahead of its time. (3.5/5)
Bandido vs. Konosuke Takeshita (07/11/2025, ROH): This match was for Bandido's ROH World Championship and comes from the year's Supercard of Honor PPV. Some slow trading of holds to start built around a Takeshita wristlock with some flashy counters and escapes by Bandido. A headscissors followed-up by a dropkick gave Bandido his first bit of real offense. Takeshita came back with a forearm before they locked up in a test-of-strength. Bandido applied a nifty headscissors, bringing Takeshita to the mat and eventually hitting him with a double stomp. Bandido went for a spear in the corner but ate the post and Takeshita followed it up by tossing him into again (causing the champ to stumble to the floor). Takeshita sends him elbow first into the post, but it only gets 2. Takeshita maintains the pressure with an armbar but Bandido reaches the ropes with his feet to break it up. Takeshita reapplied the armbar moments later and then tried for some joint manipulation. Despite Bandido reaching the ropes again, Takeshita kept hold of his arm and brought him to his feet. Bandido hit a big boot and then a spinning splash from the top and a dragonscrew, shifting the momentum a bit. Bandido hit a Code Red but only got 2. He hit a big boot in the corner but Takeshita hit one of his own and then hit the Blue Thunder Bomb for another near fall. Takeshita went for the running knee but Bandido side-stepped and caught him with a bicycle kick off the ropes. Bandido went for his finish but Takeshita kept hold of the ropes. Onto the apron Bandido went, but he got nailed by a forearm that brought him down. Takeshita went to rip off the mask but couldn't tear it off Bandido's face as Don Callis made his way down to ringside. Takeshita grabbed a chair but didn't connect on his chairshot. Bandido went for a dive to the floor but ran into the chair (a spot that didn't look as great/vicious as it could've/should've). Callis got a boot in behind the ref's back as the ref checked on Bandido's cut forehead. Takeshita brought him up the ramp for some fists and then a brainbuster. As Takeshita would not win the title on a count-out, I'm not sure I understood the psychology there. (even the commentators noted the lack of forethought). Bandido made his way back to the ring only to be met by more right hands from Takeshita and even some biting in the corner. Takeshita applied a headlock but Bandido fought out of it. Both men attempted suplexes but couldn't pull them off. Takeshita went back to working on the arm but Bandido slapped the heck out of him and powered him up for a big not-so-snappy snap suplex. Big boot in the corner by Bandido! Poisonrana after a failed big boot by Takeshita! Bandido with a huge somersault senton to the floor! Up to the top he went for a frog splash, but it only got him 2. Front leg sweep into the buckle by Bandido, but Takeshita caught him and prevented him from capitalizing. Things seemed to get a bit sloppy when Bandido attempted something off the floor, but he eventually landed an Angel's Wings for another nearfall. Bandido held onto the underhook and applied a Cattle Mutilation but Takeshita rolled over. Bandido turned it into a cradle for 2. Callis drew heat on the floor as Takeshita and Bandido traded blows in the ring leading to a double-down after both men connected with flying clotheslines. They traded strikes with most of Bandido's getting no-sold, but Bandido eventually caught him with a huge spinning backhand and both men fell to their knees on the mat out of exhaustion. Bandido went for his finish but Takeshita flipped out of it! Takeshita tried one of his own but the same thing happened! Bandido with a reverse GTS! He hit his finish...1....2...kickout at 2.5! Clothesline in the corner by Bandido! They go up to the top rope and Bandido muscles him over with a huge fallaway slam off the top for another nearfall. Bandido went up top again and went for a 7 Year Itch but Takeshita got his knees up. Takeshita almost won on a counter to a hurricanrana but then ate an enzigiuri right after. Bandido exposed his knee and went for another reverse GTS, catching Takeshita in the midsection. Bandido was too exhausted to capitalize, though, allowing Takeshita to counter his finisher attempt into his signature tombostone-into-a-wheelbarrow slam. Takeshita hit the V-Trigger but didn't quite get all of it and Bandido kicked out at 1! He hit a big forearm and went for a spinning brainbuster but Bandido countered it into a roll-up for the sneaky win! This match has a massive 9.43 rating on Cagematch, but I was considerably less into it. There were some outright sloppy moments and the finishing stretch - heavy on false finishes and kickouts - betrayed the hard work they did selling their exhaustion and the cumulative damage of the match itself. Good, but not nearly as great as the votes on Cagematch will have you believe. (3/5)
Richard Slinger and Johnny Ace vs. Toshiaki Kawada and Yoshinari Ogawa (08/26/1995, AJPW): We pick up the match in media res (is that the phrase) with Ogawa in the ring with (I believe) Richard Slinger. He makes the tag to Kawada, who gets in some kicks that lead to a tag in to Johnny Ace. Ace takes control and hits a big clothesline off the top rope at one point. Big boot by Ace to Ogawa! Powerbomb by Kawada! Kawada slows things down a bit with a submission before tagging in Ogawa, who hits a double stomp from the top. Ace runs into a boot in the corner, Ogawa goes for a splash but gets caught, he turns it into a cradle but then gets clotheslined after the kickout. In comes Slinger, but he eats a swinging neckbreaker and an awesome side suplex. Ogawa tags in Kawada - running boot but Slinger hits a pair of his own! Enziguiri by Kawada! Nasty lariat by Kawada but it only gets 2. Kawada applies the Stretch Plum as Ace and Ogawa duke it out on the outside. Ace breaks up the submission with a boot to Kawada and then a striaght-up Stunner. Both men make the tag and Ogawa gets in some offense, including a fisherman suplex for 2. He goes for another back suplex but eats a big stunner from Ace. In comes Kawada, who hammers him with elbows. DDT by Ace to cut him off. On the apron they go and Ace hits a Stunner off the apron on Kawada! Powerbombs on the floor by Ace. He barely gets him up and almost drops him on his head, which probably would've cropped him. Ace comes back in and elbow drops Ogawa for 2. Ace hits a very awkward-looking Pedigree on Ogawa to end the match. Kawada and Ogawa were great in this - as usual - while Johnny Ace, despite delivering some moves that would soon become among the most well-known finishers in US wrestling history, looked almost unsafe at times with his sloppy execution. Of course, in AJPW, that was almost seen as a good thing. A fun watch, though there were some cringey moments. (3/5)
Stan Hansen vs. Mitsuharu Misawa (08/30/1992, AJPW): Coming into this match, Stan Hansen had quite an assortment of gold - the Triple Crown, in fact. Once they clear the streamers, Hansen and Misawa start things up with a lock-up and then some immediate strikes leading to a Hansen wristlock and then a hammerlock. Hansen targets Misawa's left arm with some stomps and then reapplies the wristlock. Misawa breaks free by blasting him with a forearm to the side of the head that sends him to the outside to regroup. Misawa applies a headlock and brings Hansen to the mat, wrenching it and then dropping back down onto the mat. Cool. Hansen breaks free and briefly retakes control before Misawa brings him back down with a headlock. Misawa adds a body scissors, trying to put Hansen to sleep but Hansen gets his feet through the ropes and almost all the way to the floor - only for Misawa to roll and pull him back into the center of the ring. I'm not sure of the legality of that, but whatever. He keeps the headlock on as they go to their feet with Hansen trying to back suplex his way out but Misawa continuing to wrench on the side of his head. Hansen grabs a handful of hair and sends Misawa into the post, momentarily breaking the hold - but Misawa locks it in again! Hansen backs him into the corner and delivers some headbutts and then some stuff kicks to the left shoulder/arm. Hansen applies a wristlock but the ref breaks it up because Misawa's in the corner. Hansen applies an armbar and brings Misawa to the mat, still targeting the left arm/shoulder with his attack. Hansen drops his knee into Misawa's arm repeatedly, but Misawa manages to get to the ropes to break the hold. Misawa rallies with a wristlock of his own, bringing Hansen to the mat. He applies an armbar but Hansen rolls to his side, weakening the grip for a bit. Hansen eventually drops an elbow on Misawa's face to break it up and then brings him towards the apron. He tries an axe kick but doesn't quite get it. Misawa rolls to the inside and Hansen puts the boots to him, even stepping on his head a few times before dropping an elbow to his back. Hansen kicks him in the back repeatedly while he's on the ropes and then tries to pull him to the floor. When Misawa hooks his arm around the bottom rope, Hansen drops an elbow to his arm. He then hoists him up and drops him shoulder-first on the guardrail! Gotta love the focused work here from Stan The Lariat. Hansen breaks the count and puts all his weight on Misawa's neck with his knee before rolling back into the ring. Misawa sells the shoulder injury but is back on his feet, pacing outside. A shoulder block when he's on the apron puts him back on the floor and Hansen drops another series of elbows into Misawa's shoulder. Damn. Sometimes the simple stuff just looks the best. Misawa tries again to get back into the ring but is again tackled on the apron. He hits Hansen with some knees, takes a boot to the shoulder, but still comes over the top with an elbow drop of his own! Misawa is up to his feet first - repeated arm breakers! A Hansen scoop slam and some elbow drops cut him off and get a nearfall. Hansen kicks him hard in the arm a few times and then tries a suplex but Misawa comes back with some kicks of his own and then applies another wristlock and drops an elbow into Hansen's shoulder. Hansen breaks free, delivers a headbutt, and tosses Misawa to the mat. Dropkick by Hansen and it was a doozy! Big football-style shoulder tackle by Hansen! DDT by Hansen! 1...2...kickout by Misawa. Misawa hits a forearm and a spin kick but can't capitalize. He goes for a German Suplex but settles for a forearm into the back of the head and gets a 2 count of his own. Misawa hits a suplex and goes to the top for a flying forearm for another 2 count. Misawa tries a headlock but Hansen snap mares him off. Misawa goes for another, but Hansen fights his way to the bottom rope before he gets choked out. Misawa delivers a snap mare and applies the Stretch Plum. He thinks he has Hansen out so he goes for a cover and gets 2. Senton by Misawa! He goes for the frog splash and misses, though, leading to another Hansen nearfall. They trade strikes, but Hansen wins the exchange with a clubbing blow to the back. Hansen gets 2 and then tries for a piledriver but Misawa breaks free. Hansen hits a powerbomb but doesn't go for the cover, opting instead to grab Misawa by the hair and bring him back up. Bodyslam by Hansen. Hansen takes off the knee pad and drives the knee into Misawa's head! Damn. 1...2...kickout by Misawa! Hansen misses the Lariat as Misawa catches him and tries for a crucifix pin. Lariat drops back and Misawa's shoulder is crushed! Hansen stomps hard on the shoulder and then brings him up for an old school shoulderbreaker. Killer. Armbar by Hansen but Misawa gets his foot on the rope! Hansen holds on for the full 5 before releasing and then grabs Misawa by the wrist once more. He wrenches it but Misawa clocks him with a forearm! Misawa runs into his boot but Misawa hits him with another huge forearm! He can't make the cover...struggling to crawl over to Hansen...he rolls him over...1....2....3! He got him! Hansen almost no sells it, though, getting up on his feet before Misawa. He was "knocked out" by the forearm for the exact 10 seconds it took but then got right to his feet? If you're going to do that, you should kick out at 3.1. This just looked like Hansen "going into business for himself" and undersold the moment entirely after what was a really, really good, intense match that told a simple, straight-forward story exceptionally well. Misawa winning the Triple Crown is obviously a huge moment and gets a massive reaction, but Hansen's shitty decision/behavior immediately after the pin prevents this from being the all-timer that it could've been for me. Maybe Hansen was upset about Misawa "milking" the pin instead of making the cover right away? (3.5/5)
Rick Rude vs. The Missing Link (02/12/1986, WCCW): This might be the first Missing Link I've ever seen and maybe the first Rude match I've watched from WCCW. He was the World Heavyweight Champion at the time and was managed by Percy Pringle (Paul Bearer with bleached blonde hair), while the Missing Link had Sunshine in his corner. The Link is very odd, bouncing around the ring. His offense is less than rudimentary. Rude is terrific in terms of facial expressions, but his offense isn't much better - punches, elbows to the back, a headlock, and a front-leg sweep (which doesn't look too great). Interference from Pringle eventually leads to Sunshine getting involved and Pringle getting his comeuppance, but Rude escapes to the outside and the match ends in essentially a non-finish. Standard filler match with Rude wrestling against someone who was "all look." Hmm...I wonder if that skill would come in handy when he went to the WWE? (2/5)
Chigusa Nagayo vs. Shark Tsuchiya (11/03/1995, GAEA): Tschuiya delivers a powerbomb through a table to start the match and thensteps away to allow her cronies to nail Nagayo with repeated whacks from a large barbwire-wrapped kendo stick. The footage is a bit grainy, but it looks like one of the other heels might be Mayumi Ozaki? Nagayo takes more shots from the kendo stick before getting sent to the outside and struck again. Up the stands they go, where Tsuchiya continues her attack and we see that Nagayo has been opened up on her forehead. Tsuchiya heads back towards the ring with her gang in tow, one of whom is pulling Nagayo behind her by her hair. Once she's back in the ring, she gets whipped into Another kendo stick shot to the gut before Tsuchiya applies a rear choke. Nagayo gets in a hope spot with a heel kick off the ropes and then delivers another right on the money! One of Shark's seconds breaks off her momentum but then inadvertently strikes her with the kendo stick! Release Razor's Edge Bomb by Nagayo! Nagayo chokes out one of Tsuchiya's allies and then hits her with the kendo stick to the head! They go out into the stands and she drops a table on her! She grabs a chair and hits her in the back. Back in the ring, she applies a headlock. Tsuchiya manages to get to her feet and tries to back up into the corner but Nagayo prevents it. One of her henchmen dropkicks Tsuchiya though, sending Nagayo back-first right into the post - which I now see is also wrapped in barbwire. Tsuchiya charges her into it once more but Nagayo comes back with a series of stiff kicks. She goes for the cover but barely gets 1. Nagayo goes After the henchmen but leaves herself vulnerable to an attack from Tsuchiya. Up to the top they go - superplex by Nagayo and another nearfall gets broken up by a kendo stick strike. The henchwomen wraps something around Nagayo's stomach and Tsuchiya nails her with a huge clothesline. Spinning heel kick off the ropes by Nagayo! Big clotheslines from Nagayo to the heel's assistants! The numbers game is too much, though, and Tsuchiya lands a big back suplex for 2. Tsuchiya whips her with the large, metal "rope" that she had had wrapped around her. The heels bring in even more barbwire and Tsuchiya delivers a not-so-great reverse powerbomb into it. Nagayo has barbwire stuck in her gear but pulls it off. Powerbomb by Tsuchiya into the metal/barbwire "rope"! Damn. Nagayo looks completely done and Tsuchiya basically just watches her writhe in pain as she undoes her boots. Either the ref or Nagayo's second ends the match at this point, Tsuchiya winning by ref stoppage. Plenty violent. I dug this. (3.5/5)
AJ Styles vs. Minoru Suzuki (08/01/2014, NJPW): I went into this match "cold," not knowing that it won the Observer's Match of the Year Award for 2014. I'd have to check my own database to see if there's anything else that year that I thought was truly excellent because this match absolutely ruled and might even stand as one of the best Styles' matches I've ever seen - and I'm a fairly big fan of the guy. This is probably my favorite Suzuki match, though I've seen comparatively much less of his work. The "Murder Grandpa" has been a treat to watch in AEW but he, like AJ, was even better back then (and this is still a few years beyond his agreed-upon peak). The strikes were hard-hitting and brutal. I loved all the various counters and cut-offs. The run-ins involving the Bullet Club and Suzuki-Gun (I spotted Lance Archer and I think Taka Michinoku, but I'm not positive and not very knowledgeable about any of this) didn't distract too much, but, along with a few moments when it felt like AJ was "giving away" his arm or leg to Suzuki, kept this from being an absolutely perfect masterpiece. Unfortunately, the version of this match I watched had the final minute or so trimmed off, but you can find the finish fairly easily online. Terrific, terrific match. (4.5/5)








































