DSE
HUSTLE-1
Date: January 1st, 2004
Location: Saitama Super Arena
Announced Attendance: 23,727
Some puroresu fans always talk about how awesome Hustle
is and I get emails asking why the promotion doesn't have a section
on this website, but to be honest I have just never been able to get
into it. Hustle throws in a lot of "sports entertainment"
and comedy bits, meaning that there is more talking and a necessity
to actually understand what the wrestlers/announcers are saying to follow
along. Since I don't understand Japanese and WWE pretty much fulfills
my need for sports entertainment, I never bothered to put in the necessary
effort to read recaps and translations to understand what the hell is
going on. Now, just to make it clear I am not saying that the current
Hustle product isn't entertaining, it just isn't something that I actively
watch.
So to help solve the problem of not knowing the storylines,
I am going to review the very first Hustle. Way back in 2004, Hustle
was more wrestling-oriented then it is today. There were still "entertainment"
aspects, but there was no Yinling or HG and a lot of the sillier storylines
(Abdullah coming out of a magic lamp, Nobuhiko Takada popping out of
an egg, etc.) wouldn't start until a little bit later. That is not to
say the show was "traditional" puroresu, for it was not at
all... in a lot of ways it reminds me of the Wrestle-1 shows as the
matches just seem incredibly random in an awesome way. Goldberg vs.
Ogawa? Giant Silva? Mil Mascaras? Dusty Rhodes? Should be interesting
if nothing else. Here is the full card:
- Jun Kasai vs. King Adamo vs. Low Ki vs. MIKAMI
- Ikuto Hidaka vs. Zebra Man
- El Solar and Dos Caras Jr. vs. Satoshi Kojima and Kaz Hayashi
- Shinjiro Otani and Masato Tanaka vs. The Predator and Kevin Randleman
- Giant Silva vs. Kohei Sato and Katsuhisa Fujii
- PRIDE GM Takada Nomination Match: Shinya Hashimoto vs. Vader
- Mil Mascaras, Dos Caras, and Sicodelico Jr. vs. Tom Howard, Steve
Corino, and Dusty Rhodes
- PRIDE GM Takada Nomination Match: Mark Coleman vs. Toshiaki
Kawada
- PRIDE GM Takada Nomination Match: Bill Goldberg vs. Naoya
Ogawa
As you can see, we have a full card so lets get right
to it.
Jun Kasai vs. King Adamo vs. Low Ki vs. MIKAMI
They brawl to start, Adamo goes for a double clothesline on Low Ki and
Kasai but they avoid it and dropkick him out of the ring. MIKAMI then
flies out onto Adamo while Kasai and Low Ki circle each other in the
ring. Clubs to the back by Kasai, Irish whip, but Low Ki grabs the ropes
and back bodydrops Kasai out of the ring when he charges in. Low Ki
goes to do a dive, but MIKAMI kicks him in the stomach before he can
make it to the ropes. Snapmare by MIKAMI, he goes off the ropes and
goes for a Tiger Feint Kick, but Low Ki moves out of the way and kicks
MIKAMI out of the ring. Finally with the ring cleared, Low Ki goes off
the ropes and sails out onto Kasai with a Space Flying Tiger Drop! Ki
was quite the flier back in the day. Adamo and MIKAMI are in the ring
now,
kicks by MIKAMI and he goes for a slam, but Adamo blocks it it and picks
up MIKAMI. MIKAMI slides down Adamo's back and applies a waist lock,
but Adamo gets out of it and hits a splash in the corner. Brief Stinkface
by Adamo, Irish whip, and he throws MIKAMI in the air before slamming
him to the mat. Cover, but Kasai breaks it up. Club to the back
by Kasai, Irish whip, reversed, Kasai goes for a sunset flip, Adamo
doesn't go down and tries to sit on Kasai, but Kasai moves out of the
way. Kasai goes off the ropes and dropkicks Adamo in the head, cover,
but it gets a one count. Kasai goes up to the top turnbuckle, but Adamo
is up in time and joins him on the top turnbuckle. Low Ki and MIKAMI
are back in the ring however and they powerbomb Adamo while Adamo hits
a superplex onto Kasai. Both men are covered, but both covers only get
a two count.
Snapmare by Low Ki on Kasai and he goes up to the top
turnbuckle to go for a Phoenix Splash, but Kasai moves out of the way.
Low Ki rolls as he lands to keep his momentum however and drops the
flash elbow onto Adamo. Snapmare on MIKAMI to Low Ki, MIKAMI goes off
the ropes and he hits the Tiger Feint Kick. MIKAMI brings in his ladder,
slams Low Ki in front of it and goes up top, but Kasai knocks him off
and he falls to the floor. Now Kasai goes to the top of the ladder,
but Adamo shakes it and he falls off, straddling the top rope before
rolling out of the ring. Next Adamo climbs the ladder, but Low Ki catches
him from behind and throws him to the mat. MIKAMI has recovered, he
goes to the top of the ladder and nails the Volcanic Bomb onto Adamo!
Cover, but Kasai breaks it up. Scoop slam by Kasai on MIKAMI, he puts
the ladder in the corner and throws MIKAMI into it, but MIKAMI rebounds
off the ladder with a quebrada. Roll-up by MIKAMI onto Kasai
but
Low Ki breaks it up. Low Ki picks up MIKAMI in the Ki Krusher position,
but instead of hitting the move he rams MIKAMI into Adamo. Kasai goes
to the top turnbuckle and hits a missile dropkick onto Adamo, but Low
Ki hits the Black Magic onto Kasai for a two count cover. Backslide
by Kasai, but it gets a two count. Kasai goes off the ropes but Low
Ki nails him with a Rolling Koppou Kick. MIKAMI goes to the top
turnbuckle, but Low Ki sees him and knocks him off with the Tidal Krush,
sending him out of the ring and onto Adamo. Ki Krusher by Low Ki
on Kasai and he picks up the three count! Your winner: Low Ki
Match Thoughts: King Adamo is better
known in the States as Skulu, which is the name he used in UPW. This
was a fun little spotty match and you could tell that for some of the
spots they actually took the time to plan them in advance, which tends
to make matches like this go smoother. I had forgotten how Low Ki's
offense used to be more high-flying then it is now, I can't remember
the last time he did a Space Flying Tiger Drop or a Phoenix Splash.
But centering his offense on stiff kicks rather then crazy dives will
probably make his career longer, which I am sure he has considered.
The wrestlers performed in their rolls well (Adamo as the big lug, MIKAMI
has only wanting to do crazy moves, and Kasai trying to sneak in a win
whenever he got the chance via backslides and sunset flips), and while
it won't go down as a classic it was a perfectly fine opening match
to get the crowd excited for the show. Score: 6.0
Ikuto Hidaka vs. Zebra Man
Single leg takedown by Zebra Man to start, but Hidaka gets out of it
and returns to his feet. A cross-armed submission is applied by Zebra
Man into a side headlock, Hidaka gets out of it and applies a front
facelock, but Zebra Man reverses it with an arm wringer. Hidaka flips
out of it and after trading one falls both men are back up again. Tie-up,
side headlock by Hidaka, Zebra Man Irish whips out of it and they collide
with no result. Another collision, Hidaka goes off the ropes but Zebra
Man hits a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker before clotheslining him out of
the ring. Zebra Man fakes a dive, Hidaka moves, so Zebra Man rolls himself
back in the ring and hits a baseball slide. Zebra Man gets out of the
ring and slams Hidaka onto the mat before connecting with a series of
chops. Hidaka rolls himself back in the ring and Zebra Man follows,
Irish whip by Zebra Man but Hidaka ducks the lariat and applies a waistlock.
Zebra Man reverses the waistlock but Hidaka hits a low blow when the
referee is distracted and follows that with a dropkick. Hidaka goes
for Zebra Man's mask but after a moment he gives up and chops Zebra
Man into the corner. Punches by Hidaka, Irish whip, but Zebra Man reverses
it and drop toeholds Hidaka into the turnbuckle. Running knee to the
face by Zebra Man, he puts Hidaka onto his shoulders and hits a rolling
fireman's carry slam. Second turnbuckle leg drop by Zebra Man but it
only gets a two count. Zebra Man picks up Hidaka but Hidaka slides down
his back when he goes for a suplex and applies a waistlock. Zebra Man
shakes Hidaka off and goes for a sunset flip, but Hidaka rolls through
and dropkicks Zebra Man in the face. Hidaka goes off the ropes but Zebra
Man catches him with an elbow. Hidaka falls out of the ring, but he
grabs the second rope to pull himself in and hits a heel kick. Cover
by Hidaka but it gets a two count. Hidaka goes off the ropes but Zebra
Man catches him and hits a belly to back wheelbarrow facebuster. Zebra
Man
goes up to the top turnbuckle but Hidaka gets up quickly and powerbombs
him off for a two count cover. With Zebra Man in the corner Hidaka goes
for a cartwheel elbow strike, but Zebra Man catches him and drops him
onto the apron before hitting a lariat. With Hidaka on the elevated
ramp, Zebra Man goes to the top turnbuckle and hits a diving lariat.
Zebra Man picks up Hidaka and press slams him back into the ring. Up
to the top turnbuckle again and he hits a flying cross body, he
then picks up Hidaka and nails the Zebra Bomb for the three count
cover! Your winner: Zebra Man
Match Thoughts: Impressive finisher.
I have no idea who Zebra Man is, as originally I thought it was Kazuhiko
Ogasawara, but they don't really look the same and then I read that
Ogasawara took over the gimmick in February of 2004. So if you know,
feel free to shoot me a line. This was a perfectly acceptable match
which in theory introduced a new wrestler by making him look good against
a competent foe. There really wasn't anything resembling a structure
to this match but there weren't any obvious miscues and it was smooth
from start to finish. A solid debut for Zebra Man, even though it seems
that it wasn't followed up on. Score: 5.5
El Solar and Dos Caras Jr. vs. Satoshi Kojima and Kaz Hayashi
El Solar and Hayashi start things off. Tie-up, waistlock by Hayashi,
reversed by El Solar and he tosses Hayashi to the mat. Single-leg takedown
by Hayashi, reversed by El Solar, Hayashi applies a front facelock but
El Solar reverses it with an arm wringer. Hayashi reverses that with
a leg lock into a head scissors, but El Solar applies the bow and arrow
submission hold. Hayashi gets out of it and applies a front facelock,
but El Solar hits a fireman's carry takeover. Wristlock by El Solar
and he goes for the Fujiwara armbar into a crossface, but Hayashi gets
a hand on the ropes. Back up, kick to the chest by El Solar and he tags
in Caras Jr.. Kick to the leg by Caras Jr., Irish whip and he hits a
tilt-a-whirl backbreaker. Bodyslam by Caras Jr., he goes up to the top
turnbuckle, Hayashi rolls out of the way of the moonsault but Caras
Jr. lands on his feet. Superkick by Hayashi and he tags in Kojima. Kicks
to the chest by Kojima and he hits a scoop slam followed by a somersault
senton. Kojima picks up Caras Jr. and applies a side headlock, Caras
Jr. Irish whips out of it and the two collide with neither man going
down. Another failed collision, Caras Jr. goes off the ropes and this
time he knocks down Kojima with a shoulderblock. Irish whip by Caras
Jr. and he hits a double chop to the chest. Enzigieri by Caras Jr.,
Irish whip from the corner, reversed, but Caras Jr. avoids Kojima's
charge. Top rope dropkick by Caras Jr. and he hits a snap trapped suplex
for a two count. Caras Jr. tags in El Solar, who delivers a dropkick
to Kojima. Arm drag by El Solar and he sits down on Kojima's arm. El
Solar continues working on the arm but Kojima grabs his leg and hits
a dragon screw leg whip. Another dragon screw leg whip by Kojima and
he tags in Hayashi. Hayashi goes off the ropes but El Solar catches
him with an arm drag.
El Solar goes over the ropes and shoulder blocks Hayashi,
Irish whip by El Solar but Hayashi hits a heel kick. Irish whip by Hayashi,
reversed, and El Solar hits a backbreaker. Dropkick by El Solar, Hayashi
falls out of the ring, and El Solar follows him out with a pescado.
Kojima then hits a pescado of his own onto El Solar, and then Caras
Jr. goes onto the top turnbuckle and hits a plancha on Kojima. Hayashi
has recovered by now and he sails out onto everyone with a tope suicida.
Hayashi slides El Solar into the ring, Irish whip by Hayashi, reversed,
and El Solar kicks Hayashi to the mat. Mexican Surfboard by El Solar
into a pin, but it gets a two count. El Solar wraps up Hayashi into
a submission hold before tagging in Caras Jr.. Double Irish whip to
Hayashi and El Solar
hits
a backbreaker followed by a Caras Jr. dropkick. Stomps by Caras Jr.,
Irish whip, and he delivers a superkick. Roll-up by Caras Jr. but it
gets a two count. Caras Jr. hits a powerbomb, another cover, but again
it gets two. Caras Jr. kicks Kojima off the apron before picking
up Hayashi into a press slam and dropping him in front so he could hit
a German suplex hold for a two count. Irish whip by Caras Jr. on
Hayashi but Hayashi rebounds off the ropes with a handstand and kicks
Caras Jr. in the stomach. Hayashi tags in Kojima, Kojima picks up Caras
Jr. and throws him into the corner.
Chops by Kojima, Irish whip, and he hits the jumping elbow/snapmare/top
rope elbow drop for a two count cover. Kojima picks up Caras Jr. and
hits a brainbuster, cover, but again it gets a two count. He goes for
another brainbuster, but Caras Jr. slides down his back and hits a German
suplex. Caras Jr. tags in El Solar, double Irish whip to Kojima and
both men hit strikes in the corner. They then give Kojima a double vertical
suplex before dropping elbows onto his chest. Cover by El Solar but
it gets a two count. Irish whip by El Solar and he delivers a
spinebuster.
El Solar applies a crab hold but Hayashi breaks it up with a kick to
the head. Chops by El Solar to Kojima in the corner, Irish whip, reversed,
El Solar flips himself out to the apron before getting back in the
ring and hitting a leg sweep onto Kojima for a two count. El Solar
applies a submission hold to Kojima, Hayashi tries to break it up but
Caras Jr. slaps a cross armbreaker on him. Caras Jr. tries to powerbomb
Hayashi but Hayashi gets out of it and breaks up El Solar's hold. Kojima
rolls out of the ring as Hayashi slams El Solar. Double elbow drop to
El Solar and Kojima hits him with the Koji Cutter. Kojima goes for the
lariat but El Solar reverses it with a drop toehold and rolls him up
for a two count cover. Kojima takes off the elbow pad and nails a lariat
onto El Solar for the three count pinfall! Your winners: Satoshi Kojima
and Kaz Hayashi
Match Thoughts: A pretty average match
all the way around, as there was nothing noticeably bad about it but
there was also nothing that really pulled you into the match. In general
the action was crisp, but the hot tags weren't really hot and both teams
were wrestling like faces (which they were, I guess, but it made the
match somewhat bland). The ending came rather suddenly, as El Solar
was not really weakened much when he was taken down by the lariat. Nothing
offensive, but I was expecting better. Score: 5.5
Shinjiro Otani and Masato Tanaka vs. The Predator
and Kevin Randleman
Otani and Randleman start things off. They jockey for position,
takedown by Randleman and he hits a series of mounted punches. He goes
for the cross armbreaker, but Otani is too close to the ropes and he
gets a break. Back up, Otani gets Randleman into the corner and he slaps
him in the face before backing off. Forearms by Otani and he hits a
snapmare before tagging in Tanaka. Arm wringer by Tanaka but Randleman
punches him in the stomach. Randleman applies a front facelock and makes
the tag to Predator. Spinning back kick by Predator in the corner and
he knees Tanaka in the chest. Tanaka goes for a scoop slam, but Predator
reverses it into a slam of his own. Predator picks up Tanaka, Irish
whip from the corner but Tanaka avoids his charge. Irish whip by Tanaka
and he hits a diving elbow in the corner. Tanaka throws Predator into
Otani's boot before tagging him in, and Otani connects with a running
boot in the corner. Chops by Otani, but Predator absorbs the blows and
punches Otani to the mat. Knee lift by Predator and he kicks Otani in
the corner before tagging in Randleman. Randleman lets Otani get to
his feet, but Otani clubs Randleman to the mat. Snapmare by Otani and
he applies a neck crank. Otani tags in Tanaka, scoop slam by Tanaka
and he hits an elbow drop. Cover, but it gets a two count. Tanaka picks
up Randleman, snapmare, and he applies a reverse chinlock. Randleman
bites Tanaka's leg to get out of it and covers him for a one count.
Tanaka returns the favor by biting Randleman's finger, Tanaka tags in
Otani who bites the other hand. Double Irish whip to Randleman, and
they hit a drop toehold/elbow drop/dropkick to the face combination.
Otani stays in the ring as the legal man and throws Randleman
into the corner before kicking him to a seated position. Boot scrapes
by Otani, Tanaka comes in the ring, double Irish whip to the opposite
corner, but Randleman avoids Otani's charge and leap frogs over Tanaka
when he charges in as well. Randleman then ducks the double clothesline
attempt and rebounds out of the corner with a cross body on both men.
Randleman tags in Predator, who boots down Tanaka and dropkicks Otani.
Scoop slams for both wrestlers, Predator goes off the ropes and drops
the leg onto Otani. Cover, but it gets a two count. Schwein by Predator,
cover, but again it gets a
two
count. Predator goes up to the second turnbuckle but Otani rolls out
of the way of the knee drop. Otani goes for a scoop slam but Predator
blocks it. Backdrop suplex by Otani onto Predator and he tags in Tanaka.
Tanaka goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a missile dropkick. Tanaka
sets up Predator against the ropes and hits a jumping elbow strike followed
by a trio of lariats which finally knocks Predator off his feet. Tanaka
picks up Predator, Irish whip, reversed, Tanaka applies a front chancery
and when Randleman runs in he gives them a DDT/Stunner combination.
Tanaka goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a body press
on Predator, cover, but it gets a two count. Irish whip by Tanaka, reversed,
and Predator levels him with a lariat. Predator tags in Randleman and
they hit the Decapitation off the second turnbuckle. Tanaka recovers
but Randleman catches him with a hurricanrana. Randleman tags in Predator
and Predator throws Randleman down onto Tanaka. Cover by Randleman but
it gets a two count. Randleman tags in Predator and they both take their
opponents to opposite corners. They try to Irish whip them into each
other but it is reversed, causing Randleman and Predator to collide.
Tanaka hits a backdrop suplex onto Randleman and then dropkicks Predator
to help Otani hit a backdrop suplex of his own. Otani kicks Randleman
out of the ring while in the ring Tanaka gets a crucifix pin for a two
count. Elbow smash by Tanaka,
cover,
but it gets a two count. Tanaka goes off the ropes but Predator catches
him with a heel kick. Predator picks up Tanaka, slams him to the mat,
and Randleman comes off the top turnbuckle with an elbow drop. Predator
then hits a top turnbuckle knee drop, cover, but Otani barely breaks
it up in time. Hercules Cutter by Predator on Tanaka but it only gets
a two count. Predator drives Tanaka into the corner, puts him up on
top and delivers the Muscle Buster. Cover, and he picks up the three
count! Your winners: The Predator and Kevin Randleman
Match Thoughts: The Predator was formally
known in WWE as Sylvester Terkay. Better then the last match as The
Predator was fun to watch, but I didn't really like the ending.... I
might be partly biased since I love Tanaka, but The Predator just kinda
squashed him at the end without even giving a hint of a Tanaka comeback.
Randleman was still a little rough around the edges as far as professional
wrestling goes though and there were a few noticeable miscommunications
and even some really loudly yelled spots during the match. It wasn't
great, but it was better then anything else on the card so far as Tanaka
and Otani are generally game and The Predator held his own while keeping
the crowd into it most of the time. Score: 6.5
Giant Silva vs. Kohei Sato and Katsuhisa Fujii
Both wrestlers attack Giant Silva as the bell rings but Giant
Silva clubs them away. Giant Silva picks up Fujii, Irish whip and he
delivers a big boot. Elbows by Sato but Giant Silva absorbs the blows,
Irish
whip,
Sato ducks the big boot though and dropkicks Giant Silva in the leg.
Another dropkick, they go for a double suplex but Giant Silva reverses
it into a double front facelock until they make it to the ropes. Giant
Silva eventually breaks the hold after getting punched a few times,
kicks by Sato and Fujii but Giant Silva clubs both of them to the mat.
Giant Silva picks up Fujii and hits a chokeslam, he then picks
up Sato and gives him a chokeslam as well. One foot cover on Sato and
Giant Silva picks up the three count. Your winner: Giant Silva
Match Thoughts: I generally rate squash
matches by how the crowd reacts, and since the crowd really didn't care
about this then I see no reason why I should. It's just a freak manhandling
two much smaller wrestlers, and while I understand that they were trying
to get Silva over as a monster (which was probably accomplished) it
doesn't make it an entertaining match. If the crowd was going nuts then
I'd excuse it, but since they apparently cared about as much as I did
I can't say this match was particularly good. At least Silva would become
a Hustle mainstay, making the squash match at least slightly meaningful
if nothing else. Score: 3.0
Shinya Hashimoto vs. Vader
They shove each other to start the match, punches by Vader but Hashimoto
hits a chop to the neck. Tie-up, Hashimoto grabs Vader's wrist and takes
him down to the mat with an armbar. He releases the hold after a minute
and they get back to their feet, Vader gets Hashimoto into the corner
and hits a series of punches. Hashimoto fires
back
with chops but Vader gets the better of it. Vader Crush by Vader, but
Hashimoto is in the ropes so he can't go for the cover. Vader lets Hashimoto
up, Hashimoto goes off the ropes but he can't knock Vader down. Now
Vader goes off the ropes and he hits a Vader Attack, sending Hashimoto
to the mat. Vader picks up Hashimoto, Irish whip, and he knocks Hashimoto
back down. Elbow drop by Vader, cover, but Hashimoto gets a foot on
the ropes. Vader drags Hashimoto to his feet and sends him back to the
mat with a lariat. Punches by Vader and he applies an armbar, cover,
but it gets a two count. Back up, Hashimoto blocks a Vader punch and
connects with a chop. Kicks by Hashimoto to the leg of Vader and he
takes Vader to the mat with a side headlock takeover. Cover, but it
barely gets a two. Hashimoto applies the cross armbreaker, but after
a minute Vader rolls out of it. Punches by Vader while Hashimoto is
against the ropes, Hashimoto grabs him and applies a side headlock,
Irish whip by Vader but Hashimoto ducks the lariat and delivers the
DDT. Hashimoto goes off the ropes and delivers a dropkick, sending Vader
out of the ring. Hashimoto joins him and applies a reverse chinlock
on the outside, but Vader connects with a few punches and puts him against
the ring post. Vader gets a chair and hits Hashimoto with it in the
ribs, but Hashimoto ducks the next shot and moves the mat at ringside.
DDT by Hashimoto onto the floor and he rolls back in the ring as the
referee is at 18. Vader naturally doesn't get back in time and is counted
out. Your winner: Shinya Hashimoto
Match Thoughts: I wanted to like this
match since I like both of these guys, but really the match was below
average at best. The one minute arm submission by Vader was lame since
the move clearly didn't hurt and Vader isn't really known for going
for the arm... I know he was probably winded but I think they could
have done better then waste so much time with one move. Same thing happened
with the cross armbreaker, as those two moves along were 20% of the
match, and neither had any impact on the end of the match whatsoever.
The crowd also hated the ending, as they wanted to get into the match
but booed it pretty heavily for a Japanese crowd. The ending did make
sense, but if the crowd hates it then it didn't really work. Both wrestlers'
striking looked great and the emotion was there, but unfortunately by
this point Vader wasn't in the condition to have a long singles match
and the structure didn't really help matters any. Score: 4.0
Mil Mascaras, Dos Caras, and Sicodelico Jr. vs.
Tom Howard, Steve Corino, and Dusty Rhodes
Mascaras and Dusty tease starting, but Corino comes in the ring and
insists on going first. They circle each other, tie-up, waistlock by
Mascaras, reversed by Corino, Mascaras applies a hammerlock and throws
Corino to the mat. Headscissors takedown by Mascaras and he keeps the
hold applied, spinning Corino to the mat each time he gets to his feet.
Corino gets a foot on the ropes after a moment and both wrestlers get
back to their feet. They go into a Test of Strength and Mascaras monkey
flips Corino down. Mascaras gets Corino into the corner but he
gives
a clean break. Drop toehold by Mascaras and he applies a stretch submission
hold. Irish whip by Mascaras and he delivers the flying double chest
chop. Dos Caras comes in the ring and with Mascaras he hits a double
flying double chest chop. Feeling left out, Sicodelico Jr. comes
in the ring and hits a spinning heel kick onto Corino. Sicodelico Jr.
stays in as the legal man but Corino rakes him in the eyes and tags
in Dusty. Dusty punches Sicodelico Jr. into the corner but Sicodelico
Jr. chops him back. Elbow to the head by Dusty and he tags in Corino.
Kick to the stomach by Corino and he applies a wristlock, but Sicodelico
Jr. gets out of it and shoulderblocks him down. Back up, spinning heel
kick by Sicodelico Jr. and he hits a Falcon Arrow. Sicodelico Jr. goes
for a twisting reverse splash by Corino moves out of the way and hits
a superkick. Corino goes for a scoop slam but Sicodelico Jr. gets out
of it and hits a superkick of his own. Sicodelico Jr. tags in Dos Caras
while Corino tags in Howard. Tie-up, side headlock by Howard, Dos Caras
Irish whips out of it but Howard shoulderblocks him down. Howard goes
off the ropes but Dos Caras hits a flying double chest chop followed
by a dropkick. Drop toehold by Howard but Howard scurries out of the
ring. Dos Caras follows him out with a pescado however and gets back
in the ring to tag in Mascaras.
Howard teases tagging in Dusty and does so, but Corino
tags himself in to massive boos. Tie-up, side headlock by Mascaras,
Corino Irish whips out of it but Mascaras shoulderblocks him down. Mascaras
goes off the ropes and hits a hiptoss, side headlock by Mascaras, Howard
comes in the ring to try to help but Mascaras flips them both to the
mat. He then hits a side headlock takeover/headscissors combination
on both men before delivering a flying double chest chop to Corino for
a two count cover. Stretch hold by Mascaras but Howard breaks it up,
sending Mascaras out of the ring. Dos Caras comes in to replace him
as Dusty is tagged in, and Dusty chops him into the corner. Elbows by
Dusty and he tags in Howard. Dos Caras tries to tag in Sicodelico Jr.
but Howard pulls him back and tags in Corino. Double Irish whip to Dos
Caras from the corner, lariat by Corino and Howard follows with a Poetry
in Motion. DDT by Corino followed by an STO. Irish whip by Corino, reversed
and Dos Caras hits a flying chop to the chest. Dos Caras applies a stretch
hold that I really can't even describe before releasing it and tagging
in Sicodelico Jr.. DDT by Sicodelico Jr., he picks up Corino, Irish
whip, and he delivers a dropkick. Sicodelico Jr. tags in Mascaras, Irish
whip by Mascaras and he hits a flying double chest chop. Double underhook
lock by Mascaras but Howard breaks it up. Sicodelico Jr. comes in to
replace Mascaras as Howard comes in as
well,
Irish whip by Howard and he hits a jumping heel kick in the corner.
Howard picks up Sicodelico Jr., Irish whip from the corner but Sicodelico
Jr. avoids his charge and rolls him up for a two count. Sicodelico Jr.
dropkicks Howard out of the ring and then sails out onto him with
a corkscrew pescado. Dos Caras and Dusty come in as the legal men
and Dusty elbows Dos Caras into the corner. Dos Caras tags in Mascaras
and holds Dusty for him as Mascaras goes to the top turnbuckle, but
Corino pushes them out of the way and Mascaras hits him with a flying
crossbody. Cover by Mascaras and he picks up the three count! Your winners:
Mil Mascaras, Dos Caras, and Sicodelico Jr.
Match Thoughts: Steve Corino said it
best himself in his commentary right after the show: "Without getting
into the inner workings of the match I was pretty much in the ring for
about 95% of the 14 minute match getting my ass handed to me by a 68
year old man. The quality of the match was what you would expect out
of it but for the nostalgia of it, it was fun." That pretty much
sums it up, but the only other thing I'd add is it was disappointing
that after teasing Dusty/Mascaras that they never actually did it...
I know they wanted Corino to get heel heat, which worked very well,
but they should have given the crowd a little taste so that they would
be satisfied. About what you'd expect from a legends match, Mick Foley
didn't like wrestling Mascaras back in the early 90s because he wouldn't
bump, you can imagine how it was in 2004. Corino did a good job at making
his offense look good however and both Caras and Sicodelico Jr. were
very solid. Score: 4.5
Mark Coleman vs. Toshiaki Kawada
They trade strikes to start the match but neither can connect cleanly.
Coleman gets Kawada into the corner and knees him in the stomach, but
Kawada comes back with slaps and a high kick. Coleman comes back with
a double leg takedown, but Kawada maintains his balance. Finally Coleman
manages to get Kawada to the mat and he hits a series of mounted punches.
Kawada tries to apply a choke but Coleman slams him down to break the
hold. After a moment Kawada gets out and goes for a cross armbreaker,
but Coleman keeps his arms locked until
he
can make it to the ropes. Back up, Coleman nails Kawada with a punch
to the face but Kawada comes back with a kick to the head. Belly
to belly suplex by Coleman but Kawada gets back to his feet and
hits a boot to the face. Another suplex by Coleman, this time Kawada
doesn't get up quickly, but when he does he eats another suplex. Punches
by Coleman and he applies a modified side headlock, but after a minute
Kawada gets to the ropes. Kicks to the leg by Kawada and they trade
strikes, waistlock by Kawada, reversed by Coleman but Kawada takes down
Coleman with an ankle lock. Coleman slowly rolls in the general direction
of the ropes but can't get there and the referee calls for the bell
even though Coleman never submitted. Your winner by referee stoppage:
Toshiaki Kawada
Match Thoughts: I am not a huge fan of
MMA vs. professional wrestling matches as MMA fighters generally take
awhile to adjust, but really this match wasn't bad until the bizarre
ending. The strikes looked pretty good, all things considered, and the
crowd popped at the right times (such as Coleman's first belly to belly
suplex). But for the referee to call for the bell even though Coleman
never submitted is just political BS as in neither MMA nor professional
wrestling is the bell supposed to be rung when a conscious wrestler
isn't submitting. So that put a damper on things, but really the rest
of it was very watchable. Score: 5.0
Bill Goldberg vs. Naoya Ogawa
Goldberg headbutts Ogawa as the bell rings, Ogawa gets Goldberg
into the corner and slaps him before backing off. Lariat by Goldberg,
Irish whip, he grabs Ogawa by the throat and picks him up in a military
press before slamming him to the mat. Goldberg kicks Ogawa out of the
ring and Ogawa takes his time returning but eventually does so. Tie-up,
knees to the midsection by Goldberg and he applies an ankle submission
hold. Ogawa reverses it into an ankle lock of his own but Goldberg makes
it to the ropes. Stomps by Ogawa and he chokes Goldberg with his boot.
Back up, side headlock takedown by Ogawa and he delivers a hiptoss.
Ogawa goes for the cross armbreaker but Goldberg blocks it, so Ogawa
goes back to the ankle. They trade slaps while Goldberg is still in
the hold and Goldberg manages to reverse it into a single leg crab hold.
Ogawa inches to the ropes however and he forces the break. Back up,
kicks to the chest by Ogawa, he goes for an Irish whip by Goldberg pushes
him back. Ogawa recovers quickly however and hits a series of forearms
before delivering the monkey flip. Ogawa picks up Goldberg but Goldberg
knees Ogawa in the midsection and hits a butterfly suplex. Goldberg
pushes Ogawa into the corner and chokes him before slapping him and
backing off. Goldberg goes for a backdrop suplex but Ogawa reverses
it and hits a backdrop suplex of his own. Ogawa picks up Goldberg, Irish
whip, and he applies the sleeper hold. Goldberg drives Ogawa into the
corner to get out of it, Ogawa doesn't break it and he
knocks
down the referee when the referee tries to intervene. The referee recovers
and tries again, but this time Goldberg pushes him to the mat (and knocking
him out, apparently). Goldberg finally frees himself of Ogawa's
hold and nails him with a spear. Cover by Goldberg but the referee
is still down. Goldberg goes to try to recover the referee, he waits
for Ogawa to get up and goes for another spear but Ogawa rolls out of
the way and hits the STO. Another STO by Ogawa and he goes over to try
to wake up the referee. Having no luck, he picks up Goldberg, but Goldberg
falls back to the mat. He picks him up again, goes off the ropes, but
Giant Silva grabs his leg. Silva gets on the apron and swats at Ogawa,
which gives Goldberg time to recover. Spear by Goldberg, he picks up
Ogawa and finishes him with the Jackhammer. The referee wakes up, cover
by Goldberg and he picks up the three count! Your winner: Bill Goldberg
Match Thoughts: Again we have a match
that would have been pretty entertaining if not for the questionable
ending. The referee being out for two minutes isn't a new concept in
wrestling, but really it should be more then a one armed push from Goldberg
to do it. No man, woman, or child should be knocked out by being gently
pushed to the mat. Even though there were a few disjointed parts the
match was generally entertaining... Goldberg might not have the passion
for the business that some do but he doesn't show it in the ring at
all. His selling in this match was exceptional, perhaps better then
anyone else on this card. The minute-long ankle locks were meaningless,
but other then that I have no complaints aside from the ridiculous referee
bump. The crowd was pretty into it as well, so bonus points for that.
Score: 5.5
Final
Thoughts:
Well what an odd little show. Not good, really, but debut
shows are hard to pull off as most of the matches have storylines that
are just starting which can have an adverse effect on crowd reaction
and emotion. The main event was very watchable but there weren't any
matches that came close to "must see" unless you like bizarre
pairings or are on a nostalgia kick. When Shinjiro Otani and Masato
Tanaka vs. The Predator and Kevin Randleman is the best match on the
card you know you have a problem, and while I enjoyed seeing some of
the legends that really isn't a good enough reason to purchase this.
It wasn't utter trash as some of the matches were entertaining and others
were so bizarre that they were fun to watch, but overall I wouldn't
recommend it.
Not
Recommended
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review completed 5/24/07