CMLL on Fox Sports (Mexico): 2013-12-21

 

Tama Tonga is not nice!

recap

taped 2013-12-13 @ Arena Mexico
Blue Panther vs Negro Casas in a lightning match: way more cut down on TV than I noticed (until I saw the clock at the end) – about three minutes loped off. Still a good match for the time, but the Terra match is the version you’d want. Finish still seems abrupt to me, it’s odd to see Panther lose so simply. It may be a coincidence, but it also looks like CMLL knew what they were doing with Negro the next few weeks (a plan!), as he gets a big win here going into the Leyenda de Plata and Volador feud. It may just be wonderful randomness too, but CMLL feels like someone’s thinking big picture lately. It’s so weird.

La Mascara, kind of a jerk

La Máscara, Rush, Valiente vs Tama Tonga, Terrible, Vangellys: By the numbers trios except for the Rush/Terrible segments. They didn’t start off well. Rush losing the first fall to a totally unconvincing Terrible dropkick was strange; I would think Rush actually got hurt, but Terrible hooks the leg like a real end of fall. They were much better together in the third fall, and their fights going away is the biggest downside to Rush ever turning rudo. (Terrible as a técnico seems doubtful.) This is the end of Tama Tonga’s 2013 run; he seemed a stronger rudo this time, but the feuds didn’t click as well as they should have. CMLL had two years of Lyger fall/winter visits and now two years of Tonga fall/winter visits; maybe it’ll be a new person in 2014, or maybe it’ll finally be the hair match.

psycho senton

Mistico, Titán, Volador Jr. vs Niebla Roja, Reapper, Último Guerrero: The effort to make Ripper look like a threat continues. It’s not helped when he screws up the big comeback spot and has to play random dead, and it’s not helped when it takes a mysterious second Ripper (never to be seen or explained) to give him the win, but I guess that’s the idea. Ripper’s crazy senton off the stage came out of nowhere. He needs to talk to Volador about timing those better, since he knows to wait in between falls to make sure nothing his happening. The other four guys were involved even less than the other four guys in the last match; there was one good Titan/Niebla Roja sequence and hopefully there’s more of that in 2014.

2013 luchablog photolog data dump – 70s/80/90s lineups

Long time followers of the site, or maybe even long time follower of me on my internet, know what I’m actually good at doing. It’s not gathering relevant news accurately, it’s not having worthwhile opinions on wrestling (definitely not that one), and it’s not even recording things on my TV to put on the internet. My skills, such as they are, are “doing dumb stuff persistently over a long period of time.” I finished a project that required just that.

We were given an opportunity to photograph a ton of old lineup posters and magazines while in Mexico. I’ve spent the time since transcribing the photographs into text and pictures, and integrating that content into the luchawiki and the match database. There are a couple magazines I actually bought which I’m not sure I’ve added in yet, but everything else is in there. If you’ve seen something sourced as “luchablog photolog (some numbers)”, that’s what that meant. I’ve been also using the new data to fix the information I also have. There were 1,221 shows modified in some way, the vast majority of them added to the database.

I’m putting all that added information right here for download. All of those events have already been entered in the database and should be appearing on the various data pages, but this puts it in one easy place. I’m not sure if anyone besides a couple of German sites will use this information, but it exists for anyone to use in whatever way to can figure out.

I’ve done my best at trying to clean up the data, but there are surely mistakes. I’ve included match/event notes in the file. I haven’t included name/alignment metadata, because there’s not an easy way to express it and I’m not sure anyone else uses it. There probably should be some standard way to share all this information, but since I haven’t figured out what that is yet, this will have to do.

(There are plenty of errors – as I can now tell looking thru that file. Oops.)

  • if you’re going to write a post about what you’ve learned from lineups, you should probably write that post up when you’ve finished typing up the lineups, and not after you’ve added them to the database. It’s much fresher in your mind.
  • if ever you find yourself in a similar situation, where you have more magazines and posters available to you than time available – and you’re using a phone camera – I would recommend leaning towards photographing posters over magazines.The poster photographs were very successful; even if it turned out somewhat blurry, they were still big enough that I could figure it out. That wasn’t the case with magazines. I didn’t keep stats, but I’d guess maybe 4% of the posters photos were unusable, while 12% of the magazine photos were impossible to decipher after the fact.

    The other person taking photos did a much better job of taking photos, so it’s possible me or my camera were not good at this – though they smartly took photos of parts of pages while I tried to did whole pages. And the magazines are the only places where you’re going to find results, plus those full pages of cards which are such a great data mine

    We could’ve scanned things, but that would’ve taken much longer and we would’ve got a lot less done. (I’d really love to find a practical magazine scanner for my own collection, but have never had much luck.) The flip side of the blurry photos was the incredible speed and number of photos I was able to take – thanks to some awesome and very appreciated assistance, there were stretches where I was framing and snapping a new poster every 10 seconds. I might have been able to get a little better quality if I went slower, and I did help myself by starting to take a two shots at may posters, but I feel like we ended up with the most usable posters we were going to get.

  • Whoever decided that a standard poster should have the month, day, day of the week AND YEAR on it is among most favorite person in the history of the world. That person saved me so much time. There’s no obvious reason for the year to be there, except the handbills might have been posted or floating around for long enough to mistake one year’s for the next.A lot of them didn’t have it that way and working out the correct year was not impossible but often a struggle. Infrequent visiting foreigners were helpful. I had to take wild guesses on a few. Promotion affiliations are 90% my guessing. Promotions were (and are) downplayed on lineups, but top wrestlers associated with the promotions were pretty consistent. There were also other shows with both UWA and EMLL talent in the 80s, making any distinctions pretty pointless.
  • temerariosfor obvious reasons, a lot of the older info tends to be more UWA specific. Still, a lot of Mexico, Coliseo and other shows too. It was neat to find missing major building lineups, but I have this (perhaps disillusion) thought that someone’s kept track of all the Arena Mexico or El Toreo shows and that list will be shared with everyone at some point. We’re less likely to find similar items for shows out in the provinces, and so getting a piece here or there was always a good fine. I also saw the Los Temerarios logo so many times I almost put it on a magnet.
  • I am Team Arena KO Magazine. Definitely better than Box Y Lucha back in the day, better results, better lineups. (And all the Naucalpan info you want.) It is amusing and not all surprsing that Box Y Lucha’s Cartela section in the late 80s looks just about the same as it does today.
  • Villano II is the rarest Pokemon. Even when he was wrestling, he was not wrestling often.
  • We (and be we I mostly me “I”) treat it like a big deal when women are allowed to semimain or even main event major shows, as if it’s a break thru. It’s more of a return. Women’s matches were booked as such a big deal in 1987, after the ban on women wrestling in Mexico City was lifted. It didn’t happen as much in Arena Mexico, but they were booked as a hot new gimmick in B arenas – including plenty of arenas they could’ve been wrestling in before the ban was removed. The ban itself obviously hurt, but the surge in interest when the ban was removed was a nice silver lining. It didn’t sustain long but it must’ve been quite a time for those involved.On a lesser scale, you can see the same thing happen with the pre-mini dwarf wrestlers – they were around for a while, but got hot for a period as something different. You can see where an Antonio Pena might have figured they could do a lot with that type of characters if they were a bit more athletic.
  • Los Xaviers were the trio I was least familiar with who seemed to be booked the most. I remain confused by X/J being the same later and everyone who actually speaks Spanish is confused why I’m confused by that. Most set trios were usually just listed by the trios name, without specifying who was in that trio in the moment. It surely makes sense in context of the moment but becomes harder to decode after the fat. I spent considerable time looking up when the Arquero del Espacio changed members or figuring out what Los Tres Villanos happened to mean that month. (Usually 1/4/5, but these go back span enough to find 1/2/3 and recent enough for 3/4/5. Speaking of, Villano I was a guy who was around for a long time without a lot being written about him today.)
  • it’s crazy to see how busy things were in the 80s and early 90s. Sundays with shows in Arena Mexico, Arena Coliseo, Pista Arena Revolucion and El Toreo (all accessible from the DF metro!) were common. That’s a lot of fans going to shows and a lot of wrestlers getting work. There was a period of time where they were running Toreo multiple times a week; I find a lineup where they were adding Tuesday shows at this giant arena just to run the same Nuevo Valores shows CMLL is now running.
  • traveling thousands of miles to find lineups of shows a few miles (and a few decades) from my house was very weird.

AAA on iPPV, AAA TV in Irapuato, Dos Leyendas, NOAH tryout

This week’s MLW Radio mentioned the plan is for all AAA major events to be on iPPV, starting as soon as Rey de Reyes. It’s not for sure they’ll have it worked out by then but that’s the plan. Konnan was unsure which site would be hosting it or what language the broadcast will be in (but did mention El Rey will be in English). I’d be shocked if it was uStream, but I’m not sure what else there is out there. Price is unknown as well. Konnan mentioned they did better on uStream for TripleMania than they thought, suggesting that’s why they’re trying this again.

AAA feels like since everyone got their money back and TripleMania went up on YouTube, everyone is cool with the last iPPV disaster. That is not a good assumption; you do have to rebuild some confidence that AAA and whatever provider can actually provide the show you’re delivering. It’s good idea to try this for Rey de Reyes if the big plan is to get people back on board by TripleMania. That’s the one where all the casual people who’ll only check one show a year will check-in, but only if they know the steam will work, and the point where the gears really should be turning towards the AAA US show. (Just don’t expect the same numbers the first time out.)

The podcast also confirms this year’s Rey de Reyes is a 16 man tournament, which is what we were figuring. They’ve also returned to the idea that the winner gets a shot at the AAA mega world heavyweight championship after getting away from it. Perro Aguayo Jr. won in 2012 and got the shot. Mesias won last year and ended up fighting for the Latin American title instead (which is really weird thinking back, given who Texano defended the title against instead.)

AAA’s TV announced a 03/03 TV taping in Irapuato. That would follow the tapings this past week’s Toluca and this upcoming weekend in Ecatepec (both of which appear to be two week shows based on the schedule.) It’s likely that 03/03 show is the last taping to air before Rey de Reyes. Konnan has hinted about a major angle in early March. That seems the right time for, say, a big major debut. (Konnan said on the podcast that he knows AAA has talked to Sin Cara, but other people are talking to him too and he doesn’t know if Sin Cara’s signed yet. Konnan is working on ideas in case he is signed – he wants to do his best to make him succeed, but wasn’t yet sure how people will receive him. The Sin Cara Gym show reception should help with that. )

CMLL’s posted it’s Dos Leyendas teaser and promo for Friday’s show. That promo includes Mistico, who’s not on Friday’s card. Maybe he was supposed to team with Dragon Lee?

There are rules for the Super Crazy/Pesadilla sponsored NOAH tryout, including the 1500 Mexican Pesos fee. That’s about $110 US, a hefty amount. Maybe there’s a lot of overhead, but that kind of sounds like the real winner of the tryout isn’t the new person who might get to go to NOAH. It’s such a slow day that I almost wrote a 300 words about this – but if you’re trying this and you don’t already know you’re probably going to win, you’re probably not going to win (but you can still get something out of the experience and impress enough to maybe considered for other opportunities.)

Noche de Coliseo – which, in 2 hours, aired 9 minutes of new content (1/2 one match, didn’t show the finish, 30 seconds were of the guest referee dancing) – aired a commercial using Rey de Reyes 2013 footage. I was surprised, because AAA hasn’t advertised Rey de Reyes on that show in previous years, though it seems like a decent idea. It was not an AAA ad. It was an WWL ad – for last July’s WWL show! It also aired in the middle of a match. I have no idea why it was airing. Noches de Coliseo is a strange creature.

LuchaWorld has KrisZ’s news update. and this week’s PosterMania.

This week’s Super Libre has interviews with El Dandy, Soberano Jr., Diamante Azul and Rey Escorpion.

CMLL on CadenaTres: 2013-12-21

recap

Blanca gets her revenge on Marcela

taped 2013-12-17 @ Arena Mexico
Estrellita, Goya Kong, Marcela vs Dalys, La Seductora, Princesa Blanca: Usual women’s match, with an entertaining (if not always good) técnica section and a not as fun ruda section because it’s tough to do much with these técnicas. Princesa Blanca was great for her counter kick to Marcela and for breaking out a runway walk for no apparent reason; those two had a couple good exchanges. The rest were trying. I was very concerned Seductora was about to die on the powerbomb/sunset flip reversal spot, and I had not heard about because it’s Seductora. Please do not do that again.

I don’t know what this was, but don’t do it again

Delta, Guerrero Maya Jr., Stuka Jr. vs Morphosis, Mr. Águila, Ripper: About as one sided a match as CMLL will do. I don’t think it’s possible for them to book a two fall match where a team gets cleanly beat both falls, so one where they cheat to win a second fall feels dominant. Tecnicos spend the majority of the match selling for the Invasors, which makes some sense if the Invasors are (suddenly) supposed to be top guys. This is a fair result if CMLL is looking at the big picture; I’m still having trouble believing CMLL is actually doing that. It only works if they bring these results up elsewhere, which doesn’t seem to happen. Easily skipable in isolation.

Porky splash

La Sombra, Rush, Super Porky vs Gran Guerrero, Rey Bucanero, Último Guerrero: Could’ve been an interesting match on another day, but this was a Tuesday match before may of these guys were disappearing for a few weeks and worked as such. Heavy on the Porky comedy (who’s looking very heavy himself.) Amusing to see Tirantes have no problem with Rush and Sombra pile on top of the técnicos in the second fall for the Porky win, when he shooed the other women out of the ring on the same exact spot two matches prior.

Maximo tope

Rey Escorpión vs Máximo for the CMLL World Light Heavyweight Championship: They got to a good place in the last couple of minutes. Sadly, this was a seventeen minute match. Máximo and Rey Escorpion working a technical style didn’t work out well at all in the first fall. Maximo’s routines get repeated too often, but he’s not the same guy when he plays it straight. Escorpion’s had better days himself; every other singles match he head in 2013 was better than this.