Lucha Fighter concludes Saturday, +Lucha tournament finishes Sunday, Roldan interview

Lucha Fighter finishes up Saturday at 8 pm. There are five matches scheduled:

  • Lady Shani vs La Hiedra in the women’s final
  • Dinastia vs Laredo Boy in the mini’s final
  • LA Park vs Pentagon Jr. in a men’s semifinal
  • Chessman vs Psycho Clown in a men’s semifinal
  • the two winners in the men’s final

The other shows have had seven, seven, and six matches. Either AAA is quietly adding a match (why was Carta Brava Jr. there???) or this will be a little shorter.

This week’s Keepin’ It 100 had Konnan’s semi-annual deceleration about Dinastia being moved out of the minis division, so he remains the favorite to win out of the division. La Hiedra’s profile has been raised greatly in the last year, but she hasn’t gotten the wins to match; Los Mercenarios entirely could use a big victory. Los Ingobernables have not lost a match yet, and I’m not sure that’s changing.

Lucha Central has a preview of the show.

AAA’s Lucha Fighter press conference ended with a brief discussion of what’s next. Jesus Zuniga said AAA ownership would decide on the promotion’s major shows on May 30th. He also mentioned the possibility that TripleMania could happen behind closed doors, leading to a wrestler discussion about what that would be like. (It’s not the same without fans, but they’ll do their best to adapt.) A closed-door TripleMania would have to either be largely funded by the TV networks & digital content (mostly Azteca) or scaled down from usual.

At the same press AAA conference, LA Park criticized Pentagon Jr. for only trying in the US and not giving the same effort in matches in Mexico. The irony here is Pentagon has been criticized for taking it easy in the US for the last couple of years.

The Gladiatores reports that CMLL is getting close to an announcement about their timeline to resume.

Mexico’s president said he’ll have an announcement about when and where the country can start to reopen either Wednesday or Thursday next week. He’s also encouraging people to postpone their Mother’s day activities to June 10th.

+LuchaTV’s tournament also concludes this weekend. Demonio Infernal defeated Arez in the match, which premiered last night. Ricky Marvin and Aramis will meet tonight to decide the other spot in the final. That final is airing Sunday night; Saturday will be an all-day marathon instead of a new match.

If you’re jumping and don’t want to go through 15 video files, you may want to wait until that marathon. Or you may want to skip the first eight matches and just start with the second round. I’m through that second round, and it’s generally better than the first one.

Fuerza Guerrera Jr. is running another empty arena show on May 10th. He’s progressed to announcing matches this time, though it’s unclear how you can watch it. Veracruz’s Arena Union is also running an empty arena show.

Ancla, who in charge of the CAR The Crash, says they’ve shut down all training at the building. They’re looking at restarting training with small groups of people and renting out the building for closed-door shows (there’s always been one.) He seems more concerned about what happens next, thinking that fans won’t be able to afford to go to shows and promoters might not want to risk running them for a while.

Dr. Wagner Jr. owns Arena Campeons in Torreon, which includes a gym. He’s still using the gym; he says he’s the only person who’s been in it. The Torreon government says all gyms should be closed, so they’ve warned him to close the gym. Wagner is unhappy about it.

Dorian Roldan appeared in a video interview with the Sports Innovation Society on Thursday. He’s spoken on panel discussions with this group before, and it was a similar big picture discussion about their business. (Not that it could avoid the “would you work with CMLL?” question, which is akin to asking “would you accept this big bag of cash?”) Roldan said the biggest change for AAA in the last ten years has been going from focusing on live audience and sponsorships to adding on a focus to various digital platforms. TV, particularly over the air TV, is still the most important part, but there are other audiences accessible in different forms. (Even international ones; there was a digression about their YouTube channel where Roldan mentioned they’ve got a lot of viewers from Russia and India is third on the list of countries watching their shows. Maybe I need to start listing the Mumbai start time for Twitch streams.) Roldan talked about seeing even just the different TV networks as reaching different people; the Azteca show is produced for children watching because of the afternoon timeslot. Roldan sees AAA owning their content and their intellectual property as important going forward; we’ve seen that in action more via lawsuits over the last decade.

Dorian Roldan mentioned that his dream show would’ve been in the US a few years ago, but now it is to run in Estadio Azteca. AAA is interested in having its performance center, explained as for international people. Roldan mentioned wrestlers from the rest of the world coming to Mexico to train and wants to have a central location to offer that for AAA. (There are other obvious advantages to having a training center; AEW & WWE were greatly helped in producing TV recently because they had buildings they owned.)

The most amusing part of the conversation that the interviewer didn’t know was amusing was when he asked Dorian Roldan for his favorite wrestler. Roldan diplomatically said it’s changed from various ones over time, then told a story about being a big Octagon fan when he was a child. It seems a pretty safe bet he’s not as much of one now. It is one of those things that’s hard to grasp if come to Mexican wrestling much later in life like me: Octagon seems like an out of shape guy who hasn’t had a good match in two decades, may never have had a great match outside of being along for the ride with Santo, Guerrero, and Barr. It’s so weird that people defend him on anything. He was just a lot of childhood hero for a lot of Mexican kids, and those feelings are tough to shake. (This may be rerun content, but it’s slow.)

Mohicano II mentioned Wednesday that Fernando Puentes passed away. The name comes up as one of the trainers of Oscar Sevilla/el Angel. Promociones Cantu also mentions him as the person who made the first gear for several people who came through Nuevo Laredo, including Laredo Kid & La Hiedra. He mentions Puentes wrestled as Magnum and Mascara Sagrada. (He’d know better, but I can’t figure out when he’d be Mascara Sagrada.)

El Fantasma announced a deal between the Mexico City commission and a local funereal parlor, should wrestlers or their families have that need.

Brazo de Oro Jr., Emperador Azteca, Hijo del Octagon, Galeno del Mal, Atlantis Jr., Bandido, and Hijo del Pirata Morgan will be participating in Hijo del Dr. Wagner Jr.’s FIFA tournament. Wagner credits Bandido with helping recruit people; it feels like he called a lot of his old ELITE friends. Atlantis Jr. is the only Big 2 promotion guy in this; I wonder if CMLL’s veto of being on the same show as AAA guys extends to YouTube FIFA tournaments?

07/03 Lucha Memes in Arena Lopez Mateos

It seems presumptuous to be advertising a show at this point, but Memes ended up running their last show with no one there and presumably will just do the same again should it be required.

There’s also the issue that the Arena Lopez Mateos fundraiser has reached only one-sixth of their funding goal. It’s got 12 days left and will not come close to meeting even their revised down target. I don’t know what happens next. (It does seem like the promoters who’ve used the building could’ve done more to promote the fundraiser since they have to look elsewhere if Arena Lopez Mateos shuts down, but I’m not sure it would’ve made a difference.)

Crazy Boy talks about the symbols on his mask.

LuchaTalk starts a look back at the top 15 luchadors of the decade.

MasLucha Torneo Supremo Round 1

flying Alebrije

Recapped: 05/05-6/2020

Demonio Infernal beat Cíclope
(13:48, ok, mluchatv)

What Happened: Payaso Purasanta and Jitsu both came out to be distractions at the end of the match, though they end up balancing each other out.

Review: Taking the fall onto the tiles stood on a slow-paced match. Ciclope wasn’t in any hurry, which early seemed to be a product of not taking Infernal seriously and alter just came off as just not being any hurry to do much. Demonio Infernal moved well when there was actual movement. The referee allowing some chair usage but stopping others didn’t make much sense. The run-ins made this a confusing pick to lead off this concept – and came off as if someone walked out too soon – but it’s not like they were disrupting a match that was firing along.

Ricky Marvin beat Miedo Extremo
(14:33, ok, +LuchaTV)

Angry Ricky Marvin took the form of a submission guy in this one, but Miedo Extremo’s inability in making those submissions look meaningful hut the match down soon. This is otherwise the usual Marvin indie format, with the younger guy getting a stretch of throwing everything he has at Marvin to pull the upset. It doesn’t work as well without a crowd to get behind Miedo and he’s not strong at come off as an underdog on his own. Miedo also spent the match going after Marvin’s knee, which serves a tournament long story for Ricky but not really this match.

Arez beat Payaso Purasanta Jr.
(11:46, ok, +LuchaTV)

I don’t think I’ve seen Purasanta Jr. outside of the FILL cibernetico, which makes it hard to tell how much he was affected by working in an empty arena. His control section of the match seemed to include a few spots playing to a non-existent crowd and not a lot of action. Purasanta did take the GTS knee right to the face, something a lot of people make look bad by bailing out on. He also was pretty suicidal on his flying legdrop to the floor, something that oddly led just to Arez charging Purasanta as he came back in (so Purasanta could do Arez’s finish.) There wasn’t anything here that made me want to see more of him. It was odd to see Arez do the NXT frustration face after getting in his first move in after minutes on the defense. Arez seemed tired at the end but this wasn’t the best out of him.

onto the tiles

Aramis beat Jitsu
(6:14, ok, +LuchaTV)

Jitsu/Aramis was closer to the style of match I tend to enjoy most, but they weren’t getting all the way there. It was the third straight match where the winner was good and the loser couldn’t keep up with the style of match he worked. Jistu came closer; he understood the idea, he just couldn’t make it work. Jitsu had a few agile spots that were close to looking good but only close. Falling out of Aramis’ torture rack was the moment that most hurt the rhythm of the match.

Fresero Jr. beat Corsario Negro Jr.
(7:36, ok, +LuchaTV)

The Eddie Guerrero tribute three suplex sequence is such a cliché mid-match bit that it threw me off to see it actually a finish. It also seemed to throw off the people in the match. Corsario & Fresero had the best match they were going to have under the circumstance, just hitting each other hard for a short period of time, and were a better match to do it than most of the first round matches. It was missing a bit of excitement, but there’s not a lot more they could’ve done about it.

Hip Hop Man beat Camuflaje
(10:23, ok, +LuchaTV)

Camuflaje & Hip Hop Man were both working rudo but also doing a lot of flying and it didn’t mesh into any particular story. It felt like two guys trying to do their version of a Best if Super Juniors match with mixed success. They were both fine, Hip Hop Man was a little better, Camuflaje needs to apologize to Elix Skipper for his Play of the Day attempt. I think they’ll remember this stronger than I will.

shoot style

Súper Nova beat Hijo del Alebrije
(6:49, ok, +LuchaTV)

They had to stop the match to check to see if Alebrije was ok after his match opening dive. It wasn’t exactly the best way to start when the idea is to build Alebrije as a flying star for this match. Nova was listed as tecnico but worked as the grounding rudo most of the match to build to that big comeback. It wasn’t really big enough to make it work, but maybe it’ll pay off building Super Nova round.

Hijo de Pirata Morgan beat Metaleón
(15:04, good, +LuchaTV)

There wasn’t a longer first-round match than Pirata/Metaleon. It never felt like it dragged. They paced it out well, with Metaleon fighting back through Pirata Morgans attacks every so often to keep it interesting. Hijo del Pirata comes off sound technically and showed some good aggressiveness along with a nice variety of attacks. Metaleon has had more spectacular performances but this was one where he fit the role the match was asking of him. Aramis might be even better at it, and I’m looking forward to how that one might go.

Pirata breaker