Box y Lucha 212A-215A (April 1956) recap

WordPress missed posting this one, so it’s going up out of order.

Box y Lucha is selling these magazines here and here.

There’s a left over Sunday result from 211A:

EMLL (SUN) 04/01/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 210A, Box y Lucha 211A]
1) Carnicero Grimaldo vs Bruno Lopez
2) Akio Yoshihara vs Red Man
3) Dr. Castro b El Bulldog
4) Joe Marín DQ Chale Romero
straight falls, DQs in both.
5) Black Shadow & Blue Demon DRAW Bobby Bonales & Gladiador
double pin with Shadow and Bonales.

Double pin finishes don’t come up often.

212A has the first Friday of April

EMLL (FRI) 04/06/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 211A]
1) Johnny Black vs El Gavilán
not listed in the results
2) Rogelio De La Paz b Carlos Segura
3) Chico Veloz b Dientes Hernández
4) Eduardo Bonada DRAW Moloch
5) Black Killer b Orquídea
Orquidea replaecd Fernando Oses
6) Dorrel Dixon b Joe Marín
7) Black Shadow & Blue Demon b Chale Romero & El Mongol
lots of topes to knock down the bigger man

Shadow & Demon remain the top tecnico team.

Nothing too notable on the Sunday show.

213A gets more interesting

EMLL (FRI) 04/13/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 212A, Box y Lucha 213A]
1) Taro Hito b Kid Vanegas
2) Sordomudo Quiroz b Rogelio De La Paz
3) Gorila Macías III DRAW Joaquin Murrieta
4) Oso Negro b Sordomudo Rodríguez
5) Joe Marín DQ El Mongol
6) Halcón Quintana b Frank Butcher
7) Rolando Vera b El Santo

Rolando Vera and Frank Butcher are notable names from that Televicentro rival promotion. Vera appeared in EMLL prior to that group starting, Butcher is making his debut. Vera is a tecnico through and through, impressing Box y Lucha not just with the win over El Santo but with his in-ring ability. Vera uses la reinera – set to be another Gory Guerrero invention – to win the first fall, and a cangrejo to submit Santo again in the third.

Box y Lucha immediately attempts to build up a NWA Middleweight Championship match, but Vera’s not interested. He declares he’s a light heavyweight and not a middleweight. The interview points out Vera is the current Occidente Middleweight Champion, and Vera says he values that title and not the NWA one. We think of those titles as Arena Coliseo Guadalajara in-house belts now, but they were originally Elias Simon’s championships and defended in a loop around western Mexico. Vera’s essentially saying he puts more weight on the rival promoter’s belts. Left unsaid is Vera has actually challenged and lost to Santo twice for that title in other locations. There’s more with those two coming.

EMLL (SUN) 04/15/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 212A, Box y Lucha 213A]
1) Carlos Segura b El Corzo
2) Chico Veloz b Red Man
3) Dr. Castro DQ Murciélago Velazquez
straight falls (one of them by DQ)
4) Chico Casasola & El Enfermero b Black Killer & Bobby Bonales
5) El Gladiador b Black Shadow
a savage battle

EMLL is getting Gladiador ready for bigger things, but it’s also maybe punishment for Black Shadow. He’s reportedly suspended two months by EMLL for no-showing a match on 04/12 in Ciudad Mante, Tamaulipas. Referee Eddie Palau is also suspended two weeks for trying to keep it quiet.

214A has Demon getting a new tag partner

EMLL (FRI) 04/20/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 213A, Box y Lucha 214A]
1) Mar Allah b Johnny Black
appears to have actually taken place after the main event
2) Red Man b Juan Diaz
3) Sordomudo Rodríguez b Chico Veloz
4) El Califa b Dr. Castro
5) Black Killer b Canelo Segura
6) Pepe Mendieta b Chico Casasola
Mendieta took ⅓, losing the second by DQ.
7) Blue Demon & Rolando Vera b Bobby Bonales & El Gladiador

Vera again looks super.

214A is published right before Arena Mexico opens. There’s a feature strongly praising Salvador Lutteroth, saying the promotion is as valuable as any of the wrestlers and the new building is proof of that. Capacity is listed as “25,000”, higher than any other estimate I’ve ever heard.

EMLL (FRI) 04/27/1956 Arena México [Box y Lucha 215A, CMLL, Lucha Libre 148]
1) Erick Bouloff b Carlos Segura
2) Canelo Segura b Dr. Castro
3) Black Killer b Manuel Robles
4) Joe Marín b El Califa
said to be best match on the show
5) Bobby Bonales b Gorilla Flores
6) El Gladiador b El Enfermero
7) El Santo & Medico Asesino b Blue Demon & Rolando Vera
Medico Aseisno debut in Arena Mexico. He had been a Televicentro star who wrestled independently and internationally following the demise of that group. (He wouldn’t be around long; those other places pay better, but Box y Lucha notices he’s got a big size advantage on his opponents.) Santo & Asesino took 2/3.

1930s/40s stars Firpo Segura, Tarzan Lopez and Dientes Hernandez make special appearances as part of the inauguration. Segura smashes a champagne bottle on the side of a ringpost as one might do for a new boat. EMLL has three ring announcers for the show Picoro, Maximiliano Aguilar and Alfredo Adam (who normally just did boxing.) Box y Lucha insists the attendance is 25,000 people and says EMLL broke the gate record with “over 100,000 pesos.” The Shadow/Santo mask match had that record at around 87,000 pesos.

Medico Asesino is clearly the biggest star from the Televicentro days, and seeing him team with El Santo is a gigantic deal. He’s also a heavyweight in a promotion full of smaller guys and stands out. Box y Lucha praises him in peculiar fashion: Medico knows about four moves but he’s so strong that he doesn’t really need to know more because he’s so big.

Manuel Robles eventually becomes EMLL’s Arena Puebla promoter, and his son now has the role.

The opener here again took place after the Santo/Asesino match, but you wouldn’t call it the main event. Bouloff goes back to at least 1937 and barely wrestles after this; he’s one last link to the earliest days of a promotion that’s grown greatly in it’s first 23 years. Carlos Segura is the son of Firpo Segura, who is seen in the (mostly empty) stands watching his son wrestle an opponent he wrestled long ago. Box y Lucha says Carlos is a long way from being Firpo.

In other news, that Black Shadow’s suspension will likely be lifted. EMLL received 50 letters from fans protesting the suspension. (Box y Lucha is always a big Black Shadow supporter.) While on hiatius, Shadow is rehabbing injuries and working on new moves. A new tope called “a ciegas” gets attention. It’s described like a reverse tope, and Black Shadow does start doing those after his return.

That’s it for April.

Box y Lucha 216A (May 1956) recap

Box y Lucha is selling this magazine here. Just one. Box y Lucha releases jump from 216A to 230A. I’m not sure why, and they haven’t given any indication if the missing issues will come turn up. I will redo this post if they do. I’ve got info from other magazines that I’ll use to fill this out.

EMLL (TUE) 05/01/1956 Arena México [Box y Lucha 214A, Box y Lucha 215A]
1) Mar Allah b José Munoz
2) Kiko Torres b Carlos Segura
straight falls
3) Dientes Hernández b Oso Negro
straight falls, first by DQ
4) Canelo Segura b Manuel Robles
bloody match
5) Bobby Bonales & El Gladiador b Chico Casasola & El Santo
match came down to Gladaidor beating El Santo

Box y Lucha pushes the idea that EMLL ran a special Tuesday Arena Mexico show so people who couldn’t make Fridays could still see the new building. There are regular Tuesday shows going forward.

Friday’s show is a one night tournament:

EMLL (FRI) 05/04/1956 Arena México [Box y Lucha 215A, Box y Lucha 216A]
1) Red Man b Bruno Lopez
actually took place after the main event
2) Akio Yoshihara b Juan Diaz
3) Manuel Robles b Murciélago Velazquez
4) Joe Marín & Pepe Mendieta b Bulldog & Gorilla Flores [quarterfinal]
5) Bobby Bonales & Gladiador b Rolando Vera & Tarzán López [quarterfinal]
6) Dorrel Dixon & Joe Grant b Chale Romero & El Califa [quarterfinal]
7) Enfermero & Medico Asesino b Carnicero Butcher & Mongol [quarterfinal]
8) Carnicero Butcher & Mongol b Bobby Bonales & Gladiador [semifinal]
9) Dorrel Dixon & Joe Grant b El Enfermero & Medico Asesino [semifinal]
10) Dorrel Dixon & Joe Grant b Bobby Bonales & Gladiador [final]
Dixon and Grant won trophies and 10,000 pesos

10,000 pesos seems a very high amount when the biggest gate is 100,000 pesos.

EMLL (SUN) 05/06/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 215A, Box y Lucha 216A]
1) Sombra Azul b Chico Hernández
2) Dientes Hernández b Fantomas
3) José Macias b Moloch
4) Canelo Segura & Chico Casasola b Dr. Castro & Emilio Charles
5) El Santo b El Gladiador [super libre]

Santo finally gets a pinfall over Gladiador into a super libre rematch.

It’s the semimain that has more news. Box y Lucha says Emilio Charles went out to dinner with a family before the show and had “two or three beers.” The commission doctor checked on Charles before the match, smelled the alcohol, and reported it. Charles still wrestled – said to be the best match on the show! – and partied after the show. He wasn’t informed of his suspension until after his Wednesday match in Acapulco.

I have a lineup for 05/11:

EMLL (FRI) 05/11/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 215A]
1) Gorila Osorio vs Taro Hito
2) Kiko Torres vs Ali Bey
3) Frankenstein vs Dr. Castro
4) Orquídea vs El Califa
5) Black Killer vs Joe Marín
6) Pepe Mendieta vs El Mongol
7) Dorrel Dixon & Joe Grant vs Enfermero & Medico Asesino

Medico Asesino & Enfermero getting a rematch with tournament winners on Dixon & Grant.

EMLL (SUN) 05/13/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 215A]
1) El Coyote vs Mar Ala
2) Carnicero Grimaldo vs Juan Diaz
3) Manuel Robles vs Chale Romero
4) El Mongol vs Halcón Negro
5) Chico Casasola & Santo vs Rolando Vera & Tarzán López

Sunday has Santo & Vera in the main event.

I’ve got nothing on 05/18. Another magazine has 05/25.

EMLL (FRI) 05/25/1956 Arena Coliseo [Punch 95]
1) Rogelio De La Paz b El Coyote
2) Juan Diaz b Gorila Osorio
3) Memo Rubio b Fantomas
4) El Mongol b Gorilita Flores
5) El Santo b Gran Markus
debut of Markus
6) Tarzán López b Carnicero Butcher
7) Rolando Vera b Bobby Bonales
Vera took 2/3

With those names, the tease in the battle royal is for Santo and Vera again, but they end up in separate matches.

 

Box y Lucha 207A-211A (March 1956) recap

Box y Lucha is selling these magazines here.

Picking up with issue 207A. I’m not really sure why these issue numbers have A.

EMLL (FRI) 03/02/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 206A, Box y Lucha 207A]
1) Ángel Negro b Chamaco Vega
2) Jalisco González TLDRAW José Macias
30 minute draw
3) Daniel Aldana b Ali Bey
4) Halcón Negro b Black Killer [quarterfinal]
5) Joe Grant b Ray Mendoza [quarterfinal]
6) El Gladiador b Gorilla Flores [quarterfinal]
7) Blue Demon b Fernando Oses [quarterfinal]
8) Halcón Negro b Joe Grant [semifinal]
9) El Gladiador b Blue Demon [semifinal]
10) Halcón Negro b El Gladiador [final]

This is sort of a low wattage Friday. Blue Demon is here, Gladiador is pushed a lot but the one night (battle royal driven) tournament is the biggest draw.

There are more names on the Friday show.

EMLL (SUN) 03/04/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 206A, Box y Lucha 207A]
1) Mar Allah b Rudy Tinoco
2) Ed Mangoetech b Carlos Segura
straight falls
3) Akio Yoshihara DQ Canelo Segura
straight falls, second by DQ
4) Carlos Moreno b Chale Romero
5) El Enfermero & El Santo b Blue Demon & Joe Marín

It appears EMLL is running just Friday and Sundays at this point.

The magazine includes an update with Tarzan Lopez, who says the previous report about his injuries were overplayed. He is hurt, but not seriously, and he’s not in any danger of retiring.

Onto issue 208A

EMLL (FRI) 03/09/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 207A, Box y Lucha 208A]
1) Rogelio De La Paz b Gorila Osorio
2) Fantomas b Juan Diaz
3) Sordomudo Rodríguez b Dientes Hernández
return of Rodirguez
4) Dr. Castro DRAW Oso Negro
return of Oso Negro. Said to be a great match.
5) Fernando Oses b Canelo Segura
6) Joe Marín b Gorilita Flores
7) El Santo & Enfermero b Dorrel Dixon & Joe Grant
Santo gets the win after he and Gori were DQed last week. Article talks about how Enfermero learned his new hold from Buddy Rodgers

Santo gets the win back over Dixon & Grant from two weeks ago, with Enfermero instead of Gory Guerrero. The magazine puts over the new hold Enfermero is using – La Cruzeta – that’s proven effective. Enfermero says he saw Buddy Rodgers using it on a trip to Los Angeles and worked out how to do it in the gym. It’s kind of a figure four with the attacker using his arms to cross the legs rather than his own legs.

Rogelio de la Paz would later become La Sombra Vengadora, after a movie character. Fernando Oses actually did the wrestling scenes in the movie, but was too busy to take the character in the ring. At least one other person would use the character, possibly without permission. It’ll come up later.

A notes column mentions Monterrey promoter Chucho Garza is promoting new versions of Medico Asesino and Enfermero. Everyone, in the magazine and the wrestling industry, is aghast at the idea of putting new people in old gimmicks.

In 209A:

EMLL (FRI) 03/16/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 208A, Box y Lucha 209A]
1) Pery Lopez b Taro Hito
may have taken place after the main event
2) El Pirata b Rogelio De La Paz
3) Eduardo Bonada b Fantomas
4) Oso Negro b Akio Yoshihara
5) Gorilita Flores b Fernando Oses
6) El Mongol b Chico Casasola
debut of Mongol
7) El Enfermero & El Santo b Black Shadow & Blue Demon
Santo & Enfermero took ⅔.

Santo & Enfermero keep on winning.

Box y Lucha notes here the first match listed here (Lopez/Hito) actually took place after the main event. This gets brought up from time to time in other 1956/1957 cards. Other shows just never mention that “opener” result, which makes me think it was probably standard practice that it wasn’t worth bringing up every week (or sticking around for it.) There’s never an explanation for why it’s happening. My theory is crowd control, to keep some of the people in the building so it would be a smaller congestion out the door and onto the streets. These post-main event matches are referred to as “super estrellas”, which is now the name CMLL uses to refer to their actual main events. I’ve kept them listed as the openers because that’s how the cards list them.

EMLL (FRI) 03/23/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 209A, Box y Lucha 210A, Box y Lucha 237A]
1) Kid Vanegas b Bruno Lopez
actually happened after the main event
2) Carnicero Grimaldo b Sordomudo Quiroz
3) Akio Yoshihara b Dientes Hernández
4) Oso Negro b Orquídea
5) Carlos Moreno b Ray Mendoza
best match of the night
6) Chale Romero & El Mongol b Halcón Negro & Joe Marín
Halcon Negro also listed as Halcon Quintana
7) Enfermero CO Black Shadow
Black Shadow has Enfermero beat with a tope but referee Rudy Blancarte is out of the ring due to a neck injury. Shadow tries another tope, Enfermero moves out of the way, and Shadow can not stand before 20.

“Tope”s at this point at more running in the ring headbutts, not the dives that are technically “tope suicida”

Box y Lucha says Black Shadow is filming a movie about his life, which means he’s put his mask back on for scenes for the movie. El Santo was offered a spot in the movie as part of including the mask match but declined. (Box y Lucha implies it was a money issue.) Medico Asesino is instead wrestling as “El Enmascarado de Plata”, the name used in a previous movie This is only 1956, so wrestling movies are a thing, but El Santo himself has not appeared in a movie yet. That’s still a couple years off.

EMLL (SUN) 03/25/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 209A, Box y Lucha 210A, Box y Lucha 237A]
1) Mar Ala b Rocky Man
2) Daniel Aldana b Joaquin Murrieta
3) Gorila Macias II DRAW Dr. Castro
4) Dorrel Dixon b Gorilla Flores
5) Blue Demon & Tarzán López b Gladiador & The Black Killer

Blue Demon is having issues with his right eye, an injury originally suffered against Ray Mendoza in Mendoza’s EMLL debut match. Blue Demon end up with a long list of injuries during his career.

Box y Lucha 211 covers the last “Friday” of this match.

EMLL (SAT) 03/31/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 210A, Box y Lucha 211A, Box y Lucha 237A]
1) Taro Hito b Mar Ala
2) Juan Diaz b El Corzo
3) Chico Veloz DRAW Kiko Torres
4) Sordomudo Rodríguez b Orquídea
5) Pepe Mendieta b Black Killer
6) Halcón Negro b El Mongol
7) El Santo & Enfermero b Dorrel Dixon & Joe Grant

This is a Saturday show, which appears to be related to Easter even though Easter is actually April 1st. Box y Lucha calle it a Noche de Judas for the rudos winning the main event, the third match between those teams.

That’s it for March

Box y Lucha 205A & 206A (February 1956) recap

Box y Lucha started releasing digital sets of 1950s magazines in August 2023. The sets themselves jumped around a bit; these weren’t the first magazines released but they’re the earliest by original publish date so far. I’m going to continue to do month by month recaps, focusing on the Friday shows. Some of these might end up pretty short.

We don’t have a lot of history from the 1950s; a lot of it is later magazines recapping this period, and it’s not only complete. My general sense of 1956 is enough time has passed that both the Televicentro/EMLL war and the denouncement (no lucha on TV or women wrestling in Mexico City) are firmly in the past and everyone’s moved on. It’s still the 50s though, so the stars of that war are largely still the biggest names and some of the business practices from that battle are still intact. EMLL and other promoters – Elias Simon of Guadalajara most mentioned – are signing wrestlers to exclusive contracts, seemingly for a few months at a time. EMLL keeps most of “their” guys around, with wrestlers who became stars in the rival promotion coming in and out. 

These issues are part of this Box y Lucha Diamante collection set.

The champs as of February 1956:

  • NWA Welterweight: Blue Demon
  • NWA Middleweight: El Santo

(The NWA Light Heavyweight will not come to Mexico until 1960. There are no EMLL tag or trios titles at this point.)

All of that and I’ve only got two Fridays to talk about. We can pick up with the February 17th show.

EMLL (FRI) 02/17/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 205A, Box y Lucha 237A]
1) Carnicero Grimaldo b Mara
2) Chico Veloz b El Corzo
3) Dr. Castro b Fantomas
4) Fernando Oses b Murciélago Velazquez
5) Ray Mendoza b Jalisco González
Ray Mendoza’s first win in Arena Coliseo
6) Halcón Negro & Tarzán López b Carlos Moreno & Gorilita Flores
7) Blue Demon © b El Enfermero [NWA WELTER]
Enfermero has Demon in a hold but Demon is in the ropes, Enfermero argues with the referee, Demon topes him and wins.

This is the latter stage of Arena Coliseo being EMLL’s top building; Arena Mexico is a couple of months from opening. El Enfermero finishes revolving around a referee issue becomes a reoccurring bit, and it will set up another title match later this year.

In my mind, Ray Mendoza has always been the younger partner of Rene Guajardo and Karloff Lagarde. In reality, he’s established in EMLL before those two. It just takes him a little longer to make progress.

Dr. Castro appears to be Max Linares, the future Rayo de Jalisco. He’ll be this identity for a while yet.

EMLL (FRI) 02/24/1956 Arena Coliseo [Box y Lucha 205A, Box y Lucha 206A]
1) Rudy Castillo vs Bruno Lopez
2) Sordomudo Quiroz vs El Pirata
3) Dientes Hernández vs Fernando Oses
4) Eduardo Bonada vs El Califa
5) Akio Yoshihara vs Orquídea
6) El Gladiador b Chale Romero
7) Dorrel Dixon & Joe Grant DQ El Santo & Gori Guerrero

Box y Lucha only recaps the top two matches. Santo & Guerrero loss by excessive violence DQ – for putting on La Estrella! The referee rules that putting on the two man star hold is illegally two men in at the same time, I guess. I had no idea that hold went back to the 50s and can’t think of it ever being a DQ. Dixon claims in the post match that he is such a big admirer of Santo that he had trouble fighting him here.

Gori Guerrero is around for the month of February before disappearing from Mexico City (at least the portion we have recorded.) It seems that way the previous few years, but we’re missing far more in those years. Guerrero is still a few years away from quitting EMLL entirely but it seems like he wasn’t interested in working there much even prior.

Tarzan Lopes and Gori Guerrero have a singles match on 02/25 in Arena Puebla. Box y Lucha reports Lopez suffered an injury “three broken ribs and dislocated neck.” A dislocated neck sounds like death. Lopez is hurt but those injuries are not correct.

That’s all for February.