CMLL on Televisa: 1995-02-04 & 02-11

Hector Garza

Recapped: 2020-07-14

I’m starting at looking at 1995 episodes of CMLL TV, but I think I’m just going to end up bouncing through whatever 90s one I can find when I have a chance to do this.

Brazo de Oro beat Gran Markus Jr. © for the Mexico City Heavyweight Championship
(CMLL 01/31 @ 17:32, good, Roy Lucier CMLL)

What Happened: The Mexico City heavyweight championship – literally a title just for the city – would pop up in CMLL from time to time as a midlevel heavyweight championship. I had Brazo de Oro listed as the champion here, but he’s definitely challenging and this is the title change.

Review: [good] A solid technical title match. I didn’t know what to expect given my experience with these two men is mostly when they were much older. It didn’t look good when it started with some slow mat wrestling. It got much better than there. In 1995, they’re surprising agile big men with decent speed and good drama. Gran Markus was easily getting up and down and Brazo moved around like a much smaller man. This isn’t a match of big moves, but the finish caught me by surprise nicely. Much better than I thought looking at the match listing, closer to being great.

Héctor Garza, La Fiera, Silver King beat Black Magic, Dr. Wagner Jr., Emilio Charles Jr.
(CMLL @ 02/03, 13:46, ok, Roy Lucier CMLL)

There’s a strong first fall and a good ending in this trios match, and a lot of running clothesline spots that make the match tedious in between. Silver King appears out to lunch at the end of the first fall, struggling setting up his own finish and then forgetting to go for the pin. Garza, Emilio and Black Magic are more positive standouts. It ended up fine enough but nothing worth seeking out.

back when Dr. Wagner had knees

El Hijo del Solitario, Kato Kung Lee, Shocker beat Arkángel de la Muerte, Cachorro Mendoza, Felino
(CMLL @ 02/07, 14:17, ok, Roy Lucier CMLL

Slow and not so interesting. You can see Arkangel looking a lot more agile than he would end up, and Kato Kung Lee still showing flashes of his own mobility. It just doesn’t go anywhere outside of that match up. It ends suddenly and anticlimactically with an Arkangel foul. Pass.

Negro Casas, Silver King, Vampiro beat Bestia Salvaje, Dr. Wagner Jr., El Hijo Del Gladiador
(CMLL @ 02/10, 16:59, ok, Roy Lucier CMLL)

A tedious encounter despite some individual good wrestlers. The first fall goes really long for no reason, and the third fall seems like they edited out the comeback. Or maybe just worked a weird match. Vampiro and Wagner did not seem to be getting along at all; Wagner was clearly upset with Vampiro after he refused to do a spot on the floor late in the second fall and kept at him about it.

great match roundup, april/may/june-ish

Pre-Pandemic catchups

Pandemic wrestling

Some stuff didn’t get recap posts. I wrote about the IWRG Rey del Ring Part 1 in this news post, and Lucha Memes second empty arena show, KAOZ’s first set of PPVs and Vanguardia’s 06/20 Land of Opportunity show here. I didn’t write a proper recap for the 04/01 Vanguardia but there’s nothing that I thought highly of from that show.

Getting the Google Drive running (before Comcast took away unlimited bandwidth ) took up a lot of my time in May and June, to the point where I’ve spent the start of July at a loss as to what I should be doing. I’ve settled on manually adding the GoogleDrive links to the database so they can show up as links. That’ll take a while.

As mentioned a few times, I’ve lost interest in watching most empty arena shows. I’m going to stick with the Vanguardia shows because there’s at least a wrestler attached to the Paypal donation account there and they’re trying hard to make them interesting. I’m sure I’ll jump on the Mas Lucha channel at some point, like when there’s more than one show there. There will eventually be CMLL & AAA empty arena wrestling but I’m otherwise past the point where I’m going to watch a show just because it exists. There are other people who will tell you if a match is worth watching or not, it doesn’t help you if I’m watching something I’m not interested in.

I’ve been thinking about diving in 1995 CMLL, based on what Roy’s putting up and it’s just another thing that doesn’t have much detailed information on it available. But I’m not sure if I’ll commit to it or when that might start.

Instead of figuring out some way to display grades from those recaps above, here’s a list of the best matches so far this year.

excellent

03-01 Villano III Jr. vs Aéreo for the mask Aéreo vs Villano III Jr. - Máscara vs Máscara - Lucha Juárez, Gimnasio Josué Neri Santos (posted by +LuchaTV) Aéreo vs Villano III Jr., máscara contra máscara en Lucha Juárez *Lucha Completa* (posted by +LuchaTV) Máscara vs Máscara, en Lucha Juárez | +Lucha Sunday Night (posted by mluchatv) Villano III Jr vs Aéreo ¡¡¡ MÁSCARA vs MÁSCARA !!! Desde el Gimnasio Nery Santos en Cd. Juárez. (posted by Estrellas del Ring)

great

01-10 Atlantis Jr., Star Jr., Valiente vs Hechicero, Rey Bucanero, Templario LUCHA LIBRE VIERNES ESPECTACULAR DE ARENA MEXICO 10 DE ENERO DE 2020 FUNCION COMPLETA (posted by VideosOficialesCMLL)
01-14 Drone vs TemplarioRey CometaKawato SanPríncipe DiamanteAkumaBlack PantherHijo del SignoStar Jr.VirusEsfingeDisturbio in a CMLL’s Reyes del Aire Tournament match Disturbio Cmll Torneo Reyes del Aire (posted by Princesa Dorada) Disturbio Cmll Torneo Reyes del Aire (posted by Princesa Dorada) LUCHA LIBRE MARTES DE NUEVOS VALORES EN LA ARENA MEXICO 14 DE ENERO DE 2020 FUNCION COMPLETA (posted by VideosOficialesCMLL)
01-18 Dinámico vs Baby Extreme | #TheCrashLuchaLibre | Dinamico vs Baby Xtreme | (posted by Arena Clandestina)
01-20 Carístico © vs Bárbaro Cavernario for the NWA World Middleweight Championship
01-25 Big Mami & Niño Hamburguesa vs Dinastía & Vanilla and Arez & Keyra and Lady Maravilla & Villano III Jr. © for the AAA World Mixed Tag Team Championship Campeonato en Parejas Mixtas AAA en CDMX | LO MEJOR | Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide (posted by Lucha Libre AAA) Lady Maravilla Villano III Jr Vs Big Mami Niño Hamburguesa Vs Keyra Arez Vs Vanilla Dinastía en AA (posted by La Tijera Lucha Libre) NACEMOS PARA LUCHAR: CIUDAD DE MÉXICO Parte 1 | PROGRAMA COMPLETO | Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide (posted by Lucha Libre AAA)
01-31 Soberano Jr. vs Templario in a lightning match LUCHA LIBRE VIERNES ESPECTACULAR DE ARENA MEXICO 31 DE ENERO DE 2020 FUNCION COMPLETA (posted by VideosOficialesCMLL)
02-01 Bandido (Indie) & Flamita vs Arez & Látigo
02-01 Rey Hechicero vs Erick Ortiz
02-01 Blake Christian vs JimmyAramisIron Kid (Estado de México)Baby Extreme
02-03 Aramis vs Látigo Aramis vs Látigo 03/02/20 (posted by ) Aramis vs Látigo - Lucha Memes vs Mexa Wrestling - Coliseo Coacalco (posted by +LuchaTV)
02-08 Hijo de LA Park & LA Park Jr. vs Súper Fly & Villano III Jr. and Myzteziz Jr. & Octagón Jr. L.A Park Jr e Hijo de L.A Park Vs Octagon Jr y Myzteziz Jr Vs Super Fly y Villano III Jr (posted by ENTRE SEGUNDA Y TERCERA) NACEMOS PARA LUCHAR: QUERÉTARO Parte 1 | PROGRAMA COMPLETO | Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide (posted by Lucha Libre AAA)
02-08 Hijo Del Vikingo, Puma King, Rey Horus vs Rey Escorpión, Taurus, Texano Jr. NACEMOS PARA LUCHAR: QUERÉTARO Parte 2 | PROGRAMA COMPLETO | Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide (posted by luchalibreaaatv) Puma King, Hijo del Vikingo y Rey Horus Vs Texano Jr, Taurus y Rey Escorpion con La Hiedra (posted by ENTRE SEGUNDA Y TERCERA)
02-22 Hijo Del Vikingo, Myzteziz Jr., Octagón Jr. vs Averno, Chessman, Rey Escorpión NACEMOS PARA LUCHAR: TONALÁ Parte 2 | PROGRAMA COMPLETO | Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide (posted by Lucha Libre AAA)
02-22 Bandido (Indie) & Dragón Lee (Indie) vs Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham | #TheCrashLuchaLibre | Bandido & Dragón Lee vs Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham | (posted by Arena Clandestina) 5a Lucha Jay Lethal, Jonathan Greshan VS Dragon Lee, Bandido (posted by Tijuana Pro Wrestling) Bandido y dragón Lee VS jay lethal y Jonathon Gresham (posted by Lucha Vlogs) BANDIDO Y DRAGÓN LEE VS JONATHAN GRESHAM Y JAY LETHAL (posted by Baja Wrestling) Dragon Lee y Bandido vs Jay Lethal y Jonathan Gresham - The Crash Lucha Libre (posted by +LuchaTV)
02-23 Volador Jr. vs Negro Casas  (posted by )
03-08 Arez vs Aramis Aramis vs Arez | 08/03/2020 (posted by Lucha Memes) Arez vs Aramis, Chairo Kingdom 2 (posted by mluchatv)
04-05 Alas de Acero & Iron Kid vs Cobre & Moria and Corsario Negro Jr. & Drako Chairo Bill Vol. 5 - Lucha Memes c/ T.W.E. desde el Coliseo Coacalco | #QuédateEnCasa (posted by +LuchaTV) La Fortaleza vs Los Kamikazes vs Moria - Chairo Bill - Arena Coacalco (posted by mluchatv)
04-18 LA Park vs Laredo Kid LUCHA LIBRE AAA: Lucha Fighter LIVE | EPISODIO 2 #QuédateEnCasa (posted by Lucha Libre AAA)
04-18 Pentagón Jr. vs Hijo Del Vikingo LUCHA LIBRE AAA: Lucha Fighter LIVE | EPISODIO 3 #QuédateEnCasa (posted by Lucha Libre AAA)
04-18 Pentagón Jr. vs Psycho Clown LUCHA LIBRE AAA: Lucha Fighter LIVE | EPISODIO 4 #QuédateEnCasa (posted by Lucha Libre AAA)

Lucha Memes: 2020-03-08

I miss this

Recapped: 07/07/2020

These are the three matches from March 8th in Coacalco, posted on the promotion’s YouTube channel.

Virus vs Judas el Traidor
(13:11, ok, Lucha Memes)

Virus/Judas felt a little aimless. They did some holds early, definitely wanted to do the board spots to set up Judas bleeding, and they had a lot of near falls. It didn’t combine too well, though it was hard-hitting for while it lasted. Judas wasn’t particularly impressive on his own and Virus seems to work at whatever level he’s presented with on indie matches. The crowd enjoyed this one a lot more than me, so maybe it’s me.

Ricky Marvin vs Perro de Guerra
(12:41, ok, Lucha Memes)

Perro de Guerra’s surprise offense to start the match is a good idea with not well-executed moves. Ricky Marvin’s stomps to the face putting to stop him look a hundred times more viscous. The idea of all these Memes Marvin matches are his opponents aren’t in his league, but Guerra isn’t close enough to make this believable competitive. Perro gets better on his comeback but the early portions to the match are so that it feels weird he even gets a comeback. He lacked the speed or intensity for this sort of match. Marvin hits a lot harder and seemed frustrated at times. Guerra did take a beating well but this wasn’t even one-sided enough to be memorable.

Arez vs Aramis
(let’s say 13:35 but it’s confusing, great, Lucha Memes)

The first five minutes of this are the best Ares & Aramis have been as opponents. They’re almost too good; people who aren’t used to seeing them may get lost in the reversals and counters. The sprint pace they’re going seems to tire them out a bit after the first five minutes, but they still finish really strong. 2020 isn’t overwhelming with top lucha libre matches for obvious reasons but this would definitely have belonged in that conversation had it ended there. It does not end there, with the match going through two superfluous extra falls, like a CMLL big match in reverse. The crowd ended the original match in approval and ends up laughing at the absurdity of the extra falls, through no obvious fault of the wrestlers This was an attempt to make up for wrestlers missing the show, but it actively made the match worse by trying to give it something extra. The place where Lucha Memes can most easily improve are the match finishes. Messy finishes work better with a heavy storyline promotion, a dream match group needs to deliver clean results to maintain that dream, combining both serves neither goal. The biggest enemy of the guy booking Lucha Memes shows is the guy deciding the finishes for the Lucha Memes, which is an easier problem to fix when it’s the same guy.

some thoughts on watching the 2020 wXw 16 Carat

I haven’t watched much of wXw in the past, maybe just a match here or there. They’re in the big pile of wrestling I’d probably enjoy if I took the time to watch, but there are limits to time. There’s a little more time right now, so I kept their three-day tournament in reserve for when I needed something with actual fans in attendance to watch. This year’s tournament features Bandido, Black Taurus, and Puma King as Mexican guests. What I knew about this year’s shows was the tournament overall being good, though the winner wasn’t well-received, and there was drama around the losers leaves town match. Other places (use your Google) can explain that stuff better than I; I’m mostly focusing on the lucha libre part.

You can watch this show, and all of wXw, at wXwNow. You need a Vimeo account, and it costs 10 Euros ($11.34 USD) a month. Some of their content also shows up on other wrestling promotion Pivotshares account.

(spoilers for two-month-old matches)

Day 1:

lucha libre matches
The Rotation beat Puma King [good]
El Bandido beat Julian Pace [good]
Shigehiro Irie beat Black Taurus [good]

Rotation versus Puma was along the lines of a Puma King versus CMLL flying tecnico lightning match, setting up Rotation well and surprising the fans with some of his usual spots. Rotation has some lucha experience from his time with DTU, and they meshed well. Bandido might have done a little more than he needed to in the first round of the tournament, as far as pulling out all of his big moves, but he made Julian Pace look great for surviving them. Pace does a race car bit, though running around a lot set up a dropkick has to end with a better dropkick than he did here. He did fine otherwise. Irie & Taurus gave the crowd exactly what they wanted out of that match, two bigger guys running in each other a lot. They smartly saved Taurus doing his in-ring tornillo until the end, when I don’t think the crowd was expecting something like that. I would’ve liked to see more of Taurus in this tournament, but Irie’s around wXw much more, it’s tough to find fault in any of the outcomes with these matches.

Day 2:

Mike Bailey beat Bandido [excellent]
Taurus & Puma King participated in a tag team gauntlet [good I guess]

Bailey & Bandido was the match of the weekend. The crowd was fired up for it existing at all, to the point where they seemed to be over-enthused to things early. The match caught up the reactions and surpassed them. It’s very much a match of how far they can go, but both are great drawing the crowd in on how very close the match is to being over. Bailey’s been very good for a while, but I haven’t watched him regularly since his trivia note 2015 AAA stint. He’s clearly improved a great deal, mixing his martial arts character with more traditional (or at least indie) professional wrestling. Bailey showed a lot more personality as a heel on the third day than I was expecting. As much as I like Vikingo, Speedball’s the best guy who can’t work the US right now.

The tag team gauntlet was lengthy on a very long show (nearly four hours, with a forty-minute main event). Taurus and Avalanche was a big guy team put in advantageous spots and taking advantage of them. It was sad to see them go away, even if they probably could’ve used a break after four mini-matches.

Day 3:

Jeff Cobb, El Bandido, Julian Pace b Black Taurus, Puma King, Hektor Invictus [great]

This looks fun in printed and turned out better in reality. It was a light match just there to be entertaining on a show with a lot of gravity seriousness. It was also on with everyone hard to get in one last strong performance before the weekend ended. Taurus was the best guy, being a destructive force when he needed to be and making the tecnicos look super. Bandido has a brighter presence, and the crowd reacted to him as a major star all weekend, but Taurus was the man of this match. Between this weekend and his AAW debut scheduled a couple of weeks later, it feels like Black Taurus was about to break out outside of Mexico. No idea what happens now.

I saw a lot of Julian Pace’s running dropkick spot this weekend. I’m not sure it went correctly anytime. It’s not a great bit. Pace’s bits with Jeff Cobb went a lot better. The wXw guys fit in despite the unfamiliarity. It was weird as a person who’s watched too much PWG to see Bandido & Jeff Cobb teaming, but Cobb finally got to do the finger gun to someone else, so that was great for him.

OTHER THOUGHTS

I watched everything on all three shows, even the dark match (sort of by accident to be honest), though I wasn’t as actively watching everything. Ten hours of wrestling is a lot, even when there’s not a lot going on. I’d recommend both the Kingston/Makabre and Kingston/Rotation matches as my other favorite tournament matches. The Ishikawa/Thatcher vs. Ikeda/WALTER gave the fans the match they wanted. Starr/Gunns seems review-proof; either you’ve already watched it because you care about the story or you’re not going to invest 40 minutes in it no matter what anyone says. Forty minutes is a long time to invest in a match; I find myself getting cranky when matches go 20 minutes unless I’m really invested in it.

Cara Noir. I don’t know. I was not sold on this whole thing. I knew of Cara Noir but had not seen him, and the presentation here was as if we were all supposed to be in awe of Cara Noir already. I was not and didn’t feel at the end either. The announcers explained Cara Noir as seeing wrestling as art. He’s committed to that idea, but the idea is also a strong reason why I’m not much into his matches. The selling of limp mute death for the first half of the match only to fire up like an 80s babyface every time just wasn’t a captivating performance. (It’s one of those weird modern mixes where the performer has put in deep thought to every action he’s taking as part of a story, though none of that story is evident to a heathen like me just watching it. It’s also one where none of that story matters about 15 minutes in when they reset to full strength to make their hot moves.) None of the Cara Nori matches were terrible, none of them would be recommended, and the final match was the biggest struggle at all. The mid-match conversations were meant to dramatic but mostly ended up as frustrating breaks out of the moment. It’s a WWE & NXT overdone thing, a reason I’ve not watched many of their recent high profile matches. It’s distressing to see the concept spread elsewhere. I’ve just spent a paragraph or three raving about a man in a bull mask, so I can’t really be against unusual attempts at gimmicks, but Cara Noir’s balance between being a character and a wrestler is off.

There was generally less obvious overt WWE/NXT influence on this shows than I would’ve expected. Given the general negative sentiment towards those brands on the European wrestling twitter accounts I see, it was surprising to hear a brief NXT chant (and for those people to escape with their lives.) Alexander Wolfe used that name, but he and Walter were still billed as RINGKAMPF, not required to be Imperium. I kept thinking about how that’d be different if this were an Evolve show. WWE certainly loomed as presence over departures (and returns), but it was not a visible one.

The difference in production with wXw and most lucha libre is just astounding. It’s an unfair comparison: wXw is selling a video product, most lucha libre (everything besides AAA) is just doing a simple video for the sake of doing it. The production still feels like worth noting: the building set up looked great, the announcing had done their homework, and the captioning was a godsend. (This is hard to explain, but even though the wXw announcers may not have been native English speakers, I felt like they got the cadence and style of announcing I’m used to hearing from US-based announcers in a way I don’t get from Mexican groups when they try to do English.) I would also buy the people who captioned the show a coffee or a beer if I knew how because it made such a difference in enjoying the show. Having production credits at the end of each file was a little thing that kind of blew my mind. There are nits to pick bit, but this felt like the gold standard in that production regard.

Mexa Wrestling: 2020-03-14

totally unnecessary but still kinda cool

Recapped: 2020-05-04

This is a pre-shutdown show that I took forever to get to and then a month more to post. I’ve included the two matches left off the +LuchaTV version.

Matches:

Águila Oriental, Dinámico, Noicy Boy, Spider Fly vs Dick Angelo 3G, Legendario, Shere Khan, Zika
(8:13. ok, Estrellas del Ring)

Video Note: There’s an edit point early but it otherwise seems clean.

This is the Mexa Boys versus a quartet of other youngsters who pop up in Arena San Juan. Brothers Dick Angelo & Legendario usually are opponents in IWRG. These many inexperienced guys create expected issues: they have no idea what to do between their cool spots but they’re doing their cool spots. It doesn’t click as well because there’s no one there to keep it moving early on, but it never falls apart like something like this might. It’s a borderline match and something they should be happy with at this stage. Spider Fly doing Spider suplexes is amusing but I can’t believe that’s happening on purpose.

nice team work on the dropkick

Black Warrior Jr. & Hijo de Mano Negra vs Atomic Star & Baby Star vs Canibal King & Teelo
(9:00, ok, Estrellas del Ring)

Remember when Hijo de Mano Negra was teased to debut in CMLL and then just didn’t. I think of that when CMLL trots out new people on the pandemic. Anyway, Mano Negra was better than Warrior Jr., who was not much good at all. There was some good action but no real direction with six guys trying to hurry through spots in a short period of time.

Warrior excelling as a boost

Hahastary vs Perla Lagunera vs Sucii Love
(7:22, ok, +LuchaTV)

This was sloppy at times, but Sucii Love and Perla Lagunera showed a lot more than I was expecting. Everyone tried a little bit of flying with some mixed results; it seemed to go better for Lagunera out of the two non-regulars. Seeing Hahastary as the big star both the outsiders were trying to take down was quite a shift from usual. The execution of the offense needed to be improved but the effort was definitely there.

everyone down

Trauma I & Trauma II vs Centvrión & Metaleón
(12:46, good, mluchatv)

Good intense brawl intended as the build-up to bigger things, though who knows if they’ll get there. I feel like I’ve either missed or forgotten many steps here: Centvrion/Metaleon went from feuding for an imminent mask match to wearing matching gear out of nowhere to me. The gear looked good and they were good as a team, though better as Trauma victims early on. Hidden highlights of this match were Metaleon stripping off his top to chop fight Trauma I, only for Trauma I to forearm him in the face repeatedly. The Traumas don’t play around.

the front row of Arena San Juan is dangerous

Negro Casas vs Fulgor I
(6:51, good, mluchatv)

Given the limitations of Negro Casas on indie shows in 2020, I enjoyed his match here with Fulgor. Casas just annoyed and frustrated Fulgor’s attempts to do most of what he wanted, leading to Fulgor just snapping and costing himself the match. Negro Casas won via trolling. It led to a stop and start match a lot, but it was a good story for where these two guys are at. This is not a match for moves, it just made sense in the end. Fulgor took a great flip bump on Casas’s dropkick and his entrance gear looked good.

Casas still does this sell better than anyone in Mexico

Dragón Bane, Hijo de Canis Lupus, Séptimo Dragón vs Arcángel Divino, Baby Xtreme, Último Maldito
(17:46, good, mluchatv)

This was all moves in the expected style from these six guys, over a longer stretch than they usually go. They might have been able to put together a better peaking match with a few fewer minutes, but they go to do all the wanted to do. Hijo del Canis Lupus & Dragon Bane against Arcangel Divino & Ultimo Maldito feels like a touring indie match if the indies worked that way in Mexico. I thought Baby Extreme looked more interesting than them, but those four fit together well. For an all-action match, there were a few too many moments where everyone was standing around and doing nothing (either waiting for someone to come back in or trying to figure out what they were doing.) It’s still very fun if you’re just looking for moves though.

Banesault

Fly Warrior, Príncipe Aéreo, Puma de Oro vs Fly Star, Lunatik Xtreme, Sobredosis in a super libre match
(19:37, ok, mluchatv)

This one lost me when it took so long for the tecnicos to make a comeback – longer than the first three matches entirely. The comeback featuring dives that went wrong didn’t help and there’s plenty of blood. Watching this one out of context probably doesn’t help me, it feels like the end of a heated feud that I’ve completely missed. Credit to the person who got Puma de Oro a usable mask mid-match, no credit for stopping the match for a minute to set up prop spots. This one wasn’t for me. I needed a scorecard to figure out who was on who’s side in the post-match scrum; it is helpful they all ended up with matching shirts in the end.

that poor trash can

IAW Batalla de los Barrio: 2020-04-25

Latigo showing off with a llave

Recapped: 2020-04-25

Matches:

This is a one-day tournament taking place in CAR The Crash. The videos themselves were released one a day.

This is a tournament where each people representing different areas of Mexico City and Mexico State, like the same as the Lucha Libre Vanguardia tournament of a similar name. I think there might have been a battle royal to set up brackets, but it didn’t seem necessary to watch.

Látigo beat Kunay in a quarterfinal
(10:32, good, Lucha Army Tv)

La Fuerza beat Príncipe Azteca Jr. in a quarterfinal
(10:33, ok, Lucha Army Tv)

Jitsu beat Ciclón Infernal in a quarterfinal
(10:06, ok, Lucha Army Tv)

Heroe Romero beat Desorden in a quarterfinal
(6:41, ok, Lucha Army Tv)

Santy Hernández © beat Deimos for the NERW REVIVAL Championship
(8:51, ok, Lucha Army Tv)

Látigo beat La Fuerza in a semifinal
(6:41, ok, Lucha Army Tv)

Dragosth beat Energía
(11:02, ok, Lucha Army Tv)

Jitsu beat Heroe Romero in a semifinal
(6:19, ok, Lucha Army Tv)

Enjambre & Perseo beat Blue Win & Deus
(11:07, good, Lucha Army Tv)

Látigo beat Jitsu in the final
(7:50, ok, Lucha Army Tv)

What happened:

Kunay tornillo

Do you want to see a tournament where Latigo is the overwhelming favorite? This is not an affront to Latigo, just he turns up more often in an ensemble of like skilled luchadors, usually in a secondary role. This is the rare show where Latigo’s definitely two notches better than pretty much everyone else, a foil who gets to be a protagonist. It doesn’t completely show a new side of Latigo, but it does make this watchable when it would’ve been a struggle without it.

Most of the matches have the same flaws, to the point where it seems pointless to write about them individually. The luchadors are unused to having singles matches, seemingly not prepared for them, and often go longer than they’re comfortable. There’s a couple of matches where it seems to be a fitness issue, where they just can’t physically do this on their own as long as they’re trying. There are creative flaws too. These guys are generally used to tag matches or other multiman situations and don’t have the offense or the ideas to make a ten-minute match interesting. There’s also an uncomfortable adjustment to the flow of a singles match. Two guys would go through a sequence decently well, then the guy on offense waited for the victim to finish selling so they can get back to their starting position for the next series. They often didn’t try to connect those or build them in any way, and the awkward pauses left one to dwell on those flaws. The tag match was a much easier watch; those pauses are replaced by the victim rolling out and the next guy coming in to keep it moving. It came off as an experience issue and a common problem with Mexican wrestling moving more towards singles matches in this moment.

double buca storm

Latigo/Kunay was the best tournament match, though it’s still hard to figure if Kunay is good or if he’s just good with good people. Jitsu hasn’t impressed me in this and the +LuchaTV, with a tendency towards strange finishes. Not even the announcer seemed to know what was supposed to happen with Romero. He could do better at committing more to his quick submissions.

Santy Hernandez is someone I don’t seem to be getting but the people he’s interacting with (both here and on the Vanguardia show) seem to react like he’s totally entertaining. I’m chalking it up to a language barrier. The Latigo/Fuerza match didn’t come together totally but it had some good ideas.

I like that these projects exist. They are works in progress, but the experience should be helpful. The luchadors can learn from these matches and IAW’s got a chance to create content on their own.