Prikazani su postovi s oznakom CWC. Prikaži sve postove
Prikazani su postovi s oznakom CWC. Prikaži sve postove
srijeda, 29. ožujka 2017.
Kota Ibushi vs Brian Kendrick-WWE CWC 26.8.2016.
Another very good match from the CWC that had many of the qualitites
you'd want in a workrate match without going overboard in excess with
big moves and nearfalls and managing to have a coherent and logical
narrative. Ibush outclasses Kendrick in direct showdowns so Kendrick
avoids them, and follows up on his first big chance with the neckbreaker
on the ringpost rope by dedicating his game plan to attacking Ibushi's
neck. The way Kendrick uses his surroundings at all times was neat and
reminiscent of Finlay, and the structure of this match was reminiscent
of the kinds of matches Misawa, Kobashi, Takayama, Akiyama etc. would
have in NOAH against lower ranked opponents, where they'd throw out
everything to try and make you believe they could pull off the upset.
They really hit the sweet spot in giving Kendrick enough to produce the
drama without it turning into him hitting big move after big move, and I
loved the High Kicks Ibushi used to quickly cut him off in the
finishing stretch. ***1/2
Kota Ibushi vs TJ Perkins-WWE CWC 14.9.2016.
Early on Perkins avoided Ibushi's kicks by checking them, countering
them with a Dragon Screw and so on, did a lot of matwork, really leaving
an impression he had come prepared to face Ibushi, as in Ibushi's last
two matches were him just surviving insane bomb throwing. But with them
showcasing Ibushi as the favourite to win the tournament, it'd only make
sense that it almost didn't matter if Perkins did all that and went to
the trouble of cutting off Ibushi's dive, Ibushi was gonna get it in
anyway. Whereas that dive cut-off felt like a big- elaborate
counter-move from Perkins Ibushi doing something like staying on the
apron and hitting a Springboard Dropkick after Perkins had tried to
set-up a dive with his rope trick looked like it just naturally came to
him. The context really makes the finishing stretch work-it would seem
bloated and cliche that was how they'd worked every match. But even in
the last two big Ibushi matches the big nearfalls were based on novelty
and them doing a good job of setting them up and not so much, well,
*really* buying into that they were going to end the match. And that was
the case here. It didn't matter how the Sitout Last Ride was used in
the rest of Ibushi's career, in this tournament it was a killshot, and
this match was the pay-off that they could have and did afford due to
the uniqueness of the tournament. And for Perkins to beat Ibushi at his
own game it would take a bunch of bombs of his own, and hitting his
biggest bomb over and over again and modifying it and boy did they ever
accomplish everything this match could've and should've been. ****
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