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| Tsuyama City Gymnasium; 18-01-06 | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: Jan 20 2006, 06:25 PM (1,249 Views) | |
| Fletchanator | Jan 20 2006, 06:25 PM Post #1 |
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Keith
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Tsuyama City Gymnasium, Tsuyama Wednesday, January 18 2000 Fans - No Vacancy - Billy Thomas addressed the crowd, and built up tonight's main event, which pits Usagi Yoshida, Griffin James and Crazy Bastard Cop against Shoji Tamura, Bombay Kaijin and the man who last night turned his back on his friend Yoshida, former RCW superstar Jeff Kujawa. Thomas also sent a reminder to all the wrestlers that the shot at Yoshida's Independent Super-Lightweight title was still up for grabs. Match One: Uchu Koujin Red [4'13" Powerbomb] Great Horned Owl[Free] - Featuring the first appearance of freelance wrestler Great Horned Owl since he took part in a masked battle royal on the Trinity Starts Now tour, this match was pure comedy. In fact, there was no real wrestling to speak of. The funniest moment came when Uchu headed to the top rope, and then so did Owl... only on the other side of the ring. Uchu jumped down and ran across the ring, before standing out from the corner and gesturing for Owl to dive onto him. Owl began to flap his arms, while yelling his customary "Hoooooot!", then lept... and fell straight down, hitting the canvas right in the corner. Uchu used probably the only wrestling move of the match, a powerbomb, to put Great Horned Owl down for 3. Match Two: Hasselhoff SE & British Steel{x} [8'24" Boston crab] Kurogama & Tornado JINTEI{o} - For the second night in a row, Dream Fujin's greatest (and only) be-wigged duo defeated the bear-masked Kurogama and high-flyer JINTEI. Hasselhoff, with his David Hasselhoff mask, bushy wig and stuffed red speedo swim trunks, had the fans entertained whenever he was in the ring, and broke out a new signature spot - the Incredibly Slow Beach Run! With Kurogama slumped in a corner, he grabbed a lifesaving tube (one of those long, red things that lifeguards carry around, which he had brought to the ring for the first time) and ran to the opposite corner. Then Steel grabbed a small stereo (which he'd also brought to the ring) and hit the play button - "I Believe", the theme song from Baywatch, started to play. Hasselhoff then began to "run" across the ring at super slow speed, lifeguard tube in hand, imitating the opening to Baywatch, which had the fans in stitches. It took him a good 10 seconds to reach Kurogama, who then casually put up his right boot. Hasselhoff went staggering back and then fell to the mat... at super slow-mo speed! British Steel and Tornado JINTEI had the best wrestling exchanges of the match, the two young high-flyers trying to out-do each other, while Kurogama was back to his usual non-inspiring self, after a good showing in his last match. Steel, who had dropkicked JINTEI in the knees a few times earlier in the match, used a Boston crab to make him tap out. Match Three: El Hijo del Super Macho[ILL]{x} & Norihiko Miura [13'21" Diving senton] Kotaro Shimita{o} & Kyuki Shonjo - Talk about your weird couple - take a be-caped and be-masked Mexican luchador and a wrestling Monk, and you've got a combination that could only be dreamed up in Dream Fujin. Their opponents were far more standard in appearance and attitude. Yet again the fans gave great support to rookie Shonjo, who was back to playing the face in peril and showed the underdog's fighting spirit, especially while taking stiff punishment from Norihiko Miura, who used an array of kneedrops to the rookie's body, and hit him with a vicious fireman's carry into a double-knee gutbuster. Miura almost finished the match when he hit Shimita with a praying-style southern piledriver, but Shonjo made the save. Miura and Shonjo took their fight to the outside, and EHdSM finished Shimita off with a springboard dropkick to the back of the head, followed by a diving senton for the 1-2-3. Match Four: Nobutaka Takase{x} & Super Orange Panda [18'13" Backdrop suplex] Eric Dane[NEXT]{o} & Tate Monroe[HVW] - This was just about a rematch from the night before, with Dane replacing EHdSM and continuing his tagteam with Monroe from the early shows on the tour. Takase and Panda - two-thirds of the Trinity X champions - were out for revenge from last night, and achieved it after almost 20 minutes of hot action. Monroe was once again methodical, using an array of amateur wrestling takedowns and holds. His style frustrated Takase, who resorted to illegal tactics such as eyerakes and even biting to break out of the American's grasp. Panda and Monroe also resumed their technical wrestling rivalry, with Monroe easily coming out on top this time. Dane continued to look out of place, and while Monroe was eagerly cheered by the fans, his tagteam partner was greeted with unimpressed silence - Dream Fujin fans know when someone isn't giving it their all in the ring, and it has been clear to all and sundry that Monroe is carrying this team right now. The end came with Takase and Dane in the ring. Dane caught a kick, whirled Takase around but missed a lariat, Takase countering with a backslide attempt. But Dane fought it, then broke one of his arms free and lifted Takase up into a fireman's carry. Takase dropped out of it and hit a backdrop suplex. Dane kicked out, but Takase hit a stiff forearm off the ropes, staggering Dane, and then hit another backdrop suplex, this time getting the 3. After the match, Monroe looked unhappy with the performance of his tagteam partner, and even pushed one of the ring attendants (ie trainee wrestlers) out of his way as he angrily left the ring. Match Five: Darkness Kitty! [14'32" Darkness Bomber] Apollo Kid III - Darkness Kitty!'s star continues to rise. The fans love his antics and his incredible workrate in the ring. Apollo Kid III had the opportunity to upset one-third of the Trinity X champion team, and knew that a win would shoot him up the standings. He gave it 100 percent, putting on undoubtedly his best match in Dream Fujin to date, but in the end wasn't quite able to pull off the upset. They started slow, warming up with several minutes of matwork. Apollo worked his gameplan around Kitty!'s left arm, working on it with submission holds and blows to the limb. Once they upped the tempo it was extremely closely-fought, with both men showing good speed and an array of suplexes and high-flying moves. At one point Apollo tried to hit Kitty! with a heart punch, which had no effect. The fans cheered as they realised why... Darkness Kitty! has no heart! One big spot saw Kitty! take Apollo from the apron to the floor with a Tiger Driver, but he was too exhausted and hurt to follow up. Another time Apollo caught Kitty! in a sleeperhold, and it looked to be the end. Kitty! went down onto the mat and Apollo made the cover, Uncle Dai counting... but Kitty! caught his hand before it could hit the mat a third time! Apollo showed great fighting spirit, surviving the Cat Nap and a shining enzuigiri, but couldn't survive a crossed-arms powerbomb, which Kitty! calls the Darkness Bomber. Match Six - Main Event: Shoji Tamura, Bombay Kaijin & Jeff Kujawa[Free] [25'31" Double countout] Usagi Yoshida, Griffin James & Crazy Bastard Cop - This was the big match that the media had been buzzing about since Kujawa's betrayal of Yoshida the night before. The crowd was hot and ready for it. In an interesting turn of events, the face team didn't even wait for the introductions, attacking as soon as they got to the ring! Tamura and Kaijin were sent from the ring, and Kujawa felt the wrath of Yoshida, James and CBC. CBC applied a camel clutch to the "Pretty Hate Machine", then James and Yoshida ran into the ropes on opposite sides, no doubt looking to nail Kujawa in the face with a pair of low dropkicks... only they were tripped up by Tamura and Kaijin from the outside. Two brawls erupted on the outside - Kaijin/James and Tamura/Yoshida, while Kujawa made a comeback in the ring, hitting CBC with a big belly to belly suplex. Order was restored, as the other wrestlers took their place in their respective corners. Kujawa and CBC continued their battle, Kujawa throwing in rudo spots like bootscrapes and eyerakes, and grinning towards Yoshida a couple of times after moves. He even flipped the bird angrily at Yoshida, which drew a few jeers from the crowd. What followed was around 10 minutes of CBC playing the face in peril, with several teased near-tags. Tamura, Kaijin and Kujawa tagged in and out regularly, and showed that although their alliance is new, they have obviously been training together. One cool spot saw Kujawa using a giant swing on CBC, before Tamura nailed CBC with a dropkick as his head came swinging around. Later, Kaijin was down at ringside jawing at the fans, when Tamura whipped CBC into a neutral corner, but the crazy lawman showed great agility to leap up onto the top turnbuckle in one jump, then lept onto Kaijin with a high elevation plancha! Because DF trios matches are fought under lucha libre rules, CBC leaving the ring was as good as a tag, so in came James, murderous intent in his eyes. He ducked a spin kick from Tamura and lariated him out of the ring, before leaping onto him with a big pescado. That left Yoshida and Kujawa to face off in the ring. The fans went nuts as the two men started to trade punches, then went into a super-fast exchange of moves that saw Yoshida hit his multiple-revolution corbata, Kujawa hitting a Northern lights suplex for 2, Yoshida getting a close near-fall after blocking a top rope uranage and taking Kujawa down with a top rope sunset flip, and Kujawa getting 2 1/2 after hitting his wrist-clutch fisherman's buster, which he calls the Algorithm. James and Kaijin came in, and James started to throw dem 'bows at Kaijin and Kujawa, until Kujawa ducked one and hit a backdrop suplex. James was up slowly, and Kujawa charged... but right into an Ego (Ace) Crusher, which got 2 1/2! James hit more elbows on Kujawa, then ducked a lariat and hit a spinning elbow! He headed up top, but Kujawa got up and low-blowed James while up top. Kujawa hit James with the Algorithm,getting 2, before hitting the devastating move he calls Adios Amigo (a piledriver while holding the opponent's wrists) for 2, CBC saving! Tamura charged in, right into a powerslam from CBC, who then hit La Quebrada for 2. Kaijin was back in - CBC ducked a double lariat from Tamura and Kaijin, but ran into a lariat from Kujawa! Tamura dropped CBC with a spinning heel kick, then locked on his reverse kneebar/chickenwing submission hold, the fans screaming as they sensed the end. But CBC somehow made it to the ropes, forcing the break! Kaijin and Tamura hit a thrust kick/legsweep combo on CBC, then Kujawa followed up by coming off the top rope with his top rope 180 turn vertical ass splash, the Chromophobia, covering for 2 1/2 as Yoshida made the desperate save! Everyone fought outside the ring for a bit, before Yoshida and Kaijin returned ot the ring, Kaijin running into a superkick, which got 2 for Yoshida. Yoshida was tripped by Tamura while running the ropes, and when he turned to investigate, was nailed by a Kaijin's rolling killer lariat, the Heaven's Crucible, Yoshida kicking out just in time. Kaijin signalled for the G Spot Fantasy (Crucifix Bomb into a Sitdown Dominator), but Yoshida countered with his patented crotch claw, as the fans went wild! He followed up with a DDT, then went up top to finish him with the US*AG~ISM! (corkscrew moonsault). However, Kujawa jumped up onto the apron and pushed him out to the floor. The match once again broke down into a six-man brawl outside the ring. Uncle Dai's count got to 17 before Tamura rushed back into the ring, only to find that James had slid in from the other side - James hitting a bone-crunching Yakuza kick before Tamura knew what was happening! James followed with a hiiiiiiiiighly elevated moonsault for 2 1/2! CBC came back in and levelled Tamura with a lariat, before James set him up... and nailed Tamura with the Jamestown Massacre (Muscle Buster)! He covered... 1... 2... but Kujawa dragged Uncle Dai out of the ring before he could count three! Once again all six men brawled around the ring, CBC and Kaijin battling their way deep into the crowd. Uncle Dai started another count, and Yoshida tried to rush back into the ring at 19, but Kujawa pulled him out, and the match was declared a double countout. The brawl continued for a while longer, before ring attendants (trainee wrestlers) managed to pull them apart long enough for the two factions to go their own way. Kujawa got on the microphone and cut a profanity-laced promo on Yoshida, adding an exclamation point via the middle finger. Yoshida then got on the mic and promised that he would gain his revenge against Kujawa, and make him pay for his betrayal. Kujawa said he wanted a shot at the Independent Super-Lightweight title, to which Yoshida replied that it was out of his hands as to who would get the first title shot. He added that if Kujawa was chosen as his opponent at Super Energy Battle, he would gladly defend the belt against him, and also extract a measure of personal revenge, to which the fans started a super-loud "YO-SHI-DA!" chant. Overall comments: The big question on everyone's lips remains: Who is going to challenge Usagi Yoshida for the Independent Super-Lightweight title at the Super Energy Battle TV taping? The answer will come on the 21st, when Billy Thomas will announce his decision. In terms of bad blood and personal feeling, the best match-up would be Yoshida vs Jeff Kujawa, undoubtedly. Common sense says that Kujawa is on his first tour of Dream Fujin, and really hasn't proven himself yet, but if Thomas is looking for the most personal match-up, that's it. A definitely worthy opponent would be Shoji Tamura, who has shown over the past few tours that he's the real deal. Likewise with Griffin James, and a rematch of the Merry Goldness from Green Dome main event would be welcomed by fans and media alike. Toss into the mix the American Tate Monroe, who has impressed many on the current tour, although the fact he's an outsider and on his first tour with DF might count against him, like Kujawa. Darkness Kitty! is another who would normally be in consideration, but with the Trinity X titles announced as being defended on the TV taping, that would seem to rule him out. There are several good options, but all we can do now is sit back and wait for Billy Thomas to make his announcement. Roll on the 21st! © Dream Fujin, 2006. Dream Fujin group: www.groups.yahoo.com/group/dreamfujin NEO-International Commons: http://s13.invisionfree.com/NEOInternational NEO-International website: www.geocities.com/neointernationalwrestling |
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8:04 PM Jul 10