Category Archives: Monterrey

El Hijo del Santo vs. LA Park (Monterrey – 12/23/2001)

El Hijo del Santo vs. LA Park
December 23, 2001
Monterrey
**** 1/4 

If the sight of blood makes you queasy, then I suggest you don’t watch this match. It is not for the faint of heart.

Once El Hijo del Santo begins bleeding in the second fall, this match takes a sharp turn and never looks back. It would be a disservice to the other work done by Santo and Park in the match to assign the entire appeal to the blood that Santo sheds, but you cannot write about this match without writing about the blood. The sickening amount of blood that Santo loses is the takeaway, even if it is not the only strong aspect of the match.

The infamous 1992 Muta & Hase New Japan match is often pointed to as the benchmark match for one wrestler losing a ridiculous amount of blood, but if this match was seen by as many people as that one I am pretty sure it would take the crown.

It is not just the total amount of blood Santo sheds, but the various visuals that it creates. For whatever reason – maybe because he was aware Santo intended to slice open an artery – Park comes dressed for the bout in his alternate grey-ish or dirty silver outfit as opposed to the traditional black outfit. Santo spills so much blood that by the end of the match, Park’s outfit is completely covered in red. The lighter colored outfit makes the blood really stand out on LA Park . . . and it’s not even his blood! Santo is wearing his traditional silver outfit of course and is equally drenched with the red stuff. Not to get too gross, but the blood drips – or even pours – out of the cut on Santo’s forehead which gives the near-sickening visual of blood spilling down and plopping on the mat. The mat is covered with literal puddles of blood. The ringside camera man makes sure to get close ups of the mat, even sometimes at the detriment of actually shooting the in-ring action. “There is blood everywhere!” is a clichéd way to sell a wrestling bloodbath but it’s a rather apt description for this one.

Admittedly, it feels a little gross to spend several paragraphs praising a match just because one of the participants shed a disgusting amount of blood. I am relatively confident that I could explain the value of most of wrestling’s (good) idiosyncrasies to a non-wrestling fan, but blood – especially this level – is a hard sell. People are going to give you a look if you explain this match was great in part because Santo bled so much that he, his opponent, and the ring were drenched in blood. I cannot blame them. That is a strange notion and one that I am not entirely comfortable with myself.

The best I can do is offer the explanation that the appeal is parts sensationalism and drama. The dramatic impact is not a given. We have all watched matches where a wrestler or wrestlers bleed buckets but the match still fails to entertain. That’s where I think Santo and Park truly succeeded. They do not use the blood as an excuse not to have a match. They have a match and while it is hard to push aside the blood completely, I do believe it would have still be an entertaining match even without it. The dives are as excellent as you would expect from those two. Parka bumps big, including a ridiculous shoulder first bump into the ring post. Both guys take hard bumps into the ringside chairs. The submissions are strong. There is a lot of quality wrestling moments lying below the spectacle of the blood.

More to the point, Santo and Park use the visuals that are created to enhance the drama. Santo comes out of this match looking like he is the toughest wrestler alive. Park gets Santo in the La Tapatia after Santo has already bled heavily. It is a spot in the match where it would make sense for a fall to occur and it seems like one will. Santo is completely helpless up the air but he refuses to give up to the point that Park is forced to release the hold. There are other moments like that where Santo does not give up in the face of serious adversary and those moments are all very effective. The easy comparison would be to Steve Austin at WrestleMania 13 in terms of having a wrestler refuse to quit in the face of blood loss as a means of getting him over as tough.

That comparison is not perfect, largely because WWF went to that well sparingly while blood in Monterrey is like forearm exchanges in Tokyo – it is going to happen more often than not. The differentiator for Santo/Park is this is far more blood than usual and as mentioned, they use it to enhance the match in an obvious and effective manner. Monterrey bloodbaths are not uncommon, but one of this magnitude and with such good working surrounding it is rare.

The ending to the third fall involves some usual Monterrey silliness. There are two officials for whatever reason and one of them inserts himself into things late with a few fast counts. The officials sort of get into it, the rudo ref gets tossed down at one point, and it is all stuff that they didn’t need to do. It doesn’t detract from the match as much as it is completely and totally unnecessary. Late match referee shenanigans are not going to enhance a match where one of the participants resembles a gunshot victim. The actual finish sees Santo kick Park low in a blatant foul. The one referee was assisting Santo, so perhaps he thought he could get away with it or maybe he just wanted a way out of the match. The rudo referee that had assisted Santo goes to count the pin, but the other ref tosses him. He counts the pin himself for some reason (the best I can come up is that he knew Santo would only get off of Park if he thought he had won). When Santo stands up, the referee that counted the fall raises Park’s hand instead giving him the DQ victory. It is all a bit confusing but that is Monterrey officiating for you.

The match is obviously not for everyone. I wouldn’t even attempt to argue with someone who believes the blood is just too much. Blood does not automatically make a match better in my opinion, but it certainly can. This match is a strong example of utilizing blood to create great visuals, to heighten the sense of drama, and to take what would have otherwise been a very good match to the next level. If you are a fan of bloodbaths, than you absolutely need to check this one out.

Catch Up Post #1: The Lucha Edition

(03/02) Charles Lucero vs. Silver Star (Monterey)
(06/22) Charles Lucero vs. Silver Star (Monterey)
(07/05) Charles Lucero vs. Black Terry (Monterey) 

Just realized I never wrote about the first match in March, so let’s get this catch-up going with a triple dose Charles Lucero!

All three of these matches are of course from Monterey.   The Silver Star matches are more or less one-man performances by Lucero.  Utilizing his signature blend of traditional and visually pleasing lucha match work, Lucero leads Silver Star through a pair of enjoyable title matches.  To be fair, Star does keep up fine and I enjoyed his fat-masked-wrestler dives in both matches, but Lucero is the one doing the heavy lifting.  The first match was the slightly more enjoyable one for me although one is not significantly better than the other.  Lucero’s appeal lies more in the style he works (a throwback mat-based lucha style) than anything else.  I wouldn’t put him the same class as Negro Navarro or Solar in terms of great lucha maestros but if you like that particular style you will like these matches.

The Black Terry match from the LuchaMania show was solid, but fell a bit shy of my admittedly lofty expectations.  The mat work was probably what disappointed me the most.  You anticipate a match like Terry/Lucero for the mat wrestling.  The mat work we got largely felt rushed and perfunctory.  By comparison, the mat work in Solar vs. Negro Navarro from Masked Mania in April came off as more high-level than the work here.  The match is just a tick over ten minutes though and there is still plenty of good stuff though (including a wicked top rope brainbuster by Lucero) so it’s worth a look.

(05/02) Jack Evans & Angelico vs. Daga & Steve Pain (AAA) 

Jack Evans and Angelico can be somewhat hit-or-miss.  They rely on strong high-flying offense, charisma , and selling while trying to get by on what is generally very weak non-flying offense.  As long as they (and their opponents) can downplay that big, glaring weakness they can get by.  On the occasions when they wrestle a match where that lack of “other” offense isn’t as egregious as it can be, than good things can result.

In this match – opposite two solid, well-rounded wrestlers in Daga and Steve Pain – Angelico & Evans click which produces very solid results.  Their flying is there as always, but everything in between is much better.  They pull off some cool double teams, including a very neat double team block/transition move that is worth checking out.  Daga and Pain are able to keep up when it is there time to control as well.  Pain is on in this match, landing a great dive to go along with other solid offense.  The resulting match is fast paced but well-structured and a very fun tag match.

(05/11) Ultimo Guerrero vs. Tiger Ali (Toryumon) 

When matches from DragonMania – Toyumon’s big annual event(s) at Arena Mexico – showed up online, I watched it out of that sick, irrational need to watch anything that is rare or different.  There were no matches that really intrigued me but that didn’t matter.  I have an insatiable thirst for variety in wrestling.  Tiger Alit – a Brit moonlighting as an Iranian heel – wrestling Ultimo Guerrero in Arena Mexico for the Toryumon Copa Mundial quenched that thirst.

Too bad the match was terrible.

Ali – who I have seen look competent in both M-Pro and in the UK – was no good here.  He went too overboard with the evil foreigner shtick and even if he hadn’t, he was any good at the basic evil foreigner stuff.  UG did not seem to have any desire to even attempt to right the quickly sinking ship that was this match.  I can’t say that I blame him.

(07/11) La Sombra vs. Shocker (CMLL) 

Shocker’s shockingly (!) great year continues when he and Sombra go mano-a-mano as part of the build towards the Negro Casas/Rush hair match.

Shocker takes a beating in this one, absorbing Sombra’s offense in a way that makes all of it look really impactful.  He spends the first fall and a half both getting his ass kicked and his ego bruised by Sombra who doles out the offense and takes plenty of time to gloat about it as well. During one such gloat, Shocker shakes out the cobwebs and with his fist clenched, he nods at the crowd as if saying “enough is enough.” He fires back and takes the second fall with some fine offense of his own.

The third fall is very good.  Both guys work stiff and show off some of the better stiff, high-impact work you will see in CMLL this side of Rush & Casas.  Shocker has – and has always had – a beautiful tope.  Sombra’s double knee stomp in the corner that he is doing a lot these days looked awesome here.  He needs to go back to Japan (tag league in December with Rush?) and bring that move with him.  Shocker has victory in sight after one top rope elbow drops and decides to try for a second one for good measure.  This draws out Rush to save his partner, but he is attacked from behind by Casas before he can get involved.  The distraction is enough, however, to allow La Sombra to foul Shocker and get a roll-up victory.

Good match and more good build towards the Rush/Casas hair match.

(07/19)  Negro Casas & Shocker vs. Rush & La Sombra (CMLL) 

The prior week’s singles match sets up this CMLL Tag Team Championship match and it’s a doozy.  In a year that has been relatively weak on tag team matches, this match stands out above the rest.

Sombra and Rush come over dressed for the match in suit coats and dress shirts.  For good measure, Sombra once again sports a black fedora on top of his black and white mask.  It’s an incredible look.  The first two falls are not as useless as they sometimes are and set the tone (read: intense hatred between the two teams) quite well.  The third fall, as it often is, is where the action is at.

The third fall is a whirlwind of hard-hitting moves, furious saves, and intensity.  It is controlled chaos at its finest.  Sombra is fantastic in his current role.  He is fully committed to playing the part of the brash, borderline aloof but nonetheless nasty rudo.  His taunt of lying between the second and third rope as if it were a hammock makes you want to slap the fedora right off his stupid masked head.  Rush and Casas are fantastic against each other as always and Shocker appears to be working extra hard these days.  He’s seeing the results of his work as well with a lot of quality matches to his name in 2014.  This match clicked on most all cylinders producing one of the finest tag matches of 2014 I’ve seen so far.  If that wasn’t enough it served the additional role of building up the August 1st Rush vs. Casas match in an effective manner.

This is one that is worth seeking out.

(07/20) Dr. Wagner Jr. vs. LA Park vs. Mascara Sagrada vs. Pirata Morgan vs. Hijo de Dos Caras vs. Demon Clown (IWRG) 

How many luchadores does it take to pull down a title belt hanging from the ceiling?

Trick question.  Going off of this match, it takes six luchadores and one referee.  Even then, that does not quite get the job done.

IWRG brought in an impressive array of talent to compete in a six-man ladder match for the IWRG Heavyweight Championship that was vacated (mercifully) by Vamprio earlier this year.  Name value alone, however, could not save this one from itself.

The match begins – as most matches involving Parka and Wagner do – with longwinded promos.  When things get underway, the match inoffensively meanders about for a bit.  As it reaches the middle stages, Parka takes some big time bumps on some okay looking moves.  It might be enough for you to let your guard down and think, “Hey, this isn’t so bad after all.”  Don’t be fooled.

Ladders aren’t made for the big bodies of LA Park, Demon Clown, and Wagner Jr. to climb and land on.  After some ladders-as-weapons spots and some climbing, the two ladders in the match are so destroyed they are rendered useless.  Someone retrieves a normal one-sided ladder from . . . somewhere . . . and the referee holds it up so the wrestlers can climb.  The match falls apart at this point as it becomes more about getting through it than putting on any resembling a good wrestling match.

At last – with both the referee and Pirata Morgan steadying the ladder – Hijo De Dos Caras climbs the backup ladder and retrieves the title belt to win the match – only, not quite.  Dos Caras gets his hands on the belt but as hard as he pulls, the darn thing won’t budge from the rope.  Time virtually stands still as Dos Caras desperately trues to unhook the belt by tugging on it.  He losses grip of the ladder at one point, leaving his feet to comically dangle above the mat as he holds onto the title belt for dear life.  Demon Clown props Dos Caras on his shoulders (nice save) but the stubborn title belt still won’t fall down.  The other wrestlers attempt to help, all the while giving a half-ass attempt at pretending to continue the match.  Eventually, Dos Caras and the belt fall to the mat, with Dos Caras being declared the winner immediately upon impact.  The entire ordeal – which lasted far longer than one might assume – made for quite the scene.

If you are into train wrecks, well, than this is your match.

(07/21)  Ultimo Guerrero, Euforia & Niebla Roja vs. Atlantis, Valiente & Volador Jr. (CMLL) 

Los Guerreros defend their CMLL World Trios championship versus the makeshift tecnico squad of Atlantis, Valiente and Volador Jr.  The title match is more than a booking device to further the yet-to-be-resolved issue between Atlantis and Ultimo Guerrero, although it does serve that purpose.  It is one of those fun, easy-to-watch CMLL trios matches that makes you think “why can’t they all be this good?”.  Atlantis hits a pair of topes, the second of which is part of a well-timed (and well filmed) string of topes by all three tecnico team members.  Los Guerreros pull out some fun double and triple teams including a great alley-oop on the ramp onto both Valiente and Volador.

Not a match that is necessarily going to stand out amongst the pack, but I thought it was in the upper tier of CMLL trios match from 2014 to date.

(07/29) Titan vs. Cavernario (CMLL) 

It has been twenty years since a pair of 19 year-olds named Rey Mysterio Jr. and Juventud Guerrera wowed lucha and worldwide wrestling audiences with their matches in the AAA promotion.  At 20 and 22 years old, respectively, Cavernario and Titan are a bit older than Mysterio and Guerrera were in 1994 but their ability to have such a strong singles match versus one another at such a young age compares favorably to what Rey and Juvi managed to do twenty years prior.

Titan looked like one of – if not the – most impressive high flyer in the world in this one.  He pulls off some extremely high level of difficulty moves with relative ease, including a tornado DDT spot that needs to be seen to be appreciated.  Cavnerario is less flashy than Titan as expected – they are not the same style of wrestler.  However, his tope rope splash looked equal parts impressive and terrifying as usual and he bumped/caught all of Titan’s offense with impressive precision.  While these two are certainly not as ground-breaking as 1994 Juvi and Rey were, it would not be a stretch to state that they are more polished than either of those two were at a similar stage in their careers.  This match is by no means a spot fest or collection of moves.  The two young luchadores bridge effectively from move to move and sequence to sequence, choosing their highspots efficiently and effectively.  They smartly toy with the standard lucha title match formula in order to work to their respective strengths, opting for a tad less mat work in the first fall and a much longer second fall than normal.

As far as lucha singles matches go, this one is up there with the best from 2014.  Well worth a look.

Round Up

Must Watch:  Titan vs. Cavernario; Rush & La Sombra vs. Negro Casas & Shocker
Watch:  Jack Evans & Angelico vs. Daga & Steve Pain
Worthwhile:  Ultimo Guerrero, Euforia & Niebla Roja vs. Atlantis, Valiente & Volador Jr.; Charles Lucero vs. Silver Star (x2)
Common:  Charles Lucero vs. Black Terry
Skip:  IWRG Ladder Match; Tiger Ali vs. Ultimo Guerrero

(02/09) El Dandy vs. Satanico

Arena Coliseo Monterrey (Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, Mexico)

Pro Wrestling history is littered with examples of very good wrestlers whose period of highest mainstream exposure coincided with a weaker portion of their careers. These guys are usually remembered (fondly or not) for a body of work in their career that paled in comparison to their truly worthwhile contributions. Jerry Lawler might be the poster boy for this phenomenon. El Dandy is not far behind. El Dandy is somewhere in the top tiers of all-time great luchadores, but his place in American wrestling history will always be as the nondescript WCW luchador who Bret Hart warned us not to doubt.

Now 51 years-old, Dandy is on his retirement tour and hooks up with his longtime and storied rival, Satanico, for a match in Monterrey. The match certainly had the feel of a retirement tour bout. Dandy and Santico embrace at the beginning and start the match laughing and smiling. The match starts at least with a celebratory tone more than anything else.

They exchange holds and work the mat, both wrestlers certainly moving in a way that reveals their age. Neither one is exactly Negro Casas in that regard. However, to call the match slow might be misleading. Their movements are deliberate and careful. I’d even go “slow” for that. However, they got a fine pace and keep things moving along just fine. To me, that’s more important than the fact that two 50+ year old wrestlers are moving like two 50+ year old guys.

The joviality of the match goes away mid-contest. Dandy starts to toy around with Satanico on the mat and in releasing holds, until Satanico has had enough. He pouts and retreats to the ramp, where he teases leaving the match altogether. It was such an old-guy move. It reminded me of my grandfather and father were you can joke around with them but there were (are) always these undefined limits where they suddenly do not find it funny anymore. Satanico no longer found Dandy to be funny.

When the match picks up, it is more of the same with perhaps a bit more intensity, a little more striking, and a little more bumping. Dandy steals the pin, just barely keeping Satanico’s shoulders down long enough for the 3-count. Satanico protests – they will meet again during the Dandy retirement tour hence the quick pin – but the two rivals shake hands afterwards.

Fun match that wasn’t too slow as too cause any issues. Dandy looked like a wrestler here who is getting out at the right time. He can still go, but not at anywhere approaching a very high-level. It is best to just let his legacy speak for itself now, even if that legacy will be something entirely different in the US then it is in Mexico.

Diagnostics
Lucha Singles | Worthwhile | El Dandy Retirement Match