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Post by elliott on Dec 3, 2017 17:34:22 GMT -5
Team New Japan (Antonio Inoki, Tatsumi Fujinami, Kengo Kimura, Umanosuke Ueda & Kantaro Hoshino) vs Team UWF (Akira Maeda, Yoshiaki Fujiwara, Nobuhiko Takada, Kazuo Yamazaki & Osamu Kid) (“Elimination Match” – NJPW – 3/26/1986) 80s New Japan is famous for having these awesome ten man elimination and gauntlet matches and this is my favorite one. This could land anywhere from #5-25 on my ballot depending on how I’m feeling come ballot time. This is a classic match with amazing work, heat, pacing and atmosphere. The best match from the best in ring feud in wrestling history.
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Post by El Mckell on Jan 8, 2018 14:31:19 GMT -5
Incredible crowd heat in this one from start to finish. I feel that along with the constant in and out of different guys and the exciting moments being spaced out throughout kept me much more entertained than I normally would be for a long match without a narrative structure i could sink my teeth into or any particularly great spots. Ueda getting that elimination on Maeda was definitely a cool moment, even though he does nothing else during the whole match.
Seconding this ***3/4
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Post by childs on Jan 9, 2018 14:05:03 GMT -5
The Ueda elimination is on my short list of greatest moments in wrestling history. That alone would probably get this on my top 100. But this match is perhaps the pinnacle of the UWF invasion of New Japan, which is one of my favorite periods of wrestling in any company ever. It's a no-brainer nomination.
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Post by stunninggrover on Jan 21, 2018 23:34:25 GMT -5
New Japan was really the first promotion to excel at booking these elimination style matches and this was before WWF started having Survivor Series PPVs. Of course, the rules for these New Japan elimination matches are slightly different from WWF Survivor Series matches because eliminations can also occur by getting your opponent out of the ring (in addition to pinfalls and submissions). This was a great match between Team New Japan and Team UWF. I think I first watched this match about ten or eleven years ago and I still think it’s a great match after re-watching now. The crowd heat was great. The work was great too. The workers really gave the impression this was a heated feud and you could feel the tension in the air. Ueda’s heroic effort to take Maeda down with him as he was getting eliminated himself was a tremendous moment. This match was possibly the biggest highlight of the New Japan vs. UWF feud. Pretty sure this will be in my top 100.
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Post by bossrock on Jun 29, 2018 20:34:55 GMT -5
Not too familiar with this period of New Japan or this particular rivalry, but really loved this match. Really dug the shoot feel and how the action was hard-hitting and urgent yet tentative at the same time. Really drove home how high the stakes were even if you're not familiar with this feud. Also liked how the rope eliminations didn't come into play right away. Gave the eliminations a feeling of spontaneity and unpredictability. The only thing I wasn't particularly crazy about was the ending. It didn't feel abrupt or anything, but it didn't come off as smoothly as I had hoped. Sort of a "OK, I win now" sort of finish.
At any rate, a terrific match that has a very good shot of making my list. Glad it lived up to the hype.
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Post by cactus on Nov 16, 2021 1:56:14 GMT -5
What we got here was a super hot inter-promotional war where everyone gets a chance to shine. There's zero downtime in this match and it well over half an hour. I thought the roof was going to blow off the building when Maeda and Inoki interacted. Inoki is the ace defending the company from those pesky shoot wrestlers, while Maeda is the dickhead renegade who has no issue kicking Kimura when he's down to show dominance. Takada throws strikes so quickly that I thought my video was running on 1.5 speed. What Hoshino lacks in size, he makes up for with pure heart. We finally get a Fujiwara match to match his consistently awesome performance. Ueda is in this for a grand total of around a minute, but the crowd pops huge whenever he was in the ring. The finish with Inoki cleaning house on the last two wrestlers gave me 'John Cena taking out the entire Nexus by himself at Summerslam 2010' vibes, but don't let that stop you from watching one of the best matches NJPW has ever put out. ★★★★★
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Post by mvz on Nov 16, 2021 4:11:40 GMT -5
Nice bump and write up by Cactus. Essential viewing and a stone cold lock.
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Post by KB8 on Oct 2, 2022 15:08:12 GMT -5
I don't know how many of these multi-man matches I've written about by now. I bet that for every one of them I've said something along the lines of "really the very best wrestling there is!" Or something like, "if modern New Japan was like this then I'd watch it every week" or some such blatant fabrication. Basically I'm just repeating myself about the broad strokes, but this was amazing in the same ways the two '87 matches and the '88 match and the '90 and '93 matches are amazing. Every single person involved gets to look good. There's next to no downtime and something interesting is always happening. It's chaotic and the intensity is through the roof and they have the crowd going nuts from the first minute to the last. They weave the minor story points through the major story points and develop them over the course of the match. The key differences then are the stories that they're actually telling, which is where the beauty lies in making all of these matches feel very different and distinguishable.
This started with the big Inoki/Maeda confrontation everybody wanted, possibly contrary to team New Japan's strategy because none of them seemed to want Inoki to start the thing. Even Hoshino took a slap in the face from the boss for trying to restrain him. It still seems wild that they never had that singles match in '86 because the people were molten for it. They do a quick bit of rope running and Maeda tries to take Inoki's head off with a high kick and this was one of those shots that, if it was designed to actually miss, you sure couldn't tell by the way he threw it. After that opening exchange they turn the pace up and everything goes by at a hundred miles an hour. Since everyone is fresh it's almost certainly going to take a flash pin or submission or a quick toss over the ropes for the first elimination to occur. Everyone is just too amped up for one guy to be able to hit a string of offence and score a pin without the opposition making a save. It's the best kind of hectic and some guys thrive in that environment. Hoshino will come in and punch you dead in the face twelve times, Takada and Yamazaki will throw multiple spin kicks in succession, Fujiwara will headbutt you repeatedly and oh if you're thinking it's a travesty that we never got Inoki/Maeda in '86 then what the fuck are we thinking about never getting Fujiwara/Fujinami EVER? Not one bastard singles match! Their early exchange was sensational and easily my favourite of that opening stretch.
After the first elimination (a quick backslide) we settle into some of the bigger stories. It's easy to say this in hindsight, but if Inoki/Maeda was the money match going in then by the end of it Maeda/Fujinami felt like the logical progression. As the boss Inoki almost had to operate with a level of detachment, much like any boss would, I suppose. He bleeds for New Japan because New Japan is who he is, but I never really got the sense he bled for his teammates. Fujinami, on the other hand, was every bit the leader you'd want in the situation. He was always willing to come to a partner's aid, always the first to congratulate his teammates when they made an elimination, always rallying even in the face of adversity, then when he and Maeda got in together there was a different sort of anticipation. Inoki was the King and the bigger scalp, but Fujinami was the Prince and his downfall more than any would lead the kingdom to ruin. Maybe Fujiwara knew it too because he came in and tried to choke the life from him. I always associate Fujiwara with the amazing choke hold selling but Fujinami might've had him beaten here, eyes rolling back in his head and spluttering for air. Fujiwara must've had the thing on like a vice grip because Fujinami's lips were turning blue. And then Fujinami went and took a bullet for his team, launching himself and Fujiwara over the top rope, knowing he was going down but refusing to do it quietly, refusing to let Fujiwara wreak any more havoc in his absence. It was the perfect representation of Fujinami and not a chance Inoki would've sacrificed himself for the greater good like that.
That said, Inoki/Fujiwara was a highlight in a match full of highlights. There was nothing quite as poetic about this as there was with Fujinami, instead it was a couple of old warriors crossing paths for the umpteenth time. Inoki grins and points at Fujiwara like "I see you're still wearing those socks" and Fujiwara grins back like "I see you're still a fucking prick." The exchange wasn't fancy but it was rugged and they fought over every hold. I should really watch their singles matches again (I guess there's no more fitting a time to watch a bunch of Inoki). Then there's Ueda. This is legitimately one of the only Ueda matches I've ever seen where he doesn't try and hit someone with a stick. Honestly it might be the only one. He's just a couple years older than Inoki at this point but really has no shot against the UWF guys, and yet the crowd are fucking badgershit mental for him. I think he spends a total of 45 seconds in the ring throughout the match and on one of his entries he's immediately tagged by Inoki and told to get back out again. When it comes down to him and Inoki against Maeda, Takada and Kido you're thinking it might as well be Inoki going it alone against all three. When Maeda spin kicks Ueda in the face you have no reason to believe in anything other than his impending demise. And then he takes a page from Fujinami's book and goes down in a blaze of glory, grabbing Maeda's leg and rolling to the floor, dragging Maeda along for the ride.
The 2v1 finishing run isn't as dramatic as the rest of the match, doesn't quite have the same hook as '88 with Fujinami losing gallons of blood trying to survive against Inoki and Saito, but Inoki uses the lifeline Ueda gave him and if nothing else there's something satisfying about Mr New Japan braining the shoot stylists with enziguris. Really the very best enziguris there are. Really the very best wrestling there is.
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Post by [Darren] on Feb 23, 2023 17:46:36 GMT -5
Team New Japan (Antonio Inoki, Tatsumi Fujinami, Kengo Kimura, Umanosuke Ueda & Kantaro Hoshino) v. Team UWF (Akira Maeda, Yoshiaki Fujiwara, Nobuhiko Takada, Kazuo Yamazaki & Osamu Kid) – NJPW – 3/26/1986)
Match Type: 5x5 Elimination
Run Time: 33:38
2021 Ranking: N/A (98)
Faction warfare rules, 80s NJPW multiman matches rule, this whole UWF angle rules. Antonio Inoki looks like the most pro-wrestling wrestler that ever pro-wrestled. Ridiculously hot crowd, fantastic elimination arc, nonstop action, a Damn near perfect match.
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Post by puropotsy on May 31, 2023 21:35:14 GMT -5
This was an outstanding elimination match that has one of my favorite Inoki performances. He took a lot of the match but made others look good as well. Fujinami, Fujiwara and Takada are the standouts in making this a prototype for style vs style matches. I was thinking that Ueda was just there as eye candy but his entrance into the match was effective. Great use of elimination rules.
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Post by mrjmml on Jul 26, 2023 10:17:19 GMT -5
Another brilliant New Japan multi-man for me to review, this time it isn’t a gauntlet match, it’s an elimination match meaning every time someone gets pinned, submitted or thrown out of the ring is eliminated from the match, this is a part of the interpromotional rivalry between New Japan Pro Wrestling and UWF Japan during 1986, it’s a very intelligent move in UWF’s part considering that most of New Japan’s crowd would be interested in shoot-style and what better way to introduce them than having a rivalry with wrestlers they know and love, this match is significantly shorter than the last one, that match went over the 60 minute mark and this match is around 35 minutes long, although it’s shorter I think that this match is arguably even more action packed than Ishingun vs Sekigun, mainly because the match structure favored a more fast-paced approach to it, that factor also gave an opportunity to guys that normally wouldn’t have had much of a role on it but on the other hand it made the final stretch less dramatic than it should have been, in my last review I talked about how absent the crowd was and I said that I wanted more out of them, I have no complaints in this one, the crowd genuinely cares about the match, they react every time their ace is in danger, that’s something that was missing in the last match. As I said before, the finish was anticlimactic, not just because is a 2 vs 1, it’s because it doesn’t feel earned, it’s something that The Warriors vs The Heenan Family in Survivor Series 1989 did right, the main difference was that the two wrestlers that The Ultimate Warrior defeated were noticeably weaker than him and that match also was building towards a Bobby Heenan vs Ultimate Warrior that eventually happened but in this one it’s more like Inoki is going to win one way or another and that isn’t as appealing.
Fujinami’s performance in the match was awesome, to be honest everyone’s performance was, no wonder why this match is considered an all-time classic.
I recommend this match to everyone who liked the last multi-man, the match won’t dissapoint you I swear.
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