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Post by The Kevstaaa on Dec 27, 2017 23:18:06 GMT -5
Yes, the thread is back for the third straight year. In 2015, I ranked the top 100. In 2016, I ranked the top 131 because that's how many matches reached ****+ territory. This year, 133 matches reached that mark for me, but I didn't want a strange number, so I went with 130 and will list the other three as honorable mentions. I watched more wrestling than ever this year. Nearly 2500 matches spanning over fifteen promotions. So, sit back, enjoy, debate, tell me I'm wrong, etc. Whatever happens, just know that 2017 was one hell of a year and let's appreciate how much great wrestling we were treated to.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 27, 2017 23:27:44 GMT -5
Before someone inevitably bitches, because this is WF, I look forward to this yearly.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 28, 2017 0:32:41 GMT -5
I betcha Travis Banks is gonna show up alllloooooottt.
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Post by TheSystem 1.5 on Dec 28, 2017 0:34:32 GMT -5
I've been looking forward to this and I respect you're opinion...I'm gonna bitch anyway
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Dec 28, 2017 0:53:30 GMT -5
Honorable Mention #1: WWN Championship Last Man Standing Match: Keith Lee vs. Matt Riddle – Evolve 94 10/14/17
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| Earlier in the year, these two met in this same building for the same title and had a classic. Matt Riddle barely escaped with his WWN Title that night and the two formed a bond. It deteriorated heading into the match, leading to the stipulation being added. This wasn’t your typical Last Man Standing match, as it wasn’t a brawl around the arena and it didn’t feature any weapons being used. Instead, it was two guys throwing bombs at one another for 17:49, in the hopes that one would finally stay down long enough. Both guys used their regular finishers in the opening minutes, showing that this was going to get wild. One of the bigger spots saw a Riddle Fisherman Buster on the apron that was so hard it caused the ring skirt to fall off. One gripe I had was the finish. It wasn’t bad, it just felt a bit anti-climactic. Granted, an avalanche Ground Zero it sweet, but commentary seemed to not expect the finish and really undersold it, which made it feel extra flat. Lee got to his feet before Riddle, who only made it halfway up as the count reached ten. A different kind of Last Man Standing match that was a joy to watch and was very refreshing. [****]
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Dec 28, 2017 9:59:05 GMT -5
Honorable Mention #2: Takehiro Yamamura vs. T-Hawk – Dragon Gate The Gate of Passion 4/7/17
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| I’m not the biggest T-Hawk fan, but Takehiro Yamamura had an incredible 2017 and his presence in this match intrigued me. After a stellar singles match in February and a huge Korakuen Hall performance in March, Yamamura was on some kind of roll. On this night, T-Hawk (the King of Gate tournament winner shortly after) stood in his way. T-Hawk slowed the pace, looking to take the fans out of it and stall Yamamura’s momentum. Yamamura refused to give in, despite the strength disadvantage he was at. He fired back strikes as hard as the ones he was taking. He kicked out of T-Hawk’s BT Bomb and the building erupted. They’ve grown to believe in him and everything he does, which worked wonderfully here. He came close to winning on a few occasions, but ultimately fell to the Night Ride after 17:21. T-Hawk’s best performance of 2017 and just another in a line of them for Yamamura, who was arguably the company’s MVP this year. [****] |
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Post by marino13 on Dec 28, 2017 11:05:40 GMT -5
I love these. Thanks Kev!
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Dec 28, 2017 11:38:31 GMT -5
Honorable Mention #3: Super Strong Style 16 Quarterfinals: Flamita vs. Travis Banks – PROGRESS Chapter 49: Super Strong Style 16 5/28/17
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| People don’t talk about him much, but I’d put Flamita up there with bigger names like Ricochet and Fenix as the top high fliers in wrestling. He made his PROGRESS debut during the tremendous Super Strong Style 16 tournament, besting fellow aerial artist Mark Andrews in the first round. First time ever matches can be awkward and after an early slip up, I was concerned that would be the case with this one. Luckily, the remainder of the 12:50 match was smooth sailing. With a shot at the PROGRESS Title on the line, both guys threw everything they had at each other to advance. The pace was wild, with Banks being good and fast enough to keep up with Flamita. The masked man showed off a sweet muscle buster lung blower combo that I’ve never seen before. He kicked out of the Kiwi Krusher and went for Flam Fly, only to have that countered into a pin. There was a fair amount of reversals throughout. Just when Flamita looked on the verge of scoring the upset, he missed a 450 splash and Banks trapped him in the Lion Clutch to make him tap. I probably went higher on this than most, but I really like both men and thought this ruled. [****] |
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Post by TheSystem 1.5 on Dec 28, 2017 11:40:09 GMT -5
Flamita deserves more recognition
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Dec 28, 2017 13:00:27 GMT -5
130. AJ Styles vs. Dean Ambrose – WWE Smackdown 1/31/17
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| For the second straight year, the list officially begins with an AJ Styles Smackdown match. The AJ Styles/Dean Ambrose feud produced some stellar matches in 2016. After losing the WWE Championship in a classic at the Royal Rumble, Styles and Ambrose reignited their rivalry for one night. With both men scheduled for the Elimination Chamber, this served as a preview, with other Chamber participants, Miz and Baron Corbin, on commentary. They opened things with some mat based work, with Ambrose showing he could more than hang there when he wants to. As it progressed, Dean brought out his brawling style, keeping AJ on his toes. After a commercial, things evened out, with plenty of counters due to their knowledge of one another. The finishing stretch reminded me of AJ’s NJPW run. Dean’s counter of AJ’s moonsault DDT was tremendous, as was the Pele Kick into Nigel clothesline spot. Just when things hit the great level, Corbin and Miz came to blows, causing the official to miss Dean’s pin. Dean took them out, only to eat a Styles Clash inside for the finish at 18:44. I’d say their three best matches were Backlash, TLC and this, but the last two are close. Great finish and they managed to work the always lame Corpus Christi crowd into a frenzy. Also, it was the first Smackdown match to get ****+ from Big Dave in several years. [****] |
*This is the final Smackdown match on the list.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Dec 28, 2017 15:12:13 GMT -5
129. Super Jr. Tag Team Tournament Semi-Finals: BUSHI and Hiromu Takahashi vs. Roppongi 3K – NJPW Road to Power Struggle 10/30/17
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| Had this match been saved for Wrestle Kingdom 12, it would’ve been the best Jr. Tag Title match in the Tokyo Dome in YEARS. Instead wasn’t even the finals of the Super Jr. Tag Tournament. Hiromu is battling KUSHIDA for best junior, while BUSHI is top five (behind those two and probably Scurll and Ricochet only) and Roppongi 3K are hella talented. SHO and YOH had just won the Jr. Tag Titles, but were still looked at by some as the young boys they were before they went on excursion. Hiromu and BUSHI certainly treated them that way. YOH’s chest was a deep red in the opening minutes from a string of brutal chops. YOH and SHO had a “never say die” attitude and won over the crowd with it. YOH was busting out fresh, impressive offense, while SHO was kicking and suplexing everything moving. I love that BUSHI and Hiromu didn’t play this like two stablemates thrown together for the sake of an extra team in the tournament. There was thought and effort put into their team and it showed. They had great chemistry and dope tandem offense. After an action-packed 20:34, SHO and YOH won via their 3K finisher, which is a flapjack/complete shot combo. This division is one of the worst in all of wrestling, but every once in a while, they deliver something like this and kill it. [****] |
*This is the final Road to Power Struggle match. *It is the final Super Jr. Tag Tournament match. *It is the final appearance of Roppongi 3K.
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Post by marino13 on Dec 28, 2017 17:15:10 GMT -5
I liked the AJ/Dean feud. But I feel that both guys were playing the wrong part. Want them to make magic? Have AJ as the sympathetic face with Ambrose as the psychotic heel.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Dec 28, 2017 17:45:18 GMT -5
128. Evolve Championship: Zack Sabre Jr. [c] vs. Ethan Page – Evolve 84 5/20/17
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| In the record books, Ethan Page held victories over Zack Sabre Jr. at Evolve 72 and 76. His turn (again) on Johnny Gargano near the end of 2016 set Page on a course for success and I bought him as the guy to end Timothy Thatcher’s reign. Sabre wound up doing that and his rivalry with Page spilled over to the Evolve Title on this night. They played this like an animosity filled title match, fighting outside and bringing big strikes. Both were aggressive, which fit the feud, Page’s personality and is the best kind of Sabre. Both men picked up near falls and had some great counters. When Page delivered the Package Piledriver, I legitimately bought it as the finish. Sabre escaped a second and went into a flurry. After two PKs, Page refused to go down, instead defiantly flipping Sabre off. Two more PKs sealed it after 13:52 of action. This worked as a great grudge match, with lots of intensity. The in-ring stuff ruled and the character work from both delivered. [****] |
*This is the final appearance of Ethan Page.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Dec 28, 2017 20:22:47 GMT -5
127. Tetsuya Naito vs. Tomohiro Ishii – NJPW G1 Climax 7/29/17
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| I’ve spoken, at length, about the chemistry between these two. Less than a month after Tomohiro Ishii beat Tetsuya Naito to advance in the IWGP United States Title Tournament, they were paired up again in the G1 Climax. Entering this match, they’d met six times in the past (never in a G1) and were tied at three wins apiece. The fans were pro-Naito for this. He treated them to his usual antics as he got under Ishii’s skin by spitting at him. Ishii had enough of his crap and proceeded to kick his ass for a few minutes. When Naito got in his offense, he focused on the neck. Ishii’s a bad man, though, and he was game to trade suplexes, regardless of what happened to his neck. Down the stretch, they traded strikes several times, with each one sounding brutal. Whatever Naito threw at Ishii, he had an answer for and won via Brainbuster after a great 20:40. It started slow, but really picked up and was helped by the hot crowd. It was a hard-fought match that had the feel of high stakes. Even with this being great, it was still possibly the worst match I’ve seen them have. [****] |
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Post by Triple S: POOR on Dec 28, 2017 20:55:23 GMT -5
Half tempted to go out and watch all of these...
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Dec 28, 2017 23:15:32 GMT -5
I ran it by the moderator when I started this two years ago to make it sure it was okay.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Dec 29, 2017 0:30:07 GMT -5
126. NXT Tag Team Championship: #DIY (c) vs. The Authors of Pain – NXT TakeOver: San Antonio 1/28/17
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| At TakeOver: Toronto in November 2016, #DIY won the NXT Tag Team Titles in my person pick for, not just match of the year, but best tag team match I’ve ever seen. On that same show, the Authors of Pain won the Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic. That set these teams on a course for this title match. Known for their heart, #DIY didn’t back down from their large challenge. It started hot and stayed that way. Even when Gargano took the heat segment, the fans were engaged. Ciampa’s hot tag ruled, as he busted out Germans on both challengers. There was a great callback when the stereo submissions #DIY won the titles with were locked in. It wasn’t enough, though, signaling that something was changing. #DIY’s finisher was countered into the Super Collider in a great spot. A Last Chapter later and new champs were crowned at 14:26. #DIY just “got” tag team wrestling. They played to the Authors’ strengths and it made for an awesome start to a series of matches that only got better. Like Sami Zayn as NXT Champion, #DIY losing the titles in just two months was fine. Their story was more about the journey, while AOP got to play dominant champions and have a great 2017. [****] |
*This is the final match from TakeOver: San Antonio
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Post by Deleted on Dec 29, 2017 1:58:25 GMT -5
Called it.
Going to start trying to make my way through this.
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Post by A-Rob on Dec 29, 2017 3:18:02 GMT -5
I'm interested in watching the Matt Riddle vs. Keith Lee match.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Dec 29, 2017 9:50:36 GMT -5
125. Cueto Cup Semi-Finals: Fenix vs. Prince Puma – Lucha Underground 8/16/17
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| A lot of the Cueto Cup didn’t deliver on the high expectations I had, but it got better as we reached the later rounds. The Semi-Finals saw Lucha Underground’s “Mount Rushmore” (at least in my mind) compete. Pentagon Dark, Mil Muertes, Fenix and Prince Puma. Though it came down to the four biggest stars, the Puma/Fenix matchup felt fresh. It had only happened once before, way back in season one. They played this match evenly, like you’d expect the two top babyfaces to be. However, Puma was no longer the straight face he was during his title run. He was more aggressive and it showed. Despite that, Fenix came the closest to winning after a brutal kick to the back of the head. Marty Martinez, Fenix’s rival, arrived to stalk Fenix’s love interest, Melissa Santos. Ever the good guy, Fenix took Marty out. Puma, no longer the straight face, took advantage and hit a Michinoku Driver. Fenix was resilient enough to survive that, but fell after a 630 splash at 10:27. This was as awesome as you’d expect from guys the caliber of Puma and Fenix, with story advancements to add to the action. [****] |
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