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Lance Storm on MMA moves in pro wrestling

578 views 2 replies 2 participants last post by  vandalian 
#1 ·
Just a little oddity I stumbled across.

http://www.thefightnetwork.com/news_detail.php?nid=6327

ADAPTING MMA


By: Lance Storm
The Fight Network

I want to debate something this week, but I’m going to have to walk gently as I do not want to offend the man that I’m going to talk about. I have a world of respect for the man I want to discuss this week and consider him one of the all time greats, but there is something that has been driving me nuts for a week or two now and I’m curious what others think, and need to speak my mind. What I want to talk about this week is the Undertaker's new finishing hold, because I really don’t like it and I’m curious if I’m alone in this opinion.

For those of you who haven’t been watching SmackDown lately, the Undertaker is now using a Gogoplata Choke (a legit MMA choke) as his new finisher. The hold, for lack of a better description, is a variation of a triangle choke executed from your back where you wrap your one leg out and around your opponents shoulder and then back under his chin and then pull his head down across your shin with your hands. To execute the hold you have to use both legs and both hands while lying on your back.

I realize that MMA is getting very popular and I understand the desire to adapt that style into pro-wrestling, but I’ve always had a huge logic problem with using “choke” holds as a finish in pro-wrestling. Even back when TAZ got his Taz-mission choke over huge, I always hated it. Choking is of course illegal in pro-wrestling, and you can argue and debate the “blood choke” vs. “air choke” as much as you want, but unless there is a means by which to clearly explain the difference to your general fan base, it is just confusing to reprimand wrestlers all show about choking and then announce that someone has choked out his opponent for the win.

Even if we put that “choke” issue aside, this is a poor choice for a finish on so many levels. For starters, any move done from you back is likely a poor pro-wrestling finish. In MMA being on you back is not a bad thing, because you can’t be pinned, but in pro-wrestling that is the worst possible position to be in. For years, since pro-wrestling’s inception actually, fans have been educated to the fact that if you are on your back and someone is on top of you, you are in a bad position. Someone as dominant and powerful as the Undertaker should almost never be in this position, let alone put himself in it voluntarily. I remember watching the AWA as a fan and hearing a commentator joke that Nick Bockwinkle (AWA World Champ at the time) doesn’t even sleep on his back, and I remember thinking that was such a great line because staying off your back is the single most important thing in wrestling.

As a one-time surprise counter (provided the announcers knew what it was and could explain it) I could see this adding a new dimension to the Undertaker. When he used it to defeat Big Daddy V it made some degree of sense. Taker faced with a 500 pound opponent, found himself in a position where perhaps he could not tombstone or choke slam the 500 pounder, and after getting beat down to the ground by one of his biggest opponents yet, had to demonstrate skill rather than his more common power to get the win. This past week on SD he used the hold on Matt Striker and I found myself groaning in disapproval for the first time ever watching The Undertaker wrestle. (Actually I have groaned during other Undertaker matches but I don’t think it is fair to count matches he had with El Gigante, the man can’t work miracles).

In my opinion after nearly 2 decades of Destruction, The Dead Man should not have to leave his feet to lay waste to Matt Striker. This should be a brief confrontation where Taker is left standing tall while Striker lays at his feet, closing the segment with a great visual of one man up and one man down. Instead after choke slamming Striker, which has laid out many men to date, me included, he tied him up and rolled to his back for the submission, ending the segment with both men down on the mat, a far less visual image to close the segment; it just seemed so unnecessary, and in my opinion even brought he crowd down rather than up, after the choke slam.

It’s a poor position visually, takes a fair bit of time to hook in, and isn’t going to be easy to counter in and out of in big matches to tease false finishes. That doesn’t even take into account he fact that with Taker's incredibly long legs this hold is going to be very hard to properly hook on a wide variety of people, and will likely never be as over as the Last Ride or Choke Slam. I think the old adage, “If it aint broke, don’t fix it” applies so perfectly when it comes to the Undertaker. Taker is arguably the greatest gimmick ever created as well as one of the best working big men of all time, and has two incredibly over finishes already. I don’t understand nor see the need to switch his character to that of a submission wrestler. To me The Undertaker is the Phenom, the Dead Man, or even the American Bad Ass, a guy who lays waste to those in his path, not a technically sound submission wrestler who can beat you on the ground. If you are going to play the MMA card, I see Taker as more a Chuck Liddell than a Royce Gracie.

That’s my 2-cents, I’ll be curious to hear yours.

POSTED -- 02/18/08
 
#2 ·
I think Lance is being too critical especially about pulling a move off your back. I think it's stupid for Taker to intentionally put himself on his back, but if he's already on his back and he puts the move as a counter then it's cool. That being said, I don't like Taker's "Gogoplata" one bit. It's sloppy as hell, it looks ridiculous, and a lot of times it's quite obvious that the opponent is positioning himself for it and it looks phony as hell. Plus the shots of the wrestlers with ketchup on their face is ridiculous.

I have nothing against MMA moves being used in rasslin' in general though. Moves like Jujigatame have been used for decades and are used extensively in Japan as finishers. The bit of MMA style action that Samoa Joe and Kurt Angle did at the beginning of their match at Lockdown (I was there in person) was quite entertaining.
 
#3 ·
I have nothing against MMA moves being used in rasslin' in general though. Moves like Jujigatame have been used for decades and are used extensively in Japan as finishers. The bit of MMA style action that Samoa Joe and Kurt Angle did at the beginning of their match at Lockdown (I was there in person) was quite entertaining.
Really? I've often wondered what those events come off like live. I went to a WWE house show when I was like 12 and right into wrestling.
I'm not really a fan anymore, but I've caught the off TNA show in TV, and a lot of it looked really bad.
Then again, those two are some of the better workers out there, so it's not like you were watching Scott Steiner vs. Giant Gonzales or anything.
 
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