Fire Ant/Jigsaw/Nick Jackson/Player Dos/Helios/Green Ant/Frightmare/Cloudy vs. Soldier Ant/Mike Quackenbush/Matt Jackson/Player Uno/Lince Dorado/Carpenter Ant/Hallowicked/Cheech, CHIKARA Cibernético Increible (10/18/2009)

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This was the annual Torneo Cibernetico match.

For the uninitiated or simply less initiated, this is an eight vs. eight tag team match with a set entry order or batting order to make it more easily understood, but since many of you are less American and/or big nerds, it means you can only tag out to the person next in line (or they have to come in next if, under lucha tag rules, you leave the ring). There are eliminations through the usual methods, and should one team have more than one man left at the very end, the will have to fight until one is left.

It can — in that it has in the past and will in the future — result in some of the better and more memorable CHIKARA matches ever, such as 2005’s one-hundred plus minute one (loved it at the time, plan on never ever watching it again so present me can never find what I’m sure are a thousand flaws), 2010’s all-time CHIKARA bullshit masterpiece of the CHIKARA team vs. the BDK which was one of the best of that year, and 2012’s similarly great CHIKARA vs. ROH edition.

That is not entirely the case here.

More often than not, these matches have some unifying story, if not tying together most of the major ones in the company. Usually team captains who are feuding and a month away from meeting in a blow-off match at the end of the season. It doesn’t always lead to the greatest combinations at the end or winners, CHIKARA being CHIKARA and all, but there’s usually a guiding concept and a focus behind everything.

Except in 2009, when — as CHIKARA seemed to do most of the year, likely sensing the chance afforded by the sudden change in Ring of Honor — the match became more about simply delivering a great match.

There were two major problems with this.

Firstly, a little less impactfully, was the choice to split eight tag teams up in a parejas increibles style, which is both a novelty that wears off after about half the match, and also something that doesn’t feel explored nearly enough (the two might be related). I’m not really sure how it would work with the batting order unless the got a little boring with it, at least at the start, but I think that might have solved some of the issues this had with repetition, if the company was always so inclined to make this edition of the match a lighter and faster fireworks-based display.

Secondly, and more obviously, it’s a little long and not everyone is all that great in it. There’s a longer Lince Dorado vs. Frightmare section in the middle that’s real real average where the match first begins to lose momentum, but in general, they go too fast from the start for a near fifty minute thing, eliminations or not. That first third or first half or so is a lot of fun, a million moving parts and them all mostly working crisply, but when nothing develops out of that and it never really escalates into a higher level fireworks show, combined with some more flubs and miscues coming later in the match, something gets lost. There’s a moment when the go to a mini dive train when the pace and intensity begins to mount, only to then go back to a lighter medium-grade back and forth, and it feels like it never totally finds its footing on such a high level again. The match, again in a CHIKARA Cibernetico, also misuses its assets, opting to showcase the Pinkie Sanchez in disguise fraud Carpenter Ant as its winner, and never quite becomes all it can be as a result of these choices.

Peak CHIKARA (07-11) being what it was though, something about it still works.

Between the pace, the gimmick always keeping things somewhat fresh, a line up this good (at the time), and a construction that at least keeps enough quality pieces around until the end even if a loser idea is the focal point, there’s something entertaining happening far more often than there isn’t. The combinations of guys like the original ants, Hallowicked, Quack, Jigsaw, the Bucks when they were just fun little flip dealers, the same for a masked Ricochet, etc., are all really good, and if underachieving, it’s a match that is almost always offering up good wrestling, and that very often drifts into great wrestling, as poorly organized as it all is.

Essentially, a fireworks show that never really builds and lacks the grand finale of the great ones, but that still offers up enough bright lights in enough interesting patterns to be worth my while.

The match isn’t perfect. Above all, it might be an example that in a match like this, you have to turn it up or go somewhere at some point. All the same, there are no major infuriating sins, it’s a forty to fifty minute long match that never becomes excruciatingly long, and there’s just too much breezy and good wrestling in it.

It’s just a little too much fun not to like.

***1/5

Eddie Kingston vs. Green Ant, CHIKARA Battle Not With Monsters (5/3/2013)

This was for Kingston’s CHIKARA Grand Championship.

In an interview before his match with an embarrassingly Q-pilled NXT referee in 2008, Eddie Kingston said that he’s a man who needs a war, a thing to go after and devote himself to trying to tear down. It was Chris Hero, it was all these veterans, it was Hallowicked, it became the BDK and ROH and Kevin Steen and all these other enemies for a long time, and for a long time, his war was fought against people who everyone wanted to see Eddie Kingston wage war against. By this point, all of those enemies are gone. CHIKARA beat back the BDK, they beat back ROH, he dethroned Quackenbush as the #1 guy when he won the title. The instinct doesn’t go away when the war is won. A guy like Eddie Kingston needs an enemy, and should they stop presenting themselves, he’s going to find a way to create one.

Inching closer towards his year and a half mark as CHIKARA’s inaugural champion, Eddie Kingston has started to become meaner and angrier and a much more desperate wrestler. Most of that comes as a result of the rise of Green Ant, and repeated “NEXT WORLD CHAMP” type reactions to the kid, giving Eddie Kingston just enough of a reason to make this more than it ever had to be.

The match itself is tremendous, one of the most underrated matches of the decade. I can see how many people would be confused though, as this show is in the CWF-MA venue, and the fact that they manages to have a gritty, intense, and compelling title match main event in only fourteen (14) minutes and not forty and an hour and forty is enough to cause some brains to short circuit upon realizing such a thing was actually possible. Best to just not speak of it. I get it.

Eddie still has a bad hand, but with a full-hand Copperfit glove on the right hand, it’s not a major deal. Eddie still doesn’t use it as much as he might otherwise, but he can use it now. It’s not a debilitating injury. The match still plays with the idea solely through the idea of the glove and Eddie having to parse out when to use the hand, but the major focus is actually Eddie’s knee. It’s a great choice, both because of all the history with Eddie Kingston’s historically bad leg, but also because Eddie is one of the best knee sellers in the history of wrestling. Any match that allows him to show this off is a far far better match for making the decision.

It’s hard to say any one Eddie Kingston leg selling performance is THE best, but this belongs up there with the best of them. All the stuff you want and expect, but there’s also a blowaway little thing where Green Ant shoves him back from the apron when Eddie is in the ring, and Eddie crumbles down just off the step back, because logically the pressure on the leg would now be different and that’s the sort of thing someone with a hurt leg understands. Some people sell a limb like they grew up watching pro wrestlers sell a limb, and some people sell a limb like they grew up watching real people have a bad knee or some home from a long shift hurt, if not having experienced it themselves. Eddie Kingston’s selling has always felt far more like the latter, and it’s what’s made him the best at it.

Just as impressive is how well they walk the line. Eddie Kingston isn’t a full on villain yet, but the fun is in the slow drift towards that. We never totally got it again in CHIKARA while he was champion, sadly, but he’s so great at peppering in little touches. A choke to keep Green Ant in the corner, aiming for a count out, these little cut offs that always feel JUST a little more mean spirited than the moment calls for. He reaches for an eye at an especially desperate moment. And yet, these are just small moments in a match where Kingston is otherwise majorly behind the eight ball and dealing with two different injuries. It’s a hard thing to get right, one that few others could. The challenge isn’t just to sell the leg well, it’s to sell the leg in sympathetic ways while also having these moments of desperation. If someone was to switch between ideas, it wouldn’t work half as well, but what Eddie Kingston is able to do is to hold them both at once, perfectly balanced in each hand.

The longer it lasts, the desperation turns to anger, and Green Ant starts to get really hurt. To his end, the selling is outstanding. Nothing quite so dramatic and grimy as Eddie Kingston’s leg selling, but sympathetic and energetic. It’s very easy to want to see him succeed, even against a guy like Kingston. The benefit of Eddie walking the line in the way he does, but something that also would have failed if Green Ant wasn’t so good at it. Green Ant pushes Eddie go reach further and further, and always in ways that make Eddie seem worse and make Green Ant seem tougher.  A Powerbomb on the floor is especially brutal, leading to the big near count out, which CHIKARA once again does better than any other company with regularity. One Backfist to the Future doesn’t work, but King is finally able to shut down the kid with a second for the win.

One of the sleeper matches of the decade, which should be talked about in much fonder terms than it is. Alternately, I would settle for people outside of one or two others talking about it at all. Green Ant is perfect. Eddie Kingston is even better. An interesting story told in an even more interesting way in a stunningly efficient package.

I’ve enjoyed making people mad online by saying this is actually the best title match to happen in the CWF Mid Atlantic Sportatorium in the 2010s. I don’t actually believe that . You can calm down.

It’s only the third best one.

***1/2

Jay Lethal/Adam Cole/TJ Perkins vs. The Colony (Fire, Soldier, & Green Ant), ROH UNITY (4/28/2012)

HOOT AND A HALF.

It’s a pure sprint from start to finish and it all goes off without a hitch. The Colony is an all time great trio, but this is a little different for them, being like a pure Dragon System style mad dash to the finish line.

The three ROH guys get plugged in here and there. They’re fine, they hit their marks, but they could probably be any three competent wrestlers and this match would have been exactly as great as it was. The ROH team tries to play in the format and work as fast and loose as the Colony does, and they just can’t. They get distracted by legal man rules and lose track of things. TJ rolls up Fire Ant at the end, only for Green Ant to sneak in and roll them over, so Fire Ant’s cradle pins TJ Perkins.

It’s played off as close, but on a mechanical ass X’s and O’s level, The Colony have them at the end and always had them. The ROH team hangs in there, but they play a game to which they barely understand the rules and pay for it.

One of the most fun ROH matches of the year, not that anyone will ever or should ever go out of their way to see it besides the deeply disturbed and/or big Colony fans.

***

Team FIST (Icarus/Chuck Taylor/Johnny Gargano) vs. The Colony (Fire, Soldier, & Green Ant), CHIKARA King of Trios 2011 Night Three (4/17/2011)

This was the finals of the 2011 King of Trios tournament.

To get it out of the way first, the booking is not ideal. This isn’t entirely a “The Colony won too late” bit, because I understand some of those calls. The Colony weren’t a trio when King of Trios 2009 happened, and 2010’s BDK victory was necessary. The big one is that they should have won in 2008, given how colossal of a failure the big Lince Dorado push ultimately was. There’s also the issue of Claudio’s absence ruling the BDK out of the finals, and leaving Nu FIST as the only other heel act that’s halfway established and good enough to be a worthy foe for this moment. That presents the biggest issue of all, which is that this is a settled issue and has been for two years.

This isn’t a match without tense moments and a few dramatic twists and turns, but The Colony doesn’t have to get revenge on these guys like they do the BDK. That’s a wrong yet to be righted. This is a wrong that’s been righted before. It’s hard to muster up the same emotion, given that that entire element just about telegraphs the result. Given that and the idea that winning of King of Trios hardly feels like the same sort of accomplishment in 2011 that it would have years earlier, this doesn’t feel quite as big as I think they wanted it to.

Now that every problem with this match has been laid bare, this is a great match!

There are four great wrestlers in this match, one good one, and one bad one, and the other five are talented enough and helped out enough by clever layout that they don’t let John Boy drag the entire ship down with him while he fails to swim in deeper waters. Green Ant’s bad arm plays a part, and he’s already good enough to care about it for the duration of the match. Fire Ant The callbacks to the 2009 matches don’t quite hit their mark for the reasons discussed earlier, but they don’t waste a lot of time here and the big nearfalls wake up this graveyard of a crowd. It’s enough to cast any real doubt onto this thing, but they’re enough to make this good as hell along the way to what very obviously comes to pass. Icarus gets beaten with the mother of all Ant Hills.

It’s the third best ever FIST/Colony match ever to this point, at best, but it does everything it needs to do. Not the moment it should have been,

***