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. Jigsaw, CHIKARA Aniversario: The Ogg & I (5/20/2012)

This was for Kingston’s CHIKARA Grand Championship.

The best sort of an Eddie Kingston match, outside of a brawl, is an Eddie Kingston knee work match. This briefly teases out that it might be that, but disappointingly just becomes a bombfest. Luckily, Eddie Kingston is better at pacing out an epic title match bombfest than all but maybe five people in the world at this point, and five might be a reach. He does it while always selling the knee despite Jigsaw abandoning it, and always selling the big shots as well as anybody. Jigsaw’s also pretty alright here. Nothing he does is all that exceptional in a match that also involves Eddie Kingston, but he does his best to not let the match down. You can probably trim three to five off the back end of this, as it’s hard to buy Jigsaw as a credible challenger at this point in the reign or at this point in CHIKARA, but it’s never a match I’d call less than great, even stretched to its thinnest points.

Not the match you use to convince (as if you should have to?) anyone that Eddie Kingston is one of the greatest of all time, but the sort of match you use to display that Eddie Kingston makes every single match he’s in that much better.

***

The Briscoes vs. Jigsaw/Hallowicked, ROH The Homecoming 2012 (1/20/2012)

To help promote ROH’s first show back in Philadelphia in a year (!!!??!?!?!), ROH needed the help of local favorite CHIKARA to help draw a house on account of ROH having no actual buzz and ROH having written off the market yet again.

It’s a LOT of fun.

Beyond just that it’s the rare ROH match with all great wrestlers, it’s one actually helped by the booking. The match is more or less worked as a face/face match, but they lean into the CHIKARA guys being local favorites compared to the Briscoes, who align with ROH (as they ARE Ring of Honor at this point). Jigsaw and Hallowicked are the perfect picks for a match like this, as they were in ROH once, but used as enhancement talent for the most part and abandoned despite the obvious talent. Jigsaw, in particular, has a bone to pick after he was unmasked in ROH and exposed in every possible way. So, they have something to prove, and work like it.

The Briscoes are great at being very casually dominant. They clearly don’t get “it” and despise this entire deal, but they’re not really mean about it. When they get mean, it costs them. It’s a nice little story. When Jigsaw gets put through a table, Jay gets into it more and they play with the food. The CHIKARA roster comes down in support, and Jay Briscoe takes offense to Saturyne being there for some reason. He punches out Dasher Hatfield and rolls the girl in. Jay ducks a Fire Ant springboard that buys the girl time to roll out, but it’s actually just a set up. Jigsaw hits a Superkick and grabs a side cradle for the BIG upset on Jay Briscoe. Absolutely the right call, even if the specific distraction only made me wish for The Briscoes vs. The Colony instead.

Yet again, it doesn’t go far enough and stops right when it’s getting VERY interesting. ROH being ROH at this point inhibits matches at something like a three-boy ceiling so often, but like Strong/Cole earlier in the night, this bumped right up against that.

I still liked it. Good things are good.

***

Jigsaw vs. Fire Ant, CHIKARA Chikarasaurus Rex: King of Sequel N1 (7/30/2011)

This was a Block B match in the 12 Large Summit to determine CHIKARA’s first Grand Champion.

It’s another one of those rare match ups that made the 12 Large Summit so special. It’s two of CHIKARA’s most popular, longest tenured, and all around best babyfaces, who rarely ever get to meet one on one. We saw in March that they had a lot of chemistry though, and this more than delivers on the promise of their interactions then.

The major story is that Jigsaw’s missed the tournament so far because of a bicep injury, and might be coming back prematurely to avoid being eliminated entirely. Fire Ant is as respectful of the arm as possible, but that doesn’t mean it’s not injured. As satisfying and engaging as quality limbwork can be, there’s something about a match like this that hits me in an even better place. As impressive as it is to pick a story and stick with it, it’s even more impressive to start out with a story and tell it this effectively while taking such a minimalist approach to that story. The arm matters in spite of Fire Ant being a good guy about it. Jigsaw is a one armed man for so much of the match after it’s innocuously reinjured early on, and it gives Fire Ant the openings he needs to counteract whatever Jigsaw has over him because of experience alone.

Jigsaw knows enough to keep Fire Ant from hitting any of his big signatures through experience and wit alone, but his arm provides the escape lever that Fire Ant needs to do the same. It’s at the end that Fire Ant finally does go after the arm, and they couldn’t have laid it out any better. By avoiding it for the first five-sixths or so of the match, Fire Ant is established as a good man. In going for it in the end, when the match has given him little other choice, he’s established not so much as an opportunist, but as someone willing to take what’s there. You feel for Jigsaw, but not at the expense of Fire Ant’s position as CHIKARA’s most likable babyface.

Jigsaw survives a cross armbreaker and short-arm scissors, so Fire Ant does something real cool and puts on a sort of short-arm scissors Kimura Lock instead, and Jigsaw has to surrender.

Nothing that’s going to blow anybody away, but a really smart and satisfying undercard affair from two guys who specialize in that sort of thing.

***

Mike Quackenbush/Jigsaw vs. The Colony (Fire Ant & Soldier Ant), CHIKARA Creatures From The Tar Swamp (3/13/2011)

This was for Quack and Jigsaw’s CHIKARA Campeonatos Des Parejas, and accordingly, a best two of three falls match. 

This is the semi main event, but it’s an all time babyface vs. babyface CHIKARA dream tag. Like the other title matches in this reign, it’s a brutally efficient match. Quack gets right into it with Soldier Ant and goes directly into some harder mat stuff, directly putting The Colony in a more sympathetic role, or at least clearly shaping the match with him working directly from above. The first fall is entirely Quackenbush vs. Soldier Ant, which is really interesting and novel. In addition to simply being good as hell, it constantly pushes the story forward. Quack tries to get Solider to go to the ropes or tag out or something to admit defeat, but he hangs tough, and surprises Quack with a chickenwing into a crucifix pin to go 1-0! Quack’s facial selling is again top notch, and pushes the entire thing up just a little bit. He’s pissed, surprised, but also just a little bit impressed. 

He starts the second fall with so much more urgency and a little desperation too. Fire Ant and Jigsaw are able to pick up the pace, and it’s a perfect kind of good guys on good guys action. Super fancy and smooth arm drags and headscissors, constantly trying to top each other, and always getting a little bit rougher. Jigsaw is like Quack here, just a little outmanned at the approach he takes. Quackenbush stays more aggressive when he gets inside again against Soldier Ant. The troop can’t help but making a mistake, akin to blowing the signing bonus on a Dodge Charger, and he tries the same combination that pinned Quack moments ago. Quackenbush is frustrated and desperate, but he’s still the master, and he blocks it a second time into a modification on a Peterson Roll to put it to 1-1, and getting something back from Soldier Ant. 

It’s in the third fall that they get much more serious. Jigsaw brings the intensity too, and we finally get the big Fire Ant vs. Quackenbush exchanges that you (I) came into this really looking forward to. Quacksnbush suffers damage to the left arm, specifically the elbow or forearm, at a point taking a spill outside. He’s smart enough to sell it for the rest of the match despite The Colony being too respectful to ever go for it, and it adds just a little something extra when he has problems with lifting Fire and Soldier because of it. A few really well executed nearfalls and counters get the match just a little further. There’s one really delightful moment where Quackenbush breaks up the CHIKARA Special on Jigsaw by pulling Soldier Ant into the original CHIKARA Special, which just about sums up this delightful little match. Late in the match, Fire Ant finally does aim some of his kicks at the arm, and the refusal to do it earlier makes it mean just a little something extra when he goes for it here. Jigsaw has to carry it after that, but he has a big big one up his sleeve and defeats Fire Ant after an avalanche-style Torture Rack Bomb.

So many times in these reviews, things don’t age as well as I would have hoped. It’s sort of how it goes. This is the rare reversal of that, the match that’s even better than I remembered. A real epic, but done so efficiently. Virtually no fat on this thing. What isn’t essential to the story is simply just incredibly cool, and it’s this beautiful little pocket epic. The CHIKARA fan’s answer to The Steiners vs. Sting and Lex Luger.

***1/2

Mike Quackenbush/Jigsaw vs. The Batiri (Obariyon & Kodama), CHIKARA Caught In A Cauldron of Hate (2/19/2011)

This was for Quackenbush and Jigsaw’s CHIKARA Campeonatos Des Parejas, and as such, was under best of three fall rules. 

The Batiri are two young recent grads, working some sort of borderline occult goblin gimmick, facepaint, cheating, aggression and the like. There’s not a lot of tape on them, so Quackenbush and his boy work a more directly offensive style against them early on. Jigsaw is not anywhere near as careful as Quack and winds up with his leg wrapped over the middle rope after a move JUST long enough for The Batiri to take advantage of it and hurt it. They’re still a little inexperienced and don’t directly go after it. It’s hard to tell if it’s intentional or not, but it’s such a great little bit to get that wrinkle over. It’s still enough to stop Jigsaw from being able to fight back effectively, and Obariyon just PLANTS him with a Flying DDT to go 1-0. 

Jigsaw is both hurt and injured, so Quack tries to storm in. The Batiri gets him out immediately, and now goes after the leg much more consistently. Jigsaw is smart enough to continually roll out and get Quackenbush in, but the Batiri learns about it the more it happens, and they start to plan against it. Each control period on Jigsaw gets longer and a little meaner, but he still just knows more, and he’s able to grab a Peterson Roll out of nowhere to get to 1-1. In the confusion, Quackenbush and Jigsaw can switch places and like “real” lucha, it’s the third fall where things really begin to happen and where the match is made. The Batiri never quite lived up to their rookie potential, but they’re simple heels doing simple and aggressive heel offense. Quackenbush can do a lot with them, and the leg of Jigsaw adds an element to this that helps so much. He’s not a big time limb seller, historically, but he has a number of wonderful little moments of it here. Quack goes big very quickly once he can get a chance, and defeats one of the little goblin perverts with a rare avalanche-style Quackendriver. 

Did The Batiri deserve a title match main event so early into their careers? Probably not. They had one though, and it’s hard to imagine a better Batiri match. None of their future weaknesses were on display here at all, a masterful display of construction by Quackenbush, selling by Jigsaw, and efficiency by everybody involved. If you for some reason have to watch one Batiri match, this is the one.

***1/4