...Dive or ...Headlock? | Wrestling With Wregret

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It's the latest debate in the ongoing battle between "old school" wrestling and the new generation! Inspired by a Rip Rogers Twitter post, everyone wants to know if you're "...Dive", or "...Headlock"! Weigh in on the subject here!
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Пікірлер: 802

  • @oryan3112
    @oryan31127 жыл бұрын

    #TeamDivingHeadlock One can't go wrong with variety.

  • @DJD3RPYOfficial

    @DJD3RPYOfficial

    7 жыл бұрын

    #TeamDivingHeadlock

  • @kane3145

    @kane3145

    7 жыл бұрын

    #TeamDivingHeadlock

  • @bbbbKeJodddd

    @bbbbKeJodddd

    7 жыл бұрын

    O'Ryan Dillon so...a bulldog?

  • @TheVarietyVendor

    @TheVarietyVendor

    7 жыл бұрын

    Someone say Variety? ;)

  • @AtonicMike

    @AtonicMike

    7 жыл бұрын

    I think Headlock drives are better! #teamheadlockdrive

  • @ellibod1
    @ellibod17 жыл бұрын

    Bret Hart, he could headlock, he could dive Tito Santana, he could headlock, he could dive Ricky Steamboat, he could headlock, he could dive Randy Savage, he could headlock, he could dive Chris Jericho, he could headlock, he could dive the list goes on. Point is you shouldn't be exclusively one style of wrestling because you either become boring, or you get injured. Any great wrestler can adapt to the world around them, sometimes you need to headlock, sometimes you need to dive, if you know when it's best to dive or headlock then that is how you become a legend like those I mentioned above

  • @EmeraldZion
    @EmeraldZion7 жыл бұрын

    ...stunt granny

  • @anjake01

    @anjake01

    7 жыл бұрын

    JacobZion Brian should make a shirt based on this

  • @doomgoy9462
    @doomgoy94627 жыл бұрын

    if there was a team diving headlock, wouldnt it be called team bulldog?

  • @rj1157bk

    @rj1157bk

    7 жыл бұрын

    i think it be someone jumping off the top rope, landing on their feet and then lock someone in a headlock for 20 mins.

  • @misterprickly

    @misterprickly

    7 жыл бұрын

    Or a *sliced bread*.

  • @anthonynorman7545

    @anthonynorman7545

    7 жыл бұрын

    Misterprickly sliced bread no. 2

  • @misterprickly

    @misterprickly

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ah yes!

  • @ThatFlyPigeon

    @ThatFlyPigeon

    7 жыл бұрын

    That's why you will make it in life ;-)

  • @terrencethompson2941
    @terrencethompson29417 жыл бұрын

    I'm on neither team. I just want matches and feuds to actually have meaning and depth. WWE gets it from time to time. But sadly most of the time it is just filler.

  • @Venemofthe888

    @Venemofthe888

    7 жыл бұрын

    Terrence Thompson #teamstory

  • @TheHagfish

    @TheHagfish

    7 жыл бұрын

    Terrence Thompson So basically team Headlock

  • @waun87

    @waun87

    7 жыл бұрын

    Terrence Thompson right there with you. Although, I am a little annoyed about a excessively they are doing certain moves.

  • @duckrutt

    @duckrutt

    7 жыл бұрын

    It feels like they write backwards most of the time. This is the match we want at Summer Slam so start a feud with these guys, oops someone got hurt are they going to be back in time? Then keep the story going even if it makes no sense if not then slide someone else into the match. All our wrestlers are basically the same right?

  • @waun87

    @waun87

    7 жыл бұрын

    duckrutt lol I agree. They're so bad at that. It's the plug n play of the same booking playbook they use that kills me. I always say that WWE's writing motto should be: "WWE, It's doesn't have to make sense to be on tv." Like RAW, more specifically three hours of it has sucked the life out of me lately. I've tried SO HARD to get into it, but they left me no choice but to reduce down to 90 mins on Hulu maybe even just highlights on KZread. RAW last night was SO uneventful and lack luster in the writing. Omg.

  • @geoffa87
    @geoffa877 жыл бұрын

    I feel like what a lot of young wrestlers are missing is the context of the big spot. Mick Foley took some insane bumps, but if you look it was usually in the context of a red hot fued, IE his Hell in a Cell match with Undertaker. If you hit your finishing move and a guy kicks out at 2, what good is that finishing move? Or to put it another way, how many guys kicked out of the tombstone piledriver? how many kicked out of a stunner? Not many. There doesn't seem to be much psychology in wrestling anymore.

  • @keithharper1470

    @keithharper1470

    7 жыл бұрын

    geoffa87 first time I ever seen Taker use the tombstone more than once was wm14 against Kane but that was telling a story of how Kane was a monster that it took 3 tombstones to finish him. Later in age I got why Taker needed more than 1 tombstone it was the opponents became more difficult to beat. Lesnar needed 3 F5's to end the streak because 1 would not do it that was a part of the story of ending the streak

  • @NeroPiroman

    @NeroPiroman

    7 жыл бұрын

    VENOM GAMING. But roman survived 4 f5s #gottomakeromanlookstrong

  • @NeverWaver
    @NeverWaver7 жыл бұрын

    This is why Zane is the best wrestling channel.

  • @RocaDeearCenjar

    @RocaDeearCenjar

    7 жыл бұрын

    Zane is a person.

  • @karrazaki89
    @karrazaki897 жыл бұрын

    I think that the Japanese have found a perfect balance between the two. The Okada/Omega match will be remembered for a lot of crazy, dangerous spots but a good deal of that match was devoted to more traditional, grapplling based wrestling thatw as accentuated in many places by the spots and it´s not the only one: Styles vs Nakamura, Elgin vs Omega, the classic that was Dynamite Kid vs Tiger Mask I.

  • @ThatFlyPigeon

    @ThatFlyPigeon

    7 жыл бұрын

    It's the storytelling. WWE can do it too look at Miz/Ziggler at No Mercy that was like the 10th match most of which were forgettable but when you add a good stipulation and a story it was epic.

  • @nurandika4563

    @nurandika4563

    7 жыл бұрын

    if you want to look the dangerous side of NJPW, always look for suzuki/shibata matches. im not even telling you about every taichi matches.

  • @okcmidtownrotary4135

    @okcmidtownrotary4135

    6 жыл бұрын

    I totally agree. this past sunday was ZSJ vs Tanahashi and it was all technical wrestling on the mat until the end that had some high spots. nobody tells a story like njpw in the ring in the present i would say.

  • @Smeeeeeghead
    @Smeeeeeghead7 жыл бұрын

    Why not both? You can very easily mix both to create a slow build style that starts with headlocks and wearing down opponents and building up momentum until the final flurry where all the big moves happen.

  • @Smeeeeeghead

    @Smeeeeeghead

    7 жыл бұрын

    I'm sure they do, your point being?

  • @RegretfulDeadMan

    @RegretfulDeadMan

    6 жыл бұрын

    Smeghead That's exactly what I want

  • @jethed2
    @jethed27 жыл бұрын

    ironically this is exactly what the miz was saying to Daniel Bryan on smack talk a year ago

  • @jamesperdomo7055

    @jamesperdomo7055

    7 жыл бұрын

    Luis Vasquez Give this man a Nobel prize

  • @Torthrodhel

    @Torthrodhel

    7 жыл бұрын

    yeah and he was right

  • @omegamark9178

    @omegamark9178

    5 жыл бұрын

    What ticks me off is no one ever called miz out on it. Bryan was right when he called him the definition of the boring, "headlock",wwe-style. Can you actually recall a great miz match? No. He's a great promo, but a permanent mid-carder. Never will be world champion cause the only thing heavyweight about him, is his wife's ****.

  • @anyoneelsebutme5757

    @anyoneelsebutme5757

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@omegamark9178 you do know he was wwe champion once?

  • @ariklion37

    @ariklion37

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@omegamark9178 he has great matches and has been world champion so everything you said except about his mic skills were wrong my dude

  • @FakeKraid
    @FakeKraid7 жыл бұрын

    The next time you want to run at the ropes and dive between them at someone: stop. Pick up a phone and call someone instead. You aren't in this alone.

  • @sproy1
    @sproy17 жыл бұрын

    Rip Rogers wasn't against diving moves, per se. Think about all the wrestlers from his time who used top rope diving moves as their finishes. Guy like Jimmy Snuka, Randy Savage, the Road Warriors, the list goes on an on. Buddy Rogers - the first WWE Champion - was able to get himself over by using "flying" moves more frequently than other wrestlers of his time. No, Rip Rogers is against flying moves being the equivalent of rest holds. There needs to be a build to the matches. Those high flying moves are good for late in the match, but the entire match should not consist almost entirely of them. In movies, television, books, and many other storytelling mediums, the "climax" - the most exciting part of the story - comes near the end of the movie. Well, there's a REASON for that! There needs to be a build to the action, otherwise it's just blowing shit up for it sown sake. Since wrestling is fake, it needs to tell a story in the ring, since it can no longer rely on sports-esque action to get fans to tune in. That means that, like action movies, there needs to be a build to the action. The climax needs to come at the very end.

  • @claybfx
    @claybfx7 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Yeah, I do enjoy the high spots, but I'll take a match with solid storytelling and psychology any day. I HATE how often finishers are kicked out of these days

  • @jotunn30

    @jotunn30

    7 жыл бұрын

    but....you can have both...that's why this argument is so stupid to me...it's not like the style of a match dictates the lack or presence of psychology

  • @cocobarbarian1510

    @cocobarbarian1510

    7 жыл бұрын

    jotunn30 the point is that high spots like suicide dives have become the standard so they never add anything to the match because we see it so often. They just dive out of the ring because they're opponent is outside. And because a suicide dive is the standard people try to top it by doing crazier stunts. They dont do it to add to the story of the match they do it because they wanna look cool/ top another move

  • @highdefinitionapollo2189
    @highdefinitionapollo21897 жыл бұрын

    Why don't we have both?

  • @AMG-ko3gt

    @AMG-ko3gt

    7 жыл бұрын

    George Zhang I agree!

  • @Cobralalalala

    @Cobralalalala

    7 жыл бұрын

    I love all different kinds of styles, from high flying to big man brawls, but I wish people of all styles would learn to tell stories more. Make the things they do in their style mean something.

  • @sxcJOELisNotsexy

    @sxcJOELisNotsexy

    7 жыл бұрын

    *throws Mexican girl in the air*

  • @Bakesale59
    @Bakesale597 жыл бұрын

    I'm somewhere in the middle. I don't like seeing repetitive high spots, but I also don't like to watch 20 minutes of rest holds.

  • @KipClips
    @KipClips7 жыл бұрын

    #DIVE then Headlock Variety is the spice of life.

  • @starhunter9085

    @starhunter9085

    7 жыл бұрын

    Kip Clips Or you could dive into a headlock. 😁

  • @TakerKaneanite619

    @TakerKaneanite619

    7 жыл бұрын

    Kip Clips Neither for me. I prefer an...... ARMBAR!!!!

  • @TheCamSays

    @TheCamSays

    7 жыл бұрын

    Diving Headlock

  • @MrBlazemaster525

    @MrBlazemaster525

    7 жыл бұрын

    Kip Clips How about the moss-covered three-handled family gredunzel?

  • @TheCamSays

    @TheCamSays

    7 жыл бұрын

    Or a Szechuan Spinning Nerve Hold?

  • @mjhardin1354
    @mjhardin13547 жыл бұрын

    Miz vs Ziggler- great match Cena vs michaels- full of headlocks great match Wm 20 main event- great match. Headlocks test your ability to put on a great technical match.

  • @AMG-ko3gt

    @AMG-ko3gt

    7 жыл бұрын

    MJ Hardin Yeah but at least move and go straight technical wrestling on each other.

  • @dontenterthischannel2995

    @dontenterthischannel2995

    7 жыл бұрын

    MJ Hardin I agree but with some wrestlers (cough cough Randy Orton) it can be a momentum killer

  • @TheJrockfreak

    @TheJrockfreak

    7 жыл бұрын

    what was the mania 20 main event?

  • @tobylane4794

    @tobylane4794

    7 жыл бұрын

    I myself am a younger viewer who's not quite out of school and I would much prefer a crossface or some tests of strength over some "rope suicido"s or whatever Mauro calls them. Diving moves are great addition to a match when used sparingly, I don't want to tune into raw, smackdown, or wcpw every week and see people near enough breaks their necks for "entertainment". Their careers are based of the backs of people like Kurt angle and mick foley. The entire reason their big spots are remembered are because they did only 6-7 in their career not 6-7 every match. I like guys like el ligero and tjp but they're putting their bodies on the line for some one off house show match. I just don't think it's worth ending your career for. Jumping off something high doesn't automatically make it a great match, it makes it a great moment for a about a month. Just ask Bret hart, the rock, and triple h very rarely if ever did those guys take huge outside bumps to make a great match with a memorable story

  • @scotteggleston7134

    @scotteggleston7134

    7 жыл бұрын

    Bret Hart would be team Headlock....I'll just leave this here....

  • @abrarhaider4445
    @abrarhaider44457 жыл бұрын

    #TeamChickenwing Long live the Villain!!

  • @robertocioffi2523

    @robertocioffi2523

    7 жыл бұрын

    Abrar Haider Woop Woop

  • @YouTubeViolates1A

    @YouTubeViolates1A

    3 жыл бұрын

    A man of culture I see.

  • @ClementsSan
    @ClementsSan7 жыл бұрын

    To be honest I think most wrestlers, dive, headlock or diving headlock, especially in WWE, are wrestling too many singles matches against each other. To the point that 1 on 1 matches, especially in a feud, are not that special. It's over-exposure...Consider a comparison; Kazuchika Okada wrestled about 18 singles matches in 2016, half of them were G1 Climax and the rest were tag matches. Kevin Owens wrestled over 100 singles matches with less than 100 multi man matches. Both were world champions in 2016. WWE need to bring back stables as well. Big stables. Have several that do Firebird rule. Have lower level talent made important, rather than added like an accessory to build the star. Because this insanity can't go on.

  • @w1llv1nt4ge9

    @w1llv1nt4ge9

    7 жыл бұрын

    Found Teddy Long!

  • @simcosimpai8471

    @simcosimpai8471

    6 жыл бұрын

    It all comes back to the TV format problem .NXT has a fair amount of singles matches but they are all often unique ,have purpose and gives the audience a grasp of what a win/loss would mean to both wrestlers.RAW in comparison generally is just filler

  • @broman9484
    @broman94847 жыл бұрын

    im more of a suplex type of guy

  • @ibbystrogylos8196

    @ibbystrogylos8196

    7 жыл бұрын

    bro man Get out.

  • @Y2JFAN18375
    @Y2JFAN183757 жыл бұрын

    Personally I think it's just a new generation of wrestling. The new influx of talent who are trying to make a name for themselves by creating a style that stands out as different. You can't say it has no place in wrestling because all styles have a place in wrestling. It's a common pattern in all forms of entertainment; music, film, tv, podcasts, art, books & literature. A key part of entertainment is variety, something to suite everyone, & that's why I think there is no problem with headlock or ...dive, they're 2 different styles of wrestling to appease a certain group of fans who enjoy that kind of wrestling. I also believe that 10-20 years from now, a bunch of wrestlers from today's generation will be complaining about how the "new style" is stupid & terrible which goes back to what I referred to before about the evolution of pro wrestling

  • @barsbay7598

    @barsbay7598

    7 жыл бұрын

    David Krappenshitz You hit the nail on the head.

  • @SnipingIsFun

    @SnipingIsFun

    7 жыл бұрын

    David Krappenshitz Agreed

  • @ronmastrio2798
    @ronmastrio27987 жыл бұрын

    Gotta be team headlock the suicide dive seems to be more used than the Irish whip in WWE today which severely diminishes the impact when every match uses one and wrestlers like Ambrose, Harper even Rollins do a really shitty looking slow variation of it. Most indy wrestlers just don't know how to pace out a good match and just do loads of moves for flash and no substance Ospreay is a perfect example of this to escape from a wristlock he grabs the rope and does a front flip even though he could just grab the rope and call break or step through the rope like Tajiri. My main problem with indy wrestling is a lot of the guys don't understand that sometimes you can do more with a lot less.

  • @MrTommygunz0482
    @MrTommygunz04827 жыл бұрын

    #headlock I like the days where finishers meant something and a lot of these matches turn into such spot fests that the guys in them start to devalue the spots Also I hate no selling unless it's to make a big guy look stronger

  • @Jnwboss

    @Jnwboss

    7 жыл бұрын

    Not a bad way of looking at things. I personally don't mind false finishes in a world tittle match or If it is really necessary. I will say though there are moments when a finisher connects and I think to myself "they're going to kick out" when I shouldn't because when I see a finisher i should most of the time think okay that's it. I will say this though Jinder beat Randy Orton with one finisher so hopefully we start to see this thing continue for a little while

  • @user-mz7cj6ss8i

    @user-mz7cj6ss8i

    7 жыл бұрын

    MrTommygunz0482 Boring

  • @MrTommygunz0482

    @MrTommygunz0482

    7 жыл бұрын

    Jnw boss I agree that some false finishes can add to the story being told but the 5th or 6th one starts to kill your finisher But to each their own if that's your twist have fun with it but if your a guy who is gonna do this stuff make it clean and make it make sense

  • @bbiscuit3000

    @bbiscuit3000

    7 жыл бұрын

    Jnw boss Yet on the same card Nakamura kicked out like a million times. That was a good match until that shit started. Ziggler looked like a pussy in that match.

  • @Jnwboss

    @Jnwboss

    7 жыл бұрын

    MrTommygunz0482 I agree that after a certain point it is a little ridiculous especially if it's after like the 4th or 5th finisher. So I understand where you're coming from

  • @Br0nze
    @Br0nze7 жыл бұрын

    I believe Al Snow had a "lecture" about this topic (I think this is it; kzread.info/dash/bejne/a5x-q8SJkqfQg6Q.html) and he essentially took your side, Brian: there is nothing wrong with a spot or a high-risk move, but it has to make sense in the formula of the match, and in the equation of the story. It has to serve a purpose, and that purpose cannot be to merely get a "pop" from the crowd. It's as you say -- the crowd is more exhausted before the match ends than the two workers are -- and that's an impossible pace to sustain. Not only that but these moves are special because they are dangerous and dangerous because they are special; seeing them done in EVERY match desensitizes us (read: fans) to their dangers, and we become accustomed to wrestlers trying to kill themselves for us, so all of a sudden when someone wrestles an "old fashioned manner," he or she isn't trying to impress us, and then why would we care? As much as wrestling is a fans' business, it's also the boys' business, and we need to step back and respect ALL the boys who go out and decide to dedicate their lives to entertaining us, dive or headlock.

  • @charlescarter4608

    @charlescarter4608

    3 жыл бұрын

    Decent comment. Not long enough tho.

  • @Halffstrong1996
    @Halffstrong19967 жыл бұрын

    What I thought was interesting was this: my girlfriend isn't in to wrestling, but the Osprey - Ricochet match was actually entertaining in her opinion. She even called "beautiful to look at". So That to me shows that this "indi-Style" could be more easy to get into for "outsiders". Personally I'm a bit torn. I don't like it when selling becomes an anomaly in a match. But I also don't enjoy matches that are so slow my eyes close. A mix is needed.

  • @jazzmaster909
    @jazzmaster9097 жыл бұрын

    "But Brian everyone knows you need to be able to do 10 Backflip frankensteiners in a row to be REAL Wrestler. headlocks and power moves are for roided up unathletic goons." - "Those" type of fans

  • @jazzmaster909

    @jazzmaster909

    7 жыл бұрын

    Variety is Gold. Vince Likes Big Sweaty Men? yeah He also like Regular Wrestling every now and then

  • @daniellevitz5259
    @daniellevitz52597 жыл бұрын

    I'm on team story. what indy wrestling is missing for me is the in ring story telling. Al Snow said it best. what you are selling if you are a wrestler is the finish. I know what it's like to get hit. I know what a surge of adrenaline feels like. don't misrepresent something I would know. a superplex to the big show breaks the ring? I've never lifted a 7 foot guy, so you can tell me anything about that. you got a surge of adrenaline, hit a superkick, then passed out? BS, weve all been suprised awake. it isn't a 2 second moment. sell me enough reality, that I want to believe your BS. you want to do a million flips? become a gymnast. you want to be a wrestler? tell me a wrestling story.

  • @birdfanboi
    @birdfanboi7 жыл бұрын

    the so called "smart marks" opinions should not have more credibility over a wrestler. good analyst Brian

  • @DammitSinged
    @DammitSinged7 жыл бұрын

    #TeamDickKick

  • @mphstteach
    @mphstteach7 жыл бұрын

    I was an avid wrestling fan until my late teens and have just recently in the last year began watching again. I grow VERY annoyed with 5 false finishes per match, finishing moves mean nothing anymore. Look at Dolph against Nakamura, he hit him WITH THREE DAMN FINISHERS and nothing... It cuts off Dolph's balls for the sake of crowd pop and putting Nakamura over. This style is growing weary on me as a guy in my 30s who knows what he likes, maybe newer fans just love all the false finishes and meaningless finishers, but not this guy

  • @Jorge.Painkiller
    @Jorge.Painkiller3 жыл бұрын

    That's why Powerhouses can still keep up in their 50s and even have solid combats

  • @tmaguire2075
    @tmaguire20757 жыл бұрын

    I'm in between. I used to work for a small promotion in NJ and most of the stuff we learned was mostly old school moves but also new innovative moves yet most of the matches that were put on had an old school style like classic bad guy tactics, elevated pins, submission finishes from a figure 4 or Boston crab, etc. There were a few times, we put on a dive style match, and it was spectacular. So, that's where I would stand. I wish there were more promotions like the one I worked for that still had that old school style but also willing to put on a high flying match whenever possible.

  • @Strathaczar
    @Strathaczar7 жыл бұрын

    Hey Brian, the way I look at it is the same as you. This is how I equate it: The one thing you forgot to mention about the violence/blood aspect of the late 90s/early 00s is the Chair Shot. We were so conditioned with the unprotected Chair Shot to the head that it became cliche, and what used to be sickening and brutal and would put someone down for the count wouldn't by the mid 00's and would take multiple to actually pin someone. And then the wheels fell off... Benoit's murder suicide, concussions, and head trauma would be in sports lexicon from that point forward. And not just the WWE is feeling the backlash, but the NFL as well. Both have class action lawsuits being brought before them, and it's HARD to know that some of my favorite wrestlers/NFL players are dying so young or feeling dangerous affects due to something that was completely preventable. This really hit home with me when my favorite NFL player ever, Junior Seau, took his own life which was very likely due to CTE much like several other NFL players before him did. Just go watch any interviews with Jim McMahon and see how he's struggling now, or go and watch that VERY surreal and painful interview with Mike Webster where he couldn't remember anything and was struggling just to get the words out. Again, I'm with you, Brian, when I'm team DivingHeadlock. I get the point of flash, and having fun, and I LOVE seeing it. Kenny Omega, The Young Bucks, and the like are some of my favorite wrestlers on planet earth right now. But I also want to see them succeed for a LONG time and not have to feel like Mick Foley for the rest of their lives and endure a life of very brutal pain.

  • @maninblack5783
    @maninblack57837 жыл бұрын

    Also, I knew that I could count on this channel to come to a rational middle ground. When these debates pop up, you always have a well thought out alternative.

  • @Rickbane01
    @Rickbane017 жыл бұрын

    The best match in WWE match this weekend was the UK title bout. That was telling a story in the ring with two young and hungry wrestlers that contain the British technical style which involved stylistic holds with high flying spots.

  • @arashi86
    @arashi867 жыл бұрын

    "I don't think you should put down other styles to put over stuff that you like, that never ends well." *very* well said, Brian - and that thinking applies in a lot of areas. more people ought to take that under consideration.

  • @jaycechua9851
    @jaycechua98512 жыл бұрын

    Honestly, I just want matches to mean something so that they don't have to do (a lot of) flashy moves just to get the match over. I am a proponent of ring psychology, where stories and selling carry a lot of weight in matches to a point where even a punch or a kick means something.

  • @goblinharry124
    @goblinharry1247 жыл бұрын

    AJ Styles has had 18 years in the ring doing dives

  • @DrBachur
    @DrBachur7 жыл бұрын

    The "diving headlock" sounds like the most dangerous move in wrestling history. Can't wait 'till Teddy Hart tries it.

  • @ryanager8029
    @ryanager80297 жыл бұрын

    Diving Headlock? That sounds like a tornado DDT from the top rope.

  • @DavidHernandez-qb1kk
    @DavidHernandez-qb1kk7 жыл бұрын

    Brian, just asking will there ever be way to combine both old school and the new high flying generation in wrestling like a wrestler combining both styles? Will there ever be a compromise?

  • @countjobula
    @countjobula7 жыл бұрын

    Very well thought out and pretty much my thoughts exactly. Remember Mike Awesome? he was amazing at doing moves but he'd dive over the top rope in the first 30 seconds of the match. Taker would do it twice a year and it would be something special.

  • @BrokenSaintRW
    @BrokenSaintRW7 жыл бұрын

    I have a banged up knee, a sore back, and 50 lbs. overweight. I didn't realize I was in better shape than Will Ospreay

  • @worlds.worst.entertainment2513
    @worlds.worst.entertainment25137 жыл бұрын

    Rodgers from American dad is screaming "dive on in!!!" Right now lmao

  • @Mushtaco
    @Mushtaco7 жыл бұрын

    That's actually why I really like the new Jinder Mahal. Once he hits his finisher (I think now named the khallas?) the match is over. I was so hyped when he hit it on Orton cause I knew it was over.

  • @greedyd5524

    @greedyd5524

    7 жыл бұрын

    Mushtaco until the script calls for a kick out

  • @Mushtaco

    @Mushtaco

    7 жыл бұрын

    Greedy D yeah but that the point. The chosen kick out is awesome when it's actually a surprise.

  • @alpeshr82
    @alpeshr827 жыл бұрын

    WWE are likely to blame social media such as youtube, they have a popular channel for which they must create 3-4min content videos. those videos are more likely be popular and viral if they have some high flying spots. i do agree with you on the whole law of diminishing returns.

  • @charlescarter4608

    @charlescarter4608

    3 жыл бұрын

    Do you have wifi and free breakfast at your hotel?

  • @Anxomaxo
    @Anxomaxo7 жыл бұрын

    I love Wrestling. I love seeing two guys fight in the mat trying to wear down their opponent while countering the rival's offense so they can make them submit. I love watching guys launching themselves from crazy positions and doing even crazier flips, all so they can put a great show. I love watching unnstoppable beasts-like men tearing down their opponents with incredible powerhouse moves that look awesome. I love a hardcore fight, in which the guys hit each other with many objects all so they can finish off one another. I love seeing blood feuds in which two man hate each other to the point you can even believe they will kill themselves. I love title matches, be it between a dirty heel and a beloved babyface or simply between two great athletes. I love wrestling. I love every part of it. I can understand if people like more one of the aspects of wrestling than another, but in the end it doesn't matter. Wrestling has something for everyone. So just enjoy it. Be it for a headlock or a dive, enjoy it for what it is and let the others enjoy it too. Because although i love wrestling, i love more to watch it with friends that share this passion with me. Edit: im such a mark, it makes me laugh xD

  • @rasslinaction8326
    @rasslinaction83267 жыл бұрын

    I think Miz made the best point at that great talking smack promo, where Daniel Bryan was telling Miz that he wrestles like a coward, and Miz told him and i quote: "The reason i wrestle the way i wrestle,is because i can do it day in and day out all the time for 10+ years... i dont get injured for six months to a year"

  • @yriafehtivan
    @yriafehtivan6 жыл бұрын

    There's room for both in a good match.

  • @VenseyNess
    @VenseyNess7 жыл бұрын

    Personally, I think the one thing that team Headlock has going for it is its understanding that doing all of those big spots means shortened careers. I feel like those big spots and high flying moves can be used as often as you want as long as the match still has a story. Using lots of speed and flashy moves doesn't mean that you can't tell a story. Just look at Omega VS Okada from WK11. Sure, in terms of flashy moves it's no Ospreay VS Ricochet, but it's no Sammartino VS Koloff either. After all, that's just progress. It's not like we can turn back the clock and make people forget all of the insane stuff people have seen over the years, they'll always want more. These days it's impossible to get a huge pop WITHOUT doing that. When's the last time you saw a DDT get a cheer? Or just a reaction for that matter. But what do I know, I'm just a nobody with a laptop and an internet connection. ...Dive

  • @mgunter
    @mgunter7 жыл бұрын

    the indy style is a big reason why 205 live is doing poor, fans are coming to expect 25 flips per match and the grounded style of TJP gets go-away (HHH) heat.

  • @cyclone927
    @cyclone9277 жыл бұрын

    Tyler Bate vs Pete Dunn had the perfect combo of big spots and technical shit.

  • @thefakedeal
    @thefakedeal7 жыл бұрын

    So.... keep the fans bored untill execpt few last moments?

  • @scotcarr3390
    @scotcarr33907 жыл бұрын

    A better term, I think, is Team Finisher. High-spots are today's submission moves. Like you said, busted out at the right time, they're thrilling. Even in the "jobber-on-the-weekly-show" days of the '80s, a finisher at the properly-paced end of a match never failed to get a huge pop. Even for the now "boring" sleeper hold. But, when they should've​ mattered, they got over-used. Same thing w/high-risk "spot-monkey" moves now. Guys like Mick Foley & Terry Funk knew how to pace risk v. reward. And they STILL ended their careers busted up. One has to wonder if, had Foley dropped one or two less apron-elbows, he could be doing the occasional match while playing w/his kids unimpaired. Overload on anything, on life & wrestling, hurts everybody.

  • @narutocankillgoku3012
    @narutocankillgoku30127 жыл бұрын

    Lol people care so much about in ring wrestling. Austin and Rock I'm sure focused on in ring talent. Instead of thier character or telling a story.

  • @killmore7014

    @killmore7014

    7 жыл бұрын

    Austin completely focused on his character, he wasn't the best wrestler.

  • @msm3150

    @msm3150

    7 жыл бұрын

    Neo Darklighter He was actually a pretty good technical wrestler but had to switch to brawling after breaking his neck

  • @narutocankillgoku3012

    @narutocankillgoku3012

    7 жыл бұрын

    Neo Darklighter its was sacarsm.

  • @matthewford8977

    @matthewford8977

    7 жыл бұрын

    Neo Darklighter Either was the rock sadly It's a shame to since his grandfather and father were both petty good wrestlers in their own right

  • @spenceII
    @spenceII7 жыл бұрын

    Action films often have explosions. If you use explosions to enhance a story, you end up with something like Saving Private Ryan; if you use explosions AS the story you end up with a Michael Bay film.

  • @MasterFhyl
    @MasterFhyl7 жыл бұрын

    Thankyou for explaining this.. I've been seeing the meme everywhere and had no idea what they were talking about.

  • @MaronkingstonOngaude
    @MaronkingstonOngaude7 жыл бұрын

    I 100% agree seeing all of ospreays injuries like that at only 24 is definitely scary

  • @JDWanko
    @JDWanko7 жыл бұрын

    Best thing about Okada v. Omega? High spots were there, but not the center piece. Oh, one thing that should be noted-the same guys saying guys are too flashy and are pandering to the fans too much with the high flying today are the same guys who used to cut themselves to liven up a crowd. Pot to kettle blackout.

  • @davesmith4839
    @davesmith48395 жыл бұрын

    I’d love to see finishers start actually finishing people off in PPV matches, unless it’s a big four show and it has a good story behind it so when they finally kick out of the finisher in a match at summerslam or something like that. It makes it a bigger PPV, and makes it an actual surprise

  • @bigdawgproductions9912
    @bigdawgproductions99127 жыл бұрын

    I'm currently training to become a wrestler and I have updated my move set to use a springboard headlock where I bounce off the ropes and come down and catch them with a headlock

  • @EightMasterRobots
    @EightMasterRobots7 жыл бұрын

    i would much rather see a technical grounded masterpiece than dives any day of the week

  • @antatomik
    @antatomik7 жыл бұрын

    ok so question what category does the old school British wrestlers stand they were acrobatic and could tell a 'wrist lock from a wrist watch' so what are they? Also i love dive but i honestly think (this is an opinion) that outside of what Brian said about pain and heal from which i agree but what happens when the new norm is this high spot athletic image and what will it do to the next Eddie Guerrero, the next Kurt Angle what i am saying is what if in the future promoters decide that we dont want all round technical wrestlers anymore we want acrobatic wrestlers because it sells.

  • @rogerbabin8175
    @rogerbabin81757 жыл бұрын

    Team variety. The show that's put on for the night shouldn't have too much of one style or too much of one spot. Simple as that. I saw a recent video of JR talking about this in a way saying that a wrestler wanted to do a chair spot and JR's first question was "Does the main event have one?". This simple question showcases a core understanding and appreciation for storytelling over the course of the show.

  • @venomousnate7911
    @venomousnate79115 жыл бұрын

    I’m both Headlock and Dive.

  • @aRo93
    @aRo937 жыл бұрын

    #TeamStory - I LOVE highflying, but you don't have to do high risk spots if you're, for example, BROKEN. (of course I'm talking about Matt, not Jeff)

  • @DoneRandomLee
    @DoneRandomLee7 жыл бұрын

    Team dive into a headlock (isn't that sort of a diving bulldog?). I love high flying moves and think it can be used to tell the story well. Including "overdoing it" for example i remember seeing jay lethal do three suicide dives back to back. It worked cause it was a title match where he was the heel champion. He was showing how much better he was and doing a all out assault on his opponent. It worked imo. Basically i agree they shouldn't be transition moves, should be apart of the story but doing a lot of dives can be apart of the story telling. Imagine a underdog like daniel bryan does all he can, finally throws the opponent out of the ring and immediately does a suicide dive and then throws them back into the ring. Some may think that's just a transition move but it's to show he's willing to put everything on the line and he needs that win so he'll do a move and quickly try to pin them rather than letting the move set in cause he needs to win the match as fast as possible. It's hard to explain how to do it right. So many factors go into it. But it can easily go right and work but can also be wrong. Depends on how well they express the story

  • @PhatLayCes7825
    @PhatLayCes78257 жыл бұрын

    I grew up watching ECW /WCW/WWF. Guys like Ricky Steamboat, Superfly, Brian Pillman, Ultimo Dragon, RVD, Rey Mysterio Jr. and the Hardys were always my favorite. Its awesome to see these current guys do 450's and dives etc. but just like watching the NBA or NFL movesets will evolve and athletes will take more risks to appease their fans. If Jeff Hardy can still do Whisper in the wind til he's 50, then that might be a serious snafu. My heroes are old now, or at least a foot into retirement. I hope guys can get up each morning without immediately depending on painkillers lol.

  • @BebopCowboy72
    @BebopCowboy725 жыл бұрын

    I'm late to the discussion, but I think a big part of it is rebranding them as something other than "rest holds," which is how most smart fans see headlocks and the like. Incorporate the need for that kind of hold into the storytelling (if your finisher targets the head then by all means crank on that head/neck area, but if you submit the leg why bother?). All too often dives and high spots are for the sake of a pop instead of being part of one person's attempt to weaken and defeat an opponent, especially when the move does as much damage to the person giving it as to the one receiving it.

  • @jasonb3085
    @jasonb30857 жыл бұрын

    Randy Orton finisher is super protected when i see a rko i know they are not kicking out , unlike a fucking super kick

  • @yallevereatenbeans2723
    @yallevereatenbeans27236 жыл бұрын

    It’s not about choosing either headlock or dive it’s about building to the dive with the headlock, everything has its place

  • @theefficiale3900
    @theefficiale39007 жыл бұрын

    These Indy Guys Couldn't Lace Bret Harts Boots!

  • @Torthrodhel

    @Torthrodhel

    7 жыл бұрын

    They could... but only with a triple flip double corkscrew avalanche imploding inverted boot lace-up.

  • @yolomasta6940
    @yolomasta69407 жыл бұрын

    Last year's Osprey Vs Ricochet match is one of my favorite matches ever but I agree with the fact that not everyone should do dives and top rope moves.

  • @gsimonbrooks
    @gsimonbrooks7 жыл бұрын

    It is kind of what The Miz said the reason that he can still wrestle on a regular basis is that he hasn't taking the crazy bumps and death defying moves that break down the body fast. I think there is a place for both the high flying and crazy stunts but as you said when it is a constant one move after another to out do it they get watered down and have little to no impact and the payoff is weaker.

  • @doesntmatter8330
    @doesntmatter83307 жыл бұрын

    My favorite style of wrestling is the stiff European style but i love high flyers like Ricochet. Every style has its place but selling is important and when 2 guys refuse to sell anything the match sucks. Two guys landing everything and getting up gets as boring as Hogan jumping up from powerbombs

  • @MsSpidey2
    @MsSpidey27 жыл бұрын

    I think huge dive/dangerous spots should be saved for big PPV matches. That way, wrestlers aren't taking huge risks every single week, and also, the moves aren't watered down.

  • @chris19wp83
    @chris19wp837 жыл бұрын

    This reminds me of something Jim Cornette said about Vince's favorite saying "Chocolate-Vanilla". I prefer Chocolate, but if you like your Vanilla then its OK. You can get you're Vanilla as long as I can get my Chocolate then I'm fine. I apply that to either Headlock or Dive.

  • @TrueBackLash
    @TrueBackLash7 жыл бұрын

    Diving Headlock Eh? Now that's a finishing move I can get behind.

  • @ericanate3155
    @ericanate31553 жыл бұрын

    U also see the most devastating move in all of wrestling on RAW every week 5 times.... The roll up!!!

  • @bigshambowski
    @bigshambowski2 жыл бұрын

    I'm more impressed by actual feats of athleticism than how many ways you can apply a headlock. Not saying that one is better than the other. They both make up the fabric of wrestling.

  • @brianhall4182
    @brianhall41827 жыл бұрын

    As far as this debate goes I keep thinking about one thing: what about Lucha Libre? There's plenty of high flying mixed with plenty of technicality and it's been around for every bit as long as "American" wrestling.

  • @planescaped
    @planescaped7 жыл бұрын

    I just hate overly choreographed spots to the point of them being contrived.

  • @misterprickly

    @misterprickly

    7 жыл бұрын

    Agreed! Those matches scream "We rehearsed this!"

  • @planescaped

    @planescaped

    7 жыл бұрын

    It's the issue I have with Will Osprey. He frustrates me to no end because he can do some amazing things... just stop doing all of them every single match! The Young Bucks also have this problem, but they pull it off slightly better due to their whole rockers vibe. I hope they someday learn that less can be more.

  • @sochioranmyaku

    @sochioranmyaku

    7 жыл бұрын

    planescaped that's why imo those guys are bums. they like to pretend that they're too good for wwe when in all honesty they don't understand how to tell stories in the ring.

  • @bf191306

    @bf191306

    7 жыл бұрын

    the rockers did not do 200 superkicks a match second the young F***s diminish every move from Kalisto's seleto del sole to undertakers tombstone it's that backyard psychology mixed with a bit of selling and an actual ring lets be marks and do everyone's shit fallowed by 1 2 sweet

  • @planescaped

    @planescaped

    7 жыл бұрын

    I love the Young Bucks because they're amazing... but the same time, I can't stand them because they're terrible... It's all so easily fixed too. :( But they wear the hate like a badge of honor. Such a shame.

  • @ViniDelchev
    @ViniDelchev7 жыл бұрын

    Dive into a headlock? :D

  • @ThisThatAndTheOtherWithBradley
    @ThisThatAndTheOtherWithBradley7 жыл бұрын

    Bryan, I've always wondered...why is there a post-it-note on the lunch box behind you?

  • @daoust26
    @daoust267 жыл бұрын

    Great video Zane I totally agree with your response to it all

  • @XantroyX
    @XantroyX7 жыл бұрын

    A few years ago there was a match on Superstars (I think?) between Kaitlyn vs Aksana. It was a short match in which Aksana basically worked variations of a headlock for 4 minutes... I like that match so much more than Ospreay/Ricochet.

  • @hyperionthundermain
    @hyperionthundermain7 жыл бұрын

    I would like it if the match style started to shift towards more like the Tyler Bate Pete Dunne match we saw at takeover. A lot of chain wrestling a lot of counters a lot of inventiveness, but not necessarily a lot of high spots. That match had like, maybe for high spots? And it was freaking amazing because they told a good story.

  • @ohbitch94
    @ohbitch947 жыл бұрын

    I understand both sides but at the end of the day story is most important to me, I hope it's something I can portray in my future pro wrestling career

  • @kurtrusselshat961
    @kurtrusselshat9617 жыл бұрын

    this is just going back over the daniel bryan miz argument a few months back, miz made the point that his style kept him in the business longer while bryan had to retire WAY too early because he took bump after bump. What do you want as a wrestling fan? A bright flame that extinguishes quickly or a burning ember that stays warm for a much longer period. Ric Flair and the Undertaker both had history making careers, and they still took bumps every so often so it was that much more exciting when they did. Eddie Guerrero and Edge left the company (for each respective reason of course) when they had YEARS left in them because of moments like wrestlemania x7, that amazing ladder match with eddie and edge on smackdown, and the chair shots eddie took from JBL when they were feuding.

  • @BloodPump
    @BloodPump7 жыл бұрын

    Headlock. If you're good enough you don't need flashy flips. Look at Misawa. He evolved from the very high flying Tiger Mask II into the greatest wrestler in the 90s in spite of sacrificing most of his aerial stuff. Granted what he did in the ring was still way dangerous compared to others (especially when he worked with Kawada or Kobashi) but he only really had two flippy moves after his transition, and those weren't done all the time.

  • @ElectricNikkiGames
    @ElectricNikkiGames7 жыл бұрын

    i'm part of team "tell me a good story in the ring"

  • @patrickracer43
    @patrickracer437 жыл бұрын

    2:14 I don't see Samoa Joe or Kevin Owens do a ton of suicide dives, and I admittedly haven't seen much of Finn Balor's matches to notice him do suicide dives, but Dean Ambrose, Seth Rollins, and Sami Zayn do the suicide dive so much that its apart of their matches as much as 50 German suplexes are apart of Brock Lesnar's matches

  • @natemccollum3731
    @natemccollum37317 жыл бұрын

    These were excellent points

  • @teenchampionshipwrestlinga4034
    @teenchampionshipwrestlinga40347 жыл бұрын

    1:43 There's one match that's an exception, Takahashi vs Dragon Lee those guys can make anything go over with a crowd

  • @CrazyChiv
    @CrazyChiv7 жыл бұрын

    In my humble observation, it seems that wrestling companies are at their hottest when they have a good variety of styles throughout the cards. So a little bit of high-flying, some hardcore/brawling, a monster or two, some talkers/showmen, some technical wrestling, some athletic/powerhouse style etc... When any roster relies too heavily on any one style (in this case high spots, in the past hardcore, in the past companies trying to build around an exclusively 'shooter' style and so on) ends up suffering in the long run when fans get fatigued and wrestlers efforts have to be escalated. So yes, I would agree that a change needs to happen. Perhaps they could chuck a big monster heel in the mix or maybe a character/stable of technical guys to literally 'ground' the high-flyers. Make it part of the story, y'know.

  • @t.v.rockwell4504
    @t.v.rockwell45047 жыл бұрын

    This whole thing reminds me of The Miz's Talking Smack promo where Daniel Bryan called him a coward for the way he wrestles. Miz retorted by saying with the way he wrestled, he would be able to do it for 10-15 more years, where as the way Daniel wrestled, well, Daniel's retired because he threw his body around in the "Dive" style.

  • @AkumaTh
    @AkumaTh7 жыл бұрын

    I think Neville embodies this debate. Before, he did spots, got crowds loving him but did get injured and not used very well. Now he's Crusierweight champ, being more grounded and using those high spots rarely, and is one of the big selling points for that division.

  • @dylanblack3635
    @dylanblack36357 жыл бұрын

    Diving Headlock?!?! Brian, don't give them any ideas.

  • @j.d.6915
    @j.d.69157 жыл бұрын

    Macho Man did one high flying move, and it meant everything to the match. It was a huge pop, it usually was his finisher, and it meant something. He didn't start with it, he used it at the right time to gain the upper edge or end the match.

  • @natemccollum3731
    @natemccollum37317 жыл бұрын

    I think this is why Omega and Styles are the best wrestlers in the world. Because while they are all about the high spot their ability to tell a story is so good. Especially when u look at matches like Omega vs Okada and Styles vs Nakamura. Those are two of the best matches I've ever seen.

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