Hey
there grapple fans it has been a while. I have been busy over at
www.tnafanforum.com being a
moderator and putting together my weekly Youtube PPV round up;
Sheriff Lonestar's PPV of the Week. JP gave me my own thread and
everything. Also I had to have something to write about. Another blog
of note gave me that something. The wonderful wrestling
personality/journalist/manager/writer/booker/promoter Greg Lambert
recently wrote a blog on the future of British Pro Wrestling (hope
you like the caps Greg ;)) that got me to thinking about how the
industry has come this far. You can read his blog over at Wrestle
Talk TV's wonderfully informative site; PHERE THE TRUTH Greg 'TheTruth' Lambert July 30th 2013 15:19 GMT.
Greg
explains in his piece the feeling that British Wrestling is holding
itself back because of its current emphasis on in ring work. He
states “It feels like the trend in most top British Wrestling
promotions these days is towards what's on the marquee, wrestling.
Generally speaking, this is a fast-paced, creative, hard-hitting,
strong style, almost a Ring of Honor style of wrestling, which the
majority of British Wrestling fans clearly enjoy.” and that “The
problem is, those fans who appreciate the endless great wrestling
matches, are generally the kind of fans who already like wrestling.”
I do have the tendency to agree with him but I thought it would be
interesting to see how we got to this point. Why is there so much
strong style in the UK?
In
short, strong style essentially comes from New Japan Pro Wrestling,
alongside Kings Road it is the predominant style of the Japanese Pros
who favour in ring stiffness to give their product credibility.
Initially Japanese pro wrestling was helped along by western
trainers. Significant westerners who trained the Japanese include Lou
Thesz, Billy Robinson, Joe Cornelius and Karl Gotch. Noticeably all
of them, with the possible exception of Cornelius, who was an
excellent showman in his day, where renown for generally being hard
cases. Gotch was a well known amateur who spent time at The Snake Pit
in Wigan to perfect his shooting skill. Billy Robinson was an actual
Lancashire shooter who had a great influence on All Japan Wrestling
and won their PWF title being one of the first Gaijin champions and
of course Lou Thesz was well, Lou Thesz. An all round wrestling God,
unstoppable hooker and six time NWA world Heavyweight Champion who
once drew 87.0 rating with Rikidozan in a world championship match.
Yes 87.0, 87 percent of the TV owning people of Japan watched that
match. With that kind of penetration in the earliest part of the
wrestling history of a nation it is easy to see why the shooters won
favour over say any passing lucahdors. It also framed the way the
sport has been run in Japan i.e. as a true sport. The US's
showmanship is only just beginning to rub off. That strong style had
further developments along the way bringing in some influence from
Mexico and the UK even. (I was just watching Tiger Mask vs The
Dynamite Kid from 1983 and was amazed how that match could easily
transfer onto a NJPW card or ROH card today.) Essentially though it
set the tone. I am not talking about the peaks and troughs of general
wrestling draws, I mean the actual inherent culture of that wrestling
country. The Japanese attitude of the way things should be done.
So
how did we get to Ring of Honor, and then onto the UK's scene? The
world has become a much smaller place. The stars or ROH in its
initial burst. Chris Hero, Claudio Castignoli, CM Punk, Brian
Danielson and their subsequent WWE make overs know as much about
Japanese wrestling as they do about north American wrestling, they
also know as much about British wrestling. They had the tapes, they
ordered them, they devoured them they learnt from them. Then they went
and found people to train them in that style. They went to Japan to
learn more. Watching Brian Danielson's work in NOAH is a testament to
how well he can adapt to a different wrestling philosophy. They
wanted the strong style to be at the forefront. They broke it down
and analysed it over and over to give it an American twist then they
moved on to British Pro Wrestling and did the same. They dug out
Johnny Saint from retirement, they went to WWE Dojo's with William
Regal and Dave Taylor, they looked for opponents in that style. At
the same time DVD's and tapes began flying across the Atlantic to our
home grown talents. Magazines like Power Slam gave detailed run downs
of what was happening everywhere in the world and people sort out
those matches to. What really revolutionised the way wrestling has
been appreciated is Youtube. Literally any card that has been
performed in front of a TV camera is on there right now, or it soon
will be. Which is the reason why I can run PPV of the week on TNA Fan
Forum and never fear of running out of things to write about.
Meanwhile, ROH was
born out of a DVD distribution model built on the foundations of what
ECW left behind in the North Eastern United states. As I have said
before it essentially took three promotions to replace ECW; ROH, CZW
and Chikara, but what ROH focused on was match quality and strong
style match quality at that. They wanted to produce cards that rivaled NJPW
in standard so as to be able to sell that product in the same DVD
category and sell they did. All over the world. Which
in turn became a model for smaller wrestling companies world wide.
Why
did it hit with the UK wrestling fans? I do not know, but I have been
a punk rock fan long enough to know that there is a group of people
in the UK who looked to San Francisco in the 90's for their
inspiration while everything here was going all Britpop. That
influence of bands from Bad Religion, The Offspring, NOFX and the
highly principled aesthetic has left a lasting legacy on the UK punk
scene that is still going strong today. I know that some of my
friends are active Roller Derby enthusiasts who followed the good
women of Austin, Texas who reinvented a fake sport into a real one
for their own pleasure and the entertainment of others. Perhaps that
is the real reason, an ongoing search for the other, to find
something else and make it our own, however in this case it was more
ours in the first place than we thought.
What
has happened to wrestling in recent years is effectively what has
happened to music. Stratification. When I was youngster I was very big fan
of the band Hüsker
Dü.
To find Hüsker Dü records I had to research them, find out about
them in books and magazines, go on off trails about Soul Asylum and
The Replacements, go to the library and borrow the tapes or CDs to
listen to them. It was a task in itself. I am now three mouse clicks
away from listening to everything they ever did and a complete
history of their work right down to what underwear Bob Mould was
wearing when they recorded Candy Apple Grey. The wrestling world is
much the same. I am able to download or order whatever style of
wrestling I want from anywhere in the world. I can watch the whole of
the G1 climax tournament this year. Live if I want to. There is
simply so much content out there is not time to watch it. That is
where wrestling taste has come into play, the three ring circus of
wrestling that ruled the last 80 or so years of our sport has been
bypassed to form a layered and stylised approach. Each company now
specialises in a specific thing that limits its very existence. Even
WWE only wants people who can wrestle their style, with very good
reasons it reduces injury risks and makes predictable from a booking
point of view. However it means that those niche audiences are going
to control the output of a company, especially the smaller ones, in
the long term.
I
am not surprised that Greg's findings led him to believe that there
was a huge base of talent available in the UK. I am also not surprised
that he found a lack of characters. The move towards strong style as
a UK staple wasn't really a move as essentially UK wrestlers always have been
the driving force behind it. It comes from something primary about
wrestling in the UK. The pits up north and the submission style, Lord
Oakley and his near riotous promotions from before the war, George
Hackendschmit chasing over matched boxers up the street in Liverpool,
The Snake Pit. It is as part of our wrestling heritage even more than
Big Daddy. It is also no mistake that the last great feuds of the ITV
era. Marty Jones and Steve Wright, Johnny Saint and Mike “Flash”
Jordan, Chick Cullen and Mark Rocco, featured Lancashire grappler’s
with strong amateur or second generation backgrounds who where well
versed in the shoot style and had success or where well known in
Japan. Even today the Northern Shooters Gym, is a highly respected
part of EVE: Pro Wrestling who take their cue from Joshi, essentially
strong style for women.
So
how do we bridge this gap? Taking a lesson from the past, and as much
as it pains me to say it, the big draws of the golden era where
Daddy, Haystacks and Nagasaki, not the shooters and hookers I love.
It is those characters that transcended the television medium and it
is characters like that that will bring British mainstream wrestling
success again. Breaking out as a mainstream entity requires that, and
that is harder than ever but it can be done. So for all of those
wrestlers, promoters and wrestling workers out there. Keep your eyes
on the prize folks, you are getting there.