Wednesday night saw the second round of WWE’s Cruiserweight Classic open up. The first bout saw Gran Metalik defeat Tajiri- but the main event was a match that wrestling fans all around the world have been looking forward to since the CWC bracket debuted: Kota Ibushi versus Cedric Alexander.
Professionalism:
Like most bouts in the CWC, the match is based on pure competition and not
various kinds of typical “wrestling” finishes. There are no distraction
roll-ups or cheating the ref. The CWC is predicated on the very best
cruiserweights showing why they were invited to the tournament and what they
can do. Ibushi and Alexander met in the middle with each showing proper respect
to their opponent. There were no egos here- only pride in one’s abilities and
representing their country on one of wrestling’s biggest stages.
Flow: The match
progressed naturally, starting slowly and building to a crescendo of strikes,
counter strikes and possible winning maneuvers. Both Alexander and Ibushi
showed their physical advantages early and were essentially even for most of
the match. The rapid pace had fans at a fever pitch, and didn’t allow for eyes to
leave the ring/screen. Due to the twenty-minute time constraint and the fact
that both men are amazing talents, the fans were left wanting more- and that’s
not a bad thing at all.
Believeable Offense: Coming
into this match, we knew to expect a striker’s affair between two high flyers.
Submission/ground-based wrestling wouldn’t be the focus here. Alexander’s back elbows
to Ibushi’s head were brutal. I don’t
recall seeing ones connect that hard before. Ibushi is famous for his
incredibly powerful kicks, and surprisingly his first kick didn’t connect until
a few minutes into the match. The buildup was worth it, as it floored Alexander
and left you generally feeling bad for “Queen City’s favorite son”.
Later in the match-up, Alexander would hit a sickening chop
to the face of Ibushi. Ibushi sold it like he was just hit with a ton of
bricks, crumpling to the mat. At one point, Ibushi connected woth one of the
most devastating dropkicks, seemingly sending Alexander into a state of
semi-consciousness. All of these strikes were incredibly accurate, with neither
whiffing even once. This brings us to the next point.
Selling: Offense
can only look as good as one’s opponent sells the damage. Both Ibushi and
Alexander ran a clinic on showing the effects of being on the wrong end of a
great move. (CWC competitor Zack Saber may be a prodigy, but this is where he
could improve.)
Ibushi’s selling of the jaw chop was one example. He also
sold a springboard elbow by landing on the back of his head and kneeling on the
mat before Alexander could pin him to it. Despite those examples, Alexander
excelled here. He sold the kicks, chops and Ibushi’s “Pele kick” brilliantly.
Alexander staggered, eventually succumbing to gravity as he fell to the mat.
Athleticism: Both
cruiserweights are on the shortlist of athletic specimens in the CWC. Agility,
balance, coordination and accuracy despite going full-tilt never suffered or
looked off. To put it in a nutshell, none of this resembled a Sin Cara match
whatsoever. The timing from both was there all match, with counters and pin
attempts fast, furious and unpredictable.
Ibushi’s standout athletic moment was his second attempt at
his running moonsault out of the ring. In almost one motion, he leaped to the
top rope, turned and executed a beautiful backflip. The part that amazed me
most about it was that while on the top rope, both feet remained level and
never quivered- making it look like he was standing on a flat surface five feet
above the mat. A runner-up for him was a corkscrew moonsault from the mat onto
a prone Alexander. Yes, a standing
corkscrew moonsault was Ibushi’s second most impressive move in this match.
Alexander showed off, too with his landing feet-first after
Ibushi attempted the hurricanrana from the top rope. It was hard to tell if the
timing was intentional, but nonetheless it was a stellar counter from
Alexander.
Competitive
atmosphere: The CWC has delivered in spades on feeling like an actual
tournament and not just a predetermined series of wrestling matches- and this
match was a beautiful microcosm of that.
This didn’t feel like “just a match”. There would be no
Dusty finish here. The stakes were evident, as the winner of this would be an
even bigger favorite to win the entire thing. The two countering each other
with moves and pins showed how badly they wanted it. Near falls and moments of
temporary befuddlement showed the desperation of each fighter. This allowed for
the audience at Full Sail and at home to get lost in the match.
This was never clearer than when Alexander hit a brainbuster
and tried for a pin, with Ibushi kicking out after a close two count. Immediately following the pin attempt,
Ibushi didn’t even inhale a breath of air before Alexander dropped him back to
the mat with a spinning kick to the head and another pin attempt. After what
seemed like 2.99 seconds, Alexander looked absolutely lost trying to figure out
the Ibushi conundrum. Which brings us to….
Facial expressions: Alexander
edged Ibushi out in this department as well. His ability to convey a multitude
of motions with just a facial expression was astounding. I put him right up
there with Alexa Bliss in that category. Need an example? Here’s his face at
two crucial points: following a Michinoku driver and after the spinning kick to
the head:
Virtually mistake-
free: There’s not much more to be said than despite a few hiccups, the two
were almost flawless. The hurricanrana looked just a bit off, while an Ibushi
exploder suplex to Cedric could have ended up a lot worse. Thankfully, both
stayed healthy.
Audience: When
NXT is at Full Sail, the audience balances a line between being endearing and
being too into themselves and sabotaging matches. During the CWC, they are
purely fun and add so much to every match (aside from Dar/Singh).
Tonight they were at their best, with a solid “FIGHT
FOREVER!” chant following Ibushi’s moonsault. But a moment that stood out to me
was when they reacted to Ibushi’s dropkick like Alexander had been put through
a table. I don’t recall many times the cameraman cut to a live shot of a crowd
after a dropkick, but that’s how good
it was.
Their post-match “PLEASE SIGN CEDRIC!” request was perfect
and caused Alexander to lose it. That bit of validation was a moment in time,
and one fans and the talented star will remember forever.
Announcers: Both
Mauro Ranallo and Daniel Bryan have been just as good at the announce table as
the cruiserweights have been in the ring, and tonight they were at their
absolute best. Ranallo has a bad habit of reaching for pop culture tie-ins
during Smackdown Live, but leaves that at the Full Sail door for the CWC
thankfully. Bryan’s been a natural and breaks down matches with insight like
only he can, and both show a level of announcing intensity lacking on both RAW
and Smackdown Live. (Looking at you, Michael Cole and Byron Saxton. Corey
Graves-never change.) The announcing duo focuses strictly on the match and not
superfluous/irrelevant things.
Not everything in WWE comes off authentic, but this match
and everything after it will remain genuine forever. Here’s the audience
showing their appreciation afterwards:
Ibushi and Alexander both gave post-match interviews:
The wrestling world was on fire following the match. Here's just a few examples of the universal validation for both competitors:
What an incredible match between @CedricAlexander and @ibushi_kota! The crowd chanting #PleaseSignCedric says it all. #RealEmotion @WWE_CWC— Daniel Bryan (@WWEDanielBryan) August 11, 2016
That @CedricAlexander @ibushi_kota match was nothing short of incredible! @WWENetwork @mauroranallo @WWEDanielBryan pic.twitter.com/FxGDMKIzsz— Mick Foley (@RealMickFoley) August 11, 2016
This seems appropriate right about now. Congratulations, my brother. @CedricAlexander https://t.co/GAAkpUA6R5— Tommaso Ciampa (@ProjectCiampa) August 11, 2016
Just got into Melbourne Australia went to @WWENetwork @ibushi_kota @CedricAlexander what a match, goosebumps watching it. What a competition— Fit Finlay (@ringfox1) August 11, 2016
This may be nitpicking, but there’s a few slight things that
may have improved this instant classic:
-It would have been great to see just one Lumbar Check used
for a 2.9 count. I understand protecting their finishers, so that’s likely why
it was not used.
-The time limit did put a cap to the potential of this match.
If not for that, seeing them go 30-40 minutes would be a dream come true.
-The one gripe I have that was in complete control of the WWE
was where this match took place in the tournament. It had the feel of a
semi-final or even the final match. I would have had the two separated until at
least the “elite eight”.
What do you feel made this match special? Anything I left out? Let me
know @SeanNeutron.
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