In the pro wrestling of the 1970’s and 80’s, there was a lot more repetition in the matches compared to today’s fast-paced matches. A match script would go something like this:
- A wrestler would apply a certain hold
- The opponent would escape
- The wrestler would slap on the exact same hold all over again.
- The opponent would escape again — Go back to Step #1.
It didn’t have to be a really fancy move — it could be as simple as a Headlock, Armbar, Bearhug, or Scissor. The nice thing was he kept going back to it, like a comfortable old friend, like a pair of jeans broken in just right, like an old tool that you can’t toss out because it still works. And I’d be sitting there thinking “Oh yeah! Get him in it again!”
The implication was that each application of the hold would further weaken or wear down the competition. Putting the same hold on the same body part does a little more damage each time, they’d tell us. It also was a humiliation for the victim, to be unable to determine an effective counter-move or to block the repeated attack.
I, for one, enjoy seeing the same hold, especially a hold that looks interesting, used over and over in a match and applied for as long as possible. Far from being boring, that repetition can be fun to watch and it helps to tell the story of the match. Every time the victim breaks free, he finds himself frustrated, tangled up in that same damn hold again until he barely wants to try breaking out at all. It’s as if the dominant wrestler is saying “I can do this to you all night long. I own you with this hold.” The dominant wrestler is using his good old favorite hold to tame and subdue yet another victim.
Lets take a look at a match between the State Patrol — two beefy cops who get in the ring wearing police uniforms — and two guys who seem to love Headscissors:
Viva la repetition! Along with the subtle alterations as hold followed hold followed hold back in the ’70s. These were the “Goldberg Variations” of pro wrestling.
“And once again to the left shoulder!” Love it when a Heel targets a specific body part, destroys it. No matter how strong the kid is, no matter what great moves he can use, another application to that injured spot takes him down. He gets up but he’s limping from that devasting leglock — only a matter of seconds before that leg gets kicked again. Divide and conquer. All strength negated by a single body part, the rest of the body wide open for any abuse.
i love it when a man is put into a nice tight headlock i use it all the time
Really enjoy your headscissor shots. One thing puzles me in professional wrestling using headscissors. Why do guys get a headscissors on the other guy and it is always with the lower part of the thigh right around the knee. For once I would like to see headscissors applied the way I apply them. When I get a dude in a headscissors I always get his face buried between my thighs right around the crotch so the partner has his head buried and he is smelling my trunks and maybe my nuts. I NEVER see pro wrestlers do this they always wrap their legs around the head, never around the face and never buried in their crotch always half way down. Can anyone answer this?