Post by concrete1992 on Oct 16, 2019 15:16:01 GMT -5
After watching a few of his matches I got to get the thread out there. While not a new discovery, Wyatt has been an under-the-radar guy for most of the decade outside a certain sub-set of fans. Earilier this decade he was the cocky technical ace of Metro Pro. That, unfortunately, closed in 2016. It looked like Wyatt might still have a shot to get the recognition he deserved with NWL...but while he showed up with his working boots, the promotion never quite recovered from trying to buy the territory.
St.Louis Anarchy comes back last year though and then Journey Pro looks to pick up some of the slack in the Kansas scene and Wyatt as least has the workload to land himself a solid position on my list if the matches that look good, end up being good. Wyatt is more or less the same worker he has always been. A cocky technician who is the ace of his territory. Despite a lack of stylistic growth, he is smoother than ever and has a bigger presence than ever, though some of that may be me seeing him in SLA which him coming off a little more prestigious carries a little more in Spaulding Hall than the admittedly very nice looking TV Tapings of Metro Pro and NWL.
Going to do full write-ups but go watch the Thomas Shire and July Jake Parnell matches. Both are telling the same basic story against two rather different wrestlers. It is his ability against the brutishness of his challenger. Parnell is coming out Wyatt with velocity and Shire is more the hulking type. For one he is uses their momentum against them and the other he takes advantage of the momentum put upon him. Some of the things he does during these matches made me rewind because I couldn't figure out how he did it. It is was like watching the mechanics of a fine watch, everything working in perfect unison to make something happen, in a lot of cases a crossface. Then Wyatt also has this match against Tom Lawlor at BLP's Turbo Graps 16 which is totally my type of match. Two opposing style, pro grappling versus shoot grappling, put against one another working towards a logical conclusion. If the mere conceit doesn't get you amped, not sure if it will work for you at quite the same level but for me it ruled.
Going to watch more of Wyatt's run. I could very easily see him ending up being the #1 Champ of 2019.
EDIT: Watched the Sharkbait match from Journey Pro in February. Jeremy Wyatt is a special wrestler. Couldn't tell you if Sharkbait upped his game or Wyatt made his stuff look THAT GOOD but it was probably Sharkbait's best match to-date, at least from what I've seen.
No problem saying that Wyatt is the most mechanically beautiful wrestler out there. The anti-Gargano.
St.Louis Anarchy comes back last year though and then Journey Pro looks to pick up some of the slack in the Kansas scene and Wyatt as least has the workload to land himself a solid position on my list if the matches that look good, end up being good. Wyatt is more or less the same worker he has always been. A cocky technician who is the ace of his territory. Despite a lack of stylistic growth, he is smoother than ever and has a bigger presence than ever, though some of that may be me seeing him in SLA which him coming off a little more prestigious carries a little more in Spaulding Hall than the admittedly very nice looking TV Tapings of Metro Pro and NWL.
Going to do full write-ups but go watch the Thomas Shire and July Jake Parnell matches. Both are telling the same basic story against two rather different wrestlers. It is his ability against the brutishness of his challenger. Parnell is coming out Wyatt with velocity and Shire is more the hulking type. For one he is uses their momentum against them and the other he takes advantage of the momentum put upon him. Some of the things he does during these matches made me rewind because I couldn't figure out how he did it. It is was like watching the mechanics of a fine watch, everything working in perfect unison to make something happen, in a lot of cases a crossface. Then Wyatt also has this match against Tom Lawlor at BLP's Turbo Graps 16 which is totally my type of match. Two opposing style, pro grappling versus shoot grappling, put against one another working towards a logical conclusion. If the mere conceit doesn't get you amped, not sure if it will work for you at quite the same level but for me it ruled.
Going to watch more of Wyatt's run. I could very easily see him ending up being the #1 Champ of 2019.
EDIT: Watched the Sharkbait match from Journey Pro in February. Jeremy Wyatt is a special wrestler. Couldn't tell you if Sharkbait upped his game or Wyatt made his stuff look THAT GOOD but it was probably Sharkbait's best match to-date, at least from what I've seen.
No problem saying that Wyatt is the most mechanically beautiful wrestler out there. The anti-Gargano.