In December 2012, the Mexican
professional wrestling promotion
Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) held four
CMLL Super Viernes shows, all of which took place in
Arena México on Friday nights. Some of the matches from Super Viernes were taped for CMLL's weekly shows that aired in Mexico the week following the Super Viernes show. The shows featured various
professional wrestling matches with different wrestlers involved in pre-existing
scriptedfeuds or
storylines. Wrestlers portrayed either
villains (referred to as "rudos" in Mexico) or
fan favorites ("technicos" in Mexico) as they followed a series of tension-building events, which culminated in a wrestling match or series of matches.
December 7, 2012
CMLL Super Viernes
Poster promoting the match between
La Sombra and
Último Guerrero as Las Joyas de la Corona ("The Crown Jewels")
Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre's (CMLL) December 7, 2012, Super Viernes show was originally promoted as Noches Britanica ("British Night") and was to be copromoted by the British
Embassy in Mexico City. The event was set to include musical performances by British Musicians, a red
double decker bus and a number of
Buckingham palace guards.[1] The event was nicknamed Un Lucha con Causa ("Wrestling for a cause") and was supported by
John Langdon Down foundation for
Down's syndrome research[3] On December 6, 2012 the British Embassy announced that they, along with the John Langdon Down foundation were pulling their support for the "British Night" event, due to CMLL being unwilling to provide the foundation with a specific percentage of the ticket sales.[4]
The show featured the second block of the 2012 2012 La Copa Junior Tournament, which included ten second-generation wrestlers. CMLL announced that one of the featured matches, originally promoted under the tagline Las Joyas de la Corona (Spanish for "The Crown Jewels"), would be a singles match between
La Sombra and
Último Guerrero with no time limit.[5] The winner of the match still received a trophy even after the "British Night" aspects were abandoned, but there was no mention of the Las Joyas de la Corona name, nor the actual reason for why the trophy was awarded. The main event of the show was
Diamante Azul and
Rush teaming up with
Máscara Dorada in their first match back from their tour of Japan. The team faced off against Los Hijos del Averno (
Averno,
Ephesto and
Mephisto).
In the opening match, the
storylinefeud between Los Hombres del Camoflaje (Artillero and Súper Comando) and
Metálico continued. Metálico was teamed up with
Sensei for the night and the makeshift tecnico team defeated the rudosLos Hombres in the first fall. Los Hombres came back throughout the second fall, ending with a double submission hold on their opponents to take the second fall.[11] During the third fall Metálico tried on several occasions to team Super Comando's mask apart, underlying his frustrations with the opposing team.[12] Artillero was the first man eliminate from the match when he was pinned by Metálico, but he snuck back into the ring and landed a low kick on Metálico while the referee was not watching.[13] The foul allowed Super Comando to pin Metálico, winning the match for his team.[2][14][15] After several weeks where members of Los Guerreros Tuareg (The Tuareg Warriors) had teamed up with members of Los Cancerberos del Infierno (The Cerberus of Hell) and failed to get along. On December 7 Los Guerreros had shown that if they were allowed to work as a group, in this instance
Arkangel de la Muerte,
Hooligan and
Skándalo, they were able to work as a unit, defeating the tecnico team of
Starman,
Super Halcón Jr. and
Pegasso when Skándalo pinned Pegasso in the third fall.[2][14][15] The match was originally announced with
Ángel Azteca, Jr. as part of the tecnico team, but when CMLL updated their posters to remove any reference to "British Night" he was replaced with Pegasso without any explanation given. In the third match of the night the Japanese team of La Fievre Amarilla ("The Yellow Fever";
Okumura and
Namajague) teamed up with
Sangre Azteca to take on the tecnico trio of
El Hijo del Fantasma,
Rey Cometa and
Tritón. The teamwork of La Fievre led them to take the first fall over the makeshift tecnico team. The high flying, fast paced offense of Hijo del Fantasma, Rey Cometa and Tritón overwhelmed their opponents as they won both the second and third fall. In the final fall Hijo del Fantasma pinned team captain Okumura.[2][14][15]
The fourth match of the night was a 10-man torneo cibernetico match with the survivor qualifying for the finals of the 2012 La Copa Junior. The match pitted 5 tecnicos (
Shocker,
Máximo,
Brazo de Plata,
Guerrero Maya, Jr. and
Stuka, Jr.) against 5 rudos (
Dragón Rojo, Jr.,
El Felino,
Misterioso, Jr.,
Puma and
Tama Tonga). Misterioso, Jr. was the first man eliminated after four minutes and twenty seconds. About four minutes later the father son team of El Felino and Puma worked together to eliminate Brazo de Plata. The third elimination saw Dragón Rojo, Jr. pinned Stuka, Jr. twelve minutes and 42 seconds into the match. The teams alternated in eliminations as Shocker pinned Puma, Tama Tonga pinned Guerrero Maya, Jr. and Maximo pinned Felino. With just four wrestlers left in the ring, Maximo and Dragón Rojo, Jr. fighting to a double disqualification, which meant they were both eliminated at the same time. The match came down to Shocker and Tama Tonga, who went one-on-one for six and a half minutes before Tonga was able to overcome his opponent to win the match. Due to his victory, Tama Tonga faced
La Sombra the following week as part of the 2012 Sin Piedad event.[2][14][16]
The fifth match of the night was originally promoted under the tagline Las Joyas de la Corona ("The Crown Jewels"), tying into the "British Night" theme. When the John Langdon Down and the British Embassy pulled out of the event the match tagline was quietly abandoned even though the match still took place. The match between two of CMLL's top names, the rudoÚltimo Guerrero and the tecnicoLa Sombra, was a single fall match with no time limit. The match, described as a "Modern classic" by one source,[2] began with mat work by both wrestlers, exchanging holds and counters. A few minutes in Guerrero started to take shortcuts, punishing La Sombra with a number of illegal actions, which led to La Sombra to start using his high-flying, high-speed offensive to regain the momentum of the match. While Guerrero tried to ground La Sombra throughout the match La Sombra was able to win the match after executing not one, but two
Moonsaults in succession to take the victory. Following the match La Sombra was still awarded a trophy, referred to as a "Commemorative trophy".[2][14][15] The main event match was the first Super Viernes match for
Diamante Azul and
Rush following their tour of Japan where they participated in
New Japan Pro-Wrestling's
2012 World Tag League.[17] Upon their return the duo teamed up with fellow tecnicoMáscara Dorada to take on the rudo trio known as Los Hijos del Averno ("The Sons of Hell") composed of
Averno,
Ephesto and
Mephisto. The two teams split the first two falls between them, leading the third and final fall. During the third fall most of the action centered around Máscara Dorada and Averno, with Dorada pinning Averno to win the match for his team.[2][14][15]
^
abVarious (2005). "Los Brazos Familia Ejemplar / the Brazos a model Family". Lucha Libre: Masked Superstars of Mexican Wrestling. Distributed Art Publishers, Inc. pp. 184–190.
ISBN968-6842-48-9.
^
abcdMadigan, Dan (2007). "A family affair". Mondo Lucha a Go Go: the bizarre & honorable world of wild Mexican wrestling. HarperCollins Publishers. pp. 128–132.
ISBN978-0-06-085583-3.
In December 2012, the Mexican
professional wrestling promotion
Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) held four
CMLL Super Viernes shows, all of which took place in
Arena México on Friday nights. Some of the matches from Super Viernes were taped for CMLL's weekly shows that aired in Mexico the week following the Super Viernes show. The shows featured various
professional wrestling matches with different wrestlers involved in pre-existing
scriptedfeuds or
storylines. Wrestlers portrayed either
villains (referred to as "rudos" in Mexico) or
fan favorites ("technicos" in Mexico) as they followed a series of tension-building events, which culminated in a wrestling match or series of matches.
December 7, 2012
CMLL Super Viernes
Poster promoting the match between
La Sombra and
Último Guerrero as Las Joyas de la Corona ("The Crown Jewels")
Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre's (CMLL) December 7, 2012, Super Viernes show was originally promoted as Noches Britanica ("British Night") and was to be copromoted by the British
Embassy in Mexico City. The event was set to include musical performances by British Musicians, a red
double decker bus and a number of
Buckingham palace guards.[1] The event was nicknamed Un Lucha con Causa ("Wrestling for a cause") and was supported by
John Langdon Down foundation for
Down's syndrome research[3] On December 6, 2012 the British Embassy announced that they, along with the John Langdon Down foundation were pulling their support for the "British Night" event, due to CMLL being unwilling to provide the foundation with a specific percentage of the ticket sales.[4]
The show featured the second block of the 2012 2012 La Copa Junior Tournament, which included ten second-generation wrestlers. CMLL announced that one of the featured matches, originally promoted under the tagline Las Joyas de la Corona (Spanish for "The Crown Jewels"), would be a singles match between
La Sombra and
Último Guerrero with no time limit.[5] The winner of the match still received a trophy even after the "British Night" aspects were abandoned, but there was no mention of the Las Joyas de la Corona name, nor the actual reason for why the trophy was awarded. The main event of the show was
Diamante Azul and
Rush teaming up with
Máscara Dorada in their first match back from their tour of Japan. The team faced off against Los Hijos del Averno (
Averno,
Ephesto and
Mephisto).
In the opening match, the
storylinefeud between Los Hombres del Camoflaje (Artillero and Súper Comando) and
Metálico continued. Metálico was teamed up with
Sensei for the night and the makeshift tecnico team defeated the rudosLos Hombres in the first fall. Los Hombres came back throughout the second fall, ending with a double submission hold on their opponents to take the second fall.[11] During the third fall Metálico tried on several occasions to team Super Comando's mask apart, underlying his frustrations with the opposing team.[12] Artillero was the first man eliminate from the match when he was pinned by Metálico, but he snuck back into the ring and landed a low kick on Metálico while the referee was not watching.[13] The foul allowed Super Comando to pin Metálico, winning the match for his team.[2][14][15] After several weeks where members of Los Guerreros Tuareg (The Tuareg Warriors) had teamed up with members of Los Cancerberos del Infierno (The Cerberus of Hell) and failed to get along. On December 7 Los Guerreros had shown that if they were allowed to work as a group, in this instance
Arkangel de la Muerte,
Hooligan and
Skándalo, they were able to work as a unit, defeating the tecnico team of
Starman,
Super Halcón Jr. and
Pegasso when Skándalo pinned Pegasso in the third fall.[2][14][15] The match was originally announced with
Ángel Azteca, Jr. as part of the tecnico team, but when CMLL updated their posters to remove any reference to "British Night" he was replaced with Pegasso without any explanation given. In the third match of the night the Japanese team of La Fievre Amarilla ("The Yellow Fever";
Okumura and
Namajague) teamed up with
Sangre Azteca to take on the tecnico trio of
El Hijo del Fantasma,
Rey Cometa and
Tritón. The teamwork of La Fievre led them to take the first fall over the makeshift tecnico team. The high flying, fast paced offense of Hijo del Fantasma, Rey Cometa and Tritón overwhelmed their opponents as they won both the second and third fall. In the final fall Hijo del Fantasma pinned team captain Okumura.[2][14][15]
The fourth match of the night was a 10-man torneo cibernetico match with the survivor qualifying for the finals of the 2012 La Copa Junior. The match pitted 5 tecnicos (
Shocker,
Máximo,
Brazo de Plata,
Guerrero Maya, Jr. and
Stuka, Jr.) against 5 rudos (
Dragón Rojo, Jr.,
El Felino,
Misterioso, Jr.,
Puma and
Tama Tonga). Misterioso, Jr. was the first man eliminated after four minutes and twenty seconds. About four minutes later the father son team of El Felino and Puma worked together to eliminate Brazo de Plata. The third elimination saw Dragón Rojo, Jr. pinned Stuka, Jr. twelve minutes and 42 seconds into the match. The teams alternated in eliminations as Shocker pinned Puma, Tama Tonga pinned Guerrero Maya, Jr. and Maximo pinned Felino. With just four wrestlers left in the ring, Maximo and Dragón Rojo, Jr. fighting to a double disqualification, which meant they were both eliminated at the same time. The match came down to Shocker and Tama Tonga, who went one-on-one for six and a half minutes before Tonga was able to overcome his opponent to win the match. Due to his victory, Tama Tonga faced
La Sombra the following week as part of the 2012 Sin Piedad event.[2][14][16]
The fifth match of the night was originally promoted under the tagline Las Joyas de la Corona ("The Crown Jewels"), tying into the "British Night" theme. When the John Langdon Down and the British Embassy pulled out of the event the match tagline was quietly abandoned even though the match still took place. The match between two of CMLL's top names, the rudoÚltimo Guerrero and the tecnicoLa Sombra, was a single fall match with no time limit. The match, described as a "Modern classic" by one source,[2] began with mat work by both wrestlers, exchanging holds and counters. A few minutes in Guerrero started to take shortcuts, punishing La Sombra with a number of illegal actions, which led to La Sombra to start using his high-flying, high-speed offensive to regain the momentum of the match. While Guerrero tried to ground La Sombra throughout the match La Sombra was able to win the match after executing not one, but two
Moonsaults in succession to take the victory. Following the match La Sombra was still awarded a trophy, referred to as a "Commemorative trophy".[2][14][15] The main event match was the first Super Viernes match for
Diamante Azul and
Rush following their tour of Japan where they participated in
New Japan Pro-Wrestling's
2012 World Tag League.[17] Upon their return the duo teamed up with fellow tecnicoMáscara Dorada to take on the rudo trio known as Los Hijos del Averno ("The Sons of Hell") composed of
Averno,
Ephesto and
Mephisto. The two teams split the first two falls between them, leading the third and final fall. During the third fall most of the action centered around Máscara Dorada and Averno, with Dorada pinning Averno to win the match for his team.[2][14][15]
^
abVarious (2005). "Los Brazos Familia Ejemplar / the Brazos a model Family". Lucha Libre: Masked Superstars of Mexican Wrestling. Distributed Art Publishers, Inc. pp. 184–190.
ISBN968-6842-48-9.
^
abcdMadigan, Dan (2007). "A family affair". Mondo Lucha a Go Go: the bizarre & honorable world of wild Mexican wrestling. HarperCollins Publishers. pp. 128–132.
ISBN978-0-06-085583-3.