From the Crow’s Nest: 1978

From the Crow’s Nest: 1978

Our journey through the Portland Wrestling territory turns the calendar from 1977 to 1978.

Unfortunately, footage from this year is pretty sparse. We’ve got two partial episodes from the first quarter of the year, one interview with Buddy Rose and Ed Wiskowski, and … that’s it. Luckily, all of that footage is available for general consumption on YouTube.

2/18/78

Another partial episode, and once again, the dastardly duo of Rose and Wiskowski take center stage. Jesse Ventura is the hero du jour going against the duo. Most of these Saturday night episodes of TV serve as a vehicle to promote the upcoming Tuesday card happening in Portland, and that’s the case again here. Wins come by pin, submission, or both feet hitting the floor. The hook this time? Ventura is going to take on Rose, and has put up $5,000 against $1,000 for Rose to make the match happen. And Wiskowski is going to be the special referee. I’m not sure how this is fair for Ventura, but …

Our existing footage includes the main event of the episode, with Rose and Wiskowski defending their tag titles against Skip Young and Jerry Oates. It’s been about two and a half months since our last available episode, and there are notable physical changes for the two villains; Rose has leaned up and Wiskowski. Oates, meanwhile, comes out in a drabby sweatshirt that makes him look like a middle school gym teacher.

This marks the last footage of Young in Portland for the next while, and it’s his best yet. I maintain he would have been a great fit in modern wrestling. There’s a great exchange with Rose where they trade slams, then leap frogs, ending with a gorgeous dropkick but Young. Rose looks sharp in this match as well, and he’s back to taking those cartoonish slipping-on-a-banana-peel bumps on his punches.

One quality that stands out in Portland matches, and Rose matches in particular, is that he makes opponents pay for repeating the same move or tactic on him multiple times. There’s a fine instance of that here. Oates spends nearly the entire first fall working in or around a headlock, usually on Rose. On Oates’ third attempt to catch Rose in a headlock takeover, the Playboy blocks it and counters with a back suplex. A kneedrop straight to the face makes for a believable end to the fall, and puts the rulebreakers up 1-0.

In between falls, Frank Bonnema interviews Ventura from the crow’s nest. This is pretty standard fare but it feels like a treasured hysterical artifact, where we get a look at Ventura as a fan favorite in a territory.

In Portland, the wrestlers involved in the previous fall automatically start the next one, and that doesn’t play out well for Oates. Rose quickly seizes the upper hand and Oates spends the majority of the fall getting roughed up by the champs. There’s a fantastic moment in this fall, after Skip tags in, when he hits Rose with a jumping headbutt. Rose instinctively goes to keep over, but Young grabs him to prevent the collapse so he can exact more punishment. Oates ends up back in, avoids a flying knee drop from Wiskowski and then ensnares him in a spinning toe hold to get the submission. The crowd loves it, and Wiskowski sells the toehold like he’s having his lower body fed into a wood chipper. Verily, the Wrestling Gods are appeased …

Time for the third fall. Skip hits a swanky bit of offense when, while standing, he leaps and puts both knees in Rose’s head at once. There’s a move available to bring back for any current wrestlers reading this, who also have the hops to do it. You can feel the war of attrition in this fall. The challengers focus on Wiskowski’s knee, vulnerable after the submission in the second fall. The champions target Skip’s shoulder after he misses on a corner shoulder tackle and collides with the turnbuckles. The fans chant “We want Skip!” with gusto but the combined assault on Young’s arm is too much and referee Sandy Barr stops the match for injury, as Young becomes the latest arm injury casualty at the hands of Rose.

This was a very good match, and one of the better in-ring offerings yet in this journey through the Portland footage.

2/25/78

Next, we get another crow’s nest interview from the following week, with Rose and Wiskowski. The villains are reveling in recent results. Rose got the win over Ventura in that singles match and crows about the result. Later, Rose and Wiskowski come back to the broadcast position, gloating about Skip Young and his dislocated shoulder at their hands. These two are really the engine that propels the territory at this point. Other wrestlers cycle in and out to try and stop them, and ultimately, everyone has come up short to this point. At the same time, Rose and Wiskowski stumble and bumble and, in Rose’s case, bleed to make the protagonists look strong. The three-fall format for TV main events also helps, as the two rulebreakers can eat a pin or submit to drop an individual fall, but without losing the overall match, maintaining their status in the hierarchy while also providing hope that this time, their challengers definitely have what it takes to dethrone them.

3/4/78

Another week of Portland TV and another Tuesday card to hype, this time headlined by Rose and Wiskowski defending the tag titles against Jimmy Snuka and Ventura. There’s a tandem where I really would like to see some footage of that duo in action. Oh well. Ed Wiskowski is still gloating about he and Rose taking out Skip Young. This and the two interview segments from the week before are all fine but they are also rather similar. They’ve had better promos previously on other episodes.

It’s not the main event of this episode, but the other surviving footage puts Rose against Snuka. You had me at hello. This is very much a TV match, in that they’re saving much of the actual fight between them for the crowd at the non-televised event on Tuesday in Portland. The match itself is pretty forgettable, but if you’re a current wrestler, watching what Rose does is highly recommended because he puts on a master class in how to stall and work a crowd. Rose is interacting directly with many of the old timers in the front row, a lot of whom were season ticket holders at these Portland TV tapings. Rose eventually asks the ringside fans to be quiet, so naturally they go louder.

This crowd work lasts about three minutes before Roae finally engages Snuka in the ring, nearly gets caught in a flash in, and then bails out and goes back into a stall. Delicious.

Snuka is still on an ascent at this point and I find it hard to accurately describe how explosive his movements are unless you can watch the matches for yourself. He hits a gorgeous armdrag on Rose, transitions into a hold, and then lifts Rose up off the mat while still having him in the hold and slams him down to the mat. Once the initial gaga subsided, everything was 95% Snuka until Rose cut him off as he ascended to the top rope and slams him off the corner. Any control Rose has is short lived. He tries to come off the top as well and gets caught by Snuka, In the rally, Snuka delivers a jumping headbutt that Rose sells with a wild leaping bump that both makes no sense and is highly entertaining. It’s a peak example of how suspension of disbelief can be a vital component to full enjoyment of this weird, wacky medium.

One factor that makes Rose so effective as a headlining villain is that he has the skills to back up his boasts. He scouts and anticipates repeat attacks, and he has a maddening level of ring awareness. Exhibit A: Snuka delivers a pretty awkward-looking piledriver, but Rose gets a foot in the ropes on the pin attempt. Exhibit B: Snuka applies his full nelson, which submitted Rose back in December, and he immediately scrambles to the ropes, then does so again on a second attempt by Snuka on the hold, barely reaching the bottom rope with his foot.

Time expires in a draw result that let a bit telegraphed, and each man’s partner comes out for a staredown. Rose and Wiskowski against Snuka and Ventura feels like the fever dream of a wrestling game simulator. Frank Bonnema gleefully proclaims “we’re going behind the barn!” as they face off. Not sure what that means, but I like it.

Unfortunately, this is all the footage available in 1978. Rose and Wiskowski drop the tag titles to Ventura and Oates a few weeks later. Rose loses a stretcher match to Ventura and cycles in and out of Portland for the rest of the year. What time he does spend back in Portland later in 1978 is often under a hood, as either The Masked Marvel or The Avenger. Wiskowski remains more of a constant for Don Owen. He loses the territory’s singles title to Oates in May, wins it back, then loses it to Jonathan Boyd in August. Boyd remains the champ as we roll into 1979, when a certain Rowdy Scot is already well-established in the territory.

Check out the full index of entries in the From the Crow’s Nest series.

From the Crow’s Nest: December, 1977

From the Crow’s Nest: December, 1977

Back in the saddle with more Portland action. Apologies for the delay between installments. February included two snowstorms in back-to-back weeks here, then some sickness in the household, and the birth of our first grandchild. And yes, I’ve already been trying to educate him in the finer things such as professional wrestling.

We close the book on 1977 with this footage from December that also serves as a refresh of the roster.

I’ve included what is available on YouTube from the December, 1977 footage. However, if you want to make sure you’ve got access to everything I am watching as part of this project, I highly recommend supporting this Patreon account, which has a veritable treasure trove of old wrestling available.

December 3, 1977

Just a heads up that, depending on where you look online, footage from this episode is mis-listed as from November 26. Also, the video quality from this episode tends to range from “not great” to “piss poor.”

Frank Bonnema interviews returning fan favorite Johnny Eagles from England, dubbing Eagles as the man of a thousand moves. Eagles is one wrestler I have very little familiarity with, and while he came in and out of Portland with some regularity, there is not a lot of surviving footage of him in action — although he will be included on the next installment. Eagles brags on how strong the wrestling is in Portland, which is a recurring theme on commentary and in interviews with mainstays like Dutch Savage. A wrestling company that uses good wrestling as a cornerstone of its marketing approach … bananas!

The other existing footage from this episode catches the tail end of the main event: a two out of three falls match pitting Lonnie Mayne and Sam Oliver Bass (that’s Ron Bass, for those of you who haven’t been following along [and if not, there’s a handy dandy index!]) against Buddy Rose and Ed Wiskowski. The tag titles, which have been vacated since the last episode when Mayne agreed to team with Bass to defend them, are on the line and there are two referees: Savage inside the ring, and Sandy Barr at ringside.

This is also the final available Portland footage we have of Mayne, who dies the following August in a single-vehicle car accident. His manic, reckless-looking style is on display here, both in the ring and later on the mic. Wiskowski Irish whips Lonnie into a neutral corner, and Mayne takes a wild-looking bump to the floor, then comes up bloody. Back into the ring, and Wiskowski unloads on Mayne with a series of diving headbutts (I counted six of them). Rose and Wiskowski aren’t through and start swinging on everyone, including both referees. A melee ensues, during which Mayne opens up an absolute gusher of a cut on Rose. By the time the fight breaks up, Mayne and Bass (and Savage, for some reason) are standing tall while Rose looks like a murder victim.

Frank interviews both teams from his crow’s nest, and we get some of the best promos yet of this time period. Promoter Don Owen sets a rematch for the tag titles on Tuesday, and raises the stakes to make it losers leave town. Rose is absolutely covered in blood for this interview, and it really adds to the interview as Rose and Wiskowski rant and rave at this latest outrage perpetrated against them by management. Frank Bonnema then has an all-timer of a segue to the commercial between interviews, observing the blood that thoroughly coats the floor and then noting “You can clean up if you’re looking for a used car.”

Mayne and Bass are next, and Maybe spends the whole interview chewing on and swallowing broken glass. We’ve seen other wrestlers do this and apparently it’s an established part of Mayne’s schtick because it’s treated with a sense of impending doom, as if to say … “Lonnie’s not screwing around, he’s got the glass out again!”

Mayne and Bass go on to lose the non-televised rematch and cycle out of the territory.

There’s not much meat here as far as the wrestling action, but the blood and chaos and good interviews make for a highly enjoyable watch.

December 10, 1977

All we have from this episode is the second and third falls of the main event. Rose and Wiskowski, tag champs once more, take on Skip Young and Jimmy Snuka in a non-title match. Snuka is another guy who came into Portland several times in the 1970s and, as mentioned on a previous episode, now is going by his “Superfly” moniker. A review of results from 1977 show that Snuka has been in the territory for almost a month on this current run, but this is the first in-ring footage we have.

Snuka spends most of this on the apron while Skip does the bulk of the work and the selling for Rose and Wiskowski. When Snuka does tag in, the heels make him look like a million bucks. Wiskowski takes some big bumps from Snuka when he makes the tag in the second fall, which ends shortly thereafter to tie the match on a slick quick pin by Skip. In the third fall, another hot tag to Snuka sees him put away Rose in fairly short order with the “Fiji Island Full Nelson.”

Rose’s selling is consistently great but he sells beautifully in this match and the following interview. He projects an air of grievance that permeates his words, facial expressions, and physical reactions. It’s as if the world is against him in Portland wrestling, and Rose has to suffer for it almost weekly as a result. A couple of moments I particularly liked… A brief beat between falls where, on his way to the locker room, Snuka pops Rose as he leaves the ringside area and Rose sells it as if he’s just been seared in the face with a hot iron. Then after the match, an anguished Rose seeks out comfort from Wiskowski. Sporting a large bandage on his forehead that is likely the consequence of his artery tapper last week, Rose proclaims “They’d have had to kill me to make me give up” had the titles been on the line. The heels then engage in some casual racism — mostly from Wiskowski, sheesh — before a title match gets set for next week’s TV program. Sadly, footage of that one appears lost to the sands of time.

So 1977 is in the books, and there’s little debate that Buddy Rose is the MVP of the territory. If you are not familiar with Rose, I highly recommend seeking out some of the footage in this and prior installments to get a feel for his matches, his persona and the general atmosphere of Portland wrestling.

Up Next: We tackle what little footage that exists from 1978 in one single review.