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A back body drop or backdrop (also sometimes called a shoulder back toss), is a move in which a wrestler bends forward or crouches in front of their opponent, grabs hold of the opponent, and stands up, lifting the opponent up and over and dropping them behind the back.
A suplex is an offensive move used in sport wrestling as well as amateur wrestling and professional wrestling. It is a throw that involves lifting the opponents and bridging or rolling to slam them on their backs. Professional wrestling features many different varieties of suplexes.
Professional wrestling contains a variety of punches and kicks found in martial arts and other fighting sports; the moves listed below are more specific to wrestling itself. Many of the moves below can also be performed from a raised platform (the top rope, the ring apron, etc.); these are called aerial variations .
Backdrop or Bankdrops may refer to: Backdrop (theater) , painted scenery hung at the back of a stage Backdrop (wrestling) , various types of throws in amateur and professional wrestling
The move was only ever been kicked out of once by Natalya a month before Phoenix's departure from WWE. [10] Jon Moxley used this during the indies in the 2000s as the Hook and Ladder before signing with WWE in 2011. NJPW wrestler Ryusuke Taguchi used this move called the Dodon. Taya Valkyrie also used this move as a finisher dubbed Road To ...
Related titles should be described in Professional wrestling moves, while unrelated titles should be moved to Professional wrestling moves (disambiguation). ( November 2020 ) Professional wrestling moves can refer to several types of moves used against opponents in professional wrestling , including:
The movie gets its name from the family’s iconic wrestling move of collapsing a hand atop an opponents head. As for who among the actors did it best, Dickinson shared his feelings on the matter.
Nikki Bella setting up to perform the Rack Attack (Argentine backbreaker drop) on Naomi.. This submission hold, better known as a Torture Rack or simply a rack, sees the attacking wrestler carrying the opponent face-up across his own shoulders, before hooking the opponent's head with one hand and a leg with the other to then pull down on both ends to hyperextend the opponent's back and force a ...