Jimmy Jacobs - in Wrestling

In Wrestling

  • Finishing moves
    • Contra Code (Shiranui)
    • End Time (Guillotine choke, sometimes preceded by a snap DDT) – 2007–present
    • High Angle Diving Senton
  • Signature moves
    • Hurricanrana
    • Berzerker Drop (Inverted double underhook facebuster)
    • Multiple stomps to a grounded opponent
    • Release powerbomb
    • Berzerker Boot (Running arched big boot)
    • Seated chinlock
    • Sidewalk slam
    • Snap suplex
    • Spear
    • Spinning headscissors takedown
    • Springboard dropkick
    • Suicide dive
  • With B.J. Whitmer
    • Doomsday Rana
    • Powerbomb / Contra Code combination
  • With Tyler Black
    • Backbreaker rack by Black followed by a senton by Jacobs
    • Doomsday Rana
    • Powerbomb / Contra Code combination
  • Managers
    • Becky Bayless
    • Ricky Steamboat
    • Bobby Heenan
    • Scott D'Amore
    • Lacey
    • Dave Prazak
    • Mr. Milo Beasley
    • Sean David
    • Allison Wonderland
    • Rain
    • Brodie Lee
  • Nicknames
    • "Zombie Princess"
  • Theme music
    • "The Touch (Huss Intro)" by Stan Bush
    • "Goodbye Horses" by Q Lazzarus
    • "The Haunted" by Walls of Jericho
    • "The Ballad of Lacey" by Jimmy Jacobs
    • "Sickeness & Sorrow" by The Champagne Charade (Marisette)

Read more about this topic:  Jimmy Jacobs

Famous quotes containing the word wrestling:

    We laugh at him who steps out of his room at the very moment when the sun steps out, and says: “I will the sun to rise”; and at him who cannot stop the wheel, and says: “I will it to roll”; and at him who is taken down in a wrestling match, and says: “I lie here, but I will that I lie here!” And yet, all laughter aside, do we ever do anything other than one of these three things when we use the expression, “I will”?
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    There are people who think that wrestling is an ignoble sport. Wrestling is not sport, it is a spectacle, and it is no more ignoble to attend a wrestled performance of suffering than a performance of the sorrows of Arnolphe or Andromaque.
    Roland Barthes (1915–1980)