Dive Combination
This refers to a series of specific move types. The first move is a grapple moves performed to the first attacker to the opponent. This then leaves them prone to a second, this time diving, attack from the second attacker. These usually include at least one finishing move. The most common kind sees the first attacker perform a grapple move in the ring, which leaves the defending wrestler prone to a diving attack from another attacker. Wrestlers who have a dive combination attack usually perform exactly the same moves each time. They also team to use their own half of the combination alone in singles matches. The most famous example is the version by Matt and Jeff Hardy. Matt would perform his Twist of Fate, leaving the opponent prone to Jeff's Swanton Bomb.
Read more about this topic: Professional Wrestling Double-team Maneuvers
Famous quotes containing the words dive and/or combination:
“I dont take no dive for nobody. Whaddya think I am, a tanker!”
—Abraham Polonsky (b. 1910)
“Just as we need to encourage women to test lifes many options, we need to acknowledge real limits of energy and resources. It would be pointless and cruel to prescribe role combination for every woman at each moment of her life. Life has its seasons. There are moments when a woman ought to invest emotionally in many different roles, and other moments when she may need to conserve her psychological energies.”
—Faye J. Crosby (20th century)