Christian Cage Explores the Origins Behind the Killswitch Finisher

Christian Cage Explores the Origins Behind the Killswitch Finisher
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Christian Cage recently attended Steel City Con as a special guest speaker, discussing various topics such as his finishing move.

The AEW star shared the backstory behind The Killswitch. He said,

“I used to study a lot of different genres of wrestling, one of those being Japanese wrestling, and there was an American wrestler there by the name of Tommy Rogers. Tommy Rogers used to do a move called Tomikaze, which is a version of the Killswitch. He did it a little bit different than I do,” said the veteran star. “When I saw him do it, it was … when he hooked the guy’s arms from behind and spun him around, first of all, I couldn’t figure out how he did that, so I had to slow it down. This was at times of VCRs, so I had to slow it down on a VCR and push pause multiple times to see it frame by frame to see how he turned the guy. When I saw how he turned the guy and the head was in the position facing down, I was like, ‘Okay, it’s almost like a piledriver move, it can be devastating.’”

Christian Cage recently attended Steel City Con as a special guest speaker, discussing various topics such as his finishing move.

The AEW star shared the backstory behind The Killswitch. He said,

“I used to study a lot of different genres of wrestling, one of those being Japanese wrestling, and there was an American wrestler there by the name of Tommy Rogers. Tommy Rogers used to do a move called Tomikaze, which is a version of the Killswitch. He did it a little bit different than I do,” said the veteran star. “When I saw him do it, it was … when he hooked the guy’s arms from behind and spun him around, first of all, I couldn’t figure out how he did that, so I had to slow it down. This was at times of VCRs, so I had to slow it down on a VCR and push pause multiple times to see it frame by frame to see how he turned the guy. When I saw how he turned the guy and the head was in the position facing down, I was like, ‘Okay, it’s almost like a piledriver move, it can be devastating.’”