"Avalanche" style refers to when a move normally performed on the ground is instead performed off the top rope. A Superplex could also be called an "Avalanche" style front suplex for example.
Doesn't it mean from up high as well, I've seen matches end with a normal brainbuster, but Stu labels it as a avalanche-style........
I have lot all my respect for my namesake...there I would like to be known as WilliamsFan from now on...I feel disgraced with the name of Edge on me...
High Angle is when you take a move and raise your opponent up before hitting the move: Undertaker's Last Ride has been called an elevated, or high angle powerbomb. Other high-angled moves include: high-angled boston crab: the person putting the move on positions his body so that the opponent's body is put in a more severe angle than it usually is; high-angled chokeslams and German suplexes occur when the person taking the move is elevated up further than normal.
I think revolution-style moves are called that because there is typically a circular, or revolving movement to the move before it is executed. Doug "The Anarchist" Williams's finisher, the Chaos Theory, is a revolution-style German Suplex. What he does is hook the opponent from behind with a waistlock as if he was going to do a German Suplex, but instead of releasing his opponent in a throw, he actually rolls backwards on the ground while still holding onto him, thus causing both of them to do a backwards roll. As they reach their feet, Williams then German suplexes him. The move looks spectacular because they move rather far from the point where they start the move and the momentum of the rolling on the ground creates alot of power, thus making the move appear devastating.
Last edited by darktowerchilde; 2005-10-02 at 11:00 PM.