Mosco de la Merced

For the original Mosco de la Merced, see X-Fly.
Mosco de la Merced
Birth name Juan Valdez Valentino
Born (1964-06-23) June 23, 1964
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s) Loco Valentino
Mosco de la Merced (II)
Trained by Rayo Dorado
Loco Valentino, Sr.
Debut 1983

Mosco de la Merced (Juan Valdez Valentino) is a Mexican Luchador or professional wrestler, best known for his time in Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (AAA) where he was a part of Los Vipers for many years. Before adopting the Mosco de la Merced ring name he worked for as Loco Valentino for over 10 years. He is a former holder of the Mexican National Tag Team Championship with Fuerza Guerrera and held the Mexican National Atómicos Championship four times with Histeria, Psicosis II and Maniaco. His name roughly translates to "Mosquito of Mercy".

Professional wrestling career

He began his wrestling career under the name Loco Valentino, son of the original Loco Valentino who also trained him for his professional wrestling career. Valentino wrestled for the Universal Wrestling Association in the early 1990s, where he defeated Semanarista to win the UWA World Lightweight Championship on September 22, 1994.[1] Valentino would hold the championship until the UWA closed down in January 1995 when he had to vacate the championship.[1]

Asistencia Asesoría y Administración

After the UWA closed Valentino began working for Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (AAA), one of Mexico's largest wrestling promotions. His first major show appearance was on June 13, 1997 at Triplemanía V-A when he teamed up with Los Hamponeslosing to the team k own as Los Cadetes del Espacio ("the Space Cadets" Discovery, Ludxor, Super Nova and Venum).[2] Later in 1997 he teamed up with Picudo to compete in a tournament for the Mexican National Tag Team Championship, but were eliminated in the first round by Heavy Metal and Venum.[3] At the 1997 Verano de Escandalo teamed up with Los Hampones once again, only to lose to a team composed mostly Los Cadetes (Discovery, Ludxor and Venum) with added the spectacular undercarder Flying.[4]

Los Vipers

Main article: Los Vipers

In August, 1997 Cibernético formed a "Super Rúdo" group called Los Vipers a group that included Abismo Negro, Maniaco, Histeria, Mosco de la Merced and Psicosis II.[5] A few weeks after Los Vipers was born Histeria was replaced by a new Histeria. Mosco de la Merced left AAA not long after the formation of Los Vipers, leaving AAA a man short in the stable. Mosco also held the Mexican National Tag Team Championship with Fuerza Guerrera and his departure forced AAA to either vacate the championship or come up with an alternative plan.[6] The solution was to give the Mosco de la Merced mask and full-bodysuit to Loco Valentino replacing the original Mosco de la Merced without publicly acknowledging it was a different wrestler under the mask.[7] This allowed Mosco de la Merced (II) and Fuerza Guerrera to remain tag team champions and also fill the void in Los Vipers.[6] On June 7, 1998 Mosco de la Merced and Fuerza Guerrera lost the tag team title to Perro Aguayo and Perro Aguayo, Jr.[6]

On August 23, 1998 Mosco de la Merced, Maniaco, Psicosis II and Histeriateamed up to participate in a tournament for the vacant Mexican National Atómicos Championship, representing Los Vipers. Los Vipers won the tournament by defeating Los Payasos (Coco Amarillo, Coco Azul, Coco Negro and Coco Rojo) in the finals to win the Atómicos title.[8] Over the following months Los Vipers began a storyline feud with another group called Los Vatos Locos, which at the time consisted of Charly Manson, May Flowers, Nygma and Picudo. On February 14, 1999 Los Vatos Locos defeated Los Vipers to win the Atómicos championship.[8] Los Vipers won the title a second time on September 17, 1999 when they defeated Los Junior Atómicos (Blue Demon, Jr., La Parka, Jr., Mascara Sagrada, Jr. and Perro Aguayo, Jr.).[8] Los Vatos Locos managed to end Los Vipers second reign only three months later as they defeated Psicosis and partners on the undercard of the 1999 Guerra de Titanes show.[9] Los Vipers regained the Atómicos title on April 15, 2000 effectively ending the storyline with Los Vatos Locos.[10] Los Vipers reigned as Atómicos champions for over a year, until they were surprisingly upset by a little-known group called Los Regio Guapos (Hator, Monje Negro, Jr., Potro, Jr. and Tigre Universitario) on August 19, 2001. Los Regio Guapos only held the title for under two months before Los Vipers regained the title and began their fourth reign with the Atómicos title.[10] Their fourth reign also turned out to be the last reign for Los Vipers, ending on November 23, 2001 as a new version of Los Vatos Locos (Espiritu, Nygma, Picudo and Silver Cat) defeated them in one of the featured matches of the 2001 Guerra de Titanes.[11] Los Vipers took part in an eight-man Steel cage match at Triplemanía X against Los Diabolicos (Mr. Condor, Ángel Mortal and El Gallego) and Gran Apache where the last wrestler in the cage would lose either his mask or be shaved bald. Mosco de la Merced was able to escape the cage and thus save his mask, although his fellow Viper Maniaco was less fortunate and was unmasked.[12] Following Maniaco's mask loss Los Vipers were used less and less in AAA, especially Mosco de la Merced. During mid-2004 Los Vipers, in this case Mosco, Histeria and Psicosis II became involved in a feud with Heavy Metal, El Intocable and Zorro that led to a Steel Cage match at Verano de Escandalo 2004 in which the last man in the cage would be unmasked or have his hair shaved off. This time Mosco de la Merced was the last man in the ring and was forced to unmask per Lucha libre traditions.[13]

Independent circuit

Not long after his mask loss Mosco de la Merced left AAA, but continued to wrestle as Mosco de la Merced on the independent circuit. In 2009 he began working for the Perros del Mal promotion, teaming with former Vipers' team mates Histeria and Psicosis II after they left AAA as well.[14] He also teamed up with the original Mosco de la Merced, who wrestles as X-Fly.[14]

Championships and accomplishments

Luchas de Apuestas record

Winner (wager) Loser (wager) Location Event Date Notes
Gran Apache (hair) Loco Valentino (hair) León, Guanajuato Live event April 5, 1992 [7]
Kid Guzmán (hair) Loco Valentino (hair) Acapulco, Guerrero Live event January 15, 1995 [Note 2][7]
Mosco de la Merced (mask) Lover Boy (mask) Unknown Live event Unknown [7]
Rey Dragón (hair) Mosco de la Merced (hair) Tulancingo, Hidalgo Live event January 31, 1999 [Note 3][7]
Mosco de la Merced (mask) Mitsuko (mask) Pachuca, Hidalgo Live event July 25, 2000 [7]
Mosco de la Merced (mask) Blade (hair) Guadalajara, Jalisco Live event June 30, 2002 [7]
Mosco de la Merced (mask) Gran Apache (hair) León, Guanajuato Live event July 15, 2002 [7]
Heavy Metal (hair) Mosco de la Merced (mask) Orizaba, Veracruz Verano de Escándalo (2004) October 16, 2004 [Note 4][7]
Mosco de la Merced (hair) Dalia Negra (mask) Oaxaca, Oaxaca Live event October 24, 2004 [Note 5][7]

Footnotes

  1. The original Mosco de la Merced won the title with Fuerza Gurrera but was replaced with Mosco II during the reign without it being made public knowledge, the reign is considered one continuous reign despite Mosco II not winning the title.
  2. This was a triangle match that also included Babe Star
  3. 'Lucha del revés, hair vs. Hair match between two masked wrestlers
  4. Steel Cage match that also included El Zorro, El Intocable, Psicosis II and Histeria
  5. Last two men in a Steel Cage match that featured Halcon 78, Oscar Sevilla and La Novia De La Parka vs. Picudo, Espiritu and Perla vs. Histeria, Mosco de la Merced and Dalia Negra

References

  1. 1 2 3 Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2000). "Mexico: UWA Lightweight Title". Wrestling Title Histories. Archeus Communications. p. 400. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  2. "Asistencia Asesoria y Administracion TripleMania". Pro Wrestling History. June 13, 1997. Retrieved May 18, 2010.
  3. "Mexican National Tag Team Title Tournament 1997". Pro Wrestling history. July 20, 1997. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  4. "Verano de Escandalo". Box y Lucha Magazine (in Spanish). September 30, 1997. pp. 3–6. issue 2316.
  5. Flores, Manuel (March 30, 2009). "Abismo Negro Adiós al rey de marinete". SuperLuchas (in Spanish). Mexico City, D.F. pp. 24–26. 308.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Royal Duncan and Gary Will (2000). "Mexico: National Tag Team Titles". Wrestling Title Histories. Archeus Communications. pp. 396–397. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Enciclopedia de las Mascaras". Mosco de la Merced (Segunda) (in Spanish). Mexico City, Mexico. October 2007. p. 39. Tomo III.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Royal Duncan and Gary Will (2000). "Mexico: National Atómicos Title". Wrestling Title Histories. Archeus Communications. p. 402. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  9. "Asistencia Asesoria y Administracion Guerra de Titanes". Pro Wrestling History. December 10, 1999. Retrieved May 17, 2010.
  10. 1 2 3 "Los Reyes de Mexico: La Historia de Los Campeonatos Nacionales – Campeonato Atómicos". Lucha 2000 (in Spanish). December 20, 2004. pp. 16–17. Especial 21.
  11. "Asistencia Asesoria y Administracion Guerra de Titanes". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved September 12, 2009.
  12. "Asistencia Asesoria y Administracion TripleMania". Pro Wrestling History. July 5, 2002. Retrieved May 10, 2010.
  13. Ocampo, Jorge (October 26, 2005). "Verano de Escandalo". SuperLuchas (in Spanish). pp. 8–10. issue 74.
  14. 1 2 "Lo Mejor de la Lucha Libre Mexicana 2009". SuperLuchas (in Spanish). January 8, 2010. 348.
  15. "Pro Wrestling Illustrated 500 – 1999 :106. Mosco de la Merced". Pro Wrestling Illustrated. Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, United States: Sports and Entertainment publications LLC. August 1999. p. 41. October 1999.
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