A dropkick is an attacking maneuver in professional wrestling. It is defined as an attack where the wrestler jumps up and kicks the opponent with the soles of both feet, this sees the wrestler twist as they jump so that when the feet connect with the opponent one foot is raised higher that the other (depending on which way they twist) and the wrestler falls back to the mat on their side, or front. This is commonly employed by light and nimble wrestlers who can take advantage of their agility, and is often executed on a charging opponent.
The most basic form of a dropkick, but potentially the hardest to pull off, is a standing dropkick where the wrestler catches a standing or running opponent with a standard dropkick from a standing position. In order to be pulled off effectively, it requires great leg strength in order to gain elevation.
Amongst the wrestlers who utilize the standing dropkick as a signature maneuver are AJ Styles, Billy Kidman, Maven Huffman, Randy Orton, Hardcore Holly, and the Killer Bees (Jim Brunzell and B. Brian Blair) who have all been credited with having some of the best dropkicks in the business, and Mark Jindrak has been credited with having the highest vertical leap to his dropkick.
A baseball slide can also be used to counter an Irish whip, as the whipped wrestler slides before they can hit the ropes, and it can be used to slide under an opponent, by going between his/her legs.
This is often used to attack lower parts of the opponent than the normal dropkick. This move is also used when charging at an opponent is sitting or kneeling on the ground so that the feet will connect with the opponent’s head.
Though "missile dropkick" most commonly refers to the aerial version of a standing dropkick, the term is also used for the aerial version of the front dropkick.
CIMA would invented a front flip variation where the wrestler first sits his/her opponent somewhere along the bottom ring rope, going to the opposite side of the ring, and out on to its ring apron before then springboarding off of the top ring rope performing a front flip and connecting with a front dropkick to the opponent
Often this will see a weapon, or foreign object, placed in front of the opponent's head usually wedged between the bottom and middle rope of the ring.
Samoa Joe is known for using a variation of this known as a single leg front dropkick where he jumps up but not to his side. This version can also be described as a jumping big boot.
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