Sunday, July 3, 2016

The Best Matches In CZW History

This is a little different for my blog here as it's not a "Best Of 2016" post but a topic came up on Twitter about the best matches in CZW history. I offered to make a list and here it is. The formatting might be a little crude as I typed it up on my iPhone.

There's a couple of matches that I ommited because I didn't think they'd hold up well enough to be worth a watch, but I wouldn't mind revisiting them. Matches that jumped out to me in that category were: Pain/Mondo from A Higher Level Of Pain, Acid/Ruckus from Live Again, Acid/Homicide from Then And Now and Acid/Hart from Retribution. I'd also really like to watch the Rave/Shelley Submission Match from the show after COD 5 and the In Da Clu 4-way main event with, I think, Hero/Cannon/Strong/Whitmer. I rememer really liking both but remember nothing about them.

I think this list covers all of the areas CZW excels at though: Crazy spotfests, death matches, brawls and the occasional technical masterpiece. Here's my "Must Watch" list from the Dub:

Un F'N Believable - 04/14/01 - Fans Bring The Weapons: Justice Pain & Johnny Kashmere vs. Nick Mondo & Jun Kasai
Best Of The Best - 05/19/01 - Best Of The Best Tournament Quarter-Finals: Jay Briscoe vs. Mark Briscoe
Take 1 - 06/08/01: The SAT & The Amazing Red vs. Divine Storm & Brian XL
What About LOBO? - 07/28/01 - CZW Tag Titles: The Briscoe Brothers vs. Justice Pain & Johnny Kashmere
Best Of The Best 2 - 06/08/02 - Best Of The Best Tournament Quarter-Finals: Jody Flesich vs. Jonny Storm
Best Of The Best 2 - 06/08/02 - Best Of The Best Tournament Quarter-Finals: Super Dragon vs. B-Boy
Deja Vu - 07/13/02 - No Rope Barbed Wire: Zandig vs. LOBO
Night Of Infamy - 11/09/02 - Ladder: Ruckus vs. Sonjay Dutt vs. Chri$ Ca$h
Night Of Infamy - 11/09/02 - No Rope Barbed Wire, Bare Ring, Fans Bring The Weapons, 100 Light Tubes, "I Quit": Zandig vs. The Wifebeater
Uprising - 10/11/03 - 2 Out Of 3 Falls: Jimmy Rave vs. Tony Mamaluke
Cage Of Death V - 12/13/03 - Elimination: Chris Hero vs. B-Boy vs. Alex Shelley
Cage Of Death V - 12/13/03 - Ladder: Chri$ Ca$h vs. Joker
Cage Of Death V - 12/13/03 - Cage Of Death: The Hi-V vs. Zandig, LOBO, The Wifebeater, Nick Gage, Ian Knoxx & A Mystery Partner
Overdrive - 03/06/04 - 2 Out Of 3 Falls, Tables Elimination: BLK OUT vs. Sonjay Dutt, Chri$ Ca$h & Jimmy Jacobs
CZW Academy - 06/12/04 - Death Match: Zandig vs. Joker
Tournament Of Deah 3 - 07/24/04 - Tournament Of Death Semi-Finals, Light Tube Death Match: Sexxxy Eddy vs. The Arsenal
High Stakes 2 - 09/11/04: Kevin Steen vs. El Generico vs. Sexxxy Eddy vs. eXceSs 69
Cage Of Death 6 - 12/11/04 - Falls Count Anywhere, Loser Leaves CZW: Sonjay Dutt vs. M-Dogg 20
Cage Of Death 6 - 12/11/04: Kevin Steen & El Generico vs. The SBS
Cage Of Death 6 - 12/11/04 - Cage Of Death: BLK OUT vs. Team Ca$h
Violent By Design - 06/11/05 - Falls Count Anywhere: The H8 Club vs. The Tough, Crazy Bastards
High Stakes III - 07/09/05 - Fans Bring The Weapons: The H8 Club vs. The Tough, Crazy Bastards
Deja Vu 3 - 08/13/05 - Loser Leaves Town: Nate Webb vs. B-Boy
Deja Vu 3 - 08/13/05 - Ruckus & Mike Quackenbush vs. The Kings Of Wrestling
When 2 Worlds Collide - 03/11/06: Pandora's Box vs. Nate Webb, Sexxxy Eddy & The Messiah
When 2 Worlds Collide - 03/11/06: Justice Pain vs. El Generico
Any Questions? - 04/15/06: The Necro Butcher & Super Dragon vs. BJ Whitmer & Kevin Steen
Down With The Sickness 4-Ever 2006 - 09/09/06: Chris Hero vs. Eddie Kingston
Out With The Old, In With The New 2007 - 04/07/07 - Loser Leaves CZW: Chris Hero vs. Eddie Kingston
Tournament Of Death VIII - 06/06/09 - Tournament Of Death First Round, Jack In The Box Death Match: DJ Hyde vs. Thumbtack Jack
Tournament Of Death Rewind - 10/25/09 - Tournament Of Death Rewind First Round, 4 Corners Of Hell, Dog Collar: Jon Moxley vs. Thumbtack Jack
High Stakes 4 - 01/30/10: Drake Younger vs. B-Boy
Best Of The Best X - 04/09/11 - Ragnarok 'N Roll, Glass Crush Death Match: Danny Havoc vs. Jun Kasai
New Heights - 07/09/11 - Gusset Plates: Danny Havoc vs. MASADA
Night Of Infamy X - 11/12/11: Greg Excellent vs. Mia Yim
Cage Of Death 14 - 12/08/12 - Ultraviolent Insanity: The Nation Of Intoxication vs 4-Loco
Tangled Web 6 - 08/10/13 - Tangled Web: The Nation Of Intoxication vs. Drew Blood, Rory Mondo & Ron Mathis
Down With The Sickness 2013 - 09/14/13 - Ladder: AR Fox vs. Alex Colon vs. Shane Strickland vs. Andrew Everett
To Infinity - 04/27/14: Drew Gulak vs. Biff Busick
Best Of The Best 15 - 04/09/26 - Best Of The Best Tournament Finals: David Starr vs. Jonathan Gresham

Monday, May 9, 2016

Review Roundup #2: Mania Weekend Edition


EVOLVE Tag Team Title: Johnny Gargano & Drew Galloway © vs. The Premier Athlete Brand (Anthony Nese & Caleb Konley) (04/01 - EVOLVE) (*** ¾)
EVOLVE 58 - Dallas, Texas
This match is going to be remembered (if at all...) for 2 things. 1: No one watching at home was able to see it. 2: The finish had no ring bell ringing, causing mass confusion. The WWN More Than Mania weekend, despite producing a bunch of fantastic matches was a pretty epic disaster. Plagued with all sorts of streaming issues, it made for an incredibly frustrating experience for fans trying to watch at home. Starting the weekend out with a really hot title match seems like a great idea in theory. The actual result was fans not getting to see a marque match that they paid for. Sadly, this mistake would be made the very next day as well. WWN was thankfully prompt with getting the replay up and this turned out to be a great little tag match in front of a fired up crowd. Konley and Nese are two very solid wrestlers spinning their wheels in a stable that was going nowhere. The gimmick here was that a loss would disband the stable. For the sake of both men, that happened. It'll be interesting to see if Gabe gives each guy a new direction or stops using them on these shows. Either way, a reinvention is definitely needed. Gargano and Galloway as champs was something I was really intrigued by giving the other promotions they work for but it seems to have limited shelf life. That coupled with the l extra stipulation gave the match some intrigue. A bunch of great sequences and a hot finishing stretch lead to... And incredibly awkward submission finish. There was no bell to ring so the crowd (and wrestlers) had no idea if the match was over or not. It was as cringe-worthy as it sounds. To his credit, the divine Drew Galloway made the best of it by bringing a fan into the ring post-match to recreate the finish with a bell ringing and a big babyface celebration. This match is going to forever fly under the radar given the circumstances of it. That, plus the quality work, makes it worth a look. 

Ricochet vs. TJP (04/01 - EVOLVE) (*** ¾)
EVOLVE 58 - Dallas, Texas
Smart booking: Take two of the smoothest wrestlers going and let them wrestle each other. For a promotion not based around storylines, it's that easy. This was as good as you would expect. TJ Perkins is the most underrated independent wrestler of the past decade, in my opinion. The guy is so good but has never gotten that real chance to shine. EVOLVE seems robe majorly behind him now giving him a number of big wins (including this one) and seemingly a spot in the upcoming WWE Cruiserweight tournament which hopefully finally gives him that platform to stand out. For a guy seen only as a high-flyer, Ricochet is game to go on the mat and strike so this was a fun mix of styles. These guys had a very solid, short match in PWG 2 years ago. Here they get a few more minutes and are able to have a better match because of it. This doesn't get ridiculous with near/finishes and ends on the right note at the right time. A very easy, fulfilling way to spend less than 15 minutes of your time.

Best In The World Series Match #3 - The Flyer: Zack Sabre, Jr. vs. Will Ospreay (04/01 - EVOLVE) (**** ½)
EVOLVE 58 - Dallas, Texas
Man alive. These guys met up at the 16 Carat (review soon-ish!) and it was very, very good. This is on another level. It's a similarly structured match. Sabre picks apart and grounds Ospreay until Will gets his openings to hit his flashy offended. It's a tried, tested and true formula and it works amazingly well here. They had a dynamite crowd for this and this was the first match to scream "Mania Weekend". This weekend was all about Will Ospreay, for my money, the best wrestler in the world right now, making a huge impact in front of tons of fans from all over the world. He crushed it all weekend. Had the man not have already signed a NJPW contract, he would have been offered a WWE deal of some sort from his performances in Texas. This match highlights him perfectly but Sabre also gets to show why he is oh so good as well in cutting Ospreay off and bending him in all sorts of disgusting ways. This match was a complete success in every level and the first (of multiple) MOTYCs that weekend.

Heroes Eventually Die (Chris Hero & Tommy End) vs. Catch Point (Drew Gulak & Tracy Williams) (04/01 - EVOLVE) (****)
EVOLVE 58 - Dallas, Texas
This was curious booking. After an incredibly outstanding sub-15-minute match that fired up the crowd we get a slow-paced, gruelling, almost 30-min tag match to close the show. Man, was it ever good though. Heroes Eventually Die (what a name!) have very quickly become the tag team to watch, for my money. Chris Hero is in another world as far as putting together matches are concerned in 2016 and the way he and Tommy gel as partners that also sort of want to kill each other is a delight. They go really long here and the crowd isn't totally with it after the Sabre/Ospreay match but this is a fight to the end. Drew Gulak is an amazing pro wrestler. He gets the little nuances so well. Tracy Williams is the perfect protégé working under him. Hot Sauce gets absolutely decimated for a lot of this match. My only criticism outside of the match placement is that Gulak gets the deciding fall and not Hot Sauce. That would have been a better conclusion to the story they were telling. This is a messy tag match. Tags get completely abandoned for a long, long stretch of time as all 4 guys hang out in the ring throwing bombs. The work is so violent though that it's easy to overlook the logistic problems. This isn't for everyone but 4 world class wrestlers hitting and stretching each other for almost 30 minutes is right up my alley. Good stuff and I hope we see a rematch for the titles before long.

Kyle O’Reilly vs. Matt Sydal (04/01 - ROH) (*** ¾)
ROH Supercard Of Honor X - Night 1 - Dallas, Texas
On paper, this was one of the best looking "just a match" matches of Mania Weekend. These two have been on an absolute terror both in ROH and elsewhere consistently for the past couple of years. This was a first time ever meeting and exactly the type of match ROH needed to book for the biggest wrestling weekend of the year. It delivers in that it is very, very good. It's a hard match to review though in that it goes how one would expect and there's nothing to separate it from any of the other 50 great matches happening in Texas that weekend. That's not necessarily a bad thing though. ROH followed up a great Philly show with a great Dallas show with quality matches top to bottom. As someone watching since 2002, ROH has lost a lot of its freshness and appeal to me in recent years. These 2 shows were great progress to get back to a level that will once again have me interested in he product. Matt Sydal is a gem, Kyle O'Reilly is a warrior. They mesh well and have a great match.

Adam Cole vs. ACH (04/01 - ROH) (*** ¾)
ROH Supercard Of Honor X - Night 1 - Dallas, Texas
The story of ACH continues! Homie comes out of his hot match with KUSHIDA and then rocks Dallas in a little war here with Adam Cole. He just can't pick up a win to save his life. Cole really should have went over here, so it's almost a moot point,  but how much does a hard-fought win over ACH do for him when the dude hasn't beaten anyone? I think it shows a lot about how ACH has slipped down the ladder (hat he was never near the top of) when a few years ago the crowd was dying for him to beat Jay Lethal in the same state and here they're solidly behind Cole. ACH is from Texas. These guys bust their butts though and have a great back-and-forth match with a couple of brutal spots around super kicks. ACH takes one to the back of the legs after he leaps onto the guardrail and crashes on the back of his head on the arena floor. Later he launches himself into the ring for that slingshot step-in flatlined move he does and eats a super kick that busts his mouth up pretty good. What a champ that ACH is. But again, another show, another great ACH performance, another loss. Hopefully change eventually comes and we either see this guy with the TV Title or making a great run in EVOLVE or NXT. He deserves better.

ROH World Title: Jay Lethal © vs. Lio Rush (04/01 - ROH) (****)
ROH Supercard Of Honor X - Night 1 - Dallas, Texas
This is a ballsy match for ROH to book on such a big weekend but I love it. Lio Rush is a phenom. For his age and experience level, there is no way he should be as good as he is. If he doesn't crash and burn and seriously injure himself, he is going to have a hell of a career. The idea behind this is that Rush won the Top Propspect Tournament that ROH runs annually (a great decision) and earned a TV Title shot. With Tomohiro Ishii being champion and in Japan until the May tour, Rush was upgraded to this World Title shot. What a great dynamic it made for. Lethal was amazing as the heel champion feeling he was above his challenger with constant comments about "ROH running out of ideas." The challenge with this match was going to be having the crowd not only get behind Rush, a newcomer, but have them by a title change. While it may not have 100% succeeded in that, it did a damn good job. Rush got enough of his big moves in to wow the crowd and Lethal cut him off without making Lio look like a chump. The closing moments were great with Lethal treating Rush like someone completely below him only to make a mistake, get caught and nearly have his title taken. The finish was great with Lethal having to bust out a super finish to survive and then uncharacteristically putting Rush over after the match. We won't talk about the post-match since it doesn't affect this contest and everyone either likes it or hates it but what we get here for 20 minutes is excellent. I had high hopes for this and it delivered.

The Motor City Machine Guns (Chris Sabin & Alex Shelley) vs. The Young Bucks (Matt & Nick Jackson) (04/01 - ROH) (*** ¾)
ROH Supercard Of Honor X - Night 1 - Dallas, Texas
ROH takes great pride in their tag team division and while I feel it isn't the strongest it's ever been, like they're presenting it to be, this was a smart main event. 4 absolute pros at what they do got to close out a tremendous show with a slew of standout singles matches by having a great, clean tag team match. These teams have excellent chemistry from years ago battling in PWG and an extended feud in TNA. 6 years removed, they find that chemistry again and have a well-executed, action-packed match. Shelley and Sabin are two guys that have unfortunately had a lot of setbacks in recent years but I'm hopeful the reformation of their team will be what they need to be revitalized. I absolutely think it is the best use of both guys. This has all of the dives and super kicks you would imagine but a bit more structure than the 3-way tag these teams were in previously and the 4-way tag they would have the next night. This was a marque match fitting of its main event spot on the biggest wrestling weekend of the year. If ROH is serious with the tag team renaissance, these are the two teams to have at the forefront. There is tons that young, new prospective teams can learn from them.

NXT Tag Team Title: The Revival (Scott Dawson & Dash Wilder) © vs. American Alpha (Chad Gable & Jason Jordan) (04/01 - WWE) (****)
WWE NXT TakeOver: Dallas - Dallas, Texas
This match, kicking of this show, with these wrestlers, in front of this crowd was magic. American Alpha is an interesting team. We all love them. We all want them to be pushed to the moon. Gable and Jordan are both unbelievable athletes. Outside of a match with Baron Corbin and Rhyno of all people, there hasn't been a real standout American Alpha match. This was finally that match and it should come as no surprise as The Revival is the best tag team in the world. Think about that. The Young Bucks exist. Those two guys just get it. They are a tag team through and through. WWE likes to break up tag teams too frequently. Dawson and Wilder should never be singles wrestlers. The way they isolate an opponent to build to a hot tag is something not done this well since the Midnight Express. The easy comparison for these teams is The Steiner Brothers and The Brainbusters and it's pretty accurate. This match is really well structured with a great build to the hot tag and a great, great, great finishing run. The crowd is molten and with it the whole way and the pop for the title change and genuine emotion shown by the new champs is a great scene. This match would have been great at Full Sail. It was a borderline classic in Dallas. We are going to see this match a lot in the next few years and we need to count our lucky stars for it. The main WWE roster needs to count theirs for how much better The Revival will make them look when they get the call up. Hopefully American Alpha can roll with the momentum from this match and start to turn in the great performances we want from them and know they're capable of.

Sami Zayn vs. Shinsuke Nakamura (04/01 - WWE) (*****)
WWE NXT TakeOver: Dallas - Dallas, Texas
It's a match like this that makes me contemplate if it's worth writing wrestling reviews for the blog. I can write about backstory or moves or why a match is important or how smoothly it's executed. I struggle to write how a match can make me feel. Not joy like when someone I like wins a championship. Not disappointment when there's something I feel is a bad booking decision or a match disappoints. Not uneasiness like a wild Brock Lesnar match or a UFC fight. That feeling that runs through your body, through your soul and you know you're witnessing something special and it sucks you in. You're immersed and nothing else matters. I watched NXT TakeOver Dallas at 1 AM the night it aired, spoiler-free. When this match was done, I stood up and applauded my TV, unaware of what my body was doing. That is a feeling. That is a feeling I haven't had in my 25+ years of watching wrestling. The energy running through me at home, on my couch, makes me ponder how the live crowd in attendance was feeling. People will disagree, Dave Meltzer has vocally disagreed, but this is the career best performance for both of these men. I saw my first Sami Zayn match in 2003 and Nakamura match in 2004 so that covers a lot of ground. I did a podcast with Alan4L and Mike Falcone and one of our topics of discussion was how Nakamura would react to the pressure of this match and how everyone would deal with it falling short of expectations. This match shattered any I could have ever had. This match is perfect. I will never forget it. "Fight Forever."

NXT Women’s Title: Bayley © vs. Asuka (04/01 - WWE) (*** ¾)
WWE NXT TakeOver: Dallas - Dallas, Texas
These poor women. This was the match I thought would be the best match of TakeOver. It was doomed before it began the moment Sami Zayn walked back through the curtain. How do you follow that? Bayley and Asuka damn sure tried and still managed to have a hell of a match and keep that crowd engaged. That alone is almost a bigger accomplishment than if these two managed to have the all-time classic I would have predicted. While not able to hold up to the ridiculously high standard that Bayley set with Sasha Banks or create the atmosphere of the criminally underrated Bayley/Nia Jax match from London, this was still very good. This was a much harder match to get that out of though. Taking away what it was following, you have two baby faces working a clean match with a title change the crowd could turn on. They kept it together and managed to deflate the crowd in the best way possible. A finish that keeps Bayley protected, makes Asuka look like a killer and makes an upset crowd able to come to turns with their goddess losing. I haven't done so yet, but I'm interested to see how this match comes off when watched on its own, without the comedown from Nakamura/Zayn. As it stands after a single watch, this is still a damn good showing, lost in the shuffle of the weekend.

NXT Title: Finn Bálor © vs. Samoa Joe (04/01 - WWE) (**** ½)
WWE NXT TakeOver: Dallas - Dallas, Texas
Irony: I am typing this review, on my iPhone, while sitting in a waiting room at the hospital waiting to get my eyebrow stitched up after an errant head butt during a basketball game. Life works in funny ways. This is a polarizing match, depending on how you view it. Samoa Joe bleeds. A lot. The match gets stopped for his cut to be treated. A lot. Does the stoppages kill the momentum and take you out of the match? Does it add to the realism, the spectacle of the match and the overall story? That's for the viewer to decide. For me, it was the latter. I loved this match. Seeing Samoa Joe in NXT makes me overjoyed. He's found his groove and he's got that spring in his step that has been missing for years. For someone that was one of the best wrestlers going from 2004-2005, it has been a frustrating experience watching Joe toil away in TNA. His NXT run took a while to get going but the Balor match in London was a revelation and this is just as good. There's so much to love here: The intensity and urgency that both guys wrestle with, the crazy crowd that gets even more wound up by the stoppages, Joe looking like a badass by refusing treatment, Finn looking like a badass by taking the fight to the bigger Joe and busting him open and a finish that works perfectly and leaves the door open (and me banging at it) for a rematch. Blood in WWE is such a rarity that it creates a buzz whenever it makes an appearance. For that, I like the no blood policy. I feel for the wrestlers who had their momentum cut several times and no doubt had to change their match. I hope their reward is the knowledge that they still had a classic they should be incredibly proud of.

Best In The World Challenge Series Match #4 - The Fighter, USA vs. Europe Series Match #2: Zack Sabre, Jr. vs. Matthew Riddle (04/02 - EVOLVE) (**** ½)
EVOLVE 59 - Dallas, Texas
This was SO good. Like, unbelievably good. I dare you to find a better match this year that goes less than 10 minutes. I honestly don't know how I can praise Matt Riddle anymore but here's another great thing about this guy: He's bought into so much as an MMA guy that it turns even the most basic of moves (like a vertical suplex) into a big spot that gets a reaction. It's astounding. The story here is so great. Sabre is winding down his Best In The World Series and is 3-0. This is also part of the USA vs. Europe Series which Europe is up 1-0. Sabre tries to be Sabre but every time he gets "too cute" like he did against Ospreay the night before, he ends up paying and Riddle counters and gets control. Of course the former UFC fighter knows how to counter a guillotine choke or a kimura. The grappling as superb, the strikes and throws were great and the story was executed flawlessly. This was an absolute gem, one of the best matches all year and a marvel for how much they accomplish in such a short amount of time. This is going to get overlooked because it's not a 25-minute epic but very few can get as much out of 25-minutes as these two pros got out of 9.

USA vs. Europe Series Match #4: Ricochet vs. Will Ospreay (04/02 - EVOLVE) (****)
EVOLVE 59 - Dallas, Texas
You know if this match is going to be your cup of tea right from looking at who the two participants in it are. This could have been an absolutely mental 15 minute match with a million dives but instead we got a bit longer of a match with the big moves more spaced out. It maybe wasn't the match I completely wanted because of that but I appreciated the effort to give it a bit more of a story. The story itself was relatively simple: The former nutty high flyer battles the new crazy high flyer that is able to one up him at every turn. Ricochet hits a standing moonsault, Ospreay hits a standing corkscrew moonsault. Ricochet hits a 450 Splash, Ospreay hits a second rope Phoenix Splash. It worked well and paid off in the end with Ricochet catching Ospreay off a flippy do and killing him with the Benadryller, the move he won the Freedom Gate Title with 2 years prior. Seeing Ricochet as the veteran, old-timer high flyer is so weird as it doesn't seem *that* long ago that he was the frizzy hair double moonsault kid. This is a match we're going to end up seeing in New Japan someday and I can't wait for it. As it stands here, this didn't feel as special as Ospreay/Sabre but the crowd loved it and they had delivered in the main event spot of the early-afternoon show.

ROH Tag Team Title #1 Contenders, Four Corner Survival: The Briscoes (Jay & Mark Briscoe) vs. The Motor City Machine Guns (Chris Sabin & Alex Shelley) vs. The Young Bucks (Matt & Nick Jackson) vs. The Addiction (Christopher Daniels & Frankie Kazarian) (04/02 - ROH) (****)
ROH Supercard Of Honor X - Night 2 - Dallas, Texas
This was complete chaos. It's a hard match to review without play-by-play because it was literally spot after spot after spot. There was no compelling story or anything to set the match apart, but it was a lot of fun. This was pretty much on par with the 3-way in Philly without the Briscoes. It was the same crash course style match with bodies flying everywhere and a million super kicks. The Briscoes being in this actually made it seem a little fresher, which is a little odd given that I've found the Briscoes to be a little stale for quite some time now. This didn't have and insane finish like the Philly match (though that same one was teased) but it still had its fair share of big-time spots, capped off by Mark Briscoe superplexing Kazarian onto everyone on the floor. Sadly, that spot has felt really overused in the past 2 years or so. One spot I really liked was Kazarian countering the Doomsday Device into essentially the Flux Capacitor. That was something the Briscoes did a lot a decade ago that I haven't seen in a long time. This was for the #1 Contendership to the ROH Tag Titles and the right team went over in that regard. I raved about Night 1 of Supercard Of Honor above (and there was a few matches I didn't write about from that show that were still pretty damn good) and up until this point, this show was really rough. Thank goodness for the last two matches saving this show from being a huge dud. This match was a big turning point leading into the main event insanity that was to come.

No Holds Barred: Adam Cole vs. Kyle O’Reilly (04/02 - ROH) (**** ½)
ROH Supercard Of Honor X - Night 2 - Dallas, Texas
These two men are lunatics. As I said in my review of the last match, this show needed something big to make it worthwhile and these two guys delivered and then some. ROH has went to the well a lot recently with the No DQ-type match with War Machine/ANX, Castle/Young and now this. This is head and shoulders above those matches and anything else ROH has done in recent memory. Cole and O'Reilly excel at this type of match and they don't get to do it often. Here they were able to construct a war that served as a perfect conclusion to their feud. Cole got a similar big match on this stage two years ago in a Ladder War with Jay Briscoe that I thought greatly under delivered. He was amazing here, getting lots of "big pop" hardcore spots while managing to continuously be an unlikable heel. On the flip side, O'Reilly was a great fiery babyface. They got to all of their big spots in clever ways, my personal highlight being the Necro Butcher-style sit down bar fight that did not feel contrived and also called back to their star-making NYC match years prior. Steve Corino was great on commentary here referencing Cole's CZW background (although not naming CZW by name) which ROH tends to avoid. It added another great little note to this match. This ends up having an awesome, satisfying finish and leaves O'Reilly poised as the man to carry the company. Whether that happens or not we'll have to see.

The Heart Of SHIMMER Title Tournament First Round: LuFisto vs. Nicole Savoy (04/02 - SHIMMER) (*** ½)
SHIMMER Volume 80 - Dallas, Texas
For the past few years, the SHIMMER show has been one of my personal highlights of WrestleMania Weekend. I don't watch nearly as much of the product as I would like, which primarily has to do with the huge delay it takes in the shows getting released. SHIMMER tapes 4 shows in a weekend with those shows generally not seeing a DVD release for anywhere between 9 months - one year. By the time the shows are released, I've completely forgotten about them and no longer care. With this yearly show, we get the chance to watch it live and it reminds me what I'm missing. The SHIMMER show always winds up being a well-booked show with all of the women working hard and delivering a few standout matches. Last year SHIMMER decided to run a tournament for a #1 Contenders shot at their title to save on the amount of talent booked. It worked very well so we got it again this year, only to crown the promotion's first secondary champion instead. Thus, we had a 12-woman tournament for the awkwardly named Heart Of SHIMMER Championship. On paper, this match looked to be the barn burner of the tournament and it delivered. Nicole Savoy really made an impact in last year's tournament as it was a lot of people's first exposure to her. She had worked the previous set of SHIMMER tapings but footage had yet to see the light of day. She was eliminated in that tournament in the second round but she was back with a vengeance. LuFisto has seemingly been around forever at this point and has went from death match wrestler, 10 years ago, to someone that a promoter can depend on for a great match that can elevate a talent. Here she gives Savoy a lot but fires right back and while not the total war it would have been as a stand-alone match, we get a heck of a first round contest. They told a sound story with Savoy being a little disrespectful and arrogant and LuFisto trying to beat her senseless for it. Nicole would use LuFisto's aggression to capitalize on a mistake and grab a submission before eventually putting her down with the great Savo Lock. This was as good as a first round match in a one night tournament that you'll see. SHIMMER would be wise to have a rematch at the next tapings where neither woman has to hold back. If we're lucky, maybe we'll see it in a year and a half.

The Heart Of SHIMMER Title Tournament Semi-Finals: Nicole Matthews vs. Heidi Lovelace (04/02 - SHIMMER) (*** ¾)
SHIMMER Volume 80 - Dallas, Texas
Colour me surprised by this match. I like Heidi Lovelace. I think she works really hard and has a good crowd following. I think Nicole Matthews is alright. I loved the Canadian NINJAS with her and Portia Perez and thought they were a great heel act. I thought it was an act that belonged in the tag team division though and when Matthews won the SHIMMER title I had my reservations as to how her style would translate as champion. SHIMMER has had some really big time title matches through the years and Matthews' old-school, very vocal, heel style doesn't quite suit that. I've only seen one match from her title reign (last year's iPPV against Tomako Nakagawa) and I wasn't impressed. This match made me want to seek out her title reign. This was so, so good and completely surprised me. This is the closest thing you'll see to a Bayley NXT TakeOver title match on an indie show (ironic because Bayley was in SHIMMER pre-WWE). The crowd lives and dies with Heidi and Matthews is perfect with her cut-offs and heel tactics. At one point the crowd even borrows from the NXT TakeOver: London fans by coming up with a song to sing, chanting Heidi Lovelace's name to the tune of "We Will Rock You" by Queen. This is a really satisfying match with the crowd fully engaged and the right person going over. When the entrances were happening, I was ready to tune out but this ended up being, quite possibly, the best match of the show and a treat to watch. Hats off to both woman.

The Heart Of SHIMMER Title Tournament Finals, Elimination: Candice LeRae vs. Nicole Savoy vs. Heidi Lovelace (04/02 - SHIMMER) (*** ¾)
SHIMMER Volume 80 - Dallas, Texas
The finals of a one night tournament is always a little dicey. Expecting any wrestler to not only wrestle three times in the span of a 3 hour show but to turn in 3 quality performances is a lot to ask. What ends up happening a lot of times is either the first round matches are cut for time one lieu of a lengthy finals or the first round matches get time with the rest of the show moving quickly. This show did a fine job and creating a balance throughout in that nothing felt necessarily rushed and the finals still got an appropriate amount of time to develop and be, perhaps, the best match on the show. All 3 women should be commended for putting together a match of this quality after already having wrestled twice. The 3 wrestlers that put on the best performances leading into the finals getting the main event slot was smart, fitting booking. This match was well laid out, had some great sequences and lots of drama down the stretch. A smart plot device was Heidi Lovelace finishing both of her previous matches with a top rope back senton and Savoy winning both of hers via submission. When each woman gets these moves near the end if creates some great nearfalls and drama. While Candice did a great job, this was really about the super babyface Lovelace and the arrogant but skilled Savoy battling for the title. In the end, the right woman won for my liking and this was a very satisfying cap to a very satisfying show. I can't wait to see what SHIMMER puts together next year for us.

PROGRESS World Title: Marty Scurll © vs. Will Ospreay (04/02 - WrestleCon) (*** ¾)
WrestleCon Supershow 2016 - Dallas, Texas
This match just makes the cut for my recommendations, which given its quality, really says a lot about how good the whole weekend was for wrestling. This is a world class match-up, arguably the best one-on-one feud we've seen in ages. Ospreay and Scurll are meant to be rivals. They are two perfectly matched up opponents. I will write novels about their matches as time goes by with these reviews. This is a big match for 2 reasons. It is he first time this match has taken place on US soil. It is also the first time the PROGRESS Title has been defended outside of the U.K., making it officially a World Championship. I am so thankful for these WrestleCon shows as they get large, hot crowds and are just so wacky and random that they're must watch. There's most definitely a ceiling as to how good a match on these shows can end up being and this match hits that ceiling. In short, it's good, very good, in fact. If you haven't seen Will Ospreay vs. Marty Scurll before, it might blow your mind. If you have, you know this is essentially a "greatest hits" match of theirs and that it barely scratches the surface of what these two men can accomplish. Opponents like this eventually find their groove and can create a touring match that can be performed in their sleep that, to someone that watches a lot of tape, is repetitive but to a 1st time live viewer is a great impression. Can Punk and Colt Cabanada, Jimmy Jacobs and Alex Shelley and Matt Sydal and Delirious are all great examples of this. This match takes what has made their previous encounters great but strips away the intangibles that have made them truly epic. As mentioned in the SHIMMER reviews, one reason behind this is the fact that both men have 3 matches in one day to deliver on. There is no shame in this not being the 30-minute blowout we've come to expect. As it is, it's a very good little "big moves" match with some historical significance and a testament to the quality of both Scurll and Ospreay in that they can produce a match of this quality under the schedule they had that weekend.

Best In The World Challenge Series Match #5 - The Rival: Zack Sabre, Jr. vs. Chris Hero (04/02 - WWN) (**** ½)
WWN Mercury Rising 2016 - Dallas, Texas
This was a complete war. For 25 minutes, Hero and Sabre brutalized each other for personal pride, the pride of their countries and the entertainment of the fans. At times it was borderline uncomfortable. They stretched and hit each other senseless with a very apparent hatred. This match is an interesting contrast to the one they had at Limitless Wrestling in January (review some day!). Both are absolute quality but that one was almost more of a friendly exhibition with one man trying to catch the other in a mistake. This match was a grudge match with both men trying to kill the other. Billed as "The Rival" in Zack Sabre's great Best In The World Challenge Series, EVOLVE did a great job at stressing why each man had to win, by also making this he rubber match of the USA vs. Europe Series that took place earlier in the day. The card placement of this match was a mistake but with Hero and Sabre having to wrestle (and team!) on the WrestleCon show, there's not much that could have been done. What we get is a long but engagingly brutal opener that is among the best matches all year this far. I could watch these two wrestle a million more times as it's always good and you'll always get to see something a little by different. It'll be interesting to see where Zack Sabre, Jr. goes from here in EVOLVR having lost the last 2 matches of his series. A rematch has already been booked and I couldn't be happier.

Matthew Riddle vs. Tracy Williams (04/02 - WWN) (****)
WWN Mercury Rising 2016 - Dallas, Texas
The idea behind he Catch Point stable is so fresh and so great. They're not in the same biker gang or a bunch of freaks. They are a group of wrestlers that have the same wrestling philosophy and push themselves to improve through competition, not being afraid to mix it up with each other. This proves that point as Hot Sauce and Riddle tear into each other, much as they did back in January, and have just as good a match as they did them. Like that one, both guys rely on their strengths (technical expertise and strikes) but are forced to go out of their comfort zones with high flying and big moves to try and out the other down for three. I've raved about Riddle being the future of professional wrestling but Tracy Williams is right there proving his worth too. Here we get a hard-fought match with the right winner and the need for a rubber match, which I am completely on board for. This had to follow a similarly styled, super-long Hero/Sabre match and held its own in every way. 2016 will continue to be great for these two young men.

Days Of Future Past 6 Man Tag: Team EVOLVE (Johnny Gargano, TJP & Kota Ibushi) vs. Team Europe (Will Ospreay, Tommy End & Marty Scurll) (04/02 - WWN) (**** 1/2)
WWN Mercury Rising 2016 - Dallas, Texas
This match had so much going for it and so much going against it simultaneously. The 6 Man Tag tradition during WrestleMania Weekend is well-storied and with this being the 10th anniversary of it, Gabe Sapolsky put together a special match. We had a cool concept with the wrestlers from EVOLVE 1 taking on the Europeans that are the talk of the wrestling world right now, a cool tagline for the match (I loved that X-Men movie!) and the buzz worthy US return of Kota Ibushi, fresh off of quitting NJPW in a shocker. Needless to say, a lot of hype was generated for this match. Unfortunately, this match had its work cut out for it as it was in the main event spot on a hellaciously long show, capping off a long and draining weekend of independent wrestling shows out the wazoo. Somehow, this still worked. The crowd got up for it and the visual of the audience coming to their feet the first time Ospreay and Ibushi step into the ring together is pretty amazing. This match was well-designed as everyone seems to have a dance partner they match up with. Gargano and Scurll, Perkins and End (who had a very solid match earlier in the day) and the one everyone wants to see in Ibushi and Ospreay. The early portion of the match sticks to those pairings until we get to a heat sequence and then all hell broke loose. It's during that stage that the match really shines. In typical Dragon Gate 6 Man tradition, the moves hit a mile a minute and everyone gets their spots to shine. Everyone ends up in the crowd for Ospreay (who is fortune he didn't slip and die) and Ibushi hitting stereo moonsaults off a balcony before returning to the ring, alone, to have the square-off everyone wants to see. This match might have the flaws of the style of match lends itself to, but I had no issue getting caught up in the action and atmosphere and not paying any mind to legal men or the length of moves being sold. It was such a cool novelty to see Ibushi in there. He looked a little frail and didn't get a ton of action as one might have hoped but he still held up his part of things tremendous. His NJPW exit is puzzling to me but hopefully he finds success and happiness wherever he ends up. This match screamed "WrestleMania Weekend" to me and reminded me of why this is the most wonderful time of year to be a wrestling fan.

WWE Intercontinental Title, Ladder: Kevin Owens © vs. Sami Zayn vs. Dolph Ziggler vs. The Miz vs. Stardust vs. Sin Cara vs. Zack Ryder (04/03 - WWE) (****)
WWE WrestleMania 32 - Arlington, Texas
This match over delivered. The IC Title Multi-Man Ladder Match of doom took place last year and was long-rumoured to happen again this year. When it was eventually signed, it seemed to have locked it in as a new yearly tradition, replacing the Money In The Bank Ladder Match after it got its own PPV event way back in 2010. The line-up for this match was bizarre. For starters, I think every internet wrestling fan was hoping for a one-on-one Kevin Owens/Sami Zayn match for the Intercontinental Title. Secondly, it would have made a lot more sense to turn the random Kalisto/Ryback US Title Match into the Ladder Match. This whole thing was set-up by Zayn, The Miz and Ziggler fighting over the right to be #1 contender for Mania. Owens, in a great troll job, arranges for a triple threat #1 contenders match but brings out Sin Cara, Stardust and Ryder for it. The whole thing was hilarious but essentially displayed those three as jokes. After a brawl, Stephanie McMahon declared Owens would defend his title against all 6 guys in a big "WTF?" moment. Going in this seemed like it would be a by-the-numbers ladder match cluster with all of the random bodies in it, but everyone stepped up huge. Sin Cara was a total force in this, getting two huge spots. The first was a Nick Jackson-like springboard summersault plancha while being pushed off a ladder. The second was the big moment of the match when he was pushed off a gigantic ladder and ended up splashing Rhodes through a ladder bridged between the apron and barricade. Zayn got a big spot to shine hitting a nutty tope con hilo through the opening of a standing ladder to the floor and immediately followed it up with the thread-the-needle DDT to Owens on the floor. Stardust got to do a nice tribute to his dad, Dusty, who was honoured over Mania Weekend, with a polka-dot ladder. The last couple of minutes of this were really good though with high drama. Owens looks like he has the win, is stopped by Zayn who kills him with a half-and-half suplex on a ladder. Zayn looks like he has the win but is stopped by The Miz. Then, in a brilliant camera shot, as Miz is about to unhook the title, ZACK RYDER, comes out of nowhere to knock him off and take the title. Ryder's win got a HUGE pop in my house from my casual fan family. Totally a nicely done surprise that I turned out to be perfectly okay with despite viewing Ryder being in the match as a joke. Of course, WWE would take the title off him the next night and forget about him but, for one night, this was special.

WWE Women’s Title: Charlotte © vs. Sasha Banks vs. Becky Lynch (04/03 - WWE) (*** ¾)
WWE WrestleMania 32 - Arlington, Texas
Like Asuka/Bayley at NXT TakeOver, these women were in a tough spot. Not because of what they had to follow but because they were given a huge slot on this gigantic show and therefore an immense amount of pressure to deliver. They did a great job. While this wasn't the quality of the NXT 4-way they had 1 year ago, which additionally included Bayley, this was still a very solid match. It had a great scale to it too. A great video package pre-match, big WrestleMania-style entrances for Sasha Banks, being accompanied by Snoop Dogg, and Charlotte, in a robe made from Flair's Retirement Match robe, the big deal with it being to crown a WWE Women's Champion and retirement of the Divas Title. The whole shebang got 30 minutes of show time, which considering the Divas matches were always used as filler or celebrity fluff, was a big step-up. Sasha was a little off in this, which is unfortunate, as she is is one of the best wrestlers in the company, but she pulled it together after a few awkward moves. At one point she hits a crazy Homicide/like tope con hilo that I'm not convinced was intentional. Charlotte got the big shine spot of the match with a gorgeous moonsault to the floor. Becky Lynch was the 3rd piece of this puzzle and just seemed sort of there but might have been the glue that held this together. The finish was screwy but didn't leave me feeling unfulfilled as it protected Banks and kept Charlotte in her current role. This was as good as the other best women's matches of the weekend. It wasn't the epic, era-defining match I hoped for but it was a very good start.

Hell In A Cell: The Undertaker vs. Shane McMahon (04/03 - WWE) (**** ¼)
WWE WrestleMania 32 - Arlington, Texas
Writing these reviews can be a little bit of a chore sometimes. It can be hard to try and recall specifics from matches I watched weeks or months ago. It can be even more difficult to try and find interesting things to write about matches that are simply "very good" but have noting that really sets them apart from anything else I would write about. The reviews I enjoy are the ones like this match. The polarizing reviews where I gush about matches that many may think the complete opposite about. I'm not necessarily trying to sell the reader on my opinion being right, or anything remotely of that sort. I'm just making an effort to provide a different take on things and, agree or disagree; I think that's something of value. This was the weirdest match possible. It was thrown together, made no sense and had every right to be a mess... But it had buzz. Shane McMahon was back after 7 years and was working The Undertaker, at WrestleMania, inside Hell In A Cell. It was so crazy it might have just worked. Maybe it did, maybe it didn't. For me, this was an endearing match. It started out clunky and awkward. It was plodding and sloppy and seemed a little phoney. Then something happened. It turned into a WrestleMania spectacle. They went to the weapons and the big moves and the kickouts and the drama. Suddenly this became something gripping, for me at least. I was with Shane McMahon, the non-wrestling dad that brought his boys to the ring. As he fought valiantly against the greatest performer in WrestleMania history for something he believed in and to show his kids to stand up for what's right, I was with him every step of the way. As he survived everything that a man desperately trying to hold onto his reputation threw at him, I too survived. When Shane McMahon climbed to the top of Hell In A Cell with 'Taker sprawled across the announcer's table, everything stopped. As he fell to the floor, seconds felt like minutes. As he crashed through the table, the dad in me shuttered at what his sons must have been feeling in that moment. It was something else, man. A highlight reel spot for the ages. A WrestleMania Moment. The rest was academic (although I wanted a mindfuck ending of Taker pulling Shane on top of him and taking the fall) but that match was all about that one spot. Whether you cared about why it was happening determines if the match was successful or not. Maybe it's a dad thing.

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Review Roundup #1



IWGP Junior Heavyweight Title: KUSHIDA © vs. ACH (03/12 - ROH) (****)
ROH The Conquest Tour 2016: Philadelphia - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
These aren't going to be your typical play-by-play match reviews. In fact, some of these might spend less time discussing the actual match itself as it does the circumstances around the match and how that makes it worthwhile. This might be one of those matches. It's ACH and KUSHIDA, two world class junior heavyweight wrestlers getting 20 minutes on a big show with a hot crowd for a title. You know what you're getting here: A great match. The thing that makes this worth watching is that this match is a shining example of just how misused poor ACH is in his, contractually-obligated, home, Ring Of Honor. This match was originally supposed to be Dalton Castle vs. Kenny Omega, if you can imagine that, but circumstances with Omega not being able to appear brought us to this. Enter KUSHIDA as a replacement and ROH suddenly had a marquee IWGP Jr. Title defence. Had that not of happened, ACH probably would have been fighting J. Diesel. Sad times. Anyways, these two had a slick match with some nice near falls and transitions and for twenty-minutes made ACH a relevant singles wrestler again, the likes of one we saw take Mike Elgin, Jay Lethal and Jay Briscoe to their limits just two years prior. The result was never in doubt but I hope beyond hope that ACH's performance lands him in the BOSJ or Super J Cup tournaments and eventually gets him a touring NJPW job. He deserves more.

The Young Bucks (Matt & Nick Jackson) vs. The Addiction (Christopher Daniels & Frankie Kazarian) vs. The Motor City Machine Guns (Chris Sabin & Alex Shelley) (03/12 - ROH) (****)
ROH The Conquest Tour 2016: Philadelphia - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
This was a blast in the way a lot of 2005-2006 TNA PPV X-Division tag or multi-man openers would be. They got enough time and worked at a frenzied pace to get the crowd riled up and went home before things got too ridiculous. Really, the TNA comparison should be no surprise when you look at the participants. The big thing about this match was the return of the Motor City Machine Guns as a tag team after several years apart. After 13+ years of competing at a high level and numerous injuries, this is, most definitely, the best spot for both Shelley and Sabin. They looked right at home in this match, even though they weren't highlighted as much as their opponents. The Bucks are the MVPs of ROH right now, just having great matches with any tag team and remaining over as a big act, despite taking loss after loss. This was no different. Normally a victory by the, not always stellar, Addiction would make me shake my head but this is a circumstance where it worked as they debuted a nutty version of the Meltzer Driver, which was all over Twitter in .gif form the next day. This won't be the last time we see these teams interact, since there's not much more for them, and in that regard, this match was successful in what it set out to accomplish.

WWE World Heavyweight Title: Triple H © vs. Dean Ambrose (03/12 - WWE) (*** ¾)
WWE Roadblock 2016 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada
I love live wrestling. There's something special about it. The buzz in the room, the production (or charming lack thereof!), the way the athletes interact with the crowd, the big fight feel and sense that you could be witnessing something special on any given night. There's nothing like it. A lot of the time we have these special matches or moments we're lucky to see live and when we watch them back on tape, they just do not transfer well. I saw WWE Roadblock live. I thought this match was just "pretty good". Watching it back, I was pleasantly surprised at just how good it was. HHH vs. Ambrose was a rare case of a match coming off better on TV than live. At the Ricoh Coliseum this had to follow a long show and specifically a chore of a Sami Zayn/Cody Rhodes match that killed the crowd. In the arena, there is no way around this and we were left with an exhausted crowd (myself included) watching a slow-paced match. With the luxury of watching this match on its own, it's very good. Yes, they work a slower pace but I thought it was integral to the story, whereas live I thought it was just a time-killer. The story here was Triple H out-wrestling Ambrose in the early portion of the match and out-classing him in the main event title match he is relatively unfamiliar with. Ambrose turns the tide by deviating from his all-over-the-place typical approach and becomes focused on Hunter's leg and takes a "tribute to the stars" tour with the Figure Four and Sharpshooter in big sequences. I appreciate things like that in matches clearly set-up as the veteran main eventer against someone that grew up watching him. Watching this match in a vacuum also helps as the match isn't affected by Charlotte and Natalya using the same spots earlier in the show in some poor planning. The big spot in the match is Ambrose getting the visual pinfall over HHH, being robbed of the title and then leaving his game plan that got him to that point, going back to the "Lunatic Fringe" and being put away after making a huge, reckless mistake by the Cerebral Assassin. The match is far from perfect. It is a little slow, the crowd is a little tepid at first and the leg selling comes and goes but overall it's a really well-worked match with a neat old-school, almost 80's NWA title defence vibe. Knowing what we know about Triple H, that's probably a huge compliment to him. We won't remember this in a year but, for now, it's a damn good contest.

16 Carat Gold Tournament Semi-Finals: Zack Sabre, Jr. vs. Sami Callihan (03/13 - wXw) (*** ¾)
wXw 16 Carat Gold 2016: Day 3 - Oberhausen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Sami Callihan has been a source of frustration for me in 2016. Before he left for NXT, I thought he was, quite possibly, the best independent wrestler in the world. I felt like he did noting in his long NXT run and what he did do was unimpressive. Since coming back to the independents, I've found all of his matches to be very similar and have no substance behind being a bunch of strikes, spitting and letting guys kick out of that reverse Jig 'N Tonic move he does at the count of one. The 16 Carat Tournament changed that for me as I thought he was the MVP of the whole thing, despite not making it through all for rounds. Funnily enough, I'm reviewing his final match in the tournament first. Such is life with these random reviews. This was a pretty darn good scrap. My favourite thing about this match is that it's just as good as their EVOLVE match from January (review coming eventually!) but it does so by lasting only half as long. They fight with a great sense of urgency here where the EVOLVE match has some periods of downtime. The EVOLVE match felt a little more fleshed out though where this left me wanting just a tad more. Overall, call it a wash. This is what you'd expect from these two chaps: a lot of stiffness and painful submissions. In the end it feels like Zack juuuuust squeaked out the victory, which works well in a tournament setting. Very fun stuff and hopefully we get more of this Sami going forward.

Will Ospreay & Mike Bailey vs. Marty Scurll & Trevor Lee (03/13 - wXw) (**** ¼)
wXw 16 Carat Gold 2016: Day 3 - Oberhausen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
I feel like the 16 Carat Tournament has a good history with having a great Night 3 non-tournament tag match and this definitely fit the bill. When you take 4 excellent, dynamic pro wrestlers that have all proven to have good chemistry with their partners and opponents alike, you get a high end match. This match really builds to the eventual Ospreay/Scurll showdown and when they finally get to let loose, it is their usual magic. Everyone in this match performs well but that sequence is the bread and butter. The whole finishing run is a sight to behold and this is a match that would feel right at home in Reseda, CA. What you get here is just a silky-smooth 20-minutes with lots of great sequences, some fun gaga from the heels and a receptive crowd. You can't ask for more than that.

TNA World Heavyweight Title: Matt Hardy © vs. Ethan Carter III vs. Jeff Hardy (03/15 - TNA) (***)
Impact Wrestling 03/15/16 - Orlando, Florida
With this review format, you're going to get the occasional match that's not a "great match." This is not a great match. What it is, is as good of a segment as you're going to get from TNA in the year 2016 and something that is, in and of itself, a success in my eyes. Matt Hardy's heel persona is the bright spot in an often dreary TNA this year. He has owned his character and his feud with EC3 has been a fun ride. This match has a lot of moving pieces and a lot of twist and turns to get to the end result and your enjoyment of it might depend on your Impact Wrestling viewing habits. I cherry pick what TNA I watch and I feel that this makes me the ideal person to get the most out of this segment. If you don't watch any TNA, this is going to come across as a complete mess and an Attitude Era tribute act, which we've had more than enough of. If you watch TNA religiously each week, this is going to come across as the same old stuff that apparently seems to happen across the show all the time. Run-ins, ref bumps, screw jobs and funny business. As someone that doesn't see a Bro-Mans match with a BS finish but does see the Hardy/EC3/Etc. saga, this worked. The match was supposed to be Hardy/EC3 for the title but a late change adds Jeff Hardy to the mix, similar to how Matt Hardy was added to the match he initially became champion in. The work is solid, if unspectacular, with some nice touches like Matt going on all fours for Poetry In Motion and Jeff refusing, allowing EC3 to mount a comeback. Eventually, Jeff Hardy gets taken out by his rivals Eric Young and Bram. EC3 seems destined to have the same fate by Spud and Tyrus but manages to overcome leading to some nice near falls. A run-in by "The Miracle" Mike Bennett takes Carter out of the match and, in the process sets up a new feud to move Ethan away from the title picture, at least temporarily. This leaves the smug champion alone to make his usual boasts only for him to have to face Drew Galloway, the man who had his title shot sullied at Bound For Glory by Hardy's inclusion, who is cashing in his title shot briefcase. A short minute later and Galloway is the new champion, a very wise decision on TNA's part. Galloway can do a lot for the brand and title as his scheduled sees him going everywhere. The man is an incredibly hard worker and seems dedicated to TNA. If it all sounded overwhelming, it is, but in the end, it's a fun ride with a nice payoff and a solid example of what TNA is doing right in their new, slightly obscure, home of Pop TV.

Lucha Underground Title: Mil Muertes © vs. Fénix (03/16 - LU) (**** ¼)
Lucha Underground 03/16/16 - Los Angeles, California
On a match-by-match basis, this might be the best and most hate-filled feud in all of wrestling. This is the third big-time match between these two on Lucha Underground and it is also the third to completely deliver. The Grave Consequences Casket Match was one of my favourite matches of 2015 and, up until a match you’ll see further down this column, the best match Lucha Underground had produced. Their Death Match follow-up was a worthy successor. This match falls in-between the two of them for quality but has the added bonus of it being the first for the Lucha Underground Title. Big Match Mil is a nickname you’ll hear me reference as these columns are released as when it comes to putting on big-time main events, few on television are better than Mil Muertes. He comes across as a complete terror but it also able to give his opponents enough believable offence to show some vulnerability. He and Fénix go to war here with tons of brawling through the arena, mask-ripping, blood and all of the other madness these two have set as an expectation for their battles. Fénix ripping at Mil’s mask and bloodying him up was some great progression to a feud that has been largely one-sided in that department. The work was there to have this match reach the quality of the Casket Match but a fluke finish prevented it from reaching just quite that height that another couple of minutes of a finishing stretch would have. With that being said, the fluke finish was an unbelievable surprise and also helped make this match one that will be remembered when looking at the series as a whole. Both competitors seemed destined for different things in the realm of Lucha Underground for the rest of season two, but hopefully their paths cross once more for another must-see brawl.

Chris Hero vs. Matt Riddle (03/20 - EVOLVE) (****)
EVOLVE 57 - Brooklyn, New York City, New York
Anyone that follows me on Twitter should know at this point that I think Matt Riddle is going to be the best wrestler in the world in two years. He is an absolute prodigy that has picked up pro-wrestling, adapting from his mixed martial arts background, at an unbelievable rate. The amount of improvement he shows from match-to-match is astounding and this, as of this writing, has been his best match. Chris Hero might be the most selfless wrestler in the world in that, it doesn’t matter what show he is on, or whom he is wrestling, he gives 100% and gives his opponent so much, making every effort to make him look good. Every up-and-coming wrestler should be killing to get a chance to work with Hero. You can tell with this match that Hero is just foaming at the mouth to work with someone with the unique abilities of Riddle and he leads him through a great match full of excellent strikes and painful submission moves. One thing I really enjoyed was Hero using the, seemingly trendy, gameplan of working on an opponent’s hand/fingers but employing that strategy on Riddle’s foot, due to the fact that Riddle wrestles barefoot. There is one awkward spot in the match where Riddle goes for a turn-around springboard knee while Hero is completely across the ring, flipping onto the ring apron. To everyone’s credit, the wrestlers and commentators do a great job in covering for it and even the fans are completely understanding and spend no time harping on it as too many other crowds would do. At the end of the day, Riddle ends up putting Hero away by countering the Gotch Piledriver into a triangle choke and then transitioned into an armbar to make Hero submit. This match did wonders in the continued elevation of Riddle as he got to look strong against one of the top wrestlers in the company and get a huge upset win. I, again, need to commend the commentary for doing an excellent job in putting over the win as being an upset but that Riddle’s victories need to stop being considered upsets as he is on a roll and putting a way top-caliber talent. The loss does nothing to affect Hero as he controlled more of the match and got caught in a legitimate submission hold by a former MMA fighter. That right there is a great piece of business.

KO-D Openweight Title: Isami Kodaka © vs. HARASHIMA (03/21 - DDT) (**** ½)
DDT Judgement 2016: DDT Raising An Army 19th Anniversary Show - Sumida, Tokyo, Japan
JBL talks about Big Match John (Cena), ROH fans have joked about Big Match Jay (Briscoe), I will write loads about Big Match Mil (Muertes) when I get to talking about Lucha Underground but we would be foolish to overlook Big Match HARASHIMA or, specifically, KO-D Title Match HARASHIMA. Nobody puts on an A Game like HARASHIMA and, for that, I think he is one of the more underrated wrestlers of the decade. Spending your career in DDT while having high level matches but not expanding like the Ibushi’s and Omega’s will get you that label pretty easily. He’s also someone that always seems to either be the champion of challenger. He can’t escape the title picture and that’s not, necessarily, a bad thing when we get matches like this quite frequently. Here he gives Isami Kodaka the best one-on-one match of the champion’s career. Kodaka is an interesting career-wrestler in that he was pretty much “just a death match guy” in Big Japan for most of his career but expanding out as the “King Of The Indies” so it seems has shown that he can be a high-level singles wrestler without the light tubes and ladders. He is also has the ability to be an incredible underdog. The March 2009 match he had with Masashi Takeda against Yuko Miyamoto and Takashi Sasaki in Big Japan is one of the best underdog matches of all-time. This doesn’t go the complete underdog route like I would have expected but HARASHIMA does out-class Kodaka for the most part. Both wrestlers have specific strategies with HARASHIMA doing his usual targeting of the mid-section and Kodaka trying to take apart HARASHIMA’s knees to counter-act his offense and, specifically, the Somato. While we don’t get a perfect match as HARASHIMA could have sold the leg more and all of the other usual criticisms that come from most main event puroresu title matches, this one succeeds where most struggle in that it doesn’t overstay its welcome clocking in at a jam-packed under 20-minutes. We get a phenomenal closing stretch with big moves and nearfalls until HARASHIMA is finally able to put Kodaka away with the Somato, questionable booking to say the least. As said in the introductory for this match, HARASHIMA is always there in the title picture and certainly didn’t need this win while Kodaka’s title reign still had a lot of steam left in it. DDT has a history of transitional title reigns so maybe this is just a short-term reign until Kodaka regains the championship or a new king ascends to his throne. At the very least, we can expect some excellent title matches going forward and this one certainly fit that bill.

Lucha Underground Title, 20-Person Aztec Warfare Match (03/23 - LU) (*****)
Lucha Underground 03/23/16 - Los Angeles, California
For as long as I continue to write these reviews, I feel that this may be my most polarizing match rating. I went back-and-forth on whether or not to give this match a five-star rating and, in the end, I went with my gut instinct. This match is an unbelievable piece of television. This match is an incredible piece of professional wrestling. No one really knew what to expect with the first season of Lucha Underground. The series showed some promise but it wasn’t until the first Aztec Warfare, to crown the promotion’s first champion, that it really showed it`s potential. Lucha Underground`s biggest strength, from my viewing perspective, is not in it`s unbelievable spot-heavy car crash spectacle matches but in its storytelling, which, while over-the-top, and, at times, ridiculous, I find captivating. So much so that I have completely avoided spoilers for the ongoing second season of the show. The first Aztec Warfare was the first example we were given of all of the storylines being interwoven and either paid-off or continued in the context of a Royal Rumble-type match. It was a tremendous success. The return of the match this year (and hopefully a yearly occurrence from here-out) gave the company another platform to show their chops and it went well above-and-beyond the original match, my lofty expectations for this match, and everything the company has done up until this point. Not everything about this match is perfect. I can write about the afterthought eliminations of big players this season like King Cuerno and Taya, or the lack of reasoning behind why a savage monster that has killed-off several characters can execute a perfect bridging German Suplex. To do that would be a disservice to all that was so wonderful about this presentation though: The atmosphere in the arena, the way that bit-players or wrestlers that frankly just don`t excite me were utilized, the nods to the ongoing storylines of the company, the past storylines of the company and wrestling history outside of the company, the most commitment ever shown to pushing a character strongly I have ever seen in my 25+ years or watching pro wrestling. I won`t go into intense details as there`s too much to cover but this match begins and ends with the Lucha Underground debut and career resurrection of Rey Mysterio and the debut and complete domination of The Monster Matanza Cuerto. This is must-see television and one of the finest pieces of pro wrestling I have ever seen. I hope everyone watches and loves this match and we`ll remember it for years to come as we do the finest Royal Rumbles. I can`t wait to see where the rest of season 2 of Lucha Underground takes us.