Josh Daniels vs Damian Adams
The commentary team hype up the friendship between the two
at the start of the match, and they have a nice even little sequence at the
start, where Daniels has a slight advantage. Adams responds by slapping Daniels
across the face to give a nice little heel/face divide. Adams hits a lovely
Alabama Slam out of the corner, getting real snap on it. Daniels is able to
fire back with a great German suplex that dumps Adams on his head. I was also
pretty impressed with the commentary team, covering for an Adams superkick that
only reaches the chest by pointing out how that would drive the air from your
lungs. Adams crotches Daniels on the top rope, but a top rope rana is reversed
to a huge powerbomb to give Daniels the win. Fun bout.
Da Hit Squad vs Roadkill & the Blue Meanie
Kinda hoping the three decent guys in this match are able to
carry the Meanie. It’s really hard to buy the wimpy punches of the Meanie doing
any damage to Monsta Mack and Dan Maff. There’s a fun face-off between Roadkill
and Mack that culminates in a nice Mack powerslam. I dug Hit Squad using fun
fat guy offence, hurling themselves into Roadkill from many angles. It does
feel like Da Hit Squad are slowing down a lot of their offence to allow their
opponents to keep up. Maff takes a horrible bump for a Roadkill TKO, landing on
his feet and leaping about a foot in the air. Roadkill goes to the top like an
idiot, despite Maff being right new to him, so he gets taken out, allowing Da
Hit Squad to hit a figure-four/frog splash combo for the win. Had decent
spells, but too many poor bits.
Homicide vs Xavier
Basic mat stuff to start until Homicide suddenly goes into
overdrive, nailing a massive tope, the cutter, a Yakuza kick and a big Northern
Lights suplex within a few minutes. He’s in total control, until he hurts his
back, and Xavier wisely zeroes in on it. Love the spear to the back by Xavier,
which looks great. He follows this up with a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker. There’s
an awkward reversals series stemming from a sunset flip, but this is generally
pretty solid. Loved Xavier bending Homicide almost in half with a Mexican
surfboard. Homicide goes for the Cop Killer, but his back is too hurt to lift
him, and Xavier hits a backstabber and a Camel Clutch to retain control. I
loved the way that Homicide regains control as they head to the outside, as
he’s portrayed as being in his element in a streetfighting environment. He
hurls Xavier into the railings and nails him with chairshots. We do head into
moves overkill at the end of the match, as they really bust out far too much,
with powerbombs and 450 splashes before Homicide is finally able to hit the Cop
Killer for the win. Enjoyed this more than I expected, was impressed with some
logical storytelling and great selling by Homicide.
Balls Mahoney vs NOSAWA
Feels odd to say, but I dug some of Mahoney’s early matwork,
especially hitting some vicious crossfaces when he’s got NOSAWA in an STF. We
don’t get enough of this, sadly, as they fight outside, using a pizza cutter on
each other’s foreheads to prompt profuse bleeding. This bit is also extremely
uninteresting. NOSAWA does hit a lovely kick to the face, but a Shining Wizard
is blocked with a lowblow. The Nutcracker Suite only gets two for Balls, but he
gets to hit a second version off the apron through a table to win. Really, they
wasted a great opening to have a pretty dull hardcore match, which reached it’s
nadir with the pizza cutter segment.
Gary Wolfe vs Joey Matthews
3PW seemed dedicated with making Gary Wolfe into a star, and
it never seemed to work. Probably something to do with him being terrible.
Here, he’s defending the title against Matthews, who is accompanied by Matt
Striker and Rob Eckos, the future Robbie E. Matthews does a lot of stalling to
start, and Wolfe hits him with a chair a lot, even stealing Raven’s drop
toehold spot. Wolfe doesn’t give Matthews much, putting him through a table
with an elbow drop from the apron. Matthew isn’t able to get any form of
control until Striker provides a distraction, and even this control is
temporary as Matthews accidentally puts Striker through a table and eats a DVD
for the Wolfe win. Pretty terrible.
AJ Styles vs Kid Kash
While some of the prior matches have been better than
expected, it’s when you see how good someone like AJ is that you know why he’s
still a big star 12 years later. He looks so crisp here, hitting a lovely superkick
over the safety rail, and there’s a great looking rana-Styles Clash
attempt-rana sequence near the start. Everything Styles does looks crisp, and
it has to be pointed out that Kash does his best to match him throughout. Styles
hits a nasty looking brainbuster, and I appreciate him really locking in his
pinfall attempts. Kash only gets two from the Money Maker, and his attempt to
put AJ away with a top rope rana sees Styles reverse to a super Styles Clash
for the win. Really enjoyed this.
Jerry Lawler vs Terry Funk
With this taking place in Philly, WWE employee Lawler is
very much the heel against ECW alumnus Funk. Lawler looks in better shape than
Funk, leaner and steadier on his feet, so he’s able to get heat on Funk by
beating him down with a series of crisp punches, each one breaking Funk down a
little more until he’s bleeding on the mat. Funk sells them beautifully too,
invoking sympathy with his slightly-dazed selling as Lawler taunts and jabs
away at him. Lawler hits the second rope fistdrop on a convulsing Funk, who
instantly stops moving like cattle shot with a bolt gun. Beautiful. Funk makes a
comeback with a crowd-popping low blow, then legdrops King through a table.
Lawler is still too strong, however, and regains control to hit a piledriver
for two. We do get a bit of overkill here, as another piledriver also gets two,
before Lawler hits a third outside on the concrete. Lawler does some great
trolling by introducing “a move a friend from the WWE taught me”, before
hitting a poor stunner for two. The portrayal of Funk as superhuman does start
getting a bit ridiculous, especially as a FOURTH piledriver through a table only
gets two, but Lawler does such a good job of riling up the crowd that you don’t
notice. Funk gets the win with a roll-up, ending a terrific match.
Ron Killings vs Kid Kash
This is a bonus match on the DVD which is taken from another show, and like the last 3PW show I reviewed,
Killings is a lot of fun as a showboating heel. Love him hitting a big slam and
doing a muscle pose. His overconfidence doesn’t pay off and he crotches himself
on the top rope after a failed axe kick. Kash hits a great flip dive, but
things swiftly go down the pan as they take a contrived “walk-while-we-hit-each-other-occasionally”
stroll to the balcony. Killings hits a big powerbomb off the balcony through
some tables, and they then decide to brawl back to the ring. That segment
really ruined the flow of the match, and it doesn’t really recover, despite
Killings flashy personality riling up the crowd. Kash makes a few nice
comebacks, but Killings hits a gourdbuster for the win. Bit of a missed
opportunity.
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