Sunday, 8 July 2018

WWE Main Event 19/08/2014


Sheamus vs Curtis Axel
Really good match, worked within their hierarchy. Sheamus lets Axel look really good here, whilst ultimately ending up the comfortable winner. Sheamus is very giving here, letting Axel power out of the 10 Beats, before Axel takes over after sending Sheamus throat first into the ropes. Lovely running knee to the head sends Sheamus out of the ring. Loved Axel putting Sheamus in the tree of woe, then hitting a running boot to the head from the floor. Looked nasty. Even when Sheamus tries a comeback with a slingshot shoulderblock, he gets caught by an Axel forearm to the face. In the end, Axel makes the mistake of slapping Sheamus repeatedly in the face, firing him up for a comeback. Sheamus basically rolls through him from that point, culminating with the rolling senton and a Brogue Kick for three. Well worked to give Axel the shine, but when Sheamus took control, Axel had no answer.

Nikki Bella vs Emma
This was Nikki’s first match after turning heel on Brie. Short, but effective as she runs through Emma pretty easily. Cranks in a front-facelock, rams Emma’s face into her knee then, after Emma misses a crossbody, just whacks her with the forearm and the Rack Attack gets the academic three. Effective.

Los Matadores vs Slater Gator
The Matadores are accompanied by Hornswoggle in a cow outfit as well as El Torito, for reasons unknown. This is fun stuff, with Slater in particular stooging about amusingly for the Matadores offence. Los Matadores make everything look so smooth, just a fluidity to their movement. Titus O’Neill coming in is the gamechanger, as he’s able to overpower Fernando, and send him flying with a big hurling slam. Slater gets taken down with an enormous flapjack, but after escaping a series of roll-ups, he nails a big implant DDT for the win.

The Big Show vs Erick Rowan
Exactly what you’d hope for from these two, nothing pretty, just two big boys battering each other. There’s a small run of Rowan working the Big Show’s leg after a chopblock to the knee, but they wisely decide that the crowd aren’t here for Erick Rowan’s limbwork, they want to see some big boy shit, and that’s what they get. Big clotheslines from both men, massive sounding chops by Show, running corner splashes from Rowan at full speed, even a side Russian legsweep by Show…just full on collision from both guys. Really good fun. Rowan even gets to slam Show for two, but as he tries raising Big Show to his feet, he gets caught with a sudden KO punch for the win.

Thursday, 5 July 2018

WWE Main Event 12/08/2014


Seth Rollins vs Kofi Kingston
Two exceptionally inconsistent wrestlers here, but the stars align and this ends up being a decent match. The big problems Rollins has always had is that he wrestles like a face, but he looks and sounds like a whiny brat heel. Here, he’s a shit to poor Kofi, trash-talking him in the corner, stood on his back and forcing Kofi to look at his MITB briefcase. There’s a nice bit where he stops and smirks at the “You sold out” chants, and this brief pause gives Kingston recovery time to duck a clothesline and hit a neat springboard dropkick and a big dive to the floor. Seth works a brief heat on Kofi after slamming him into the barriers, but Kofi takes over when he evades a corner splash, hitting a pendulum kick as Seth leaps into the corner. Kingston is kept looking really strong, getting nearfalls from a corner crossbody and the SOS, to the extent that I thought he might win. He doesn’t, as Rollins stops a superplex attempt by sunset flipping into a running corner bomb, and the Kerb Stomp gets three.

The Usos vs Rybaxel vs Sheamus & Rob Van Dam
This is for the Usos tag title, and the Sheamus/RVD team really stands out as “We had nothing for these guys this week”. I’m not sure that the team added anything to the standard good Usos/Rybaxel match, but it did add an interesting riff on the psychology. As the heels, Rybaxel end up working a heat sequence, in this case on Sheamus when Ryback catches a Brogue Kick into a powerbomb. To stop anyone tagging in, Rybaxel can’t even cut the ring in half, they basically have to contain Sheamus to their quarter of the ring, and they manage to do this convincingly, with Axel doing this awesome little scrabble for purchase, using momentum to roll Sheamus away from the hot tag. Impressive stuff. In the end, RVD gets the hot tag and goes through the greatest hits. There is a nice rolling senton/rolling thunder spot by Sheamus and RVD, but aside from that Van Dam isn’t cracking out the new stuff. The Usos are slightly marginalised, but Jimmy gets to light up Ryback with a vicious sounding series of chops and Jey hits a big dive to the floor. Neat ending sees RVD push Axel off the top and nail him with the Five Star, but Jimmy Uso had already blind tagged Axel, and he followed RVD with his own top rope splash, getting the pinfall on Van Dam. Overall, good stuff.

Wednesday, 4 July 2018

World Class Championship Wrestling 18/12/1982


Killer Tim Brooks vs Brian Adidas
Good little match here, always fun to see Brooks fighting dirty against an opponent. Loved Brooks variation of a hiptoss here, as he chucks Adidas across the ring by his head. There’s a fun look of apprehension on the face of Adidas on a rope break, but Brooks breaks cleanly…before moments later raking the eyes with his finger then along the top rope. Adidas doesn’t offer much, but he makes Brooks’ offence look good. The end sees Adidas charge into a corner, but Brooks takes him down with a double-leg and pin him holding the ropes, a decision later reversed by a second referee.

Checkmate & Magic Dragon vs Al Madril & Bugsy McGraw
This was a reasonable match with an eyerolling ending. The majority of the match sees Checkmate and Dragon in control of Madril, with Checkmate keeping Madril’s arm under his control, pulling him back to the mat by the hair if it looks like Madril is recovering. Love the kicks and chops Dragon throws in the corner, looked really nasty. The heels really cut the ring in half, Madril nowhere near tagging out, until Checkmate grabs the arm again and Madril is able to whip him into a corner at speed. This lets him tag in McGraw and, as limited as he is as a wrestler, McGraw does at least have the energy you need for a good hot tag. Then the ending. McGraw and Dragon, the two legal men, are in the ring, and McGraw gets a really shitty looking sunset flip. The ref doesn’t start counting. Then Madril hits a top rope sunset flip on Checkmate as he enters, at which point the ref does double count, counting both heels down. Just nonsensical, he could have counted three on Dragon before Madril had even left the top rope.

David von Erich vs The Great Kabuki
This is for Kabuki’s All-Asian title. Loved David’s aggression at the bell, wanting revenge for the injury Kabuki caused to Kerry, and he gets an early 2 count right away. The bulk of this match is worked as a battle of the Kabuki nerve hold vs the Von Erich Claw, with both men fighting to apply their move. Loved David’s smarts, as he tries for a while to claw Kabuki on the head then, realising this left the rest of Kabuki vulnerable, suddenly switching and locking in a stomach claw instead. Kabuki does get to lock in a nerve hold on the shoulders of Von Erich, who manages to break free and get another Claw to the head. Loved David’s running knee to the head, looked like a knockout blow. We get a ref bump, and Kabuki’s manager Armand Hussein holds David for a misting. With hilarious inevitability, David ducks and Hussein gets the mist. Beautifully timed too, as the replay shows. This leads to a DQ win for David, which also seemingly gives him the title. Odd. Match was surprisingly fun for two men trying to apply the same moves over and over.

Sunday, 1 July 2018

ACTION Wrestling Debut Show 27/4/2018


AC Mack vs Joey Lynch
Good opener. I liked Mack as a loud-mouth braggart, and his attempt to get in Lynch’s face sees him get met with a big elbow to the jaw. Loved Lynch holding a wristlock and clapping using Mack’s hand to get the crowd into it. The commentary makes mention of Lynch returning from a knee injury, which nicely pre-empts him jarring his leg on a floatover. Mack works it over, but the selling is inconsistent. At one point Lynch can’t even run the ropes without collapsing to the mat, then moments later he’s landing on his feet flipping out of a back suplex and sprinting across the ring. Wouldn’t stand out so much if he’d not oversold it in the first place. Lynch misses a moonsault but reverses a figure four attempt to a cradle for the victory.

Arik Royal vs Michael Spencer
Spencer isn’t the most intimidating looking character, and he’s pretty awkward throughout this. Right at the start, he hits an ugly looking wheelbarrow armdrag. Royal is far better here, taking control with a nice cheapshot where he puts his body between the blow and the referee. Royal hits a kind of kneeling pounce that looks good. This is basically a squash, but at least the right guy won, as Royal slams Spencer’s skull to the mat with a leaping dunk before nailing a spear to win. Liked Royal a lot here.

Ethan A Sharpe vs James Bandy vs Donnie Dollars vs Adrian Hawkins
The only guy I’ve seen here is Dollars, who’s pretty good. He’s easily the best wrestler in this match, looking really impressive, with a really nice slam-facebuster and a great big boot to the face. Hawkins slips on a springboard on his very first move and I don’t know if it affects him, but he’s a bit sloppy throughout. Sharpe has all the look of a comedy wrestler, and his strikes are indeed laughable. Bandy seemed fine, but it’s probably for the best this is short, with Hawkins slipping out of a Dollars pumphandle slam and rolls him up to win.

Billy Buck vs Cam Carter
Buck is accompanied by Team TAG, Kevin Blue and Chris Spectra. Carter is the leaner competitor here and makes the most of his speed advantage. Early on, he sends Buck out of the ring with a headscissors and hits a neat dropkick to the stomach as Buck tries to get in. There’s some lovely camera work as Buck takes control by hurling Carter shoulder first into the corner, with Carter almost coming straight into the viewer. Dug Buck’s control on the shoulder, with him wrapping Carter’s left arm around the corner post and really yanking on it. Buck continues to impress with come great height on a dropkick, and I loved how he just casually threw Carter to the floor to be picked off by his henchmen. Carter makes a nice comeback, taking out all three opponents with a plancha and hitting a neat springboard 450 splash back into the ring. However, there’s a ref bump and Buck takes advantage of a missed 450 to hit the Buckshot superkick to win. Really good stuff here.

Matt Sells vs Big Bite Martinez
Sells looks like a knock-off of 1992 DDP whilst Martinez is a guy wearing an interesting looking mask with a big tooth-filled mouth. This is short, with some sloppy looking offence before Team TAG come back and beat both men down.

Cain Justice vs Fred Yehi
This right here was terrific. I’d heard a lot about Justice from various people who’s opinions I trust, and I liked his performance in the CWF Mid Atlantic rumble I watched, but this is the match that made me a believer. Loved the focus both guys had on their matwork, with Yehi trying to lock on a Koji Clutch right on kicking out of a pinfall while Justice dropped his guard for a second. The kind of matwork where the wrestlers have to be alert or they’re done for. Yehi works over the arm of Justice viciously, jamming the arm over his shoulder. They fight outside the ring, and this is where Justice takes over, breaking Yehi’s fingers by snapping them through a small look on the outside of the ringpost. Real nasty looking shot. I like how instead of this being just a one off spot for a pop, it dictates how the rest of the match goes, which it really should. With every hold Justice applies, he makes sure to include the fingers in some way, making escape harder for Yehi. Every time Yehi tries to comeback, he goes for Justice’s shoulder, which he worked over earlier. It means the early matwork has consequences. Justice locks in a triangle, grabbing the fingers in the process, but Yehi is able to power up and slam him down to escape. The end is perfect, as Justice goes for a knee strike, only for Yehi to avoid and use the momentum to send Cain to the mat, swiftly locking in a Koji Clutch with elbow strikes to the head for the victory. Great, great match.

Gunner Miller vs Dominic Garrini
Interesting clash of styles here, with the power of Miller vs the technique of Garrini. In the initial stages, Garrini is really fun at trying to grab a limb from anywhere to down Miller, trying to force a submission. Miller finally gets some separation with a big overhead belly-to-belly suplex. There’s a nice spot where Miller tries some shoulder barges in the corner, only for Garrini to lock in a front choke. However, because they’re so close to the ropes, Miller is able to force the break and hit a knee strike as Garrini lets go. Garrini has nice open palm strikes, though he does kind of telegraph a missed back elbow. Both gets close nearfalls with the CTE pounce for Miller and a stump piledriver by Garrini getting two. Finally, the end sees Garrini lock on another front choke from a Miller spear, but Miller holds on a powers him up into a jackhammer for the win. Good main event.

Friday, 29 June 2018

NYWC Psycho Circus 2018


The Benson Brothers vs The Punk Relics
Sloppy, but quite enjoyable stuff here. Not everything hits cleanly, but it’s high energy, ambitious stuff. The early stages establish both teams as being pretty even, with only the size and strength of CJ Benson being an outlier. Ugo of the Relics really works a headlock on CJ to nullify this, but to no avail. The Relics get a little more luck in isolating Brad Benson, with a Valo back elbow looking nasty. The Relics make a tactical mistake by ignoring this control to try and take out CJ on the apron, which causes everything to breakdown. Brad hits a nice cannonball from the apron, though an Ugo top rope moonsault to the floor sees him just graze the crowd below. His top half basically crashes into the apron, which must have hurt. Nice ending as CJ pulls Brad out of a frogsplash/neckbreaker combo, causing the Relics to take each other out, before CJ flips Brad into a moonsault for the win.

Johnny Radke vs Teddy Hart vs Blake Morris
This is for Radke’s Fusion title. This match is basically the Teddy Hart show, as he controls the majority of the bout. Morris gets to hit some nice looking punches in the corner, before his attempt at choking Hart with his boot sees him taken to the mat with a leglock in a fun spot. From here, Teddy runs wild, taking both men out at once with a simultaneous draping piledriver/DDT over the ropes. Hart continues just casually hitting moves on both guys, nailing a huge tornado DDT on Morris and an electric chair backstabber on Radke. However, Morris throws Hart out and steals the pin and the title. A bit disappointing, this did nothing for Radke or Morris.

Willow Nightingale vs Mike Mondo
This is for Nightingale’s Starlets title, which is the women’s belt. Not sure how the very male Mondo got a title match, but hey-ho. Mondo works this as a slightly dismissive chauvinist, confident that he can out-wrestle Willow. He’s the veteran, so manages to lure Willow into attempted shoulderblocks that he laughs off, before suddenly putting his force into a block to send her down. Willow’s ability to comeback fits in with her established character, that being that she’s got a lot of heart. Despite being worn down by Mondo, she wont stay down and this enables her to get up and crotch him as he climbs to the top rope. She hits a series of kicks and gets a German suplex for two. Mondo locks her in a sleeper, but Willow again wont go down and climbs up the ropes for the Bret Hart pin to win the match. Effective match, as Willow looked the best I’ve seen her, confident and with some nice execution to her strikes. The overconfident male vs spirited female is an overused trope in intergender matches, but they worked this really well.

Bull James vs Alex Reynolds
I had high hopes for this match, but this was bitterly disappointing. Bull is a guy I really like, but his title run has been full of underwhelming matches that I don’t think have been his fault – facing the worst regular roster member King Mega, full on comedy mode Joey Ryan and past-his-prime Scott Norton along the way. Reynolds is someone I often enjoy, and the John Silver match on the previous show was maybe the best NYWC match I’ve seen, so I really thought this would be James’ best title defence to date. That it wasn’t isn’t down to the wrestlers, but the booking.

This is fought under “High Society” rules, which seems to mean it’s 2/3 falls with a round system. The rounds seem to mess with their timing, as rather than have a straight match, they have to break the match into sections. So for example, the first round sees them exchange some basic matwork until they realise it’s time for the end of the fall, with James suddenly hitting a clothesline and a buttsplash, only to have his pinfall halted by the round ending. James then wins the first fall in R2 with a cradle. The overbooking starts to kick in in R3 as Reynolds sneak attacks before the bell, controlling and hitting a second rope codebreaker for 2. Rick Cataldo runs interference, allowing Reynolds to hit a brass knuckles loaded punch, also for two. A really nice touch I didn’t notice at first was Reynolds putting the knuckles into James’ s tights. There’s a ref bump and James hits a butt splash for what appears to be the match winning three count, but the High Society members tell the ref about the knuckles in his tights, drawing a DQ and evening the scores to 1 fall each. R4 is sadly the sloppiest of all the rounds, with a terrible looking chokeslam by King Mega onto the apron and James barely getting Reynolds up as he tries to boost him into the post with his legs. Finally, a face full of powder and a belt shot wrap the mess up, giving Reynolds the win and the title. As I said, I like both men, but there was only so much they could do with this booking.

The Awakening (Matt Tremont, G-Raver, Terra Calaway, Stockade & Devon Moore) vs The Extricated (Jeff Cannonball, Mouse, Aidan Baal, Victoria Von Black & Bam Sullivan)
This match also has a lot of booking, but given that this is the Psycho Circus match, you expect and want a big spectacular of a match. The rules take in bits of WarGames, Survivor Series and Cage of Death, as the two teams fight in a ring with walls round two sides, in this case a cage wall and a barbed wire wall, with two men starting the match. Team members join each team alternately, and there’s also elimination rules. This rule really allows for more big spots, as you don’t have to worry about wasting it – there’s generally nine pinfalls in the bout, so you can use 9 big spots and have them all result in pins.

So yeah, this ended up being really fun. I like the way the spots were built to, incrementally increasing in carnage and spectacle. I assumed that the ladies would be the final two entrants for both teams, but I was pleasantly surprised to see Calaway enter first and even the heel Von Black didn’t enter last. Indeed, her entrance saw her blast Moore with a frankly vicious looking weapon that seemed to have plastic cutlery just jutting out of every side. I was pleased to see Baal getting some shine in the match, he’s been really good during this feud and he looked great here from the get-go, hurling himself into the ring as a weapon on his entry. He’s basically the iron man for his team, and gets the pinfalls on Calaway and Moore (who ends the match a blood-soaked mess). They even address the fact that Calaway and Cannonball are a real-life couple for his elimination by having him pretend to play nice at the end, attempt a double-cross and get speared by his partner into a door with tin cans sticking out of it. In terms of big spots, we got a few crackers – G-Raver being eliminated by being pushed off the cage through a large wooden box at ringside, Mouse getting powerbombed violently onto a bin by Tremont, and Stockade pinning Baal after a Death Valley Driver through a barbed wire board. There’s a nice throwback to last year as Stockade eats a big spinebuster on a pile of breezeblocks, which saw him eliminated last year, but he's able to kick out at two this time. Even the overbooked nonsense is fun, as the lights go out, bringing out a returning Boo Sullivan, only for Mikey Whipwreck to also return and take him out. By the time Stockade wins the match (powerbombing Bam Sullivan through a shitload of lightbulbs, through the stage), nearly 50 minutes have passed that haven’t dragged or overstayed their welcome. Really, really fun match.

Saturday, 23 June 2018

Mid-South Wrestling 06/02/1982


Bob Orton Jr vs Ken Woodby
Woodby is pale, portly and auburn haired; a less intimidating grappler you couldn’t hope to meet. Orton controls him on the mat, working the arm to keep him grounded. Orton then hits a back breaker, a leaping second rope forearm and a piledriver in quick succession to win.

Ted DiBiase vs Ron Cheatham
Flavourless squash, as DiBiase controls Cheatham rather easily and hits powerslam and the figure four to win. Meh.

The Wild Samoans vs Junkyard Dog & Mike George
This takes two attempts to happen, as the first sees a fun angle with Ernie Ladd furious that Skandor Akbar has taken managerial control of the Samoans, his charges. He goes on the assault, beating all three men down, until an unnamed One Man Gang comes in a beats him down, hitting a (shitty) top rope splash on his legs to injure him.

Twenty minutes later, after Akbar demands the Samoans be allowed their scheduled match, we get it…and it’s a bit nothing. It’s for the tag titles, held by Dog and George, but it’s too short for much to happen. What it does do is show how useful Akbar will be for the Samoans. After a ref bump, a chair gets brought into the ring and, whilst JYD is able to use the chair to deflect an attempted fireball by Akbar, it gets left in the ring and the Samoans take advantage, hitting a Samoan Drop on George onto the chair to claim the tag belts. I hoped for a better match, but the whole deal was fun.

Bob Roop vs Frank Monte
Short, but with bits to enjoy. Liked Roop showing hid power to muscle Monte through a hip toss after it looked like they’d blown it, and I enjoyed Monte slipping out of a second attempt to hit a flying headscissors, which he then held on the mat. Good ending too, as a clubbing blow to the back of the head by Roop sends Monte into the corner and Roop hits a shoulderbreaker for the win. Good stuff.

Paul Orndorff vs Mr Olympia
Really good stuff here. They work a nice even pace, with some lovely punches thrown by both, before Orndorff takes control by rebounding from the corner with a second rope clothesline. Nice driving knees into the side of Olympia’s face. Orndorff starts getting frustrated as Olympia kicks out of some big moves, with a powerslam and driven elbows only getting two. Olympia reverses a piledriver, hits an enzuigiri and locks in a sleeper that, even though Orndorff tries his best to fight it, gets the victory. Good sprint.

Ed Wiskowski vs Brian Blair
They get the “TV time limit” death spot here, but both guys wrestle like they want to win instead of killing time. This is speed vs power, with Blair showing his skill early by reversing a Wiskowski suplex into a small package for two. From there, Wiskowski keeps hurling Blair into the ropes, first catching him with a stungun, then with two slingshots. Blair kicks out of an O’Connor roll, sending Wiskowski headfirst into the bottom turnbuckle, giving him the comeback until time runs out. Fine enough.

Saturday, 9 June 2018

WWF Madison Square Garden 20/03/1983


Baron Mikel Scicluna vs Mac Rivera
Joined in progress opener. Scicluna controls the majority of this with some unconvincing offence, mainly weak blows. Rivera makes a comeback after Scicluna misses a wild swing that was obviously nowhere near Rivera’s head, and Rivera isn’t particularly dynamic on offence either. Rivera at least plays to the crowd. The Baron does hit a nice knee lift before a Rivera hits a sunset flip to give him the win.

Tony Garea vs Johnny Rodz
Liked Rodz throughout this one, especially at the start where he ducked around and tried antagonise Garea, begging off and then hitting a sucker punch. Rodz misses a splash, fully committing to the miss, and Garea takes him down with an armdrag. Garea holds onto the arm for A LONG time. Just holding Rodz on the mat and armdragging him back down every time. Rodz continues to enhance the match with a nice leaping forearm, decent legdrop and a hilarious bump into the ropes where he just gets totally caught up. The end of this got quite exciting, back and forth shifts in momentum that make both guys feel like believable winners, before Garea gets an O’Connor roll for the win.

Superstar Billy Graham vs Jules Strongbow
Is it wrong that I actually enjoyed this match. Took me by surprise how much I dug this, all pretty simple stuff that told a simple story. Strongbow works the arm of Graham, in a far more interesting manner than Garea did in the previous bout, actually making it seem like he was trying to hurt the limb. Graham grabs him in a bearhug…then has to release it as his arm is too damaged to maintain the hold. Loved that. Graham has a brief period of control before Strongbow fires up with a war-dance and locks on a sleeper to a giant pop. The crowd honestly went nuts for it. Graham escapes though, and hits an illegal karate chop to the throat to get the victory. Totally effective.

Salvatore Bellomo vs Ray Stevens
Thankfully, a chunk of this is clipped after we endure a lengthy Sal headlock. Stevens bumps around a bit to try and fire this bout up, but Sal offers very little here, going back to the headlock at the earliest opportunity. They exchange fists and end up fighting on the apron, leading to both men getting counted out. That’s it? Stevens tried to make this interesting, but there’s basically zero content here.

Bob Backlund vs Don Muraco
World champion vs IC champion, though only Backlund’s world strap is on the line. This is billed as a Texas Death match by Monsoon, but this just means there has to be a winner by pin or submission. Though it only seems to be Monsoon who knows this, as he chastises the ref for counting for rope breaks and breaking holds. This starts with some fun schtick based around Backlund holding and maintaining a headlock on Muraco. He works the hold too, which at least keeps it interesting for a while. There’s a great spot where Muraco finally breaks a headlock and wearily climbs the rope, only for Backlund to leap to the top and take him back down with another headlock. This does go on too long though, nearly ten minutes, and it gets tiresome after a while. It finally picks up when Muraco takes control, dropping Backlund headfirst on the steel railing and hitting a legdrop on the ring apron. Muraco wastes some time celebrating though, and gets rammed into a ringpost and busted open. Backlund works the cut, before Muraco hits a sudden powerslam from nowhere. He’s too worn down to make the cover though, selling the bloodloss and the lengthy headlock. The ending is pretty great, nice back and forth as Backlund gets an Argentine backbreaker, Muraco uses his feet on the top rope to flip out, Backlund locks in a chickenwing, Muraco gets the ropes and Backlund finally hits a German suplex for the victory. The overlong headlock spot was really tedious, but the second half of this really delivered.