Friday, June 9, 2017

Evolve 85 Review

Evolve 85
May 21st, 2017 | Knights of Columbus Hall in Detroit, Michigan


Following their best show of the year, Evolve returned with the second half of a weekend double shot. Like the night before, the Evolve and WWN Championships were on the line.

Alex Daniels vs. Dominic Garrini
This was billed as a WWN seminar tryout match. Apparently, both men were trained by WWN icon Johnny Gargano and appear in AIW. Garrini wore no shoes and continually went for submissions. Daniels showed a little more versatility in his game. However, it was Garrini who picked up the win with a triangle choke and some elbows at 3:36. It was short, but fun. Garrini fits into Evolve and I can certainly see the Gargano influence in Daniels. I’d like to see more from both and people who impress in these seminars we hear about often. [**]

Catch Point came out and Tracy Williams congratulated Garrini. Stokely said Garrini isn’t marketable and called Catch Point the only stars around. They made Garrini leave, but a fan stole the show by shouting that Stokely was a midget Charles Barkley. Of course, that led to a “Charles Barkley” chant. Jason Kincaid and Austin Theory interrupted, looking for a Tag Team Title shot. Stokely agreed, but wanted more money from Evolve.

Evolve Tag Team Championship: Chris Dickinson and Jaka (c) w/ Catch Point vs. Austin Theory and Jason Kincaid
The tandem of Kincaid and Theory is an interesting one. Theory has shown a ton of potential and is just nineteen years old. Dirty hippie Kincaid used his unique offense and it made sense here. He wasn’t just doing it to do it, he had to use it to overcome the size disadvantage. Theory played face in peril and the champions had fun throwing him around. Kincaid’s hot tag was fun, but then the math broke down into everything getting their shit in. Though the outcome was obvious, the fans bit on a near fall after Kincaid hit a double stomp. The champs hit the Death Trap shortly after, to retain in 16:25. I thought this was fine. I think Kincaid taking the heat would’ve worked better though. The finishing stretch was fun, but I do think it went too long. [**¾]

Allysin Kay vs. Priscilla Kelly
It’s a Shine showcase match! I love me some Priscilla Kelly. This was the first women’s match in Evolve since 2010. They should it more often. It’s a nice way to promote Shine and get variation on the card. Kay dominated early, which made sense since Priscilla is relatively new and Kay is a Shine main eventer. Priscilla went high risk for some hope spots and nailed an impressive code red. Still, Kay put her down with a discus lariat in 5:01. Fine little match here. It went how it should have and I like it since Priscilla has been on Evolve shows lately. [**]

Donovan Dijak vs. Ethan Page
Both men are coming off losses in great matches at Evolve 84. There were some surprisingly fun moments here and some good crowd interactions. Page has portrayed more of a serious heel lately, so seeing him go this route was a nice change of pace. I particularly loved Page taking a phone from a fan to see what was trending and seeing a post that said Dijak was making him look like a good wrestler. He proceeded to stuff the phone in his trunks before handing it back to the fan. With that out of the way, they progressed to a more traditional match and each guy threw some of their best shots at the other. Page hit the Spinning Dwayne to win in 16:06. This was two guys doing their best to entertain the fans and having a fun time. I was very much okay with this and it was different from the rest of the show. [***¼]

Kyle O’Reilly vs. Tracy Williams
Surprisingly, no Stokely with Tracy here. These guys have similar styles, so this should mesh well. They worked at a much slower pace than the awesome O’Reilly/Riddle match from Evolve 84. O’Reilly focused on the arm, but he didn’t go after Tracy’s taped up arm. You’d think he’d focus on the injury. There was some strong technical wrestling throughout. The crowd kept trying to chant different things, including calling for “Sleazy Kyle”, to get things going. Instead, this seemed to drag on and never fully clicked with me, despite being a fan of both guys and the style. The intensity finally picked up near the end, just before Hot Sauce won with a crossface in 18:22. It felt way longer than it was and didn’t do enough to hold my interest. [**½]

Fred Yehi vs. Keith Lee
I was more excited for this match than any other on Evolve 85. Yehi showed no fear despite a massive size disadvantage. He refused to “bask in Keith’s glory” and had a smart strategy when he hit stomps and strikes on Lee’s foot. Lee shook it off and started to dominate. The crowd ate up everything he did on offense, even though Yehi is a popular guy. Yehi fought back, hitting a top rope suplex and even locking in the Koji Clutch. It was fun watching Yehi utilize his unique offense to combat the size and power of Lee. Still, Lee won with a jackhammer at 18:10. I enjoyed most of what they did, but there are a lot of matches that have gone a bit too long already, so this one dragged at points too. [***]

Post-match, Keith Lee asked the fans which title he should go after, since he now has a shot at the WWN or Evolve, whichever he chooses. They seem to say the Evolve Title, but he tells them to continue telling him on Twitter tonight.

WWN Championship: Matt Riddle (c) vs. Jeff Cobb
Okay, so Riddle was the most over guy on the show by a fair margin. He and Cobb have recently teamed up in PWG. Right from the start, they showed they knew each other well and both men went to their strengths. Cobb threw Riddle around, while the champion went for several submissions. Riddle started moving to strikes and used them to set up a fisherman buster. Cobb launched him for a huge gutwrench, but Riddle then blocked the Tour of the Islands. He busted out a goddamn Destroyer! I’ve never seen Riddle do that. Cobb kicked out of a Tombstone at one, so Riddle used the Bromission to retain in a short, but eventful 6:21. More of this please! Some would be upset with the length, but it allowed them to go full tilt and it worked very well. [***½]

Evolve Championship: Zack Sabre Jr. (c) vs. Lio Rush
This is a rematch from Evolve 83. In that match, Sabre wisely went after the leg to neutralize Lio’s speed. This time around, Lio had a taped shoulder and Sabre, unlike O’Reilly earlier, targeted it like a shark smelling blood. He just went after it and was in firm control. Rush could only get in a few hope spots, but refused to stay down. Sabre got worried as Rush kept kicking out and bringing more offense down the stretch. The fans believed in a few near falls, which showed they did a great job in investing the audience. The shoulder work came into play in the finish as well, because it was a shoulder submission that made Rush tap at 19:19. I preferred this to their first match because the limb work paid off and was sold better. The crowd was hotter here too. Lio’s so good as the plucky underdog and it worked against the smug champion in similar fashion to his match with Jay Lethal last year. [***¾]

Keith Lee came out after the match to challenge Zack Sabre Jr. However, Matt Riddle arrived to say his title was superior. That led to Riddle and Sabre having a staredown. Catch Point also came out, before Ethan Page snuck in to hit Lee with a low blow. He took out Sabre with Spinning Dwayne, while Catch Point attacked Riddle. Jason Kincaid saved Riddle from a Hathaway slap and everyone fought outside. Lee got up, alone in the ring, and busted out a tope con hilo! He slid Tracy Williams into a Bro to Sleep. Riddle and Lee agreed on a title match and shook hands. Hot ending to the show.

Overall: 7/10. A good show from Evolve, but not up to the high standard of Evolve 84. The two main events certainly delivered and did so in different ways. One was an energetic sprint and the other was a great underdog battle. My only gripe with the show was that some of the matches went and felt too long. With shorter matches for Yehi/Lee and Tracy/O’Reilly, this could’ve been nearly as good as Evolve 84.

Thursday, June 8, 2017

Lucha Underground "Sudden Death" Review

The show started with Prince Puma seemingly in a trance backstage. Rey Mysterio came up to him, worried about him taking advice from Vampiro. Rey said he's using him. Puma asked, "Like Konnan?" Puma left and said Rey wasn't his friend. Creepy Vampiro appeared behind Rey in the mirror and gave a warning.

Lucha Underground Championship Falls Count Anywhere: Johnny Mundo (c) vs. The Mack
This is the continuation of last week's All Night Long match. Dario Cueto came out and tipped the scales in Mack's favor, making this Falls Count Anywhere, which Mack competed in at two straight Ultima Luchas. That allowed Mack to get off to a hot start and get some revenge on Mundo by beating him around the Temple. Mundo got help from his biggest fan, Ricky Mandel, and nailed a dive from the stands. PJ Black got involved too, but was hit with a Stunner and he fell through a table. Mack came close a few times, but Taya showed up. Mundo scored with a sunset flip bomb onto chairs to retain at 9:45. Good way to follow up last week's effort. It was nearly as good despite being much shorter. [***1/4]

Dario Cueto came out and cut a passionate promo about how he's revolutionized Lucha Libre. From Dario's Dial of Doom to the Battle of the Bulls and everything in between. He then announced the Cueto Cup and said the person who wins it will get a title shot at Ultima Lucha Tres. It'll be a 32 man tournament. On the night the Cup winner is announced, Mundo will have to defend his Lucha Underground Title against Rey Mysterio! LONG LIVE THE CUETO CUP!

Lucha Underground Trios Championship: Aerostar, Drago and Fenix (c) vs. Kobra Moon, Pindar and Vibora
The challengers are embroiled in a feud with Drago when they kidnapped him. Kobra believes he belongs to her. The match was odd, as it saw the heels dominate. Vibora and Pindar are big dudes and they got to showcase that. Kobra directed traffic through all of this. Aeorstar looked to make the hot tag to Drago, but DRAGO MISTED HIM! He then walked over and joined Pindar and Viobra, asking for the tag. Kobra Moon was never in the match (there was no official announcement)! Drago tagged in and his new team hit a tandem move to win the titles at 5:32. Not great in terms of action, but good storytelling and a fun turn that should freshen up Drago, while freeing up Fenix to do more hopefully. [**1/2]

Backstage, Johnny Mundo exited the shower wanting to party. Ricky Mandel was there. Taya informed Johnny of his match with Rey. He didn't want to show concern in front of "the kid", so he sent Mandel away. He said he needs to train harder than ever and walked off in his towel. Taya asked if he was putting on pants, but he had no time for pants. Johnny Mundo is way more fun than John Morrison ever was.

Boyle Heights Street Fight: Mil Muertes w/ Catrina vs. Prince Puma
Their matches at Ultima Lucha (****1/4) and earlier this season (***3/4) were both great. This was a great, fitting continuation of their story. Puma started behind Muertes, jumping him for the upper hand. They fought around ringside and into Dario's office. There was a great camera shot of Dario picking up the bull that he used to kill Cortez Castro, and holding it up defensively against Mil in case of an attack. Puma used a wrench, trash can and coast to coast offense on Mil. He hit the 630, but Catrina jumped in and whacked him with the stone. Puma was given a brick by Vampiro, which he used on Mil to win at 11:38. This has the right amount of violence and added to the dark Puma angle. [***3/4]

Overall: 8/10. It's so good to have Lucha Underground back. This was a fun show that advanced several angles, while delivering entertaining stuff in the ring. It seems like season three is finally getting going, after the first half set a lot up using a slower pace. 

Want to watch Lucha Underground, Raw and Smackdown and don't have cable? Try signing up for Fubo.tv. Stream USA, El Rey, NBA TV, SyFy and many other channels by getting Fubo.tv right here!

Tuesday, June 6, 2017

Evolve 84 Review

Evolve 84
May 20th, 2017 | Summit Park District in Summit, Illinois


Usually, the first show of Evolve weekends feature lesser cards. Not here as a rematch from one of the best matches of Mania weekend is signed (Dijak/Lee), a grudge match for the Evolve Title (Sabre/Page) and a big time WWN Title match (Riddle/O’Reilly) are all on tap.

Lenny Leonard opened the show in the ring but there were horrible audio issues with the microphone. Keith Lee came out and cut a promo I barely understood, outside of bask in my glory, and it led to the opener.

Donovan Dijak vs. Keith Lee
These two tore the house down during WrestleMania weekend. They impressed the fans early with high impact offense. Dijak tried his Fosbury Flop but Lee caught him and hit snake eyes on the apron to a standing ovation. They continued throwing bombs including Lee using Feast Your Eyes, a Destroyer and a Spirit Bomb, but not getting the three. I get scared every time Lee goes up top and I was freaked out when he did it here, only to be launched backward by Dijak. To up the ante from Orlando, Dijak did a somersault from the ring into the crowd. Not done yet, Dijak pulled out a super rana, before Lee responded with a reverse rana. After all that, it took a top rope Spirit Bomb for Lee to win at 18:42. This was great but didn’t reach the level of their previous encounter. Something was missing. Still, I could watch these two go to war anytime. [****]

Fred Yehi vs. Jason Kincaid
These are two of the more unique wrestlers around. This was a change of pace from the last match. Instead of trying to throw everything in their arsenal at one another, this was two guys trying to win a grappling battle. Kincaid did well in hanging in Yehi’s wheelhouse, so the former Catch Point member had to move to bigger offense. Kincaid continually went for a knee bar. Yehi caught Kincaid with an awesome high angle German suplex that was the highlight of the match. Kincaid came close a few times and his frustration grew, before tapping to the Koji Clutch around 14:47. I found this to be a good showing for Kincaid. He showed toughness, heart and hung in there against one of the top guys in WWN. Yehi continues to be a consistently good performer with a variety of opponents. [***]

Austin Theory vs. Lio Rush
Both guys are incredibly young. They traded early stuff to show how evenly matched they were. Lio was first to hit a big move, nailing an Asai moonsault. Theory came back with some solid stuff but Lio remained in firm control. I admittedly lost my notes for this one, so I can’t recall many specific moves. However, I can tell you that this was a blast. Lots of fast paced action in a short timeframe. I do remember Theory hitting an interesting torture rack bomb for a good near fall. Lio won at 9:00 following a Spanish Fly and frog splash. Like I said, this was a really fun sprint. [***¼]

Priscilla Kelly came out, told Theory he belonged with her, and then left.

Jeff Cobb vs. Tracy Williams w/ Catch Point
Another match on this show I was looking forward to. Williams tried grounding Cobb, but the big man can more than hold his own there. After surviving an armbar, Cobb started tossing Williams around. It’s a blast to watch him manhandle people. Once Tracy took over though, the match hit a lull. It picked up a bit when Tracy showed power and did a bit of throwing Cobb around. Cobb came back with an excellent popup swinging gutwrench and looked to be on his way to a comeback. However, Tracy pulled him into a rollup and stole the match at 9:58. It started well and ended in the best possible fashion. Cobb looked strong and Tracy’s a smug dick. The middle parts were missing something, but this was still good. [***]

Stokely Hathaway got on the microphone after the match. He said a bunch of stuff about New York being better than Chicago. It got a “Fuck New York” chant going and made sense considering the upcoming opponents are from Chicago.

Evolve Tag Team Championship: Chris Dickinson and Jaka (c) w/ Catch Point vs. Isaias Velazquez and Matt Knicks
The crowd was hot for this, showing how well the pre-match promo worked. I’ve never seen the challengers before, but the champions quickly subdued them and the fans. Luckily, the crowd was ready and into the hot tag that brought in Velazquez. He showed fire and got a near fall with a standing sliced bread. There was an awkward point where the challengers set up a diving spot outside and it all looked so staged. From Catch Point standing in place to the moves themselves. Velazquez got left alone with the champs, who murdered him with a flurry of offense. He somehow survived and they came back with their own flurry for a near fall. In the end though, Velazquez got left alone and fell to Death Trap at 10:04. Another good match. The challengers impressed at times, while the champions played their roles very well. [***]

Evolve Championship: Zack Sabre Jr. (c) vs. Ethan Page
These two have had quite the rivalry in recent months. Sabre only wore the Evolve Title to the ring for this one. They played this like two guys who don’t like each other, bringing strikes and brawling from the get go. Sabre incorporated his style with an octopus hold on the guardrail for extra leverage. Page nearly won in under five minutes following an apron bomb and RK-Ego. They continued with a hard hitting match that saw both guys come close a few times. Sabre countered the RK-Ego into a triangle choke, only for Page to buckle bomb out. I completely bit on a package piledriver near fall. Sabre escaped a second and delivered a series of strikes and submissions. He fired off two PKs, but Page flipped him off instead of staying down. Two more PKs kept Page down at 13:52. I found this to be a very strong grudge match. They made me believe the title could change hands, while also making sure this was the physical match it had to be. Both men played to their strengths and delivered the goods here. I also loved Page being defiant until the end. This was much better than Page’s title match with Thatcher last year. [****]

Darby Allin showed up with his arm in a sling. He said he’s going to reinvent himself as a wrestler, so he can do what Page never could and that’s hang with Sabre.

WWN Championship: Matt Riddle (c) vs. Kyle O’Reilly
I thought their match in PWG last year was strong but a bit of a disappointment considering they seem made for each other. They both applied early submissions and reached the ropes to break them. They progressed into forearm strikes. Kyle got in trouble there, so he kicked Riddle’s leg to knock him down. O’Reilly continued to have a game plan for whatever Riddle threw at him. He’d stop his momentum whenever he could and try to get in his own attempts at winning. Kyle won a strike battle while holding a knee bar, so Riddle responded with heel strikes. Riddle no sold some kicks and hit the Bro to Sleep. A German followed but it wasn’t enough. They did a great guillotine choke struggle spot that was a highlight. The final stretch started off oddly, with a few moments that looked staged. It picked up and became great though. Riddle nailed a Liger Bomb and Kyle trapped him in a triangle choke. He delivered a bunch of elbows but Riddle powered out and nailed the jumping tombstone. The Bromission finished, allowing Riddle to retain at 16:11. This was far better than their PWG match. For the most part, it felt like a real fight, which I loved. It stayed in Riddle’s wheelhouse of 15 minutes, too. It was hard hitting, played to their strengths and was the best Evolve match I’ve seen this year. [****½]

Overall: 9/10. A show of the year contender. I expected a good show, but this blew me away. Three matches clock in with at least four stars and nothing gets less than three. It flew by. The undercard was quality, with consistently good matches and then the two main events delivered. Add in an excellent opener and there’s nothing not to like about this show.

Monday, June 5, 2017

WWE Extreme Rules Review

WWE Extreme Rules
June 4th, 2017 | Royal Farms Arena in Baltimore, Maryland


Apollo Crews w/ Titus O’Neil vs. Kalisto
This was a last minute addition to the show and took the Kickoff spot, bumping the mixed tag to the main show. The Apollo/Titus pairing has been entertaining and a benefit for Apollo. He can go in the ring, but lacks personality, which is the exact opposite of Titus. These two had a fun back and forth match. They did a good job getting the crowd invested, despite neither guy being positioned very well on the card. You could see their chemistry from past work on the indies, which they brought here. The finish was where things fell apart. It was meant to continue issues for Apollo and Titus, but came off wrong. Kalisto hit his finisher to win at 9:31. Good opener with lots of energy but a lame finish. [***]

WWE Intercontinental Championship: Dean Ambrose (c) vs. The Miz w/ Maryse
If Dean Ambrose got DQed, he’d lose the title. Why you book that stipulation on a show called EXTREME RULES is beyond me. They got a LOT of time and it felt like it. The stuff they did wasn’t bad, and it made sense, it just lacked something to engage me. I did appreciate some of the finish. I was wondering why Maryse wouldn’t just hit Miz, because that would be a DQ. They tried it, but the referee was smart enough to see the ruse and eject Maryse. Miz then sent Ambrose into the referee, which led to him teasing the disqualification. Before he could though, Miz nailed the Skull Crushing Finale to win his seventh IC Title at 20:02. This was fine, but dragged at times. I’m glad Miz didn’t win the title via DQ and that they put a twist on the finish. [**¾]

Alicia Fox and Noam Dar vs. Rich Swann and Sasha Banks
Interestingly, the ropes weren’t purple for this. Dar and Fox are two of the worst performers on the roster. This was about what I expected, but with a hotter crowd. They loved Swann and Sasha. Anyway, I’d consider this a TV match that got put on the PPV and was mostly used to get Sasha on the PPV. Dar and Alicia could’ve been any other pairing and that would’ve done just as much. Swann won with the Phoenix Splash in 6:20. I assume he won in his hometown because Vince was unaware of it. Like I said, this was a TV match. [**]

Elias Samson sang in the ring. It went on for a while and nothing came of it.

WWE Raw Women’s Championship Kendo Stick on a Pole Match: Alexa Bliss (c) vs. Bayley
Earlier in the show, Bayley received some boos during her promo. Her entrance didn’t get a much better reaction. Yes, the one girl that could be the equivalent to a female John Cena in terms of popularity, has also fallen to the curse of Raw booking someone like complete shit. The match went 5:12 and was basically a squash. Alexa dominated. Bayley got the kendo stick first and Alexa ran. Yet, Alexa just speared her and used the kendo stick as a weapon. She won in lackluster fashion with a DDT. So, Alexa said Bayley couldn’t get extreme and then was proven right, so Bayley looked like a total goof. I’m not a huge Bayley fan, but it’s sad that I’ve hit a point where I don’t care at all about her or Sasha thanks to Raw. [*]

WWE Raw Tag Team Championship Steel Cage Match: The Hardy Boyz (c) vs. Cesaro and Sheamus
I’m admittedly not a fan of tag team Steel Cage matches where the concept is for both guys to escape. It sets up a situation where one guy would leave his partner all alone. That happened with Jeff Hardy here, which was something we saw from the Hardys back in 2001. Matt was forced to try to survive his brute opponents all alone. I liked that Jeff eventually decided to return in, with a huge Whisper in the Winds off the cage spot. His return boosted the drama. The teams did tried escaping at the same time, but Sheamus and Cesaro hit the floor first to win at 15:03. I thought this was good, though some of the cage climbing got repetitive. It’s hard to avoid that in this kind of match though. The action was cool and we got the expected Jeff dive, as well as the Hardys dropping the titles without taking a pin.[***]

WWE Cruiserweight Championship Submission Match: Neville (c) vs. Austin Aries
Neville beat Aries at WrestleMania and retained via DQ at Payback. The crowd seemed less into this than the mixed tag earlier. Their match at Mania was awesome, but this was a slow paced match. It made sense for the stipulation, but the Cruiserweight Title could be used as a way to pick up the pace, instead of slowing it down. These two are great, so they did the best with what they were given and told a solid story. I liked Aries slapping on the Rings of Saturn to get back at Neville. He used the Last Chancery, but Neville pulled the hold to the outside. Aries held on, but had to be reminded by the official that he couldn’t win out there. Once back in, Aries hit a sick sounding Red Arrow onto Aries’ back and made him tap with the Rings of Saturn in 17:28. It’s a tough match to gauge, because it was solid, yet unspectacular and not what I wanted from them. Aries losing is odd. Where does he go now? [***]

Number One Contender’s Fatal Five Way Match: Bray Wyatt vs. Finn Balor vs. Roman Reigns vs. Samoa Joe vs. Seth Rollins
These are the things we get when you have Brock Lesnar as your top champion. With a lot of moving parts, this could either be great or a wreck. Thankfully, it was closer to the former. It had some great things and some stuff I didn’t like. To start with the bad, I didn’t care for Joe and Wyatt working together. They did the same thing against Finn on Raw recently, and Bray turned on Joe quickly, so why would Joe do it here? The pace was considerably slow early on and we got the WWE trope of multi-man matches seeing one or two guys taking breathers at a time. The final ten minutes were bonkers though. Reigns’ guardrail spot, though overdone, was great here and I loved Seth’s frog splash through the announce table. Finn nearly pulled it out against Reigns, avoiding the Spear and hitting the Coup de Grace. However, Joe snuck in and put him in the Coquina Clutch to win it at 29:08. A great main event, but it missed some of what was needed to make it something I’d have in my MOTY list. If pressed for time, absolutely find a way to watch the last ten minutes. [***¾]

Overall: 5/10. Honestly, this is what I’ve come to expect from Raw PPVs. One match that nearly cracks four stars (I’ve yet to give a match from a Raw PPV ****. Sheamus/Cesaro at COTC and Owens/Rollins at HIAC came close), while the rest of the card is solid at best, but underwhelming. The women’s match did nothing for me and was a massive disappointment (and I didn’t have high expectations). This was Sunday Nigh Raw. Outside of a few spots from the main event, I don’t think this will be remembered at all.

Sunday, June 4, 2017

Extreme Rules Predictions

Winners: Rich Swann and Sasha Banks

Winner: Austin Aries

Winner: Alexa Bliss

Winners: Sheamus and Cesaro

Winner: The Miz
Winner: Seth Rollins

2017 Prediction Record: 25-19
2016 Prediction Record: 72-41
2015 Prediction Record: 60-35

Saturday, June 3, 2017

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors XXIV Finals Review

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors XXIV Finals
June 3rd, 2017 | Yoyogi 2nd Gymnasium in Tokyo, Japan | Attendance: 3,454


After thirteen shows, we’ve finally reached the end of the Best of the Super Juniors XXIV. It’s my third tournament and it was much better than 2015 and about on par, if not a bit better than 2016. The finals were great the last two years (2015 got ****½ while 2016 got ****). This year we have an unexciting finals, but one that should deliver in quality. Sounds like a lot of NJPW booking right?

Katsuya Kitamura, Manabu Nakanishi and Tetsuhiro Yagi vs. Syota Umino, Tomoyuki Oka and Yuji Nagata
This is my first look at Yagi. Oka and Kitamura, which should be a main event rivalry in a few years, started off and it ruled. I hope they don’t get sent on excursion. I don’t think time in CMLL or ROH will do much for them. Umino and Yagi brought a different pace, moving very fast in their exchanges. Yagi got wrecked by Nakanishi a bit, before Nagata came in to a battle of the dads. Oka got the win for his guys by making Yagi submit to the Young Lion Crab in 7:58. Just what I’ve come to expect from the Young Lions. Lots of energy Nagata and Nakanishi took nights off as the coaches, which is fine. I’m digging the protégé vibe from them and Oka/Kitamura. [**¾]

Hirai Kawato, Hiroyoshi Tenzan and Togi Makabe vs. Jado, Tomohiro Ishii and Toru Yano
I totally forgot that Yano and Ishii had the Tag Titles this year. Kawato gave zero fucks and wanted to fight instantly. Jado tried playing the vet who taught him a lesson, but he’s shit at everything he does, so I couldn’t buy into it. Ishii and Yano worked him over as well, including sending him into the exposed turnbuckle. He managed to tag in his older partners, who fared better, but he wanted right back in. It’s probably good, since Makabe looked like he didn’t want to be there today. Ishii murdered Kawato with a lariat to close it out at 7:24. Ishii was a badass, Yano was mildly entertaining and Kawato stole the show by being a madman. Nobody else came to work, though. [**¾]

El Desperado, TAKA Michinoku and Yoshinobu Kanemaru vs. Jushin Thunder Liger, Tiger Mask IV and Volador Jr.
All six men were part of the tournament. Desperado and Liger were great, Tiger Mask and Volador were good, TAKA had his moments and Kanemaru sucked. This was exactly what you’d expect. The Suzuki-Gun guys tried their standard tricks, while the babyface unit did all they could to overcome it. TAKA was not in the mood to take a big bump, as he turned the top rope Spanish Fly into what was basically a hip toss off the top for the loss in 5:46. This was short and sweet. They kept Kanemaru to a minimum and let the entertaining guys do their thing. [**½]

ACH, David Finlay and IWGP Tag Team Champions War Machine vs. Bad Luck Fale, The Guerillas of Destiny and Yujiro Takahashi
Pimp Yujiro brought the Tokyo Latina (@muffin030ass on Instagram) with him. I love when she’s around. David Finlay’s been wearing the War Machine face paint for a while, but ACH adopted it here too. I’m still upset Finlay was left off this tournament. This was here to preview GOD/War Machine at Dominion. ACH was hype and wanted the champs to throw him onto their opponents, but it was unfortunately cut off. ACH ended up taking the heat, before bringing in War Machine to kick ass. Things broke down, which including a dive by ACH and then Hanson hitting a somersault onto GOD. Finlay nearly ended Yujiro, but Fale took him out. It allowed Yujiro to win via Pimp Juice at 10:06. This was more fun than expected. War Machine is great in NJPW, while ACH and Finlay have always delivered. The Bullet Club guys played their roles well too. [***¼]

Hirooki Goto and YOSHI-HASHI vs. NEVER Openweight Champion Minoru Suzuki and Taichi
Guys in CHAOS have bad hair, especially YOSHI and Ospreay. Except Ishii. Anyway, this was to build towards the Goto/Suzuki rematch at Dominion. In a totally expected opening, Suzuki-Gun jumped CHAOS before the bell and it led to a brawl on the outside. They’ve only been back for about five months and I’m beyond tired of them. And I say this as a guy who likes Minoru and Desperado. HASHI took most of the heat, which meant Taichi was on offense, which is never good. Goto came in hot, but it just led to a battle of strikes with Suzuki. That part was fun. Suzuki-Gun all got involved and Kanemaru accidentally spit booze at Taichi, allowing YOSHI to win with Karma at 12:13. Standard Suzuki-Gun stuff. I’m over it. [*¾]

IWGP Jr. Heavyweight Champion Hiromu Takahashi, IWGP Intercontinental Champion Tetsuya Naito and NEVER Openweight Six Man Tag Team Champions BUSHI, EVIL and SANADA vs. Dragon Lee, Juice Robinson, Ricochet, Ryusuke Taguchi and Satoshi Kojima
Kojima has been working these matches in place of the injured Hiroshi Tanahashi. Naito threw his broken IC Title at Liger on commentary. I’d love that singles matches, to be honest. I like that Taguchi Japan was ready for the LIDJ sneak attacks. We’ve seen variations of this match for the entire year, yet they’re always entertaining. LIDJ is awesome in a way the Bullet Club, Suzuki-Gun and CHAOS can only dream of. The interactions between Dragon Lee and BUSHI made me wish they were in the same block (ditto for Ricochet/BUSHI). I also always get a kick out of Kojima’s rapid-fire chops. He also did a dragon screw and air guitar tribute to Tanahashi. Just when he looked like he might win, he got taken out by a lariat from EVIL. Naito hit Destino and that was all in 12:19. Easily the best thing so far. LIDJ can do no wrong. Great energy, awesome pace and lots of action. Always entertaining. [***¾]

Post-match, Tetsuya Naito cut a promo and out came Hiroshi Tanahashi. He claimed that Naito tells people to relax, so he did. He’ll be at Dominion for their match.

Gedo and IWGP Heavyweight Champion Kazuchika Okada vs. Kenny Omega and Marty Scurll
This clearly previewed Omega/Okada II. The match that I thought was great, but nowhere near GREATEST MATCH OF ALL TIME LEVELS like a lot of people saw. They started the match and had some good exchanges, with teasing of signature moves, but nothing more. Scurll and Gedo slowed things down a bit. Gedo got worked over for obvious reasons. Okada was given the hot tag and hit all his shit. He and Omega continued to avoid the finisher of the other. Both Gedo and Scurll had to be saved from defeat by their partners, but dual superkicks sent Okada packing. The Chicken Wing made Gedo tap at 13:04. Solid tag match. The heat segment was good, Okada’s hot tag worked and they did the right amount of teasing for the Dominion main event. Though it’s not much of a tease since, like the rest of Dominion, it’s a rematch of something we’ve seen already. [***]

BOTSJ Finals: ROH World Television Champion KUSHIDA vs. Will Ospreay
Last year, these two met twice (****½ at Invasion Attack and ***¾ at Dominion) and KUSHIDA won both. KUSHIDA won this tournament in 2015, while Ospreay did in 2016. It’s an incredibly uninspired finals choice. Though this was a friendly encounter, you got the feeling Ospreay had a chip on his shoulder. Or maybe that’s just his personality. He called KUSHIDA a bitch while no-selling his strikes, trying to show his toughness. It just led to him eating a rolling kick and dive outside. They played off their past well, with Ospreay having the top rope shoulder breaker scouted (but he still got hit with it) and KUSHIDA getting his knees up on signature Ospreay stuff. There was a particularly wild spot where Ospreay spiked KUSHIDA on the apron with a reverse rana. Ospreay decided against the good guy route of helping KUSHIDA in and was willing to take the countout, but KUSHIDA beat it. KUSHIDA had a fantastic Oscutter counter, jumping with Ospreay and catching him in an armbar. It was nearly as good as the chair armbar spot against KOR last year. They progressed in a badass exchange of strikes and kicks, including KUSHIDA going all Bryan Danielson by stomping on Will’s face. Will flipped him off in the middle, remaining defiant. The Hoverboard Lock didn’t work, so KUSHIDA went to transition to Back to the Future, but Ospreay had a counter ready. Ospreay brought everything, including an imploding 450 and about ten of his corner superkicks, but KUSHIDA refused to stay down. They fought up top, where KUSHIDA hit SUPER Back to the Future. He held on like his name was Okada, and rolled into a second to win in 27:59. That was fantastic. Some spots didn’t look as good as others (Will standing like a moron while KUSHIDA set up his own Oscutter for example) and I preferred their first match. It followed the formula of a lot of NJPW matches that people have gone the full five on this year in that it had a slow build to a wild finish that everyone remembers. Still, it’s a working formula and I was all about how well they played into their history. Having the tourney guys around the ring added to the big fight feel. A must-see match. [****½]

At the end of the day, my biggest gripe with NJPW continues to be the booking. They did the come from behind win just like Ospreay had last year. Now, the Jr. Title match at Dominion is ANOTHER Wrestle Kingdom rematch. Could you imagine the outcry if WWE put on a great WrestleMania and SummerSlam was just a retread of that show? It’s like there’s been no growth in six months. There were lots of interesting opportunities to go with out of this tournament, but they went the safe route. Take a chance. They did it with Omega and it paid off. Take more risks. NJPW gets away with a lot of their safe, stale booking because the in-ring product delivers. I’m sure Dominion will be a damn good show, just not an exciting one.

Overall: 7.5/10. Pretty much the show I expected. NJPW tends to have events with solid tag matches filling the undercard and then a big finish. The only things that I say need to be seen are the LIDJ tag and the main event. A show like this is all about the main though, and that delivered. I’m not a fan of the booking, but the wrestling was great.

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors XXIV Night Thirteen Review

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors XXIV Night Thirteen
June 1st, 2017 | Nagoya Congress Center Event Hall in Nagoya, Aichi | Attendance: 1,535


It’s the final night of the tournament before the finals. Will Ospreay won the A Block, so I’m expecting a KUSHIDA win in this block. I’m not a fan of the idea and I’d rather BUSHI, ACH or El Desperado take home the win. Everyone in this block enters tied with six points and there are a ton of possibilities.

B Block: El Desperado [6] vs. Yoshinobu Kanemaru [6]
Desperado has been one of the MVPs of this tournament, so naturally, he’s 0-3 after starting 3-0. I appreciated that they were untrustworthy of one another. Both guys are in Suzuki-Gun, so both are typically up to heel tricks. The story of this was each guy trying to out heel the other, which was a good way to play it. Taichi and TAKA got involved, everyone argued and there was some brawling on the outside. As they fought outside, the count neared ten. Desperado nearly got in, but Taichi rolled Kanemaru in and knocked TAKA into him, so Kanemaru won via countout in 9:39. About as good as they could’ve handled this. They worked to their strengths and had a solid match. I liked how Desperado was pissed after the match. I’d be all for him splitting from the group, but in NJPW, seemingly everyone has to be in some sort of stable, so it won’t happen. [**¾]

B Block: ACH [6] vs. Ryusuke Taguchi [6]
With both guys being babyface, they had some fun and joked around to start. We even got ACH mocking Taguchi’s ass attacks and the Shinsuke Nakamura taunt. As things progressed, they got a bit more serious and competitive. They still found ways to throw in the comedy stuff, but it felt natural. Taguchi went for the ankle lock, which helped slow ACH down at times. It certainly didn’t when he jumped straight to the top rope for a superplex. I didn’t mind it much since the ankle work wasn’t overdone to the point where he should’ve been completely unable to do things like that. ACH countered Dodon into a cradle, which got reversed a few times before Taguchi kept his shoulders down for three at 13:41. A good, fun match with lots of energy. It may have gone a bit long for what they were done, but I enjoyed it. [***]

B Block: BUSHI [6] vs. Tiger Mask IV [6]
BUSHI started 0-3, but has won three in a row. Tiger Mask came out firing and hit an early Tombstone. He was looking to get his two points and leave quickly. BUSHI turned things in his favor after tripping up Tiger Mask, leading to some fast paced back and forth. There were moments of desperation, like when Tiger Mask applied a guillotine choke. Just as Tiger Mask went for the Tiger Suplex, BUSHI fought out and we got a ref bump. BUSHI used a chair assisted Codebreaker and MX to finish things off at 12:08. I thought this was going very well until the cheap finish. I just don’t think it was needed. BUSHI is booked well enough to beat Tiger Mask without nonsense. [***]

B Block: ROH World Television Champion KUSHIDA [6] vs. Volador Jr. [6]
With wins over Kanemaru, Taguchi and BUSHI, a win for KUSHIDA gets him in the finals. They shook hands before the match, because though everything’s on the line, they’re respectable athletes. With so much at stake, they worked with a sense of urgency and had some great exchanges throughout. KUSHIDA went after the arm, even though that hasn’t quite worked for him recently. Volador continued to find ways to escape. They traded super ranas, with Volador’s being especially impressive. When KUSHIDA finally got the Hoverboard Lock on again, Volador still wouldn’t quit. Wisely, KUSHIDA took what he’s learned in the tournament and rolled it into God’s Last Gift to win the match and block at 15:44. A really fun main event that kept a great pace throughout. [***½]

I get why they did it, but I’m not a fan of the booking. It’s the same exact thing they did with Will Ospreay last year. Now the finals are a rematch of something that happened twice last year and the last two winners of this tournament. It’s typical Gedo booking. Why not take a chance? Now the Jr. Title match at Dominion will either be a rematch from the tournament or from Wrestle Kingdom and there’s already far too many of those. The last time Gedo took a big chance was with Kenny Omega and that’s worked out great. Do more surprise things like that.

Overall: 6.5/10. The typical good, but not great outing from the BOTSJ. The main event was the best match on the show and was worked like it was important. The rest of the show is solid, yet unspectacular. I’m not a fan of the booking decisions throughout, but whatever.

A BlockPointsB BlockPoints
Will Ospreay *Winner*10 (5-2)KUSHIDA *Winner*8 (4-3)
Ricochet8 (4-3)Yoshinobu Kanemaru8 (4-3)
Dragon Lee8 (4-3)BUSHI8 (4-3)
Hiromu Takahashi8 (4-3)Ryusuke Taguchi8 (4-3)
Taichi8 (4-3)Tiger Mask IV6 (3-4)
Marty Scurll8 (4-3)ACH6 (3-4)
TAKA Michinoku4 (2-5)El Desperado6 (3-4)
Jushin Thunder Liger2 (1-6)Volador Jr.6 (3-4)