Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Random Match Reviews: Austin Aries vs. Samoa Joe

Show: Slammiversary
Date: 6/10/12
Championship: X-Division
Location: Arlington, Texas


To open Slammiversary, TNA went with their X-Divison and two of the top guys to ever step foot in that division. Samoa Joe and Austin Aries, who actually had quite the memorable and historic match in ROH, where Aries won their World Title from Joe. Here you have your classic case of powerful big guy vs. determined smaller guy. They did a very good job of portraying the strength against speed aspect of the match. Joe would hit big offense and Aries would find a way to combat it. At one point, Joe went for elbow suicida, but Aries used his speed to dodge, run in and hit the heat seeking missile. Aries also did a good job in selling just how much Joe's offense took out of him. I appreciate that they didn't overdo the false finishes, with only Joe, the monster, kicking out of Aries' 450. The finishing sequence was also really good as Aries had to hit a flurry of moves, including a sick brainbuster, to finally put down the dominant challenger. Performances like this are why Aries would win the World Title less than a month later.

Match Time - 11:44 ***¾

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

G1 Climax 24 Day Eight Review

G1 Climax 24 Day Eight
August 3rd, 2014 | Osaka, Japan


More than halfway through the tournament, New Japan somehow either continues to top themselves or at the very least, maintain the very high level of this thing. From what I’ve seen, Osaka is a pretty great crowd usually and the card looks good, telling me that this show should deliver again. Two Bullet Club members, Karl Anderson and Bad Luck Fale, have the night off here.

Block A
Davey Boy Smith Jr. (6) vs. Tomohiro Ishii (6)

Out of the gate, Tomohiro Ishii came out firing, setting the tone for what would be a hard hitting fight. Each shot from both guys was pretty damn stiff. Ishii is well known for this but I give Davey Boy Smith Jr. a ton of credit for holding his own. Both guys busted out cool suplex variations. The hot crowd added a ton to this. Smith nailed an absolutely beautiful German suplex for a close near fall before doing the same with a tiger suplex. The finish came as Ishii busted out a damn rana to counter a bomb. He followed with a lariat for a near fall that the fans bought into. A Brainbuster put away Smith in a great match.

Winner: Tomohiro Ishii (8) in 10:24
I did not expect that. I knew that Tomohiro Ishii has been delivering and that Smith has been consistently good, but this clicked in a way I didn’t expect. It was hard hitting, had a red hot crowd and was just all around awesome. The best Smith match I’ve ever seen. Seeing Ishii hit a rana was pretty sweet too. Ishii injured his shoulder during the match, but soldiered on. ****¼

Block B
Hiroyoshi Tenzan (6) vs. Toru Yano (6)

A quick attack started this match, which, as expected, wasn’t very long. It featured the typical Toru Yano shenanigans including the turnbuckle spot. It was funny to see Yano steal Tenzan’s trademark chops. It was different than when, say, AJ Styles did it as it was more fun here. The finish was cool as Yano had his low blow attempt blocked and he was put in the Anaconda Vice. He got out, they did a slight ref bump and then Tenzan turned the tables by hitting Yano with a low blow before applying the Vice and winning.

Winner: Hiroyoshi Tenzan (8) in 4:33
Fun little match here. It was kept short and did the job of acting as a cool down after the hot opening contest. The finishing sequence helped me bump up the score a bit. **¼

Block A
Shelton X Benjamin (8) vs. Yuji Nagata (6)

Right from the get go, you could tell there would be a fair amount of counters in this. Shelton caught an early kick and slapped on the ankle lock. He also had the backdrop very well scouted, reversing two of them, one into a DDT and the other into another ankle lock. Nagata was ready for Shelton’s finish as well, turning Paydirt into the armbar. All of this was pretty damn good. There were a few more ankle locks attempts until Nagata put him down with a crossface finish.

Winner: Yuji Nagata (8) in 10:52
I’ve seen people pretty split on this online. Some people loved it and some people found it boring. I really enjoyed it and the series of counters. Shelton using the ankle lock throughout the G1 has been cool and I’m glad it played a part in this. I also like how he had the backdrop scouted so well that Nagata had to find another way to win. ***¾

Block A
Doc Gallows (4) vs. Satoshi Kojima (6)

Honestly, this match was kind of just there. I watched it but most of it wasn’t memorable. Granted, it was actually rather solid. Doc Gallows normally isn’t very exciting, but was better than expected here. Satoshi Kojima bumped well for Gallows’ offense throughout, helping him look more like a monster than some. Gallows survived a Brainbuster and blocked the big lariat, but couldn’t continue to do so. He would eat a vicious lariat from Kojima that ended things.

Winner: Satoshi Kojima (8) in 7:11
Better than I expected, but still nothing great. It was a solid match that again, was kept rather short and sweet. They didn’t overstay their welcome and worked about as a good a match as I expected from them. **¾

Block B
Hirooki Goto (6) vs. Tetsuya Naito (8)

After starting 3-0, Hirooki Goto has hit a rut and lost a few in a row. The crowd was really into it from the start. They were very much behind Goto, which kind of forced Tetsuya Naito to act a bit heelish. That made it fun for me because I love heel Naito in 2015. I wonder if his dick tendencies here were part of the eventual decision to turn him. Goto pounded on Naito and they tried to build to a Naito rally. He did so, but the crowd wasn’t behind him in the way they wanted. The counters that both guys pulled out were great, including a particular one where Goto stopped a trademark corner dropkick of Naito’s. Naito took a risk with the Stardust Press and paid for it when he missed. Goto nailed Shouten Kai and ended his losing streak.

Winner: Hirooki Goto (8) in 12:21
This is one of those cases where I love the time that G1 matches get. This was brisk and they packed a ton into their twelve minutes, meaning that everything they did mattered. ***¾

Block B
AJ Styles (8) vs. Lance Archer (6)

TNA! TNA! TNA! Anyway, throughout this tournament, AJ Styles has been incredibly versatile. That happened again here as he played right into Lance Archer’s strengths. Styles bumps like crazy for Archer, in the best possible way. It really hammered home the point that Archer was a monstrous threat, which he himself has done a good job of during the tournament. Styles used a favorite of mine, the ring post figure four and then focused on the leg. I always appreciate when the smaller guy goes after the leg. Archer kept things simple throughout, relying on just throwing AJ around and allowing AJ to make sure the bump looked vicious. He did reach into his bag of tricks by trying a moonsault, which is impressive considering his size. He missed it though, leading to the finish, where AJ made him submit to the calf cutter.

Winner: AJ Styles (10) in 12:52
Far better than I ever thought it would be. I’ve gone on record in saying that I don’t particularly enjoy Lance Archer, but this just clicked. I liked the big man/little man dynamic and loved that the leg work played into the finish. It also made sense because Archer was too big to hit the Styles Clash, so AJ had to pull something else out to win. ****

Block B
Minoru Suzuki (6) vs. Togi Makabe (6)

This absolutely worked in the sense that it felt way different than everything else on the card tonight. They just had an intense brawl that spilled all around the ring and involved weapons. Makabe went after the leg and applied a figure four variation. He was more seated instead of laying and Suzuki would try to sit up but get slapped back down. Each shot was pretty damn brutal. Suzuki reached the ropes, but the brutality didn’t stop. Suzuki straight up punched Makabe, hit a kick and locked in Saka Otoshi for the win. Makabe was turning colors from the hold.

Winner: Minoru Suzuki (8) in 12:21
These are two of the baddest dudes in the G1, so their match being this style was very fitting. As I noted, I loved that this had a different feel to the rest of the card as the best cards usually give you a little bit of everything. I dug the finish of Togi passing out instead of submitting since he is too much of a badass to tap. ***½

Block A
Katsuyori Shibata (8) vs. Tomoaki Honma (0)

Going into this, I knew it would be awesome and it delivered. The crowd is always molten hot for Tomoaki Honma. The start of this match was intense, as Shibata beat the fuck out of Honma with some shots, only for Honma to just scream at him and take it like a man. The mixture of the hot crowd with the vicious hard hits of the match made for something really enjoyable to watch. Near the end, Shibata hit a sick slap on Honma but Honma came right back with that headbutt. Honma caught the Penalty Kick attempt so Shibata lit him up with slaps only for Honma to hit one major one of his own that took down Shibata. Shibata then finally won with a GTS and PK, ending a fantastic match.

Winner: Katsuyori Shibata (10) in 10:47
The more I watch Shibata, the more I like him and I can honestly say the same for Honma. The fans just eat up everything Honma does and they buy into the possibility of him winning, hook, line and sinker. He did have some really close calls here too. I feel like I’m going to have bruises just from watching this. It was two guys who didn’t let up and worked the whole match at a fantastic breakneck pace. ****½

Block B
Kazuchika Okada (8) vs. Yujiro Takahashi (4)

Takahashi attacked Okada during his entrance. This allowed him to be in the driver’s seat far longer than I expected. Okada did a good job in selling Yujiro’s offense and there have been more than a few upsets in this tournament, but I never believed the outcome of this match was in doubt. Takahashi did a good job of avoiding some of Okada’s signature moves and then hit Tokyo Pimps for two but I never bought it as the finish. Okada would counter a buckle bomb with a rana before going into his finish. Dropkick, tombstone and Rainmaker ended this.

Winner: Kazuchika Okada (10) in 12:49
I thought this was a fine wrestling match but it did nothing to stand out on this crowded show. Maybe on a different card it would have come off better, but I never fully got into this.**¾

Block A
Hiroshi Tanahashi (8) vs. Shinsuke Nakamura (10) 

Earlier in the year, these two headlined in the Tokyo Dome, which was won by Tanahashi. Their rematch at Invasion attack was won by Nakamura. They went in knowing each other very well and played right into that, with neither man gaining a clear advantage. It seemed like they might be heading into time limit draw territory early on due to the slow pace, but that picked up quickly. Tanahashi stole Nakamura’s signature corner move/taunt only for Nakamura to turn it around. Nakamura had a cool submission applied, only for Tanahashi to find a way to counter it into the cloverleaf. In the best spot of the match, Tanahashi countered the Boma Ye into a dragon screw, only for Nakamura to spin out of that and hit one anyway, for an incredibly close near fall. Tanahashi then pulled out the win with an O’Connor roll.

Winner: Hiroshi Tanahashi (10) in 17:00
I’ve seen three matches between these two and they always manage to deliver. This felt different than the other two. They knew that were going less than 20 and made sure to work within those confines. I liked them playing off their past and some of the near falls were great. I love that the finish came on a rollup, since in the past, it has taken so much for these guys to beat each other, that if the match had to go under 20, it should end with something like that. ****

Overall: 9/10. Somehow they keep either topping themselves or equaling their already amazing efforts. This show was fantastic, featuring four matches that clock in at over four stars. Again, there was nothing bad on this show, the incredibly hot Osaka crowd and the performances of nearly everyone made this another special show. I don’t see how they could possibly keep up this pace.

Block A Standings
Katsuyori Shibata 10
Hiroshi Tanahashi 10
Shinsuke Nakamura 10
Satoshi Kojima 8
Yuji Nagata 8
Shelton X Benjamin 8
Bad Luck Fale 8
Tomohiro Ishii 8
Davey Boy Smith Jr. 6
Doc Gallows 4
Tomoaki Honma 0

Block B Standings
Kazuchika Okada 10
AJ Styles 10
Tetsuya Naito 8
Minoru Suzuki 8
Hirooki Goto 8
Hiroyoshi Tenzan 8
Togi Makabe 6
Lance Archer 6
Toru Yano 6
Karl Anderson 6
Yujiro Takahashi 4

Monday, November 9, 2015

Top Five 11/2/15-11/8/15

1) Timothy Thatcher: Granted, I wasn't able to see the Evolve shows this weekend, but from what I'm hearing, I can't deny this man the top spot. Timothy Thatcher has quickly become one of my favorite guys to watch on the indies, so I'm pretty sure when I see his matches from this weekend, I'll agree with some of the high praise. At Evolve 51, he successfully defended the Evolve Title against Johnny Gargano in what many are calling a Match of the Year candidate. Not satisfied with that, he went out and had another match that people are saying was great when he defeated former champion Drew Galloway in another title match. All in all, it was another successful weekend for a guy that has been having a pretty great year.

2) Naomichi Marufuji: Pro Wrestling NOAH's big yearly tournament is known as the Global League Tournament. The finals took place this weekend and saw Naomichi Marufuji take on Suzuki-Gun member Shelton Benjamin. Benjamin was 6-1 heading into the finals, and went to a draw with the GHC Champion. Marufuji defeated Benjamin to win the entire tournament and earn himself a shot at the GHC Heavyweight Title. That title is held by Suzuki-Gun leader Minoru Suzuki. I expect Marufuji to win it and put an end to Suzuki-Gun's hostile takeover of Pro Wrestling NOAH, saving the company. It would be cool to see him win that considering I've liked the guy since 2006 and saw him wrestle live multiple times with Ring of Honor.

3) Shinsuke Nakamura: The biggest show of the week was probably New Japan's Power Struggle in Osaka. The main event of the show saw IWGP Intercontinental Champion Shinsuke Nakamura retain his belt against Karl Anderson. Anderson had defeated Nakamura early on in the G1 Tournament, so he came in as a bit of a threat to Nakamura's belt. The match itself was great, though it saw a fair amount of Bullet Club interference. The biggest news however, came after the match. Nakamura wasn't allowed to celebrate for long as AJ Styles got in his face and basically challenged him for the IC Title. This will most likely occur at Wrestle Kingdom and will be a first time ever bout.

4) Tomohiro Ishii: The reigning NEVER Openweight Champion competed in my favorite match of the week. He defended that title against his rival, Tomoaki Honma. The quality of the matches between these two is possibly unmatched right now. They never have a bad match and I've given all of the ones I've seen, which is about five, more than four stars. This was another. It wasn't on the level of their G1 match that Honma won, but was among their better outings. Honma put up one hell of a fight and had the crowd firmly believing in him. Alas, Ishii was able to retain and will be the champion heading into Wrestle Kingdom 10 on January 4th in the Toyko Dome. No word on who his opponent will end up being. I just hope it isn't Togi Makabe again.

5) Matt Sydal and Ricochet: New Japan Pro Wrestling's Jr. Tag Team division is incredibly stale. So I appreciated seeing Matt Sydal and Ricochet team up to participate in the Super Jr. tournament. I'm not the biggest fan of either guy, but they are both pretty good. I really love Ricochet as Prince Puma though, he just fits the Lucha Underground style so well. Anyway, Sydal and Ricochet made it to the finals of the tournament against Roppongi Vice at Power Struggle. They pulled out a match that was very good and won the entire tournament. Usually, the winners get a title shot. Unfortunately though, their title shot will be shared with the Young Bucks and Roppongi Vice at the Tokyo Dome.

Saturday, November 7, 2015

NJPW Power Struggle Review

NJPW Power Struggle
November 7th, 2015 | Osaka Prefectural Gym in Osaka, Japan | Attendance: 5,128


This morning, the last big New Japan show before their biggest show, Wrestle Kingdom, aired. Power Struggle was headlined by an Intercontinental Title match, while also featuring a NEVER Title match and the finals of the Super Jr. Tag Team Tournament.

Jushin Thunder Liger, Mascara Dorada, Ryusuke Taguchi and Tiger Mask IV def. David Finlay, Jay White, Sho Tanaka and Yohei Komatsu in 7:46
Lately, the Young Lions have certainly been a highlight of New Japan shows, opening things with some really solid matches. This was more basic than those. It was a step below their usual work though I’m not exactly sure why. It just seemed to be missing something. It was acceptable stuff but very skippable. I felt like the finish was rather abrupt. The most important piece of information from this was that it seemed like Jushin Thunder Liger challenged Tiger Mask for the NWA Junior Heavyweight Title and it seemingly was accepted. **½

Cody Hall, Doc Gallows and Tama Tonga def. Captain New Japan, Juice Robinson and Togi Makabe in 7:53
This might have been the most random of six man tags I’ve seen in New Japan, and I’ve seen some random ones. Togi Makabe, Juice Robinson and Capt. New Japan are just strange bedfellows for sure. Despite this being weird, the work in the match was pretty good. Juice still seems to be trying to find his groove and seemingly got hurt during the match. He couldn’t even really put weight on his leg so maybe it was legit. Tama Tonga did well again, and he’s probably my third favorite member of the Bullet Club behind AJ and Anderson. He pinned the Captain after a double arm DDT. **½

Hirooki Goto def. EVIL via disqualification in 8:52
For those that missed it, EVIL is Watanabe, having his first match in New Japan in about two years from what I’m reading. He is now part of Los Ingobernables and has a completely revamped character. It’s actually really way over the top and comes off as campy at times. He came out in a grim reaper robe which was pretty ridiculous but not overly terrible. Goto has had a pretty good year even though he fell some after dropping the Intercontinental Title, so I was curious about how this would end. Tetsuya Naito, who hadn’t been on the current tour, came out and caused the rare New Japan disqualification. They continued the attack on Goto until Shibata ran out for the save. The DQ worked here since it’s not done often here and the match itself was pretty physical. Solid stuff here. **¾

reDRagon and the Time Splitters def. Chase Owens, Kenny Omega and the Young Bucks in 8:53
Four of the teams that didn’t make the finals of the Super Jr. Tag Team Tournament compete in an eight man tag. Now, the Bullet Club team featured four of my five least favorite performers in New Japan so I didn’t go in with confidence. They ended up doing okay with what I kind of expected from them. The Time Splitters and reDRagon are both great teams and did well, though I had to sit through the Bullet Club guys just being themselves. I don’t enjoy the Bucks, Omega overdoes the campiness and Owens is devoid of charisma. If you must see this, enjoy the face teams and that’s all. It seemed like KUSHIDA is looking for an IWGP Jr. Heavyweight Title match soon as well. **¾

Super Jr. Tag Team Tournament Finals: Matt Sydal and Ricochet def. Roppongi Vice in 16:06
I’ve voiced my opinions on the Junior divisions in New Japan but I found myself actually really enjoying this. Of all of the teams involved in the tournament, I think Roppongi Vice has had the best matches. Both teams busted out some very impressive spots. Roppongi Vice showed great chemistry while Sydal and Ricochet got to show off how athletic they are. Baretta was selling the leg, which reDRagon targeted heavily and I truly appreciate that. He didn’t magically heal or act like it, which I loved. It didn’t play into the finish or anything like that, but still. Sydal and Ricochet hit stereo shooting star presses to win. Their celebration was cut short as reDRagon and the Young Bucks appeared. This set up a four way for the Tokyo Dome, making the tournament pretty worthless. Yes, I get that the Bucks have a rematch and Roppongi Vice beat reDRagon but it came off as the usual lazy booking for the division. The match itself was still better than I expected and a lot of fun. ***¾

AJ Styles and Bad Luck Fale def. Toru Yano and YOSHI-HASHI in 9:02
Following intermission, we got this tag match between the Bullet Club and Chaos. It was here to get AJ Styles back into the mix after his recent back injury. He did more than I thought he would here and looked impressive. YOSHI-HASHI was kind of just there, while Toru Yano was his comedic self. I always enjoy him. Bad Luck Fale played the big man role about as well as he could. Styles won with Bloody Sunday followed by the Styles Clash. This was fine. ***

NEVER Openweight Championship: Tomohiro Ishii (c) def. Tomoaki Honma in 17:26
Much like the Juniors division, the NEVER division has featured a lot of matches that I’ve seen multiple times. This is another one. They faced for the vacant title back in February in a match that a lot of people called the Match of the Year. I preferred their match in the G1 Climax when HONMAMANIA ran wild. This was pretty much their other matches and that was perfectly fine. They go to war every single time out and did so here again. The crowd just absolutely loves Honma and the Osaka crowd is always hot. They completely bought into the possibility of Honma winning but it was not to be. As usual with Honma, the Kokeshi was his downfall as he missed and it led to the Ishii victory. ****¼

Hiroshi Tanahashi and Katsuyori Shibata def. Kazuchika Okada and Kazushi Sakuraba in 15:33
I really liked this tag team match. The interactions between Tanahashi and Okada were fantastic as always. What really stuck out to me though was seeing Okada and Shibata go at it. It made me want to see a match between the two at some point next year, even if it’s just in the G1. Back to the Wrestle Kingdom main event though, both guys acted like total dicks throughout, which is not something you see often. Tanahashi hit Sakuraba with the High Fly Flow and Shibata finished it off with the GTS. After the match, Okada and Tanahashi came face to face and Okada kicked away the G1 briefcase. This led to a pull apart brawl that was cool to see. Okada used the briefcase as a weapon and this came off rather well. ***¾ 

IWGP Intercontinental Championship: Shinsuke Nakamura (c) def. Karl Anderson in 21:37
These two had a really solid match in the G1 Climax and I expected this to be about as good as that. Instead, it proved to be an improvement. I’m not always a fan of matches that feature Bullet Club interference but I think it worked well here. It wasn’t overdone and really only used to give Anderson the upper hand. Nakamura made his rally and they ended up going back and forth with some big time counters, including a second rope Gun Stun. Props to Anderson, who not only did a good job in his performance but he also didn’t outshine Nakamura, knowing that he had to come off as the bigger star. Nakamura won with what I believe was his second Boma Ye. Post match, AJ Styles got in Nakamura’s face. The crowd’s reaction to this was pretty great and it seems like we’re getting Styles/Nakamura at Wrestle Kingdom, which is the match I want more than any other right now. ****

Overall: 8/10. A very good show from New Japan here. I wasn’t excited about the card but it over delivered. The first half of the show is decent but once it reached the Jr. Tag Title Finals, it kicked into another gear and everything after that was between good and great. The two title matches were the best of the night, while the Okada/Tanahashi tag and tournament finals were damn good

Random Match Reviews: Eddie Guerrero vs. Edge

Show: Smackdown
Date: 9/26/02
Location: San Diego, California

Edge and Eddie Guerrero are two of the best that I've ever seen and this era in 2002 was filled with fantastic matches from the "Smackdown Six". They had good matches at SummerSlam and Unforgiven but hadn't reached "great" status in their rivalry. That all changed here. Given a no disqualifications stipulation to close out the feud, these two put on a fucking classic. I love that it wasn't overly brutal for a no DQ match. They use two ladders and a chair and those don't come into play for a while. They build to it and using the ladders considering Edge's past with them was great. While they don't go into the big bumps until the end, they all were massive. From Edge's fall onto the ladder after an uppercut (which he later said did a real number on him), to the sunset flip bomb to the super Edgecution and everything in between, it was all brutal. A fantastic match and one of the best TV matches I can think of.

Match Time: 16:42 ****½ 

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Top Ten Thursday: Survivor Series Elimination Matches

Starting today, I will be bringing you a weekly top ten list based on various different topics. These will be personal top ten lists and not at all what some would call "definitive". If you disagree and have your own lists, please share in the comments section. Down the line, I will be taking requests as well. For starters, with the Survivor Series coming up, I'm going with the ten best traditional Survivor Series matches in the history of the PPV. That would mean that matches like the one from this past Monday on Raw is excluded.

10. The Bodydonnas vs. The Underdogs - 1995

Kicking things off is a match that is honestly overlooked. On a really good Survivor Series event, the show opened with a match that severely lacked star power. On the Bodydonnas team, you had Skip, Zip, Rad freaking Radford and the recently heel turned 1-2-3 Kid, while the Underdogs consisted of Marty Jannetty, Hakushi, Barry Horowitz and Bob Holly. That's not exactly a recipe for a great match. However, they managed to do their best to wow the audience and busted out some pretty impressive high flying moves. The highlight being a top rope powerbomb spot that honestly made me jump out of my seat. Considering the guys involved, it was obvious that the Kid would be the survivor in the end, but that didn't take away from my enjoyment. This is worth a look as a fun way to spend about 20 minutes.

9. The Dream Team vs. The Million Dollar Team - 1990

Not only was this a really good traditional Survivor Series match, but it also happens to be one of the most historic. Ted Dibiase's Million Dollar Team featured himself, Rhythm and Blues and a mystery partner that turned out to be the debuting Undertaker. Having him in this match made it more special because right from the start, he had a presence about him that was unmatched. You could see the reactions of some of the speechless audience members, while Undertaker was nailing each and every mannerism that he had to. The Dream Team was captained by Dusty Rhodes and featured the Hart Foundation and Koko B. Ware. Koko was eliminated quickly by the Undertaker, showing his dominance. Undertaker was gone via countout while attacking Dusty which protected him. The real gem of this match is the final few minutes when it comes down to Bret Hart and Ted Dibiase. Their exchange is pretty fantastic and was my favorite part of the entire Pay-Per-View in 1990.

8. Team Michaels vs. Team Yokozuna - 1995

We go back to 1995 for a match concept that was only executed one time. This was a "Wild Card" match, which meant that the faces and heels were mixed up. Shawn Michaels was partnered with Ahmed Johnson, British Bulldog and Sycho Sid with the latter two being heels. On Team Yokozuna, he had his partner Owen Hart, Dean Douglas and Razor Ramon, who was a face. That certainly made for an intriguing dynamic that we don't see often. Guys that were in feuds, like Razor and Dean, were on teams. It came into play when Dean got eliminated and something similar went down between Michaels and Sid. Sid ate Sweet Chin Music by mistake and Shawn kind of just shrugged. He would be the only guy eliminated from his team as well. There was a funny moment near the end as Bulldog broke up a pin for his team, seemingly forgetting that he was with them and then just celebrated with the win anyway. This was a unique match that turned out to be highly entertaining.

7. Team Foley vs. Team Ziggler - 2012

This match changed more than a few times during the build up and it was even originally set to be Team Foley vs. Team Punk. In the end, Team Ziggler featured Dolph himself, Damien Sandow, David Otunga (replacing an injured Cody Rhodes), Alberto Del Rio and Wade Barrett, while Team Foley had Randy Orton, Miz, Kofi Kingston and Team Hell No. Despite the strange build up and changes, the guys managed to deliver a really good match. The action was fast paced and it all worked well due to their chemistry with each other. In the end, Randy Orton was the last guy remaining for his team, down 2-1. He eliminated Del Rio and it came down to him against Ziggler. Ziggler picked up a big win by pinning Orton, which was the right call since he was Mr. Money in the Bank. The match had a fair amount of talent, everything made sense and it was pretty damn good.

6. Strike Force, the Young Stallions, the Fabulous Rougeaus, the Killer Bees and the British Bulldogs vs. The Hart Foundation, the Islanders, Demolition, the Bolsheviks and the Dream Team - 1987

1987 was the year of the inaugural Survivor Series Pay-Per-View event. The night was headlined by a massive match pitting Team Hulk Hogan against Team Andre the Giant. However, it was an absurdly large 20 man tag earlier in the evening that stole the show. It says something about the state of tag team wrestling in the era that there were ten legit teams that could all compete in one huge match. These weren't just any teams either as a few of these are Hall of Fame caliber. You would expect a match with so many moving parts to be a bit of a clusterfuck but that wasn't the case here. They managed to work a crisp match that went about 37 minutes, but seemed to move along quickly. The surviving teams in the end were the Killer Bees and the Young Stallions. If there is anything that you are going to watch from the first Survivor Series, I'd suggest this (though the entire show is good).

5. Team Raw vs. Team Smackdown - 2005

Following the brand split in 2002, we would go on to see plenty of incarnations of Raw vs. Smackdown tag matches. Not all took place at the Survivor Series (some being at the short lived Bragging Rights event), but this one did and it may be my favorite. Representing Raw was Shawn Michaels, Big Show, Kane, Chris Masters and Carlito while Smackdown was led by Randy Orton, Rey Mysterio, Bobby Lashley, JBL and World Champion Batista. Similar to the Wild Card match in 1995, this allowed for heels and faces to partner up, making for some interesting moments. The match was well executed where teams like Kane and Big Show worked together, we got a face to face between Masters and Lashley and it all came down to HBK. This made sense considering Michaels had a heroic comeback like performance two years earlier being down 3-1. This wasn't on the level of that night, but it followed a similar trend where Michaels eliminated two men and was left with Orton. A distraction from the already eliminated JBL allowed Orton to hit the RKO and win it for Smackdown. The most memorable thing is the Undertaker's return after the match, which is a shame because the match was really goo.

4. British Bulldog, Owen Hart and the New Rockers vs. Doug Furnas, Phil Lafon and the Godwins - 1996

Honestly, I can't recall many people talking about this when they mention the best traditional Survivor Series matches but I love this. Survivor Series 1996 is my second favorite Survivor Series event, behind only 2002. It starts with this match that I didn't have high expectations for. Doug Furnas and Phil Lafon were good but were void of personality, while Owen Hart and the British Bulldog were great. The other four guys were definite question marks. The Godwins might have had their best performance here, Leif Cassidy played his role of starting to heel it up well and Marty Jannetty did a goo job of selling and doing his part. After their efforts, the match really gets going. Furnas and Lafon go head to head with the Tag Team Champions and come out looking like stars. They busted out moves that wowed the New York crowd and survived against the champions. It never amounted to a Tag Team Title run for them, but for one night at least, a team was put over huge in the world's most famous arena.

3. Team Authority vs. Team Cena - 2014

The stakes were very high coming into this main event match. The Survivor Series 2014 card seemed to lack and didn't have many matches booked. Part of the reasons was that the company was missing some top guys. Randy Orton, Roman Reigns and Sheamus were all on the shelf, while Bray Wyatt and Dean Ambrose had a singles match. That set up some strange teams. The Authority were led by Mr. Money in the Bank Seth Rollins, Kane, Mark Henry, the US Champion Rusev and a late addition, Luke Harper. John Cena struggled to find teammates because he's a terrible friend in kayfabe terms. However, he managed to get Big Show, Dolph Ziggler, Ryback and late addition Erick Rowan. Going in, I didn't expect the match to be great but dammit it was. This was overbooking done incredibly well. Big Show turned heel for the hundredth time and knocked out Cena, leading to him getting eliminated. Show then walked out, leaving Ziggler of all people in a three on one deficit. Ziggler channeled his inner Shawn Michaels in a heroic rally that saw him eliminate two men, leaving him with Seth Rollins. Triple H and J&J Security got involved, only for Sting to make his WWE debut and save the day. That was something I never expected to see, which made this match all the more special. Ziggler would pin Seth and vanquish the Authority...for about a month.

2. Team Austin vs. Team Bischoff - 2003

On Team Bischoff, you have Randy Orton, Chris Jericho, Christian, Scott Steiner and Mark Henry. On Team Austin, it's Shawn Michaels, Rob Van Dam, Booker T and the Dudley Boyz. Early on, this match followed the formula that we've come to expect from a traditional Survivor Series match most of the time. The guys that were getting eliminated early, (Scott Steiner, Mark Henry, Booker T and RVD) were given a chance to get in their stuff before going home. When it gets down to a three on on three match, the heels used shady tactics to send the Dudley Boyz home and leave Michaels alone. What happened next is how you expertly book the heroic comeback. Shawn takes a beating and does one of the better blade jobs I can remember. When he makes his comeback, it's not done in superhuman fashion. He doesn't just shrug off the damage and start taking people out. He hits Sweet Chin Music from out of nowhere and takes out Christian before using a fluke pin to get rid of Jericho. It's a desperate man on his last legs. The finish involves all kinds of shenanigans from Bischoff, Austin and then an appearance by Batista who ends up costing Shawn the match. The crowd was 100% into this and when Shawn finally can't get up in the end, the air is basically let out of the building. Extra props to Jim Ross and Jerry Lawler for their performance during all of this. It's all so well done and is one of the best Survivor Series matches of all-time.

1. Team WCW vs. Team WWF - 2001

Considering how the entire Invasion angle was booked, I didn't expect this to be as great as it was. Granted, the talent was there. You had The Rock, Chris Jericho, Kane, Undertaker and Big Show on Team WWF, while Team WCW had Steve Austin, Kurt Angle, Booker T, Rob Van Dam and Shane McMahon. Okay, so not everyone there is among the best workers, but they all lent something to the match that made almost every part of it feel unique. From the finisher barrage that sent Big Show home, to Undertaker and Kane being complete badasses to Jericho attacking the Rock after he was eliminated because he's selfish to Angle turning back on WCW, this had a lot of cool moments. It was tough for me to remember this fondly due to the booking before and after, but as a standalone match, it's fantastic. The final battle between Rock and Austin was great to see and was the last we'd really get until WrestleMania XIX. Team WWF would win, obviously, in a match that made 45 minutes fly by.

G1 Climax 24 Day Seven Review

G1 Climax 24 Day Seven
August 1st, 2014 | Tokyo, Japan


Man, this tournament has been phenomenal. Looking at the card, I see a match that was picked as the 2014 Match of the Year by the Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Despite my excitement for that, it looks like Hiroshi Tanahashi and Kazuchika Okada both have the night off, which is surprising considering the venue. This will be the first show that I watch using NJPW World, which I have to use on my PC. Therefore I won’t be writing the review as I watch and instead jotting down notes during it and writing up something after. Should be interesting.

Block A
Satoshi Kojima (4) vs. Shelton X Benjamin (8)

They started with a fun little back and forth. It featured both guys trying out wrestle each other, out power each other and then when they both got the upper hand, they taunted to the crowd. It was a fun game of one upping each other. Instead of doing the typical guardrail spot, Shelton back suplexed Kojima on it, which looked brutal. Shelton took on control until Satoshi busted out the big chop sequence. However, Shelton was able to cut off his big offense. They fought outside again, where Kojima hit a DDT out there. I preferred that much more to the apron DDT. It looked so much better. Back inside, Kojima hit a lariat to the back and went for another but ran into a superkick, which was cool. The finish comes from a lariat by Kojima.

Winner: Satoshi Kojima (6) in 10:11
I felt like this was a solid choice to open the show. The crowd was really hot, which would be the trend for the show. Their back and forth was fun throughout. My biggest gripe was that the finish kind of came out of nowhere and felt a bit anti-climactic. ***¼

Block B
Lance Archer (4) vs. Toru Yano (6)

Right from the start, Toru Yano and his trademark antics were in full effect. He ran around the ring and Archer gave chase, but it backfired on the big man and he was nearly counted out. Yano’s exposed buckle spot actually led to both guys getting hit by it. Archer stole Yano’s “RVD” taunt and the crowd was so into everything that they even chanted “LANCE AR-CHER” with it. Yano did his best Eddie Guerrero when he threw a chair to Archer to make it seem like he was going to cheat. It fails when Archer punched it into his face and hit his finisher.

Winner: Lance Archer (6) in 4:38
They kept this short, which really helped it. It was the usual Toru Yano fun and nothing more. Enjoyable but not what I would consider a top notch match. It was as good as I expected.**¼

Block B
Karl Anderson (4) vs. Yujiro Takahashi (4)

With both guys being in the Bullet Club, they “too sweet” each other. After an exchange, they go for it again but Takahashi heels it up by getting in a cheap shot. He wants another one but this time it was Anderson who got in a cheap shot. Fun stuff. The fans got behind Anderson partially because he’s really good, but probably also because Takahashi hasn’t been. They ended up in the corner and had a decent series of counters before Anderson ended up winning with the Gun Stun.

Winner: Karl Anderson (6) in 7:45
Decent little match here. It wasn’t as fun as the Yano fun, but still had its moments. Despite the match not being great, I got hints that there is a potentially good face somewhere in Karl Anderson. **½

Block A
Davey Boy Smith (4) vs. Doc Gallows (4)

IT’S DAVID HART SMITH VS. LUKE GALLOWS! Lots of matchups featuring people close to or tied in points. Throughout this tournament so far, Davey Boy Smith has been consistently solid while Doc Gallows has been consistently one of the lesser performers so far. They tried to battle power before Smith busted out an excellent stalling vertical suplex, complete with a flex. That is impressive considering the size of Gallows. When Gallows took over, it moved to a slower pace. The Gallows Pole only earned Doc a two count, before Smith picked up the win with the Sharpshooter.

Winner: Davey Boy Smith (6) in 10:08
As I noted, this was a slow paced match so it wasn’t very excited. It was smartly worked though, as they played into the strength of both guys. Gallows was allowed to be in control until Smith picked up the win. I do think it was cool to win with the Sharpshooter too. **½

Block B
Hirooki Goto (6) vs. Hiroyoshi Tenzan (4)

While he hasn’t been bad, I don’t think Hiroyoshi Tenzan has been great outside of the AJ Styles match. This started with just both guys hitting each other hard as they built towards the bigger offense. Tenzan nailed his wheel kick, which looked better than it would in 2015, but still came off weak. It wasn’t Viscera bad but it wasn’t very impressive. As they moved into countering each other, the fans get more into this. In a cool moment, Goto knocked him down and tried to pick him up but he was dead weight. Instead of continuing to try and lift him, Goto tried to pin him, which, while it didn’t work, I thought it was smart. They moved into a fun finishing sequence that surprised me when Tenzan won with the Anaconda Vice.

Winner: Hiroyoshi Tenzan (6) in 11:46
Best match of the night so far. Hiroyoshi Tenzan shut me up and went out and had another really good match. Their counters were well done, the action was hard hitting and they worked to have the crowd way into it. A thoroughly enjoyable match. ***¾

Block A
Bad Luck Fale (6) vs. Tomoaki Honma (0)

As usual, the fans were MOLTEN hot for Tomoaki Honma. This pairing worked well because Bad Lucky Fale got to be his destructive self and Tomoaki Honma had to make the comeback, which played into his strength. At one point, Honma knocked Fale outside and did his headbutt to a standing Fale, which was pretty great. The crowd pretty much bit on every single thing that Honma did, including each near fall. Honma even kicked out of the grenade, which gave the crowd hope, but he fell to the Bad Luck Fall.

Winner: Bad Luck Fale (8) in 6:40
The heat during this match was fantastic and, despite only going under seven minutes, it was damn good. They did a lot in the time and having the crowd be ungodly hot for Tomoaki Honma added to this. Their styles worked very well together. This is one of those matches that was short but didn’t need more time. ***½

Block B
Tetsuya Naito (8) vs. Togi Makabe (4)

I feel like this was an interesting matchup. You had the speed game of Tetsuya Naito against the vicious style of Togi Makabe. After a brief back and forth to start, this turned into Makabe taking control. He just pounded away on Naito, not allowing him to go into the high octane offense that he’s known for. He had Naito well scouted, countering some of his signature moves during his rallies. His corner dropkick and rebound attack were both stopped by Makabe, which I appreciated. Naito was resilient throughout, even trying to fight off the spider suplex. However, Makabe smashed his face into the ring post, which gave a sickening sound. The suplex and knee drop finished Naito off.

Winner: Togi Makabe (6) in 12:02
Honestly, I didn’t expect this to be as good as it ended up being. I wasn’t sure if they would click but they really did. Babyface Naito was so good at being resilient, but I think it would have worked a bit better if the crowd was more into him. They seemed to be behind Togi for the most part, making his comeback attempts kind of fall flat. Still, great work from both guys. ****

Block B
AJ Styles (6) vs. Minoru Suzuki (6)

Going into this, I had high expectations due to the high praise I had heard for this. They started with a face to face stare down that was pretty awesome in itself. They got right into it with AJ hitting his signature dropkick quickly. When they fought outside, I expected the typical guardrail spot, but instead, AJ leapt over and came back with his springboard punch which I appreciate. Suzuki, being the bad dude that he is, took the fight to the crowd and applied an armbar in a chair on AJ. The work he continually does throughout this match on the arm is fantastic and brutal in the best kind of way. When we got a ref bump, I was weary, especially when Taka Michinoku ran in. A few members of the Bullet Club and Suzuki Gun ran in, but they fought to the back, keeping that short. Suzuki is such a badass, that even when he takes AJ’s finger and works it, it looks vicious. Towards the end, they have a fantastic series of counters and strikes. During the strike battle, AJ more than holds his own despite only using his left hand. That is the kind of selling I wanted to see. The match comes to an end after a second Styles Clash.

Winner: AJ Styles (8) in 16:20
This is now officially my favorite match of the tournament. Everything about this was so good. Yea, there was interference but this was a match featuring the two leaders of two heel stables so it playing a factor made sense and at least it was kept short. The arm work is smart, brutal and they go back to it, with AJ’s selling being top notch. This is just fantastic, top notch pro wrestling. ****¾

Block A
Katsuyori Shibata (8) vs. Yuji Nagata (4)

Both of these guys have been having really good matches and Shibata has been one of my favorite people to watch during this entire thing. As you would expect, this was hard hitting from both guys. They fought outside and did the countout tease, but put a twist on it that other matches didn’t do. They traded massive shots outside until 19 and both barely got back in. Despite his age, Nagata laid into Shibata as hard as he got hit, making for some absolutely brutal exchanges. When Nagata applies the armbar, Shibata broke out and sold the effects well. They ended up in an exchange where Shibata just pounded on Nagata with a bunch of shots, but once Nagata hit him back, he fell instantly. Nagata would pull it out after two back suplexes.

Winner: Yuji Nagata (6) in 13:31
This show just continued to deliver. This was two hard hitting dudes just beating the hell out of each other. It was stiff and violent in the best possible way. Nagata playing the old man who doesn’t back down is great. Another fantastic performance from both guys. ****¼ 

Block A
Shinsuke Nakamura (8) vs. Tomohiro Ishii (6)

They went into a fun exchange early on the in match. When Nakamura gave a clean break, he offered a handshake but ate a slap instead. Both men missed their finishers early and had a bit of a stare down. Nakamura took control and kind of toyed with Ishii, which is obviously a mistake. When Ishii fired back at him, he hit him so hard that Nakamura was coughing like he had the flu. Nakamura went for the Boma Ye a while after but Ishii was ready and stopped it with a dropkick. The near falls that Ishii picked up were all heavily bought into by the fans, including one on a huge lariat. He had one lariat countered into an armbar, which was cool. The finish came when they went into a string of vicious strikes before Nakamura hit Boma Ye, only for Ishii to kick out at 1. That got a huge pop. Nakamura hit another one that ended things.

Winner: Shinsuke Nakamura (10) in 15:14
Another great match on this show, this one fitting as a main event. The hard hitting strikes, the counters, the near falls and the atmosphere all made this a great match. Both guys have consistently been delivering in the tournament and did so again here. Nakamura wins another one and is probably in contention for the MVP of the tournament so far. ****¼ 

Overall: 9/10. The first half of this show was solid but had nothing to go out of you way and see. The second half changed things completely. Everything after intermission was a blast as even the lowest post intermission score went to a really fun, short match. The fact that this show was as excellent as it was without two of the top stars in the company on it is a testament to the talent level in NJPW. There are four must see matches on this show, including the match of the tournament so far. Amazing show.

Block A Standings
Shinsuke Nakamura 10
Katsuyori Shibata 8
Shelton X Benjamin 8
Hiroshi Tanahashi 8
Bad Luck Fale 8
Tomohiro Ishii 6
Satoshi Kojima 6
Yuji Nagata 6
Davey Boy Smith Jr. 6
Doc Gallows 4
Tomoaki Honma 0

Block B Standings
Tetsuya Naito 8
Kazuchika Okada 8
AJ Styles 8
Minoru Suzuki 6
Hiroyoshi Tenzan 6
Hirooki Goto 6
Togi Makabe 6
Lance Archer 6
Toru Yano 6
Karl Anderson 6
Yujiro Takahashi 4