Category: Daily Updates

  • Note on Roddy Piper’s Memorial service in Los Angeles on Monday

    Private Roddy Piper Memorial at The World Famous Comedy Store in Hollywood,
    Planned for August 17, 2015

    A private memorial is in the works for beloved pro wrestler, actor and comedian “Rowdy” Roddy
    Piper who passed away last week at his home in Hollywood, California. Set to take place
    Monday, August 17th at The Comedy Store, this private memorial will include friends from all
    facets of Roddy Piper’s life and career which ran the gamut of wrestling, acting, stand up
    comedy, live and broadcast TV, film and numerous business and charitable ventures. His
    closest friends/colleagues in L.A. will share stories and experiences about Roddy over the
    years.

    The service will be private.  Anyone from the pro wrestling or MMA world wishing to attend should contact Rick Bassman and Rick@RickBassman.com

    Organizer and Roddy Piper friend, comic Steve Simeone said of the event “The Comedy Store
    is the adopted home of so many ‘comic orphans’ and Roddy became like a dad or big brother to
    all of us. He became family. I wanted to have a get together where we could get up and share
    our favorite stories about this incredible man who we all love and will miss greatly. This is a
    night for Roddy’s friends to celebrate what a great friend he was to all of us.”

    Roddy Piper’s daughter, actress Ariel Teal Toombs had this to say about the memorial, “I know
    a lot of people wanting something like this in L.A., especially because the funeral will be up in
    Oregon and a lot of folks won’t be able to make that trip. It means a lot that Steve and the
    Comedy Store family are putting this together.”

    Memorial co-organizer, Pro Wrestling and Mixed Martial Arts agent, producer and longtime friend of Piper, Rick Bassman commented, “Roddy’s sudden death has hit all in the Pro Wrestling and MMA worlds pretty hard. I’m very grateful that the Comedy Store is doing this and we intend to see that Roddy is remembered in a way that would make him proud.”

    Also helping to organize this send off is Mitch Ackerman, Roddy’s best friend who remarked, “I
    appreciate all the love and support from all the friends and fans of Roddy’s. Other than Madison
    Square Garden I don’t think there is a more appropriate place to have this memorial than at the
    Comedy Store ”

    The Toombs family also wants the worldwide public who can’t attend his private funeral or
    memorial to know that a moment of silence is planned August 11th at 10 am PST. Details here:
    http://j.mp/RoddyPiper_MomentOfSilence

  • WWE News: Notes for tonight’s Raw – Bryan appears plus trios match

    For tonight’s show, there will be a Miz TV segment with Daniel Bryan, plus the Bellas & Alicia Fox vs. Team BAD of Sasha Banks & Naomi & Tamina Snuka have been announced.

  • MON UPDATE: Piper magazine, Cyborg, ROH, Paige on Rousey, Tough Enough, Raw

    By Dave Meltzer

    We’re looking for your thoughts on yesterday’s TripleMania show, as well as Saturday and Sunday’s G-1 shows, so you can leave a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to Dave Meltzerdave@wrestlingobserver.com”>

    We’re also looking for live reports from Raw in Everett, WA tonight with dark matches, Superstars matches and anything else not evident on the live show to Dave Meltzerdave@wrestlingobserver.com”>, as well as for tomorrow night’s tapings in Portland, OR.

    We’re also looking for reports on the WWE shows over the weekend in Sydney, Australia and Victoria, BC, today’s show in Vancouver, and the NXT shows in Starke, FL on Thursday ad Orlando on Friday.

    G-1 Climax on Tuesday morning at 5:30 a.m. Eastern from Tokyo Korakuen Hall on New Japan World

    Jay White & Mascara Dorada vs. Cody Hall & Yujiro Takahashi

    Kushida & Captain New Japan vs. Karl Anderson & Tama Tonga

    Hirooki Goto & Yohei Komatsu vs. Michael Elgin & David Finlay

    Satoshi Kojima & Yuji Nagata & Tomoaki Honma & Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Shinsuke Nakamura & Kazuchika Okada & Tomohiro Ishii & Yoshi-Hashi

    Tetsuya Naito vs. Doc Gallows

    Hiroyoshi Tenzan vs. Katsuyori Shibata

    Kota Ibushi vs. Toru Yano

    A.J. Styles vs. Bad Luck Fale

    Hiroshi Tanahashi vs Togi Makabe

    Smackdown will be Tuesday night in Portland, OR.

    G-1 Climax on Wednesday morning at 5:30 a.m. Eastern from Tokyo Korakuen Hall on New Japan World 

    Tiger Mask & David Finlay & Jay White vs. Ryusuke Taguchi & Yohei Komatsu & Sho Tanaka

    Toru Yano & Yoshi-Hashi vs. Bad Luck Fale & Tama Tonga

    Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Togi Makabe & Kushida vs. Tetsuya Naito & Kota Ibushi & Mascara Dorada

    Hiroshi Tanahashi & Katsuyori Shibata & Captain New Japan vs. A.J. Styles & Doc Gallows & Cody Hall

    Karl Anderson vs. Yujiro Takahashi

    Michael Elgin vs. Hirooki Goto

    Satoshi Kojima vs. Shinsuke Nakamura

    Kazuchika Okada vs. Yuji Nagata

    Tomohiro Ishii vs. Tomoaki Honma

    The life and times of Roddy Piper is the lead story in the new issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter.  We also have coverage of WWE financials and why the stock is going through the roof, the rise of Ronda Rousey and UFC 190 numbers, the G-1 Climax tournament update and the full story behind the 2002 pitch made to WWE about a gay asskicking wrestler.  

    The latest Wrestling Observer: August 10, 2015 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Roddy Piper passes away, WWE Q2 results & analysis

    Web site subscriptions, which include access to both current and older newsletters as well as every audio show in the history of the site are at  Sign up here for as low as $9.99 per month!

    You can also order the print Observer right now and get it delivered to your door via mail, by sending your name, address, Visa or Master Card number and an expiration date to Dave Meltzer

    You can also order at PayPal.com directing funds to  dave@wrestlingobserver.com

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    For the United States, it is $13 for 4 issues, $32 for 12, $61 for 24, $101 for 40 and $131 for 52. In Canada and Mexico, rates are $14.50 for 4, $35 for 12, $67 for 24, $111 for 40 and $144 or 52.  In Europe, you can get the fastest delivery and best rates by sending to moonsault@mediaplusint.com  For the rest of the world, rates are $16.50 for 4, $44 for 12, $85 for 24, $141 for 40 issues and $183 for 52.

    If you order by mail with a check, cash or money order (P.O. Box 1228, Campbell, CA 95009-1228), you can get $1 off in every price range.

    The Wrestling Observer ranges weekly from 35,000 to 50,000 words covering pro wrestling and MMA internationally. Each issue has coverage and analysis of all the major news, plus every issue breaks major news stories before the Internet sties and has the most complete look at the pro wrestling and MMA business anywhere, plus history pieces available nowhere else.

    Our lead story is an extensive look at the career of Roddy Piper.  We start by looking at the cause of death, and Piper’s role in the national expansion of WWF and the first WrestleMania.  We look at how Piper differed from almost every wrestler in WWF when he came in, why Piper didn’t work certain shows, Piper working outside WWF while under contract, how he flopped in his first WWF run, his runs in California, Oregon, Georgia and the Carolinas before WWF, the feud with Jimmy Snuka, the Hogan-Piper program, The War to Settle the Score, the original WrestleMania and how it changed the history of wrestling, his period in WCW, his relationship with Mad Dog Vachon, his issues with Kevin Nash, how he got started in pro wrestling, the story behind his babyface turns and the loss at WrestleMania to Bret Hart.

    We also look at WWE business, why stock is up, what aspect of business looked deceptively good, a look in depth at the network numbers, how many people dropped and picked up subscriptions this past quarter as well as how all the other aspects of WWE business are doing.

    We look at UFC 190 and the storyline that led to Ronda Rousey setting her highest PPV mark.  We look at how things have changed for Rousey since February, the interest level of her fight,  Rousey vs. Cyborg, ratings in Brazil and the U.S. and match-by-match coverage.

    We also go in-depth on the G-1 Climax tournament with the updated schedule, standings and match-by-match coverage.

    We also have an update on John Cena, more on the injury and surgery, Cena actually going to a show this weekend but fans didn’t see him, Shawn Michaels return, will fans respect Cena more, update on the SummerSlam card and matches being built, Cena vs. Rollins future, WrestleMania note, note on Daniel Bryan’s book, Update on Ryback, Update on a 2002 angle proposed for a gay wrestler and funny story behind it, Bryan’s plan for the IC title, more on womens’ division, Eva Marie note, Tough Enough notes, Ultimate Warrior book, Cesaro section notes, WWE lawsuit notes, Pat Patterson book, sister of current WWE star gets a tryout and Owen Hart DVD news.  We also have coverage of the NXT and WWE shows over the weekend and business notes on the shows. 

    The Observer is the world’s most detailed weekly pro wrestling publication, in its 32nd year of publication, and is read by the biggest names in the pro wrestling, industry, MMA industry, sports world and on Wall Street.

    We also have our regular features such as the most complete look at ratings, plus results of the major house show events each week in pro wrestling and MMA, and complete inside rundowns of all the TV shows.

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    Click here for the most requested Wrestling Observer back issues.

    MONDAY’S NEWS UPDATE

    • Bryan and I will be back tonight covering Raw, the fallout from AAA, as well as taking your e-mail questions to mailbag@wrestlingobserver.com
    • The Wednesday morning G-1 show looks to be the best lineup (check the schedule part of the report) of the B block to date.  Ishii vs. Honma is a rematch of one of the year’s best matches, and Goto vs. Elgin could be a sleeper given Elgin’s impressive showing to date.  Okada vs. Nagata and Nakamura vs. Kojima are also both strong matchups.
    • WWE is releasing a Roddy Piper commemorative magazine on 8/31 with an introduction by HHH, photos of matches and old Piper’s Pits and tributes from various wrestlers.
    • George Lockhart, the nutritionist for Cris Cyborg, said today on the MMA Hour that she could make 135 pounds on 12/5.  It’s at www.mmafighting.com  I’m also on the show as the first guest talking December 5 and UFC’s potential big winter season.
    • As noted earlier, Ryback is in Everett, WA.  Whether he’s actually on Raw or not, we don’t know but one would think given there are just two weeks before SummerSlam that he will be.  Dolph Ziggler’s return is imminent.  He was at the house show in Vancouver last night and is scheduled for Raw next week in Minneapolis.
    • ROH announced for the 8/22 show in Brooklyn a match with Rocky Romero & Baretta & Matt Taven & Michael Bennett vs. ACH & Matt Sydal & Young Bucks.  
    • Paige talks Ronda Rousey, WrestleMania and her effect on pro wrestling 
    • John Cena and the NXT roster will be appearing on Tough Enough.  As noted before, during the week, they taped the Tough Enough crew doing matches in the gym with NXT talent as the audience. 
    • The advertised dark match for tonight is Randy Orton & Roman Reigns & Dean Ambrose vs. Seth Rollins & Big Show & Bray Wyatt.  Show replaced Sheamus, so at the time the new advertising was done they didn’t expect Sheamus would be able to wrestle tonight.  With concussions, there is no way of knowing when someone will be ready. 
    • Stephen Amell from the TV show “Arrow” is on tonight’s show, presumably doing an angle with Stardust.
    • Amir Khan, the well known boxer, was announced as part of the new ownership and management group for the Super Fight League promotion, which is looking to expand onto television in the U.S.  It has produced 41 live events, mostly in India, and was formed for television in India, including five in the U.S.  Announced with Khan as part of the management group is Bill Dosanjh as CEO, George Chung as Digital Media Executive and Brian Halquist, a Seattle based MMA promoter.  A show in the U.S. is expected to be announced soon.
    • Trainwreck, its first weekend with a full nationwide release (it had preview screenings before in some cities) was No. 1 at the box office in Australia. (thanks to James Stanios)
    • Sasha Banks will be a guest this week on Talk is Jericho that drops on Wednesday.
    • Paul London will be doing seminars on 8/13 at the PWX Wrestleplex in McKeesport, PA at 7:30 p.m., and on 8/15 in Strongsville, OH at Wrestling Geekfest at 9 a.m. at the Holiday Inn Strongsville.  Cost for each is $35.  For any questions, you can send to JoeDombrowskiPR@gmail.com
    • 2K 16 had the following new characters announced for its video game:  Booker T, Col. Mustafa, Emma, Eva Marie, Gen. Adnan, Kalisto, Kane, Lord Steven Regal of WCW, Sin Cara, Summer Rae, Tamina Snuka, HHH, Steve Austin, Seth Rollins, Daniel Bryan, Dean Ambrose, Bad News Barrett, Paige, Finn Balor, Alexa Bliss, The Rock and Andre the Giant.
    • Invicta has announced a show on UFC Fight Pass on 9/12 from the Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City headlined by Tonya Evinger defending the bantamweight title against Pannie Kianzad. 
    • Tier One Wrestling on 10/2 in Queens, NY at the R Studios at 100-17 Atlantic Avenue.
    • Championship Wrestling Entertainment on 8/14 in Port St. Lucie, FL at the Civic Center with Santana Garrett & Su Yung vs. Grace Storm & MJ Night.
    • Nova Pro Wrestling on 8/15 in Orlando at the Northwest Community Center featuring an appearance by Larry Zbyszko, a Battle Royal and an NWA women’s title defense of Santana Garrett.
    • I Believe in Wrestling on 8/22 in Orlando.
    • Pro Wrestling alliance on 8/22 in Port Richey, FL at the Jewish Community Center.
    • Full Impact Pro iPPV from Friday night in Ybor City, FL: Tyranus & Chico Adams & Wayne VanDyke b Josh Parker & Russell Payne & Dustin Dirk, Mark Silva b Arik Royal, Nuclear Kassarole b Flying Solow, Gary Jay b Zane Riley, Bolt Brady b Earl Cooter, Maxwell Chicago b Jonny Vandal to keep Florida Heritage title, Martin Stone b Blake Edward Belakus, Deimos b Josh Hess, Monster Tarver (Michael Tarver) b Rhett Giddins, Hooligans b The Savage to win FIP tag titles, Caleb Konley b Trevor Lee to keep FIP title,
    • Coastal Championship Wrestling from Saturday night in Coral Springs, FL:  Jesus DeLeon b Senior Entertainment, Ace Mayhem b Byronic Hero, Kahagas & Rico Casanova b Pablo Marques & Lanny Poffo, Santana Garrett b Tammy Lynn to keep NWA womens’ title, Dan Embry b Craig Classic, Headbanger Mosh b Kiny Tony, Stefan Guadaluupe won Battle Royal (thanks to Al Haft).
    • Kayfabe Dojo Wrestling from Saturday night in Rochester, NY:  Ryan Cassidy b Cloudy, Victor Lord b Terrell Kenneth, Ron Falco & Bobby Dipinto b Vanguard 2.-DQ, Jason Savior b Charlie Locke, Rob Sweet b Jet Rebel, Mattick b Miliman, Coleman Jackson b Cheech, Gabreal Saint NC Coconut Jones, Interstate Mayhem b Eric Rosecroft & Steve Gage, Frank Burlington b Rik Matrix, Michael McKinger won over Vince Valor, LaDiva, Michael Templar, Professor Wessler, Frankie Feathers and Krist Worthless, Hellcat b Eric Young (thanks to Todd Brantley)
    • The NWAClassics.com web site has released a number of new matches of late, including Andre the Giant vs. Stan Stasiak from the 70s.  Other new Houston matches they’ve posted include a Lou Thesz vs. Wild Bill Longson NWA title match, Killer Tim Brooks & Vida Negra vs. Tiger Conway Jr. & Bella Karina, Mark Lewin vs. Gary Hart in a paint match, a six-man tag match from the 50s with Duke Keomuka and Ray Gunkel, Tim Horner vs Rip Oliver, Jose Lothario & Terry Taylor vs. Chavo & Hector Guerrero, Billy Jack Haynes vs. Kamala, King Parsons vs. Jack Victory and Ernie Ladd vs. Brad Armstrong.
    • Southern Illinois Championship Wrestling on 8/22 in East Carondelet, IL featuring Flash Flanagan vs. Tokyo Monster Kahagas.
    • Greg Valentine is doing a Roddy Piper Memorial dog collar match with Phil Monahan on 8/22 for the CIW promotion in Jackson, MI.  This is billed in honor of the series of dog collar matches that Piper had with Valentine in late 1983, the most famous being at the first Starrcade show.
    • CaraLucha from Saturday night at Arena San Juan Pantitlan:  Jimmy Madrid & Principe Aereo b Imperio Negro & Ying Sang, Keira & Ludark Shaitan b Felina Metalca & Krazy Star, Los Magnificos I & II b Rayo Star & Sky Man, Akuma & Demus 3:16 b Kilvan & Yoruba, Polvora won three-way over Jinzo and Toxin Boy, Barbaro Cavernario & Rey Hechichero & Ultimo Guerrero DDQ Halloween & Damian 666 & Bestia 666 (thanks to Kris Zellner)
    • New Era Wrestling from Friday night in El Paso before 300 fans:  Piranita & The American b Minotauro & Super Can, Aydan Colt & Pierre Montero b Sub Zero & Zodiaco, Ultimo Samuray b  Metro, Rey Largarto & Triano b El Hijo del Impostor & Dragon.  Next show is 8/21 (thanks to Albert Cerda)

    ON THIS DAY IN PRO WRESTLING HISTORY INTERNATIONAL (thanks to Graeme Cameron)

    1982 – Devil Masami & Tarantula beat Yukari Omori & Mimi Hagiwara in Fukushima to win the WWWA tag titles and Noriyo Tateno beat Chigusa Nagayo to win the Japanese jr. title

    1986 – Villano I beat Fishman in Acapulco to win the UWA light heavyweight title

    1989 – Vader beat Riki Choshu in Tokyo to win the IWGP heavyweight title and Naoki Sano beat Jushin Liger to win the IWGP jr. title

    1997 – Kensuke Sasaki & Kazuo Yamazaki beat Manabu Nakanishi & Satoshi Kojima in Nagoya to win the IWGP tag titles and Shinjiro Otani beat El Samurai to win the J Crown

    1999 – Arkangel de la Muerte beat Super Delfin in Kawasaki to win the CMLL welterweight title

    2003 – Hulk Ogan (Naoya Ogawa pretending to be Hogan) beat The Predator (Sylvester Terkay) in Nagoya to win the Zero-One U.S. title

    2014 – Kazuchika Okada beat Shinsuke Nakamura at the Seibu Dome to win the G-1 Climax tournament

  • On this day in pro wrestling history (August 10): Vader wins IWGP title, Hogan wins WCW title, Luger wins U.S. title

    By Brian Hoops

    1939 – At Memorial Hall in Kansas City; World Junior Heavyweight Champion Steve Brody beat Prospector Pete 

    1944 – In Kansas City; Kansas; The Black Faced Panther beat Jimmy Coffield in 2 out of 3 falls and Orville Brown defeated Jack Hader 1 fall to 0.  

    1963 – In St. Paul, Minnesota at Midway Stadium; AWA Champion Verne Gagne beat Larry Hennig in a fence (cage) match. Also, The Crusher beat Haystack Calhoun in 2 out of 3 falls, AWA Tag Team Champions Ivan Kalmikoff & Karol Kalmikoff beat Butch Levy & Don McClarty, Eddie Sharkey beat Gene Anderson and Iron Mike DiBiase beat Stan Kowalski. Attendance was 6,064

    1968 – In Chicago, Illinois; Dr X beat Wilbur Snyder, The Crusher beat Mad Dog Vachon, Bill Watts beat Harley Race and Blackjack Lanza beat Dutch Savage

    1972 – In Kansas City, Kansas; Steve Bolus & Les Thornton defeated Omar Atlas & Bobby Whitlock, The Viking vs. Jim Preacher, Danny Little Bear vs. Yasu Fuji, Terry Funk vs. Harley Race and Roger Kirby & Black Angus (w/ Percival A. Friend) vs. The Stomper & Rufus R. Jones

    1972 – In Jacksonville, Florida; NWA Champion Dory Funk Jr. beat Paul Jones, Eddie & Mike Graham beat Buddy Colt & Phil Robley, 
    Ray Stevens beat Louie Tillet and Nick Bockwinkel drew Mr Wrestling Tim Woods

    1973 – In Denver, Colorado; AWA Tag Team Champions Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens beat The Crusher & Wahoo McDaniel on a 3rd fall countout. Also, Superstar Billy Graham beat Ken Patera, Red Bastien drew Ivan Koloff and Greg Gagne beat Ric Flair. Attendance was 4,501

    1976 – In Omaha, Nebraska; Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell ddq Mad Dog Vachon & Baron Von Raschke, 
    Bobby Duncum beat the Crusher, Peter Maivia beat Blackjack Lanza and Billy Red Cloud beat Buck Zumhofe

    1992 – Big Van Vader defeated Riki Choshu to win the IWGP Heavyweight Championship.

    1992 – Reno Riggins defeated Brian Christopher for the USWA Southern
    Heavyweight Title in Memphis, Tennessee.  On the same show, The Moondogs
    (Spot & Cujo) defeated Jerry Lawler & Jeff Jarrett for the USWA Tag Team
    Title,

    1996 – Hulk Hogan defeated The Giant to win the WCW World Title at the
    WCW Hog Wild PPV in Sturgis, SD. Also on the show, WCW World Tag Team Champions Harlem Heat defeated Rick & Scott Steiner, WCW United States Champion Ric Flair defeated Eddie Guerrero and Scott Hall & Kevin Nash defeated Sting & Lex Luger. 

    1997 – Shinjiro Otani defeated El Samurai in Nagoya, Japan to win the J-Crown.

    1998 – On Monday Night Raw, Kane & Mankind defeated Steve Austin &
    Undertaker, Rock & D’Lo Brown, and the New Age Outlaws to win the WWF
    World Tag Team Title.

    1998 – On Monday Nitro, Lex Luger defeated Bret Hart for the United
    States Title and Chris Jericho defeated Stevie Ray for the WCW
    Television Title.

    2003 – Christian defeated Booker T for the WWE Intercontinental Title in
    Des Moines, Iowa.

    2008 – At the TNA Hard Justice PPV; AJ Styles defeated Kurt Angle in a Last Man Standing match and Samoa Joe defeated Booker T in a 6 sides of Steel match.

  • Weekend show feedback

    Thumbs down
    Best Match : Myzteziz vs Rey Misterio Jr
    Worst Match : Villanos vs Psycho Circus

    That was my first AAA event ever, and I ordered it on a whim. Did not expect such horrendous wrestling and production hiccups. It was worth it for all the laughs I got out of it, especially on that last Myzteziz botch on the tope in the very end, and the fact that there was still action in the ring and a story being told while the credits rolled. Definitely glad I got to be a part of this, but seriously, never paying money for something like this again.
    Yuriy Bortnik

    : Thumbs Up

    : Best Match – Rey Mysterio Jr. vs. Myzteziz

    : Worst Match – Los Villanos III, IV, V vs. The Psycho Circus

    This was a last minute decision to order the PPV and I figured for $20 what the heck. Overall despite the audio problems which weren’t really that bad I still enjoyed the show. The opening two matches did nothing for me as I’ve never been a fan of mixed tag matches and the Los Villanos vs. The Psycho Circus match was dreadful. It looked like something from a kids television show with three purple Barney the dinosaurs lumbering around the ring. Everything else outside of that I liked and the Mysterio Jr. vs. Myzteziz match I thought was really good although Myzteziz timing on some moves seem off since his Sin Cara days in the WWE. The post match attack on both guys seemed pointless with Myzteziz turning heel anyways. I was entertained enough that I will give the October show a shot providing it will air in Canada.

    -Ed Ludwig

    Burnaby, BC

    AAA TripleMania 25

    thumbs down
    best Rey Mysterio Jr. vs. Myzteziz
    worst Los Villanos III & IV & V vs. The Psycho Circus (has to be the worst match in the last 10 years or so….what was that finish were they were really hitting each other. 

    wow i don’t even know what to say about that…the production was an all time low…the commentary from what you could hear of it when the sound was buzzing in and out or when they were running production test was awful they kept talking over each other all night. the last match was fine actually it was pretty good but nothing else was worth going out of your way to see. the only thing you can take pride in is the fact that you probably saw one of the all time worst ppv train wrecks. 

    g1
    thumbs up 
    best Hirooki Goto vs. Tomohiro Ishii (really good everything this week has been good. lord im done complaining about the g1 after tonight it looks like the best stuff on earth compared to the triple a show tonight.
    john juett 


    Hi guys:

    Wanted to write you about my ordering experience with TripleMania 23 tonight. That name is appropriate because if you Triple the number 23 you get the number of ways in which this was a fail for me.

    So on Friday I ordered the show in advance because being someone with a visual impairment I need someone to navigate the on-screen menus for me. I mention the visual impairment because it is kind of important later.

    Anyway, the preview show starts at 5:30 with no problem. The show starts at 6 and my friends and I are treated to the same technical issues that plagued everyone else.

    Then after the Villanos match, right as they were making preparations for the Trios title match the PPV feed cut off and we were taken back to the menu screen. We waited a few minutes to see what was happening, thinking that things with the show had just gotten worse. Well after seeing people still tweeting about the show I figured maybe it wasn’t a problem with the show so I rang up my cable company.

    Generally, I like my cable company and think they have great customer service. I even like that they charge the same amount for HD as they do for SD, so the HD feed of this show was only $19.99. Anyway, I called and told them that we were watching the show and that it had just stopped.

    Tonight, the guy was helpful but had to put me on hold several times. Once was because they couldn’t find a listing for this anywhere. Eventually, they did and decided that what they were going to do is reset my box and order the show for me again. So that’s what they did.

    When the box came back online they directed me away from channel 808 where we were watching the show to channel 807. I told them that it was showing, the guy asked if Mysterio had wrestled yet and then we ended the call. Then I realized that we were now watching the Spanish feed of the show which explained why they asked me to change the channel.

    The Spanish version of the feed was miles ahead of the English version even though my friends now were watching an SD picture. Being visually impaired, I rely on commentary for a lot of information but given the quality of the first two matches commentary wise I think I also may have been better off listening in Spanish.

    But this is where it gets really weird. I tweeted about how my cable company ordered the wrong version of the show. They replied asking for my account info which I sent via direct message. They messaged me back and said that they apologized but they had to order me the Spanish feed because according to their schedule the next English broadcast wasn’t until tomorrow morning. Keep in mind that this is during the Hair vs. Hair match.

    The happy ending is that they credited me for $15 on my account. So unless I get double charged for this show which they said they would reverse if it happened, I’m going to get it for $5. That may still be too much.

    Strange times all around.

    Casey Trowbridge
    Huron, SD.

    –Thumbs Down
    Best match: Mysterio vs Myzteziz
    Worst Match: Los Villanos vs Psycho Circus

    There is no way I can recommend the English version of this show. I don’t have anything against Matt Striker but he and Hugo were terrible, they didn’t work with each other and constantly flubbed things that should not be a problem for either of them (like Rey winning with La Mistica). I wish I could make a crack about the technical problems being an improvement but the horrible buzzing and scratching noises they produced had me changing the volume constantly. It was a struggle watching this live. As soon as it seemed they righted the ship they some screwed up worse by cutting away in the middle of the big show ending angle. They completely missed Konan’s promo at the end and came back to the show with no explanation of what was going on and why it was such a big deal. On the plus side the two main events were very good. Cage wearing a Donald Trump shirt was great heel stuff, he and Alberto put on a fun brawl. Mysterio and Myzteziz were excellent but I felt the match itself might have been too short. The undercard was unremarkable with the cage match being a total let down. Watch this show in Spanish if you must, otherwise don’t bother.
    Jack Wofford

    Thumbs down
    Best match Rey Jr vs Mysteziz
    Worst match Los Villanos vs Psyco Circus

    The rare thumbs down show that i didnt regret paying for at all. I highly enjoyed both main events especially Rey vs Mistico even if the postmatch stuff was something else. Albero vs Brian Cage was fun and I enjoyed myself and in the opening match I fell in love with Goya Kong.

    Everything else on the show was something else with the constant technical difficulties and when there werent any difficulties Matt Striker was so grating that I was wishing for more technical difficilties. The Villanos match will also go down in my book as one of the worat matches I have ever witnessed…enough so that I expect I will watch it multiple times just to see if it was really as bad as I remember it.

    Wade Haugen

    Thumbs DOWN!

    Best Match: Rey vs Myzteziz
    Worst Match: Villanos vs Psycho Circus

    I paid $19 dollars for this putrid, sorry excuse, for a PPV.  I took a chance knowing this would happen seeing as they had issues with the Trios World Cup show but I honest to God thought they would get it right this time.  Nope, I was a fool!

    Good luck ever getting another chance like this AAA because I doubt Cable companies are going to want to continue airing your PPV’s in the United States after this debacle.

    Anyone who paid for this show needs to get a refund ASAP in order to send AAA a message.

    David Penton
    San Antonio, TX

    Hey Dave,

    Overall: thumbs down show.
    Best Match; Rey vs. Myzteziz
    Worst Match; The Villanos vs. Clown posse rivals the Rosa Mendes singles match for worst match in recent memory.

    Thoughts:

    I have never been much more than a casual fan of authentic lucha libre wrestling. The only time I really watched AAA or CMLL consistently is when I first started to train to wrestle in 2003. Back then, I watched Sunday morning Lucha Libre in an attempt to learn new moves and transitions.  Needless to say, I did not have the skills needed to execute such complicated maneuvers. On many occasions I have heard other people, both wrestlers and wrestling fans, state they did not understand the psychology behind Lucha Libre. I share similar sentiments.  In other words, forgive my ethnic bias. Triplemania is Mexico’s biggest Lucha Libre Event. A lot can be said for watching an event and being able to feel the culture and vibrant energy through the television screen.  I believe this is why the World Cup and other live sporting events generate such buzz and viewership from casual fans. People want to feel the event. I wanted to get the feeling of authentic lucha libre through the viewing experience.

    Obviously, the audio difficulties were a source of frustration and distraction for the majority of the show. The multiple distractions severely hurt the experience. It is hard to judge the show based on the merits of the in ring action when everything built to enhance the presentation failed.  To make matters worse, out of befuddlement, Striker resorted to his sarcastic super smark comments.  I feel Hugo’s role was to fill in the backstory to place each event and match into a context. Without Hugo’s commentary, I was unaware of the essential relationships and stakes that make each match important.  The continuity between the camera work, live audio, timing, and commentary was off all night.  As a viewing experience, it was unique, but not in a good way. Unlike Wrestle Kingdom 9, this did not leave me wanting more or urge me to direct more attention to AAA.

    1. Drago & Goya Kong & Dinastia & Pimpinela Escarlata vs. Daga & Sexy Star & Mini Psycho Clown & Mamba. Good variety, notable diversity, and a lot of high energy. The match had some good sequences and an abundance of confusion. I was entertained yet perplexed.  The momentum of the match did not flow or build into the finish.
    2. Los Villanos III & IV & V vs. The Psycho Circus. Some like to lean on the card of cultural relativity. I am not going to be one of those people. This was a cluster fuck of the worst kind. The audio feed made the action worse. Got to love Matt Striker. He took chicken shit and compiled it into a chicken shit septic tank. Awful.
    3. Cibernetico & Chessman & Averno defend the trios titles against Jack Evans & Fenix & Angelico and El Hijo del Fantasma & El Texano Jr. & Pentagon Jr. Another match ruined by audio distractions and camera mis cues. The top of the cage cam actually subtracted from the effect and impact of many of the moves. It was supposed to be a train wreck match up. It was a train wreck, just a train wreck I could easily bypass without second thought.
    4. Blue Demon Jr. & La Parka vs. Mesias & Electroshock. I attempted to tune out the audio, and enjoyed some of the action. If Blue Demon was two steps faster, he would be quite amazing. Striker was able to relay enough commentary to portray the historic importance of Blue Demon.
    5. Alberto El Patron vs. Brian Cage. This was an American style heel/face match. It was fine.  Alberto did not showcase anything we have not seen from him in WWE. When Cage is not hitting spots, he shows an abundance of amateur tendencies.  The ref bump was perhaps the silliest part of the entire match. Matt Striker telling the American wrestling fans that the American flag is a symbol of ethnocentrism in Mexico was great.
    6. Rey Mysterio Jr. vs. Myzteziz. This match had a story I could follow. I dream match built on respect devolved into a grudge match. For the most part, the action was solid. Mysterio is still capable of performing his trademark maneuvers in a quick and believable way. Myzteziz played the aggressive role better than I expected. All in all, it was good but fell short of hype and expectation. The after match shenanigans were a booking disaster that made WWE run in finishes appear to be sacrament like in execution.

    Thanks,
    Derrick Hubbard from Utah

    Hi Dave and Brian 

    All I can say about the show was “ugh”! It was pretty bad from start to finish. Mysterios match was the best on a show that was horrible. Aside from the audio and technical problems Hugo was horrible as well. Striker was ok. Thumbs down.

    Peter Leong

    Dave,

    Hope you had a better weekend than that show. I only wish I had more hands, so I could give TripleMania four thumbs down. What a total disaster. One of the 4 or 5 worst PPVs I’ve ever watched, and I stayed to the bitter end of WCW. 

    Rey vs. Myzteziz was, but FAR, the best match. You could draw the rest out of a hat for worst match, but if I had to pick one, I guess it’s the Villanos-Psycho Circus debacle. I think Vince Russo booked that swerve fest mess at the end of the show. 

    Even without the gaffs in production, this show was beyond awful. Striker makes doing wrestling commentary seem like rocket science, like it’s the hardest thing in the world to figure out. How can anyone be as bad and unprepared as he was tonight? My favorite was him asking Hugo what Myzteziz translated to. What a dolt. Hugo wasn’t much better, either. 

    Why is it that 30-40 years ago, there were dozens of promoters and bookers that could put out a quality product around the world and today, whew, only a small, small handful. 

    AAA has a long way to go before I plop down $30 for one of their shows again. 

    All the best,
    Sammy Eanes

    Thumbs in the middle
    Best match: Mysterio/Myzteziz
    Worst match: Villanos/Psycho Circus

    Well…it wasn’t When Worlds Collide but I had fun watching this show with a friend. The opener was fine, exactly what I expected. The Villanos match was bad, like worst match of the year bad. Cage match was a blast even with the technical problems. Hated the Blue Demon Jr. match and that Cage/Alberto match was horrendous. The Perro tribute was my favorite thing on the show. I’m glad they did as good of a job with that as they did. The main event was excellent as well. On the whole, I felt like I spent $30 reasonably well. I had fun if nothing else and I’m looking forward to seeing heel Myzteziz vs. Rey in a mask match.

    Ricky Schmidt

    G1 night 8/8/15

    Thumbs in the middle

    Most of the card wasn’t great and would probably be thumbs down but the Tanahashi match elevated it beyond that.  Though even Tanahashi playing to the crowd didn’t seem as great as it normally is, probably because of the crowd.  It was noticable how few people were left when the camera pulled away as Tanahashi was walking back up.  Naito and Ibushi continue to be the other standouts in the A Block.

    Best Match – Tanahashi vs. Shibata

    Worst Match – Opening 6 man (mainly because it is the same as all the other 6 man tag matches that have taken place on this tour)

    G1 night 9/8/15

    Thumbs up

    Much better than previous day, it is amazing how much of a difference having commentary makes to the presentation, even though I basically understand nothing they say. The crowd also seemed much more into it tonight. All the tournament matches tonight were really good. A lot of Bullet Club interference as well but not to the point that it was too much. Elgin and Anderson had a great match, much better than I thought it was going to be.

    Best Match – Goto vs. Ishii

    Worst Match – Tonga & Fale vs Finlay & White

    Looking forward to the last few nights of tournament, it should really start to pick up from now on.

    Lee Dunn

    GLORY 23

    Decent. MMA defector Dustin Jacoby, showing improvement, wins a 4 man tourney MW tourney which allows him to enter the next 4 man MW tourney for (I think) a title shot. HW Xavier Vigney does a 3R paint job on Daniel Sam but has to settle for an incomprehensible split decision. Nieky Holzken repeats his previous stoppage of Raymond Daniels, this time for the WW title left vacant by Joe Valetillini’s medical suspension. Holzken avoided all Daniels’ movie kicks and picked his shots, and in the 3rd cornered Daniels, landed a flurry, and then backed away, talking to ref BJM, who took one look at the cut over Daniels’ eye, caused by a legal knee, and waved it off. The cut was horrible.

    UFC FN 73

    Thumbs middle. Too many mismatches.
    Best fight: Glover-OSP
    Worst fight: Rosholt-T. Johnson
    Best performance: Glover, Nunes
    Worst performance: yet again, the judges
    KO: Wilson
    Sub: Vera

    Onesided UFC debut win for Scott Holtzman over Anthony Christodoulou, who still needs to drop at least one division, dominating standup completely then finishing with RNC in the 3rd. Chito Vera, probably behind, taps Ramon Salazar with a triangle/arm bar in the 2nd and then screams and yells a lot. Quick UFC debut KO for Raymond Wilson over the badly outsized Chris Dempsey, who has no business at 205.

    Frankie Saenz gets a dubious 30-27 x 2, 28-29 SD over Sirwan Kakai. Very close fight. Onesided 3rdR G&P TKO for Distin Ortiz over late sub Willie Gates. Onesided, tedious UD for Chris Camozzi over Tom Watson. Quick win for Uriah Hall catching a kick and spilling way overmatched late sub indy phenom Oluwale Bamgbose and bombing him out with G&P. 

    Onesided but fast paced and sorta entertaining FlyW grapple-fucking card sweep UD for Ray Borg over UFC debuting Geane Herrera.

    Amanda Nunes comes through, stuffing Sara McMann’s TDs, dropping her with a combo capped with a right, and not letting her off the hook, taking back, pounding and opening up the RNC for the tap.

    Jared Rosholt barely survives the 3rd but has plopped and schmopped his way to a 29-28 HW porkfest UD over Tim Johnson. Dreadful.

    Derek Brunson batters Smilin Sam Alvey on the fance till he goes down and Yamasaki jumps in prematurely. Eh.

    Beniel Dariush gets an EXTREMELY dubious 29-28 SD over Michael Johnson, who certainly seemed to win at least the 1st and 2nd.

    Best performance in a couple years from Glover Teixeira. After a back and forth 1st, takes over completely scoring TDs at will and puts OSP to sleep with RNC early in the 3rd. OSP’s TD defense was nonexistent.
    Crimson Mask

    Here are my tournament thoughts on a thumbs up show. The best match of the night was Shibata vs Tanahashi. The worst match was Naito vs Yano.

    Night 13 

    Ibushi vs Fale

    Fale is using his size to beat down IbushiThey do a good job of giving Ibushi hope spots only for Fale’s size to be too much. This even makes more sense this late in the tourney. They tease a Razor’s Edge on the floor, but Ibushi escapes and delivers an Asai Moonsault. It looks like Ibushi is about to make a run, but Fale cuts him off with a Samoan Drop. Some more and eventually it builds to a finish. From a story this was pretty basic, and honestly they needed it to be.  2 3/4*

    Naito vs Yano

    Some comedy early. Naito kicking Yano’s ass. Some Yano shennanigans. 1 1/2*

    Styles vs Tenzan

    AJ with some fun hair pulling. AJ is working another smart match. Tenzan has now busted his mouth. AJ selling the Koppo kick big. Nasty kick in the corner by AJ. Styles working the leg. Calf Slicer!!!!! Followed up by a Figure 4. Tenzan comeback after AJ mocking him. I bought Tenzan’s nearfall. I like how the story went back to Tenzan’s leg. I bit again on AJ’s close call. Yes and I loved that the leg work was paid off. I can’t wait to see AJ next month. He can go so many different ways in a match and tell so many different stories. He’s a lot like Billy Robinson in that regard. 4*

    Gallows vs Makabe

    Hoss fight. Gallows choking Makabe with his own chain. Now he’s punching him with it. Big sternum bump into the guard rail by Makabe. Gallows smashes a guard rail and chairs on Makabe. I guess the ref is giving him leeway. Makabe comeback. Gallows bumping good for him. A cursing battle to boot. Gotta give Makabe credit, he’s taking an ass kicking, and his strikes seem on point. A fun match. 3*

    Tanahashi vs Shibata

    Liking the mat work to start. The battles for positioning is really cool. Very old school build with a modern update. Tanahashi’s ankle pick was  sweet. Tanahashi doesn’t give Shibata a clean break. A nice piece of history in the match. Shibata transitions into an Abdominal Stretch into a Figure 4. I’m really liking the chess build here. Shibata beating Tanahashi down. Tanahashi tricks him and gives a low level drop kick. Dragon Screw by Tanahashi. Tanahashi presses his advantage on the floor. Shibata does a fighting spirit comeback, but at least it’s after 2 Tanahashi pussy elbow strikes. Shibata with some nasty work in the corner. A modified Octopus by Shibata. A kick stops Shibata cold. Tanahashi going back to the leg was awesome. This feels epic and a total battle. Super hot finishing sequence. What a match. The finish was perfect NWA champion. 4 1/2*

    Pete Schirmacher
    @titansowrestlin

  • SUN UPDATE: TripleMania, G-1, Sheamus injury, Smackdown womens tag, John Cena, UFC fighters get letter

    By Dave Meltzer

    We’re looking for your thoughts on today’s TripleMania show, as well as today’s G-1 show from Tokyo and yesterday’s G-1 show from Nagoya, so you can leave a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to Dave Meltzerdave@wrestlingobserver.com”>

    We’re also looking for reports on the WWE shows yesterday in Sydney, Australia and Victoria, BC, today’s show in Vancouver, and the NXT shows in Starke, FL on Thursday ad Orlando on Friday.

    AAA TripleMania 25 from Arena Ciudad in Mexico City on regular PPV at 7 p.m. Eastern

    Drago & Goya Kong & Dinastia & Pimpinela Escarlata vs. Daga & Sexy Star & Mini Psycho Clown & Mamba

    Cibernetico & Chessman & Averno defend the trios titles against Jack Evans & Fenix & Angelico and El Hijo del Fantasma & El Texano Jr. & Pentagon Jr.

    Blue Demon Jr. & La Parka vs. Mesias & Electroshock

    Los Villanos III & IV & V vs. The Psycho Circus

    Alberto El Patron vs. Brian Cage hair vs.. hair

    Rey Mysterio Jr. vs. Myzteziz

    There will also be a Hall of Fame induction ceremony for both Perro Aguayo Jr. and Hector Garza.

    Raw will be Monday night in Everett, WA. Stephen Amell of the TV show Arrow will be a guest doing an angle with Stardust.  No Brock Lesnar or Paul Heyman advertised this week, nor John Cena.

    G-1 Climax on Tuesday morning at 5:30 a.m. Eastern from Tokyo Korakuen Hall

    Jay White & Mascara Dorada vs. Cody Hall & Yujiro Takahashi

    Kushida & Captain New Japan vs. Karl Anderson & Tama Tonga

    Hirooki Goto & Yohei Komatsu vs. Michael Elgin & David Finlay

    Satoshi Kojima & Yuji Nagata & Tomoaki Honma & Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Shinsuke Nakamura & Kazuchika Okada & Tomohiro Ishii & Yoshi-Hashi

    Tetsuya Naito vs. Doc Gallows

    Hiroyoshi Tenzan vs. Katsuyori Shibata

    Kota Ibushi vs. Toru Yano

    A.J. Styles vs. Bad Luck Fale

    Hiroshi Tanahashi vs Togi Makabe

    Smackdown will be Tuesday night in Portland, OR.

    The life and times of Roddy Piper is the lead story in the new issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter.  We also have coverage of WWE financials and why the stock is going through the roof, the rise of Ronda Rousey and UFC 190 numbers, the G-1 Climax tournament update and the full story behind the 2002 pitch made to WWE about a gay asskicking wrestler.  

    The latest Wrestling Observer: August 10, 2015 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Roddy Piper passes away, WWE Q2 results & analysis

    Web site subscriptions, which include access to both current and older newsletters as well as every audio show in the history of the site are at  Sign up here for as low as $9.99 per month!

    You can also order the print Observer right now and get it delivered to your door via mail, by sending your name, address, Visa or Master Card number and an expiration date to Dave Meltzer

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    The Wrestling Observer ranges weekly from 35,000 to 50,000 words covering pro wrestling and MMA internationally. Each issue has coverage and analysis of all the major news, plus every issue breaks major news stories before the Internet sties and has the most complete look at the pro wrestling and MMA business anywhere, plus history pieces available nowhere else.

    Our lead story is an extensive look at the career of Roddy Piper.  We start by looking at the cause of death, and Piper’s role in the national expansion of WWF and the first WrestleMania.  We look at how Piper differed from almost every wrestler in WWF when he came in, why Piper didn’t work certain shows, Piper working outside WWF while under contract, how he flopped in his first WWF run, his runs in California, Oregon, Georgia and the Carolinas before WWF, the feud with Jimmy Snuka, the Hogan-Piper program, The War to Settle the Score, the original WrestleMania and how it changed the history of wrestling, his period in WCW, his relationship with Mad Dog Vachon, his issues with Kevin Nash, how he got started in pro wrestling, the story behind his babyface turns and the loss at WrestleMania to Bret Hart.

    We also look at WWE business, why stock is up, what aspect of business looked deceptively good, a look in depth at the network numbers, how many people dropped and picked up subscriptions this past quarter as well as how all the other aspects of WWE business are doing.

    We look at UFC 190 and the storyline that led to Ronda Rousey setting her highest PPV mark.  We look at how things have changed for Rousey since February, the interest level of her fight,  Rousey vs. Cyborg, ratings in Brazil and the U.S. and match-by-match coverage.

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    SUNDAY’S NEWS UPDATE

    • Bryan and I will be back tonight covering G-1 and the TripleMania PPV as well as taking your e-mail questions to mailbag@wrestlingobserver.com
    • From last night’s show in talking about the women’s match on Smackdown, the commentary was done live.  Bryan watched and thought it may have been done after the fact, but that wasn’t the case.
    • Sheamus was off the weekend house shows due to either a diagnosed or fear of a concussion from the Raw main event on Monday.  
    • Great Hirooki Goto vs. Tomohiro Ishii main event on today’s G-1 show from Korakuen Hall.
    • Twitter numbers for today were Glover Teixeira at 11,400, and Roman Reigns at 40,600 stemming from the fan throwing a briefcase at last night’s show in Victoria, BC and nailing him in the back of the head.
    • Apparently the fan who threw the briefcase at Reigns was getting the wrestlers on the undercard to sign it first.
    • Regarding the controversial second round judging of the Michael Johnson vs. Beneil Dariush fight, apparently every media member on MMA Decisions gave the round to Johnson, which ended up as the swing round of the fight.  Two judges gave it to Dariush.  Johnson out landed Dariush 35-22 during the round and his punches were also harder and more impactful.  He also stopped every takedown attempt.  There have been worse decisions, but this was pretty bad. 
    • Michael Hayes and Kevin Von Erich are teasing one last match.  Kevin asked for a six-man tag where he would team with his sons against Hayes and two partners of his choosing.  Hayes claimed that before he came to Texas, nobody had ever heard of the Sportatorium or the Von Erichs.
    • John Cena is scheduled for Tough Enough on Tuesday.  He was not advertised for Raw on Monday, but it would be weird for him to be on Tough Enough if he’s not on Raw.
    • I will be appearing tomorrow at 1 p.m. on the MMA hour with Ariel Helwani at www.mmafighting.com
    • There is an NXT taping on Thursday night this week. The first hour taped will be the go-home show for Takeover.  The next three hours will be airing after Takeover.
    • UFC Chief Legal Officer Kirk Hendricks sent a letter to the fighters regarding the attempts by The Teamsters and the Culinary Workers Union to unionize UFC fighters.  As you can imagine, they weren’t encouraging them to join.  FrontRowBrian on his twitter has a copy of the letter. 
    • The UFC took out a huge ad in the Los Angeles Times promoting Ronda Rousey for her success, calling her the company’s biggest PPV draw as well as listing social media numbers.  A copy of the ad is on twitter
    • An article on Rey Mysterio promoting tonight’s AAA PPV
    • The Boston Globe has an editorial piece on Ronda Rousey
    • Regarding the story of Babe Ruth as a wrestling referee, in the movie, The Babe Ruth Story, starring William Bendix, there was a brief scene of Ruth as a referee of a women’s wrestling match (thanks to Irv Muchnick)
    • Preston City Wrestling from Friday in Preston, England:  El Ligero won over Ashton Smith, Dean Allmark, Charlie Garrett, Luther Ward and Ophidian, T-Bone & Rampage Brown b Josh Bodom & Ryan Hendricks, Iestyn Rees b Dave Rayne, Noam Dar b Drew Galloway, Dave Mastiff won over Bubblegum and Chris Masters to keep the PCW title, Lionheart b Rockstar Spud, Kyle O’Reilly & Bobby Fish b Joey Hayes & Martin Kirby, Sha Samuels b Kris Travis, Dave Mastiff DDQ Samoa Joe.  Masters said farewell, being fired by General Manager Joanna Rose and turning face on the way out.  O’Reilly & Fish are set to face T-Bone & Rampage at the Supershow of Honor 2 card in November.  Travis had his first match back after cancer.  Next show is 8/29 which is the Bank Holiday Bash which is a free outdoor show in  Blackpool, England with Eddie Edwards, Davey Richards, Ken Anderson, Brian Christopher, Scotty 2 Hotty, Nick Aldis and Mickie James.  On 9/25 they have Tommaso Ciampa vs. El Ligero.  On 10/31 they have two shows with Ricky Steamboat and Jeff Jarrett.  Supershow of Honor 2 is 11/27 to 11/29 with Roderick Strong, Silas Young, Dalton Castle, Cedric Alexander, Kyle O’Reilly, Bobby Fish, Adam Cole, Michael Elgin, Delirious, Hanson, Ray Rowe and Doug Williams (thanks to Jan Buxton)
    • Acclaim Pro Wrestling on 9/12 in Ottawa at 379 Waverly Street
    • Pro Wrestling from Cleveland on Friday night that has no name:  Bobby Beverly b Andrew Palace, N8 Mattson b Joey Vengeance, Bryan Bowers b Nikki Valentino, Rickey Shane Page b Matt Cross, Dylan Bostic & Derek Direction b Idris Abraham & Aiden Prince, Jimmy Nutts b Jock Samson, Johnny Gargano b Tyson Dux (thanks to Jeff Gorman)
    • Jim Crockett’s granddaughter has just launched a non-profit organization helping veterans.  They have already donated $180,000 in 2015.  They are also posting tons of exclusive photos from Jim Crockett’s days as a wrestling promoter that have never been seen before at www.crockettfoundation.com
    • Dynamo Pro Wrestling from last night in Fenton, MO:  Keon Option b The Snitch, Rocket Mapache & Jackal b Brandon Aarons & Evan Morris, Brandon Espinosa b Paco Gonzalez, Justin D-Air b Jayden Fenix, Jack Gamble & Jon Webb b Michael Magnuson & Dave DeLorean-DQ, Mike Outlaw b Elvis Aliaga, Jake Dirden b Shorty Biggs (thanks to Patrick Brandmeyer)
    • Combat Zone Wrestling iPPV last night in Voorhees, NJ:  Sozio b Ryan Galleone, Sozio b Trooper Audubon, JT Dunn b Joey Janela, Penelope Ford & Takumi Iroha b Sumie Sakai & Brittany Blake, Greg Excellent NC Dick Justice, Chigusa Nagayo (the biggest woman’s pro wrestling star ever in Japan) & Takaaki Watanabe b Nate Carter & Dave McCall, Tim Donst b Frankie Pickard to keep CZW Wired title, Jake Crist b Danny Havoc in a barbed wire match, Dave Crust b Conor Claxton, Matt Tremont b Pepper Parks in a street fight, Matt  Tremont b BLK Jeez to win the CZW title.  Next show is 9/12 with AR Fox vs. Mike Bailey in a Chris Cash Memorial Ladder match (thanks to Bob Magee)
    • Destiny World Wrestling on 10/2 in Mississauaga, ONT at the Don Kolov Arena features Rey Mysterio Jr. and PJ Black and the show will be a TV taping.
    • Chris Dickinson vs. Ethan Page headlines 8/22 in Toronto at The Great Hall.
    • Lucha Xtreme TV from last night in Fresno:  Jesse Poole b Mike Strong, Brandon Pinion b Johnny Plinko, Brian Tannen b Mike Rayne (thanks to Jon Southerland)
    • Terry Crews, the actor, sent a positive message to Apollo Crews, the former Uhaa Nation, who took his name from him saying “Love the new name.  Represent it well.”
    • The WWE Network will be adding the April 6, 1998 and September 26, 1997 episodes of Nitro on Thursday.  
    • During a Northeast Wrestling show last night in Bethany, CT, a fan brought a coconut to the ring and asked Donovan Dijak to hit Matt Taven with it.  But it wasn’t a whole coconut, but a shredded coconut that you would buy for baking.  After the match, a Texas death match that Taven won, Taven poured it all over Dijak’s face when Dijak was on the ground selling the loss.  Dalton Castle also hit the deadlift German suplex on Warbeard Hanson at the show.  (thanks to Troy Cummings)
    • Robbie E this weekend appeared at Geekfest, a comic con in Newport, South Wales.
    • Ring Warriors has two shows on 8/15, with a 1 p.m. and a 7 p.m. show at the Tampa Letter Carriers Hall, both TV tapings.  Announced for the tapings are Bruce Santee, Monster Tarver, Sonjay Dutt, Wes Brisco, Lince Dorado, Santana Garrett, Chase Stevens, The Almighty Sheik, Mister Saint Laurent, Jessy Sorensen, Mr. 450, Maxwell Chicago and more.
    • On the ESPN.com web site, if you click on the “Mike and Mike” Big Mess video, there is a commercial for Werner ladders featuring Rey Mysterio and Alicia Fox. (thanks to Neal Hager)
    • ACE Wrestling from last night in Wallington, NJ:  EC Negro b CK Cross, Sonny Kiss b Azrieal and Lou Torres, Chris Raze b Astro Morales, Mike Donovan & Ricky Richards b Absolute Alvin & Mike Orlando, Maya & Black Zemis b William Wyeth & Tiny Johnson, Stockade b Chris Romano, Vince Steele b TJ Marconi-DQ, Ethan Carter III b Ricky Reyes.  Next show is 8/29 at the Morgan Jr. Arena.

    ON THIS DAY IN PRO WRESTLING HISTORY INTERNATIONAL (thanks to Graeme Cameron)

    1969 – Michiaki Yoshimura & Antonio Inoki beat The Crusher & Art Mahalik in Nagoya to win the All-Asia tag titles

    1978 – The Queen Angels (Lucy Kayama & Tomi Aoyami) beat Nancy Kumi & Victoria Fujimi to win the WWWA tag titles and Maki Ueda beat Chabela Romero to win the All-Pacific title.  

    1991 – Akira Nogami beat Jushin Liger in Tokyo to win the IWGP jr. title

  • On this day in pro wrestling history: Bruno vs. Zbyszko at Shea, Flair beats Dusty for NWA title, Hogan beats Luger for WCW title

    By Brian Hoops

    1936 – In Waterloo, Iowa; for the Iowa Heavyweight title, Earl Wampler (champion) wrestled Alphonse Bisignano to a no contest, 
    Bull Martin beat Frank (Bull) Topas and Hal Rumberg drew with Albert Mills. 

    1969 – In Chicago, Illinois;  AWA Champion Verne Gagne beat Jack Dillinger, 
    Mad Dog Vachon & Butcher Vachon beat Flying Redheads Red Bastien & Billy Red Lyons, Wilbur Snyder beat Frank Dillinger, 
    Dr X beat Moose Cholak and Bill Watts beat Big K

    1972 -In Miami, Florida; NWA Champion Dory Funk Jr beat Bob Orton, Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens beat Jack Brisco & Ron Fuller,
    Buddy Colt beat Louie Tillet and Mike Graham beat Taurus

    1973 – In Kansas City, Kansas; Man Mountain Mike & Hillbilly Vic & Jim Brunzell vs. Jay French & Togo the Great & Percy Pringle,
    Bob Orton vs. Mike George, Ricky Romero vs. Jim Dalton, Danny Little Bear vs. Tokyo Joe, Roger Kirby vs. Rufus R. Jones and Bob Brown vs. Harley Race

    1980 – WWF held their “Showdown at Shea” event at Shea Stadium in Flushing, New York, drawing 36, 295 fans. Andre the Giant defeated Hulk Hogan; Tony Atlas defeated Intercontinental Champion Ken Patera via countout;  Bob Backlund & Pedro
    Morales defeated The Samoans (Afa & Sika) to win the WWF World Tag Team Title.  However, because Backlund was already the WWF World Heavyweight Champion, he and Morales were forced to vacate the belts. In the main event, Bruno Sammartino defeated Larry Zbyszko in a steel cage match.

    1981 – In Minneapolis, Minnesota; Sheik Adnan beat AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel dq, In a non title match, Adrian Adonis & Jesse Ventura beat AWA Tag Team Champions Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell, Jerry Blackwell wrestled to a no contest with Brad Rheingans, 
    Billy Robinson beat Ed Boulder (Brutus Beefcake) and Hulk Hogan beat Terry Scholes & Nacho Berrera & Chuck Greenlee

    1985 – In Salt Lake City, Utah; In a Boot Camp Match; Sgt. Slaughter & Greg Gagne beat Larry Zbyszko & Nick Bockwinkel,
    AWA Champion Rick Martel beat Michael Hayes, Terry Gordy beat Baron Von Raschke, Boris Zhukov beat Steve O, Buck Zumhofe beat Ray Stevens dq and Steve O drew Billy Robinson. Attendance was 7,753.

    1986 – Ric Flair defeated Dusty Rhodes for the NWA World Heavyweight
    Wrestling Title in St. Louis, Missouri .

    1997 – Hulk Hogan defeated Lex Luger to win the WCW World Heavyweight
    Title at the Road Wild PPV in Sturgis, SD.  Also on the show, Rick & Scott Steiner defeated WCW World Tag Team Champions Scott Hall & Kevin Nash via DQ and WCW Cruiserweight Champion Alex Wright defeated Chris Jericho

    1999 – Kane & X-Pac defeated The Acolytes for the WWF World Tag Team
    Title during an edition of Monday Night Raw. Chris Benoit defeat David
    Flair for the WCW United States Title during an episode of Monday Nitro.

    2001 – At the Brian Pillman Memorial Show in Ohio;  Chad Collyer defeated Pepper Parks, Shark Boy, and Matt Stryker in a Four Corners match to win the HWA Cruiserweight Title, Nick Dinsmore defeated Race Steele to win the HWA Title and Matt & Jeff Hardy defeated Edge & Christian and Chris Kanyon & Diamond Dallas Page in a three way match.

    2010 – Angelina Love defeated Madison Rayne to win the TNA Knockouts Title.

  • A look at different UFC scoring options

    A Look At Different Scoring Options – UFC Fight Night: Teixeira vs. Saint Preux

    By: Dan Velten

    approvedathletics@gmail.com

    Before tonight’s column, which is part two on different scoring options, I’d like to mention a new weekly column I will be writing called, Reclaiming the Lapsed UFC Fan. Over the past five years, I have been noticing a trend. There seems to be a declining interest in Mixed Martial Arts, specifically the Ultimate Fighting Championship. A lot of fight fans are no longer interested in MMA, and I would like to examine why. As I am sure many of you have also experienced, fewer friends come over for Pay Per View events, even less bother to turn on Fox every weekend, and far fewer buy tickets. In 2010, my living room was filled every PPV Saturday with sometimes 20-25 friends.   Now, it is a struggle to get more than one single buddy to come over. Certainly there are many factors, the primary one being that lives change, but I think there is much more to it than that, because theoretically, I should see or hear about younger fans emerging to take their place, and I just do not.

    Over the course of this column, I will investigate different reasons that the fans from five to ten years ago are waning, and why it does not seem like UFC is making many new ones.   Maybe I will discover I am incorrect.  

    In a parallel universe back in 2001, the then World Wrestling Federation (now World Wrestling Entertainment) bought out their main competition World Championship Wrestling. One thing that really interested me after the buy-out was how WWE would capture the WCW audience. Seemingly, WW(F)E could double their audience over night. However, as history has shown us, WW(F)E did not do a very good job of capitalizing on this, and a huge chunk of the professional wrestling audience instead vanished. The same thing seems to be happening in the UFC (although they largely bought out their competition a long time ago). UFC is losing the older fans. Sure, most business markers show an increase in profitability, but I am not convinced that this means there are more fans now than in 2010, and I am not certain that their business can continue to grow unless some changes can be implemented.

    My new weekly column, Reclaiming the Lapsed UFC Fan, will examine all of the aspects that have led to the UFC losing fans. Part of the reason I am looking at the different scoring options is because an improved scoring system would make for a better sport, and thus a better environment to keep current fans, and possibly bring back the lapsed ones. So, on with tonight’s column…

    My quest to expose the current judging system as timeworn and in need of an overhaul continues tonight in Nashville at UFC Fight Night: Teixeira vs. Saint Preux. I would like to continue writing these columns for at least 10 shows to really get a grasp of whether or not changing the scoring would make a difference.   This is only show two of 10, and last week’s show did not have any robberies due to judging, though some would argue that Little Nog beat Shogun. I do not think Little Nog’s ribs would agree.

    Studies like this have been done before, looking back at old fights, but this will be real time scoring.   I will use the same three options as I did at UFC 190 which were my version of the current “10-Point Must” I call “10-Point Open,” “Weighted Rounds,” and “Pride.”

    I will only score the main card bouts and only note the scores that go to a decision.

    10-Point Must (currently used in MMA) – The round winner receives 10 points and the round loser receives 9 or fewer, supposedly based on the differential of the damage and other advantages.

    10-Point Open– This is the same as above, but more of the points will be used, including each fighter potentially receiving 10 points in an even round. It could be determined as follows:

    10-10 – No clear round winner

    10-9 – Winner barely eked out the round

    10-8 – Winner clearly won the round

    10-7 – Winner significantly won the round

    10-6 – Winner did tremendous damage and dominated the round

    10-5 – Winner dominated entire round and nearly finished the fight

    Weighted Round Scoring – The first round would be worth 1 point, the second would be worth 2, and the third would be worth 3 points. At the end of the round, the judge simply needs to pick the winner and not worry about the damage differential.

    “Pride” Scoring – This would simply be picking the fight as a whole. At the end of the fight, the judge decides who won.

    Tonight I’ll give a little bit more explanation of my scorecard.

    FLYWEIGHT:   Geane Herrera vs. Ray Borg

    OFFICIAL RESULT: 30-27 by unanimous decision, Ray Borg

    Open Scoring:

    Round 1) 10-8 Borg, he dominated with a lot of submission attempts but did not do enough damage to warrant the 10-7

    Round 2) 10-8 Borg, by my own description, if a fighter clearly won the round, he gets the 2-point differential

    Round 3) 10-8 Borg, because he clearly won the round

    RESULT: 30-24 Borg

    Weighted:

    Rd 1) Borg, 1 point Rd 2) Borg, 2 points Rd 3) Borg, 3 points

    RESULT: 6 – 0 Borg

    Pride: Borg (This is by far the best method)

    Analysis: This match showcased one of the primary flaws with the “10-Point Must” system. Ray Borg solidly owned every round, with only a small blip in the third, and not a single judge gave Borg a single 10-8 round.   If being on top, throwing punches, going for submissions, taking no damage, and defending excellently only yields you a one-point edge, why bother with the numbers at all? The sport could simply use a round winner system, and use monetary fines instead of taking penalty points. If it cost a fighter five thousand bucks per eye gouge, or low blow, there would without a doubt be fewer. Yes, in the end the right guy won the decision, but it seems obvious that judges are only using punching and kicking damage to levy a round differential.   If the full criteria including aggression, takedowns, and Octagon control were considered fully, the scores would be different and the points would matter.

    HEAVYWEIGHT: Jared Rosholt vs. Tim Johnson

    OFFICIAL RESULT: All three judges score it 29-28 for Jared Rosholt

    Open Scoring:

    Round 1) 10-9 Rosholt for the take down and ground and pound but not a lot of damage.

    Round 2) 10-8 Rosholt for the near submission finish. Johnson must have some flexible shoulders, or no longer have a rotator cuff.

    Round 3) 10-9 Johnson for the barrage at the end, but it didn’t look like Rosholt was close to going down

    RESULT: 29-27 Rosholt

    Weighted:

    Rd 1) Rosholt, 1 point Rd 2) Rosholt, 2 points Rd 3) Johnson

    RESULT: 3 – 3 Draw

    Pride: Draw

    Analysis: As surprising as it was that this fight went the distance; the official score was not.   The only real significant damage came at the end of the third, which is why the “Weighted” rounds seem to make sense.   At the end of the fight, who would you have rather been? Sure, Rosholt controlled more of the action, but there was little that amounted to much, and he got his head dinged pretty hard in the final thirty seconds. One could make a case for either. Draws would not be so frowned upon if they were more frequent.

    LIGHTWEIGHT: Beneil Dariush vs. Michael Johnson

    OFFICIAL RESULT: 29-28 Dariush, 29-28 Johnson, and 29-28 Dariush

    Open Scoring:

    Round 1) 10-9 Johnson because he connected a few times, but not much

    Round 2) 10-10 Both guys super fast just getting out of the way of any significant damage and too close to call, but I’ll bet the judges give that round to Johnson

    Round 3) 10-10 again too close to call

    RESULT: 30-29 Johnson

    Weighted:

    Rd 1) Johnson, 1 point Rd 2) Dariush, 2 points Rd 3) Johnson, 3 points

    RESULT: 4-2 Johnson

    Pride: Johnson or Draw

    Analysis:

    This fight should be a draw. Why did we have to pick a winner here? These too were clearly evenly matched, and neither man gained any significant dominance over the other. I was impressed by the speed of Dariush and I guess the judges scored his jabs because he was landing it a lot. The crowd is booing the decision, but again, this highlights the imperfections of the system. All three rounds could have gone either way, so why not just make those “either way” rounds even?

    FINAL THOUGHTS: One of the shortcomings I am already realizing with my experiment, is that because the fighters do not know they are being scored in these different methods, it is not impacting how they fight.   I also need to clarify some of the wording of my “Open” scoring criteria.   For example, I gave Borg 3 rounds of 10-8, and really, the last round should have been a 10-9 because the differential was not the same as the first two rounds, but given my wording, it had to be a 10-8. The purpose of the “Open” method was to use more of the 10 points, but even in me, the traditional “10-Point Must” system is so engrained I find it difficult to dip to the lower numbers. Before the next column, I will work on the phrasing of my “Open” point criteria.

    Other Show Notes:

    Matt Brown was interviewed backstage and he said he is looking forward to fighting Kelvin Gastelum and understands why Carlos Condit got the nod ahead of him for the title shot, but looks forward to getting a chance to fight the winner. He believes he should be next in line after he beats Gastelum, which I believe will be the case.

    Matt Hughes was also at the show and looked to be a lot lighter than his competition weight.

    Robbie Lawler was supposedly here but I never saw him.

    Clint Hester was in the front row.

    Ray Borg’s face was pretty messed up and Geane Herrera’s was not. There needs to be more points scored for damage from the bottom.

    The upper bowl was completely empty. The Bridgestone Arena was at maybe 60% capacity.

    All the Tennessee guys were way over, especially Scott Holtzman who is from Knoxville, the new home of Kane. I assume that is the reason he got such a big pop.

    Smilin’ Sam had a smiley face cut into the hair on the back of his head. I think the stoppage was a little early, but I don’t think the result would have changed.

    The Reebok uniforms look like pajamas, but at least I do not have to see guys wearing those ridiculous Bony Acai hats holding a can of Monster anymore. The new uniforms are seriously awful. My guess is Reebok did not focus group test the new look because I have not heard one person say they like them. I am a big fan of getting rid of the NASCAR style shorts, and banners as I thought it was distracting, but then let us also get rid of the ads along the cage side and the mat. I also think we should limit the sponsorship of god as he seems to only sponsor the winners, which makes the sport feel fixed.

    If you have any comments about the article or anything in general, please feel free to contact me at approvedathletics@gmail.com

  • SAT. UPDATE: Hulk Hogan perjury story clarification, TripleMania publicity, UFC preview

    by David Bixenspan | davidbix@wrestlingobserver.comFollow @davidbix

    Weekend major show notes:

    UFC Fight Night: Texeira vs. St. Preux airs live tonight from Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee:

    Here is WrestlingObserver.com’s coverage: 

    • UFC Fight Night 73: Teixeira vs. Saint Preux live results and coverage
    • UFC Fight Night Nashville: Observer Picks & Preview for Glover Teixeira vs. Ovince St. Preux
    • UFC Fight Night 73 Preview: 5 storylines to watch, betting odds & predictions
    • UFC Fight Night 73 Picks From The Secret Psychic Spy~!
    • UFC Fight Night 73: Teixeira vs. Saint Preux weigh-in results and live video

    Main Card on Fox Sports 1 at 10:00 p.m. ET:
    Glover Teixeira (205.5) vs. Ovince Saint Preux (206) in a five round main event.
    Michael Johnson (155.5) vs. Beneil Dariush (156)
    Derek Brunson (186) vs. Sam Alvey (186)
    Jared Rosholt (237) vs. Timothy Johnson (265)
    Sara McMann (136.5) vs. Amanda Nunes (136)
    Ray Borg (126.75) vs. Geane Herrera (126)

    Prelims on Fox Sports 1 at 8:00 p.m. ET:
    Uriah Hall (185.5) vs. Oluwale Bamgbose (184.5)
    Chris Camozzi (185.5) vs. Tom Watson (185)
    Dustin Ortiz (125.5) vs. Willie Gates (126 – 126.5 on first try)
    Frankie Saenz (136) vs. Sirwan Kakai (136)

    Prelims on UFC Fight Pass at 6:30 p.m. ET:
    Chris Dempsey (204.5) vs. Jonathan Wilson (205)
    Marlon Vera (135.5) vs. Roman Salazar (135)
    Anthony Christodoulou (156) vs. Scott Holtzman (155.5)

    This is an iffy card with some good fights mixed in. The main event isn’t incredibly compelling, but it’s a good fight. McMann-Nunes is very divisionally relevant and would be huge for Nunes if she wins, but she doesn’t seem like the type of fighter to beat McMann unless her defensive wrestling has improved a lot (and it very well could have at American Top Team).

    The best fight on paper is Johnson vs. Dariush, which is a really fun style match on paper and an intersting test of where Dariush’s ever-improving striking is right now if he can’t take Johnson now. Sam “King of Fight Pass” Alvey also gets his toughest test yet in Derek Brunson, which is also pretty fun on paper.

    New Japan G-1 Climax Day 14 airs on New Japan World at 5:30 a.m. Sunday morning Eastern time from Korakuen Hall in Tokyo

    Non-Tournament Matches:
    David Finlay & Jay White vs. Bad Luck Fale & Tama Tonga
    Kota Ibushi & Mascara Dorada vs. Toru Yano & Yoshi-Hashi
    Tetsuya Naito & Ryusuke Taguchi & Captain New Japan vs. A.J. Styles & Doc Gallows & Cody Hall
    Hiroshi Tanahashi & Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Kushida vs. Togi Makabe & Katsuyori Shibata & Tiger Mask
    B Block League Matches
    Michael Elgin vs. Karl Anderson
    Satoshi Kojima vs. Yuji Nagata
    Kazuchika Okada vs. Yujiro Takahashi
    Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Tomoaki Honma
    Hirooki Goto vs. Tomohiro Ishii

    WWE has a house show on Sunday in Vancouver, BC (Roman Reigns vs. Bray Wyatt)

    AAA TripleMania XXIII from Arena Ciudad in Mexico City on both traditional and internet PPV and  at 7 p.m. Eastern
    Drago & Goya Kong & Dinastia & Pimpinela Escarlata vs. Daga & Sexy Star & Mini Psycho Clown & Mamba
    Cibernetico & Chessman & Averno defend the trios titles against Jack Evans & Fenix & Angelico and El Hijo del Fantasma & El Texano Jr. & Pentagon Jr.
    Blue Demon Jr. & La Parka vs. Mesias & Electroshock
    Los Villanos III & IV & V vs. The Psycho Circus
    Alberto El Patron vs. Brian Cage hair vs.. hair
    Rey Mysterio Jr. vs. Myzteziz

    There will also be a Hall of Fame induction ceremony for both Perro Aguayo Jr. and Hector Garza.

    Raw will be Monday night in Everett, WA. Stephen Amell of the TV show Arrow will be a guest doing an angle with Stardust.  No Brock Lesnar or Paul Heyman advertised this week, nor John Cena.

    SmackDown will be Tuesday night in Portland, OR.

    **** 

    The new issue of Figure Four Weekly is now up for subscribers (subscribe to th site here and get access to Figure Four, the Observer, tons of audio, and more) featuring a chat with Konnan about the state of AAA heading into TripleMania XXIII. We discuss the company’s improvements in production, advantages over WWE and differences in philosophy, how to listen to fans, and much more. Plus, as always, we have  all of the usual reviews and international news, including Dr. Lucha’s TripleMania preview.

    Last week’s FREEFigure Four Weekly is still up with a look at the crazy story of why Gawker thinks the FBI may have helped Hulk Hogan cover up his racist and homophobic comments. A judge has ordered the FBI to turn over the records of their investigation, and what Gawker is saying in court about what has and hasn’t been turned over paints a very interesting picture. 

    Also, now available for the first time on Kindle (meaning Kindle devices and anything with the Kindle app) is Fall Guys, the seminal 1937 book that has been described as being like the 1930s version of the Wrestling Observer. It was surprisingly not on Kindle already, so we put together a nice version with a full table of contents w/ chapter marks, proper formatting on everything, etc. Right now it’s available from the AmericanCanadian, and Australian Amazon/Kindle stores OR you can also buy it from anywhere in the world on PayHip, who will provide you with both Kindle and ePub (every other e-reader) format files, and you can either sideload them to your device or have them email it to your Kindle. 

    **** 

    The latest Wrestling Observer: August 10, 2015 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Roddy Piper passes away, WWE Q2 results & analysis

    Web site subscriptions, which include access to both current and older newsletters as well as every audio show in the history of the site are at  Sign up here for as low as $9.99 per month!

    You can also order the print Observer right now and get it delivered to your door via mail, by sending your name, address, Visa or Master Card number and an expiration date to Dave Meltzer

    You can also order at PayPal.com directing funds to  dave@wrestlingobserver.com

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    If you order by mail with a check, cash or money order (P.O. Box 1228, Campbell, CA 95009-1228), you can get $1 off in every price range.

    The Wrestling Observer ranges weekly from 35,000 to 50,000 words covering pro wrestling and MMA internationally. Each issue has coverage and analysis of all the major news, plus every issue breaks major news stories before the Internet sties and has the most complete look at the pro wrestling and MMA business anywhere, plus history pieces available nowhere else.

    Our lead story is an extensive look at the career of Roddy Piper.  We start by looking at the cause of death, and Piper’s role in the national expansion of WWF and the first WrestleMania.  We look at how Piper differed from almost every wrestler in WWF when he came in, why Piper didn’t work certain shows, Piper working outside WWF while under contract, how he flopped in his first WWF run, his runs in California, Oregon, Georgia and the Carolinas before WWF, the feud with Jimmy Snuka, the Hogan-Piper program, The War to Settle the Score, the original WrestleMania and how it changed the history of wrestling, his period in WCW, his relationship with Mad Dog Vachon, his issues with Kevin Nash, how he got started in pro wrestling, the story behind his babyface turns and the loss at WrestleMania to Bret Hart.

    We also look at WWE business, why stock is up, what aspect of business looked deceptively good, a look in depth at the network numbers, how many people dropped and picked up subscriptions this past quarter as well as how all the other aspects of WWE business are doing.

    We look at UFC 190 and the storyline that led to Ronda Rousey setting her highest PPV mark.  We look at how things have changed for Rousey since February, the interest level of her fight,  Rousey vs. Cyborg, ratings in Brazil and the U.S. and match-by-match coverage.

    We also go in-depth on the G-1 Climax tournament with the updated schedule, standings and match-by-match coverage.

    We also have an update on John Cena, more on the injury and surgery, Cena actually going to a show this weekend but fans didn’t see him, Shawn Michaels return, will fans respect Cena more, update on the SummerSlam card and matches being built, Cena vs. Rollins future, WrestleMania note, note on Daniel Bryan’s book, Update on Ryback, Update on a 2002 angle proposed for a gay wrestler and funny story behind it, Bryan’s plan for the IC title, more on womens’ division, Eva Marie note, Tough Enough notes, Ultimate Warrior book, Cesaro section notes, WWE lawsuit notes, Pat Patterson book, sister of current WWE star gets a tryout and Owen Hart DVD news.  We also have coverage of the NXT and WWE shows over the weekend and business notes on the shows. 

    The Observer is the world’s most detailed weekly pro wrestling publication, in its 32nd year of publication, and is read by the biggest names in the pro wrestling, industry, MMA industry, sports world and on Wall Street.

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    Click here for the most requested Wrestling Observer back issues.

    ****

    Saturday Daily Update

    • Reminder:  It’s fallen off the front page thanks to the new issue, but last weel’s Figure Four Weekly is still FREE for everyone with a huge, detailed cover feature on the crazy story of why Gawker thinks the FBI has tried to help Hulk hogan cover up the racist and homophoic comments he made that ended up being leaked a week ago. This is some weird, fascinating stuff.
    • AAA got a pretty big late hype boost for TripleMania in the form of an Associated Press story about Rey Mysterio and the show that is or will be in hundreds of newspapers this weekend. It’ll be interesting to see how the show does, as most of the expenses (including the satellite feed) were already incurred before the decision to put it on PPV in the U.S. and Canada, so they can be very successful without getting anywhere close to the 10,000 buy mark everyone else needs to hit to reach profitability. 
    • As noted last night, in an interview with Ron Kruck that aired on Insida MMA, Tito Ortiz claimed that the Cristiane “Cyborg” Justino has been offered a fight with Ronda Rousey for “Cowboys’ Arena.” Dave also has an article about this at MMAFighting. Ortiz is, while still friends with Cyborg as well as her wrestling coach, no longer her manager because he worried his issues with the UFC would hurt her career. So far, UFC hasn’t acknowsled what he said, but one would think it’ll come up at tonight’s press conference.
    • With regards to what Dave wrote on the front page about Thursday’s National Enquirer website article on the possibility that Hulk Hogan perjured himself in a deposition, here’s the entire relevant portion of the July 2nd haring transcript that’s being referred to. The context is that Gawker attorney Seth Berlin is trying to get the FBI to re-issue documents about their investigation into the sex tape extortion attempt without redactions that shouldn’t have been made, and the emphasis on the key part is mine:

    But what these documents show, and then I’ll come back and I can talk a little bit about the exemptions and the indexes, but let me tell you what our concern is, Your Honor. So in this investigation what we know is that Mr. Bollea — this is not — I’m not treading on secret ground here. What we know is that Mr. Bollea came with his lawyer, Mr. Houston, to the FBI and asked for an investigation, which they conducted. And what we know from Mr. Hardy’s last declaration is that part of this investigation yielded three DVDs that have encounters involving the three key participants in this — Mrs. Clem, Mr. Bollea, and for portions of it Mr. Clem.

    Each of those people has testified differently, they have all said different things about what actually happened, when it happened, how often it happened, whether — what was known. And so one of the reasons why we said we would like to get — we started by just saying look, we thought we would find, which we eventually got in yesterday’s stack, statements by Mr. Bollea and his lawyer, and to see whether what he was saying to the FBI matched what he is saying in our lawsuit.

    Turns out, without getting into the specifics, they don’t, that we have essentially under oath testimony to the FBI and we have under oath testimony in our case directly at odds with one another. So we have a situation — and it’s very unfortunate that this is two days or one business day before we’re supposed to start a trial on this matter, but we have a situation where the key participant, the plaintiff, is telling us one thing under oath and telling the FBI something else. So this is why we’re asking — and you can’t use that document to impeach a person if there is a bunch of blanks in it that somebody is saying well, that’s private even though it’s already public.

    • The BBC of all places has an article about why wrestlers die young stemming from the passing of Roddy Piper
    • RIP Roddy Piper: your favorite matches & moments, part 1 of 3
    • RIP Roddy Piper: your favorite matches & moments – part 2 of 3
    • Glory and Bellator announced a new fight for the Septmeber 19th “Dynamite” card in San Jose, which is Gabriel Varga defending the Glory Featherweight Title against Serhiy Adamchuck. 
    • Nice article from The Courier about the late George Kidd (the wrestler who developed the “escapology” style that Johnny Saint made famous internationally) being honored at Caird Hall, where he first made his name.
    • WWE’s “The Kliq Rules” set comes out this Tuesday on both DVD and Blu-Ray this Tuesday with pre-orders still available. It looks like the streaming version is already available now.
    • AAW tomorrow afternoon (August 9, 2015) at 115 Bourbon St (3359 W 115th St Merrionette Park, IL). Doors:  2:15pm   Belltime: 3:00pm. Tickets Available at the door. Anything Goes Bourbon Street Fight:  Eddie Kingston & Shane Hollister vs. Matt Cage & Tyson Dux, AAW Heritage Championship Match:  Louis Lyndon vs. Christian Faith w/ Gregory Iron, Matt Sydal vs. Johnny Gargano, Silas Young vs. Tommaso Ciampa, ACH vs. DjZ,  Zero Gravity vs. Mat Fitchett & Davey Vega.  Also signed:  AAW Tag Team Champions: OI4K, Candice LeRae, Heidi Lovelace, Allysin Kay, The Hooligans (Devin & Mason Cutter with Bucky Collins).
  • On this day in pro wrestling history: Gagne wins AWA title from Fritz Von Erich, Wahoo beats Piper, Guerrera over Jericho

    By Brian Hoops

    1960 – Red & Lou Bastien defeated Al Costello & Roy Heffernan for the
    U.S. Tag Team Title

    1961 – In Bloomington, Minnesota at Met Stadium; In a Cage Match, Verne Gagne beat Gene Kiniski to regain AWA title. Also,  
    Hard Boiled Haggerty & Bob Geigel beat Wilbur Snyder & Dale Lewis and Tiny Mills beat Tony Baillargeon. Attendance was 8,055

    1963 – In Amarillo, Texas at the Sports Arena; Verne Gagne beat Fritz Von Erich in 2 out of 3 falls to regain AWA Title
    Also, Dory Funk Sr & Dory Funk Jr beat Sputnik Monroe & Tokyo Tom on a 2nd fall dq

    1972 – In Tampa, Florida; NWA Champion Dory Funk Jr beat Buddy Colt, Jack Brisco beat Ray Stevens and Nick Bockwinkel beat Ron Fuller

    1973 – In Columbus, Georgia; In a two out of three falls, hair vs. title match; Bobby Duncum won the Columbus Heavyweight Title from Bill Dromo.

    1974 – In Kansas City; Lord Alfred Hayes & Don Fargo vs. The Viking & Mike George, Bad News Beach vs. Bob Orton, Killer Karl Krupp vs. Gene Costello, Central States Heavyweight Champion Bob Brown vs. The Sheik, Handicap Match: Pat O’Connor vs. The Intern & Dr. Ken Ramey and Texas Death Match: Omar Atlas vs. The Intern

    1980 – In Green Bay, Wisconsin; In a non title match; The Crusher & Mad Dog Vachon beat AWA Tag Team Champions Adrian Adonis & Jesse Ventura

    1981 – Wahoo McDaniel defeated Roddy Piper for the NWA United States
    Heavyweight Title in Greensboro, North Carolina.

    1988 – In Memphis, Tennessee; Austin Idol beat AWA Champion Jerry Lawler dq, Robert Fuller & Jimmy Golden beat Bill Dundee & Jeff Jarrett, Southern Tag Team Champions Billy Travis & Scott Steiner beat RPMs and Gary Young beat Max Pain

    1993 – Tito Santana defeated Don Muraco for the ECW Heavyweight Title in
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

    1997 – Dutch Mantel defeated Jerry Lawler for the USWA Unified
    Heavyweight Title in Memphis, Tennessee.  On the same card, Steven Dunn
    & Flash Flanagan defeated PG-13 for the USWA Tag Team Title.

    1998 – Juventud Guerrera defeated Chris Jericho to win the WCW
    Cruiserweight Title in Sturgis, SD. Also, Bill Goldberg won a nine man battle royal.