Category: Daily Updates

  • FRI. UPDATE: Big weekend with deep UFC show, World Cup trios, Super Junior tourney opening, CMLL to start big tournament, Jarrett, Punk (updated)

    By Dave Meltzer
    dave@wrestlingobserver.com”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com

    We’re looking for your thoughts on Wednesday night’s NXT Takeover Unstoppable show, so you can leave a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to dave@wrestlingobserver.com”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com  We’re also looking for feedback from Saturday’s UFC show.

    We’re also looking for reports on tonight’s WWE house show in Manchester, NH (John Cena, Rusev, Dean Ambrose, Kane, Luke Harper, Neville) at dave@wrestlingobserver.com”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com

    TNA on Destination America at 8 p.m. Eastern

    No new show tonight.  They are instead aring last year’s Slammiversary show

    Seiya Sanada vs. Manik vs. Tigre Uno vs. Eddie Edwards vs. Davey Richards vs. Crazzy Steve in a ladder match
    Bobby Lashley vs. Samoa Joe
    Willow (Jeff Hardy) vs. Magnus
    Austin Aries vs. Kenny King
    Ross & Marshall Von Erich vs. The Bro Mans
    Angelina Love vs. Gail Kim
    Bully Ray vs. Ethan Carter III Texas death match
    Eric Young vs. Bobby Lashley vs. Austin Aries for TNA title

    New Japan World Pro Wrestling opens its new season on AXS at 9 p.m.

    Semifinals and finals of the 2014 Best of the Super Junior tournament
    Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Ricochet
    Kushida vs. Taichi
    Winners face off

    New Japan World has a show on Saturday but it will be up on tape delay.

    Saturday we’re looking for reports from the WWE shows in Worcester, MA (John Cena, Rusev, Dean Ambrose, Kane, Luke Harper, Neville) and Utica, NY (Randy Orton, Roman Reigns, Seth Rollins, Dolph Ziggler, Bray Wyatt, Sheamus) and NXT in Starkes, FL.

    UFC 187 from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas

    Facebook at 6:30 p.m. Eastern

    Josh Sampo vs. Justin Scoggins
    Leo Kuntz vs. Islam Makhachev
    Colby Covington vs. Mike Pyle

    FS 1 at 8 p.m.

    Nina Ansaroff vs. Rose Namajunas
    Uriah Hall vs. Rafael Natal
    Josh Burkman vs. Dong Hyun Kim
    John Dodson vs. Zach Makovsky

    PPV at 10 p.m.

    Joseph Benavidez vs. John Moraga
    Andrei Arlovski vs. Travis Browne
    Donald Cerrone vs. John Makdessi
    Chris Weidman vs. Vitor Belfort for middleweight title
    Anthony Johnson vs. Daniel Cormier for vacant light heavyweight title

    Sunday has WWE shows in White Plains (John Cena, Rusev, Dean Ambrose, Kane, Luke Harper, Neville) and Binghamton (Randy Orton, Roman Reigns, Seth Rollins, Dolph Ziggler, Bray Wyatt, Sheamus).

    AAA LUCHA WORLD CUP IPPV AT www.LuchaWorldCup.com starting at 6 p.m. Eastern time from Los Palacios de los Deportes in Mexico City 

    Rey Mysterio & Alberto El Patron & Myzteziz
    El Texano Jr. & El Hijo del Fantasma & Psycho Clown
    Blue Demon Jr. & Dr. Wagner Jr. & Solar
    Masamune & Tiger Mask (Koji Kanemoto) & Kenso
    Taiji Ishimori & Atsushi Kotoge & Yoshihiro Takayama
    Moose & ACH & Brian Cage
    Matt Hardy & Ken Anderson & Johnny Mundo
    Angelico & Drew Galloway & Mesias

    Raw is Monday night at the Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, NY.  The cast of Entourage will be guest stars on the show.

    New Japan World has a show Monday and it will be up on tape delay. 

    Smackdown and Main Event will be taped on Tuesday night in Wilkes-Barre, PA.

    New Japan World has a show Tuesday and it will be up on tape delay.

    The new issue of the Wrestling Observer is among the most talked about of the year, with a detailed lead story on the plight of every key non-WWE promotion, as well as details of TNA’s future with Destination America, ROH viewership and more, a detailed look at how MMA is going to be changing with far more serious repercussions for drug test failures and the story behind the changes, a look at Elimination Chamber, a rundown of Payback, a detailed update NXT with coverage of its Northeast tour, and of the ROH/New Japan tour.  We also look at the Urijah Faber vs. Frankie Edgar show and the death of Corey Hill.

    The new issue is up on the site at http://www.f4wonline.com/component/content/article/110-wrestling-observer-newsletter/42649-may-25-2015-wrestling-observer-newsletter-state-of-tna-nsacs-new-doping-penalties-and-more

    Web site subscriptions, which include access to both current and older newsletters as well as every audio show on the history of the site are at  http://www.f4wonline.com/member/signup.php

    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@wrestlingobserver.com”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com

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

    Rates are:

    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.

    The lead story looks at the battle for the No. 2 spot in American pro wrestling.  We look at ROH, TNA, GFW and Lucha Underground, as well as how WWE may have created the real No. 2.  We look at where things stand with all the groups, both in going forward, if they even can go forward, the TV situation with everyone, tons of changes in TNA television with the move to Wednesday. 

    We also look at the background of the changes in drug testing penalties in Nevada, what it means for the sport, how the business will change for many, the realities of drug testing with these penalties, injury rates, careers ending earlier, the Wanderlei Silva case, the marijuana threshold and far more.

    We also have coverage of the Elimination Chamber lineup, questions regarding the show, business for Payback and match-by-match coverage of the show with star ratings and poll results.

    We also look at the attempt to make NXT a third WWE touring brand.  We look at the plans for the next few years for the brand, ideas Paul Levesque talked about, long-term plans for shows in and out of Florida, business notes from the Philadelphia and Albany shows and full coverage of all three nights.

    We also look at the last three nights of the ROH/New Japan tour with shows in Philadelphia and Toronto, with notes on the business and iPPV, as well as when ROH is trying to cut a deal to bring New Japan talent back. 

    We also look at the update on the Steve Austin/WWE relationship and some podcast notes, Update on injuries to key talent and how some of them happened, promotions, Ronda Rousey talks a WWE return, Vince McMahon on WrestleMania, What WWE performer has ESPN and FOX wanting them, Notes on how this season’s Tough Enough will work, view on women in WWE going forward, Samoa Joe in WWE, WWE Studios looking to make major moves, what WWE star is in the biggest grossing movie of the weekend, more on the box office for Dwayne Johnson’s latest movie, ABC airing a piece on WWE and Finn Balor talks NXT.

    We also look at the next group of wrestlers getting WWE tryouts, what group in WWE is history, what person from another sport was a guest trainer last week, and a former MMA fighter signs with WWE.  We’ve also got business notes for all the weekend WWE shows and highlights of the events.

    We’ve also got full coverage of UFC’s morning show from The Philippines, including the retirement of Mark Munoz, Urijah Faber vs. Frankie Edgar and business notes from the show.

    We also have a story on the death of former UFC fighter Corey Hill, as well as one of the worst injuries in UFC history, why people thought he had championship potential and what happened.

    We’ve also got notes on AAA’s big show of he weekend, Verano de Escandalo, with many of the stars of Lucha Underground, as well as Rey Mysterio Jr.

    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.

    Also in this week’s issue:

    –One of biggest stars in Mexico under a police investigation and has been pulled from bookings

    –Full details on how this went down

    –Octagon first Arena Mexico appearance

    –Big tournament coming up

    –New Japan star headed to CMLL

    –Huge head-to-head battle on Sunday with loaded shows a few miles from each other

    –Lineup for the AAA World Cup tournament

    –Notes on this week’s iPPV of World Cup

    –King of Gate tournament coming up to this finals this week

    –One of the greatest pro wrestling stars of the 70s returns to Japan at the end of the month

    –A look at all the New Japan Super Juniors shows of the week and complete New Japan World lineup of multiple shows

    –Update on health of one of 80s biggest names

    –More details on Global Force Wrestling including lineups for the first four shows

    –Who are newcomers that they have added

    –Who was pulled from the promotion

    –An update on Scott Hall

    –Update on Bill Goldberg and his appearance on a pro wrestling event

    –Huge fund raiser to commemorate regional wrestling from the 70s with tons of area stars involved

    –Notes on ROH Final Battle

    –More on ROH signing of Moose

    –Who else had made a play for him

    –Main events for the next few ROH shows

    –A look at ROH television over the next month

    –Why this week’s first-run Impact show didn’t air in the U.S.

    –A look at the Impact schedule and more on the time slot change

    –TNA’s U.K. tour notes

    –More on Billy Corgan in TNA

    –Dixie Carter talks to Steve Austin, fact vs. fiction

    –TNA loses anther time slot

    –A look at this coming week’s UFC show

    –Lots of UFC card changes and why

    –UFC debuts in South Korea in the fall

    –Who are the biggest stars from there

    –Will UFC’s books be made public due to lawsuit

    –UFC expected to sign WSOF champion

    –A look at all the activities in July in conjunction with UFC in Las Vegas and Fight Week

    –Lots of new UFC fights

    –A look at Bellator’s last show and next show

    –Former Pride star put in jail

    If you are a new subscriber ordering 24 or more issues, you can get one free classic issue of your choice sent to you today.  With a 40 issue subscription, you can get two free classic issues sent to you today.

    New subscribers ordering 24 or 40 issues have to let us know what major stories of the past 11 years you are most interested in and we’ll send the issue with the best coverage of that story. We’ve got coverage of every major PPV event and world wide spectacular, every major star switching promotions, histories of companies like FMW, Rings and New Japan, retirement and obit issues of every major star who fits into those descriptions over the past 11 years, as well as our biggest issue every year, the annual awards issue, and our most controversial issue of every year, the Hall of Fame issue.

    Our most requested issues in our history are:

    *November 17, 1997 (full details of everything leading to the most famous wrestling match finish of modern times at the Survivor Series plus a history of in-ring double-crosses)

    *December 21, 1998 (the complete Vince McMahon-Bret Hart conversation right before the Survivor Series match so you’ll know exactly what was said–the conversation played in edited form both on the inaugural broadcast of Confidential as well as in Wrestling with Shadows, but everything that was said between the two about the match that was going to take place that same night)

    *August 1, 1994 (the most detailed coverage anywhere of the Vince McMahon steroid trial, an issue praised in numerous newspaper article and Sex, Lies and Headlocks)

    *March 26, 2001 (death of WCW and history of pro wrestling on the Turner networks)a

    *October 22, 2001 (why the adult audience has left pro wrestling in such great numbers and what needed to have been done to save them)

    *July 8, 1991 (Ric Flair leaves WCW as world champion/Zahorian steroid trial)

    *February 8, 1993 (the life and times of Andre the Giant)

    *May 13, 2002 (the life story of the most incredible pro wrestling career ever, a look at Lou Thesz, in one of the largest issues of our history)

    *January 27, 2003 (part one of the two-part series covering the career and life of The Sheik)

    *February 3, 2003 (Part two on The Sheik including thoughts from people who worked with him and where he stands historically)

    *March 24, 2003 (history of the WWWF title, inside behind the Sammartino, Backlund and Backlund era)

    *April 21, 2003 (history of WWF continues with the expansion nationally, the death of the regional territories and the rise of Hulk Hogan)

    *May 12, 2003 (The life and death of Elizabeth and the rise of fall of Lex Luger)

    *June 9, 2003 (Part 1 of history of WWF vs. WCW wars and what many say was the greatest year in U.S. wrestling; plus a look at Fred Blassie)

    *June 16, 2003 (Freddie Blassie through the eyes of his biggest rivals and friends)

    *July 28, 2003 (Part 2 of the history of the WWF vs. WCW war and the plans to make new superstars in the early 90s, what happened, and the night where the three biggest wrestling companies in the world combined for a joint show and what happened)

    *August 25, 2003 (2003 Hall of Fame issue with huge profiles on the controversial career of Shawn Michaels, Chris Benoit as well as historical features on Earl Caddock and Francisco Flores)

    *September 22, 2003 (Part 3 of the history of the WWF vs WCW war with the seeds that caused the collapse of the industry in the 90s, Zahorian trial, Gulf War controversy, Flair leaves WCW while holding world title and much more)

    *October 27, 2003 (The fascinating life of Stu Hart plus the story of Road Warrior Hawk)

    *January 19, 2004 (2003 Awards issue)

    *February 2, 2004 (History of Toronto wrestling, Jack Tunney life story, Royal Rumble and Battle Royal history)

    *February 23, 2004 (History of Guerrero family with Eddy’s win over Brock Lesnar)

    *March 1, 2004 (History of WWF continues with the period that brought the company down in early 1992, the mistakes, the real stories and how the business changed)

    *March 8, 2004 (History of Wrestlemania, its greatest matches and best and worst shows as voted both by wrestlers and non-wrestlers and Wrestlemania history books)

    *July 5, 2004 (A look behind the scenes and Ric Flair’s book and his background with Eric Bischoff and Hulk Hogan)

    *July 12, 2004 (A look at more on Ric Flair’s book and his comments on Bruno Sammartino, Bret Hart and Mick Foley)

    *August 16, 2004 (History of the Olympians in pro wrestling)

    *August 23, 2004 (2004 Hall of Fame issue and biggest issue of the year with huge profiles on Kazushi Sakuraba, Undertaker, Bob Backlund, Masahiro Chono, Ultimo Dragon, Kurt Angle and Tarzan Lopez–this counts as one issue if you are asking for a free issue, but ordered separately, due to size, is $6 in North America and $7 overseas)

    *October 4, 2004 (the life and times of Big Bossman; as well as details of the life and times of one of the most influential men world wide in pro wrestling history, Jim Barnett)

    *November 15, 2004 (the full story of what happened between Kurt Angle and Daniel Puder, plus coverage of the most important week in the history of TNA)

    *January 24, 2005 (2004 Awards issue, Rock and WWE part company)

    *March 14, 2005 (the 50 biggest money players in the history of WWF and a look at their Hall of Fame)

    *May 9, 2005 (the life and times of Chris Candido)

    *June 20, 2005 (The full story behind Paul Heyman and the death of ECW, as well as coverage of One Night Stand, Hardcore Homecoming and behind the scenes of both shows)

    *July 18, 2005 (death of Shinya Hashimoto and his records with a look at the fall of New Japan, the Matt Hardy angle, tons of WWE firings, Cornette firing in detail as well as problems of a WWE developmental territory in our biggest news issue of the year which is a double-sized issue and would be $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

    *August 24, 2005 (2005 Hall of Fame issue with career profiles of Paul Heyman, HHH and Freebirds plus debut of MMA Hall of Fame)

    *September 12, 2005 (History of Mid South Wrestling)

    *October 10, 2005 (Life and Times of the Ultimate Warrior)

    *November 21, 2005 (Life and Times of Eddy Guerrero and Crusher, double issue $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

    *December 5, 2005 (The Eddy Guerrero special issue, double issue $6 on its own, $7 overseas)

    *January 9, 2006 (The life and times of Superstar Billy Graham, plus New Year’s Eve 2005 coverage)

    *January 16, 2006 (2005 Awards double issue, $6 or $7 overseas)

    *April 3, 2006 (Story of Ann Calvello and the history of Roller Derby–many called this the best issue of the Observer ever)

    *April 10, 2006 (Behind the scenes at the 2006 Wrestlemania/Hall of Fame week)

    *July 24, 2006 (The History of the Von Erichs and World Class Championship Wrestling–the most unreal story ever in wrestling)

    *September 4, 2006 (The Rise and Fall of Kurt Angle; 2006 Hall of Fame inductions of Eddie Guerrero, Paul Bowser, Masakatsu Funaki, Aja Kong and Hiroshi Hase including tons of wrestling history around the world from the 20s through the 60s, the evolution of working to not working in Japan, and a look at Guerrero in hindsight, double issue $6 or $7 overseas)

    *October 9, 2006 (A look back nine years later at the life and legacy of Brian Pillman with tons of inside information about what made him tick as his real objectives)

    *November 15, 2006 (History of WCW part one, Eric Bischoff’s book and how the industry was changed forever)

    *November 20, 2006 (History of WCW part two, Why Jim Ross left WCW, How Bischoff changed the company, signing of Hulk Hogan, Beginning of Nitro, Jesse Ventura, Brian Pillman, Chris Jericho and signing Wrestlemania planned celebrity away)

    *November 27, 2006 (History of WCW part three, When Bischoff challenged McMahon to fight; Truth and fiction around Bret Hart signing with WCW and why it didn’t click)

    *December 6, 2006 (details behind Pride’s offers to sell promotion and Part four of History of WCW part four, Hogan-Goldberg match and why there was no rematch, WCW loses NBC network deal in 1999 and the real reasons the company fell apart)

    *January 22, 2007 (2006 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *February 14, 2007 (Life and Times of Bam Bigelow)

    *March 5, 2007 (WWE begins plans that will change the business)

    *March 12, 2007 (Life and Times of Mike Awesome)

    *March 19, 2007 (Life and Times of Ernie Ladd)

    *April 4, 2007 (Life and Times of Badnews Allen Coage–which many are calling one of the best issues in history)

    *July 2, 2007 (Part one of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 5, 2007 (Part two of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 10, 2007 (Part three of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 19, 2007 (Part four of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 23, 2007 (Part five of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 25, 2007 (Part six of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *August 15, 2007 (The legend of the God of Japanese wrestling and his influence on MMA, Karl Gotch)

    *October 15 (2007 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas including inductions of The Rock, Tom Packs and the original Strangler Lewis)

    *November 12, 2007 (Life and times of Fabulous Moolah and history of U.S. women’s wrestling) .

    *December 31, 2007 (History of Ric Flair and the heyday of wrestling at the Greensboro Coliseum)

    *January 21, 2008 (2007 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *March 17, 2008 (Life and times of Johnny Weaver)

    *March 24, 2008 (Life and times of Gary Hart)

    *April 10, 2008 (Farewell to Ric Flair; My thoughts, Shawn Michaels talks of Flair’s meaning to him; Hall of Fame; Wrestlemania double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *August 11, 2008 (Ric Flair leaves WWE; Updated history of pro wrestlers and MMA fighters who went to the Olympics)

    * September 8, 2008 (2008 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas; part one of Killer Kowalski bio)

    * September 15, 2008 (Life and Times of Evan Tanner)

    * September 22, 2008 (The amazing career of Killer Kowalski, one of our most in-depth bios)

    You can also order any of these issues on their own for $4 in North America or $5 overseas.

    We now have available personally autographed copies of Tributes II, our latest book, as well as a DVD that comes with it talking more about the subjects in the book. The book covers the life stories of Lou Thesz, Wahoo McDaniel, Elizabeth, Fred Blassie, Road Warrior Hawk, Andre the Giant, Curt Hennig, Johnny Valentine, Davey Boy Smith, Terry Gordy, Owen Hart, Stu Hart, Gorilla Monsoon, The Sheik and Tim Woods..

    To get all of those biographies as back issues of the Observer would be a $60 value today. This is a collection of some of the best Observer articles of the past several years in a hardcover, full-color format that is 239 pages. There is also a foreword by Bret Hart. The book price is $12.95 plus $3.50 for shipping costs in the U.S., $20 for shipping costs to Canada and $25 for shipping costs outside North America. You can order the book the same way you order the newsletter.

    FRIDAY’S NEWS UPDATE

    –This is up early since I’ll be at the UFC show in Las Vegas and there is stuff all day long.

    –UFC weigh-ins wll be 7 p.m. Eastern time up on the site.  This is the deepest show of the year, with two major titles at stake and every match on PPV and FS 1 features decent name fighters.  It will be interesting to see how much the natural decline after the Mayweather fight will affect this show, or if it’s strong enough to overcome that.

    –TNA has sent an e-mail to talent saying that the reports of the cancellation of the show are defamatory and detrimental to business and they will seek legal recourse.  The term used internally at the Discovery Network is “not renewing.”   The game is still in play, and I guess people who actually read the report know that. 

    –For those in Las Vegas for UFC, there is a Lion Fight show taped for AXS tonight at 5 p.m. local time at the Outdoor Ampitheatre at Sunset Station. featuring two title fights.  A super welterweight title fight has Jo Nattwaut vs. Salah Khalifa and a women’s featherweight title fight as Tiffany Van Soest vs. Bernise Alldis.

    –WWE.com has the first two chapters of Daniel Bryan’s autobiography up at http://www.wwe.com/inside/first-two-chapters-daniel-bryan-yes-my-improbable-journey-to-the-main-event-of-wrestlemania-27394016/page-2

    –I’ve read the entire book and it’s as honest a wrestling book as I’ve seen.  There’s a lot about his perspectives and motivations and you really get a telling look, both good and bad, at the modern WWE.  If you’re interested in WWE I’d highly recommend it.

    –A story on WWE’s participation in the Relay Across America for Special Olympics is at http://uraa.donordrive.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=cms.page&id=1153

    –The CMLL Busca de un Idolo tournament starts Tuesday at Arena Mexico.  There will be a 16 man Elimination match.  The first eight are eliminated and the last eight go into the tournament.  The lineup is nothing close to last year’s tournament, which was really awesome.  The names listed are Blue Panther Jr., Delta, Esfinge, Flyer, Gallo, Guerrero Maya Jr., Pegasso, Stigma, Akuma, Cancerbero, Canelo Casas, Disturbio, Jocker, Raziel, Sagrado and Bobby Zavala.  The tournament is supposed to be for newcomers, and some of these guys have been around for 20 years.

    –Jeff Jarrett is in Mexico know for the AAA World Cup and there is talk he’ll be announcing for the iPPV.     

    ON THIS DAY IN PRO WRESTLING HISTORY INTERNATIONAL (thanks to Graeme Cameron)
    1963 – John Da Silva beat Tibor Szakacs in London to win the Royal Albert Hall Trophy
    1965 – Hercules Cortez beat Mitsu Arakawa in Melbourne to win the IWA title
    1985 – Gran Hamada beat Luiz Arizona in Monterrey to win the UWA middleweight title
    1994 – Super Muneco & Angel Azteca & El Hijo del Santo beat Los Payasos in Aguascalientes to win the Mexican national trios titles
    2001 – Hayabusa beat Tetsuhiro Kuroda in Tokyo to win the FMW World Brass Knux title
    2004 – Genichiro Tenryu & Masa Fuchi beat Great Kosuke (Satoshi Kojima) & Shiryu (Kaz Hayashi) to win the All Asia tag title

    –CMLL on Tuesday night in Guadalajara:  Divino & Linterna Verde Jr. b Evola & Relampago Azul, Pepe Aguayo & Flyer & Magnus b Canelo Casas & Metalico & Sadico, Kamaitachi & Okumura & Tiger b Blue Panther Jr. & The Panther & Triton, Blue Panther & Brazo de Plata & Valiente b Kraneo & Morphosis & Rey Escorpion-DQ, Marco Corleone & La Mascara & Rush b Ephesto & Euforia & Mephisto.

    –Max Proad from Tuesday night in Pachuca:  Los Ninja Turtles b Electro Boy & Los Oficiales, Alebrije & Gronda XXX & Lizmark Jr. b Histeria & Psicosis & X-Fly, Atlantis & Ultimo Guerrero b Octagon & Fuerza Guerrera-DQ.  Both Fuerza turned on Octagon and Ultimo turned on Atlantis (thanks to Kris Zellner)

    –New Japan Pro Wrestling announced they would be running shows on 6/20 and 6/21 in Singapore as part of a Japanese trade fair where parent company Bushiroad will be an exhibitor.  Hiroshi Tanahashi had gone to Singapore last month to promote the product.

    –Super Junior tournament matches for tomorrow in Kuki:  Gedo vs. Yohei Komatsu, Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Barbaro Cavernario, Alex Shelley vs. Rocky Romero, Kushida vs. Nick Jackson.  For Monday in Niigata, it’s Sho Tanaka vs. Barbaro, Baretta vs Chase Owens, Mascara Dorada vs. David Finlay III, Tiger Mask vs. Bobby Fish, Jushin Liger vs. Kyle O’Reilly.  For Tuesday in Yamagata, it’s Gedo vs. Bararo, Kushida vs. Finlay III, Romero vs. Nick Jackson, Taguchi vs. Baretta.

    –On last night’s Celebrity Name Game show hosted by Craig Ferguson, there were a few mentions of WWE.  There was a category about celebrities in WrestleMania.  there was also a category of Famous Mustaches with Hulk Hogan as an answer and the contestant correctly named him.

    –One of our readers, Brandon Teachout, at Stanford Law School, was doing trademark searches for his IP class and picked C.M. Punk, thinking it would have an interesting history.  Ownership for the person of C.M. Punk, using C.M. Punk for clothing and using C.M. Punk for merchandise was assigned by WWE to Punk, though his Los Angeles lawyer, on October 24.  The power of attorney went from WWE lawyers to Punk’s Los Angeles lawyers.  Essentially Punk’s legal representation were able to legally force WWE to sign over their trademarks back to him as part of their legal issues last year.  The marks were first registered by WWE on June 24, 2006.

    –Eddie Wineland, who had retired last year, is coming back on UFC’s 7/25 show in Chicago, where he’ll face Bryan Caraway.  So Caraway and Miesha Tate (who faces Jessica Eye with a title shot to the winner) are fighting on the same show.  Wonder how often a boyfriend and girlfriend have fought the same night on a major event.

    –Holly Holm vs. Marion Reneau has been added to the UFC’s 7/15 show in San Diego.

    –Due to an injury, T.J Waldburger is out of the 5/30 UFC event in Goiania, Brazil.  Darren Till, who is 12-0, was signed as a late replacement, and will face Wendell Oliveria.  Oliveira had been scheduled against Waldburger.  

    –We’re sorry to report the death of Daniel J. Pacheco, who wrestled in New England under the name Dan Strikes.  He passed away on Wednesday at the age of 33.  He worked as one of the Convicts tag team from 2011 to 2013, which is ironic since his regular job was that of a prison guard (thanks to John Callahan)  

    –NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and former WWE wrestler Chris Nowinski on concussions

    http://i.tsn.ca/story/?id=537541

  • Total Divas moving to Tuesday

    E! sent out a press release for the new season of Total Divas listing the debut on 7/7 at 9 p.m., which is a Tuesday night.  This would mean it would start right after Tough Enough ends on USA for much of its run.  Tough Enough starts its season two weeks earlier.

    Listed as cast members are The Bella Twins, Natalya, Naomi, Alicia Fox, Paige and Eva Marie.

  • THURS. UPDATE: More from NXT Takeover, Samoa Joe deal notes, What TNA talent has been told, White predicts 2 million buys for Rousey vs. Cyborg, Lawler, Angle

    By Dave Meltzer
    dave@wrestlingobserver.com”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com

    We’re looking for your thoughts on last night’s NXT Takeover Unstoppable show, so you can leave a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to dave@wrestlingobserver.com”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com  We’re also looking for feedback from Saturday’s UFC show.

    We’re also looking for reports from tonight’s NXT tapings at Full Sail University in Orlando. 

    Smackdown tonight on Syfy, taped in Norfolk

    Tyson Kidd & Cesaro vs. Lucha Dragons vs. The Ascension vs. Los Matadores
    Dolph Ziggler vs. King Barrett
    R-Truth vs. Stardust
    Macho Mandow & Axel Mania vs. Heath Slater & Adam Rose
    Dean Ambrose vs. Bray Wyatt

    The Beat the Streets wrestling from Times Square from this afternoon with the U.S. national team vs. Cuba airs tonight on NBC Sports Network at midnight. 

    New Japan World has a live show at 5:30 a.m. Eastern and 2:30 a.m. Pacific

    Jushin Liger vs. Yohei Komatsu
    Alex Shelley vs. David Finlay III
    Cavernario Barbaro vs Chase Owens
    Hiroshi Tanahashi & Togi Makabe & Hirooki Goto & Katsuyori Shibata & Tomoaki Honma vs. Shinsuke Nakamura & Tomohiro Ishii & Toru Yano & Kazushi Sakuraba & Yoshi-Hashi
    Rocky Romero vs. Bobby Fish
    Trent Baretta vs. Kyle O’Reilly 
    Mascara Dorada vs. Kushida
    Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Gedo

    The new issue of the Wrestling Observer is among the most talked about of the year, with a detailed lead story on the plight of every key non-WWE promotion, as well as details of TNA’s future with Destination America, ROH viewership and more, a detailed look at how MMA is going to be changing with far more serious repercussions for drug test failures and the story behind the changes, a look at Elimination Chamber, a rundown of Payback, a detailed update NXT with coverage of its Northeast tour, and of the ROH/New Japan tour.  We also look at the Urijah Faber vs. Frankie Edgar show and the death of Corey Hill.

    The new issue is up on the site at http://www.f4wonline.com/component/content/article/110-wrestling-observer-newsletter/42649-may-25-2015-wrestling-observer-newsletter-state-of-tna-nsacs-new-doping-penalties-and-more

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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.

    The lead story looks at the battle for the No. 2 spot in American pro wrestling.  We look at ROH, TNA, GFW and Lucha Underground, as well as how WWE may have created the real No. 2.  We look at where things stand with all the groups, both in going forward, if they even can go forward, the TV situation with everyone, tons of changes in TNA television with the move to Wednesday. 

    We also look at the background of the changes in drug testing penalties in Nevada, what it means for the sport, how the business will change for many, the realities of drug testing with these penalties, injury rates, careers ending earlier, the Wanderlei Silva case, the marijuana threshold and far more.

    We also have coverage of the Elimination Chamber lineup, questions regarding the show, business for Payback and match-by-match coverage of the show with star ratings and poll results.

    We also look at the attempt to make NXT a third WWE touring brand.  We look at the plans for the next few years for the brand, ideas Paul Levesque talked about, long-term plans for shows in and out of Florida, business notes from the Philadelphia and Albany shows and full coverage of all three nights.

    We also look at the last three nights of the ROH/New Japan tour with shows in Philadelphia and Toronto, with notes on the business and iPPV, as well as when ROH is trying to cut a deal to bring New Japan talent back. 

    We also look at the update on the Steve Austin/WWE relationship and some podcast notes, Update on injuries to key talent and how some of them happened, promotions, Ronda Rousey talks a WWE return, Vince McMahon on WrestleMania, What WWE performer has ESPN and FOX wanting them, Notes on how this season’s Tough Enough will work, view on women in WWE going forward, Samoa Joe in WWE, WWE Studios looking to make major moves, what WWE star is in the biggest grossing movie of the weekend, more on the box office for Dwayne Johnson’s latest movie, ABC airing a piece on WWE and Finn Balor talks NXT.

    We also look at the next group of wrestlers getting WWE tryouts, what group in WWE is history, what person from another sport was a guest trainer last week, and a former MMA fighter signs with WWE.  We’ve also got business notes for all the weekend WWE shows and highlights of the events.

    We’ve also got full coverage of UFC’s morning show from The Philippines, including the retirement of Mark Munoz, Urijah Faber vs. Frankie Edgar and business notes from the show.

    We also have a story on the death of former UFC fighter Corey Hill, as well as one of the worst injuries in UFC history, why people thought he had championship potential and what happened.

    We’ve also got notes on AAA’s big show of he weekend, Verano de Escandalo, with many of the stars of Lucha Underground, as well as Rey Mysterio Jr.

    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.

    Also in this week’s issue:

    –One of biggest stars in Mexico under a police investigation and has been pulled from bookings

    –Full details on how this went down

    –Octagon first Arena Mexico appearance

    –Big tournament coming up

    –New Japan star headed to CMLL

    –Huge head-to-head battle on Sunday with loaded shows a few miles from each other

    –Lineup for the AAA World Cup tournament

    –Notes on this week’s iPPV of World Cup

    –King of Gate tournament coming up to this finals this week

    –One of the greatest pro wrestling stars of the 70s returns to Japan at the end of the month

    –A look at all the New Japan Super Juniors shows of the week and complete New Japan World lineup of multiple shows

    –Update on health of one of 80s biggest names

    –More details on Global Force Wrestling including lineups for the first four shows

    –Who are newcomers that they have added

    –Who was pulled from the promotion

    –An update on Scott Hall

    –Update on Bill Goldberg and his appearance on a pro wrestling event

    –Huge fund raiser to commemorate regional wrestling from the 70s with tons of area stars involved

    –Notes on ROH Final Battle

    –More on ROH signing of Moose

    –Who else had made a play for him

    –Main events for the next few ROH shows

    –A look at ROH television over the next month

    –Why this week’s first-run Impact show didn’t air in the U.S.

    –A look at the Impact schedule and more on the time slot change

    –TNA’s U.K. tour notes

    –More on Billy Corgan in TNA

    –Dixie Carter talks to Steve Austin, fact vs. fiction

    –TNA loses anther time slot

    –A look at this coming week’s UFC show

    –Lots of UFC card changes and why

    –UFC debuts in South Korea in the fall

    –Who are the biggest stars from there

    –Will UFC’s books be made public due to lawsuit

    –UFC expected to sign WSOF champion

    –A look at all the activities in July in conjunction with UFC in Las Vegas and Fight Week

    –Lots of new UFC fights

    –A look at Bellator’s last show and next show

    –Former Pride star put in jail

    If you are a new subscriber ordering 24 or more issues, you can get one free classic issue of your choice sent to you today.  With a 40 issue subscription, you can get two free classic issues sent to you today.

    New subscribers ordering 24 or 40 issues have to let us know what major stories of the past 11 years you are most interested in and we’ll send the issue with the best coverage of that story. We’ve got coverage of every major PPV event and world wide spectacular, every major star switching promotions, histories of companies like FMW, Rings and New Japan, retirement and obit issues of every major star who fits into those descriptions over the past 11 years, as well as our biggest issue every year, the annual awards issue, and our most controversial issue of every year, the Hall of Fame issue.

    Our most requested issues in our history are:

    *November 17, 1997 (full details of everything leading to the most famous wrestling match finish of modern times at the Survivor Series plus a history of in-ring double-crosses)

    *December 21, 1998 (the complete Vince McMahon-Bret Hart conversation right before the Survivor Series match so you’ll know exactly what was said–the conversation played in edited form both on the inaugural broadcast of Confidential as well as in Wrestling with Shadows, but everything that was said between the two about the match that was going to take place that same night)

    *August 1, 1994 (the most detailed coverage anywhere of the Vince McMahon steroid trial, an issue praised in numerous newspaper article and Sex, Lies and Headlocks)

    *March 26, 2001 (death of WCW and history of pro wrestling on the Turner networks)a

    *October 22, 2001 (why the adult audience has left pro wrestling in such great numbers and what needed to have been done to save them)

    *July 8, 1991 (Ric Flair leaves WCW as world champion/Zahorian steroid trial)

    *February 8, 1993 (the life and times of Andre the Giant)

    *May 13, 2002 (the life story of the most incredible pro wrestling career ever, a look at Lou Thesz, in one of the largest issues of our history)

    *January 27, 2003 (part one of the two-part series covering the career and life of The Sheik)

    *February 3, 2003 (Part two on The Sheik including thoughts from people who worked with him and where he stands historically)

    *March 24, 2003 (history of the WWWF title, inside behind the Sammartino, Backlund and Backlund era)

    *April 21, 2003 (history of WWF continues with the expansion nationally, the death of the regional territories and the rise of Hulk Hogan)

    *May 12, 2003 (The life and death of Elizabeth and the rise of fall of Lex Luger)

    *June 9, 2003 (Part 1 of history of WWF vs. WCW wars and what many say was the greatest year in U.S. wrestling; plus a look at Fred Blassie)

    *June 16, 2003 (Freddie Blassie through the eyes of his biggest rivals and friends)

    *July 28, 2003 (Part 2 of the history of the WWF vs. WCW war and the plans to make new superstars in the early 90s, what happened, and the night where the three biggest wrestling companies in the world combined for a joint show and what happened)

    *August 25, 2003 (2003 Hall of Fame issue with huge profiles on the controversial career of Shawn Michaels, Chris Benoit as well as historical features on Earl Caddock and Francisco Flores)

    *September 22, 2003 (Part 3 of the history of the WWF vs WCW war with the seeds that caused the collapse of the industry in the 90s, Zahorian trial, Gulf War controversy, Flair leaves WCW while holding world title and much more)

    *October 27, 2003 (The fascinating life of Stu Hart plus the story of Road Warrior Hawk)

    *January 19, 2004 (2003 Awards issue)

    *February 2, 2004 (History of Toronto wrestling, Jack Tunney life story, Royal Rumble and Battle Royal history)

    *February 23, 2004 (History of Guerrero family with Eddy’s win over Brock Lesnar)

    *March 1, 2004 (History of WWF continues with the period that brought the company down in early 1992, the mistakes, the real stories and how the business changed)

    *March 8, 2004 (History of Wrestlemania, its greatest matches and best and worst shows as voted both by wrestlers and non-wrestlers and Wrestlemania history books)

    *July 5, 2004 (A look behind the scenes and Ric Flair’s book and his background with Eric Bischoff and Hulk Hogan)

    *July 12, 2004 (A look at more on Ric Flair’s book and his comments on Bruno Sammartino, Bret Hart and Mick Foley)

    *August 16, 2004 (History of the Olympians in pro wrestling)

    *August 23, 2004 (2004 Hall of Fame issue and biggest issue of the year with huge profiles on Kazushi Sakuraba, Undertaker, Bob Backlund, Masahiro Chono, Ultimo Dragon, Kurt Angle and Tarzan Lopez–this counts as one issue if you are asking for a free issue, but ordered separately, due to size, is $6 in North America and $7 overseas)

    *October 4, 2004 (the life and times of Big Bossman; as well as details of the life and times of one of the most influential men world wide in pro wrestling history, Jim Barnett)

    *November 15, 2004 (the full story of what happened between Kurt Angle and Daniel Puder, plus coverage of the most important week in the history of TNA)

    *January 24, 2005 (2004 Awards issue, Rock and WWE part company)

    *March 14, 2005 (the 50 biggest money players in the history of WWF and a look at their Hall of Fame)

    *May 9, 2005 (the life and times of Chris Candido)

    *June 20, 2005 (The full story behind Paul Heyman and the death of ECW, as well as coverage of One Night Stand, Hardcore Homecoming and behind the scenes of both shows)

    *July 18, 2005 (death of Shinya Hashimoto and his records with a look at the fall of New Japan, the Matt Hardy angle, tons of WWE firings, Cornette firing in detail as well as problems of a WWE developmental territory in our biggest news issue of the year which is a double-sized issue and would be $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

    *August 24, 2005 (2005 Hall of Fame issue with career profiles of Paul Heyman, HHH and Freebirds plus debut of MMA Hall of Fame)

    *September 12, 2005 (History of Mid South Wrestling)

    *October 10, 2005 (Life and Times of the Ultimate Warrior)

    *November 21, 2005 (Life and Times of Eddy Guerrero and Crusher, double issue $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

    *December 5, 2005 (The Eddy Guerrero special issue, double issue $6 on its own, $7 overseas)

    *January 9, 2006 (The life and times of Superstar Billy Graham, plus New Year’s Eve 2005 coverage)

    *January 16, 2006 (2005 Awards double issue, $6 or $7 overseas)

    *April 3, 2006 (Story of Ann Calvello and the history of Roller Derby–many called this the best issue of the Observer ever)

    *April 10, 2006 (Behind the scenes at the 2006 Wrestlemania/Hall of Fame week)

    *July 24, 2006 (The History of the Von Erichs and World Class Championship Wrestling–the most unreal story ever in wrestling)

    *September 4, 2006 (The Rise and Fall of Kurt Angle; 2006 Hall of Fame inductions of Eddie Guerrero, Paul Bowser, Masakatsu Funaki, Aja Kong and Hiroshi Hase including tons of wrestling history around the world from the 20s through the 60s, the evolution of working to not working in Japan, and a look at Guerrero in hindsight, double issue $6 or $7 overseas)

    *October 9, 2006 (A look back nine years later at the life and legacy of Brian Pillman with tons of inside information about what made him tick as his real objectives)

    *November 15, 2006 (History of WCW part one, Eric Bischoff’s book and how the industry was changed forever)

    *November 20, 2006 (History of WCW part two, Why Jim Ross left WCW, How Bischoff changed the company, signing of Hulk Hogan, Beginning of Nitro, Jesse Ventura, Brian Pillman, Chris Jericho and signing Wrestlemania planned celebrity away)

    *November 27, 2006 (History of WCW part three, When Bischoff challenged McMahon to fight; Truth and fiction around Bret Hart signing with WCW and why it didn’t click)

    *December 6, 2006 (details behind Pride’s offers to sell promotion and Part four of History of WCW part four, Hogan-Goldberg match and why there was no rematch, WCW loses NBC network deal in 1999 and the real reasons the company fell apart)

    *January 22, 2007 (2006 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *February 14, 2007 (Life and Times of Bam Bigelow)

    *March 5, 2007 (WWE begins plans that will change the business)

    *March 12, 2007 (Life and Times of Mike Awesome)

    *March 19, 2007 (Life and Times of Ernie Ladd)

    *April 4, 2007 (Life and Times of Badnews Allen Coage–which many are calling one of the best issues in history)

    *July 2, 2007 (Part one of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 5, 2007 (Part two of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 10, 2007 (Part three of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 19, 2007 (Part four of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 23, 2007 (Part five of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 25, 2007 (Part six of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *August 15, 2007 (The legend of the God of Japanese wrestling and his influence on MMA, Karl Gotch)

    *October 15 (2007 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas including inductions of The Rock, Tom Packs and the original Strangler Lewis)

    *November 12, 2007 (Life and times of Fabulous Moolah and history of U.S. women’s wrestling) .

    *December 31, 2007 (History of Ric Flair and the heyday of wrestling at the Greensboro Coliseum)

    *January 21, 2008 (2007 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *March 17, 2008 (Life and times of Johnny Weaver)

    *March 24, 2008 (Life and times of Gary Hart)

    *April 10, 2008 (Farewell to Ric Flair; My thoughts, Shawn Michaels talks of Flair’s meaning to him; Hall of Fame; Wrestlemania double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *August 11, 2008 (Ric Flair leaves WWE; Updated history of pro wrestlers and MMA fighters who went to the Olympics)

    * September 8, 2008 (2008 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas; part one of Killer Kowalski bio)

    * September 15, 2008 (Life and Times of Evan Tanner)

    * September 22, 2008 (The amazing career of Killer Kowalski, one of our most in-depth bios)

    You can also order any of these issues on their own for $4 in North America or $5 overseas.

    We now have available personally autographed copies of Tributes II, our latest book, as well as a DVD that comes with it talking more about the subjects in the book. The book covers the life stories of Lou Thesz, Wahoo McDaniel, Elizabeth, Fred Blassie, Road Warrior Hawk, Andre the Giant, Curt Hennig, Johnny Valentine, Davey Boy Smith, Terry Gordy, Owen Hart, Stu Hart, Gorilla Monsoon, The Sheik and Tim Woods..

    To get all of those biographies as back issues of the Observer would be a $60 value today. This is a collection of some of the best Observer articles of the past several years in a hardcover, full-color format that is 239 pages. There is also a foreword by Bret Hart. The book price is $12.95 plus $3.50 for shipping costs in the U.S., $20 for shipping costs to Canada and $25 for shipping costs outside North America. You can order the book the same way you order the newsletter.

    THURSDAY’S NEWS UPDATE

    –We will have an interview up today with Montreal historian Patric Laprade talking last night’s NXT show as well as Sami Zayn, Kevin Owens, The Hall of Fame induction ceremony this past weekend in Amsterdam, NY, and more.

    –Thanks for all the compliments about this week’s issue.  For those who didn’t read it, the lead story is pretty much a must-read, given that the versions going around of it are leaving out key details.  The Nevada drug testing story is a game changer in the business.

    –According to TNA talent, they’ve been told the rumors will be addressed at the next tapings.  In other words, at the end of June.

    –Dana White yesterday on Jim Rome said that he guaranteed when Ronda Rousey faces Cris Cyborg that it would do 2 million buys.

    –The clip of Jerry Lawler slapping Andy Kaufman was included in the final montage of David Letterman’s final show last night and a glimpse of it was all over CNN this morning (thanks to Rishi Malhotra)

    –Samoa Joe has a very unique deal with NXT in the sense he has very few restrictions on where he can work.  I was told it was similar to the Rhyno deal but for a lot more money.  His deal does include merchandise, and he had the same design T-shirt he wore already up for sale at shop.wwe.com (thanks to Jeff Parker)

    –The National Wrestling Hall of Fame in Waterloo, IA, will have a special presentation at the Dan Gable Museum at 4 p.m. on 7/10.  Angle will be getting two Hall of Fame rings, one for his 1995 world championship and one for his 1996 Olympic gold medal.  Angle will not be appearing at the Tragos/Thesz Hall of Fame banquet on 7/11 as originally scheduled.  Scheduled at the banquet on 7/11 are Jim Ross, Gerald Brisco, Wes Brisco, J.J. Dillon, Baron Von Raschke, Danny Hodge, Jim Brunzell, Larry Hennig, Colt Cabana and Bob Holly, plus honorees Brian Blair, Wade Keller, Beth Phoenix, Matt Lindland and Greg Wojciechowski (Great Wojo).

    –NWA Mid South on 6/20 in Dyresburg, TN at the Herb Welch Wrestle Plex features Tim Storm vs. Rob Conway vs. Alan Steel plus NWA jr. champion Steve Anthony vs. Seiya Sanada and Matt Riviera & Greg Anthony vs. Savio Vega & Americos.  Jim Cornette and Chris Cruise will be doing the announcing for the DVD.

    –Last night on the show when we were asked if anyone had been sued over a shoot interview, well not a DVD, but as far as a podcast interview, there was C.M. Punk.

    –Chris Hero will be facing Samoa Joe on 6/6 for Smash Wrestling in Etobicoke, ONT for Smash Wrestling Kicks ALS.  On 6/7, Hero will be doing a gauntlet match to raise money for ALS.  If fans can donate $2,000, he will wrestle for two hours straight against a variety of opponents.  This takes place at the Cross Body Academy in Waterloo, ONT.  For a $10 donation you can do a meet and greet with Hero plus see the matches and 100% of the money goes to ALS Canada.      

    –CMLL’s Dark Angel (Sarita in TNA, Sarah Stock) was one of the women in the Tyler Breeze ring entrance on the NXT show last night.

    –WWE stock closed at $13.66 per share today, down five cents from yesterday.

    –There was some heat from last night’s NXT show because WWE oversold the show by a lot of tickets, meaning some ticketed customers couldn’t get in, and the usual allotment of tickets to the Full Sail University students wasn’t available, so there were a lot of angry people turned away.

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

    1965 – Toyonobori beat Fred Blassie in the finals of the World League tournament
    1988 – Ciclon Ramirez beat Gran Markus Jr to win the Mexican national heavyweight title
    1990 – Cuchillo beat Yoshihiro Asai (Ultimo Dragon) to win the UWA middleweight title in Puebla
    1993 – Dan Kroffat beat Masa Fuchi in Sapporo to win the All Japan world  jr. title
    1996 – Mascara Magica beat Felino in Mexico City to win the CMLL welterweight title
    2006 – Super Delfin beat Takeshi Minamino in Osaka to win the Tohoku Jr. title
    2009 – Alex Koslov beat Extreme Tiger (Tigre Uno) and Alan Stone to become the first AAA cruiserweight champion
    2010 – La Sombra & La Mascara & Mascara Dorada beat Hiroshi Tanahashi & Okumura & Taichi in Mexico City to win the CMLL trios titles

    –Moose Ojinnaka is taking indie dates through Bill Behrens at www.sbibookings.com  He’s based out of Atlanta.  Samoa Joe is also taking indie bookings based out of Tampa.  Others available include A.J. Styles (Atlanta), Christopher Daniels (Los Angeles), Frankie Kazarian (Los Angeles), Matt Sydal (Tampa) as well as the likes of Tommy Dreamer, Drew Galloway Sean Waltman,Abyss, James Storm, Eric Young, Kevin Nash, DDP, EC 3, Bully Ray & Devon, Rick Steiner, Scott Steiner, Nunzio, Al Snow, ODB, Shannon Moore and Shane Helms.  

    –TWE on Saturday in Middlesboro, UK at the Teeside University Student Union and Refectory Building.

    –Joe Schilling vs. Hisaki Kato has been added to the 6/26 Bellator show in Mulvane, KS.  Bubba Jenkins (8-2), a former NCAA champion wrestler, faces Joe Wilk (18-10) in a featherweight bout on the same show.

    –Jeff Jarrett is going to Mexico City on Sunday, saying he’ll be scouting talent at the AAA World Cup tournament that will be on iPPV and do some commentary.

    –Rockstar Pro Wrestling on 6/5 in Dayton at the Rockstar Pro Arena with Abyss vs. Ron Mathis and Davey Richards vs. Dave Crist

    –Justin Gabriel, Michael Elgin, Jason Kincaid and Chase Owens headline for CWE on a tour with shows on 6/22 in Steinbach, Manitoba at the Legion Community Hall, 6/23 in Gimli, MB at the Gimli Dance Pavilion, 6/24 in Yorkton, SK at the Central School, 6/25 in Souris, MB and the Souris & Glenwood Memorial Complex and 6/26 in Winnipeg at the Holy Cross Gymnasium Hall.

    –There is talk of tearing down the Los Angeles Sports Arena, which housed tons of major wrestling events over the years from the LeBell group, WWF, CMLL and AAA among others over the years.  If it is torn down, it will be to build a soccer stadium on the location.  With both The Forum and Staples Center, as well as the Honda Center, there really isn’t a need for the Sports Arena these days. (thanks to Jose Gonzalez)

    –Infinity Pro Wrestling on 5/30 in Bloomington, IN at the National Guard Armory headlined by Dave & Jake Crist. 

    –One Championships and IMC Live are doing an MMA show in Guangzhou, China at the International Sports Arena on 6/20, coming off a sold out show in Beijing.

    –The One Championship show tomorrow starts at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time from Kallang, Singapore, headlined by Shinya Aoki vs. Koji Ando.  It airs live in Canada on The Fight Network

    Weigh-ins

    Shinya Aoki (154) vs. Koji Ando (154.5) for lightweight title
    Dejdamrong Sor Amnuaysirichok (114) vs. Roy Doliguez (113.5) for strawweight title
    Ev Ting (145) vs. Marat Gafurov (145)
    Lowen Tynanes (153) vs.  Kuat Khamitov (154.5)
    Eddie Ng (154.5) vs. Ariel Sexton (154.5)
    Stephen Langdown (134.5) vs. A La Teng Hei Li (134.5)
    Amir Khan (144) vs. Shannon Wiratchai (145)
    Benedict Ang (143.5) vs. Waquar Umar (144)
    Angela Lee (114) vs. Aya Saeid Saber (114)
    Ali Yaakub (121.5) vs. Jianbing Yang (125)

    –Andre Dirrell vs. James DeGale headlines the Premier Boxing show at 4:30 p.m. Eastern on NBC Saturday from the Agganis Arena in Boston.

    –NWA Vendetta Championship Wrestling fro Sunday in Chowchilla, CA:  Ricky Ruffin b Perry Von Vicious, Holly Renee & Shane Ballard & Shannon Ballard b Kiara Dillon & Jinx the Jester & Jeckles the Jester, Tsunami b Mike Rayne, Cyanide & Vintage Dragon b Buddy Royal & Levi Shapiro, Matt Riviera b Jeff Jarrett for Western States Heritage title, Carlito b Ricardo Rodriguez (thanks to Joseph Duncan)

    –A note regarding a debate on whether the 2002 WWE Global Warning show from Melbourne’s Colonial Stadium (now Etihad Stadium) aired on PPV, it did not, but it was released on a commercial DVD.  The show drew about 56,000 fans with Rock vs. HHH vs. Brock Lesnar as the main event.

    –Lucha Xtreme iPPV on Sunday from the Fresno’s Grizzlies Stadium.  The only match announced is a fatal four-way for their heavyweight title from JR Kratos vs. Brandon Groom vs. Dylan Drake vs. Mike Rayne.  Tickets are $25 and include both the baseball game at 2 p.m. and the wrestling show which is scheduled to start at about 4:30 p.m.

    –Evolve 43 on 5/30 at La Boom in Queens at 6 p.m. Eastern on iPPV

    Drew Galloway vs. Biff Busick for Dragon Gate USA title
    Johnny Gargano & Rich Swann vs. Drew Gulak & ? for tag titles
    Caleb Konley vs. Davey Richards
    Chris Hero vs Trevor Lee
    TJ Perkins vs. Mike Bailey
    Anthony Nese vs. Rey Hours

    –Evolve 44 on 5/31 in Ronkonkoma, NY on Long Island

    Drew Galloway vs. Roderick Strong for Evolve title
    Davey Richards vs. Drew Gulak
    Rich Swann vs. Trevor Lee
    Biff Busick vs. Mike Bailey
    Anthony Nese vs TJ Perkins
    Rey Hours vs. ?

    –On Monday Night’s Chicago White Sox game against Cleveland, during the eighth inning, after Melky Cabrera of the White Sox made a great catch to the top half of the inning, they played “Rise of the Valkyrie” and a few people started a “Yes” chant (thanks to Jacob Burnett)

    –WWE uploaded a lot of Raw’s from 1997, but they skipped the episode where Rocky Maivia won the IC title from HHH and where Shawn Michaels lost his smile and retired when he was supposed to drop the title that night to Sid Vicious. (thanks to Dave Pordy)

    –Bushwhacker Luke was added to Saturday’s show in Pickering, ONT for Destiny World Wrestling.

    –CMLL from Monday night in Puebla:  Rey Apocalipsis & Toro Bill Jr. b Leono & Sensei, Arkangel de la Muerte & Disturbio & Furia Chicana b Black Tiger & Oro Jr. & Tigre Rojo Jr., Amapola & Reyna Isis & Tiffany b Estrellita & Goya Kong & Marcela, Angel de Oro & Stigma & Ttian b Morphosis & Hechicero & Ripper, Marco Corleone & La Mascara & La Sombra b El Terrible & Rey Escorpion & Vangellys, Rush b Ultimo Guerrero-DQ (thanks to Kris Zellner)

    –Barrie Wrestling on 7/1 in Orillia, ONT at Terry Fox Circle at Couchiching Park

    –Acclaim Pro Wrestling on 5/30 in Ottawa, ONT at the SPK-Dom Polski

    –C4 Wrestling on Saturday in Ottawa at the Vanier Columbus Club with Pinkie Sanchez & Chris Dickinson & JAKA vs Buxx Belmar & Mike Bailey & Sexxy Eddy.

    –Pro Wrestling Phoenix has its 10th anniversary show on Saturday in Council Bluffs, IA at the National Guard Armory with Scott 2 Hotty in a ladder match.

    –Maryland Championship Wrestling on 6/19 at Michael’s Eighth Avenue in Glen Burnie, MD has Mick Foley, Melina Perez, Rene Michelle, Mickie James, Tessa Blanchard, and Lisa Varon for a show called Ladies Night.  

    –Cutting Edge Wrestling on 6/18 i St. John’s Newfoundland at the CLB Armory. 

    –Pure Wrestling Association on 5/30 in Kitchener, ONT at the Alpine Club.  They also run 5/22 in Courtenay, BC at the K’omoks First Nation Band Hall.

    –Hard Knocks Fighting tomorow night at 11 p.m. Eastern on The Fight Network from the Markin MacPhail Centre in Calgary featuring former UFC fighter Nick Ring (13-3) in his first match outside UFC against Jason Zentgraf (8-2). 

    –Prairie Wrestling Alliance on 7/4 in Edmonton, at the Northgate Lions Rec Centre  featuring Samoa Joe and Lisa Varon.  They also run on Saturday night in the same building. 

    –Absolute Intense Wrestling on Friday and Saturday night in Cleveland at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel School for the J.T. Lightning Invitational tournament.  Samoa Joe vs. Johnny Gargano takes place in a non-tournament match on Saturday night.  Among those in the tournament itself that starts on Friday are Too Cold Scorpio, Little Guido, Cheech, B.J. Whitmer, Doug Gilbert, Nick Gage, Raymond Rowe, Tyson Dux, Louis Lyndon, Josh Prohibition, DJ Zema Ion, Cedric Alexander, Colin Delaney, Jennifer Blake and Flip Kendrick.

    –A story on Ronda Rousey saying she’d never fight Floyd Mayweather at

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/early-lead/wp/2015/05/19/zing-ronda-rousey-says-shed-never-fight-floyd-mayweather-unless-we-ended-up-dating/?tid=HP_sports?tid=HP_sports (thanks to Chris Cruise) 

    –FuRyu today release three New Japan themed home screen themes for the Nintendo 3DS in Japan with one NJPW logo and two Hiroshi Tanahashi. See http://www.furyu.jp/2015/05/3ds-theme-newjapanprowrestling.html for details. (thanks to Brian Cooper)

    –Best of the Super Juniors preview at

    http://culturecrossfire.com/wrestling/japan/new-japan-best-of-the-super-jr-xxii-preview-block-a
    –John Hitchcock interview on Greensboro wrestling history

    http://wunc.org/post/golden-age-professional-wrestling

    –A story on the Generation X pro wrestling legacy

    http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2015/05/generation-xs-pro-wrestling-legacy.html

    –A story on Honky Tonk Man at

    http://www.al.com/entertainment/index.ssf/2015/05/honky_tonk_man_to_shake_rattle.html#incart_river_mobile (thanks to Jim Ward)  

    TODAY’S PRO WRESTLING VIDEOS (by Thomas Rude)

    WWE


    The JBL & Renee Show (Episode 129)

    5/18/15 WWE RAW “Fallout”:  Ziggler Gets The Girl

    Elimination Chamber Declarations:  First Seen On The WWE App; April 19, 2015

    WWE Canvas 2 Canvas:  Junkyard Dog Hits The Canvas

    Zayn On Owens’ RAW Debut

    5/18/15 Top Ten WWE RAW Moments

    NXT TakeOver:  Unstoppable Pre-Show

    Rusev Reacts To Lana Kissing Dolph Ziggler:  WWE.Com Exclusive

    5 Things-5 Forgotten Faction Members

    INDY TV SHOWS


    5/16/15 Southern States Wrestling TV

    3XWrestling “All Stars Of The Midwest” TV (Episode 18)

    Chaotic Wrestling “ChaotiCast” TV (Episode 29)

    America’s Most Liked Wrestling TV (Episode 11)

    West Coast Wrestling Connection TV (Episode 51)

    Anarchy Wrestling TV (Episode 484)

    Pro Wrestling Syndicate TV (Episode 18)

    5/1/15 Future Stars Of Wrestling “High Octane” TV

    Smash Wrestling TV (Episode 52)

    CWF Mid-Atlantic Wrestling “Worldwide” TV (Episode 1)

    TNA


    IMPACT in 60:  May 15, 2015-Hardcore War!  Best Of 5 Tag Team Series And More!

    The Question Mark (Episode 8)

    MISC. STUFF


    The Candice & Joey Show (Episode 114)

    Jushin “Thunder” Liger On “The Apter Chat”

    Top 5 Moves Of Max Smashmaster

    CHIKARA Podcast-A-Go-Go (Episode 416)

    Michael Elgin on “The Apter Chat”

    Dad You Don’t Work, You Wrestle (Episode 120)

    TOMORROW’S WWE NETWORK SCHEDULE (thanks to Bert Duckwall)

    Friday, May 21,2015

    12:00 AM ET
    RAW FLASHBACK    The 1-2-3 Kid once again shows Razor Ramon his determination to win. Jerry ‘The King’ Lawler unveils a surprise for Bret Hart.

    1:00 AM ET
    FIRST LOOK    First Look: It’s Good To Be King

    1:30 AM ET
    CULTURE SHOCK WITH COREY GRAVES    Corey Graves heads down to one of his favorite tattoo shops in the heart of New York City!

    2:00 AM ET
    WWE COUNTDOWN    Counting down the top ten most stylish ring attire ever worn by a WWE Superstar.

    3:00 AM ET
    WWE PAYBACK 2015    Seth Rollins defends the WWE World Heavyweight Championship in a Fatal 4 Way Match against Dean Ambrose, Randy Orton and Roman Reigns!

    6:00 AM ET
    NXT TAKEOVER UNSTOPPABLE    Sami Zayn looks to end the title reign of his former best friend, NXT Champion Kevin Owens at NXT TakeOver Unstoppable.

    8:00 AM ET
    TOTAL DIVAS    Ariane’s mother calles with a desperate plea for help, and Eva is shocked when Jonathan makes a dangerous decision without her consent.

    9:00 AM ET
    NXT TAKEOVER UNSTOPPABLE    Sami Zayn looks to end the title reign of his former best friend, NXT Champion Kevin Owens at NXT TakeOver Unstoppable.

    11:00 AM ET
    TOTAL DIVAS    Ariane’s mother calles with a desperate plea for help, and Eva is shocked when Jonathan makes a dangerous decision without her consent.

    12:00 PM ET
    NXT TAKEOVER UNSTOPPABLE    Sami Zayn looks to end the title reign of his former best friend, NXT Champion Kevin Owens at NXT TakeOver Unstoppable.

    2:00 PM ET
    TOTAL DIVAS    Ariane’s mother calles with a desperate plea for help, and Eva is shocked when Jonathan makes a dangerous decision without her consent.

    3:00 PM ET
    MONDAY NIGHT WAR    In an era of shifting loyalties, WWE and WCW would each build a cornerstone in order to achieve stability.

    4:00 PM ET
    WWE BEYOND THE RING    Learn about The Viper in and out of the ring as he reflects on his career to date. Hear about the past, present, and future of Randy Orton.

    6:00 PM ET
    TOTAL DIVAS    Ariane’s mother calles with a desperate plea for help, and Eva is shocked when Jonathan makes a dangerous decision without her consent.

    7:00 PM ET
    TOUGH ENOUGH    Legendary WWE Superstar The Rock and ‘Psych’ star James Roday give the remaining five contestants a lesson in charisma.

    8:00 PM ET
    WWE SUPERSTARS    WWE Superstars features the best of the best, in matches you’ll have to see to believe. You never know what to expect, so expect everything.

    9:00 PM ET
    WWE BEYOND THE RING    Learn about The Viper in and out of the ring as he reflects on his career to date. Hear about the past, present, and future of Randy Orton.

    11:00 PM ET
    WWE SUPERSTARS    WWE Superstars features the best of the best, in matches you’ll have to see to believe. You never know what to expect, so expect everything.

  • WED. UPDATE: Gawker sues FBI over Hulk Hogan case, farewell David Letterman, Young Bucks in Rolling Stone, and more

    by David Bixenspan | davidbix@wrestlingobserver.comFollow @davidbix

    TV/show notes:

    WWE has NXT TakeOver: Unstoppable live on WWE Network at 8:00 p.m. ET with:

    * Kevin Owens (c) vs. Sami Zayn for the NXT Championship
    * Sasha Banks (c) vs. Becky Lynch for the NXT Women’s Championship
    * Blake and Murphy (c) vs. Enzo Amore and Colin Cassady for NXT Tag Team Championship
    * Finn Bálor vs. Tyler Breeze vs. Not Hideo Itami (Itami’s out for months, but he will be “represented” per yesterday’s conference call) to determine the number one contender to the NXT Championship
    * Baron Corbin vs. Rhyno
    * Bayley and Charlotte vs. Dana Brooke and Emma 

    Lucha Underground on El Rey at 8:00 p.m. ET. Official preview from El Rey: The Trios Titles are not done yet – tonight they will be defended in a match that is bound to be colossal. The winner who comes out on top will win the titles for their team. Meanwhile, Johnny Mundo has some explaining to do when Vampiro confronts him about his actions.”Shoots and Ladders” premieres on Wednesday, May 20th at 8:00PM ET/PT on El Rey Network.

    On Fox Sports 1, there’s a new UFC Tonight at 8:00 p.m. ET, last week’s episode of The Ultimate Fighter at 9:00 p.m. ET, and a new episode of The Ultimate Fighter titled “Battle Wounds” at 10:00 p.m. ET. Official description: One fighter has trouble coping with the devastation of his most recent loss and begins to let it affect him, while two fighters who have a history inside the octagon are looking forward to a rematch to unleash the bad blood between them. Remember to add at least 20 minutes of DVR padding if you want to catch the “TUF Talk” segment that opens Fox Sports Live immediately following the show.

    **** 

    The newest issue of Figure Four Weekly is up on the site for subscribers (subscribe here) and being the first week of May, features an extensive article demystifying what Sweeps mean for ratings and how it affects the wrestling business in 2015:

    — What do Sweeps periods actually measure?

    — Do Sweeps matter for cable at all?

    — What wrestling companies are they relevant to these days?

    — What was their past significance?

    — And more.

    Plus, as always, we have  all of the usual reviews and international news.

    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 story behind the Elimination Chamber as a network special, why and how it came about, as well as a look at the next two WWE major shows, Payback and Elimination Chamber and NXT Takeover, is the lead story in this week’s Observer.  We also have a look at the injury situation with Daniel Bryan, Sami Zayn and Hideo Itami.  We also look at the Mayweather-Pacquiao business, New Japan & ROH working together for big shows, a detailed story on Global Force Wrestling including talent and television outlets and the TV scene, a lawsuit that has nothing to do with WWE & UFC, but where the result will be very important to both, Tough Enough, has NOAH turned the corner, as well as the monthly business rundowns for WWE & TNA.

    The latest Wrestling Observer: May 18, 2015 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Last minute Elimination Chamber special, Mayweather vs. Pacquiao destroys PPV records

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

    The lead story looks at the addition of the Elimination Chamber show, why this is being done, plans for the future and how this relates to it, the Elimination Chamber card as well as notes on the Chamber matches.  We also look at Daniel Bryan and the poor job of pushing his appearance and how they are pushing the Payback main event.

    We also look at the Mayweather-Pacquiao business, and how it breaks down, live event business, Vegas closed circuit, bar business, how much Mayweather and Pacquiao figure to earn, Mayweather talks rematch, why the fight was so big, and the state of PPV in 2015. 

    We also look at a big question as to how this relates to UFC going forward.

    We look at the historical implications of Ronda Rousey on the Sports Illustrated cover.

    We also have a rundown of ROH and New Japan working together in Philadelphia.

    We’ve got a major piece on Global Force Wrestling.  We look at the talent list, notes on the schedule for different talent, notes on the taping schedule, different TV stations they are talking with, Spike talks about getting into wrestling, the business ideas behind all this, as well as thoughts on the talent and both who is surprisingly not listed.

    We also look at the new season of Tough Enough including the nature of the contract to the winner, Steve Austin talks WrestleMania 32, the Owen Hart DVD controversy, new movie projects with Dwayne Johnson and Dave Bautista, a night Raw is going to have to be special show next year, WWE injury notes, Fourth generation wrestler gets a WWE tryout, WWE angle news, When they had ideas for Justin Bieber at SummerSlam, Jerry Lawler day, Sheamus talks his career, WWE raising ticket prices for premium seats, WWE tryout notes, most popular shows on WWE Network, WWE Japan tour notes, why Jericho vs. Balor was put on the Japan show, Lesnar story involving the brother of a famous actor and notes and business of all the arena events from the past week.

    We look at last week’s UFC show in Australia, the heavyweight title picture, the Mark Hunt stoppage and match-by-match coverage.

    We also look at the latest Pro Wrestling NOAH major show, which included appearances by Kenta Kobashi and Yuji Nagata, as well as NOAH’s Mitsuharu Misawa Memorial tour coming up next month.

    We also have a business rundown for WWE & TNA and where things stand in the different categories.

    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.

    Also in this week’s issue:

    –Wrestler fired once from major promotion, doesn’t last long on his return

    –The Santo Memorial tournament for 2015

    –Notes on the format of the AAA World Cup tournament

    –Who is now heading two promotions at the same time and why the move was made

    –Update on Dragon Gate’s King of Gate tournament

    –Minoru Suzuki promoting a show

    –New Japan lineups for all the big shows in June as well as the Dominion PPV in July

    –Notes on this year’s Best of the Super Junior tournament

    –Hall of Famer and health issues noted

    –Shinya Hashimoto Memorial show

    –Fujinami vs. Funaki Battle of Hall of Famers for the first time

    –Notes from the AGON promotions and main event pay

    –Notes on a promotion which claimed a TV deal and it falling apart

    –Details on all TNA television through mid-June, with matches, angles and destinations

    –A look at TNA’s Slammiversary show

    –Notes on TNA’s prospects on PPV

    –Update on Jeff Hardy

    –Notes on the best of five series between the Wolves vs. Aries & Roode

    –Update on TNA money issues

    –Update on TNA creative team

    –A look at those who returned to TV this past week and who is long and short-term

    –Who turned down an offer to come in

    –TNA announcing situation

    –Notes on TNA’s relationship with AAA

    –What happened with TNA and Wrestle-1

    –Can TNA talent work for GFW

    –Best stuff at the TNA tapings

    –Updates on UFC PPV numbers

    –Managers meeting and why

    –Dana White’s reaction regarding complaints about the Reebok deal

    –An interesting legal question stemming from the deal

    –UFC schedule notes

    –Anthony Pettis injury notes

    –Josh Barnett vs. Ryron Gracie

    –Metamoris news

    –Fight Pass promotion

    –New Fight Pass deals made

    –Rousey talks coaching vs. Cyborg

    –Lots of new UFC fights

    –Active UFC fighter sort of does a pro wrestling match

    –Huge Bellator signing of Olympian

    –This week’s Bellator show 

    If you are a new subscriber ordering 24 or more issues, you can get one free classic issue of your choice sent to you today.  With a 40 issue subscription, you can get two free classic issues sent to you today.

    New subscribers ordering 24 or 40 issues have to let us know what major stories of the past 11 years you are most interested in and we’ll send the issue with the best coverage of that story. We’ve got coverage of every major PPV event and world wide spectacular, every major star switching promotions, histories of companies like FMW, Rings and New Japan, retirement and obit issues of every major star who fits into those descriptions over the past 11 years, as well as our biggest issue every year, the annual awards issue, and our most controversial issue of every year, the Hall of Fame issue.

    Our most requested issues in our history are:

    *November 17, 1997 (full details of everything leading to the most famous wrestling match finish of modern times at the Survivor Series plus a history of in-ring double-crosses)

    *December 21, 1998 (the complete Vince McMahon-Bret Hart conversation right before the Survivor Series match so you’ll know exactly what was said–the conversation played in edited form both on the inaugural broadcast of Confidential as well as in Wrestling with Shadows, but everything that was said between the two about the match that was going to take place that same night)

    *August 1, 1994 (the most detailed coverage anywhere of the Vince McMahon steroid trial, an issue praised in numerous newspaper article and Sex, Lies and Headlocks)

    *March 26, 2001 (death of WCW and history of pro wrestling on the Turner networks)a

    *October 22, 2001 (why the adult audience has left pro wrestling in such great numbers and what needed to have been done to save them)

    *July 8, 1991 (Ric Flair leaves WCW as world champion/Zahorian steroid trial)

    *February 8, 1993 (the life and times of Andre the Giant)

    *May 13, 2002 (the life story of the most incredible pro wrestling career ever, a look at Lou Thesz, in one of the largest issues of our history)

    *January 27, 2003 (part one of the two-part series covering the career and life of The Sheik)

    *February 3, 2003 (Part two on The Sheik including thoughts from people who worked with him and where he stands historically)

    *March 24, 2003 (history of the WWWF title, inside behind the Sammartino, Backlund and Backlund era)

    *April 21, 2003 (history of WWF continues with the expansion nationally, the death of the regional territories and the rise of Hulk Hogan)

    *May 12, 2003 (The life and death of Elizabeth and the rise of fall of Lex Luger)

    *June 9, 2003 (Part 1 of history of WWF vs. WCW wars and what many say was the greatest year in U.S. wrestling; plus a look at Fred Blassie)

    *June 16, 2003 (Freddie Blassie through the eyes of his biggest rivals and friends)

    *July 28, 2003 (Part 2 of the history of the WWF vs. WCW war and the plans to make new superstars in the early 90s, what happened, and the night where the three biggest wrestling companies in the world combined for a joint show and what happened)

    *August 25, 2003 (2003 Hall of Fame issue with huge profiles on the controversial career of Shawn Michaels, Chris Benoit as well as historical features on Earl Caddock and Francisco Flores)

    *September 22, 2003 (Part 3 of the history of the WWF vs WCW war with the seeds that caused the collapse of the industry in the 90s, Zahorian trial, Gulf War controversy, Flair leaves WCW while holding world title and much more)

    *October 27, 2003 (The fascinating life of Stu Hart plus the story of Road Warrior Hawk)

    *January 19, 2004 (2003 Awards issue)

    *February 2, 2004 (History of Toronto wrestling, Jack Tunney life story, Royal Rumble and Battle Royal history)

    *February 23, 2004 (History of Guerrero family with Eddy’s win over Brock Lesnar)

    *March 1, 2004 (History of WWF continues with the period that brought the company down in early 1992, the mistakes, the real stories and how the business changed)

    *March 8, 2004 (History of Wrestlemania, its greatest matches and best and worst shows as voted both by wrestlers and non-wrestlers and Wrestlemania history books)

    *July 5, 2004 (A look behind the scenes and Ric Flair’s book and his background with Eric Bischoff and Hulk Hogan)

    *July 12, 2004 (A look at more on Ric Flair’s book and his comments on Bruno Sammartino, Bret Hart and Mick Foley)

    *August 16, 2004 (History of the Olympians in pro wrestling)

    *August 23, 2004 (2004 Hall of Fame issue and biggest issue of the year with huge profiles on Kazushi Sakuraba, Undertaker, Bob Backlund, Masahiro Chono, Ultimo Dragon, Kurt Angle and Tarzan Lopez–this counts as one issue if you are asking for a free issue, but ordered separately, due to size, is $6 in North America and $7 overseas)

    *October 4, 2004 (the life and times of Big Bossman; as well as details of the life and times of one of the most influential men world wide in pro wrestling history, Jim Barnett)

    *November 15, 2004 (the full story of what happened between Kurt Angle and Daniel Puder, plus coverage of the most important week in the history of TNA)

    *January 24, 2005 (2004 Awards issue, Rock and WWE part company)

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    *May 9, 2005 (the life and times of Chris Candido)

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    *November 21, 2005 (Life and Times of Eddy Guerrero and Crusher, double issue $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

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    *April 10, 2006 (Behind the scenes at the 2006 Wrestlemania/Hall of Fame week)

    *July 24, 2006 (The History of the Von Erichs and World Class Championship Wrestling–the most unreal story ever in wrestling)

    *September 4, 2006 (The Rise and Fall of Kurt Angle; 2006 Hall of Fame inductions of Eddie Guerrero, Paul Bowser, Masakatsu Funaki, Aja Kong and Hiroshi Hase including tons of wrestling history around the world from the 20s through the 60s, the evolution of working to not working in Japan, and a look at Guerrero in hindsight, double issue $6 or $7 overseas)

    *October 9, 2006 (A look back nine years later at the life and legacy of Brian Pillman with tons of inside information about what made him tick as his real objectives)

    *November 15, 2006 (History of WCW part one, Eric Bischoff’s book and how the industry was changed forever)

    *November 20, 2006 (History of WCW part two, Why Jim Ross left WCW, How Bischoff changed the company, signing of Hulk Hogan, Beginning of Nitro, Jesse Ventura, Brian Pillman, Chris Jericho and signing Wrestlemania planned celebrity away)

    *November 27, 2006 (History of WCW part three, When Bischoff challenged McMahon to fight; Truth and fiction around Bret Hart signing with WCW and why it didn’t click)

    *December 6, 2006 (details behind Pride’s offers to sell promotion and Part four of History of WCW part four, Hogan-Goldberg match and why there was no rematch, WCW loses NBC network deal in 1999 and the real reasons the company fell apart)

    *January 22, 2007 (2006 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *February 14, 2007 (Life and Times of Bam Bigelow)

    *March 5, 2007 (WWE begins plans that will change the business)

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    *April 4, 2007 (Life and Times of Badnews Allen Coage–which many are calling one of the best issues in history)

    *July 2, 2007 (Part one of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 5, 2007 (Part two of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 10, 2007 (Part three of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 19, 2007 (Part four of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 23, 2007 (Part five of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 25, 2007 (Part six of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *August 15, 2007 (The legend of the God of Japanese wrestling and his influence on MMA, Karl Gotch)

    *October 15 (2007 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas including inductions of The Rock, Tom Packs and the original Strangler Lewis)

    *November 12, 2007 (Life and times of Fabulous Moolah and history of U.S. women’s wrestling) .

    *December 31, 2007 (History of Ric Flair and the heyday of wrestling at the Greensboro Coliseum)

    *January 21, 2008 (2007 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *March 17, 2008 (Life and times of Johnny Weaver)

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    *August 11, 2008 (Ric Flair leaves WWE; Updated history of pro wrestlers and MMA fighters who went to the Olympics)

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    To get all of those biographies as back issues of the Observer would be a $60 value today. This is a collection of some of the best Observer articles of the past several years in a hardcover, full-color format that is 239 pages. There is also a foreword by Bret Hart. The book price is $12.95 plus $3.50 for shipping costs in the U.S., $20 for shipping costs to Canada and $25 for shipping costs outside North America. You can order the book the same way you order the newsletter.

    ****

    Wednesday Daily Update

    — This is different. Tampa Bay Online is reporting that Gawker has sued the FBI for the records of their investigation into the leak of the Hulk Hogan/Heather Clem sex tape. Hogan’s lawsuit against Gawker is still ongoing, and Gawker filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for more than 1,100 pages of records of the investigaton to help defend the Hogan lawsuit. The FOIA request was denied on privacy grounds, so Gawker resubmitted it. Then it was denied because the records involved a “pending or prospective” investigation. A Justice Department appeal was denied, so now Gawker is suing the FBI, arguing that there’s no such investigation.

    — Being that David Letterman bids television adieu tonight, what better way to commemerate the occasion here than linking the famous Jerry Lawler/Andy Kaufman segment, which frequently places on “greatest TV moments” lists? This specific YouTube video is the best version you’ll find, as includes everything relevant from the credits and the monologue as well as the complete interview with the uncensored version of Kaufman’s rant towards Lawler.

    Also make sure to check out:

    Kaufman’s appearance introducing Freddie Blassie as his new manager while promoting “My Breakfast with Blassie” and the wrestling-themed Broadway play “Teaneck Tanzi,” which closed after two nights.

    * Killer Kowalski’s appearance during Letterman’s first year (Part 1, Part 2)

    Vince McMahon’s appearance on Letterman’s New Year’s Eve 1985 special, where he serves as the show’s special correspondent to report on the first baby born in Nw York City in 1986. Vince doesn’t exactly do well or fit in, but it’s still a great skit.

    Letterman would bring up pro wrestling fairly regularly over the years, usually talking about watching Dick the Bruiser in Indianapolis. There’s also a great segment that I can’t find online where Debbie Harry (on the show to plug “Videodrome“) talks about how she and Chris Stein had gotten into watching both the WWF and Georgia Championship Wrestling on TV, but they preferred the Georgia wrestling because it was “funkier.”

    RollingStone.com interviewed The Young Bucks. Great, long interview covering a ton of topics, including burning out on being their own bosses on the indie scene, hustling to sell merchandise, how they got booked into NJPW, the rise of the Bullet Club, and much more. Maybe the most notable quote sees Matt Jackson talking about working full-time for a single promotion: “We’re waiting for the right offer. When we do settle down, it’s going to be for the right dollar amount. We’re thinking of our families, so it’ll be what’s best for our families, ’cause we’ll be able to maximize our time at home while still being wrestlers.”

    There are at least 32 lawsuits from across the U.S. regarding the idea that Manny Pacquiao’s secret shoulder injury amounted to defrauding customers. One lawsuit in Texas alleges racketeering. It looks like a panel of federal judges will have to determine which of these go on, which are consolidated, which are class action, and so on.

    — Some notes from Kris Zellner in his latest edition of The Lucha Report:

    CMLL pulled both Rush & Shocker from all of their bookings this week, Rush likely due to the public allegations that he attacked an Arena Mexico security guard and Shocker most likely due to personal issues.

    They also got the Atlantis vs. Octagon match pulled from the June 21st Chilanga Mask show on 6/21, as it looks like they’ll be working with each ther on the All Elite (outside promoter booking CMLL’s Arena Mexico) show the previous week.

    Finn Balor talks to MTV UK about (briefly) meeting Vince McMahon for the first time as well as being able to catch up with the NJPW crew last week in Philadelphia.

    UFC 187 Embedded Episode 2 features Donald Cerrone going scuba diving as well as both Daniel Cormier and Chris Weidman saying goodbye to their families before heading to the airport. Not the best episode aside from the scenery in the Cerrone segment.

    — Inside MMA returns to AXS TV after a few weeks off this Friday night at 12;30 a.m. ET (or whenever the Lion Fight Muay Thai card ends) with a show that includes interviews with Dana White, Donald Cerrone, and Dolph Lundgren. They have a preview of the Cerrone interview on the AXS TV Fights YouTube channel. That’s the same night as the premiere of the second cyle of New Japan Pro Wrestling shows (at 9:00 p.m. ET and 1:30 p.m. ET), and they’re also rerunning Michael Schiavello’s sit-down interview with Steve Austin at 8:00 p.m. ET.

    — The Fight Network’s Canadian and Turkish branches will be airing this Friday’s ONE Championship card at 8:30 a.m. ET. American subscribers (either on cable or omline) are presumably out of luck.

    Jerry Lawler appeared on Cerrito Live on WHBQ radio in Memphis to promote his new Blu-Ray/DVD set that was released yesterday. Topics covered include how involved he was in the production of the set, including his dealings with WWE for Memphis footage.

    ESPN talked to Bill Goldberg while he was at Citi Field promoting the Legends of Wrestling event that’s being held there on June 7th.

    I have a new podcast up talking to wrestling memorabilia collector/historian Josh Watko about all sorts of collectibls from toys to trading cards to autographs to advertising items to records and everything in between. Really fun show if you’ve ever been into any of this stuff.

    WUNC radio talked to former wrestling newsletter writer John Hitchcock about “Front Row Section D,” his new book about Carolinas wrestling.

    RVA Magazine in Richmond reviewed this past Monday’s Raw as a live show.

    — Former WWE writer Kevin Eck reviewed Jim Ross’s one man show in Baltimore on his blog.

    TOMORROW’S WWE NETWORK SCHEDULE (thanks to Bert Duckwall)

    1:00 AM ET
    CULTURE SHOCK WITH COREY GRAVES Corey Graves heads down to one of his favorite tattoo shops in the heart of New York City!

    1:10 AM ET
    WWE UNFILTERED WITH RENEE YOUNG In the premiere of Unfiltered, Renee Young hangs out with WWE World Heavyweight Champion Seth Rollins for a fun and revealing conversation!

    1:30 AM ET
    FIRST LOOK First Look: It’s Good To Be King

    2:00 AM ET
    WWE BEYOND THE RING Batista embodies his nickname ‘The Animal’. Relive Batista’s storied career with this biography of his life both inside the ring and out.

    3:30 AM ET
    WWE QUICK HITS WWE Quick Hits 3 brings you some of the most unique, entertaining, and sometimes outrageous clips, unearthed from the depths of WWE Network.

    4:00 AM ET
    RAW FLASHBACK WWE Champion Sycho Sid gives a special in-ring interview. Plus, Bret Hart, Rocky Maivia, and many more in action!

    5:00 AM ET
    RAW FLASHBACK Shawn Michaels and Bret Hart come face-to-face in a highly volatile interview. Plus, Stone Cold Steve Austin, Goldust, and more in action!

    6:00 AM ET
    PRIME TIME WRESTLING On this Prime Time Wrestling, Bobby ‘The Brain’ Heenan tries to find himself. Plus, Iron Mike Sharpe, Macho Man Randy Savage, and more!

    8:00 AM ET
    WWE KING OF THE RING 1995 Eight men including The Undertaker, Shawn Michaels, and Yokozuna compete for the crown in the annual King of the Ring Tournament and more.

    11:00 AM ET
    SMACKDOWN FLASHBACK Mankind faces Big Show in the main event with Triple H suspended 15 feet above the ring. The Rock vs. Al Snow in a steel cage and more.

    12:30 PM ET
    FIRST LOOK First Look: It’s Good To Be King

    1:00 PM ET
    CLASH OF THE CHAMPIONS Clash of the Champions XXI; Ricky Steamboat and Shane Douglas take on Barry Windham and Dustin Rhodes for the Unified World Tag Team Titles.

    3:00 PM ET
    WCW MONDAY NITRO On this episode of WCW Monday Nitro Lex Luger puts his career on the line against Randy Savage. Hulk Hogan looks to confront The Giant.

    4:00 PM ET
    RAW FLASHBACK The 1-2-3 Kid once again shows Razor Ramon his determination to win. Jerry ‘The King’ Lawler unveils a surprise for Bret Hart.

    5:00 PM ET
    WCW WRESTLEWAR 1990 Ric Flair defends the NWA World Title against Lex Luger. Arn and Ole Anderson face The Steiner Brothers for the NWA Tag Team Titles.

    8:00 PM ET
    WCW MONDAY NITRO On this episode of WCW Monday Nitro Lex Luger puts his career on the line against Randy Savage. Hulk Hogan looks to confront The Giant.

    9:00 PM ET
    RAW FLASHBACK The 1-2-3 Kid once again shows Razor Ramon his determination to win. Jerry ‘The King’ Lawler unveils a surprise for Bret Hart.

    10:00 PM ET
    FIRST LOOK First Look: It’s Good To Be King

    10:30 PM ET
    CULTURE SHOCK WITH COREY GRAVES Corey Graves heads down to one of his favorite tattoo shops in the heart of New York City!

    11:00 PM ET
    WCW MONDAY NITRO On this episode of WCW Monday Nitro Lex Luger puts his career on the line against Randy Savage. Hulk Hogan looks to confront The Giant.

  • On this day in pro wrestling history (May 19): Undertaker beats Hogan, Gagne’s first retirement match

    By Brian Hoops, Wrestling Observer.com

    1905 – Tom Jenkins defeated Frank Gotch to retain the American Heavyweight Championship in Madison Square Garden in New York City.

    1961 – In Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; AWA Tag Team Champions Hard Boiled Haggerty & Gene Kiniski beat Whipper Billy Watson & Wilbur Snyder and AWA Champion Verne Gagne beat Stan Kowalski.

    1963 – The Destroyer (Dick Beyer) defeated Rikidozan in Osaka, Japan,

    1966 – In Kansas City, Kansas; Pat O’Connor defeated The Butcher via DQ and Bob Ellis & The Mongolian Stomper defeated Bob Geigel & Bob Brown in three falls.

    1973 – In Peoria, Illinois; Dusty Rhodes won a 10 man battle royal by eliminating The Crusher; The Crusher beat Dusty Rhodes; Reggie Parks beat Dick Murdoch via DQ; Ken Patera beat Vic Rossitani; Ric Flair went to a time limit draw with Greg Gagne and Jim Brunzell beat Khosrow Vaziri.

    1977 – Bruno Sammartino defeated Larry Zbyszko in the main event of a WWWF event in Worcester, MA.

    1980- In Madison Square Garden, Larry Zbyszko won a 16-man $15,000 battle royal; WWF World Champion Bob Backlund pinned WWF IC Champion Ken Patera in a Texas Death Match and Tony Atlas, Ivan Putski, & Pat Patterson defeated Peter Maivia & WWF Tag Team Champions the Wild Samoans in a Best 2 out of 3 falls match.

    1981 – It was officially announced by the American Wrestling Association that, due to Verne Gagne retiring and vacating the AWA World Heavyweight Title, Nick Bockwinkel, the former champion and current number one contender, was being awarded the belt.

    1981 – In Omaha, Nebraska; AWA Tag Team Champions Adrian Adonis & Jesse Ventura beat Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell and Baron Von Raschke beat John Studd.

    1986 – In Fayetteville, NC; NWA World Tag Team Champions The Midnight Express, Bobby Eaton & Dennis Condrey defeated Dusty Rhodes & NWA U.S. Champion Magnum TA.

    1990 – In Washington, DC; The Midnight Express (Bobby Eaton & Stan Lane) defeated Brian Pillman & Tom Zenk to win the U.S. Tag Team Title and Doom (Ron Simmons & Butch Reed) defeated Rick & Scott Steiner to win the NWA World Tag Team Championship.

    1991 – In St. Petersburg, FL at the SuperBrawl PPV; The Freebirds (Michael Hayes & Jimmy Garvin) defeated Tracey Smothers & Steve Armstrong to win the vacant United States Tag Team Title, Bobby Eaton defeated Arn Anderson to win the WCW Television Title and WCW World Champion Ric Flair defeated Tatsumi Fujinami to capture the NWA World Title.

    1995 – Razor Ramon defeated Jeff Jarrett in Montreal, Quebec to win the WWF Intercontinental Championship in a Ladder match.

    1996 – In Madison Square Garden, Henry & Phinneas Godwinn defeated WWF Tag Team Champions Skip & Zip to win the titles.

    2002 – In Nashville, Tennessee; the Undertaker defeated Hulk Hogan to capture the WWE Undisputed World Title and Rikishi & Rico beat Billy & Chuck to capture the WWE World Tag Titles.

    2011 – Abyss defeated Frankie Kazarian to win the TNA X Division Title.

    2013 – At the Extreme Rules PPV; Dean Ambrose defeated Kofi Kingston to win the United States Title and The Shield defeated Bryan Danielson & Kane to win the WWE Tag Team Titles. Also, Brock Lesnar defeated Triple H in a steel cage match.

  • TUES. UPDATE: Triple H conference call, Scotland establishes national concussion guidelines, and more

    by David Bixenspan | davidbix@wrestlingobserver.comFollow @davidbix

    TV/show notes:

    Fox Sports 1 has a block of UFC programming tonight designed to push this Saturday’s UFC 187 pay-per-view card:

    8:30 p.m. ET – UFC From All Angles: Daniel Cormier (sit-down interview from a year ago)

    9:00 p.m. ET: UFC Countdown: UFC 187 (The hype show for Saturday, which premiered Sunday night)

    10:00 p.m. ET: UFC Fight Flashback: Weidman vs. Machida (Documentary style look back at the fight)

    10:30 p.m. ET: UFC Fight Flashback: Silva vs. Weidman I

    Plus as always we need SmackDown/Main Event spoiler reports, which you should email to newstips@wrestlingobserver.com.

    **** 

    The newest issue of Figure Four Weekly is up on the site for subscribers (subscribe here) and being the first week of May, features an extensive article demystifying what Sweeps mean for ratings and how it affects the wrestling business in 2015:

    — What do Sweeps periods actually measure?

    — Do Sweeps matter for cable at all?

    — What wrestling companies are they relevant to these days?

    — What was their past significance?

    — And more.

    Plus, as always, we have  all of the usual reviews and international news.

    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 story behind the Elimination Chamber as a network special, why and how it came about, as well as a look at the next two WWE major shows, Payback and Elimination Chamber and NXT Takeover, is the lead story in this week’s Observer.  We also have a look at the injury situation with Daniel Bryan, Sami Zayn and Hideo Itami.  We also look at the Mayweather-Pacquiao business, New Japan & ROH working together for big shows, a detailed story on Global Force Wrestling including talent and television outlets and the TV scene, a lawsuit that has nothing to do with WWE & UFC, but where the result will be very important to both, Tough Enough, has NOAH turned the corner, as well as the monthly business rundowns for WWE & TNA.

    The latest Wrestling Observer: May 18, 2015 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Last minute Elimination Chamber special, Mayweather vs. Pacquiao destroys PPV records

    Web site subscriptions, which include access to both current and older newsletters as well as every audio show in the history of the site. Sign up now 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@wrestlingobserver.com”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com

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

    Rates are:

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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.

    The lead story looks at the addition of the Elimination Chamber show, why this is being done, plans for the future and how this relates to it, the Elimination Chamber card as well as notes on the Chamber matches.  We also look at Daniel Bryan and the poor job of pushing his appearance and how they are pushing the Payback main event.

    We also look at the Mayweather-Pacquiao business, and how it breaks down, live event business, Vegas closed circuit, bar business, how much Mayweather and Pacquiao figure to earn, Mayweather talks rematch, why the fight was so big, and the state of PPV in 2015. 

    We also look at a big question as to how this relates to UFC going forward.

    We look at the historical implications of Ronda Rousey on the Sports Illustrated cover.

    We also have a rundown of ROH and New Japan working together in Philadelphia.

    We’ve got a major piece on Global Force Wrestling.  We look at the talent list, notes on the schedule for different talent, notes on the taping schedule, different TV stations they are talking with, Spike talks about getting into wrestling, the business ideas behind all this, as well as thoughts on the talent and both who is surprisingly not listed.

    We also look at the new season of Tough Enough including the nature of the contract to the winner, Steve Austin talks WrestleMania 32, the Owen Hart DVD controversy, new movie projects with Dwayne Johnson and Dave Bautista, a night Raw is going to have to be special show next year, WWE injury notes, Fourth generation wrestler gets a WWE tryout, WWE angle news, When they had ideas for Justin Bieber at SummerSlam, Jerry Lawler day, Sheamus talks his career, WWE raising ticket prices for premium seats, WWE tryout notes, most popular shows on WWE Network, WWE Japan tour notes, why Jericho vs. Balor was put on the Japan show, Lesnar story involving the brother of a famous actor and notes and business of all the arena events from the past week.

    We look at last week’s UFC show in Australia, the heavyweight title picture, the Mark Hunt stoppage and match-by-match coverage.

    We also look at the latest Pro Wrestling NOAH major show, which included appearances by Kenta Kobashi and Yuji Nagata, as well as NOAH’s Mitsuharu Misawa Memorial tour coming up next month.

    We also have a business rundown for WWE & TNA and where things stand in the different categories.

    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.

    Also in this week’s issue:

    –Wrestler fired once from major promotion, doesn’t last long on his return

    –The Santo Memorial tournament for 2015

    –Notes on the format of the AAA World Cup tournament

    –Who is now heading two promotions at the same time and why the move was made

    –Update on Dragon Gate’s King of Gate tournament

    –Minoru Suzuki promoting a show

    –New Japan lineups for all the big shows in June as well as the Dominion PPV in July

    –Notes on this year’s Best of the Super Junior tournament

    –Hall of Famer and health issues noted

    –Shinya Hashimoto Memorial show

    –Fujinami vs. Funaki Battle of Hall of Famers for the first time

    –Notes from the AGON promotions and main event pay

    –Notes on a promotion which claimed a TV deal and it falling apart

    –Details on all TNA television through mid-June, with matches, angles and destinations

    –A look at TNA’s Slammiversary show

    –Notes on TNA’s prospects on PPV

    –Update on Jeff Hardy

    –Notes on the best of five series between the Wolves vs. Aries & Roode

    –Update on TNA money issues

    –Update on TNA creative team

    –A look at those who returned to TV this past week and who is long and short-term

    –Who turned down an offer to come in

    –TNA announcing situation

    –Notes on TNA’s relationship with AAA

    –What happened with TNA and Wrestle-1

    –Can TNA talent work for GFW

    –Best stuff at the TNA tapings

    –Updates on UFC PPV numbers

    –Managers meeting and why

    –Dana White’s reaction regarding complaints about the Reebok deal

    –An interesting legal question stemming from the deal

    –UFC schedule notes

    –Anthony Pettis injury notes

    –Josh Barnett vs. Ryron Gracie

    –Metamoris news

    –Fight Pass promotion

    –New Fight Pass deals made

    –Rousey talks coaching vs. Cyborg

    –Lots of new UFC fights

    –Active UFC fighter sort of does a pro wrestling match

    –Huge Bellator signing of Olympian

    –This week’s Bellator show 

    If you are a new subscriber ordering 24 or more issues, you can get one free classic issue of your choice sent to you today.  With a 40 issue subscription, you can get two free classic issues sent to you today.

    New subscribers ordering 24 or 40 issues have to let us know what major stories of the past 11 years you are most interested in and we’ll send the issue with the best coverage of that story. We’ve got coverage of every major PPV event and world wide spectacular, every major star switching promotions, histories of companies like FMW, Rings and New Japan, retirement and obit issues of every major star who fits into those descriptions over the past 11 years, as well as our biggest issue every year, the annual awards issue, and our most controversial issue of every year, the Hall of Fame issue.

    Our most requested issues in our history are:

    *November 17, 1997 (full details of everything leading to the most famous wrestling match finish of modern times at the Survivor Series plus a history of in-ring double-crosses)

    *December 21, 1998 (the complete Vince McMahon-Bret Hart conversation right before the Survivor Series match so you’ll know exactly what was said–the conversation played in edited form both on the inaugural broadcast of Confidential as well as in Wrestling with Shadows, but everything that was said between the two about the match that was going to take place that same night)

    *August 1, 1994 (the most detailed coverage anywhere of the Vince McMahon steroid trial, an issue praised in numerous newspaper article and Sex, Lies and Headlocks)

    *March 26, 2001 (death of WCW and history of pro wrestling on the Turner networks)a

    *October 22, 2001 (why the adult audience has left pro wrestling in such great numbers and what needed to have been done to save them)

    *July 8, 1991 (Ric Flair leaves WCW as world champion/Zahorian steroid trial)

    *February 8, 1993 (the life and times of Andre the Giant)

    *May 13, 2002 (the life story of the most incredible pro wrestling career ever, a look at Lou Thesz, in one of the largest issues of our history)

    *January 27, 2003 (part one of the two-part series covering the career and life of The Sheik)

    *February 3, 2003 (Part two on The Sheik including thoughts from people who worked with him and where he stands historically)

    *March 24, 2003 (history of the WWWF title, inside behind the Sammartino, Backlund and Backlund era)

    *April 21, 2003 (history of WWF continues with the expansion nationally, the death of the regional territories and the rise of Hulk Hogan)

    *May 12, 2003 (The life and death of Elizabeth and the rise of fall of Lex Luger)

    *June 9, 2003 (Part 1 of history of WWF vs. WCW wars and what many say was the greatest year in U.S. wrestling; plus a look at Fred Blassie)

    *June 16, 2003 (Freddie Blassie through the eyes of his biggest rivals and friends)

    *July 28, 2003 (Part 2 of the history of the WWF vs. WCW war and the plans to make new superstars in the early 90s, what happened, and the night where the three biggest wrestling companies in the world combined for a joint show and what happened)

    *August 25, 2003 (2003 Hall of Fame issue with huge profiles on the controversial career of Shawn Michaels, Chris Benoit as well as historical features on Earl Caddock and Francisco Flores)

    *September 22, 2003 (Part 3 of the history of the WWF vs WCW war with the seeds that caused the collapse of the industry in the 90s, Zahorian trial, Gulf War controversy, Flair leaves WCW while holding world title and much more)

    *October 27, 2003 (The fascinating life of Stu Hart plus the story of Road Warrior Hawk)

    *January 19, 2004 (2003 Awards issue)

    *February 2, 2004 (History of Toronto wrestling, Jack Tunney life story, Royal Rumble and Battle Royal history)

    *February 23, 2004 (History of Guerrero family with Eddy’s win over Brock Lesnar)

    *March 1, 2004 (History of WWF continues with the period that brought the company down in early 1992, the mistakes, the real stories and how the business changed)

    *March 8, 2004 (History of Wrestlemania, its greatest matches and best and worst shows as voted both by wrestlers and non-wrestlers and Wrestlemania history books)

    *July 5, 2004 (A look behind the scenes and Ric Flair’s book and his background with Eric Bischoff and Hulk Hogan)

    *July 12, 2004 (A look at more on Ric Flair’s book and his comments on Bruno Sammartino, Bret Hart and Mick Foley)

    *August 16, 2004 (History of the Olympians in pro wrestling)

    *August 23, 2004 (2004 Hall of Fame issue and biggest issue of the year with huge profiles on Kazushi Sakuraba, Undertaker, Bob Backlund, Masahiro Chono, Ultimo Dragon, Kurt Angle and Tarzan Lopez–this counts as one issue if you are asking for a free issue, but ordered separately, due to size, is $6 in North America and $7 overseas)

    *October 4, 2004 (the life and times of Big Bossman; as well as details of the life and times of one of the most influential men world wide in pro wrestling history, Jim Barnett)

    *November 15, 2004 (the full story of what happened between Kurt Angle and Daniel Puder, plus coverage of the most important week in the history of TNA)

    *January 24, 2005 (2004 Awards issue, Rock and WWE part company)

    *March 14, 2005 (the 50 biggest money players in the history of WWF and a look at their Hall of Fame)

    *May 9, 2005 (the life and times of Chris Candido)

    *June 20, 2005 (The full story behind Paul Heyman and the death of ECW, as well as coverage of One Night Stand, Hardcore Homecoming and behind the scenes of both shows)

    *July 18, 2005 (death of Shinya Hashimoto and his records with a look at the fall of New Japan, the Matt Hardy angle, tons of WWE firings, Cornette firing in detail as well as problems of a WWE developmental territory in our biggest news issue of the year which is a double-sized issue and would be $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

    *August 24, 2005 (2005 Hall of Fame issue with career profiles of Paul Heyman, HHH and Freebirds plus debut of MMA Hall of Fame)

    *September 12, 2005 (History of Mid South Wrestling)

    *October 10, 2005 (Life and Times of the Ultimate Warrior)

    *November 21, 2005 (Life and Times of Eddy Guerrero and Crusher, double issue $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

    *December 5, 2005 (The Eddy Guerrero special issue, double issue $6 on its own, $7 overseas)

    *January 9, 2006 (The life and times of Superstar Billy Graham, plus New Year’s Eve 2005 coverage)

    *January 16, 2006 (2005 Awards double issue, $6 or $7 overseas)

    *April 3, 2006 (Story of Ann Calvello and the history of Roller Derby–many called this the best issue of the Observer ever)

    *April 10, 2006 (Behind the scenes at the 2006 Wrestlemania/Hall of Fame week)

    *July 24, 2006 (The History of the Von Erichs and World Class Championship Wrestling–the most unreal story ever in wrestling)

    *September 4, 2006 (The Rise and Fall of Kurt Angle; 2006 Hall of Fame inductions of Eddie Guerrero, Paul Bowser, Masakatsu Funaki, Aja Kong and Hiroshi Hase including tons of wrestling history around the world from the 20s through the 60s, the evolution of working to not working in Japan, and a look at Guerrero in hindsight, double issue $6 or $7 overseas)

    *October 9, 2006 (A look back nine years later at the life and legacy of Brian Pillman with tons of inside information about what made him tick as his real objectives)

    *November 15, 2006 (History of WCW part one, Eric Bischoff’s book and how the industry was changed forever)

    *November 20, 2006 (History of WCW part two, Why Jim Ross left WCW, How Bischoff changed the company, signing of Hulk Hogan, Beginning of Nitro, Jesse Ventura, Brian Pillman, Chris Jericho and signing Wrestlemania planned celebrity away)

    *November 27, 2006 (History of WCW part three, When Bischoff challenged McMahon to fight; Truth and fiction around Bret Hart signing with WCW and why it didn’t click)

    *December 6, 2006 (details behind Pride’s offers to sell promotion and Part four of History of WCW part four, Hogan-Goldberg match and why there was no rematch, WCW loses NBC network deal in 1999 and the real reasons the company fell apart)

    *January 22, 2007 (2006 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *February 14, 2007 (Life and Times of Bam Bigelow)

    *March 5, 2007 (WWE begins plans that will change the business)

    *March 12, 2007 (Life and Times of Mike Awesome)

    *March 19, 2007 (Life and Times of Ernie Ladd)

    *April 4, 2007 (Life and Times of Badnews Allen Coage–which many are calling one of the best issues in history)

    *July 2, 2007 (Part one of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 5, 2007 (Part two of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 10, 2007 (Part three of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 19, 2007 (Part four of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 23, 2007 (Part five of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 25, 2007 (Part six of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *August 15, 2007 (The legend of the God of Japanese wrestling and his influence on MMA, Karl Gotch)

    *October 15 (2007 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas including inductions of The Rock, Tom Packs and the original Strangler Lewis)

    *November 12, 2007 (Life and times of Fabulous Moolah and history of U.S. women’s wrestling) .

    *December 31, 2007 (History of Ric Flair and the heyday of wrestling at the Greensboro Coliseum)

    *January 21, 2008 (2007 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *March 17, 2008 (Life and times of Johnny Weaver)

    *March 24, 2008 (Life and times of Gary Hart)

    *April 10, 2008 (Farewell to Ric Flair; My thoughts, Shawn Michaels talks of Flair’s meaning to him; Hall of Fame; Wrestlemania double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *August 11, 2008 (Ric Flair leaves WWE; Updated history of pro wrestlers and MMA fighters who went to the Olympics)

    * September 8, 2008 (2008 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas; part one of Killer Kowalski bio)

    * September 15, 2008 (Life and Times of Evan Tanner)

    * September 22, 2008 (The amazing career of Killer Kowalski, one of our most in-depth bios)

    You can also order any of these issues on their own for $4 in North America or $5 overseas.

    We now have available personally autographed copies of Tributes II, our latest book, as well as a DVD that comes with it talking more about the subjects in the book. The book covers the life stories of Lou Thesz, Wahoo McDaniel, Elizabeth, Fred Blassie, Road Warrior Hawk, Andre the Giant, Curt Hennig, Johnny Valentine, Davey Boy Smith, Terry Gordy, Owen Hart, Stu Hart, Gorilla Monsoon, The Sheik and Tim Woods..

    To get all of those biographies as back issues of the Observer would be a $60 value today. This is a collection of some of the best Observer articles of the past several years in a hardcover, full-color format that is 239 pages. There is also a foreword by Bret Hart. The book price is $12.95 plus $3.50 for shipping costs in the U.S., $20 for shipping costs to Canada and $25 for shipping costs outside North America. You can order the book the same way you order the newsletter.

    ****

    Tuesday Daily Update

    — The quarterly Triple H pre-NXT special conference call was ongoing as I wrote this (and we’ll have audio up for subscribers), and he mentioned a few newsworthy things:

    – Matt “Jason Albert” Bloom and Sara Amato have been promoted to Head Coach and Assistant Head Coach, respectively. at the WWE Performance Center. Bloom had been the Interim Head Coach since the departure of Bill DeMott.

    – Sami Zayn has been cleared to wrestle at tomorrow night’s NXT TakeOver: Unstoppable live special on WWE Network.  Hideo Itami isn’t, but that’s no surprise.

    – The official word on Samoa Joe for now: He was at the Performance Center a month ag, but”whether or not we do business together, I don’t know.”

    – There are plans to do what everyone expected with NXT house shows, which is the TV talent on tour and the greener talent on B-shows in Florida, but it’s probably not happening until 2016.

    Per the BBC, Scotland has become the first country to introduce national guidelines for dealing with concussions in all sports. There’s no sport-specific guidance, but there are clear guidelines on how to recognize and deal with concussions. Should be interesting to see how much publicity this gets and what governments follow suit.

    — You may have seen this by now, but Kevin Owens’ wife posted an Instagram video of their son (Owen, who was named after Owen Hart, and in turn Kevin took “Owens” on as his WWE name) reacting to his dad’s Raw debut. It’s pretty much the most adorable thing you’ll see all day.

    — Also, RollingStone.com has an interview with Owens. Of note, he mentions that Terry Taylor is his main trainer, which, if the timing had been different, probably would have been a hint since Taylor is used to put the finishing touches on talent considered ready for the main roster. Anyway, interesting quote from Owens on adapting himself to WWE: “So there were little tweaks, maybe clean up the language a little, but besides that I think I’ve been pretty true to myself. And I think that’s a big part of what helps me be successful. I’m genuine, and I think people can see that when they watch. I’m just gonna keep going that way and see where that takes me.”

    — ROH issued a press release announcing that Quinn “Moose” Ojinnaka has signed a new contract, meaning that the former Atlanta Falcons offensive lineman won’t be going to WWE or Global Force Wrestling’s TV tapings any time soon. He’s still working the GFW baseball park house shows because those aren’t restricted by ROH contracts.

    — Global Force Wrestling removed Scott Hall from their website’s roster page after he was thrown out of a show this past weekend for showing up intoxicated and not even taking the time he was given to try to dry out.

    Part 1 of the UFC Embedded documentary videos for this weekend’s UFC 187 PPV went up today. The highlight is absolutely Vitor Belfort going to a barber shop for maintenence on his mowhawk with the crosses on the sides of his head. He looks smaller than the last time he fought off testosterone replacement therapy (the Anderson Silva fight four years ago) but leaner and in better overall shape.

    Really nice article about a boy from Princeton, Indiana whose love of WWE helps him cope with a number of serious medial problems stemming from a birth defect.

    Under the Mat Radio talked to Jim Ross at his Baltimore one-man show.

     — Jim Ross will be doing a show on Aug. 19, the Wednesday before SummerSlam, at the DC Improv in Washington, DC. Tickets go on sale this Friday at the venue’s website.

    — AAA EVP Dorian Roldan and Court Bauer talk about the Lucha World Cup, AAA’s expansion, Lucha Underground’s future as well as Rey Mysterio and dealing with Japanese companies on today’s MLW Radio podcast at MLWRadio.com.

    — Dave has two articles at MMAFighting.com from the past few days:

    A look at if Mayweather-Pacquiao will hurt UFC 187 PPV buys.

    The usual Fortunes Changed for Five postmortem for this past weekend’s card.

    — This is not new, but I had never seen nor heard of it before that I can recall: In 2008, Thomas Golianopoulos wrote an article about Hardbody Harrison’s wrestling and criminal careers for KING Magazine, and he added it to his website last year. Fascinating stuff, well worth going out of your way to read. For those not aware of what exactly happened with him, he was a WCW Power Plant trainee turned WCW job guy who was one of the plaintiffs who got a big settlement in the racial discrimination lawsuit against the company. Meanwhile, he was running an elaborate pimping/sexual slavery operation, and eventually, in 2005, he got busted.

    TOMORROW’S WWE NETWORK SCHEDULE (thanks to Bert Duckwall)

    Wednesday, May 20

    12:00 AM ET
    WWE UNFILTERED WITH RENEE YOUNG    In the premiere of Unfiltered, Renee Young hangs out with WWE World Heavyweight Champion Seth Rollins for a fun and revealing conversation!

    12:07 AM ET
    MONDAY NIGHT WAR    In an era of shifting loyalties, WWE and WCW would each build a cornerstone in order to achieve stability.

    1:01 AM ET
    WWE NXT    The future is here. Witness the entertainers, the leading men and women, the Superstars of tomorrow — this is NXT!

    2:00 AM ET
    TUESDAY NIGHT TITANS    Vince McMahon hosts Tuesday Night Titans with Lord Alfred Hayes. Guests include Roddy Piper, Greg Valentine and Wendi Richter.

    4:00 AM ET
    PRIME TIME WRESTLING    On this Prime Time Wrestling, Bobby ‘The Brain’ Heenan tries to find himself. Plus, Iron Mike Sharpe, Macho Man Randy Savage, and more!

    6:00 AM ET
    TOUGH ENOUGH     Legendary WWE Superstar The Rock and ‘Psych’ star James Roday give the remaining five contestants a lesson in charisma.

    7:00 AM ET
    MONDAY NIGHT WAR   In an era of shifting loyalties, WWE and WCW would each build a cornerstone in order to achieve stability.

    8:00 AM ET
    WWE COUNTDOWN    Counting down the top ten most stylish ring attire ever worn by a WWE Superstar.

    9:00 AM ET
    TOUGH ENOUGH    Legendary WWE Superstar The Rock and ‘Psych’ star James Roday give the remaining five contestants a lesson in charisma.

    10:00 AM ET
    MONDAY NIGHT WAR   In an era of shifting loyalties, WWE and WCW would each build a cornerstone in order to achieve stability.

    11:00 AM ET
    WWE COUNTDOWN    Counting down the top ten most stylish ring attire ever worn by a WWE Superstar.

    12:00 PM ET
    TOUGH ENOUGH    Legendary WWE Superstar The Rock and ‘Psych’ star James Roday give the remaining five contestants a lesson in charisma.

    1:00 PM ET
    MONDAY NIGHT WAR    In an era of shifting loyalties, WWE and WCW would each build a cornerstone in order to achieve stability.

    2:00 PM ET
    WWE COUNTDOWN    Counting down the top ten most stylish ring attire ever worn by a WWE Superstar.

    3:00 PM ET
    WWE NXT    The future is here. Witness the entertainers, the leading men and women, the Superstars of tomorrow — this is NXT!

    4:00 PM ET
    TOTAL DIVAS     Trinity’s inability to have sex frustrates Jon, and Bryan and Nikki shock Brie when they team up to stage an intervention.

    5:00 PM ET
    TOTAL DIVAS    Ariane’s mother calles with a desperate plea for help, and Eva is shocked when Jonathan makes a dangerous decision without her consent.

    6:00 PM ET
    WWE BEYOND THE RING    An in-depth look at some of the most well-known, colorful managers wrestling has ever seen including Bobby Heenan, Paul Bearer, and more.

    7:30 PM ET
    NXT TAKEOVER UNSTOPPABLE    The NXT TakeOver Unstoppable Pre-Show hosted by Renee Young, Corey Graves and Byron Saxton.

    8:00 PM ET
    NXT TAKEOVER UNSTOPPABLE    Sami Zayn looks to end the title reign of his former best friend, NXT Champion Kevin Owens at NXT TakeOver Unstoppable.

    10:00 PM ET
    CULTURE SHOCK WITH COREY GRAVES   Corey Graves heads down to one of his favorite tattoo shops in the heart of New York City!

    10:10 PM ET
    WWE UNFILTERED WITH RENEE YOUNG    In the premiere of Unfiltered, Renee Young hangs out with WWE World Heavyweight Champion Seth Rollins for a fun and revealing conversation!

    10:30 PM ET
    NXT TAKEOVER UNSTOPPABLE    The NXT TakeOver Unstoppable Pre-Show hosted by Renee Young, Corey Graves and Byron Saxton.

    11:00 PM ET
    NXT TAKEOVER UNSTOPPABLE   Sami Zayn looks to end the title reign of his former best friend, NXT Champion Kevin Owens at NXT TakeOver Unstoppable.

  • TMZ reports Scott Hall kicked out of event this weekend

    TMZ reported today that Scott Hall was physically escorted out of a wrestling event in Asbuty Park, NJ at the Skate and Surf Music Festival.

    Hall, 56, was reported as being wasted hours before the event was to start, and then given multiple chances to sober up before the scheduled meet and greet.

    He did not, and was told to leave, and then refused, demanding to be paid, and security took him out.

    The story is at www.TMZSports.com

  • MON. UPDATE: Ruling in Silva vs. Nevada, Interest in Payback, Levesque conference, New Japan starts season

    By dave@wrestlingobserver.com”>Dave Meltzer

    We’re looking for your thoughts on both last night’s WWE Payback show and the ROH Global Wars show from Toronto so you can send a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to dave@wrestlingobserver.com”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com

    We’re also looking for reports from Raw tonight in Richmond, VA with dark matches, Superstars matches and anything else that wouldn’t be evident from the live show.  John Cena is scheduled to do another open challenge for the U.S. title.

    Smackdown and Main Event will be taped on Tuesday night in Norfolk, VA.

    ****

    The newest issue of Figure Four Weekly is up on the site for subscribers (subscribe here) and being the first week of May, features an extensive article demystifying what Sweeps mean for ratings and how it affects the wrestling business in 2015:

    — What do Sweeps periods actually measure?

    — Do Sweeps matter for cable at all?

    — What wrestling companies are they relevant to these days?

    — What was their past significance?

    — And more.

    Plus, as always, we have  all of the usual reviews and international news.

    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 story behind the Elimination Chamber as a network special, why and how it came about, as well as a look at the next two WWE major shows, Payback and Elimination Chamber and NXT Takeover, is the lead story in this week’s Observer.  We also have a look at the injury situation with Daniel Bryan, Sami Zayn and Hideo Itami.  We also look at the Mayweather-Pacquiao business, New Japan & ROH working together for big shows, a detailed story on Global Force Wrestling including talent and television outlets and the TV scene, a lawsuit that has nothing to do with WWE & UFC, but where the result will be very important to both, Tough Enough, has NOAH turned the corner, as well as the monthly business rundowns for WWE & TNA.

    The latest Wrestling Observer: May 18, 2015 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Last minute Elimination Chamber special, Mayweather vs. Pacquiao destroys PPV records

    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@wrestlingobserver.com”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com

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

    Rates are:

    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.

    The lead story looks at the addition of the Elimination Chamber show, why this is being done, plans for the future and how this relates to it, the Elimination Chamber card as well as notes on the Chamber matches.  We also look at Daniel Bryan and the poor job of pushing his appearance and how they are pushing the Payback main event.

    We also look at the Mayweather-Pacquiao business, and how it breaks down, live event business, Vegas closed circuit, bar business, how much Mayweather and Pacquiao figure to earn, Mayweather talks rematch, why the fight was so big, and the state of PPV in 2015. 

    We also look at a big question as to how this relates to UFC going forward.

    We look at the historical implications of Ronda Rousey on the Sports Illustrated cover.

    We also have a rundown of ROH and New Japan working together in Philadelphia.

    We’ve got a major piece on Global Force Wrestling.  We look at the talent list, notes on the schedule for different talent, notes on the taping schedule, different TV stations they are talking with, Spike talks about getting into wrestling, the business ideas behind all this, as well as thoughts on the talent and both who is surprisingly not listed.

    We also look at the new season of Tough Enough including the nature of the contract to the winner, Steve Austin talks WrestleMania 32, the Owen Hart DVD controversy, new movie projects with Dwayne Johnson and Dave Bautista, a night Raw is going to have to be special show next year, WWE injury notes, Fourth generation wrestler gets a WWE tryout, WWE angle news, When they had ideas for Justin Bieber at SummerSlam, Jerry Lawler day, Sheamus talks his career, WWE raising ticket prices for premium seats, WWE tryout notes, most popular shows on WWE Network, WWE Japan tour notes, why Jericho vs. Balor was put on the Japan show, Lesnar story involving the brother of a famous actor and notes and business of all the arena events from the past week.

    We look at last week’s UFC show in Australia, the heavyweight title picture, the Mark Hunt stoppage and match-by-match coverage.

    We also look at the latest Pro Wrestling NOAH major show, which included appearances by Kenta Kobashi and Yuji Nagata, as well as NOAH’s Mitsuharu Misawa Memorial tour coming up next month.

    We also have a business rundown for WWE & TNA and where things stand in the different categories.

    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.

    Also in this week’s issue:

    –Wrestler fired once from major promotion, doesn’t last long on his return

    –The Santo Memorial tournament for 2015

    –Notes on the format of the AAA World Cup tournament

    –Who is now heading two promotions at the same time and why the move was made

    –Update on Dragon Gate’s King of Gate tournament

    –Minoru Suzuki promoting a show

    –New Japan lineups for all the big shows in June as well as the Dominion PPV in July

    –Notes on this year’s Best of the Super Junior tournament

    –Hall of Famer and health issues noted

    –Shinya Hashimoto Memorial show

    –Fujinami vs. Funaki Battle of Hall of Famers for the first time

    –Notes from the AGON promotions and main event pay

    –Notes on a promotion which claimed a TV deal and it falling apart

    –Details on all TNA television through mid-June, with matches, angles and destinations

    –A look at TNA’s Slammiversary show

    –Notes on TNA’s prospects on PPV

    –Update on Jeff Hardy

    –Notes on the best of five series between the Wolves vs. Aries & Roode

    –Update on TNA money issues

    –Update on TNA creative team

    –A look at those who returned to TV this past week and who is long and short-term

    –Who turned down an offer to come in

    –TNA announcing situation

    –Notes on TNA’s relationship with AAA

    –What happened with TNA and Wrestle-1

    –Can TNA talent work for GFW

    –Best stuff at the TNA tapings

    –Updates on UFC PPV numbers

    –Managers meeting and why

    –Dana White’s reaction regarding complaints about the Reebok deal

    –An interesting legal question stemming from the deal

    –UFC schedule notes

    –Anthony Pettis injury notes

    –Josh Barnett vs. Ryron Gracie

    –Metamoris news

    –Fight Pass promotion

    –New Fight Pass deals made

    –Rousey talks coaching vs. Cyborg

    –Lots of new UFC fights

    –Active UFC fighter sort of does a pro wrestling match

    –Huge Bellator signing of Olympian

    –This week’s Bellator show 

    If you are a new subscriber ordering 24 or more issues, you can get one free classic issue of your choice sent to you today.  With a 40 issue subscription, you can get two free classic issues sent to you today.

    New subscribers ordering 24 or 40 issues have to let us know what major stories of the past 11 years you are most interested in and we’ll send the issue with the best coverage of that story. We’ve got coverage of every major PPV event and world wide spectacular, every major star switching promotions, histories of companies like FMW, Rings and New Japan, retirement and obit issues of every major star who fits into those descriptions over the past 11 years, as well as our biggest issue every year, the annual awards issue, and our most controversial issue of every year, the Hall of Fame issue.

    Our most requested issues in our history are:

    *November 17, 1997 (full details of everything leading to the most famous wrestling match finish of modern times at the Survivor Series plus a history of in-ring double-crosses)

    *December 21, 1998 (the complete Vince McMahon-Bret Hart conversation right before the Survivor Series match so you’ll know exactly what was said–the conversation played in edited form both on the inaugural broadcast of Confidential as well as in Wrestling with Shadows, but everything that was said between the two about the match that was going to take place that same night)

    *August 1, 1994 (the most detailed coverage anywhere of the Vince McMahon steroid trial, an issue praised in numerous newspaper article and Sex, Lies and Headlocks)

    *March 26, 2001 (death of WCW and history of pro wrestling on the Turner networks)a

    *October 22, 2001 (why the adult audience has left pro wrestling in such great numbers and what needed to have been done to save them)

    *July 8, 1991 (Ric Flair leaves WCW as world champion/Zahorian steroid trial)

    *February 8, 1993 (the life and times of Andre the Giant)

    *May 13, 2002 (the life story of the most incredible pro wrestling career ever, a look at Lou Thesz, in one of the largest issues of our history)

    *January 27, 2003 (part one of the two-part series covering the career and life of The Sheik)

    *February 3, 2003 (Part two on The Sheik including thoughts from people who worked with him and where he stands historically)

    *March 24, 2003 (history of the WWWF title, inside behind the Sammartino, Backlund and Backlund era)

    *April 21, 2003 (history of WWF continues with the expansion nationally, the death of the regional territories and the rise of Hulk Hogan)

    *May 12, 2003 (The life and death of Elizabeth and the rise of fall of Lex Luger)

    *June 9, 2003 (Part 1 of history of WWF vs. WCW wars and what many say was the greatest year in U.S. wrestling; plus a look at Fred Blassie)

    *June 16, 2003 (Freddie Blassie through the eyes of his biggest rivals and friends)

    *July 28, 2003 (Part 2 of the history of the WWF vs. WCW war and the plans to make new superstars in the early 90s, what happened, and the night where the three biggest wrestling companies in the world combined for a joint show and what happened)

    *August 25, 2003 (2003 Hall of Fame issue with huge profiles on the controversial career of Shawn Michaels, Chris Benoit as well as historical features on Earl Caddock and Francisco Flores)

    *September 22, 2003 (Part 3 of the history of the WWF vs WCW war with the seeds that caused the collapse of the industry in the 90s, Zahorian trial, Gulf War controversy, Flair leaves WCW while holding world title and much more)

    *October 27, 2003 (The fascinating life of Stu Hart plus the story of Road Warrior Hawk)

    *January 19, 2004 (2003 Awards issue)

    *February 2, 2004 (History of Toronto wrestling, Jack Tunney life story, Royal Rumble and Battle Royal history)

    *February 23, 2004 (History of Guerrero family with Eddy’s win over Brock Lesnar)

    *March 1, 2004 (History of WWF continues with the period that brought the company down in early 1992, the mistakes, the real stories and how the business changed)

    *March 8, 2004 (History of Wrestlemania, its greatest matches and best and worst shows as voted both by wrestlers and non-wrestlers and Wrestlemania history books)

    *July 5, 2004 (A look behind the scenes and Ric Flair’s book and his background with Eric Bischoff and Hulk Hogan)

    *July 12, 2004 (A look at more on Ric Flair’s book and his comments on Bruno Sammartino, Bret Hart and Mick Foley)

    *August 16, 2004 (History of the Olympians in pro wrestling)

    *August 23, 2004 (2004 Hall of Fame issue and biggest issue of the year with huge profiles on Kazushi Sakuraba, Undertaker, Bob Backlund, Masahiro Chono, Ultimo Dragon, Kurt Angle and Tarzan Lopez–this counts as one issue if you are asking for a free issue, but ordered separately, due to size, is $6 in North America and $7 overseas)

    *October 4, 2004 (the life and times of Big Bossman; as well as details of the life and times of one of the most influential men world wide in pro wrestling history, Jim Barnett)

    *November 15, 2004 (the full story of what happened between Kurt Angle and Daniel Puder, plus coverage of the most important week in the history of TNA)

    *January 24, 2005 (2004 Awards issue, Rock and WWE part company)

    *March 14, 2005 (the 50 biggest money players in the history of WWF and a look at their Hall of Fame)

    *May 9, 2005 (the life and times of Chris Candido)

    *June 20, 2005 (The full story behind Paul Heyman and the death of ECW, as well as coverage of One Night Stand, Hardcore Homecoming and behind the scenes of both shows)

    *July 18, 2005 (death of Shinya Hashimoto and his records with a look at the fall of New Japan, the Matt Hardy angle, tons of WWE firings, Cornette firing in detail as well as problems of a WWE developmental territory in our biggest news issue of the year which is a double-sized issue and would be $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

    *August 24, 2005 (2005 Hall of Fame issue with career profiles of Paul Heyman, HHH and Freebirds plus debut of MMA Hall of Fame)

    *September 12, 2005 (History of Mid South Wrestling)

    *October 10, 2005 (Life and Times of the Ultimate Warrior)

    *November 21, 2005 (Life and Times of Eddy Guerrero and Crusher, double issue $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

    *December 5, 2005 (The Eddy Guerrero special issue, double issue $6 on its own, $7 overseas)

    *January 9, 2006 (The life and times of Superstar Billy Graham, plus New Year’s Eve 2005 coverage)

    *January 16, 2006 (2005 Awards double issue, $6 or $7 overseas)

    *April 3, 2006 (Story of Ann Calvello and the history of Roller Derby–many called this the best issue of the Observer ever)

    *April 10, 2006 (Behind the scenes at the 2006 Wrestlemania/Hall of Fame week)

    *July 24, 2006 (The History of the Von Erichs and World Class Championship Wrestling–the most unreal story ever in wrestling)

    *September 4, 2006 (The Rise and Fall of Kurt Angle; 2006 Hall of Fame inductions of Eddie Guerrero, Paul Bowser, Masakatsu Funaki, Aja Kong and Hiroshi Hase including tons of wrestling history around the world from the 20s through the 60s, the evolution of working to not working in Japan, and a look at Guerrero in hindsight, double issue $6 or $7 overseas)

    *October 9, 2006 (A look back nine years later at the life and legacy of Brian Pillman with tons of inside information about what made him tick as his real objectives)

    *November 15, 2006 (History of WCW part one, Eric Bischoff’s book and how the industry was changed forever)

    *November 20, 2006 (History of WCW part two, Why Jim Ross left WCW, How Bischoff changed the company, signing of Hulk Hogan, Beginning of Nitro, Jesse Ventura, Brian Pillman, Chris Jericho and signing Wrestlemania planned celebrity away)

    *November 27, 2006 (History of WCW part three, When Bischoff challenged McMahon to fight; Truth and fiction around Bret Hart signing with WCW and why it didn’t click)

    *December 6, 2006 (details behind Pride’s offers to sell promotion and Part four of History of WCW part four, Hogan-Goldberg match and why there was no rematch, WCW loses NBC network deal in 1999 and the real reasons the company fell apart)

    *January 22, 2007 (2006 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *February 14, 2007 (Life and Times of Bam Bigelow)

    *March 5, 2007 (WWE begins plans that will change the business)

    *March 12, 2007 (Life and Times of Mike Awesome)

    *March 19, 2007 (Life and Times of Ernie Ladd)

    *April 4, 2007 (Life and Times of Badnews Allen Coage–which many are calling one of the best issues in history)

    *July 2, 2007 (Part one of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 5, 2007 (Part two of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 10, 2007 (Part three of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 19, 2007 (Part four of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 23, 2007 (Part five of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 25, 2007 (Part six of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *August 15, 2007 (The legend of the God of Japanese wrestling and his influence on MMA, Karl Gotch)

    *October 15 (2007 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas including inductions of The Rock, Tom Packs and the original Strangler Lewis)

    *November 12, 2007 (Life and times of Fabulous Moolah and history of U.S. women’s wrestling) .

    *December 31, 2007 (History of Ric Flair and the heyday of wrestling at the Greensboro Coliseum)

    *January 21, 2008 (2007 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *March 17, 2008 (Life and times of Johnny Weaver)

    *March 24, 2008 (Life and times of Gary Hart)

    *April 10, 2008 (Farewell to Ric Flair; My thoughts, Shawn Michaels talks of Flair’s meaning to him; Hall of Fame; Wrestlemania double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *August 11, 2008 (Ric Flair leaves WWE; Updated history of pro wrestlers and MMA fighters who went to the Olympics)

    * September 8, 2008 (2008 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas; part one of Killer Kowalski bio)

    * September 15, 2008 (Life and Times of Evan Tanner)

    * September 22, 2008 (The amazing career of Killer Kowalski, one of our most in-depth bios)

    You can also order any of these issues on their own for $4 in North America or $5 overseas.

    We now have available personally autographed copies of Tributes II, our latest book, as well as a DVD that comes with it talking more about the subjects in the book. The book covers the life stories of Lou Thesz, Wahoo McDaniel, Elizabeth, Fred Blassie, Road Warrior Hawk, Andre the Giant, Curt Hennig, Johnny Valentine, Davey Boy Smith, Terry Gordy, Owen Hart, Stu Hart, Gorilla Monsoon, The Sheik and Tim Woods..

    To get all of those biographies as back issues of the Observer would be a $60 value today. This is a collection of some of the best Observer articles of the past several years in a hardcover, full-color format that is 239 pages. There is also a foreword by Bret Hart. The book price is $12.95 plus $3.50 for shipping costs in the U.S., $20 for shipping costs to Canada and $25 for shipping costs outside North America. You can order the book the same way you order the newsletter.

    MONDAY’S NEWS UPDATE

    • Bryan and I will be back tonight talking Raw and the latest MMA and pro wrestling news.  You can send questions to tonight’s show to mailbag@wrestlingobserver.com
    • A judge ruled today in District Court in Nevada two things regarding the Wanderlei Silva vs. Nevada State Athletic Commission case:

    The commission had the right to test and punish Silva even though he was not a licensed competitor in the state

    The punishment of a lifetime ban and a $70,000 fine was too harsh (Nevada had no actual rules in place regarding treatment of someone who refused to take a test past it counts as a positive, but first positive isn’t a lifetime ban).

    The judge ordered a new hearing regarding punishment for Silva.  The Nevada announcement on Friday of specific penalties for offenses will close that loophole going forward.  Silva would likely have to be suspended at the same level as fighters who had failed drug tests for the first time.

    Silva’s lawyer, Ross Goodman, said they are looking at appealing the ruling based on the idea that Silva should not have been tested since he was not a licensed fighter in Nevada.

    • WWE was the No. 7 most searched thing yesterday on Google with 100,000.  That’s much lower than usual, as most B shows get to 200,000, but it kills a Demetrious Johnson UFC show.  Billboard Music Awards were No. 1.  The only sports term that beat it was the Los Angeles Clippers with 200,000.
    • Adam Rose on twitter wrote “Rosebuds are done!  Party over.”  I guess we’ll see at TV what that means.  But the entire entourage ring entrance looks to be history.
    • Paul Levesque will be doing a media conference call tomorrow to promote Wednesday night’s NXT Takeover special.  Still no word on what is going on with Hideo Itami, who has a shoulder injury.  They are still promoting Kevin Owens vs. Sami Zayn hard as the main event.  There was no weekend talk one way or the other on him. 
    • Jessica Aguilar, the WSOF strawweight champion, who many thought was the best in the world in that division, has gotten her release from the organization.  The expectation is that she’s moving to UFC.  WSOF sent out a press release stating that she was being released.  “We sat down with Jessica and her manager and we all agreed that she needs to move on to a place where she can compete against the best 115 pound women in the world,” said Ray Sefo, the WSOF President.
    • NBC Sports Network will be airing Thursday’s Beat the Streets wrestling show from Times Square via tape delay at midnight.
    • AXS starts its new season of New Japan Pro Wrestling at 9 p.m. on Friday night with the semifinals and finals of last year’s Best of the Super Junior tournament, featuring Ricochet.
    • Shinsuke Nakamura got himself photographed in front of the Rocky statue when in Philadelphia this past week.
    • Smash Wrestling from yesterday in Toronto:  Rip Impact & Space Monkey b Dan O’Hare & Plunkett, Tournament for a title shot:  Matt Cross (replacing Gregory Iron) b Tarik, Biff Busick b Scotty O’Shea, Tyson Dux b Drew Gulak, Candice LaRae b Brent Banks, Trevor Lee b Rich Swann, John Greed & Scott Hunter b Kirk Warmack & Shane Sabre, Johnny Gargano b Chris Hero to retain Smash title, Candice LaRae won five-way over Matt Cross, Biff Busick Trevor Lee, Tyson Dux and Matt Cross to become No. 1 contender. (thanks to Dave Musgrave)
    • One Championships has an iPPV on 5/22 from the Singapore Indoor Stadium in Kallang, Singapore headlined by Shinya Aoki defending the lightweight title against Koji Ando.
    • EWF from Saturday night in Rialto, CA:  RJ Ruiz b Eddie Mattson, Archnmedes b Wolftanus, Brandon Gatson b Brute Daddy, Uptown Andy Brown b Tommy Wilson-DQ (thanks to Frank Mott)
    • World Series of Fighting announced a 6/5 show from Edmonton on NBC Sports headlined by Lance Palmer (9-1) defending the featherweight title against Chris Horodecki (21-5-1) and Smealinho Rama (9-1) putting the heavyweight title up against Blagoi Ivanov (11-1).  The show will start on 9 p.m. Eastern.
    • The movie Pitch Perfect 2, where Lana has a small role, was No. 1 at the box office this weekend in its opening week with $70.3 million estimated.  Mad Max:  Fury Road, which former WWE wrestler Nathan Jones has a role in, was No. 2 at $44.40 million.  Furious 7, in week 7, was estimated at $3.6 million and in sixth place.  In Australia, one and two were reversed, but Pitch Perfect 2 was already released there last week so that explains it.  Furious 7 was No. 6 (thanks to James Stanios)
    • Axl Rotten is doing a Gofundme campaign as he needs two spinal surgeries on his cervical vertebrae and to walk again
    • Steven Borden Jr., the son of Sting, is at a three-day rookie mini-camp right now with the Kansas City Chiefs.  He’s a long shot to make the team.  Borden played last season with the University of Kentucky and is the last son of Sting who is still active playing football. (thanks to Alex Marvez, Mike Gunter, Kevin Witt and many others)
    • It appears from close odds and lack of late movement in significant new directions that smart money did not come in on Payback.  
    • RFA runs on 6/5 from Broomfield, CO live on AXS TV with Ben Smith vs. Gilbert Smith for the welterweight title and Thiago Alves (not the UFC fighter of the same name) vs. Marcus Edwards as the co-main event.
    • Booker T talks Comipalooza this coming weekend in Houston, as well as Tough Enough, who from NXT has the most potential and his own promotion

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

    1969 – Toyonobori & Shozo Kobayashi beat Michael Nador & Ivan Strongoff in Paris to win the IWE tag team titles

    1974 – Bobby Ryan beat Jim Breaks in Hanley to win the British lightweight title

    1986 – Gran Cochisse beat Chamaco Velaquez to win the NWA middleweight title

    2013 – Zack Sabre Jr. beat Sha Samuels in Swanley to win the IPW UK All England title

    WWE NETWORK SCHEDULE FOR TOMORROW (thanks to Bert Duckwall)

    12:00 AM ET
    WWE COUNTDOWN Countdown Greatest High Flyers counts down the top ten greatest high flying superstars of all time!

    1:00 AM ET
    TOTAL DIVAS Trinity’s inability to have sex frustrates Jon, and Bryan and Nikki shock Brie when they team up to stage an intervention.

    2:06 AM ET
    WWE NETWORK EXCLUSIVE The action continues live after Raw!

    2:11 AM ET
    FIRST LOOK First Look: It’s Good To Be King

    2:41 AM ET
    CULTURE SHOCK WITH COREY GRAVES Corey Graves gets a culture shock immersing himself within the fascinating world of Marvel Comics, from their headquarters in New York City!

    3:00 AM ET
    WCW STARRCADE 1988 Ric Flair defends the NWA World Title against Lex Luger. The Road Warriors vs. Sting and Dusty Rhodes for the NWA Tag Team Titles.

    6:00 AM ET
    WWE COUNTDOWN Countdown Greatest High Flyers counts down the top ten greatest high flying superstars of all time!

    7:00 AM ET
    WWE BEYOND THE RING The story of the one of the most distinctive and storied championships in the world of sports entertainment and the men who held it.

    8:00 AM ET
    TOTAL DIVAS Trinity’s inability to have sex frustrates Jon, and Bryan and Nikki shock Brie when they team up to stage an intervention.

    9:00 AM ET
    WWE COUNTDOWN Countdown Greatest High Flyers counts down the top ten greatest high flying superstars of all time!

    10:00 AM ET
    WWE BEYOND THE RING The story of the one of the most distinctive and storied championships in the world of sports entertainment and the men who held it.

    11:00 AM ET
    TOTAL DIVAS Trinity’s inability to have sex frustrates Jon, and Bryan and Nikki shock Brie when they team up to stage an intervention.

    12:00 PM ET
    WWE COUNTDOWN Countdown Greatest High Flyers counts down the top ten greatest high flying superstars of all time!

    1:00 PM ET
    WWE BEYOND THE RING The story of the one of the most distinctive and storied championships in the world of sports entertainment and the men who held it.

    2:00 PM ET
    TOUGH ENOUGH Stone Cold Steve Austin enlists the help of four sexy WWE Divas and THQ video games to teach the remaining contestants all about creativity.

    3:00 PM ET
    TOUGH ENOUGH Legendary WWE Superstar The Rock and ‘Psych’ star James Roday give the remaining five contestants a lesson in charisma.

    4:00 PM ET
    MONDAY NIGHT WAR In an era of shifting loyalties, WWE and WCW would each build a cornerstone in order to achieve stability.

    5:00 PM ET
    WWE COUNTDOWN Counting down the top ten most stylish ring attire ever worn by a WWE Superstar.

    6:00 PM ET
    FIRST LOOK First Look: It’s Good To Be King

    6:30 PM ET
    WWE BEYOND THE RING Batista embodies his nickname ‘The Animal’. Relive Batista’s storied career with this biography of his life both inside the ring and out.

    8:00 PM ET
    TOUGH ENOUGH Legendary WWE Superstar The Rock and ‘Psych’ star James Roday give the remaining five contestants a lesson in charisma.

    9:00 PM ET
    WWE UNFILTERED WITH RENEE YOUNG In the premiere of Unfiltered, Renee Young hangs out with WWE World Heavyweight Champion Seth Rollins for a fun and revealing conversation!

    9:07 PM ET
    MONDAY NIGHT WAR In an era of shifting loyalties, WWE and WCW would each build a cornerstone in order to achieve stability.

    10:01 PM ET
    WWE NXT The future is here. Witness the entertainers, the leading men and women, the Superstars of tomorrow — this is NXT!

    11:00 PM ET
    TOUGH ENOUGH Legendary WWE Superstar The Rock and ‘Psych’ star James Roday give the remaining five contestants a lesson in charisma.

  • First batch of feedback, Payback, ROH, Boxing, MMA

    This was a good show . I give it a thumbs up. To be fair ROH has been on fire  with good matches on television, and good shows on their VOD service. For the most part from top to bottom the matches were good. The problem though I thought the matches weren’t as good as I was anticipating. 

    The best match of the night was the main event. This was tremendous an a MOTYC. It had a real Von Erich/Freebird feel in the sense it was super chaotic. It even had an updated version of the triple Von Erich drop kick . We got a quintuple super kick. Yes I stated it had chaos, but we also got shine and heat segments. Super hot moves and everybody got to shine or have a moment to look great in this match. Strong was the glue to his team. While Styles and the Bucks pushed the action on their side. Just outstanding and it makes you want to see matches off pairings in this match.

    The worst match was the opener. Moose needs to stop the standing headbutts when he gets a tag. They don’t come across as organic. 

    Pete Schirmacher

    Thumbs in the middle.

    Best match: 10-man tag.
    Worst match: 3-way tag.

    ROH is quite weird. For whatever reason, they continue to deliver more on the “Lesser” shows compared to the “Important” ones. That trend continues this week with both Philadelphia shows beating the Toronto iPPV by a solid margin in quality.

    Show was fine, but had nothing you need to go out of your way to see. 

    The crowd was substantially down in terms of reactions compared to last year. In fact, this was one of the worst ROH crowds I’ve ever experienced live, and that covers dozens and dozens of shows since 2003. They didn’t really know any of the New Japan Japanese talents, but loved the Bullet Club, and were really out to get themselves over and chant TNA related things at the former TNA guys.

    It’s funny, Philly was the Toronto crowd stereotype and Toronto was the Philly crowd stereotype this go around.

    Thank you,
    Sal Sarinzio

    Global Wars Night 1
    Thumbs Up
    Best Match: Okada vs Cedric Alexander
    Worst Match: Gedo/Moose vs Silas Young/Takaaki Watanabe

    Global Wars Night 2
    Thumbs Slightly Up
    Best Match: Roderick Strong vs Shinsuke Nakamura
    Worst Match: Silas Young vs Takaaki Watanabe

    Hi Dave,

    I attended both of the live shows in Toronto this weekend. Overall it was a very good weekend for prowrestling fans in Toronto. It was really great to see the ROH talent mash up with the New Japan guys (I missed it last year). Night 1 was much more entertaining than Night 2, but it’s hard to compare the two since Night 1 was an iPPV and Night 2 was intended for TV tapings; two different beasts.

    Regarding Night 1, not sure how it translated on iPPV, but at the live show, the crowd seemed hot throughout.   Nakamura and Bullet Club were the most over, and in general, the crowd seemed to respect all the Japanese talent.   The final match was really hard to follow from the floor seats. There was just too much going on. I’d like to see a replay of the iPPV just to catch things I missed. There was really no bad match per se. By default the Gedo/Moose vs Silas Young/Takaaki Watanabe was the “worst” match when compared to the rest of the card, but really, it was a good match for what it was. For me, the Okada and Alexander match was the best. Great flow and chemistry with the two.

    As Night 2 was a string of TV tapings, the evening moved to the rhythm of what you would typically expect in a TV show (i.e. DQs, countouts, promos, etc.). The show went long as I think they did 4 tapings (it started around 7:30 PM and ended around 11:45 PM) and by the end, you could tell that the crowd was running out of energy. Some spoilers ahead. There weren’t really any outstanding matches in the first half of the show. The biggest highlight was the Cedric Alexander turn which went further as he used a foreign object (brass knuckles?) to nail Moose for the win. I don’t follow the ROH TV show, but from what I gather, this was Moose’s first loss. If so, I was surprised that they did it for a TV taping than on a PPV. The last half of the evening was far above the first half in match quality. Crowd was probably most hot for the Strong vs Nakamura fight which the crowd ate up.   Great performance by both men.   Elgin vs Gedo followed the Strong/Nakamura match and at this point, you could tell the crowd was tired as chants and general crowd interactions were subdued.   However, they did pick up for the last match of the night with AJ Styles and Young Bucks vs Okada and RPG. Much like Night 1, Bullet Club was very over. Very fun intro as every person in the match got up on the turnbuckle for cheers before the bell rang, including the Japanese referee who even did a pose and got a huge reaction. The match was really fun and much easier to follow than the 5-on-5 match the night before, with Bullet Club taking the win.  

    Stray Thoughts: I took my girlfriend to see Night 1. Just for some perspective, she is a non-fan. The few times she’s caught glimpses of Monday Night Raw, she’s dismissed it for its inane storylines. That said, even as a non-fan, she really enjoyed the iPPV show live, particularly the Japanese talent and highflyers. To me, it re-affirms that ROH and NJPW put on a great show!

    Thanks for all your work!

    Jeff Lam
    Toronto, Ontario

    BELLATOR 137

    Thumbs somewhat up. Several come-from-behind &/or upset wins, but missed weight issues in the two top fights looks very horseshit.
    Best fight: Zwicker vs. Al-Hassan
    Worst fight: Reiter vs. Radach
    Best performance: Parsons
    Worst performance: Juarez
    KO: Taimanglo
    Sub: Gonzalez

    Idiotic, passive, sloppy fight plan from Jesse Juarez gets him KOed by Ricky Rainey early in the 2nd. Virgil Zwicker wades through most of a round of Razak Al-Hassan kicks, and KOs him with punches, entertaining brawl. Jordan Parsons, probably down on the cards, drops 21/y/o Julio Cesar to 30-1 with a 3rdR Arm Triangle. Antonio Duarte fades after paintjobbing Joe Taimanglo in the 1st and gets KOed in the 3rd via overhand right.

    Darrion Caldwell pretty much skunks Rafael Silva. Impressive considering the experience gap but tedious. 29-28 UD.

    Yet another (Amoussou, Parysian, Zaromskis) upset for Fernando Gonzalez, probably far behind, jumping Guillotine in the 3rd for the tap on the much bigger Curtis Millander.

    Mike Richman misses the extra pound allowance by 3.8 vs. Eduardo Dantas in what was supposed to be a BW title eliminator. Second time in a row he’s missed weight since dropping divisions. Solution seems sorta obvious, huh? First they couldn’t agree on a catchweight, then Richman wouldn’t agree to weigh no more than 147 going into the ring, so the fight was off, but then Dantas decided to fight anyway. Richman looked three divisions bigger. The fight is very close and neither looks very good. Dantas takes the 29-28 UD.

    Brandon Halsey missed by 3.1 lbs. for his MW title defense vs. perennial retread Kendall Grove so if he wins the title is vacant. and if Grove wins he wins the title. There is no extra pound allowance in title fights. Like Warren a few weeks ago, Grove’s promo involves taking a shit. If this is some new kind of company policy I wonder who thought it was a good idea. Halsey wipes the mat with Grove, as expected, till the ref steps in in the 4th, so the title goes vacant.

    In the walkout fight (you have to go back to spike.com or bellator.com ). Benji Radach comes back from a 4 1/2 year layoff and looks it, unable to defend or counter the wild swinging Ben Reiter, an American based for some reason in Peru, and drops a wide UD. One judge somehow gives Benji a round. Both totally gassed by the 3rd. Kimbo-vs.-Houston level bad.

    UFC FN 66 Manila

    Thumbs up. Lot to like on this card.
    Best fight: Magny vs. Lim, Delos Reyes vs. Sangcha-an
    Worst fight: Zhikui-Ticman
    Best performance: Munoz
    Worst performance: Ticman
    KO: Guangyou, Jingliang
    Sub: Delos Reyes

    Nolan Ticman decides he’s Floyd Mayweather and stinks out the joint and drops a bizarre 29-28 SD to the aggressive but almost totally ineffective Yao Zhikui. At least it was anti-hometown, which wouldn’t last. Then night and day great fight as Jon Delos Reyes, badly cut from a head clash, drops Roldan Sancha-an in the 2nd with a big right and then gets the tap with a persistent RNC after a high tech, all action at all ranges war.

    Royston Wee very sluggish after missing weight by a pound and Ning Guangyou does whatever he wants before ending it at the very end of the 2nd with a HK and punches after appearing to gas himself. Li Jingliang blows Dhiego Lima away with a quick KD and G&P. Dhiego should retire before it’s too late. This is 3 1R KO losses in his last 4 fights. Solid performance from Kajan Johnson staying a step ahead of Zhang Lipeng all the way for what should be a 30-27 UD. Two judges somehow give Lipeng a round. Outstanding performance from Jon Tuck walking through Tae Hyun Bang and finishing with a right hook KD, taking back and RNC.

    Missed the next fight. Levan Makashvili W SD Mark Eddiva. Read it wasn’t that close, semi-hometown decision although right winner.

    After a stifling 1stR by Phillipe Nover, Yui Chul Nam takes over the 2nd half of the fight and IMO edges the fight. It’s 29-28 SD Nover, also somewhat hometown but close fight.

    Hyun Gyu Lim rocks Neil Magny early and goes too wild and lets him off the hook. Idiots at fox manage to cut away to the next commercial twice during the round just enough to make us miss the tide turning. Lim gasses and Magny finishes him early in the 2nd with a Suplex, back take, flatten out and G&P and goes to 7 in a row. Magny more than ready for contenders.

    Mark Munoz fighting at home in the Philippines for the first time and it’s his retirement fight win or lose and he’s not there to lose to a Luke Barnatt. Brings back his A game in the 1st with overhand punches, multiple TDs and Donkey Kong G&P but Barnatt is still there and both guys looking spent at the bell. Close to 10-8 round. In the 2nd both gassed and ineffective. Munoz only gets 1 TD and can’t do much with it but that and a big right at the end of the round are enough to edge it. In the 3rd Barnatt keeps walking into the right. Munoz drags him down again. Barnatt hits some Travis Browne elbows trying in vain to avoid another TD. Walks into right hands. Another TD. Munoz has his 2nd wind. Barnatt keeps trying with the elbows. Another TD. More Donkey Kong. Munoz riding and pounding till the bell. Also close to a 10-8 but will probably be all 10-9s. One judge gives Barnatt the 2nd. Munoz cuts the farewell promo and leaves his gloves in the ring.

    Gegard Mousasi out-everythings Costa Phillipou for the UD that the correct score would have been 30-0.

    Almost the same story in the main except the exchanges are competitive. Frankie Edgar just a little better than Urijah Faber at everything and wins every round on every card. Little bigger, little quicker, little more… everything.

    HBO BOXING

    Astounding US/HBO debut for Nicaraguan FlyW Roman ‘Chocolatito’ Gonzalez, a protege of the late great Alexis Arguello, TKOing former sparring employer Edgar Sosa (50-8 going in, no chump)  in the 2nd and retaining whatever titles. Complete blowaway. You have to see this kid. Total aggression and off the chart punching accuracy. He has already held titles in 3 divisions and is (get this) 43-0 with 37 KOs.

    In the main, Gennady Golovkin racks up another KO defense of the MW title not without some drama. He drops Willie Monroe Jr. (great nephew of The Worm) twice in the 2nd and it looks like another squash, but Monroe having failed with his usual hit and run style stands his ground and trades and his speed keeps him in the fight till the 6th, when GGG drops him again and he just beats the count but tells the ref he’s done. Perhaps more to the point GGG sells out the LA Forum against a second (or third) tier opponent and gets a rock star reaction. He has made a point of improving his English and Spanish, and happily calls out Cotto and Andre Ward.
    Crimson Mask

    Thumbs Up
    This was going to be a thumbs in the middle show, but the main event made it a thumbs up.

    Best Match
    4 Way Main Event.  Opened as a free for all but ended out very compelling once things got going.  Great moments, good finish, and they somehow found a way for everyone to matter.

    Worst Match
    Cena v. Rusev.  No wrestling.  Dumb finish.

    Missed Opportunity
    Neville v. Barrett. This match was in a bad spot on the card and felt like it was being rushed.  The finish made no sense.  It was also the worst commentary of the night.     Lots of jokes about kings.  No one called the match.  

    -Nick Garcia

    WWE Payback
    Thumbs in the Middle
    Best Match: Seth Rollins vs. Dean Ambrose vs. Roman Reigns vs. Randy Orton
    Worst Match: Bray Wyatt vs. Ryback

    Fun main event, and WWE giving Seth Rollins the Pedigree as a finisher
    is a savvy move to build long-term for the inevitable Rollins/Triple H
    match.

    I watched the majority of this show with the Spanish commentary — and
    I barely speak the language. But it was well worth it to not have to
    endure the grating, inane banter of the English language crew taking
    away from my enjoyment of the matches.

    Think about that for a second. I found it preferable to listen to
    broadcasters who I could barely understand over the horribly produced
    broadcast style that WWE inexplicably seems hell-bent on sticking with
    in spite of it sounding terrible.

    It seems highly questionable for WWE to book violent stip matches with
    so many restrictions in place on what its wrestlers are allowed to do.

    Lou Pickney
    Nashville, TN

    Thumbs Up
    Best Match – Ambrose v. Reigns v. Rollins v. Orton

    Great show.  Really entertaining.
    Main Event started out slow but really delivered in the end despite the worst looking pedigree ever delivered.  All four guys shined at different times.  Really enjoyed the Reigns and Ambrose interactions.
    Tag title match was once again very enjoyable.  Seemed sloppy or mistimed at points but overall had a lot of cool spots and great to overcome any botches. 
    Ryback v. Wyatt far exceeded expectations
    Ziggler v. Sheamus was great but really makes you think maybe headbutts should be banned, assuming thats where Ziggler busted himself open.  With that much blood he must have hit his head pretty hard.  Wouldn’t be surprised if he was concussed as well.

    Devon McClure

    Hey Dave,

    Overall: Thumbs up show. At the beginning of the main event, my thumb was pointed neutral. The quality of the in ring action and the execution of the prevailing story in the main event moved my thumb from east to north. From top to bottom, the roster put in an A effort. Moreover, the bookers (creative team) deserve some credit. Obviously they were not bullet proof, but the show offered a diverse and creative array of finishes that appeared to be appropriate for the matches on an individual basis and for the show as a whole.

    Best Match: Fatal 4 way title match was great. Character contrasts, relationship history, plots, sub plots, peaks, valleys , and good in-ring action creates an exciting and fulfilling cap stone to a good event.

    Worst Match: Divas tag match was “take it or leave it.” If given a second chance, I would leave it.

    A. Metapowers Vs. The Ascension:
    Sorry, but the majority of wrestling comedy does not do it for me. I do not mind subtle humor as a piece of an angle, but when the entire act is comedy, it often compromises any semblance of quasi-competition. I could say this was a harmless crowd pleasing match, but the heels went over and disappointed the crowd. Hopefully, this is an indication that WWE realizes the Metapowers have a short shelf life. ½*

    1. Sheamus Vs. Dolph Ziggler. There was a lot to like about this match. Ziggler’s intensity and fire at the onset was fitting for the personal animosity talked up by the announce team. This intensity reappeared towards the end, concluding in an ill-advised Ziggler head-butt that ultimately cost him the match. I have four complaints about the match. One, the cut off was a simple elbow to the knee but Ziggler sold it like it was a crippling blow. Simply stated, he sold too much too soon. Second of all, despite Ziggler’s obviously compromised knee, instead of working the ailing body part, Sheamus applied a chin lock. Third, once Ziggler mounted his comeback, the knee injury story was erased from the narrative. My last complaint was the ass kiss spot. It is difficult to go from funny gag master to courageous and determined babyface in the span of five minutes. Action and aggression helped the match, inconsistency brought it back down. **3/4

    2. 2 out of 3 falls Tag Team Title Match: The New Day Vs. Kidd and Cesaro. I had high expectations for the tag team title match, and I would say this almost reached my expectations. I enjoyed the formula of the match. 1st fall was an extended baby face shine. Second fall started with an impact cut off and was dominated by heel heat. This allowed Kidd to play the valiant baby face. A roll he pulled off very well. The hot tag to Cesaro started white hot. Unfortunately, the momentum was watered down when he was unable to get Big E up for the tiger driver. They recovered sufficiently and the timing on the finish made it a realistic twin magic trick finish. If you erase some of the clutter and clean up a few exchanges, this was a four star match. Even with its deficiencies, it gets ***1/2 from me.

     3. Bray Wyatt Vs. Ryback. Two motivated wrestlers engaged in a physical match. This was Wyatt’s best showing in recent memory. Ryback’s selling deserves complement. The only thing that brought this match down was Baltimore’s hesitance to fully invest in Ryback as the conquering hero. Clever finish that was conclusive enough to satisfy and yet did not damage either wrestler involved. ***1/2

    4. I Quit US Title Match: John Cena Vs. Rusev. Not bad, but too long and too slow for my taste. Rusev dominated the beginning of the match, and looked good doing so. Once they took it to the outside of the ring, I think they lost the crowd and dampened the intensity. Every time the match appeared to lull into lethargy, they executed a transition to liven the crowd. The finish was as inconclusive as predicted, which does not add an exclamation point to a feud blow off. I liked Bradshaw’s closing line concerning the legality of Lana quitting for Rusev, “This is a US title match, we cannot assume.” **1/4

    5. Naomi and Tamina Vs. Nikki Bella and Brie Bella. I thought the match started off fine, but once the live crowd lost interest, I lost interest. Tonight, the fans did not give the divas a chance. At this point, an appropriate step in reviving and improving the Divas division may be removing the Bellas from active competition. As wrestlers in the division, they are like old condiments in a refridgerator. They may be used later, but as for now, they are just taking up space. Sometimes, the best decision is to throw them away.*1/2

    6. Neville Vs. King Barrett. I like the idea of placing these guys in the traditional dead spot and making them work up hill to illicit a positive crowd response. These guys were up to the task and provided a decent but less than thrilling singles match. Many will complain about the finish, but I will say this; Barrett is a heel. Even during this match, he was getting a mixed response. Quitting at a key point in the match ensures his favorable response is cut off at the knees. Neville coming back in the ring and beating up the king allows him to come out of the event looking like a fighter. **

    7. Fatal Four Way WWE World Title Match: Seth Rollins Vs. Dean Ambrose Vs. Roman Reigns Vs. Randy Orton. The pre match hype video heightened my fear that the enveloping story would center around Kane and Rollins rather than the three challengers. While this narrative was central to the match, the Shield sub plot was the highlight of the contest. The crowd was subdued to start, but once the Shield dynamic was revealed, the place came unglued. Everyone was given a chance to shine and Kane’s involvement was more of a positive than a negative. Character contrasts, relationship history, plots, sub plots, peaks, valleys, and good in-ring action creates an exciting and fulfilling cap stone to a good event. ****

    Thanks, Derrick from Utah

    Thumbs in the middle
    Best: Main event
    Worst: Ascention/Axel & Sandow

    Not much to say about this one.  Almost too predictable.  Sometimes predictable is good, but WWE didn’t really give anything on this show.  Basically a televised house show.  Good matches, but finishes were easy to call in each of them.  Should at least have a surprise or newsworthy event given it’s a PPV, as there’s absolutely nothing different in WWE land now than there was this morning.

    – Chris H
    Lakeland, FL

    Payback: Thumbs Up

    Best Match:WWE Championship 4 Way

    Worst Match: Divas Tag Match

    Preshow wasn’t much of anything.  The bonus match as they called it with Truth over Stardust was filler.  I rather they not put these matches on for no reason.  The Mega Powers vs. the Ascension was basically a squash.  I thought the Mega Powers were actually going to over, but maybe they will try to actually push the Ascension now.

    Payback starts with Sheamus beating Dolph Ziggler.  Solid match here.  New Day retains over Kidd and Cesaro in the 2/3 fall match.  Good match.  These two teams really have good in-ring chemistry.  Solid match with Bray Wyatt over Ryback.  They did a few impressive things here some of which looked like it really hurt.  Not sure what plans are for Wyatt, but honestly everything he’s been doing just seems like a place holder.  Cena over Rusev was entertaining.  I still don’t understand how Lana saying I Quit is acceptable.  They should just say hey anyone can act on behalf of a participant if they feel like it.  Divas tag match just didn’t work.  It wasn’t flowing well.  Neville vs. Barrett was fine until the lame count out finish.  Neville really has something.  I hope gets to move up.  Four way was good overall.  I knew they would work the Shield triple power bomb spot into the match.  I hope Ambrose gets a shot at holding the title down the line.  Rollins’ using the Pedigree wasn’t that great.  It didn’t come off that good, but the match itself was good.  Overall a good show, nothing off the charts, but nothing terrible either. 

    Robb Block

  • SUN. UPDATE: Payback preview, UFC Countdown show today, Rusev’s star stolen, Super match yesterday, WWE injury angle notes, Cena, big weekend coming, Bruno anniversary

    By Dave Meltzer
    dave@wrestlingobserver.com”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com

    We’re looking for your thoughts on both tonight’s WWE Payback show and the ROH Global Wars show from Toronto so you can send a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to dave@wrestlingobserver.com”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com

    We’re also looking for reports on tonight’s Shooto Brazil show on Fight Pass.

    WWE Payback from the Baltimore Arena Sunday on PPV and WWE Network

    *Seth Rollins vs. Randy Orton vs. Roman Reigns vs. Dean Ambrose for WWE title – With another show in two weeks with a title match, they need a strong angle or hook coming out of tonight to set the next show up.  I don’t expect a quickie title change but that may be what they come up with.  Most expect Rollins to retain with help from Kane, but whatever they do, it has to clearly set up a match right away.  This should be a very good, if not great match.
    *John Cena vs. Rusev for U.S. title in an I Quit match – One would think Lana will somehow cost Rusev the match here, bringing another step into her face turn
    *Ryback vs. Bray Wyatt – Could go either way.  This is the first match of their program and I don’t see it as a one-time thing, so a Wyatt win to bring it back would seem to make sense.  This depends a lot on how much time they are given and where it’s placed on the show.  It’s a hit-or-miss match. 
    *New Day vs. Tyson Kidd & Cesaro 2/3 falls – This is to set up the Chamber match.  This could involve other teams coming out, but New Day winning with outside interference is what they’ve been doing.  With 2/3 falls, this is expected to be either the best match or second best match of the night, unless they do the rushing two falls thing that often gets done in 2/3 fall bouts.    
    *Dolph Ziggler vs. Sheamus – With Ziggler winning last time, I could see Sheamus winning this time, but expect both in the IC title chamber match.
    *Neville vs. King Barrett – These two have been having really strong house show matches and this could be a real sleeper.  I can see Neville doing more than usual given it’s his first actual PPV match
    Axel Mania & Macho Mizdow vs. The Ascension (preshow match at 7:30 p.m. Eastern time)
            On paper this show looks strong.  Everything on the PPV portion figures to be at least decent and most should be good.  I don’t sense the interest level of a lot of shows given the four-way main event and the feeling of a “B” show, but for three hours of entertainment, it looks good.

    Shooto Brazil airs on UFC Fight Pass at 6 p.m. Sunday

    Felipe Froes vs. Paulo Guerreiro for featherweight title
    Rony Torres vs. Benito Tavares
    Luiz Cane vs. Ricardo Silva
    Pedrinho Falcao vs. Thiago Manchinha
    Guilherme Jacare vs. Edson de Souza
    Felipe Colen vs. Alex Trem Bala
    Oton Jasse vs. Marcio Breno
    Ivan Paiva vs Antonio Pedreira
    Yago Bryan vs. Carlos Eduardo
    Guilhereme Doin vs. Denilson Oliveira
    Matheus Nacacche vs. Alir de Oliveira
    Elves Oliveira vs. Lucas Bigous

    Raw will be live on Monday night from Richmond, VA.

    Smackdown and Main Event will be taped on Tuesday night in Norfolk, VA.

    The story behind the Elimination Chamber as a network special, why and how it came about, as well as a look at the next two WWE major shows, Payback and Elimination Chamber and NXT Takeover, is the lead story in this week’s Observer.  We also have a look at the injury situation with Daniel Bryan, Sami Zayn and Hideo Itami.  We also look at the Mayweather-Pacquiao business, New Japan & ROH working together for big shows, a detailed story on Global Force Wrestling including talent and television outlets and the TV scene, a lawsuit that has nothing to do with WWE & UFC, but where the result will be very important to both, Tough Enough, has NOAH turned the corner, as well as the monthly business rundowns for WWE & TNA.

    The new issue is up on the site at http://www.f4wonline.com/component/content/article/110-wrestling-observer-newsletter/42526-may-18-2015-wrestling-observer-newsletter-last-minute-elimination-chamber-special-mayweather-vs-pacquiao-destroys-ppv-records-and-more

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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.

    The lead story looks at the addition of the Elimination Chamber show, why this is being done, plans for the future and how this relates to it, the Elimination Chamber card as well as notes on the Chamber matches.  We also look at Daniel Bryan and the poor job of pushing his appearance and how they are pushing the Payback main event.

    We also look at the Mayweather-Pacquiao business, and how it breaks down, live event business, Vegas closed circuit, bar business, how much Mayweather and Pacquiao figure to earn, Mayweather talks rematch, why the fight was so big, and the state of PPV in 2015. 

    We also look at a big question as to how this relates to UFC going forward.

    We look at the historical implications of Ronda Rousey on the Sports Illustrated cover.

    We also have a rundown of ROH and New Japan working together in Philadelphia.

    We’ve got a major piece on Global Force Wrestling.  We look at the talent list, notes on the schedule for different talent, notes on the taping schedule, different TV stations they are talking with, Spike talks about getting into wrestling, the business ideas behind all this, as well as thoughts on the talent and both who is surprisingly not listed.

    We also look at the new season of Tough Enough including the nature of the contract to the winner, Steve Austin talks WrestleMania 32, the Owen Hart DVD controversy, new movie projects with Dwayne Johnson and Dave Bautista, a night Raw is going to have to be special show next year, WWE injury notes, Fourth generation wrestler gets a WWE tryout, WWE angle news, When they had ideas for Justin Bieber at SummerSlam, Jerry Lawler day, Sheamus talks his career, WWE raising ticket prices for premium seats, WWE tryout notes, most popular shows on WWE Network, WWE Japan tour notes, why Jericho vs. Balor was put on the Japan show, Lesnar story involving the brother of a famous actor and notes and business of all the arena events from the past week.

    We look at last week’s UFC show in Australia, the heavyweight title picture, the Mark Hunt stoppage and match-by-match coverage.

    We also look at the latest Pro Wrestling NOAH major show, which included appearances by Kenta Kobashi and Yuji Nagata, as well as NOAH’s Mitsuharu Misawa Memorial tour coming up next month.

    We also have a business rundown for WWE & TNA and where things stand in the different categories.

    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.

    Also in this week’s issue:

    –Wrestler fired once from major promotion, doesn’t last long on his return

    –The Santo Memorial tournament for 2015

    –Notes on the format of the AAA World Cup tournament

    –Who is now heading two promotions at the same time and why the move was made

    –Update on Dragon Gate’s King of Gate tournament

    –Minoru Suzuki promoting a show

    –New Japan lineups for all the big shows in June as well as the Dominion PPV in July

    –Notes on this year’s Best of the Super Junior tournament

    –Hall of Famer and health issues noted

    –Shinya Hashimoto Memorial show

    –Fujinami vs. Funaki Battle of Hall of Famers for the first time

    –Notes from the AGON promotions and main event pay

    –Notes on a promotion which claimed a TV deal and it falling apart

    –Details on all TNA television through mid-June, with matches, angles and destinations

    –A look at TNA’s Slammiversary show

    –Notes on TNA’s prospects on PPV

    –Update on Jeff Hardy

    –Notes on the best of five series between the Wolves vs. Aries & Roode

    –Update on TNA money issues

    –Update on TNA creative team

    –A look at those who returned to TV this past week and who is long and short-term

    –Who turned down an offer to come in

    –TNA announcing situation

    –Notes on TNA’s relationship with AAA

    –What happened with TNA and Wrestle-1

    –Can TNA talent work for GFW

    –Best stuff at the TNA tapings

    –Updates on UFC PPV numbers

    –Managers meeting and why

    –Dana White’s reaction regarding complaints about the Reebok deal

    –An interesting legal question stemming from the deal

    –UFC schedule notes

    –Anthony Pettis injury notes

    –Josh Barnett vs. Ryron Gracie

    –Metamoris news

    –Fight Pass promotion

    –New Fight Pass deals made

    –Rousey talks coaching vs. Cyborg

    –Lots of new UFC fights

    –Active UFC fighter sort of does a pro wrestling match

    –Huge Bellator signing of Olympian

    –This week’s Bellator show 

    If you are a new subscriber ordering 24 or more issues, you can get one free classic issue of your choice sent to you today.  With a 40 issue subscription, you can get two free classic issues sent to you today.

    New subscribers ordering 24 or 40 issues have to let us know what major stories of the past 11 years you are most interested in and we’ll send the issue with the best coverage of that story. We’ve got coverage of every major PPV event and world wide spectacular, every major star switching promotions, histories of companies like FMW, Rings and New Japan, retirement and obit issues of every major star who fits into those descriptions over the past 11 years, as well as our biggest issue every year, the annual awards issue, and our most controversial issue of every year, the Hall of Fame issue.

    Our most requested issues in our history are:

    *November 17, 1997 (full details of everything leading to the most famous wrestling match finish of modern times at the Survivor Series plus a history of in-ring double-crosses)

    *December 21, 1998 (the complete Vince McMahon-Bret Hart conversation right before the Survivor Series match so you’ll know exactly what was said–the conversation played in edited form both on the inaugural broadcast of Confidential as well as in Wrestling with Shadows, but everything that was said between the two about the match that was going to take place that same night)

    *August 1, 1994 (the most detailed coverage anywhere of the Vince McMahon steroid trial, an issue praised in numerous newspaper article and Sex, Lies and Headlocks)

    *March 26, 2001 (death of WCW and history of pro wrestling on the Turner networks)a

    *October 22, 2001 (why the adult audience has left pro wrestling in such great numbers and what needed to have been done to save them)

    *July 8, 1991 (Ric Flair leaves WCW as world champion/Zahorian steroid trial)

    *February 8, 1993 (the life and times of Andre the Giant)

    *May 13, 2002 (the life story of the most incredible pro wrestling career ever, a look at Lou Thesz, in one of the largest issues of our history)

    *January 27, 2003 (part one of the two-part series covering the career and life of The Sheik)

    *February 3, 2003 (Part two on The Sheik including thoughts from people who worked with him and where he stands historically)

    *March 24, 2003 (history of the WWWF title, inside behind the Sammartino, Backlund and Backlund era)

    *April 21, 2003 (history of WWF continues with the expansion nationally, the death of the regional territories and the rise of Hulk Hogan)

    *May 12, 2003 (The life and death of Elizabeth and the rise of fall of Lex Luger)

    *June 9, 2003 (Part 1 of history of WWF vs. WCW wars and what many say was the greatest year in U.S. wrestling; plus a look at Fred Blassie)

    *June 16, 2003 (Freddie Blassie through the eyes of his biggest rivals and friends)

    *July 28, 2003 (Part 2 of the history of the WWF vs. WCW war and the plans to make new superstars in the early 90s, what happened, and the night where the three biggest wrestling companies in the world combined for a joint show and what happened)

    *August 25, 2003 (2003 Hall of Fame issue with huge profiles on the controversial career of Shawn Michaels, Chris Benoit as well as historical features on Earl Caddock and Francisco Flores)

    *September 22, 2003 (Part 3 of the history of the WWF vs WCW war with the seeds that caused the collapse of the industry in the 90s, Zahorian trial, Gulf War controversy, Flair leaves WCW while holding world title and much more)

    *October 27, 2003 (The fascinating life of Stu Hart plus the story of Road Warrior Hawk)

    *January 19, 2004 (2003 Awards issue)

    *February 2, 2004 (History of Toronto wrestling, Jack Tunney life story, Royal Rumble and Battle Royal history)

    *February 23, 2004 (History of Guerrero family with Eddy’s win over Brock Lesnar)

    *March 1, 2004 (History of WWF continues with the period that brought the company down in early 1992, the mistakes, the real stories and how the business changed)

    *March 8, 2004 (History of Wrestlemania, its greatest matches and best and worst shows as voted both by wrestlers and non-wrestlers and Wrestlemania history books)

    *July 5, 2004 (A look behind the scenes and Ric Flair’s book and his background with Eric Bischoff and Hulk Hogan)

    *July 12, 2004 (A look at more on Ric Flair’s book and his comments on Bruno Sammartino, Bret Hart and Mick Foley)

    *August 16, 2004 (History of the Olympians in pro wrestling)

    *August 23, 2004 (2004 Hall of Fame issue and biggest issue of the year with huge profiles on Kazushi Sakuraba, Undertaker, Bob Backlund, Masahiro Chono, Ultimo Dragon, Kurt Angle and Tarzan Lopez–this counts as one issue if you are asking for a free issue, but ordered separately, due to size, is $6 in North America and $7 overseas)

    *October 4, 2004 (the life and times of Big Bossman; as well as details of the life and times of one of the most influential men world wide in pro wrestling history, Jim Barnett)

    *November 15, 2004 (the full story of what happened between Kurt Angle and Daniel Puder, plus coverage of the most important week in the history of TNA)

    *January 24, 2005 (2004 Awards issue, Rock and WWE part company)

    *March 14, 2005 (the 50 biggest money players in the history of WWF and a look at their Hall of Fame)

    *May 9, 2005 (the life and times of Chris Candido)

    *June 20, 2005 (The full story behind Paul Heyman and the death of ECW, as well as coverage of One Night Stand, Hardcore Homecoming and behind the scenes of both shows)

    *July 18, 2005 (death of Shinya Hashimoto and his records with a look at the fall of New Japan, the Matt Hardy angle, tons of WWE firings, Cornette firing in detail as well as problems of a WWE developmental territory in our biggest news issue of the year which is a double-sized issue and would be $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

    *August 24, 2005 (2005 Hall of Fame issue with career profiles of Paul Heyman, HHH and Freebirds plus debut of MMA Hall of Fame)

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    *October 10, 2005 (Life and Times of the Ultimate Warrior)

    *November 21, 2005 (Life and Times of Eddy Guerrero and Crusher, double issue $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

    *December 5, 2005 (The Eddy Guerrero special issue, double issue $6 on its own, $7 overseas)

    *January 9, 2006 (The life and times of Superstar Billy Graham, plus New Year’s Eve 2005 coverage)

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    *April 10, 2006 (Behind the scenes at the 2006 Wrestlemania/Hall of Fame week)

    *July 24, 2006 (The History of the Von Erichs and World Class Championship Wrestling–the most unreal story ever in wrestling)

    *September 4, 2006 (The Rise and Fall of Kurt Angle; 2006 Hall of Fame inductions of Eddie Guerrero, Paul Bowser, Masakatsu Funaki, Aja Kong and Hiroshi Hase including tons of wrestling history around the world from the 20s through the 60s, the evolution of working to not working in Japan, and a look at Guerrero in hindsight, double issue $6 or $7 overseas)

    *October 9, 2006 (A look back nine years later at the life and legacy of Brian Pillman with tons of inside information about what made him tick as his real objectives)

    *November 15, 2006 (History of WCW part one, Eric Bischoff’s book and how the industry was changed forever)

    *November 20, 2006 (History of WCW part two, Why Jim Ross left WCW, How Bischoff changed the company, signing of Hulk Hogan, Beginning of Nitro, Jesse Ventura, Brian Pillman, Chris Jericho and signing Wrestlemania planned celebrity away)

    *November 27, 2006 (History of WCW part three, When Bischoff challenged McMahon to fight; Truth and fiction around Bret Hart signing with WCW and why it didn’t click)

    *December 6, 2006 (details behind Pride’s offers to sell promotion and Part four of History of WCW part four, Hogan-Goldberg match and why there was no rematch, WCW loses NBC network deal in 1999 and the real reasons the company fell apart)

    *January 22, 2007 (2006 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *February 14, 2007 (Life and Times of Bam Bigelow)

    *March 5, 2007 (WWE begins plans that will change the business)

    *March 12, 2007 (Life and Times of Mike Awesome)

    *March 19, 2007 (Life and Times of Ernie Ladd)

    *April 4, 2007 (Life and Times of Badnews Allen Coage–which many are calling one of the best issues in history)

    *July 2, 2007 (Part one of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 5, 2007 (Part two of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 10, 2007 (Part three of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 19, 2007 (Part four of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 23, 2007 (Part five of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *July 25, 2007 (Part six of Benoit double murder-suicide)

    *August 15, 2007 (The legend of the God of Japanese wrestling and his influence on MMA, Karl Gotch)

    *October 15 (2007 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas including inductions of The Rock, Tom Packs and the original Strangler Lewis)

    *November 12, 2007 (Life and times of Fabulous Moolah and history of U.S. women’s wrestling) .

    *December 31, 2007 (History of Ric Flair and the heyday of wrestling at the Greensboro Coliseum)

    *January 21, 2008 (2007 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *March 17, 2008 (Life and times of Johnny Weaver)

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    *April 10, 2008 (Farewell to Ric Flair; My thoughts, Shawn Michaels talks of Flair’s meaning to him; Hall of Fame; Wrestlemania double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

    *August 11, 2008 (Ric Flair leaves WWE; Updated history of pro wrestlers and MMA fighters who went to the Olympics)

    * September 8, 2008 (2008 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas; part one of Killer Kowalski bio)

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    You can also order any of these issues on their own for $4 in North America or $5 overseas.

    We now have available personally autographed copies of Tributes II, our latest book, as well as a DVD that comes with it talking more about the subjects in the book. The book covers the life stories of Lou Thesz, Wahoo McDaniel, Elizabeth, Fred Blassie, Road Warrior Hawk, Andre the Giant, Curt Hennig, Johnny Valentine, Davey Boy Smith, Terry Gordy, Owen Hart, Stu Hart, Gorilla Monsoon, The Sheik and Tim Woods..

    To get all of those biographies as back issues of the Observer would be a $60 value today. This is a collection of some of the best Observer articles of the past several years in a hardcover, full-color format that is 239 pages. There is also a foreword by Bret Hart. The book price is $12.95 plus $3.50 for shipping costs in the U.S., $20 for shipping costs to Canada and $25 for shipping costs outside North America. You can order the book the same way you order the newsletter.

    SUNDAY’S NEWS UPDATE

    –Myself, Bryan and Tom Lawlor will be back tonight talking WWE Payback, UFC and the Nevada commissions new policies of drug test failures late tonight.  You can also send questions to the show, but it’s best to concentrate on current topics because time will be limited, to mailbag@wrestlingobserver.com

    –Tonight’s show is expected to be sold out.

    –The only combat sports thing getting lots of traction as far as mainstream is GGG with 50,000 searches last night.  In sports, lots of NBA interest and The Preakness.

    –It was 52 years ago today that Bruno Sammartino beat Buddy Rogers to win the WWWF title in Madison Square Garden for the first time.  If you look back from an historical perspective, that should be on the list for one of the biggest matches in history because it was really the match that kicked of the Sammartino legacy.

    –The Countdown to UFC 187 will air on FS 1 today at 5:30 p.m. Eastern time.

    –TNA announced today its 2016 U.K. tour with shows on 1/29 in Manchester, 1/30 in London and 1/31 in Birmingham.

    –As noted earlier, the Brie Bella injury on Friday night was a work, as they did the exact same thing last night in Atlantic City. 

    –People were raving about how great the ROH TV match with Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Roderick Strong was yesterday in Toronto.

    –Rusev’s star from the Russian Federation was stolen on Friday night.  I’ve heard conflicting stories, one saying it was at the arena and the other saying it was at the airport.  If he is wearing one tonight it means they had a new one made quickly.

    –Titus O’Neil was named Celebrity Dad of the Year in the MEGA Dads awards.  This prompted his friend Dave Bautista to write:  “You’re everything a WWE star should be.  Get out there and represent our company.”  He then wrote about his lack of a push saying “WWE:  Sorry there’s nothing for you creatively” and followed it by writing #sameoldbullshit.

    –John Cena has to be honest when it comes to the weights at the very least.  There was a video of him doing a squat and TMZ wrote that it was with 600 pounds.  Cena then on Twitter wanted to clear it up saying it was 396 pounds.

    –We want to send sympathies to Nigel McGuinness on the passing of his father.

    –The first ROH show from Philadelphia is available right now for VOD at www.rohwrestling.com  Hopefully the second show will be up today.  

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

    1968 – Giant Baba beat Killer Kowalski in Osaka to win the World League tournament
    1974 – Mr. Wrestling (George Barnes) beat Larry O’Dea in Sydney to win the WCW TV title
    2006 – Hiroshi Tanahashi beat Giant Bernard to win the vacant IWGP title that Brock Lesnar had vacated i Sapporo

    –Another busy week upcoming, with the Wednesday NXT special, UFC’s biggest show since January on Saturday, and the AAA World Cup on Sunday.  New Japan World will also have the jr. tourney with shows on Friday, Saturday and Monday mornings.

    –Spike’s next PBC show is 5/29 from the Barclays Center with Amir Khan vs. Chris Algieri as the main event.

    –PBC will also be live on NBC on Saturday night.

    –In picks from last night, Jack Encarnacao and John Pollock both went 4-1.  Encarnacao was the only one to pick Philippe Nover, which really should have gone the other way.  Pollock was the only one to pick Mark Munoz.  Me, Front Row Brian, David Bixenspan, Mike Sempervive and Steve Juon went 3-2 and Josh Nason and Mike Sawyer went 2-3.

    –PWA on 7/3 in Meaford, ONT at the Fourth Canadian Training Centre.

    –Victory Commonwealth Wrestling on 6/7 in Toronto at Lee’s Palace.

    –The Bruiser Brody Memorial show and 56th anniversary of the debut of Wrestling at the Chase from last night in East Carondelet, IL promoted by Southern Illinois Championship Wrestling with guest appearances by Stan Hansen, Barbara Goodish and former AWA announcer Mick Karch:  Jake Dirden & Bobby D & Daniel Gunner b Brandon Espinosa & Curtis Wylde & Bubba Troll, Ax Allwardt b Jim Hoffarth, Chaz Wesson b Waco, Gary Jackson b Barackus, Lucy Mendez b Paloma Starr, Keith Smith Jr. b Ken Kasa, Attila Khan & Chris Hargas b Ricky Cruz & Ron Powers, Flash Flanagan b Daniel Eads, Ron Powers won Bruiser Brody Memorial Battle Royal (thanks to Patrick Brandmeyer)

    –Big Show is expected to return at TV this week.  He’s been out selling the beating from Roman Reigns in the last man standing match.

    –Trish Stratus will be a torch bearer for the Pan American Games.

    –Not that this necessary means anything, but Chris Jericho is advertised for house shows this summer against King Barrett.

    –Curtis Axel was given last night off from house shows to attend the induction of his father into the Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame in Amsterdam, NY.  It was a super emotional moment as he read the eulogy that his grandfather, Larry Hennig, gave to Curt Hennig at his funeral.  

    –UCW from last night in Bay City, MI:  Brian Fury won Battle Royal, Danny Shay b John E Bravo, Black Bushido b Bryan Castle, Ingrid Isley b Shayla Hyde, Taeler Hendrix b Ingrid Isley, Ben Boone & Bry Sullivan b Kharma Police, Jake Something b Mad Dragon Hakeem Zane, Justin Mane b Brian Christopher-DQ, Dave Duponte b TK Parker, Caleb Stills b Gangrel (thanks to Leonard Brand)

    –GOUGE from yesterday in Raleigh, NC:  Ivan Putin & Vladimir Ryker b Rob Van Pillman & Old School, Jimmy Jack Funk Jr. b Victor Andrews, Otto Schwanz & Zero Gravity b No Direction, Mickey Gambino b Juan Jeremi, Jakob Hammermeier b Seymour Snott.  Next show is 5/30 in Guquay Varina, NC at the Draft Line Brewery.

    –Ken Shamrock vs. Kimbo Slice TV commercial at

    http://spikecreativehub.com/links/Bellator/BTOR_138_Kimbo_Shamrock/BTOR138_Kimbo_Shamrock_30_cut14_MIX2.mp4

    –Wrestling bloopers at

    http://www.si.com/extra-mustard/2015/05/06/botchamania-blooper-reels-wrestling-video?page=4&devicetype=phone

    –A Jim Ross interview in Baltimore, where he did a show last night

    http://www.abc2news.com/entertainment/hall-of-fame-pro-wrestling-announcer-jim-ross-to-share-stories-answer-questions-at-rams-head-live

    –Jeff Jarrett beat Matt Riviera to win the Western States Heritage title Friday night in King City, CA.  

    TOMORROW’S WWE NETWORK SCHEDULE (thanks to Bert Duckwall)

    2:00 AM ET
    TOUGH ENOUGH Stone Cold Steve Austin enlists the help of four sexy WWE Divas and THQ video games to teach the remaining contestants all about creativity.

    3:00 AM ET
    WWE NXT With one week until Takeover, Sami Zayn and Kevin Owens meet face to face in the ring to determine the fate of their NXT Championship Match.

    4:00 AM ET
    WWE SUPERSTARS Stardust arrives from the fifth dimension to battle R-Truth. Plus, Kalisto is in singles action against Heath Slater.

    5:00 AM ET
    OLD SCHOOL Old School WWE card from the Boston Garden features Macho Man Randy Savage defending the Intercontinental Title in a Lumberjack Match.

    6:00 AM ET
    WWE PAYBACK 2015 Seth Rollins defends the WWE World Heavyweight Championship in a Fatal 4 Way Match against Dean Ambrose, Randy Orton and Roman Reigns!

    9:00 AM ET
    WWE PAYBACK 2015 Seth Rollins defends the WWE World Heavyweight Championship in a Fatal 4 Way Match against Dean Ambrose, Randy Orton and Roman Reigns!

    12:00 PM ET
    WWE PAYBACK 2015 Seth Rollins defends the WWE World Heavyweight Championship in a Fatal 4 Way Match against Dean Ambrose, Randy Orton and Roman Reigns!

    3:00 PM ET
    WWE PAYBACK 2015 Seth Rollins defends the WWE World Heavyweight Championship in a Fatal 4 Way Match against Dean Ambrose, Randy Orton and Roman Reigns!

    6:00 PM ET
    TOTAL DIVAS Trinity’s inability to have sex frustrates Jon, and Bryan and Nikki shock Brie when they team up to stage an intervention.

    6:55 PM ET
    WWE 24 In this edition of WWE 24, we reveal the personal story of this rising star, his family and his memorable experience at Wrestlemania 31.

    7:30 PM ET
    RAW PRE-SHOW From WWE Studios in Stamford Connecticut. Scott Stanford, David Otunga and Corey Graves cover all the events leading up to Monday Night Raw.

    8:00 PM ET
    MONDAY NIGHT WAR Jericho shed his cruiserweight stigmas to make his mark on both WWE and WCW throughout the Monday Night War.

    9:00 PM ET
    WWE COUNTDOWN Countdown Greatest High Flyers counts down the top ten greatest high flying superstars of all time!

    10:00 PM ET
    TOTAL DIVAS Trinity’s inability to have sex frustrates Jon, and Bryan and Nikki shock Brie when they team up to stage an intervention.

    11:06 PM ET
    WWE NETWORK EXCLUSIVE The action continues live after Raw!

    11:11 PM ET
    FIRST LOOK First Look: It’s Good To Be King

    11:41 PM ET
    CULTURE SHOCK WITH COREY GRAVES Corey Graves gets a culture shock immersing himself within the fascinating world of Marvel Comics, from their headquarters in New York City!