Category: Post Type article

  • NJPW on AXS TV results (10/2): Bullet Club vs. Goto/Shibata headlines 2014 World Tag League finals

    Tonight’s show took place on December 7, 2014 from the Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium in Aichi. This show is the finals of the 2014 World Tag League.

    First match is an eight man tag match where Hiroshi Tanahashi, Kota Ibushi, Togi Makabe and La Sombra take on Shinsuke Nakamura, Kazuchika Okada, Yoshi-Hashi and Tomohiro Ishii. New Japan has a very basic formula when it comes to tag team matches- they’ll put rivals on opposite teams, they’ll wrestle each other a for a while, somewhere in here there’s a barricade spot, then eventually they pin the weak link on the team who has no real feud with anyone while his partners are all held back, which in this case is Yoshi-Hashi. In fact, in most years it’s been Yoshi-Hashi. Not that they’re bad, but they are very formulaic and don’t stray all that much. This was a fine bout that pushed programs for WrestleKingdom 9 and it did it’s job well in that regard.

    Hirooki Goto is interviewed. He remembers 2014 as a year of tag matches for himself. He and Shibata worked out their relationship after the Seibu Dome G1 finals, and the Tag League was their first time teaming together on a constant basis. About their opponents, they knew how good they were since they faced them before.

    Then the Tag League finals aired, with Karl Anderson and Doc Gallows (who are also the champions) faced Hirooki Goto and Katsuyori Shibata. This turned into a pretty good match; the crowd was red hot for this toward the end. The start wasn’t nearly as interesting but they worked it into a pretty good match. Maybe a shade below normal New Japan main events but I’d have this around the ***½ star range. Goto and Shibata, since they never seem to be in the real main event scene, could be the ace of this division if New Japan ever really gets behind having a heavyweight tag team scene.

    The problem is they haven’t, and don’t seem to be based on the booking of the division this year, which we’ll see in later episodes on AXS TV. They win the match with a PK to Anderson, a shotgun kick that sends Gallows to the outside then Goto pins Anderson with the shouten kai.

    Gallows said they didn’t need to win the Tag League again. They (their opponents) want to fire shots, we’ll fire back harder. Anderson says the Tag League means nothing because they have the belts, then challenged them to a match at the Tokyo Dome with the titles on the line. I cleaned up their language here as it was rather salty. I didn’t think you can say those words on cable TV, but I guess AXS is one of those premium channels.

    Shibata says in a post match interview in the ring that he wants a belt, since he’s never felt he’s achieved anything here in particular. Goto said the time is right, and the next target is those belts. In another post match interview backstage, the two talk about knowing each other in high school. Goto says it’s nice to have a partner next to him that he could rely on.

    In his reflective interview, Goto mentions that match gave them confidence and was happy to accomplish something that night. He thinks that’s the moment their tag team became one. He thought Shibata was happy to win the match, but they are both hungry for more titles. he mentions the Goto Revolution, there are no stages, just about results. When he turns everything around, that is when it will be over.

    This was a good show for what it was. The Tag League doesn’t mean a whole lot in the long run as it’s usually teams you see maybe once a year, plus Tencozy and the Bullet Club, and the match quality is nowhere near the same as the G1. Goto and Shibata made sense to win here since it seemed like they were being groomed as the next great tag team to hit New Japan, but as we’ll see later in the year, that wasn’t the case. Big next five weeks on AXS as the entire WrestleKingdom 9 card will be shown, with next week focusing on junior heavyweights as reDragon, Forever Hooligans, Young Bucks and Time Splitters square off over the junior tag titles and Kenny Omega battles Ryusuke Taguchi for the junior title.

  • NJPW/Revolution Pro live results: AJ Styles, Nakamura, Kyle O’Reilly, Kushida

    Submitted by Jan Buxton

    This was a joint show with NJPW and RevPro from York Hall in London, England.

    – Sha Samuels and James Castle b Hiroyoshi Tenzan and Satoshi Kojima
    – Martin Kirby b ACH
    – Shinsuke Nakamura b Big Damo
    – Hiroshi Tanahashi and Jushin Liger b Gedo and Kazuchika Okada
    – Kyle O’Reilly b Kushida
    – Tetsuya Naito b Mark Haskins
    – RPW Cruiserweight Chapion Josh Bodom b Jimmy Havoc to retain
    – RPW Champion AJ Styles b Will Ospreay and Marty Scurll to retain

    Notes:

    This was a very good show, so enjoyable. Nothing bad, lots of good matches. Both Nakamura-Damo and O’Reilly-Kushida started slowly but ended up really good by the end. The Tanahashi/Liger/Okada/Gedo tag was fun and quite the sight to see on British soil, and we got more Tanahashi vs Okada than I had expected going in which was nice. Mark Haskins (on a bit of a roll at the moment) really brought it against Naito I felt, and the main event was very good, especiall Marty Scurll who was quite great tonight, to me at least.

  • FRI UPDATE: John Cena taking time off, Johny Hendricks hospitalized

    We’re looking for reports on tonight’s WWE show in Trenton, NJ (John Cena vs. Seth Rollins), NXT in Nashville and TNA in Beckley, WV (Ethan Carter III vs. Drew Galloway for the TNA title, Gail Kim vs. Awesome Kong for the Knockouts title, Matt Hardy vs. Eric Young, Bobby Roode vs. Eli Drake for the King of the Mountain title, Wolves vs. Trevor Lee & Andrew Everett for TNA tag titles) and Ken Anderson vs. Jessie Godderz) at newstips@wrestlingobserver.com

    This weekend we’ll be doing polls for UFC 192, WWE in Madison Square Garden, TNA Bound for Glory and AAA Heroes Inmortales, so a huge weekend of big events.

    New Japan World Pro Wrestling Returns at 9 p.m. Eastern on AXS TV

    Hiroshi Tanahashi & Kota Ibushi & Togi Makabe & La Sombra vs. Shinsuke Nakamura & Kazuchika Okada & Tomohiro Ishii & Yoshi-Hashi

    Karl Anderson & Doc Gallows vs. Hirooki Goto & Katsuyori Shibata in finals of the 2014 tag team tournament

    CMLL from Arena Mexico live at 9:30 p.m. Eastern at www.ClaroSports.com

    First round of the Universal Champion of Champions tournament, a one-night eight man tournament with Angel de Oro, Dragon Lee, Barbaro Cavernario, Dragon Rojo Jr., Luciferno, Rey Bucanero, Shocker and Ultimo Guerrero

    Atlantis & Super Parka & Volador Jr. vs. Marco Corleone & Rush & La Sombra

    Shine iPPV tonight at www.WWNLive.com

    Santana vs. Evie for Shine championship

    Allysin Kay vs. Sweet Saraya Knight anything goes

    Jessicka Havok vs. Kay Lee Ray

    Madison Eagles vs. Su Yung

    Leah Von Dutch vs. Malia Hosaka

    Kimber Lee vs. Taylor Made

    Leva Bates (Blue Pants) & Mia Yim (Jade) vs. Rhia O’Reilly & Sammi Baynz

    Ivelisse vs. Thunderkitty

    Jayme Jameson vs. Shazza McKenzie vs. Kellyanne vs. Liberty

    Saturday we’re looking for reports from WWE in Bangor, ME (Ryback, Roman Reigns, Dean Ambrose, Wyatt Family), TNA in Salem, VA (Ethan Carter III vs. Drew Galloway for the TNA title, Gail Kim vs. Awesome Kong for Knockouts title, Kurt Angle vs Eric Young, Bobby Roode vs. Andrew Everett for King of the Mountain title, Wolves vs. Eli Drake & Jessie Godderz for tag title, Ken Anderson vs Tyrus and Earl Hebner Hall of Fame Ceremony) and land NXT with a Noon show in Louisville at the Louder than Life Music and Food Festival at Champions Park. 

    UFC 192 from the Toyota Center in Houston

    Fight Pass at 6:30 p.m.

    Sage Northcutt vs. Francisco Trevino

    Derrick Lewis vs. Viktor Pesta

    Chris Cariaso vs. Sergio Pettis

    FS 1 at 8 p.m.

    Islam Makhachev vs. Adriano Martins

    Alan Jouban vs. Albert Tumenov

    Angela Hill vs. Rose Namajunas

    Daniel Hooker vs. Yair Rodriguez

    PPV at 10 p.m.

    Joseph Benavidez vs. Ali Bagautinov

    Jessica Eye vs. Julianna Pena

    Ruslan Magomedov vs. Shawn Jordan

    Rashad Evans vs. Ryan Bader

    Daniel Cormier vs. Alexander Gustafsson for UFC light heavyweight title

    WWE on WWE Network live from Madison Square Garden at 8 p.m. Eastern time

    Brock Lesnar vs. Big Show

    John Cena vs. Seth Rollins in a cage match

    New Day vs. Dudleys for tag titles

    Kevin Owens vs. Chris Jericho for IC title

    Randy Orton vs. Sheamus

    Dolph Ziggler vs. Rusev

    We’ll be looking for reports on Sunday from the WWE house shows in Worcester, MA (John Cena vs. Seth Rollins, Rusev vs. Dolph Ziggler, New Day vs. Dudleys) and Portland, ME (Roman Reigns, Dean Ambrose, Ryback, The Wyatt Family), plus NXT with another Noon show in Louisville at the Louder than Life Music and Food Festival at Champions Park.

    TNA Bound for Glory PPV on Sunday at 8 p.m. from Concord, NC

    EC 3 vs. Matt Hardy vs. Drew Galloway for the TNA title with Jeff Hardy as ref

    Eddie Edwards & Davey Richards vs. Trevor Lee & Brian Meyers for the TNA tag tilters

    Abyss, Aiden O’Shea, Chris Melendez, Jesse Godderz, Ken Anderson, Mahabili Shera, Tyrus, Eli Drake and Robbie E in a Gauntlet for a title shot

    Gail Kim vs. Awesome Kong for Knockouts title

    Tigre Uno puts up X title in an Ultimate X match

    Bobby Roode vs. Bobby Lashley for King of the Mountain title

    Kurt Angle vs Eric Young

    AAA Heroes Inmortales iPPV at 7 p.m. Eastern time at www.internetvluchalibreaaa.com from San Luis Potosi

    Alberto El Patron vs. Johnny Mundo for AAA Mega heavyweight title

    Rey Mysterio Jr. & Psycho Clown & ? vs. El Hijo del Fantasma & El Texano Jr. & Myzteziz

    Antonio Pena Cup tournament:  Aero Star, Blue Demon Jr., Nino Hamburguesa, La Parka, Averno, Chessman, Cibernetico, Electroshock, El Hijo del Pirata Morgan & ?

    Joe Lider & Pentagon Jr. defend AAA tag titles against Jack Evans & Angelico and Steve Pain & Daga

    Taya Valkyrie defends Queen or Queens title against Goya Kong, Hiedra and two mystery women

    Raw is Monday night at the TD Garden in Boston.  Brock Lesnar and Paul Heyman are at the show along with the usual cast of characters.  No Undertaker advertised.

    Wrestling Observer Newsletter

    If you saw the JBL interview with Eric Bischoff, or even if you didn’t, we have what is already one of the most talked about and praised issues of the Wrestling Observer this year up on the site right now.  The main theme is fact vs. fiction, covering both the WWE historical view of the Monday Night Wars and the Eric Bischoff version, going through every point and cutting through things like outright B.S., faulty memories and interesting truths.

    The new double issue also covers SummerSlam in Brooklyn, the real story behind the UFC announcing a show in Madison Square Garden, Jon Jones’ legal punishment and future, coverage of both of the New Japan PPV shows this past week as well as a look at their direction as they build toward King of Pro Wrestling and later, the Tokyo Dome show, UFC in Japan and a look at that business, the retirement of Rich Franklin, a Hall of Famer running for Mayor, the retirement show of Genichiro Tenryu, more concerning drug testing questions, SummerSlam PPV numbers and what we can learn from them, as well as the death of German legend Axel Dieter Sr.

    The latest Wrestling Observer Newsletter:  October 6, 2015 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Analysis of Bischoff Network interview, Jones plea and tons more. 

    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 todave@wrestlingobserver.com” target=”_blank”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com

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

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

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

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

    We look at Eric Bischoff and his role, both good and bad, in what the pro wrestling industry has turned into.  We look at the WCW boom, the creation of Nitro, the early war, the NWO era, the peak and the fall of WCW.

    We look at the mistakes made, the fall of WCW, the emergence of Bill Goldberg, the real origination of the streak idea,   We look at the rapid decline of the company and why.  We look at how and when things went down, as well as why, how history shows the merger excuse doesn’t hold water, the complete b.s. of the WWE’s Monday Night War narrative.  We look at the dying days of WCW and Eric Bischoff’s plan he never got a chance to implement.

    We look at Eric Bischoff’s background, how he got into wrestling, his first meeting with Verne Gagne, his WWF tryout as an announcer, his connection with Japan, the unique case of Sonny Onoo, and the death of the AWA.

    We look at the sale of Georgia Championship Wrestling, Vince McMahon’s one-year run on TBS and problems with Ted Turner, where Bill Watts fit into the scene then, and the scene prior to the launch of Nitro.

    We look at WCW before Bischoff got power, what really happened with Jim Ross and WCW, , moves by Bill Watts, .  We look at the first Nitro, the real story behind Lex Luger, what Lex Luger really got, what really happened in WCW with HHH and Mick Foley, Foley getting into WWF, the story behind Bischoff’s firing of Steve Austin, the cruiserweight division and its double-edge sword, what was the point of no return, the Montreal screw job and why so many, even in wrestling, missed key points in that story, Mike Tyson at WrestleMania, Kevin Nash as a booker, DX invades Nitro and the Bischoff vs. McMahon challenge to a fist fight and the story behind the PPV that went 30 minutes over.

    In the UFC Madison Square Garden announcement, we look at the thought process behind the strategy.

    FOR A FULL WRESTLING OBSERVER PREVIEW CLICK HERE

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    Click here for the most requested Wrestling Observer back issues.

    FRIDAY’S NEWS UPDATE

    2/10 in Bremen

    2/11 in Cologne

    2/12 in Mannheim

    2/13 in Mageburg

    • Daniel Bryan had been advertised yesterday for some shows on the WWE European tour after John Cena was pulled, but now he’s been pulled from the listings. 
    • Weigh-ins for UFC will be up on the site starting at about 5 p.m. Eastern time.
    • UFC 192: Cormier vs. Gustafsson weigh-in results and live video
    • UFC 192 Preview: 5 storylines to watch, betting odds & predictions
    • A judge ruled in favor of Hulk Hogan that the complete contents of his sex tape should remained sealed.  AP had attempted to get the contents.
    • Paul Heyman talks returning to Madison Square Garden, where he grew up as a photographer and hung out with the Grand Wizard, Lou Albano and Fred Blassie as a teenager
    • And more Paul Heyman promotion of tomorrow night’s MSG show with Brock Lesnar vs. Big Show
    • Jim Ross interviews Ethan Carter III
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fh5Hsyvx1vE
    • WWE with new marketing ideas for Rock and John Cena
    • Jeff Hardy has released a new album.  It’s interesting that GFW is promoting the release.
    • There is a Legends of the Ring convention tomorrow in Monroe, NJ with Don Muraco, George Steele, Sgt. Slaughter, Jerry Brisco, Barry Windham, Mike Rotunda Howard Finkel, Paul Orndorff, Shelton Benjamin, Bob Orton Jr., Dean Malenko, Jerry Lawler, Johnny Mundo, Taz, Chyna, Vickie Guerrero and Carlito among those appearing.
    • Finn Balor, in Nashville today to headline the NXT show tonight, put on Twitter a photo of him at TNA headquarters giving them a crotch chop.
    • Johnny Gargano challenged Ethan Page to a match on 10/17’s Evolve show in Queens, NY saying that if he doesn’t win, he’ll leave Evolve forever.  There has obviously been WWE interest in him since he’s been on NXT television already. 
    • Marvelous Puroresu on Sunday at the Elks Lodge in Elmhurst, NY will feature the U.S singing debut of Chigusa Nagayo, the most popular woman pro wrestler of all-time.  The show is at 5 p.m.  Davey Boy Smith Jr., Patrick Clark, Amazing Red, Takaaki Watanabe, and Cheeseburger all appear. 
    • ROH has added television on Saturday at 10 p.m. Central time on the MyNetwork TV station, WTVO-DTV 2 in Rockford, IL. (thanks to Jacob Burnett)
    • The Fight Network will be airing UFC 182 and UFC 187 back-to-back tomorrow prior to the start of the PPV show (thanks to Paul Fontaine)
    • I Believe in Wrestling tomorrow night in Orlando at the Team Vision Dojo with Santana Garrett vs. Saraya Knight for the NWA & Shine titles.
    • Alpha 1 Wrestling on 11/15 in Hamilton, ONT featuring a taping of a Colt Cabana podcast.
    • Glory kickboxing runs 10/9 in Denver and 11/6 in Milan, Italy (Robin van Roosmalen vs Sittichai for lightweight title) on Spike.  They also have a 12/4 show in Amsterdam, Holland.
    • Terry Funk is headed to Cleveland on 10/16 for Absolute Intense Wrestling at Our Lady of Mount Carmel School.
    • Pro Wrestling Zombie Lucha on 10/10 in Moosic, PA at the Youth Center.
    • Combat Zone Wrestling on 10/10 in Voorhees, NJ at Flyers Skate Zone for an iPPV has added AR Fox vs. Joey Gacy and Tim Donst vs. Joey Janela.
    • Legacy Fighting Championships on AXS run on 10/16, live from Center Stage in Atlanta.
    • NFC 79 on 10/23 in Kennesaw, GA at the Electric Cowboy.  Attendance is limited to those 18 and over.  Frank Shamrock will be a special guest at the event and will also be doing a free training seminar. at 11 a.m. on 10/24 at Georgia Fitness in Duluth, GA.  There is also a dinner with Frank Shamrock special at 6 p.m at Hooters in Kennesaw, GA for $50 per person with all you can eat wings and soft drinks. 
    • Road Warrior Animal appears for a Q&A for Mecca Pro Wrestling on 10/24 at 6 p.m. at Nativity Bowling.
    • ECWA Super 8 Womens’ tournament has announced Tessa Blanchard, last year’s winner, along with Brittany Blake, Jewells Malone and Miranda Vionette as the first participants for the show on 10/17 in Woodbury Heights, NJ.  The winner becomes the ECWA women’s champion.
    • Empire State Wrestling tomorrow in North Tonawanda, NY at the St. Johnsburg Fire Hall featuring Jinder Mahal, Matt Taven, Ethan Page, Dalton Castle and more.

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

    1974 – Jumbo Miyamoto & Junko Sasaki beat Jackie West & Jane Sherrill in Takamatsu to win the WWWA tag titles

    1976 – Jerry & Ted Oates beat Great Kojika (who is still wrestling) & Motoshi Okuma in Tokyo to win the All-Asia tag titles

    1979 – Ryuma Go beat Tatsumi Fujinami in Osaka to win the WWF jr. heavyweight title

    1990 – Kyoko Inoue beat Takako Inoue in Yamagata to win the Japanese jr. title

  • UFC 192: Cormier vs. Gustafsson weigh-in results and live video

    Welcome to WrestlingObserver.com’s live coverage of the UFC 192: Cormier vs. Gustafsson weigh-ins from the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas kicking off at 5 PM eastern time. The event airs on Saturday on PPV at 10 PM eastern time. Preliminary card action kicks off on UFC Fight Pass at 6:15 PM eastern time before moving over to FOX Sports 1 at 8 PM eastern time. This is the UFC’s fourth overall visit to Houston, and the first since UFC 166 in October 2013.

    The event is headlined by UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Daniel Cormier making his first title defense against the challenger, Alexander Gustafsson, who is looking to win the championship in his second attempt to do so. Also on the card are a pair of former champions looking to get another title shot as former UFC Welterweight Champion Johny Hendricks takes on Tyron Woodley in the co-main event, and former UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Rashad Evans takes on Ryan Bader, who is looking to extend his four-fight win streak.

    MAIN CARD (PPV- 10 PM ET/7 PM PT):
    Daniel Cormier (205) vs. Alexander Gustafsson (204) – UFC Light Heavyweight Championship
    Johny Hendricks () vs. Tyron Woodley () – FIGHT CANCELED
    Ryan Bader (206) vs. Rashad Evans (205)
    Shawn Jordan (265) vs. Ruslan Magomedov (236)
    Jessica Eye (136) vs. Julianna Pena (135)

    Joseph Benavidez (126) vs. Ali Bagautinov (125) – This fight was moved to the main card due to the Hendricks-Woodley fight being canceled.

    PRELIMINARY CARD (FOX SPORTS 1- 8 PM ET/5 PM PT):

    Yair Rodriguez (145) vs. Dan Hooker (146)
    Alan Jouban (170) vs. Albert Tumenov (170)
    Rose Namajunas (115) vs. Angela Hill (115)

    PRELIMINARY CARD (UFC FIGHT PASS- 6:15 PM ET/3:15 PM PT):
    Adriano Martins (156) vs. Islam Makhachev (156)
    Francisco Trevino (160) vs. Sage Northcutt (156) – Obviously, Trevino was WAY over.
    Chris Cariaso (126) vs. Sergio Pettis (126)
    Derrick Lewis (265) vs. Viktor Pesta (237)

  • On this date in pro wrestling history (10/2): AWA vs. NWA title match, Sabu wins ECW title, Alberto del Rio wins WWE title

    1913

    Oxford, Iowa:
    American Heavyweight Champion Dr. B.F. Roller defeated Charles Cutler 2 out of 3 falls to retain title

    1947

    Kansas City, Kansas:
    – Orville Brown beat Joe Dusek 2 falls to 1 to retain the MWA Title, special referee was Jack Dempsey

    1952

    Kansas City, Kansas:
    – Heart of America Heavyweight Champion Sonny Myers beat Jim Henry in 2 of 3 falls to retain the tile

    1959 

    Atlanta, Georgia:
    – Ray Gunkel defeated Freddie Blassie to win the Southern Heavyweight title

    1962 

    Pensacola, Florida:
    – Jan Madrid defeated Don Fields in a tournament to win the NWA Gulf Coast Heavyweight Title 

    1965

    Omaha, Nebraska:
    – AWA Tag Team Champions Larry Hennig & Harley Race beat Haru Sasaki & Mad Dog Vachon dq
    – Mad Russian Stan Pulaski beat Mighty Igor Vodik to win Nebraska Heavyweight title
    – Danny Hodge beat Bob Rader

    1971

    St. Paul, Minnesota:
    – The Crusher & Billy Robinson beat Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens
    – Lars Anderson beat Bull Bullinski
    – Larry Hennig drew Don Muraco

    1974

    Miami Beach, Florida:
    – Lumberjack Match: Pak Song beat Jos LeDuc
    – Bill Watts beat Dusty Rhodes by DQ
    – Mike Graham & Jerry Brisco beat Dick Slater & Gary Hart
    – Professor Toru Tanaka beat Ron Fuller
    – Bob Armstrong & Tony Charles beat The Hollywood Blondes, Buddy Roberts & Jerry Brown

    1975 

    Osaka, Japan:
    – Antonio Inoki & Seji Sakaguchi defeated Jerry Brown & Buddy Roberts for the NWF North American Tag Team Title 

    1976 

    Tokyo, Japan:
    – Jerry & Ted Oates defeated The Great Kojika & Motoshi Okuma to win the All Japan All Asian Tag Team Title

    1978

    Memphis, Tennessee:
    – Jerry Lawler beat Mongolian Stomper dq
    – NWA Junior Heavyweight Champion Nelson Royal beat Bill Dundee
    – Loser of the Fall Leaves Town: Wayne Farris & Jimmy Valiant beat Mike Bowyer & Frankie Laine
    – Jos LeDuc beat Tommy Gilbert

    1979 

    Osaka, Japan:
    – Ryuma Go defeated Tatsumi Fujinami to win the WWF World Junior Heavyweight Title

    1981

    St. Louis, Missouri:
    – Jack Brisco defeated Ted DiBiase to win the Missouri Title 
    – Bulldog Bob Brown drew Dewey Robertson
    – Kevin & David & Kerry Von Erich defeated Greg Valentine & Johnny Valiant & J.J. Dillon
    – Dick the Bruiser defeated Baron Von Raschke
    – Andre the Giant and Rocky Johnson defeated Sgt. Slaughter and Ken Patera by disqualification
    – NWA World Champion Ric Flair fought Harley Race to a 60 minute draw

    Denver, Colorado:
    – AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel drew Tito Santana 
    – Hulk Hogan & Jim Brunzell & Greg Gagne beat Jerry Blackwell & Adrian Adonis & Jesse Ventura 
    – Billy Robinson beat Sheik Adnan
    – Bobby Heenan beat Buck Zumhofe 

    1982

    Chattanooga, Tennessee:
    – Tito Santana defeated Chick Donovan
    – Terry Gordy defeated Matt Borne
    – Ivan Koloff and The Iron Sheik defeated Brad Armstrong and Johnny Rich
    – Roddy Piper defeated The Super Destroyer
    – Paul Orndorff defeated Buzz Sawyer by DQ

    1983

    San Antonio, Texas:
    – Kerry Von Erich defeated Boris Zurkov
    – Chris Adams & Iceman Parsons defeated Terry Gordy & Buddy Roberts
    – David Von Erich defeated Jim Garvin
    – Kevin Von Erich defeated NWA World Champion Harley Race by DQ

    1985 

    Tokyo, Japan:
    – NWA World Champion Ric Flair vs. AWA World Champion Rick Martel in a title vs. title match ended in a double countout

    1989

    Wheeling, West Virginia:
    – Demolition defeated Arn Anderson and Tully Blanchard to win the WWF World Tag Team Championship 

    Memphis, Tennessee:
    – Tony Anthony won a tournament final over Dustin Rhodes to become the first USWA Southern Heavyweight Champion

    1993

    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania:
    – Sabu defeated Shane Douglas to win the ECW Heavyweight Title 
    – Kevin Sullivan defeated Abdullah The Butcher in a steel cage match 
    – The Public Enemy defeated Ian & Axl Rotten and Badd Company in a three way steel cage match

    1999

    Thomaston, Connecticut:
    – Naoya Ogawa defeated Gary Steele for the NWA World Heavyweight Title 

    2000 

    San Francisco, California:
    – Booker T won the vacant WCW World Heavyweight Champion by defeating Jeff Jarrett

    2002

    Nashville, Tennessee:
    – Amazing Red defeats Shark Boy
    – NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ron Killings defeats Low Ki
    – NWA World Tag Team Champions Chris Harris & James Storm defeat Ron Harris & Ashley Hudson
    – X Division Champion Jerry Lynn defeated AJ Styles in a Ladder match

    2011 

    – Alberto Del Rio defeated John Cena and CM Punk to become new WWE Champion 
    – Beth Phoenix defeated Kelly Kelly to become WWE Divas Champion
    – Cody Rhodes defeated John Morrison to retain the Intercontinental Title

  • Breaking UFC News: Hendricks vs. Woodley off UFC 192 card, new title contender named (updated)

    Additional reporting by Dave Meltzer

    The welterweight co-main event between former UFC Welterweight Champion Johny Hendricks and top contender Tyron Woodley has been cancelled for Saturday UFC 192 due to weight cut issues for Hendricks, announced by UFC president Dana White on Twitter Friday morning. However, some additional details have been revealed.

    Ariel Helwani reported Friday that Hendricks suffered an intestinal blockage Thursday night as well as a kidney stone which caused the cancellation. Ted Ehardt, Hendricks’ manager said the former two-time NCAA champion was rushed to the emergency room and had to be given an IV.

    Doing interviews Friday, Hendricks said that he weighed 183 pounds. He needed to get to 171 today, which under normal circumstances would not be much of an issue. Ryan Bader vs. former UFC light heavyweight champion Rashad Evans now moves into the co-main event slot, while Joseph Benavidez vs. Ali Bagautinov has been moved from the preliminary card to the main card.

    On Friday afternoon, the story got two new twists as White told Yahoo’s Kevin Iole that Woodley will be getting a welterweight title shot vs. the winner of Robbie Lawler (c) vs. Carlos Condit on January 2nd. Additionally, White said that he now considers Hendricks to be a middleweight.

    Hendricks vs Woodley is off the card due to Hendricks weight cut issues.

    Your new main card is as follows:

    – UFC light heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier vs. Alexander Gustafsson

    – Rashad Evans vs. Ryan Bader

    – Shawn Jordan vs. Ruslan Magomedov

    – Jessica Eye vs. Julianna Pena

    – Joseph Benavidez vs. Ali Bagautinov

    We’ll have live fight coverage all weekend from Houston, TX.

  • WWE Total Divas season finale recap: Dolph Ziggler the homewrecker

    Submitted by Ryan Pike for WrestlingObserver.com

    Paige Doesn’t Want To Get Married

    We get a replay from last week, where Paige told Alicia she (a) didn’t want to get married but (b) didn’t want to lose her boyfriend. She gets conflicting advice from everyone, including Big Show (who advises her to “take what she can get”). Her boyfriend comes back from tour early to surprise her and she agonizes over whether to tell him or not. She decides that since she’s going on tour to Japan, she’ll tell him when she gets back. Probably.

    TJ Breaks His Neck

    Nattie goes to the eye doctor and frets about maybe needing eye surgery to avoid a retina issue, but would be very vulnerable to having detached retinas. Then TJ breaks his neck, but then they avoid mentioning his specific injury or what happened, despite him wearing a neck brace. Needless to say, TJ needs neck surgery (and his career is in jeopardy) and Nattie needs eye surgery (and her career is in jeopardy). So she lies to TJ that her eyes are fine so that he can focus on his surgery and recovery; she figures she can get her eye issue dealt with in a few months.

    Eva Marie Goes To NXT

    Eva finishes her training and goes down to NXT too get “street cred,” as the head writer says. She comes out for a match and the crowd goes crazy with hatred. She’s ecstatic that the fans care about her (and they kind of gloss over how they hate her).

    Dolph Ziggler, Homewrecker

    Nikki used to date Dolph. Dolph runs into Nikki – turns out they used to date years back – and flirts with her all episode (she’s not that receptive). Brie asks him point-blank if he has feelings for Nikki (and is using their history to try to manipulate her) and he avoids answering the question entirely. John Cena makes his longest appearance of the season, having dinner with Nikki – where she brings up how pregnant all her friends are, as Dolph mentioned earlier in the episode to her.

    Finally, Dolph does admit he has feelings for Nikki and then pours his heart out about how he’s more mature than he was when they went out before and he can give her everything she wants (like kids and a husband). And again, she seems very unresponsive (and reiterates how wonderful and magical and perfect John Cena, World’s Most Understanding Man, is).

    Our big season-ending cliffhanger is Dolph trying to kiss the girlfriend of the industry’s biggest star. But hey, at least Total Divas solved the mystery of why Ziggler’s pushes have been so infrequent and uneven since he’s been in WWE.

  • WWE News: John Cena off European tour, taking time off for personal reasons

    WWE U.S. Champion John Cena will be taking time off from wrestling shortly for what the WWE has described as personal reasons.

    While we don’t know the exact time frame that he will be gone, the 38-year-old Cena isn’t advertised on anything after the Hell in a Cell PPV special in late-October starting with the next night’s RAW in San Diego, CA. As of now, he is being advertised for their December shows.

    As part of the time off, WWE officials have confirmed he will not be appearing on any dates during the company’s upcoming 10-day European tour that will see them do shows in Ireland, the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, and Germany.

    Cena recently regained the U.S. title from WWE World Champion Seth Rollins at WWE Night Of Champions, and is set to face Rollins in a steel cage match for the title this Saturday at the Madison Square Garden show on WWE Network.

  • TNA, ROH & UFC Wednesday night ratings (September 30)

    The news for last night’s ratings weren’t good for pro wrestling.

    Impact last night in the 9 p.m. time slot did 275,000 viewers, slightly up from 272,000 last week, but still the fourth lowest since the move to Wednesday.  The midnight replay did 69,000 viewers.  The show was the go-home show for Bound for Glory, headlined by Drew Galloway & Matt Hardy vs. Ethan Carter III & Tyrus.

    ROH did 127,000 viewers  for a show headlined by Shinsuke Nakamura vs.Adam Cole.  It is the second lowest number for ROH since getting on Destination America.

    Ultimate Fighter last night did 538,000 viewers.

  • The Eric Bischoff Network Interview

    If you saw the JBL interview with Eric Bischoff, or even if you didn’t, we have what is already one of the most talked about and praised issues of the Wrestling Observer this year up on the site right now.  The main theme is fact vs. fiction, covering both the WWE historical view of the Monday Night Wars and the Eric Bischoff version, going through every point and cutting through things like outright B.S., faulty memories and interesting truths.

    The new double issue also covers SummerSlam in Brooklyn, the real story behind the UFC announcing a show in Madison Square Garden, Jon Jones’ legal punishment and future, coverage of both of the New Japan PPV shows this past week as well as a look at their direction as they build toward King of Pro Wrestling and later, the Tokyo Dome show, UFC in Japan and a look at that business, the retirement of Rich Franklin, a Hall of Famer running for Mayor, the retirement show of Genichiro Tenryu, more concerning drug testing questions, SummerSlam PPV numbers and what we can learn from them, as well as the death of German legend Axel Dieter Sr.

    The latest Wrestling Observer Newsletter:  October 6, 2015 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Analysis of Bischoff Network interview, Jones plea and tons more. 

    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” target=”_blank”>dave@wrestlingobserver.com

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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.

    We look at Eric Bischoff and his role, both good and bad, in what the pro wrestling industry has turned into.  We look at the WCW boom, the creation of Nitro, the early war, the NWO era, the peak and the fall of WCW.

    We look at the mistakes made, the fall of WCW, the emergence of Bill Goldberg, the real origination of the streak idea,   We look at the rapid decline of the company and why.  We look at how and when things went down, as well as why, how history shows the merger excuse doesn’t hold water, the complete b.s. of the WWE’s Monday Night War narrative.  We look at the dying days of WCW and Eric Bischoff’s plan he never got a chance to implement.

    We look at Eric Bischoff’s background, how he got into wrestling, his first meeting with Verne Gagne, his WWF tryout as an announcer, his connection with Japan, the unique case of Sonny Onoo, and the death of the AWA.

    We look at the sale of Georgia Championship Wrestling, Vince McMahon’s one-year run on TBS and problems with Ted Turner, where Bill Watts fit into the scene then, and the scene prior to the launch of Nitro.

    We look at WCW before Bischoff got power, what really happened with Jim Ross and WCW, , moves by Bill Watts, .  We look at the first Nitro, the real story behind Lex Luger, what Lex Luger really got, what really happened in WCW with HHH and Mick Foley, Foley getting into WWF, the story behind Bischoff’s firing of Steve Austin, the cruiserweight division and its double-edge sword, what was the point of no return, the Montreal screw job and why so many, even in wrestling, missed key points in that story, Mike Tyson at WrestleMania, Kevin Nash as a booker, DX invades Nitro and the Bischoff vs. McMahon challenge to a fist fight and the story behind the PPV that went 30 minutes over.

    In the UFC Madison Square Garden announcement, we look at the thought process behind the strategy.

    We also look at the punishment of Jon Jones for the hit and run, his future as a fighter, what the judge told him, what the UFC said, the change in people’s opinions on Jones and his track record.

    We also talk Brock Lesnar and this year’s WrestleMania with different options as well as what is and isn’t known about the rest of the show, more on Sting, Chris Jericho 25th anniversary of his pro debut, Stephanie McMahon update, Cody Runnels on why he stayed Stardust after Dusty’s death, WWE coming to new markets, Seth Rollins talks his training, Update on Carlito and WWE, Strongest men who ever lived and pro wrestling, Nikki Bella denies John Cena helps her career out, plus notes on all the weekend NXT and WWE shows and business notes for the week.

    We also look at New Japan building the Tokyo Dome show, the lineup for King of Pro Wrestling, the title situation, as well as full coverage of the Destruction in Okayama and Destruction in Kobe shows.

    We also have look at UFC’s return to Japan and the business related to the show.

    We look at the career of Rich Franklin and his retirement.

    We also have a look at the TV ratings for all the major shows and results from the major league events over the past week, and the major TV show rundowns.

    Also in this issue:

    –The CMLL Champion of Champions tournament notes

    –The three generation of green mist blowers team

    –Dragon Gate’s tag team tournament finals and new title matches

    –Top star leaves promotion and creates lots of interest in where he goes next

    –Early notes on the tag team tournament in New Japan

    –Hall of Famers having major surgery this past week

    –Madusa returns to Japan

    –Notes on future of Jersey All Pro Wrestling after death of promoter

    –Notes on death of Percival A. Friend

    –Tammy Sytch update

    –Notes on Jake Roberts movie

    –Stories from Bob Backlund’s autobiography

    –Funny story about traveling with Jack Brisco and Dusty Rhodes

    –How Terry Funk and Harley Race became world champions in the 70s

    –Why Bob Backlund became WWWF champion in the 70s

    –WWC Anniversary show

    –Update on Dave Bautista and his movie career

    –Loser must retire match coming next week

    –TV show featuring former WWE star renewed for second season

    –Unique notes about who watches that show

    –Shayna Baszler’s pro wrestling debut

    –What other MMA fighters were at the show

    –Santo returns to action

    –Another person sentenced in the murder of an 80s pro wrestler

    –Pro wrestler sentenced in pedophile ring

    –Update on all the injuries and situations that caused the ROH weekend shows to be changed

    –Notes from the ROH weekend events

    –Notes on Bound for Glory

    –More on Bobby Lashley’s next fight

    –TNA’s next TV tapings scheduled

    –Notes on TNA’s next PPV show and upcoming shows

    –Major notes from lawsuit against UFC

    –Ronda Rousey talked about culturally

    –This week’s UFC show

    –Anderson Silva talks his return

    –Update on Cris Cyborg

    –New Dana White reality show

    –UFC fighter engaged to Miss Universe contestant

    –Who will face Fedor?

    –More on Bellator Dynamite viewership

    –Upcoming Bellator shows

    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)

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    *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)

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

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    *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)

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

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    *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)

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

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    *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)

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

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

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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.