Category: Post Type article

  • Shine 29 iPPV results: Santana vs. Allison Kay for the Shine title; Lucha Sisters (Leva Bates & Mia Yim) reunite

    By Chris Aiken, WrestlingObserver.com

    Shine 29 from Ybor City, FL opened with SoCal Val joined by Andrea in the ring to discuss the proposed merger of her stable, Valifornia, with Allison Kay’s Valkyrie, which is the long standing heel faction in Shine Wrestling. Kay marched to the ring with Valkyrie to emphatically say no and squash the offer saying they did not need them. Kay would go on to challenge for the Shine championship in the main event against champion Santana with the story of her having declined the merger seemingly over for now… or is it?

    Crazy Mark Dobson (with Daffney) beat Rachel

    Instead of the high energy “Scream Queen” manager that is usually Daffney, she accompanied Rachel to the ring in a more brooding manner to emphasize the recent change in her character complete with dressing in all black. She’s transitioning to a new stable as Daff’s All-Star Squad has disbanded. Throughout the show, characters transitioning to different roles are reoccurring themes.

    In the match, they played off the size difference as Rachel got heat on Crazy Mary until she hulked up into a comeback. Rachel cut her off but Daffney interfered by tripping Rachel allowing Crazy Mary to score the pinfall. Daffney appears to be headed to the dark side. More on that to follow later.

    Taylor Made (with April Hunter) beat Cherry Bomb

    Representing Valkyrie, Taylor’s gear was exactly similar to that of Allison Kay. Cherry Bomb, one half of the Shine tag team champions, ran wild on Taylor in the early portion until April Hunter attacked Cherry Bomb on the outside to set up the heat spot. Taylor used dirty heel tactics like raking the eyes and brawling to keep cutting off Cherry Bomb as she’d get a hope spots. They started exchanging standing elbows and Cherry Bomb began her comeback.

    She got a few nearfalls before hitting a running death valley driver. Cherry Bomb looked to have the victory within her grasp but Hunter interfered and break up the referee’s counts. With Cherry Bomb distracted by the interference, Taylor Made scores a pin out of nowhere for the win while holding the trunks.

    Lucha Sisters (Leva Bates & Mia Yim) vs. Valifornia (Andrea & Jayme Jameson with SoCal Val)

    After teasing dissension, the Lucha Sisters were reunited. In some quirky way they celebrated being back together by wearing masks depicting two former U.S. presidents. Leva Bates (Blue Pants) wore a Ronald Reagan mask and Mia Yim had on a Richard Nixon mask. Leva showed her mad dancing skills even with a mask. Mia threw up peace signs spoofing the infamous imagery of Nixon doing the same. The character Leva portrays in Shine has a much more serious tone than Blue Pants, but some of that was subdued here in the reuniting of the Lucha Sisters. Leva continues to develop a unique charisma.

    In the match, the heels (each of them basically doing a strongwoman gimmick) got heat on Mia first until Leva tagged in to change the tide. However, the strongwomen got heat on her too building to a hot tag to Mia Yim. During a melee in the ring, Daffney comes to ringside with her new team, the Iron Maidens, and they stalk SoCal Val. Andrea jumps out of the ring to protect Val leaving Jayme alone with the Lucha Sister who then proceed to finish her off. Leva and Mia adorn the president masks again as Leva covers Jayme for the pin. Meanwhile, Andrea went all Haku on the Iron Maidens.

    Andrea singlehandedly dispatched the Maidens and flexed when she was done. To get their heat back, Cherry Bomb runs in to attack the Maidens and they pummel her as Daffney looks on. Authority figure Lexie Fyfe enters the scene to scold Daffney and the Maidens. Fyfe went on to throw them out of the building. Daffney and the Iron Maidens begrudgingly left to likely terrorize another day.

    After they exited, April Hunter and Su Young came to the ring. Tracy Taylor was scheduled to face Young in a no DQ street fight but she unable to appear due to travel issues. Hunter demanded Fyfe provide Su Young with an opponent. Luscious Latasha ran in to volunteer and a match was made.

    Luscious Latasha beat Su Young (with April Hunter) via DQ

    While it was a competitive match, it was more a showcase for the psychotic character played by Su Young. For the finish, Latasha missed a splash off the top and Young picked her up for an airplane spin into a Michinoku driver for the pin. Afterwards, Su Young spit mist into the eyes of Latasha and attacked her so referee reversed the decision and disqualified Su Young.

    Jessika Havok beat Lufisto

    They chain wrestled early on and had a good match. The crowd was mild at first without a clear babyface favorite but as they match went on they got more and more into it and the women had them in the palm of their hands by the end. They brawled in the crowd and around the building, which is where the match began to pick up. Lufisto had a whelp on her back after about a third of the way through the match.

    The crowd started a “this is awesome” chant after Havok got a nearfall following a chokeslam. Lufisto climbed to the top turnbuckle but Havok grabbed her off the top and gave her the “Air Raid Crash” (think Sheamus’ White Noise) for the pin.

    Leah Von Dutch beat Brandi Wine (with Leilani Kai)

    LVD had “DINO HUNTER” written on her sleeves since she is hunting “dinosaurs”, as in older wrestlers from the heel faction Legendary. Leilani Kai interfered several times and LVD was the clear underdog as the veteran Brandi Wine worked her over throughout the match. Wine seems to have not aged and was great in her role as the wily veteran. Wine took most of the match building to an eventual comeback by Leah. Kai interfered one last time allowing Wine to give LVD an airplane spin into a clothesline for a nearfall.

    From there, Leah started a comeback with a series of knee strikes. LVD hit a backcracker and applied a combination cobra and camel clutch to win via submission.

    Following the match, other members of the heel stable Legendary attacked Leah when Thunderkitty and Malia Hosaka ran in. Ivelisse and Amanda Rodriquez made the save and the heels scattered out of the ring. LVD disappeared to the back. Ivelisse cut a promo on Legendary. She is basically seeking revenge for a dastardly attack by Legendary that left La Rosa laying and supposedly hospitalized after a previous angle. Ivelisse introduced Amanda as her new charge then Ivelisse challenged Legendary to an impromptu match threatening to also send Legendary to the hospital like they did to Rosa.

    Ivelisse & Amanda Rodriquez beat Thunderkitty & Malia Hosaka

    With Thunderkitty’s style and throwback character of being a young old time wrestler, she would fit well into the Vaudevillains act. Thunderkitty is so old school she even broke out the iron claw on Rodriquez at one point. Despite the old fashioned techniques, Ivelisse applied a guillotine choke then dropped Thunderkitty into a DDT for the pin. After the match, Ivelisse began choking Thunderkitty until other members of Legendary pulled her out of the fray. Though the match was disjointed in spots, it still put over Ivelisse strong in the end and she is still seeking revenge so THIS FEUD MUST CONTINUE!

    Vanessa Kraven beat Athena

    The announcers put over Kraven as the new heel monster in the Shine promotion. Athena was the returning heroine. It was David vs. Goliath except with a different finish. Kraven no-sold two topé dives to the outside before Athena did a third and Kraven went down hard. Nevertheless, Kraven cut her off and began to pummel her. Athena did a handspring into a headscissors takeover to start a comeback. Athena screamed “EAT IT HUSSY” before delivering a kick.

    The crowd chanted “she’s a hussy” in response yet the new heel monster cut Athena off again. Athena was breaking out all the stops in the closing minutes and they exchanged several nearfalls. Eventually Kraven grabbed Athena by the throat with both hands, hoisted her up and executed a sit-out powerbomb for the win.

    Havok came out afterwards to challenge Kraven to a rematch of their last encounter. Kraven blew her off saying she already beat her once. Kraven left the scene and an angry Havok grabbed Athena. Ever the fighter, Athena called her a “hussy” only for Havok to give her a chokeslam to leave her laying.

    Santana beat Allison Kay (with April Hunter) to retain the Shine title

    Kay jumped Santana before the bell and put the boots to her. Kay showed a lot of intensity in dominating the early portion until a comeback by Santana. Kay countered a Great Muta handspring back elbow and suplexed Santana over the ropes to the floor. Kay worked over Santana at ringside but Santana fired up and they exchanged chops. During all this, the announcers kept putting over Santana’s history with Shine (she was on the first show) and her recent run with the title. Santana would rally and Kay would cut her off. The crowd chanted “this is awesome” at one point. They had some killer exchanges before Santana snatched her “headband of power” away from Kay, who had taken it from Santana early in the match. After putting the headband back on, she hulked up and ran wild.

    Kay bailed out of the ring only to get hit with a baseball slide dropkick. Back in the ring, Santana dove off the top with a high crossbody for a nearfall. Santana delivered the Muta handspring elbow in a corner and went for a bulldog, yet Kay blocked it. Kay went for a tornado clothesline and took out the ref. He went down. Santana hit a superkick and another ref ran down to count the nearfall. After some great late exchanges, Santana used a O’Connor roll into a bridging cradle to score the pinfall and retain the title.

    Valkyrie and SoCal Val’s Valifornia entered the ring as Kay lay on the mat defeated. Val announced that unbeknownst to Kay, the merger of the two factions was happening. This angered Kay and she attacked Valifornia. They took a powder as Kay began to argue with the members of Valkyrie. Kay had enough and gave April Hunter a Stone Cold stunner complete with post-stunner middle finger salutes to turn Kay into a kick ass babyface to close the show. 

  • UFC 191: Johnson vs. Dodson 2 live results and coverage

    Welcome to WrestlingObserver.com’s live coverage of UFC 191: Johnson vs. Dodson 2 from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. The event is headlined by UFC Flyweight Champion Demetrious Johnson making his seventh title defense, this time in a rematch against top contender John Dodson. The two met in January 2013, a bout Johnson won by unanimous decision. In the co-main event, former UFC Heavyweight Champions Andrei Arlovski and Frank Mir meet as both men put their win streaks on the line. The action kicks off with preliminary card fights at 7 PM eastern time on UFC Fight Pass. The action moves over to FOX Sports 1 at 8 PM eastern time with additional preliminary fights before the main card kicks off at 10 PM eastern time on pay-per-view. We are looking for your thoughts on the show, so send a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle as well as a best fight and worst fight to dave@wrestlingobserver.com.

    Coverage provided by Ryan Frederick, who is cageside at the event.

    PRELIMINARY CARD (UFC FIGHT PASS- 7 PM ET/4 PM PT)

    LIGHTWEIGHTS: JOAQUIM SILVA VS. NAZARENO MALEGARIE

    MIDDLEWEIGHTS: JOE RIGGS VS. RON STALLINGS

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

    FEATHERWEIGHTS: CLAY COLLARD VS. TIAGO TRATOR

    WOMEN’S BANTAMWEIGHTS: JESSICA ANDRADE VS. RAQUEL PENNINGTON

    BANTAMWEIGHTS: FRANCISCO RIVERA VS. JOHN LINEKER

    LIGHTWEIGHTS: ROSS PEARSON VS. PAUL FELDER

    MAIN CARD (PPV- 10 PM ET/7 PM PT)

    WOMEN’S STRAWWEIGHTS: PAIGE VANZANT VS. ALEX CHAMBERS

    LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHTS: JAN BLACHOWICZ VS. COREY ANDERSON

    LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHTS: ANTHONY JOHNSON VS. JIMI MANUWA

    HEAVYWEIGHTS: ANDREI ARLOVSKI VS. FRANK MIR

    UFC FLYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP: DEMETRIOUS JOHNSON(C) VS. JOHN DODSON

  • WWE News: John Cena possibly injured tonight at house show (video)

    Former WWE Champion John Cena needed help getting up and out of the ring Friday night after his WWE main event house show match against Kevin Owens in Hampton, VA.

    According to live reports, Cena was doing the Infrared (a sunset flip move popularized by Amazing Red and Rey Mysterio Jr.) and landed on his head. They went right to the finish with Cena winning, and officials helped him in the ring.

    Here’s a Vine video of what happened.

    More on this story as it develops. 

  • NJPW on AXS 9/4 TV results: Kazuchika Okada vs. Tetsuya Naito

    With Destruction now over, we focus on the next big New Japan show, King of Pro Wrestling, the last big show of the year before the Tokyo Dome show on January 4. The right to the  IWGP title match at WrestleKingdom 9 will be defended on tonight’s show as Kazuchika Okada will face Tetsuya Naito in a rematch of sorts from the 2014 WrestleKingdom show. Okada beat Naito that night, but during the G1 Naito had Okada’s number by beating him in an excellent match. Tonight’s show is the culmination of their year long feud; will fresh, babyface Tetsuya Naito pick up the win here on tonight’s show, or will Okada prove he’s one of the top dogs in New Japan?

    by Bryan Rose, WrestlingObserver.com

    First up we have Ryusuke Taguchi taking out El Desperado for the IWGP Jr. Heavyweight championship. Taguchi started to introduce the hip attacks here as his new gimmick. It’s such a mid card comedy act thing to do here, but he didn’t harp on it as much as he did once he dropped the title, so it’s not as bad here. Desperado is fine but given that he was in New Japan for just a year under this gimmick before jumping over to NOAH, I didn’t gain any real thoughts on him as a single during this run. In this match, he was fine. Taichi freely interferes, but the ref sees Taichi helping Desperado and kicks his hand away, giving Taguchi the opportunity to hit the dodon then apply the ankle lock for the submission. It was a solid, perfectly acceptable match but nothing I would call memorable.

    Katsuyori Shibata & Hirooki Goto vs. Shinsuke Nakamura & Yoshi-Hashi is next. I wonder who is taking the fall here. I think I’ve mentioned this before, but Yoshi-Hashi is a good example of someone who could go to NOAH and get over there because he’s stuck in the midcard here in New Japan. Considering how many people they bring in here in New Japan, he’s going to be lost in the shuffle, even though he’s pretty good when put in certain situations. This was clipped, but was pretty good and the crowd was heated. Yoshi Hashi looked good with his interactions with Shibata, but one penalty kick later he’s facing the ring lights.

    Shibata and Nakamura have a staredown after the match, meaning things aren’t done here yet. Nakamura cuts a promo, basically challenging Shibata to a match down the line.

    Okada does his reflective interview. He reflects on the Tokyo Dome match from 2014, then mentions how he lost to Anderson and Naito in the G1. He wasn’t looking forward to fighting him, but this match was just a match for payback in his opinion.

    The match aired. From what I remember the G1 match was just as good as this match. But it was really great. The crowd was hot and they worked a really great match with lots of false finishes and great reversals. The wheelbarrow into the German suplex towards the end was really great. Okada, of course, pins him with the rainmaker. There’s so many great matches in New Japan I don’t know if this would crack the top five, but it would probably be around the top 10 mark in terms of main events this year. Naito’s an excellent babyface worker and so is Okada, and they had a terrific match here.

    Naito said it’s great Okada won, New Japan Pro Wrestling will e safe now. He heard so many fans chanting his name, he felt very happy about that. The more people chant for him, the more people will give back. What will be interesting to see on these shows is how Naito eventually transitions into his new heel persona.

    Okada says he’s curious about the next match. Upon reflection, he realized how strong he was during the match. The stamina he had at the end of the match even surprised him. Not a lot to say here at the end. Overall, a pretty good show highlighted by a great main event. There will be more coverage of King of Pro Wrestling next week, so tune in then!

  • WWE news: Smackdown sets record low number

    Smackdown last night, going against college football, did 1.98 million viewers last night, the lowest audience since the show has been on Syfy with the exception of a July 4th airing.

  • UFC News: UFC 200, Dana White asked about Fedor and 3 shows in 3 nights

    At today’s UFC Go Big press conference, a few new things were announced:

    – There will now be UFC shows on 12/10, 12/11 and 12/12 in Las Vegas.  The first two shows will be at the Cosmopolitan — a 1,500 or so seat arena that Invicta just ran. The 12/11 date was formerly announced for the MGM Grand, headlined by Frankie Edgar vs. Chad Mendes and the TUF McGregor/Faber finals. They don’t have a card yet for 12/10.

    – Dana White didn’t answer Ariel Helwani’s question regarding Fedor Emelianenko past saying “I don’t got it” and moved on.

    – UFC 200 will be July 9, 2016 at the new MGM Arena in Las Vegas — a week later than first announced.

  • UFC 193: Joanna Jedrzejczyk vs Valerie Letourneau title fight announced

    UFC just announced that Joanna Jedrzejczyk will defend her strawweight title on the 11/15 show at Etihad Stadium in Melbourne against Valerie Letourneau.

    This will be the semi-mainevent to the Ronda Rousey vs. Holly Holm.

    UFC wanted to do the obvious good booking of putting Joanna, who has a lot of charisma but her name isn’t that well known, on the same show as Rousey, particuarly since people who are more open to women fights will be the audience watching.

  • VIDEO: Watch today’s UFC GO BIG Campaign Launch Event

    The UFC presents the launch of their GO BIG Campaign, highlighting the main events of their events beginning with UFC Fight Night 75 on September 27 and going through UFC On FOX 16 on December 19, a series of can’t-miss fights. The press event kicks off at 3:30 PM eastern time above. The entire list of fights scheduled to attend:

    UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Daniel Cormier
    UFC Women’s Bantamweight Champion Ronda Rousey
    UFC Featherweight Champion Jose Aldo
    UFC Interim Featherweight Champion Conor McGregor
    UFC Lightweight Champion Rafael Dos Anjos
    Alexander Gustafsson
    Holly Holm
    Luke Rockhold
    Donald Cerrone
    Josh Barnett
    Roy Nelson
    Dustin Poirier
    Joseph Duffy
    Vitor Belfort
    Dan Henderson
    Matt Brown
    Kelvin Gastelum
    Frankie Edgar
    Chad Mendes

  • UFC 191: Johnson vs. Dodson 2 weigh-in results and live video

    Welcome to WrestlingObserver.com’s live coverage of the UFC 191: Johnson vs. Dodson weigh-ins from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada kicking off at 7 M eastern time. The event airs on Saturday on pay-per-view at 10 PM eastern time. Preliminary card action kicks off on UFC Fight Pass at 7 PM eastern time before moving over to FOX Sports 1 at 8 PM eastern time.

    The event is headlined by UFC Flyweight Champion Demetrious Johnson making his seventh title defense, this time in a rematch against top contender John Dodson. Johnson defeated Dodson by unanimous decision at UFC On FOX 6 in January 2013, and Dodson has won three straight fights since to earn another shot at winning gold. In the co-main event, former UFC Heavyweight Champions Andrei Arlovski and Frank Mir put their win streaks on the line and try to potentially earn a title opportunity with a win. Also on the card is number-one ranked light heavyweight contender Anthony Johnson, and rising UFC women’s strawweight star Paige VanZant making her pay-per-view debut.

    MAIN CARD (PPV- 10 PM ET/7 PM PT):

    Demetrious Johnson () vs. John Dodson ()  (UFC Flyweight Championship)
    Andrei Arlovski () vs. Frank Mir ()
    Anthony Johnson () vs. Jimi Manuwa ()
    Jan Blachowicz () vs. Corey Anderson ()
    Paige VanZant () vs. Alex Chambers ()

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

    Ross Pearson () vs. Paul Felder ()
    Francisco Rivera () vs. John Lineker ()
    Jessica Andrade () vs. Raquel Pennington ()
    Clay Collard () vs. Tiago Trator ()

    PRELIMINARY CARD (UFC FIGHT PASS- 7 PM ET/4 PM PT):

    Joe Riggs () vs. Ron Stallings ()
    Joaquim Silva () vs. Nazareno Malegarie () 

  • FRI UPDATE: UFC stars together today, Ambrose social media, UFC adds fights, Bellator

    By Dave Meltzer

    We’re looking for reports on tonight’s WWE show in Hampton, VA (John Cena vs. Kevin Owens, Dolph Ziggler vs. Rusev) and GFW show in Waterloo, IA (Nick Aldis vs. Chris Mordetzky) at Dave Meltzer

    Our only poll this weekend will be on the UFC 191 PPV tomorrow night from Las Vegas.

    New Japan World on AXS TV at 9 p.m.

    Tetsuya Naito vs. Kazuchika Okada

    Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Desperado for IWGP jr. title

    Shine iPPV from Ybor City, FL at www.WWNLive.com at 9 p.m. Eastern

    Santana vs. Allysin Kay for the Shine championship

    Vanessa Kraven vs. Athena

    Jessicka Havok vs. LuFisto

    Tracy Taylor vs. Su Yung no DQ street fight

    Leah Von Dutch vs. Brandi Wine

    Cherry Bomb vs. Taylor Made

    Leva (Blue Pants) & Mia Yim (Jade in TNA) vs. Andrea & Jayme Jameson

    Crazy Mary Dobson vs. Jessica James

    Thunderkitty vs. Amanda Carolina Rodriguez

    UFC 191 from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas

    Fight Pass at 7 p.m. Eastern

    Nazareno Malegarie vs. Joaquin Silva

    Joe Riggs vs. Ron Stallings

    FS 1 at 8 p.m. Eastern

    Clay Collard vs. Thiago Trator

    Jessica Andrade vs. Raquel Pennington

    John Lineker vs. Francisco Rivera

    Paul Felder vs. Ross Pearson

    PPV at 10 p.m. Eastern

    Paige VanZant vs. Alex Chambers

    Corey Anderson vs. Jan Blachowicz

    Anthony Rumble Johnson vs. Jimi Manuwa

    Frank Mir vs. Andrei Arlovski

    Demetrious Johnson vs. John Dodson for flyweight title

    WWE runs Saturday night in Charlottesville, VA (John Cena vs. Kevin Owens) and Wildwood, NJ (Roman Reigns vs. Bray Wyatt, Ryback vs. Big Show, Luke Harper vs. Dean Ambrose) and GFW in Clinton, IA.

    WWE runs Sunday in Fairfax, VA (John Cena vs. Kevin Owens) and Salisbury, MD (Roman Reigns vs. Bray Wyatt, Ryback vs. Big Show, Luke Harper vs. Dean Ambrose).

    Raw will be Monday night in Baltimore.

    Smackdown and Main Event are taped Tuesday night in Wilkes-Barre, PA.

    It’s a gigantic news week in the new issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter with the main feature story on everything that led to the indictment of Jimmy Snuka after 32 years, plus Irv Muchnick, who has reported on the story for years gives his views on the proceedings, and we also look at Hulk Hogan’s attempt at redemption of his character, the full story behind the shooting at the Performance Center, notes from Battle of Los Angeles, the retirement of Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, Hayabusa walks to the ring, Bram gets arrested, WWE fires Zahra Schreiber, UFC brings back Travis Browne, a rundown of the PPV business in WWE in 2015 and the latest monthly business report from WWE & TNA.

    The latest Wrestling Observer: September 7, 2015 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Snuka indicted, shooting at WWE Performance Center and tons more

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

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

    You can also order at 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.

    Our lead story goes back to 1983 with an in-depth look at the death of Nancy Argentino, how the media caused the case to be reopened, a look at the charges against Jimmy Snuka, the different statements on the subject by Snuka, Snuka’s lawyer speaks, notes on documentation and testimony from the time, lots of notes regarding evidence, where Jimmy Snuka stood in the wrestling business in 1983, how Buddy Rogers fits into this story, what Snuka told police the morning after Argentino died as well as testimony from those who treated Argentino before her death.

    We also look at the autopsy report, the police report from that time, the strange question that was never answered regarding the case being dropped, what Snuka has said to different people, the brawl in Syracuse before Argentino’s death, how the pro wrestling business in 1983 is so completely different from today and the previous legal action regarding this case. 

    Irv Muchnick also does a piece on the indictment talking about several points from the indictment.

    We also look at Hulk Hogan appearing on Good Morning America and Nightline in a way to get his job back and repair his public image.  We look at the WWE reaction, what Hogan said, what does and doesn’t hold up, the timeline issues with his various stories, neighbors of his growing up contradict his story and more.

    We also look at the story of the man who was shot in front of the Performance Center, the circumstances of the shooting, and the different things he had done in recent months regarding his obsession with wrestling.

    We also look at Battle of Los Angeles, how the tournament went, highlights from the weekend and celebrities at the shows.

    We also look back at the career of Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, including his new job with UFC, his becoming the top heavyweight in the sport at one time, his background, his debut in RINGS, his move to Pride, his fight with Bob Sapp, his three fight series with Fedor and his UFC run.

    We look at the arrest of Thomas “Bram” Latimer of  TNA, police details of what happened, TNA’s response and what is next for him.

    We’ve got a story on Hayabusa, one of the best high flyers from 15-20 years ago and his attempted recovery from near paralysis.

    We’ve got a look at Travis Browne and his reinstatement in UFC.

    We look at the firing of Zahra Schreiber, the girlfriend of Seth Rollins, by WWE.

    We also look at WWE & TNA business when it comes to house shows, merchandise, ratings and other categories for the past month.

    We also have a PPV chart with how all the shows in the first seven months of the year have been, and compared them with the last few years.

    We also look at WWE signing one of the major international women stars and why she’s not going to be wrestling in NXT, the return of Dr. Wagner Jr. & L.A. Park to Arena Mexico and how it got over, top pro wrestling star gets a reality show gig, and some major title changes.

    We also look at maneuvering for the 2017 and 2018 WrestleMania, and the favorites, the 10/3 Madison Square Garden WWE live special, notes on lots of indie stars on WWE’s radar, ticket sales for NXT in the U.K., a new WWE movie, Update on Wade Barrett, action figure sales, announcing changes, SummerSlam edits, lots of notes on various WWE lawsuits, Dean Ambrose talks Renee Young, Fan tries to attack Ambrose, Sara Lee in NXT, plus notes on all the WWE & NXT house shows over the past week.

    We also look at a number of top stars who worked recently in Bolivia, the last AAA TV taping and AAA wrestlers in a bodybuilding contest.

    We update Wrestle-1 and the three generations of green mist stars trios match.

    We also look at the Dragon Gate summer tag team tournament and its big show in Fukuoka and what came out of it.

    We look at All Japan’s last major show and its current singles tournament.

    We look at Pro Wrestling NOAH’s next major show, including a title match that was set up in the U.S., a well as the bracketing in the upcoming junior heavyweight tag team tournament.

    We look at the weekend IGF show, a record that will be set at the next Tokyo Dome show, and the NWA title change.

    We also look at U.S. stars who usually don’t tour Japan that are going shortly.

    We’ve got more on the planned bio movie on Chris Benoit, Angelo Mosca getting his number retired, the weekend GFW shows and angles, Preston City Wrestling’s weekend show, former TNA star retires and a unique main event, plus early notes on this year’s WWC Anniversary show.

    We also update the TNA TV situation, the Lucha Underground TV situation, the next ROH PPV show, new roles for people in ROH and notes from the weekend show.

    We also look at changes in UFC main events, can UFC sell 70,000 tickets to its November show with Ronda Rousey, Rousey talks when she expects to retire, Cyborg, the date with the marine and notes about live shows on Fight Pass this month.  We also look at this week’s PPV show, talks about the Jan. 2 Las Vegas card, a star fighter retires, Chad Mendes wants a rematch with McGregor, what happened recently with Jose Aldo, Rousey T-shirt sales, plus lots of more fights.

    We also have a look at Bellator’s next major show, including the updated card, as well as plans for the big November show.  We look at the Fan Fest with Fedor and Sakuraba, as well as notes on last week’s show.

    We also look at the arrest of Chris Leben, and new restrictions on weight cutting that is being tried out for in California.

    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.

    Click here for the most requested Wrestling Observer back issues

    FRIDAY’S NEWS UPDATE

    • UFC will be holding a press conference today at 3:30 p.m. Eastern time today from the MGM Grand Garden Arena which will be streamed live on the site. Those attending will be Daniel Cormier, Ronda Rousey, Jose Aldo, Conor McGregor, Rafael dos Anjos, Alexander Gustafsson, Holly Holm, Luke Rockhold, Donald Cerrone, Josh Barnett, Roy Nelson, Dustin Poirier, Joe Duffy, Vitor Belfort, Dan Henderson, Matt Brown, Kelvin Gastelum, Frankie Edgar and Chad Mendes.
      VIDEO: Watch today’s UFC GO BIG Campaign Launch Event
      Also check out the Weigh-ins right after:  UFC 191: Johnson vs. Dodson 2 weigh-in results and live video
      VIDEO: UFC 191 Countdown
      Check out Ryan Fredrick’s preview piece: UFC 191 Preview: 5 storylines to watch, betting odds & predictions
    • The UFC show on 12/12 added Gunnar Nelson vs. Demian Maia in a battle of the two of the best submission guys in the company to the loaded show which last night added Urijah Faber vs. Frankie Saenz and Max Holloway vs. Jeremy Stephens.
    • At the 9/19 Bellator show in San Jose, in the prelims, at two different times they will experiment with two fights going on at the same time.  There will be a ring and a cage both set up.  So they will have a kickboxing match inside the ring and the MMA match going on inside the cage.  It’s going to be a long show as they’ve got 20 fights on the card.  There will be 16 MMA fights and four kickboxing bouts.  
    • While not officially announced, there are reports from Brazil that Miesha Tate vs. Amanda Nunes will be taking place.  That bout has been talked about ever since Tate was pulled from the Ronda Rousey fight.   No date or place is confirmed.
    • We’ll see what happens.  Finn Balor and Samoa Joe are scheduled to headline for NXT in Jacksonville tonight.  Balor was on Twitter saying he was hiking in Ireland.  Balor was also advertised the last time NXT was in Jacksonville and wasn’t there.     
    • Dean Ambrose on why he avoids social media in an interview  “There’s a whole world of weirdos out there.”
    • Tommy Dreamer’s House of Hardcore promotion runs 11/13 in Philadelphia at the 2300 Arena and 11/14 in New York at the Elmcor Center in Queens, NY.
    • Funny thing on WWE.com.  They are doing a Where are they now?  For Maria Kanellis, it says, “Today, she’s an actress, podcaster and honor student at Johnson & Wales University, where she’s studying for a degree in event management.”  That’s all true, but what is her actual job today?  
    • Ryan Couture vs. Nick Gonzalez has been added to the 9/25 Bellator show in Hidalgo, TX at the State Farm Arena.  Couture vs. Gonzalez will air on the Spike.com prelims.
    • CMLL on Tuesday night in Guadalajara:  Exterminador & Malefico b Magnum & Metatron, Cancerbero & Raziel & Virus b Esfigne & Pegasso & Starman, Metalico b Omar Brunetti, Angel de Oro & Brazo de Plata & Stuka Jr. b El Terrible & Rey Bucanero & Rey Escorpion, Atlantis & Marco Corleone & Valiente b Negro Casas & Mr. Niebla & Shocker-DQ (thanks to Kris Zellner)
    • The new match added to NWAClassics.com today is Black Gordman vs. Omar Atlas.  Gordman was actually as far as I can tell, the inventor of the DDT.  He was doing it in Texas when Jake Roberts was starting out as a referee.  He brought the move into the U.S. in the 60s from Mexico.
    • C.W. Anderson faces Matt Saigon in the main event for ECWA on 9/19 in Woodbury Heights, NJ at the Community Center.
    • Pro Wrestling Illustrated released its top 500 this year at www.pwi-online.com  the top ten is Seth Rollins, John Cena, A.J. Styles, Roman Reigns, Shinsuke Nakamura, Randy Orton, Jay Briscoe, Rusev, Alberto el Patron and Kevin Owens.
    • Tickets for NXT in Nashville went on sale at 10 a.m. local time today and they are almost sold out in a 2,000 seat concert hall.  Ringside at $105 sold out almost immediately (thanks to Chris Kunkel)
    • Irv Muchnick on Toronto radio talking the Jimmy Snuka case
    • Notes from yesterday’s UFC press conference.  Paige VanZant got more media attention than anyone else.  She was swarmed.  The next most attention was Demetrious Johnson, followed by Frank Mir.  Not many paying attention to John Dodson.  Anthony Johnson was super friendly to fans, above and beyond.  Lots of fans were from  England and Ireland.  Dana White took photos with every fan there for a long time after it was over.

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

    1902 – George Hackenschmidt beat Tom Cannon in Liverpool, England to win the European Greco-Roman heavyweight title.  This was the win that set up Hackenschmidt coming to the U.S. as European champion for his first match with Frank Gotch in 1908.

    1980 – Giant Baba beat Harley Race to win the NWA title in Saga

    1989 – Cuchillo beat Super Astro in Monterey to win the UWA junior light heavyweight title

    1992 – Bestia Salvaje bet Dandy in Mexico City to win the CMLL middleweight title

    1994 – Pierroth beat Vampiro in Monterrey to win the FILL heavyweight title

    2012 – Titan beat Polvora in Mexico City to win the Mexican national welterweight title