Category: Post Type article

  • WWE announces SummerSlam activities: panels, NXT, Sting, more

    WWE sent out this press release for SummerSlam activities which includes the first mention of Sting being in the New York area that weekend. There will be a pre-sale for the SummerSlam NXT panel event as well as the Meet and Greet using the code SStravel.

    ***** 

    STAMFORD, CT – July 27, 2015 – WWE (NYSE: WWE) and Barclays Center announced today the addition of several fan events to take place at Barclays Center as part of the Ultimate SummerSlam Experience in Brooklyn.  Tickets will be available this Saturday, August 1, at noon EST through Ticketmaster.

    On Friday, August 21 and Saturday, August 22, WWE will host “WWE Superstar Meet and Greets” at 40/40 CLUB & Restaurant presented by American Express at Barclays Center.  These exclusive sessionswill give WWE fans an opportunity to get autographs and photos with their choice of WWE World Heavyweight Champion Seth Rollins™, Randy Orton®, Roman Reigns®, Dean Ambrose®, Bray Wyatt™, WWE Divas Charlotte™, Paige™ and Becky Lynch™, WWE Legend Sting™ and WWE Hall of Famer Shawn Michaels®. 

    On Saturday, August 22, a special “SummerSlam Panel” will take place at Barclays Center, giving fans a chance to ask questions directly to WWE Superstars.  The topic of the panel will be NXT®, where WWE Executive Vice President of Talent, Live Events and Creative Paul “Triple H®” Levesque, WWE World Heavyweight Champion Seth Rollins™, NXT Champion Finn Bàlor™, NXT Women’s Champion Sasha Banks™, WWE Superstar Kevin Owens™, WWE commentator Corey Graves™ and host Byron Saxton™ will discuss the evolution of one of the hottest entertainment brands in the world seen every Wednesday night at 8 p.m. on WWE Network. 

    The “SummerSlam Panel” will feature a 90 minute discussion and Q&A with fans in attendance.  General admission and a limited number of VIP tickets will be available.  The VIP ticket includes priority floor seating, a professional photo with select panel Superstars and an exclusive, autographed limited edition poster. 

    Tickets for “WWE Superstar Meet and Greets” and the “SummerSlam Panel” will be available this Saturday, August 1, at noon EST and can be purchased online by visiting http://www.barclayscenter.com, http://www.ticketmaster.com, or by calling 800-745-3000. Tickets can also be purchased at the American Express Box Office at Barclays Center on Monday, August 3 at noon. For more information on SummerSlam Week activities, please visit www.SummerSlam.com

    In addition, WWE NXT will make its historic debut in New York City on Saturday night, August 22, as NXT Takeover: Brooklyn will emanate live from Barclays Center.  NXT Takeover: Brooklyn is NXT’s biggest event to date, and will be broadcast live on WWE Network.  The main event will feature Finn Bàlor™ defending his newly crowned NXT Championship against former Champion Kevin Owens™.  The event will also include appearances by NXT Women’s Champion Sasha Banks™, Samoa Joe™, Rhyno™, Enzo Amore™, Big Cass™, as well as a special appearance by international superstar Jushin “Thunder” Liger. Tickets for NXT Takeover: Brooklyn are currently available through Ticketmaster. 

  • Hulk Hogan gets hit again from National Enquirer, duped by Twitter pranksters

    By Dave Meltzer, WrestlingObserver.com

    On Monday, The National Enquirer and RadarOnline.com released the teased second story regarding Hulk Hogan and comments gleaned from the four sex tapes he did with Heather Cole, the ex-wife of Bubba the Love Sponge. In the new story, Hogan was telling Cole about how a billionaire black man that was funding Brooke Hogan’s musical career had recruited Jamie Foxx to be in one of her tracks.

    Hogan used the term “f***in n*****”. It wasn’t clear if he meant the billionaire or Foxx. He then complained about Brooke, saying that she “f**ed up a $10 million deal” she had with “the Saudis” and how he told Cole that Brooke told him “f*** you, Dad” and flipped her off. He then complained about his family, saying how they have a huge house in Miami but they all went to Los Angeles.

    The tape in question was believed to be from 2006 and the contents were sealed by court order, and how The Enquirer and RadarOnline.com got the tapes is also likely to be a major story.

    If that wasn’t bad enough, Hogan was duped by Twitter pranksters Sunday that he thought were celebrities posting messages of support for him.

    A number of media outlets are planning Hogan news stories today stemming from all of these revelations.

  • WWE News: Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Terminator characters to be playable in WWE 2K16

    The following is a press release:

    New York, NY – July 27, 2015 –2K today announced the debut of 2015 WWE Hall of Fame inductee and global action film icon Arnold Schwarzenegger in WWE® 2K16, the forthcoming release in the flagship WWE franchise. Best known for his acting, bodybuilding and political endeavors, Schwarzenegger, a longtime WWE fan and WWE Hall of Famer, will expand his relationship with WWE through WWE 2K16 with two playable characters – T-800 from The Terminator and Terminator 2: Judgment Day films. The playable characters will be available for those who pre-order the game at participating retailers for the PlayStation®4 and PlayStation®3 computer entertainment systems, as well as Xbox One and Xbox 360. WWE 2K16 is scheduled for release on October 27, 2015 in North America and October 30, 2015 internationally.

    “I’ve achieved many things in my life, but I’ve always said success means staying hungry and pushing the limits,” said Schwarzenegger. “I was honored to join the WWE Hall of Fame earlier this year, and now I’ll continue my WWE legacy with one of my biggest film roles immortalized in WWE 2K16. Match the Terminator against Stone Cold Steve Austin®, Seth Rollins® or Daniel Bryan®, and there’s only one possible outcome: Hasta la vista, baby!”

    From early childhood in his native Austria to today, Schwarzenegger represents the ultimate renaissance man, taking risks and defying odds through career accomplishments in bodybuilding, acting, politics and more. He won his first of four Mr. Universe titles at the age of 20, earned seven Mr. Olympia titles and since 1989 has hosted worldwide fitness expositions through the Arnold Sports Festival. Schwarzenegger is a fixture in numerous blockbuster action films, including Conan the Barbarian,The Terminator, Predator, Total Recall, Terminator 2: Judgment Day, TheExpendables franchise and his most recent release, Terminator Genisys, as well as for his roles in pop-culture favorites Kindergarten Cop and Twins. In addition, Schwarzenegger transcended from Hollywood to the state capitol, serving two consecutive terms as the 38th Governor of California from 2003 to 2010.  

    “Arnold Schwarzenegger is a living legend with universal appeal, a perseverance for greatness and a strong relationship with WWE, including his recent Hall of Fame induction, all of which make him an incredible fit for WWE 2K16,” said Chris Snyder, Vice President of Marketing at 2K. “He’s a force to be reckoned with and defines what it means to raise some hell. Through his WWE 2K16 pre-order inclusion, fans simply can’t beat the opportunity to play as the Terminator in a WWE ring.”

    To see the WWE 2K16 pre-order promotional campaign featuring Arnold Schwarzenegger, please visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AZTSahJxT0Q.

    Developed collaboratively by Yuke’s and Visual Concepts, a 2K studio, WWE 2K16 is not yet rated by the ESRB. WWE 2K16 is currently scheduled for release on PS4™, PS3™, Xbox One and Xbox 360 on October 27, 2015 in North America and October 30, 2015 internationally.

    For more information on WWE 2K16 and 2K, visit wwe.2k.com, become a fan on Facebook, follow the game on Twitter and Instagram using the hashtags #WWE2K16 and #RaiseSomeHell or subscribe on YouTube.

    2K is a wholly owned publishing label of Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc. (NASDAQ: TTWO).

    T1, THE TERMINATOR, T2, TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY, ENDOSKELETON, and any depiction of Endoskeleton are trademarks of Studiocanal S.A. All Rights Reserved. ©2015 Studiocanal S.A.®

  • After Dark Radio for tonight — Brian Forschner talks the Jack the Strangler murders!

    After Dark Radio with Bryan Alvarez returns tonight streaming LIVE AND FREE from the After Dark Radio Show website on the Dark Matter Radio Network. You can also now stream the show through the front page of this website using the link on the right-hand side of the front page!

    The show airs at MIDNIGHT ET/9 PM Pacific every Sunday for two hours!

    We will be joined tonight by Brian Forschner, author of Cold Serial, a book about the JACK THE STRANGLER murders from the turn of the 20th century. We will also be taking your open lines phone calls on any topic imaginable! Check the website for NEW call-in numbers/email addresses in addition to our normal toll-free line.

    We will also be discussing tons of news, both from our website, afterdarkradioshow.com, our Facebook page, and, of course, Artbell.com, plus taking your phone calls, emails and Twitter questions!

    All of the phone numbers are available at afterdarkradioshow.com. You can send in emails on any topic to bryan@afterdarkradioshow.com. Remember, this show survives on your participation, so please send those emails or be prepared to call!

  • SUN UPDATE: Hogan firing, Vince getting bad pub, Fan tries to call out Punk, Dana White on Duran, Raw

    By dave@wrestlingobserver.com”>Dave Meltzer

    We’re looking for your thoughts on day’s G-1 Climax show in Hiroshima, last night’s UFC show in Chicago and ROH in Baltimore, 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 Meltzerdave@wrestlingobserver.com”>

    We’re also looking for reports on today’s WWE house shows in Lawton, OK and Amarillo and tonight’s ROH TV tapings in Orlando at dave@wrestlingobserver.com”>Dave Meltzerdave@wrestlingobserver.com”>.

    Raw will be Monday night in Oklahoma City.  Brock Lesnar is not advertised for the show.

    The G-1 Climax tournament continues on Tuesday morning at 5:30 a.m in Beppu with Yuji Nagata vs. Yujiro Takahashi, Tomoaki Honma vs. Hirooki Goto, Ken Anderson vs. Tomohiro Ishii and Kazuchika Okada vs. Satoshi Kojima.  Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Michael Elgin is also listed but we don’t have any updated word on Nakamura’s condition.

    Smackdown is Tuesday night in Tulsa.  Roman Reign and Seth Rollins are advertised as the top stars on the show.  Dolph Ziggler is still being advertised on the show, so in theory he should be returning this week although what is advertised and what happens aren’t necessarily the same thing.

    The return of the Undertaker and build to SummerSlam, Battleground coverage, the rise of NXT and situation with ROH, the G-1 Climax tournament and some major UFC stories are the major stories in the new issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter. 

    The latest Wrestling Observer: July 27, 2015 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: The Undertaker returns at Battleground, NXT/ROH insanity with Liger booking

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

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

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

    Our lead story concerns the build to SummerSlam.  We look at advertising that has already been cut for the show, what are the possibilities for Sting, the Lesnar-Undertaker angle, the booking of WWE right now, the situation with the women, plus full coverage of Battleground with match-by-match coverage with star ratings and poll results on the show.

    We also look at the booking of  Jushin Liger to NXT on 8/22, ticket sales for the show, plans for the NXT show, how the Liger booking affects ROH and has caused such a political turmoil.  We look at the NXT card as well as the competing ROH show.  We look at the Liger booking, ROH working with New Japan, ratings with New Japan stars vs. shows without New Japan stars, NXT touring, the next NXT vs. ROH head-to-head in September, the next ROH PPV show and much more.

    We also have full coverage of the G-1 Climax tournament, with all of the shows planned for the next week, as well as full coverage of opening night in Sapporo with match-by-match-coverage, star ratings and poll results.

    We also look at a major story concerning fighters for UFC to address which is the banning of IVs for rehydrating after weigh-ins starting October and why the story is far more significant than people realize.

    We also look at a potential alliance between ESPN and WWE and the ethical debate regarding the coverage.  We also look at the Hogan/Gawker lawsuit and each side’s case, an update on the Dr. Christopher Amann lawsuit against C.M. Punk and Colt Cabana, an update on Dolph Ziggler and what he claims is his contract status, Undertaker working more than just SummerSlam, Stephanie McMahon talks gay characterizations in future WWE creative as well as a look back from former creative members regarding different suggestions on gay characterizations in the past.  We look at more WWE banned terms and how some were changed and why.  We also look at how the characters are being described for Camp WWE, which is really hilarious.

    We’ve also got notes on Chris Jericho working more house shows, Tough Enough notes, John Cena in the movies, how the WWE Network free month has changed, as well as what to look for over the next week in WWE stock.

    We also have full coverage of the next month of NXT TV tapings, as well as coverage of all the WWE and NXT house shows this past week and business notes from the shows.

    We also have notes on TripleMania being on U.S. PPV for the first time on 8/9, including price point, why it’s happening now, and its history as well as broadcast information.

    We also have coverage of both UFC events held over the past week, with the Mir vs. Duffee and Bisping vs. Leites shows.  We’ve got business notes and stories behind both events.

    We also have notes on the third season of New Japan World on AXS, including highlights of the new season, all the matches airing from 8/14 to 12/11 including when the Wrestle Kingdom 9 matches will air, as well as notes on the schedule for 2016.

    We also look at Dragon Gate’s Kobe World Festival show and CMLL’s Sin Salida show, which were two of those two company’s biggest events of the year.

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

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

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    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

    SUNDAY’S NEWS UPDATE

    • UFC was the fifth most searched term in the U.S. with 100,000 yesterday.  Hulk Hogan was No. 8 with 50,000.  On Friday, Hogan was No. 2 with 1 million.
    • On Twitter this morning, UFC has 152,000 tweets and nothing else having to do with boxing or MMA or wrestling had any substantial numbers. 
    • The Hulk Hogan firing was among the top stories of the day on the Sky News App in the U.K. and the BBC digital text service under World News, rather than sports, which is the first story since the Benoit incident eight years ago to get that kind of coverage.  It was the third top story.  There were also numerous reports on the BBC web site. (thanks to Gary Mehaffy and Matthew Singh Donsanjh) 
    • At Friday’s C.M. Punk Q&A at the UFC event, someone who challenged him on Twitter went to the Q&A and tried to provoke a confrontation.  Punk basically told him off.  Punk has become like the old time small heel that fans attack because they think they can take him in the old pro wrestling days.  Punk said he thought Dana White would beat Vince McMahon in a fight.  What else is he going to say today?   Megan Olivi, who was hosting, basically told the guy to leave and they turned off his mic. 
    • At this writing, the top five matches from today’s New Japan show in Hiroshima, including A.J. Styles vs. Kota Ibushi and Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Tetsuya Naito are up on New Japan World.  The undercard is not yet up.  Not sure the time zone thing but it looks like it’ll be up late tonight.
    • Dana White outright said that Miesha Tate would be getting a title shot at the Ronda Rousey vs. Bethe Correia winner next.  Tate got the biggest reaction last night of anyone on the show, but the people hated her boyfriend, Bryan Caraway.  Not a surprise if you think about it.
    • Sasha Banks worked the show last night at the Staples Center in Los Angeles that was headlined by John Cena vs. Kevin Owens in a street fight, which went 27:00.
    • Enzo & Cass were on the other tour, wrestling in Odessa, TX last night.  They were put over The Ascension.
    • Stephen Amell of Arrow and WWE continue to be in the gossip pages, with rumors of him appearing on the Raw show in Everett, WA on 8/10.
    • A trailer for the AAA TripleMania on 8/9  PPV show
    • At yesterday’s ROH tapings in Baltimore, The Cauliflower Team was Chase Brown & Peter Kaasa 
    • David Otunga will be a guest on the Steve Harvey talk show tomorrow discussing health and nutrition 
    • Son of the TNA talent flew to the U.K. including Drew Galloway to work for the major indie shows this weekend but I think they’ll be back once they start taping for Impact.  Most of the tapings thus far have been assorted matches for One Night Only and Xplosion shows.
    • In fact, this was Drew Galloway vs. Rhino from last night in Glasgow.
    • The Daily Mail in the U.K. talks Vince McMahon’s skit years ago on TV where he used the N word. 
    • Bleacher Report ran a story about UFC’s Elias Theodorou facing Kris Chambers at an indie pro wrestling show in Toronto recently.  I guess he didn’t know that UFC contracts don’t allow you to do pro wrestling. 
    • Undertaker will be appearing at the Wizard World Comic Con in Tulsa on 10/24. 
    • Jim Ross announced talk show dates for 9/11 in Knoxville at the International and 9/20 in Houston at 4 p.m. at the Warehouse Live Ballroom, which will be a few hours before the Night of Champions PPV that night at the Toyota Center.
    • At the beginning of last night’s Battlelfield Fight League show on The Fight Network, from Richmond, BC, they announced at the start of the broadcast an In Memory graphic for fighter Oliver Evanshen, who recently passed away.  Evanshen was an area amateur with a 5-0 record. (thanks to Ed Ludwig)
    • Dana White story regarding his Twitter outburst a few nights ago on the USA Today site
    •  White then blasted USA Today saying how when UFC no longer pays them (buys advertising) that they are giving them far less coverage.  I’ve seen Eric Bischoff and Vince McMahon go through some phases, but it was usually when things were going down fast.  For someone whose business is actually doing very well to do stuff like that reaction last night to Stitch Duran, that’s actually unique.  
    • Here’s notes from his response to the Stitch Duran firing
    • Seriously, at least when Ole Anderson did that promo in 1980 the goal was for people to hate him.
    • Countdown to UFC 190, Rousey vs. Correia airs at 9 p.m. tomorow night on FS 1.
    • A story on Mike Hayes from the Tough Enough tryouts and his start at OVW
    • A tribute to Dwayne Johnson at an Arena Football game this weekend
    • Don Leo Jonathan interview
    • An old WWE racism story from The Atlantic
    • ONE FC presents Dynasty of Champions on 9/1 in Shanghai, China with Igor Svirid of Kazakhstan defending the middleweight title against Vitaly Bigdash from Russia.
    • Deathproof on 8/16 at The Rockpile in Toronto featuring Ultimo Dragon vs. Steve Corino plus Necro Butcher.
    • Smash Wrestling on 8/23 in Toronto at the Frank Horner Community Centre with Chris Hero vs Tarik plus Candice LaRae.
    • CrossRoads Wrestling on 8/15 in Riverside, NJ at Turner’s Hall.
    • Congratulations to Diamond Dallas Page, who married Brenda Nair over the weekend at a ceremony in Cancun.  Marc Mero was among those at the wedding.
    • Pure Wrestling Association on 8/21, 8/22 and 8/23 in Nanaimo, BC at the  Vancouver Island Exhibitions.  They also run 8/2 in Thedford, ONT as part of a festival at the Legacy Centre.
    • ECCW on 8/15 in Vancouver at the Russian Community Centre with Cat Power vs. Nicole Matthews.
    • The Resurrection Fighting Alliance runs 9/18 in Olcinon, NE at the Pinnacle Bank Arena on AXS TV featuring Darrick Minner, Anthony Smith and Ryan Roberts.
    • World Powerhouse Wrestling from last night in Collinsville, IL:  Jake Capone & Juggernaut Jones b Purple Dragons, Scar b Bio Shock, Kyle King b Moondog Pongo Alexander Steele & Knight Fyre b Ivan Stronkgenovf & Victor Cortez, Sniper b Wapo Concho & Paradox, Bronson b Gavin Alexander, Curtis Payne b Uriah Eleazar, Gauge Evans b Hawk Elliott, Xavier Frost b Damian Blade (thanks to Patrick Brandmeyer)
    • GOUGE from last night in Raleigh:  Waylon Maze won three-way over Chance LeBeaux and Johnny Fulls, Ron Nicole b Taylor Black, Jimmy Jack Funk Jr. b Outcast, Juan Jeremi b Priest, No Direction b Seymour Snott & Victor Andrews, Timmy Lou Retton b Mickey Gambino-DQ.  Next show is 8/22 in Raleigh at the Nickeloonit Brewery.
    • Lucha Xtreme TV from last night in Fresno:  Marcus Eriks b Prince Nagi, Levi Shapiro b Super Tiger, Al Azar b Johnny Dynamo (thanks to Jon Southerland) 

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

    1972 – Miyoko Hoshino beat Sara Lee (not the Tough Enough contestant, nor her grandmother, but the former Nashville ticket lady) to win the WWWA title.

    1975 – Skandor Akber & George Guliovas beat Larry O’Dea & Bobby Hart in Melbourne to win the Austra Asian tag titles

    1980 – Cien Caras beat Tony Benetto in Puebla to win the Mexican national heavyweight title

    1983 – Tiger Jeet Singh & Umanosuke Ueda beat Giant Baba & Jumbo Tsuruta in Fukuoka to win the NWA Int. tag titles

    1984 – Chamaco Valaquez beat Mocho Cota in Cuernavaca to win the NWA welterweight title

    1990 – Rumi Kazama & Shinobu Kandori beat Miss A (Dynamite Kansai) & Harley Saito in Yokohama to win the Pacific Coast tag titles

    1991 – Dan Kroffat & Doug Furnas beat Joel Deaton & Billy Black in Matsumoto to win the All-Asia tag titles

    2005 – Kensuke Sasaki & Katsuhiko Nakajima beat Shuji Kondo & Yasshi in Tokyo to win the All-Asia tag titles

    2008 – Alex Shelley beat Ultimo Guerrero to win the International Grand Prix tournament at Arena Mexico

  • On this day in pro wrestling history: Valentine vs. Flair, Dusty wins final NWA title

    By Brian Hoops

    1929 – In St. Louis, Missouri at the Outdoor Battery Arena; Dick Shikat beat Joe Komar 

    1946 – Dave Levin defeated Kay Bell for the Texas Heavyweight Title in
    Houston, Texas

    1950 – Ray Clements defeated Frank Murdoch to win Amarillo’s Southwest
    Junior Heavyweight Title in Lubbock, Texas.

    1960 – Curly Gagnon defeated Andy Galipeau in Winnipeg, Manitoba for the
    Madison Wrestling Club Middleweight Title

    1968 – Fritz Von Erich defeated Spoiler #1 in Houston, Texas for the
    held-up NWA American Heavyweight Title.

    1970 – Miyoko Hoshino and Yoshiko Miyamoto defeated Masked Killer and
    Masked Lee in Fuchu, Japan to win the American Girls’ Wrestling
    Association International Tag Team Title.

    1972 – Fred Blassie defeated Johnny Barend for the Hawaii NWA North
    American Heavyweight Title

    1972 Miami, Florida; Paul Jones beat Jack Brisco on a 3rd fall dq, Don Curtis beat Buddy Colt dq and 
    Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens beat Hiro Matsuda & Ron Fuller.

    1972 – Miyoko Hoshino defeated Sarah Lee in Kasugabe, Japan for the WWWA
    World Singles Title. At the same event, Aiko Kyo and Jumbo Miyamoto won
    the WWWA World Tag Team Title from Opearl Anston and Masked Lee.

    1973 – In Kansas City; Mike George & Jim Brunzell defeated Percy Pringle & Jim Dalton, Togo the Great & Tokyo Joe defeated Hillbilly Vic & Steve Bolus, In an Indian Strap Match; Danny Little Bear defeated Bob Brown and Lord Alfred Hayes & Roger Kirby defeated Bobo Brazil & Rufus R. Jones in three falls

    1977 – Ken Lucas defeated Kurt Von Hess to win the NWA Gulf Coast
    Heavyweight Title in Mobile, Alabama

    1980 – Greg Valentine defeated Ric Flair to win the NWA United States
    Heavyweight Title in Charlotte, North Carolina

    1980 – Barry Windham defeated Masa Saito for the NWA Florida Television
    Title in St. Petersburg, Florida.

    1981 – Angelo Mosca defeated Mr. Fuji in Toronto, Ontario to win the
    Toronto NWA Canadian Heavyweight Title

    1981 – In Green Bay; Adrian Adonis & Jesse Ventura beat The Crusher & Baron Von Raschke, Sheik Adnan ddq Tito Santana and 
    Jerry Blackwell beat Brad Rheingans. 

    1983 – Tiger Jeet Singh and Umanosuke Ueda defeated Giant Baba and Jumbo
    Tsuruta to win the NWA International Tag Team Title in Nagasaki, Japan,
    to end Baba and Tsuruta’s fifth reign.

    1984 – The Grapplers (Tony Anthony and Len Denton) defeated The Uptown
    Boys (Marty Jannetty and Tommy Rogers) to win the NWA Central States Tag
    Team Title in Kansas City, Kansas,

    1985 – In Albany, GA, The Midnight Express, Dennis Condrey & Bobby Eaton
    won an 18 Man Battle Royal and split the “$10,000” purse.

    1986 – At the Great American Bash, Dusty Rhodes defeated NWA
    World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair in a Steel Cage match to win the
    title and Magnum T.A. defeated Nikita Koloff (with Ivan Koloff) make their best-of-seven 
    series for the NWA United States Heavyweight Title 3-1 favor of Nikita in Greensboro, North Carolina.
    Also on the card, NWA National Heavyweight Champion Tully Blanchard (with James J. Dillon) defeated Ron Garvin in a Taped Fist match and The Rock ‘n’ Roll Express (Robert Gibson and Ricky Morton) fought The Minnesota Wrecking Crew (NWA World Television Champion Arn and Ole Anderson) to a draw.

    1991 – The Can-Am Express (Doug Furnas and Dan Kroffat) defeated Billy
    Black and Joel Deaton to win the AJPW All Asia Tag Team Title in
    Matsudo, Japan,

    1998 – WWF Champion Steve Austin and The Undertaker defeated WWF Tag
    Team Champions Kane and Mankind to win the title in Fresno, California. Also,
    WWF Intercontinental Champion The Rock fought Triple H (with Chyna) to a 30-minute time-limit draw in a best-of-three falls match to retain the title. 

    2005 – Katsuhiko Nakajima and Kensuke Sasaki defeated Shuji Kondo and “brother” YASSHI for the AJPW All Asia Tag Team Title in Tokyo, Japan.

    2009 – At the Night of Champions PPV, Christian defeated Tommy Dreamer
    to win the ECW Championship and Mickie James defeated Maryse to win the
    Diva’s Championship. Also, Jeff Hardy defeated CM Punk to win the World
    Championship.

  • Weekend boxing coverage: Kovalev vs. Mohammedi on HBO

    By Jeremy Wall

    Sergey “Krusher” Kovalev (28-0-1, 25 KOs) defeated France’s Nadjib Mohammedi (37-4, 23 KOs) by knockout at 2:38 of the third round to retain his IBF Light-Heavyweight title on Saturday, July 25th. Kovalev also holds the WBA and WBO Light-Heavyweight titles, which weren’t on the line. The fight took place at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas and aired on HBO and included a co-main event featuring Jean Pascal (30-3-1, 17 KOs) defeating Cuba’s Yunieski Gonzalez (16-1, 12 KOs) by a controversial unanimous decision after ten rounds. The fights were co-promoted by Main Events and Interbox.

    Kovalev won all three rounds in a total mismatch. There was an element of a grudge match to this bout as Mohammedi’s trainer Abel Sanchez is the former trainer of Kovalev and had a bad falling out with Kovalev. Kovalev now trains with John David Jackson.

    In the second round, Kovalev, 32, dropped Mohammedi, 30, with a combination of punches including a big right hand. When Kovalev knocked Mohammedi down in the second, he waved his gloves for Mohammedi to get back up.

    “I told him to stand up. It’s like a short show. People know they didn’t see boxing. It was just the one round. It was a small fight. I wanted to continue and I tried to continue to make this a longer fight,” said Kovalev during his post-fight interview.

    Kovalev then finished Mohammedi in the third with a right hook followed by a left jab. Mohammedi immediately collapsed and was holding his left eye, which appeared injured. He was taken to a local hospital to have his eye checked and did not appear at the post-fight presser.

    Kovalev landed 47-percent of his power punches, landing 32 jabs in total and 35 power punches, according to CompuBox. Kovalev landed 67 of 170 punches for 39-percent. Mohammedi only landed 17 punches of 96 punches for 18-percent. Kovalev landed 35 of 74 power punches for 47-percent and Mohammedi landed only 6 of 24 power punches for 25-percent.

    Mohammedi was the mandatory challenger for Kovalev’s IBF title. Despite Mohammedi’s mandatory challenger status, no one gave Mohammedi a chance against Kovalev, even though Mohammedi was going into the bout riding a thirteen-fight winning streak, was ranked number two by the WBA and number one by the IBF at light-heavyweight.

    Last year, Adonis Stevenson beat Dmitry Sukhotsky. Adonis, Kovalev’s rival to the claim of being the best light-heavyweight in the world, was heavily criticized for taking that fight with the feeling that Sukhotsky was nowhere near Adonis’s league. Sukhotsky, however, stopped Mohammedi in the second round of their fight in October 2011 in St. Petersburg. So, the feeling was that Mohammedi was even further below Kovalev’s league than Sukhotsky was in comparison to Adonis.

    Kovalev earned $750,000 and Mohammedi earned $270,000. Kovalev also earned additional income from a TV deal in Russia.

    The fight drew poorly in Las Vegas. Attendance was 4,351. It was Kovalev’s second time fighting in Las Vegas and first time headlining in the city. His last appearance in Vegas was on July 29th, 2011, when he stopped Douglas Okola in the second round at The Cosmopolitan. This was Pascal’s first time fighting in Las Vegas. Kovalev was also figured to fustigate Mohammedi, so the interest in this fight was low because Kovalev was fighting an easier opponent.

    In the co-main, Jean Pascal, 32, beat Yunieski Gonzalez, 30, by a unanimous decision after ten rounds on three straight scores of 96-94. The decision was controversial as many boxing pundits had the fight scored for Gonzalez. Kovalev landed 154 of 397 punches for 39-percenet and Gonzalez landed 163 of 632 punches for 26-percent.

    The punching stats didn’t tell the entire story, though. It was an exciting fight with Gonzalez coming out hard starting with the first round. It was an all-action fight all the way to the ninth round, when both fighters started to gas out. They came back hard in the tenth.

    Although Gonzalez doesn’t have much of a name, he is considered a legitimate contender and was not an easy out for Pascal. Pascal went to the hospital after the fight to have his right hand examined. He injured it in the third round.

    “I was never in trouble,” Pascal said in his post-fight interview. “I was controlling the fight. The fight followed the rhythm exactly as I wanted.”

    Gonzalez wept when the decision was read. “When I heard unanimous decision, I absolutely thought I won the fight,” Gonzalez said in his post-fight interview. “Had it been a split decision or something, I would’ve been worried.”

    It was a close, exciting fight that could reasonably lead to a rematch, depending on what plans are regarding a rematch between Kovalev and Pascal. Kovalev knocked out Pascal on March 14th at the Bell Centre in Montreal in one of the best fights this year. There were some that felt the eighth round knockout against Pascal was unfair with referee Luis Pabon calling the fight while Pascal still looked ready to go, as Pascal was still standing when Pabon stepped in and stopped the fight. They were put together in separate fights on Saturday night’s card with the idea of doing a rematch if both won. A rematch between the two would do well on HBO, but more so would draw a tremendous gate at the Bell Centre.

    The HBO fights went up against a PBC show on NBC Sportsnet and the UFC on Fox in Chicago. The main event of the PBC show featured Beibut Shumenov (16-2, 10 KOs) beating BJ Flores (31-2-1, 20 KOs) to win the interim WBA Cruiserweight title. Shumenov won on three straight scores of 116-112. I didn’t see the Shumenov-Flores fight, but reports were that it was a dull fight with poor output from both boxers.

    And for those interested, Stitch Duran worked Shumenov’s corner.

    Also, for those paying attention to the other controversial story in MMA this week, after the Kovalev fight HBO replayed the episode of Real Sports that featured the segment on domestic violence in MMA. HBO even hyped the replay repeatedly during the boxing broadcast, advertising the MMA domestic violence segment to the boxing audience, even though advertising for the episode elsewhere focused on the other segments aired by Real Sports.

    HBO Boxing is a major competitor for market share against the UFC and it is not a coincidence that they opted to replay that Real Sports episode against the UFC on Fox main event and also hyped the MMA domestic violence story during the boxing broadcast. I do find it ironic, though, that HBO is so concerned about the rate of domestic violence among MMA athletes when they co-promoted a pay per view starring Floyd Mayweather Jr only a couple of months ago.

    On Fox, TJ Dillashaw routed Renan Barao to retain the UFC Bantamweight title, drawing 2.29 million viewers in the overnights. The show featured a co-main event of Miesha Tate beating Jessica Eye by unanimous decision to setup a third fight between Tate and Ronda Rousey (assuming Rousey gets past Bethe Correira in Brazil next weekend) later this year. The HBO broadcast began at 10pm ET, just as the Dillashaw-Barao title fight was getting underway.

    In Canada, the HBO fights did not air on HBO Canada, which ran reruns of other HBO programming instead. HBO Canada is a bastardized version of the genuine HBO that American viewers are fortunate to receive. Instead, Kovalev-Mohammedi and Pascal-Gonzalez were available as a pay per view in Quebec for $55 from pay per view broadcaster Indigo. It wasn’t available elsewhere in Canada, on pay per view or otherwise. Pascal fights always air on pay per view in Quebec and are blacked out elsewhere in Canada, which is the case for most Montreal boxing stars.

    That Indigo could air a prelim fight featuring a weak Pascal against an unknown and want to charge $55 for it and keep a straight face is nothing short of amazing.

    There is genuine animosity between Kovalev and Pascal and the first fight was exciting, so a rematch would figure to be another great fight. Importantly, it would also draw well locally in Montreal. But Pascal doesn’t deserve a rematch. He may have lost against Gonzalez, with many boxing writers feeling that Gonzalez, not Pascal, won the decision in a fight that elevates Gonzalez’s name value and box office appeal. There is a rumour that before Saturday night’s fights, however, Kovalev and Pascal’s camps already had a verbal agreement for a rematch if both won.

    “If people are interested very much, I’m ready for any fighter… I’m ready for everyone,” Kovalev said in his post-fight interview when HBO’s Max Kellerman asked him about rematching against Pascal

    “I’m still the cash cow because if this fight will be [in Quebec], there’ll be like 15,000 people and not only 1,000 sold,” Pascal said in the final pre-fight presser on Thursday. “I know I’m the cash cow of the division.”

    The big money fight at light-heavyweight is between Kovalev and Adonis Stevenson, another star Montreal fight. Stevenson hold the WBC Light-Heavyweight title. He is also set to debut in Toronto in September, which would make him the biggest name boxer to come to Toronto since time immemorial.

    The Kovalev-Adonis fight almost went to purse bid earlier this year. Kovalev’s promoter, Main Events, pulled Kovalev from the purse bid. Adonis is handled by Al Haymon and Haymon uses his Wall Street funding to win every important purse bid by a mile. It was looking like Haymon would easily outbid Main Events for the rights to the Kovalev-Adonis fight. The fight is now in limbo, with boxing’s politics keeping one of the biggest money pay per views on the shelf.

    “I’m ready to fight Stevenson but he doesn’t want to fight me,” Kovalev told The Ring before the fight against Mohammedi. Adonis has been accused of avoiding a fight with Kovalev.

    Others have accused Kovalev of dodging Adonis. For instance, Stephen Espinoza of Showtime posted on Saturday to Twitter that, “Kovalev hides behind his hbo contract. Kathy [Duva] knows Adonis will KO her guy.”

    Kovalev’s side claimed that if Haymon won the purse bid and the fight was aired by Showtime, it would violate Kovalev’s exclusive contract with HBO. That may be true, but HBO and Showtime have worked together in the past and if the chance to make money is there, it is not like it would be impossible for them to work together in the future.

    Another possible opponent for Kovalev is Andre Ward, who recently made his return to boxing by defeating Paul Smith in a glorified exhibition bout a few weeks ago on BET.

    “I’m ready for any fight, for any fight. It’s boxing. It’s sport. First of all for me, it’s a sport,” Kovalev said when Kellerman asked him about Ward during Kovalev’s post-fight interview. “And if fans want to see this fight and promoters will make this fight, I’ll be happy.”

    “I’ve had conversations with the people from Roc Nation. The (Andre) Ward fight is something I think is makeable, we’re having steady talks about it,” Kathy Duva, promoter of Main Events, told The Ring. “It won’t happen immediately, it looks like next year. Once he fights Andre Ward he won’t have the WBC (light heavyweight) title but he will be the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world when the fight is over. It seems to be a good alternative since our first plan didn’t work.”

    Yet another possibility is against fellow countryman Artur Beterbiev, who has looked incredible in a couple of fights that have aired on PBC broadcasts. Beterbiev is a Russian transplant who lives in Montreal and is promote by Yvon Michel, but controlled by Al Haymon.

    At the Kovalev-Mohammedi post-fight presser, Kathy Duva said she would call Michel and offer a fight between Kovalev and Beterbiev in Russia for November 28th. Beterbiev holds an amateur win over Kovalev. Yvon Michel posted a message on Twitter saying he would gladly take that call, but odds of that fight happening are weak because Kovalev is an HBO guy and Beterbiev is a PBC guy. It seems that whether or not Kovalev’s next opponent is Beterbiev, Kovalev will be fighting no matter what on November 28th in Russia, which will only be Kovalev’s third fight in his home country after bouts in 2010 and 2011. It will be Kovalev’s first fight in Russia, though, after he has become a star.

    “We wants to confirm @abeterbiev will take the challenge to fight Kovalev in Russia or anywhere, on HBO if the offer is fair!” Michel later posted to Twitter.

    Kovalev-Beterbiev would be bad matchmaking for Beterbiev. A lot of people see Beterbiev as PBC’s version of Kovalev. Kovalev, however, is the more experienced and possibly the better skilled fighter and would be the favourite to win if the two fought this year, despite that Beterbiev has an amateur win over Kovalev years ago. It doesn’t make sense to put PBC’s version of Kovalev in against the real Kovalev with the expectation that the real Kovalev would win. A loss to Kovalev would ruins whatever future box office appeal Beterbiev may develop. If Beterbiev beat Kovalev, it would be damaging to Kovalev and a great boost to Beterbiev’s fortunes, but that seems like an unlikely outcome.

    Beterbiev ought to be protected by PBC in order to increase his drawing power. Once Beterbiev’s drawing power reaches its peak, he should be matched against Adonis. Adonis is a PBC guy, so no matter who wins between Adonis and Beterbiev, PBC winds up on top. If Beterbiev beat Adonis, talks between Beterbiev and Kovalev would make more sense from the PBC side depending on how Beterbiev looked against Adonis and how Kovalev looked in his recent fights. But there still might be other good light-heavyweights under contract to Haymon that Beterbiev could fight before facing Kovalev, Andrzej Fonfara being an example, among others.

    Ratings for the fights on HBO and NBC Sportsnet won’t be available until Monday or Tuesday. HBO has been drawing well this year, mostly due to the general increase in interest in boxing due to the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight in May and the plethora of PBC fights on network television since March. Since Mohammedi has no name whatsoever and was given no chance against Kovalev whatsoever, whatever rating that fight draws will be solely on the back of Kovalev’s box office appeal. Thus, the rating will probably be a good gauge of the drawing power of simply seeing Kovalev fight.

    Competition among other combat sports promotions was stiff for the night. It is still possible for HBO to squeak out a decent rating, though. PBC on NBC Sportsnet had a weak main event and NBC Sportsnet only draws good ratings for select events. PBC on Saturday didn’t seem like one of those events. And UFC drew well in the overnights considering who they had in the main event, but UFC draws from a totally different demographic than HBO Boxing. UFC being on network television on Saturday as opposed to cable, however, might put a bigger dent in HBO’s ratings with more people tuning in to UFC on Fox rather than if the UFC card was on Fox Sports 1.

    Prior to the Kovalev-Mohammedi main event, HBO also announced that they had signed Gennady Golovkin vs. David Lemieux for October 17th on pay per view. The fight will take place at Madison Square Garden. It is a huge match both from a sporting and a business perspective. Golovkin is widely considered the top middleweight and holds the WBA and interim WBC Middleweight titles. Lemieux is a star in Montreal and one of the rising stars of the Middleweight division and holds the IBF Middleweight belt. Like Golovkin, Lemieux is a massive power puncher. Golovkin will be the favourite, but it will be an exciting fight that people expect will end in a knockout victory either way. The fight will unify the title belts held by the two. The other middleweight champions are Miguel Cotto with the WBC title, Daniel Jacobs with the regular WBA title (WBA typical has two champs for each division, obviously a cheap ploy to glean more sanctioning fees), and Andy Lee with the WBO belt.

    From a business perspective, the fight is important because it is the first time that Golovkin will be headlining a pay per view. One of the obstacles Golovkin has faced in getting fights against big names is that Golovkin is considered one of the most dangerous fighters in boxing, but doesn’t have enough box office appeal to make fighting him worthwhile. If Golovkin can draw money on pay per view, that will make him a viable opponent against some bigger names at middleweight, super-middleweight, or even light-heavyweight in fights that could draw big money on pay per view. On the other hand, if Golovkin draws poorly on pay per view, or if he loses badly to Lemieux, it will become that much harder for Golovkin to garner fights against bigger names.

    The most likely outcome is that Golovkin beats Lemieux and then a couple of months later Canelo Alvarez beats Miguel Cotto on pay per view. That would setup Golovkin vs. Canelo maybe next May in a massive pay per view fight. A win over Golovkin might cement Canelo is the heir to Floyd Mayweather’s throne as boxing’s biggest star. Even a loss for Canelo in a classic fight wouldn’t hurt Canelo’s star power. No matter what happens, though, a major tent-pole pay per view fight between Golovkin and Canelo next year will shape the landscape of the boxing industry for years to come.

    It is an interesting match for Golden Boy, Lemieux’s promoter. Golden Boy doesn’t have many star fighters left with most of their roster being poached by Al Haymon when PBC bowed on NBC earlier this year. The idea here is clearly to use Lemieux as a setup to give Golovkin a major push before he faces Canelo, the latter of whom is Golden Boy’s biggest star and realistically their last remaining meal ticket.

    I think feeding Lemieux to Golovkin to build hype for a Golovkin-Canelo showdown is good matchmaking. But it does require sacrificing Lemieux, who is one of the only stars Golden Boy has created since Al Haymon formed PBC. I thought a better move would be to try and get Golovkin to fight Bernard Hopkins at light-heavyweight. A win over Hopkins would mean much more for Golovkin’s box office appeal than a win over Lemieux, plus Hopkins has little time left as a professional boxer, compared to Lemieux who could be a star for years. Maybe Golden Boy tried and couldn’t put that fight together, I don’t know. I also liked the idea of De La Hoya coming out of retirement to get beaten by Golovkin, although that was a fantasy match long-shot at best. Golovkin beating De La Hoya would setup Canelo getting revenge against Golovkin, which would be a huge deal to boxing’s Mexican audience.

    No matter what happens, though, boxing will have a number of major pay per views over the coming few months, with Canelo-Cotto, Golovkin-Lemieux, and Floyd Mayweather’s supposed retirement fight all taking place sometime between September and Christmas.

    Jeremy Wall can be contacted at jeremywall1984@gmail.com and followed on Twitter @jeremydalewall.

  • UFC News: Dillashaw vs. Barao II FOX ratings

    By Dave Meltzer, WrestlingObserver.com

    Saturday’s UFC on FOX show was the second most watched of the four July shows since the seven-year deal went into effect.

    Based on the overnight ratings, the show did a 0.9 in the key 18-49 demo and 2.29 million viewers.  It should be noted that the final number that will come out on Monday or Tuesday will likely end up significantly higher beacuse the overnights measure the 8-10 p.m. time slot on the West Coast, while the show aired at 5 p.m. local time live.

    In addition, the entire four-round T.J. Dillashaw vs. Renan Barao bantamweight title main event aired after 10 p.m., so the number was based on only the first three fights of the main show.

    It was up 13 percent from the Robbie Lawler vs. Matt Brown show, which did 2.02 million viewers on the original overnight ratings.

    FOX easily won the night and time slot in the key demo against weak nework programming, with ABC second at 0.5. However, CBS with shows that skewed much older (NCIS Los Angeles and Scorpion reruns) averaged 3.42 million viewers, won the night with total viewers, with FOX in second place.

  • Feedback to weekend events

    Hi Dave,
      Just wanted to give some feedback on the UFC Fight Night on Fox. I gave the card a Thumbs up, it was a pretty good show, not great with big marquee match/ups in my opinion, but a good fight night. This is the 4th UFC event I’ve watched since they implemented the new Reebok uniforms and I’m completely sick of looking at them already. I didn’t think it would make a big difference, but it really does. I mean plain black and white fight gear in every single fight on every fight card since they implemented the new uniform style? When they showcased examples of the fight uniforms and how the would look, I seem to remember a variety of clothing styles being presented, different colors, different styles, all with the Reebok logo. I know this is not a fashion show, and in a good fight it should not even be a factor on what they are wearing, but my god are these things bland! They actually make the fights boring if that makes any sense, and nobody really stands
     out in my opinion, especially on the undercards. Every fight and just about every fighter looks the same. I just don’t understand the goal of Dana White here in making the product look as bland as possible. No cageside sponsors, nobody stands out at the weigh-ins, and don’t even get me started on the huge injustice to Stitch! But I digress, at least go with a different color scheme for every fight card, I’m so fricken sick of the black and white color scheme and feel like a complete idiot complaining about it, but it really does take away from the entertainment and look of the product which is very important.
    Anyway, I skipped the prelims basically for this reason, and just watched the main card, which was very good, but some oddball decisions in a few fights in my opinion.

    1. Joe Lauzon / Takanori Gomi – Lauzon gets the TKO over Gomi as Herb Dean is slow on the draw, but at least Lauzon was paying attention, lol. I think Herb Dean is the best ref in the world, but even he was bored by the uniform styles by this point and I think he fell asleep on his feet as a result, lol. Good stoppage though as Gomi was done, even though the stoppage was by the fighter and not the ref initially.

    2. Edson Barboza / Paul Felder – A very good fight with Barboza getting the decision, even with a nasty eye bump that looked painful. A good decision in my opinion, the right guy won. I’m sure the executives on Fox just loved it when Felder decided to drop an “F” bomb when he lost by decision and then refused to shake hands and just left the cage. Or maybe he was more upset by the new uniform style then the decision? It’s really difficult to say, lol. But I’m sure a financial fine was waiting for him as he returned back stage to the dressing rooms.

    3. Miesha Tate / Jessica Eye – “Takedown” Tate is now “Cupcake” Tate, lol. How about “Enhancement” Tate if you know what I mean? I like Tate, don’t get me wrong, I’ve been a big fan of hers since her Strikeforce days, but I think that Jessica Eye was the clear winner here. I think the decision went in her favor due to the rematch aspect of her and Ronda in my opinion. Not sure how good Jessica would do fighting Ronda, but pretty sure Ronda would bulldoze through her as they are clearly running out of contenders to challenge Ronda, and now need to look at making every fight for Ronda as personal as possible to keep her motivated I think and keep the crowd into it.  A rematch between Ronda and Tate would be interesting, I just don’t think Tate won this fight as she clearly didn’t look like the winner by the end of the fight as she was banged up pretty bad and Jessica Eye really didn’t have a mark on her.

    4. Dillashaw / Renan – Really good fight, I like both these fighters, I like Dillashaw as champ and he is on fire right now in my opinion. I hope they get a chance for a 3rd fight as I like Renan too, but he has to work his way back to a title match. But a good main event, good fight, not sure how it would have done on PPV as far as if I would have bought this fight, but a good fight night match up. Good night of fights, but I think I may need to join a group therapy session for my disdain of the new uniform style! It’s dumb to complain about it I know! And it bothers me more then it should, lol. But it does really take away an aspect of the excitement and Dana White and company should really revisit that aspect.

    Thanks,
    Jon Southerland
    Clovis, Ca.

    UFC on fox

    Thumbs up, consistent show. Everything was decent except the officiating.
    Best fight/Worst fight: nothing off the chart either way, several very good fights, nothing really bad
    Best performance: would have to split this 5 or 6 ways
    Worst performance: Barao I guess if we’re not counting the judges or Yves Lavigne (what else is new)
    KO: Lawlor
    Sub: Krause

    Zak Cummings makes short work of late sub Dominique Steele with a flurry of punches. Local yokel ref lets it go way too long. Jessamyn Duke, down two rounds, comes up with a 3rd round onslaught that has Elizabeth Phillips saved by the bell. I would call the 3rd 10-8 and the fight 28-28 but the judges won’t. 29-28 UD Phillips and reverses an amateur loss a few years back. Good UFC debut late sub performance from Andrew Holbrook but isn’t in shape to quite hang with Ramsey Nijem and gasses late. Good technical fight especially while both were fresh. 29-28 split for Holbrook? What planet were the judges on? Darren Cruikshank tags James Krause a lot very early but Krause takes him down and immediately takes back and sinks the RNC for a quick upset win. Eddie Wineland off a long layoff  looking overtrained, undersized and rusty never gets any range and Brian Caraway wins a comfortable decision without even being able to take the fight to the ground. Wineland tries coming on late and might steal the 3rd and does on two cards and even that’s questionable.

    Ben Saunders-Kenny Robertson even more interesting than expected as Robertson able to more than hold his own standing most of the time. Saunders dominates the 1st but Robertson drops him hard late and seems to dominate the 2nd. Saunders traps Robertson in a triangle most of the 3rd and busts him up with elbows. Robertson is the hometown guy but Saunders gets the 29-28 split. Really good. Very close fight between Jim Miller and Danny Castillo. Much improved kicking from Castillo. Late TD by him may be the margin. Miller takes the SD with one asinine 30-27. Getting bullied by the much bigger Gian Villante, Tom Lawlor catches him coming in hands down with a right hook and knocks him silly early in the 2nd. The new uniforms mean we get no more Tom Lawlor Entrances even for weighins, which highly sucks.

    Joe Lauzon stands briefly with Takanori Gomi, takes him down, takes back, flattens him out, knocks him out cold with G&P and gets up and walks away. Dean checks Gomi and then calls it. It’s announced as a ‘T’ KO. Not sure what’s ‘technical’ when the guy’s out cold.

    Edson Barboza and Paul Felder, both late subs, amazingly go the distance in essentially a high level Muay Thai fight. Both do serious damage. Very similar fighters, more spinning strikes in this fight than I think any other MMA fight I’ve seen. Movie fight. Really good. Barboza a little faster and comes on late and should take the decision but tonight who knows. He does, 29-28 UD.

    Jessica Eye outboxes Miesha Tate most of the 1st but is just too small to take Miesha’s power and Miesha takes over with a big overhand right KD late in the round and dominates the rest of the fight for a card sweep UD and I guess we have to watch Ronda clean her clock again. Jessica is a flyweight forced to fight at bantam because UFC for some reason still hasn’t started 125 for women. She might be better off starving down to 115. Lavigne manages to miss a blatant ground head kick by Miesha.

    TJ DIllashaw repeats his dominance over Renan Barao. Barao lands a little more than last time and the fight is less dynamic till the finish but even Barao’s power seems to be gone. Maybe he has no choice other than to go up to 145 but it’s such a shark tank compared to 135. Dilashaw finishes it in the 4th with a flurry. Thought Dean let it go too long.
    Crimson Mask

    ROH Death Before Dishonor 13

    Dear Mr Meltzer,

    rating–Thumbs Up
    best matchAdam Cole vs Dalton Castle… Cole was in much better shape than in his return match in Philly vs AJ. Good to see he’s been working hard. Castle got a ‘holy shit’ chant for a clean break, pretty tough to do. They got the most out of doing the least. Enjoyed castle’s deadlift’s very much. 
    worst matchSilas Young vs Will Ferrara… no one knew Will. Flat crowd for an opener, didn’t think it achieved it’s purpose. 

    Good, not great show I thought. But well worth my time and money.

    I figured Roddy/Lethal was going broadway very early. At no point did I think it was match of the year though as the crowd chanted afterwards. I give both guys credit for having a good match go an hour. That’s pretty damn hard to do.

    thanks for your time,
    Dan Petrucci

    Thumbs up

    Best match: Lethal-Strong

    Worst match: Silas-Ferrara

    Great event. Maybe not as good as “Best in the World”, but pretty close. Loved the main event and Broadway makes perfect sense. The tag matches were fantastic. Loved ACH. Loved Adam Cole. Kelly and Corino are great as announcers. Stream was flawless

    Britt Whitmire,
    North Carolina

    Overall: Thumbs Up
    Best Match: Strong vs. Lethal
    Worst Match: Silas Young vs. Will Ferrara (not bad, just given the least amount of time)

    A fantastic show that I’m afraid very little people saw. You’re simply not going to see any better professional wrestling on TV and PPV from America than ROH. Death Before Dishonor XIII seemed like a show to hold you over until their big show in Texas in September. The crowd kind of spoke to that as I felt like they hurt the show. Overall though I would definitely recommend anyone to order the replay if they want to see a fantastic 60 minute draw in the modern era. A definite MOTY contender. I can’t imagine how they did it in that heat as it looked like Roderick Strong legitimately sweated off 5-10 lbs. Every match was great. Dalton Castle and Adam Cole had a far better match than I ever imagined them having. Castle isn’t just a goofy gimmick, he’s a really talented wrestler. Moose went from being way too green for ROH, to fitting right in. He impresses me more and more each time I see him and Cedric Alexander looked the best I’ve seen him in a long time. Every other match was typical ROH goodness. Every time I order a ROH show I feel like I got my money’s worth plus some. 

    -Matthew Burrill
    @mattb425

    Ring of Honor: Death Before Dishonor

    Overall: Thumbs in the middle. Below ROH standards and a far cry from BITW. The undercard provided little to celebrate or praise. The main event was a marathon of attrition. It almost entered the classic phase.

    Best match:  I wanted to love the main event because of the extreme effort, but it only partially won my love. It built and built and built. With that said, the build was almost too slow.

    Worst match. Page and ACH had no flow. Because of this, the dangerous spots felt completely wasted.

    1. Silas Young vs. Will Ferrara. Quick paced, solid opener. As a heel, Young has grown on me. On the ROH roster, he is unique. I am not yet sold on Ferrara. His wrestling ability is fine, but he lacks anything that stands out in ROH or anywhere else. ** 1/2

    2. Moose vs. Cedric Alexander. A few good spots, but the match lacked a consistent story and strongly defined roles. Too many missed kicks. *3/4

    3. The Briscoes vs. Roppongi Vice. As I suspected, good action from start to finish in this contest. My one reoccurring complaint with ROH tag matches is the inconsistent enforcement of tag team rules. To sum it up, the break down and chaos goes on way to long. Nonetheless, I was entertained. ***1/2

    4. Dalton Castle vs. Adam Page. Castle amuses me. His facial expressions and body mannerisms are awesome.  A long, back and forth, fifty/ fifty match. If the plan was to go so long, a traditional template would have perhaps been more effective.  As it stands, it was okay but below expectations. **1/2

    5. Adam Page vs. ACH. ACH started with good fire, but the match lost momentum and subsequently lost the crowd. By the end, it was a few violent high spots in a match with no flow. **

    6. Tag Title Match: The Addiction vs. Redragon vs. War Machine vs. The Kingdom.  At the onset, the crowd had cooled off. The match picked up and the crowd came alive after the hot tag to Redragon and the dive spot. From there, the match turned to the familiar take turns spot fest. War Machine was given a nice shine during this phase. In my opinion, the spot fest went on too long and lost momentum prior to the finish. ***

    7. ROH Title Match: Roderick Strong vs. Jay Lethal. Methodical pacing that felt worthy of a title match. Near the latter stages of the match, it felt as though the crowd was begging the athletes to quicken the pacing and increase the intensity. It never really happened, and hence what could have been epic, never reached that special level. Strong had a few outbursts of offense, but none that were built upon. This was a war of attrition, and a true marathon. For my taste, the build was almost too slow They wrestled a 60 minute match, 45 of which looked like exhausted desperation. The effort should be commended. ***3/4

    Thanks, Derrick Hubbard
    Utah

  • G-1 News: Nakamura injured

    Shinsuke Nakamura, who was the favorite to win the G-1 Climax tournament, suffered a left elbow injury in Saturday’s match in Kagawa against Yuji Nagata.

    He missed today’s show in Hiroshima.  He is scheduled to face Michael Elgin on tomorrow’s show in Beppu.  We have no update on his condition at this point.