Category: Post Type article

  • PWG report 7-24-15 Young Bucks vs. Evans & Angelico; Ricochet vs. Tozawa and loaded undercard

    Great show last night.  Every match was hard hitting and got great reactions  Pretty much an awesome crowd.

    Among those in attendance with William Regal, Canyon Ceman, Seth Rollins and Konnan.

    *Team Tremendous (Bill Carr & Dan Berry) b Joey Ryan & Candice LaRae with what I’d call a combination doomsday device and a reverse blockbuster on Ryan.  Fun opener.  Carr looks like a Big Bubba Rogers type from the 80s but with more modern moves. 

    *Brian Cage b Johnny Gargano with the discus clothesline.

    *Andrew Everett b Rich Swann with a shooting star press.

    *Trevor Lee b Tommaso Ciampa.  This match was excellent leading into intermission.

    *Speedball Mike Bailey b Chris Hero.  In many ways this was the match of the night, particularly when it comes to every single move meaning something, perfect pacing for the type of match they were doing and the crowd going nuts at peaking perfectly at the end.  It hard the hard hitting fight feel, more like Japanese match.  The result also seemed like something that most didn’t expect. 

    *Ricochet b Akira Tozawa.  This was an authentic Dragon Gate match, so crisp acrobatics and a lot of comedy.  Still very good peaking well.  Lots of crazy moves as well.

    After the match came the only angle of the show with Super Dragon and The Young Bucks, wearnig Super Dragon masks, laying out Tozawa.  A lot of the faces underneath like Ryan, LaRae, Bailey, Lee and Gargano came out and were all destroyed including a scary tease of a Meltzer driver on the floor.  Jack Evans & Angelico came to as well.  This led to the main event.

    *Young Bucks b Jack Evans & Angelico.  Excellent match.  Pretty much a top end Young Bucks match with a million superkicks.  Angelico did the running dive over the post.  No balconies in Reseda as compared to Boyle Heights.  There ended up being a spike piledriver on the floor by the Bucks near the finish coming off the teased spot during the brawl.  The Bucks won when Matt pinned  Evans with More Bang for Your Buck.

  • New Japan 2015 G-1 Climax July 25 results: Honma vs. Okada, Nakamura vs. Nagata

    by Bryan Rose, WrestlingObserver.com

    Here are results from day 4 of New Japan’s G1 Climax Tournament, held today in Takamatsu at the Takamatsu Gymnasium. This is a fixed camera show with no commentary.

    Captain New Japan, Jushin Liger and Tiger Mask vs. Cody Hall, Tama Tonga and Doc Gallows

    This was the usual New Japan six man. Everyone worked with one another and was fine for the most part, though it felt a little long. Captain New Japan fell again as he was mounting a comeback and even rolled up Doc Gallows for a nearfall that people reacted big to. Eventually he falls to the Gallows Pole.

    Toru Yano, Gedo & Yoshi Hashi vs. Hiroyoshi Tenzan, David Finlay and Mascara Dorada

    Yano squirted his water bottle at Tenzan before the match started, alluding to their upcoming bout. Rather mundane, textbook six man. Only real highlights were Yano’s usual antics and Dorada’s brief offense. This time it was Yoshi-Hashi who got the win, pinning Finlay after a swanton bomb. Tenzan goaded Yano to come to the ring after the match but he bailed.

    Jay White and Kota Ibushi vs. Bad Luck Fale and AJ Styles

    Started really dull without a ton of heat as White was being worked on. Ibushi made a hot tag that the crowd was really into. They were very much into the match whenever Ibushi and Styles were at it, they looked terrific in this match. AJ wiped out Ibushi with a crossbody to the floor and White was left with Fale. The former tried to mount a comeback but the latter wiped him out and pinned him after a grenade.

    Ryusuke Taguchi, Katsuyori Shibata & Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Yohei Komatsu, Togi Makabe & Tetsuya Naito

    This was a pretty good tag bout, though like the others were formulaic. Makabe and Shibata had some interactions, as well as Tanahashi & Tetsuya Naito. Good offense throughout, though nothing particularly special about the match. Last part of it had Komatsu kicking out of everything Taguchi was giving him, including kicking out of a dodon and avoiding his sliding hip splash. Taguchi hit the dodon one more time on Komatsu and got the win there.

    Yujiro Takahashi vs. Tomohiro Ishii

    Ishii gained control at the start but Cody Hall, seconding Yujiro, jumped him. Yujiro was in control for a good while and it was nothing special at all. He hit the Tokyo Pimps but Ishii kicked out. Ishii made a comeback and gave Yujiro a big time headbutt. He follows that with a sliding D then pins him with the brainbuster. Nothing really that special, and these two have had better matches together. 

    Michael Elgin vs. Satoshi Kojima

    This turned out to be easily the best match of the night so far. Very good back and forth match between the two, nothing super but a really good match. Elgin continues to thrive here as he was getting over the more he was on offense. At one point Kojima had him wiped out with a lariat, then went for another but Elgin came back with one of his own. Elgin had him in the middle rope and was looking to do something, but Kojima fell off and when Elgin jumped off the middle rope he ate another lariat and was pinned. 

    Karl Anderson vs. Hirooki Goto

    Good match, but not as good as last year’s G1 match they had together. Solid back and forth match for the most part. Goto hit a really cool code red off the top rope at one point for a nearfall. Goto had Anderson laid out with his knee neckbreaker and was about to go for the shouten kai, but in mid air Anderson transitioned into a second gun stun and pinned Goto. Fans were really surprised by the finish, which was really well done.

    Yuji Nagata vs. Shinsuke Nakamura

    This match wasn’t really that interesting until the ending. I don’t know what it is about these two, but something just seems to be missing whenever they’re in the ring together. I don’t want to say that they don’t have chemistry at all, because by the end this was a pretty good match that the crowd got into, but before then I really just wasn’t feeling it. Nagata got the crowd into the match when he got the white eyes armbar on Nagata. He fought him off and went with the boma ye but he dodged. Nakamura eventually hit him with it, then another, but Nagata blocked a third. Nakamura came back with something resembling a boma ye, but pretty much just looked liked a regular kick and pinned him. Ranged into very good territory towards the end, but most of this was just there.

    Kazuchika Okada vs. Tomoaki Honma

    This was really good, but didn’t venture into great territory, like most matches tonight. They were on a even playing field as both guys gave a lot of offense to one another. A lot of kokeshis by Honma. Honma was scoring some nearfalls when he went for a top rope kokeshi but Okada moved. They botched a tombstone piledriver attempt but Honma acted quickly and rolled him up for a nearfall. Okada came back with a German and while still holding him, deadlifted him back to his feet and hit the rainmaker for the win. Crowd was really into this when it came to the nearfalls, and made this a really good, but not great match. 

  • UFC on FOX 16 Picks and Betting Game From The Secret Psychic Spy~!

    By the Secret Psychic Spy (secretpsychicspy@yahoo.com)

    Starting Bankroll: $1,500

    Current Bankroll: $1,033.08

    Last week: 3/5 Overall 68/119 (57%)

    The biggest free show in a couple of years takes place tomorrow afternoon and evening on FOX, with 4 fights on Fight Pass preceding the 8 FOX fights. I’ve gone through the entire card and as usual have picked five fights in which there is value. The picks have been profitable the last several weeks after a bit of a rough patch. Especially the picks in the betting game, which is heating up. If you only pick two fights, I’d recommend my, as well as Freddy’s, weekly picks as they’ve been very profitable.

    Pick 1 – Jessamyne Duke (3-2) +145 over Elizabeth Phillips (4-3) I’m betting $100 to win $145

    Both ladies have struggled thus far in UFC but Duke does have a win. Duke has the obvious size advantage and should have a wrestling advantage as well, with new grappling coach Josh Barnett. One of Ronda’s Horsewomen has to win sometime, right? This should be the night.

    Pick 2 – Jim Miller (24-6) -125 over Danny Castillo (17-8) I’m betting $100 to win $80

    Both guys have lost 2 in a row. Miller is the favorite and for good reason. He’s one of the mainstays of the division and always has a great fight. He’s got way more experience and isn’t about to be stopped by Castillo. His relentless should wear out “Last Call”, leading to a win here for Miller.

    Pick 3 – Ben Saunders (18-6-2) -120 over Kenny Robertson (15-3) I’m betting $100 to win $83.33

    Two submission wins in a row for Killa Bee is about to become three. Whatever happens, I’d almost guarantee this will end in a finish but Saunders has looked spectacular since returning to the U. Saunders should break into the top 15 after taking the win here.

    Pick 4 – Daron Cruickshank (16-6) -160 over James Krause (21-7) I’m betting $100 to win $62.50

    I like Cruickshank, but this is more of a bet against Krause. If not for a freak injury to Jamie Varner, Krause would be on a four fight losing streak. He hasn’t looked particularly good either. I suspect an early KO win for the “Detroit Superstar”.

    Pick 5 – Eddie Wineland (21-10-1) -140 over Bryan Caraway (19-7)

    Wineland is a former title challenger, coming off a year plus layoff. He had a  KO loss in his last fight but I think he turns things around here against Kid Lightning aka Mr Miesha Tate. This is another one that should end early as it will likely be a Caraway submission or a Wineland KO.

    All told, I’m betting $500 with a chance to win $442.26

    On with the betting game.

    2015 Betting Game: Secret Psychic Spy vs Ryan Frederick

    Current Standings:

    Ryan Frederick: $1,082.53 (Picked Leites, Lawler, Gordon, Hein, Alvarez, Ortega, Noons, Browne, Magny, Matthews)

    Secret Psychic Spy: $1,470.18 (Picked Rivera, Samman, Bosse, Amirkhani, Henderson, Breese, Pyle, Wee, Andrews)

    I increased my lead last week, although I personally thought that Leites won the fight with Bisping. Tough break for young Ryan. This week, I’m going with the underdog Jessamyne Duke for the reasons listed above.

    Ryan’s pick:

    I’m going Jessica Eye +185 over Miesha Tate. I’m surprised the line is this big and Eye is undervalued and will be an easy way to make money. Eye is better on the feet by far and if she can avoid the takedown, I can’t see Tate winning a striking battle at all. Tate really hasn’t been all that impressive since losing to Ronda Rousey in Strikeforce, winning fights made that she was supposed to win and winning a close fight where her opponent fought dumb in Sara McMann. Eye is an intelligent fighter who is looking to make a statement, and has a strong will to win. An underrated situation to point out is Tate is cornering her boyfriend, Bryan Caraway, earlier in the night, some two hours before she is supposed to fight. In my opinion, that is a dumb move as she should be relaxing and making final preparations in the locker room, but instead she’s taking 30-45 minutes out of her time and focusing it on someone else. Plus, if Caraway loses or loses badly, that will have to be on her mind. Eye wins this

    Good luck, enjoy the fights and remember, don’t bet more than you can afford to lose and try to have fun with it!

  • NJPW on AXS 7-24-15 report: Tanahashi vs. Nakamura; Shibata vs. Honma

    by Bryan Rose, WrestlingObserver.com

    Tonight’s show took place August 3, 2014 from the Osaka Bodymaker Colosseum.

    First match we have on the docket tonight is Tomoaki Honma taking on Katsuyori Shibata. This was just excellent, right from the get go. You had two guys going out there and being as stiff as possible and people were totally into it. At one point Shibata chopped Honma right in the face, which did not look fun in the least bit. Honma did not win one single match here in this tournament, but it doesn’t matter. He got over big time in this tournament because he went to the limit every time he faced off against someone, and only after giving it his all did he get pinned. That’s how you book a guy to lose but still get over. Honma is one of the best babyfaces in New Japan, probably the best underdog type character in wrestling at the moment, and this performance here was a great reason why. Shibata gets the win after a GTS and the penalty kick.

    Honma, with his gravelly voice, said after the match that he might not win or be a champion, but he wants to make sure people know about him in this tournament.

    Kazuchika Okada followed, facing Yujiro Takahashi. This was fine, but not nearly as good as the previous match. Yujiro I wouldn’t say is terrible, but he’s clearly a notch below a lot of the New Japan Heavyweights and can be clumsy at times. He wasn’t here, as the match between him and Okada was pretty short, and was perfectly fine for what it was, though there’s not much to talk about here. Okada picks up the win with the Rainmaker lariat.

    Gedo interviews for Okada after the match, saying no one is able to step up to Okada. When asked if he felt anything after facing Takahashi since he was the one who cost him the IWGP championship, Okada simply said “no” and walked away.

    Tanahashi is interviewed. He says he enjoyed facing Nakamura as there are wrestlers that he always looks forward to facing, and he’s one of them. He always feels that he could do more, however. He gains something every time they face.

    The big match followed. This was a very good, back and forth technical match for much of the match, then got really awesome in the closing stretches. Ranallo did a good job of detailing the background of the match, including Tanahashi’s trip to the hospital during the G1 to check on his neck. I completely forgot about that, and was a nice touch. Nakamura hit the boma ye twice on Tanahashi and was going for a third when Tanahashi tripped him and busted out the Japanese rolling clutch hold to pin him for the surprise win. I wasn’t too into this the first time it aired, but I loved it re-watching it again. This was different from the opener in that they didn’t destroy each other, but rather just had a great back and forth match. This is probably my favorite match between the two at the moment.

    After the match Nakamura notes his losses to Shibata and Tanahashi. He’s still in the game, and his fight with those two will never end.

    Back with Tanahashi for his reflections on the match. When coming up for the finish, he didn’t realize that it was on the anniversary of Karl Gotch’s death, so he saw it as the god of pro wrestling giving him powers. He realized that G1 was a truly important event when he was a worldwide audience gaining interest in it. He says that concentrating on the G1 for nearly a month will wear your out. Being strong mentally was the most important factor this year. He says that he will become G1 champion this year.

    Another great show this week with some good analysis and great matches. Next week we’ll continue the G1 trail as Kazuchika Okada takes on Minoru Suzuki in the main event.

  • ROH Death Before Dishonor XIII Live Results and Coverage 7-24-15: Jay Lethal vs Roderick Strong

    By Paul Fontaine for WrestlingObserver.com

    Welcome to our live coverage of Death Before Dishonor XIII, from Baltimore MD. Jay Lethal defends the World title in the main event. A 4 Corner Survival match for the ROH tag team titles and much, much, more. Action kicks off at 8 pm eastern and is available on iPPV at ROHWrestling.com

    Will Ferrara vs “Professional Wrestling’s Last Real Man” Silas Young

    Despite his higher place on the card, Young has yet to score a win over the upstart Ferrara. Back in March, Young was DQ’d in their first match. Two weeks ago on ROH TV, Dalton Castle’s boys provided distraction, allowing Ferrara to score an upset win. 

    Crowd solidly behind Ferrara, somewhat surprisingly. Young gets into it with some ringside fans before the match and Ferrara does a dive from the ring to fire up the crowd.

    Match was back and forth, with Ferrara not wanting to take a countout loss, which proved to be his downfall. After rolling Young back into the ring, Young eventually hit his Misery finisher to get the pinfall win.

    WINNER: SILAS YOUNG by pinfall

    After the match, Dalton Castle’s boys confronted Young in the ring. They tried fanning him off but Young would have none of it. He set one of them up for the Misery but the other one made the save and then they rode him like a horse. The boys and Ferrara posed, which took us to an Alexander/Moose video package

    Cedric Alexander w/Veda Scott vs Moose w/Stokely Hathaway

    Prince Nana joined Corino and Kelly at commentary. Mixed reaction for Moose but he does get a fair bit of streamers. Story of this match is that Scott turned on Moose and Cedric went with her, splitting up the Moose, Hathaway and Scott trio. Nana originally brought Moose into ROH, which is why he’s on commentary. Prior to the heel turn, Alexander ended Moose’s unbeaten streak. Actually the finish of that match is what started the turn.

    Alexander started the match by constantly trying to roll out of the ring, not wanting to engage. Eventually Moose got a hold of him and threw him around outside the ring, while Scott was screaming at the fans to stop. Distraction by Scott allowed Alexander to get the advantage when it went back in the ring.

    Moose eventually took over with what Kelly called an “Okada-like” dropkick. Moose did a 540 splash off the top but was hit by a kick from Alexander on the way down in a pretty amazing spot for a guy the size of Moose. Alexander then got a two count off of a Michinoku driver.

    Moose nearly took Alexander’s head off with a clothesline after Alexander slipped coming off the top rope. YAY/BOO slap sequence doesn’t quite get the reaction they were looking for so Alexander hit an enziguri. Alexander then hit the crash and burn dive on Moose but took time from the match to get into it with Nana at the commentary booth. Hathaway made the save but Alexander whipped him into the ringside barriers.

    Moose hit Alexander with a powerbomb on the ring apron and Alexander rolled under the ring after being distracted by Scott. Moose pulled him out and rolled him back into the ring. Alexander was hiding a wrench that he pulled out from under the ring and used it to nail Moose and get the pin.

    WINNER: CEDRIC ALEXANDER by pinfall

    The Briscoes (Jay and Mark) vs Roppongi Vice (Trent Barretta/Rocky Romero)  

    No real backstory here. Jay lost the world title on the last PPV and is looking to get back on a roll here by teaming up with his brother and long-time tag team partner against one of New Japan’s top teams in Roppongi Vice.

    Crowd doesn’t really have a favorite. Romero and Mark take turns doing the Eddie Guerrero “shimmer” early on but Romero heels on him with an eye poke, allowing RPV to get the early advantage. Mark tags out to Jay though and Barretta is isolated for the next while.

    Barretta eventually tags out to Romero but the Briscoes take turns working him over for a while, including hitting consecutive senton splashes. Mark was about to do some Froggie-Bo but Barretta ran in, allowing Vice to get the advantage, isolating Mark. Romero continues doing the Guerrero thing, mocking the Briscoes with “Man Up, boys” to the camera, while doing it.

    Mark nails Romero with a couple of kicks as he’s doing splashes into the corner, which allows him to tag in brother Jay. Jay takes over with some good ole fashioned clobbering on both guys but they hit double flying knees on Jay. Mark runs in to make the save and it’s chaos for a bit but we’re left with Mark and Barretta, who’s cut open over the eye.

    Corino reminds us that the Maryland State Athletic Commission has a habit of stopping matches for blood. Mark puts one of Barretta’s armbands on his head as a headband and does a little Redkneck Kung Fu for a bit. More double-teaming from Roppongi Vice put a stop to that.

    Romero takes out Jay Brisoce with a running knee off the apron, leaving Mark and Barretta in the ring to the YAY/BOO spot, which the crowd does react to. Briscoe gets the better of it. Superkick from Jay into a destroyer from Mark onto Barretta. Jay hits a top rope splash and a neckbreaker for two. This draws the first THIS IS AWESOME chant of the night.

    Romero breaks up a Jay Driller attempt. Barretta hits a double-foot stomp off the top rope onto the back of Jay, which gets a two count for Romero. Vice set up for a Doomsday device but it’s broken up by Mark. Mark hits a Blockbuster off the ring apron onto Romero outside the ring. Jay hits a Jay driller on Barretta and Mark follows up with the Froggie-Bo elbow drop to get the win.

    WINNERS: THE BRISCOES by pinfall

    Adam Cole vs Dalton Castle w/his boys 

    Both guys get superstar reactions coming out and I have to say that they probably have the two best theme songs in ROH. Duelling Dal-ton Cas-tle/A-dam Cole chants after the ring entrances are very loud. They do adhere to the Code of Honor in Castle’s own unique way.

    The first HOLY $hit chant of the night comes from a Yoga move by Castle that has to be seen to be believed. Adam Cole followed with an ADAM COLE baby and then mocked the move to a huge reaction. Five minutes in, they’ve barely locked up and the fans are going nuts.

    Once they get started wrestling, Castle takes the early advantages with a series of gut-wrench suplexes, helped along by his boys fanning him. Cole takes over by pushing Castle off the top rope and following him to the outside. The boys scatter when Cole goes after them as the fans chant FAN UP.

    Cole mocks Castle’s strut before putting on a rear chinlock. The boys fire up the crowd with their fanning. This draws Cole outside the ring and he goes after them. The distraction allows Castle to take control, hitting a dive through the middle roles and then rolling Cole back into the ring.

    Castle gets a two off of a modified airplane spin and then goes for a bearhug. Cole powers out and goes to the top rope but Castle catches him and gets another bearhug. The announcers are putting over how strong Castle is, comparing him to Michael Elgin. Cole takes over with a neckbreaker and then a Shining Wizard, which gets a two.

    Cole uses a thrust kick to the gut to set up a Figure Four but Castle makes the ropes. Castle rolls out to be attended to by his boys. Cole chases them off but again the distraction allows Castle to take control. Fans chanting PEACOCK for Castle and he hits a German Suplex with a bridge to get a two.

    Castle hits a running knee on the apron to Cole and follows up with a dive off the top but Cole hits a superkick and follows with a rolling German but only gets a two. They do the YAY/BOO spot in the centre (third straight match for this) and Castle gets the better of it. Cole turns it around with a low blow and hits a superkick to the front and back of Castle’s head. He follows up with a neckbreaker to get the win.

    WINNER: ADAM COLE by pinfall

    They adhere to the Code after the match but that allows Silas Young to run in and attack The Boys. He chases them to the back pretty much without incident. 

    No DQ Match:
    ADAM PAGE w/Colby Corino and BJ Whitmer (on crutches) vs ACH 

    Whitmer says that he just had knee surgery and won’t be able to wrestle for the foreseeable future. Crowd is all over Whitmer for the whole promo, throwing him off with chants for Steve Corino. He then announces that he’s joining Kelly and Corino on commentary. In fact he tells him to “lay out” and let Whitmer show him how it’s done.

    ACH attacked Page during the ring intros and came out wearing a pink shirt to mock Page. Steve Corino stayed at commentary but is pretty silent for the most part, allowing Whitmer to put Page over. ACH hit a Fosbury Flop onto Page outside the ring and pulled him back outside when Page tried to roll into the ring.

    Page tried to throw ACH into a turnbuckle but it looked like a cameraman ate the move instead. Fans chanted CAMERA-MAN at that one. ACH still whipping Page all over the outside to the delight of the crowd. ACH then does a lap around the ring but the showboating allows Page to take over, rolling ACH back into the ring.

    They end up outside the ring and it should be noted that the lighting is far better for this show and being outside the ring doesn’t really hurt the presentation as it usually does. ACH takes over by throwing a chair at a charging Page and they go back inside the ring. ACH goes to the top but gets knocked off by a dropkick and then a chairshot by Page.

    Page hits a powerslam onto the chair for a two and then kicks ACH back outside the ring. Fans are chanting for tables. Page teases pulling out a table but stops, drawing boos. This allows ACH to take control and he obliges the fans by pulling the table out from under the ring. Setting up the table allows Page time to recover though.

    Page pulls a ladder out from under the ring and slides it into the ring. ACH then pulls out Indian workout clubs and beats on Page with one. ACH misses a twisting flying elbow from the top and Page suplexes him onto the ladder, which is draped on the turnbuckle. That only gets a two count.

    Funny spot as Kevin Kelly mentions that Page is jealous because ACH got a match with Alberto Del Rio and Corino says “how bout Alberto El Patron? Saved ya…”. Both guys have slowed down quite a bit, selling the beating they’re both getting. ACH then suplexes Page, shoulder first, into the ladder, drawing a “HOLY $HIT!” chant.

    ACH hits a field goal kick off of the apron onto Page, who’s on the floor by the table that ACH set up earlier. Back in the ring, ACH hits a brainbuster onto the chair but that only gets a two. Page turns things around with a DDT out of nowhere that gets a two.

    Page rolled out of the ring and ACH hit a 450 splash from the ring apron onto the floor. Page actually got back into the ring first after that but ACH went to the top. This brought out Colby Corino to try and knock ACH off the top. Whitmer slid his crutch into the ring and Page used it on ACH. Page then hit the Rite of Passage off of the apron through the table outside the ring. Colby then rolled them both back into the ring and Page on top of ACH for the pin.

    WINNER: ADAM PAGE by pinfall

    This match wouldn’t be everyone’s tastes but for me personally, I liked it more than just about everything I’ve seen so far in the G1 tourney (and I haven’t seen a lot of the matches).

    4 Corners Survival Match for the ROH World Tag Team Titles
    The Kingdom (Michael Bennett/Matt Taven) w/Maria Kanellis vs War Machine (Hanson/Rowe) vs ReDRagon (Bobby Fish/Kyle O’Reillly) vs ROH World Tag Team Champions The Addiction (“The Almighty” Christopher Daniels/Kazarian)

    Adam Cole comes out at the start to join the commentary team. Cole says that he was left out of the Kingdom’s strategy meeting earlier tonight, furthering that break-up angle. He says that he hasn’t even spoken to them all night.

    ReDRagon gets the first extended advantage, double-teaming Matt Taven. Bennett stops that with a spear on O’Reilly, knocking him outside the ring. Taven ends up tagging out to Kazarian. Rowe gets a blind tag, while O’Reilly has Daniels on his shoulder and Rowe picks up both of them and slams them down in a nice spot.

    War Machine uses double-teams moves on the champs for the next few minutes, including a dropkick by Rowe, followed by a bronco buster by Hanson. Fish ends up getting a blind tag in. The champions use some double-teaming of their own to get the advantage over Fish.

    Consecutive springboard legdrops by the champs lead to a two count from Kazarian on Fish. Fish blocks a suplex attempt by Daniels and gets one of his own but Daniels tags in Bennett. Fish gets isolated in the Kingdom’s corner. Bennett hits a spinebuster on Fish but Taven misses a frog splash. Fish about to tag in O’Reilly but he’s knocked off the apron by Kazarian.

    Fish ends up tagging in Rowe, who’s a house of fire on the Kingdom. This ends up leading to everyone getting involved. Wild exchanges where everyone takes turns hitting double teams on everyone else. Ends up with Taven all by himself inside the ring and takes out everyone with a dive outside the ring. This sets up a Hanson cannonball from the top that takes out everyone, drawing another HOLY $hit chant.

    Back in the ring, the Kingdom hit a double superkick onto Rowe, followed by splash from Taven but that only gets a two. This spurs Cole to leave commentary but instead of helping his teammates, he heads to the back.

    Chasing the Dragon by ReDRagon onto Rowe only gets a two and everyone’s in the ring again. Ends up with War Machine standing tall in the centre after taking out all three other teams. War Machine hit the Path of Resistance, setting up a powerslam by Rowe into a splash by Rowe. Daniels then takes out both War Machine members with belt shots and goes after Maria but he’s thwarted.

    Kingdom get a near fall after a double-team on O’Reilly. Fish makes the save after a Hail Mary attempt. Double-team by ReDRagon onto Taven gets a near fall but it’s broken up by Daniels. Celebrity Rehab by the champs onto Bobby Fish, completely with a tights pull by Kazarian gets the win.

    WINNERS AND STILL ROH WORLD TAG TEAM CHAMPIONS: THE ADDICTION by pinfall

    Main Event for the ROH World Heavyweight Championship
    “Mr ROH” Roderick Strong vs World Champion Jay Lethal w/Truth Martini, Donovan Dijak & J Diesel

    Nigel McGuinness joins the commentary booth for the main event. Lethal mentioned in the pre-match video package that no ROH World champion has ever lost his first title defence. They do adhere to the Code of Honor without incident to start.

    They start out with a nice grappling exchange with neither guy getting the advantage. Test of strength follows and Roddy ends up getting the better out of it, including a pinfall attempt. They’re working a very slow pace so this should be a long one. They did work a 30 minute draw on TV a couple of months ago.

    Fans getting on J Diesel with the Baby-tista chants. Duelling Lets Go Roddy/Lets Go Lethal chants early on as well. Lethal drops hard forearms onto Strong for a series of one counts in a unique spot. This starts up LE-THAL SUCKS (or possibly ROCKS) to the New Day Sucks cadence. Lethal tries an upside down surfboard to weaken Strong’s knees and back but Strong makes the ropes.

    Strong ends up with the advantage and hits a butterfly suplex but is selling the back and knees from the earlier submission attempt. They end up outside the ring with Strong in control and he hits a series of Ric Flair chops on Lethal against one of the ring barriers. He follows up by throwing Lethal in the air and dropping him onto one of the barriers throat first.

    Strong breaks out a Tully Blanchard slingshot suplex for a two count. Strong works over the back of Lethal with a couple of whacky submission moves but Lethal hits an enziguri out of nowhere to take control. Three straight bodyslams in the center of the ring by Lethal and he follows up by dropping a forearm but doesn’t cover. Somewhere in this, Strong was cut on the forehead, likely hardway.

    Lethal then hits 13 punches in the corner, which the fans count along with but Strong leaps out of it and takes Lethal down with a clothesline, followed by a side suplex. Lethal tried to escape but Strong grabs him on the way out and stretched him out over the ropes before he had to break it up. Lethal finally does roll out and then snaps Strong’s necks on the ropes when he tries to follow.

    Lethal with a modified sleeper on Strong but Strong fights out of it. Lethal goes for a Jay Driller but Strong powers out with a back body drop. Strong goes for the double gut buster but misses. Lethal Combination from Lethal only gets a two as a follow-up.

    Strong rolls out but Dijak knocks him down with a cheap shot, which the ref missed. Strong back in the ring and tries a sunset flip off the ropes but Lethal blocks it and throws him back outside. Dijak goes after Strong again but Nigel is trying to get the ref’s attention. They end up back in the ring with Lethal in control and he puts on a rear chin luck.

    Strong takes control with a series of chops in the corner onto Lethal and hits a running power slam for a two count. Strong with another submission attempt which seems almost an attempt as resting for the next series of moves. Lethal fights out but eats a sweet dropkick from Strong, which gets a two count.

    Crowd really starting to get behind Strong but they get quiet when Strong goes for another submission, a body scissors. Lethal ends up slipping out and a submission attempts of his but they quickly end up back on their feet. Nice insight from Nigel when he explains that often when someone goes for a two, they don’t think they’re going win but they’re just trying to make their opponent expend some energy.

    Strong ends up outside the ring and again Dijak interferes but it’s missed again by the ref. Lethal follows him out and goes for a bodyslam but Strong counters with a DDT onto the matt outsde the ring.

    Back in the ring and Strong hits a dropkick for a two. Lethal rolls out of the ring this time. Strong follows him out and they get into a chopping match. Strong ends up pushing Lethal head-first into one of the barricades. Strong then throws Lethal back in to break up the 20 count. Strong about to hit a running charge but Dijak holds his leg from the outside, again missed by the ref. He does break free and makes the charge but Lethal got his feet up.

    Again Lethal tosses Strong outside the ring and then goes for the running dive but Strong steps out of the way and Lethal flies into the barrier. Strong then takes out Lethal, Dijak and Diesel with a dive over the top. Strong to his feet first and tries to whip Lethal into a barrier but Lethal reverses. He goes into the ring to break up the 20 count but that allows Strong to recover.

    Strong hits the double-knee gutbuster in the ring for a near three. Strong gets another two off of a vertical suplex. Strong sets Lethal up on the turnbuckles but Lethal fights him off. Strong back on him and tries for a superplex but blocked by Lethal. Lethal knocks him off again. Lethal hits a Tornado DDT off the top and rolls into a guillotine attempt but Strong gets out.

    Lethal brings Strong to the mat by trying to choke him out with wrist tape but the ref notices and makes him break. Lethal snaps Strong’s neck in the ropes again and he rolls outside. Lethal follows and whips Strong into the barricade. Lethal then stalking Strong around ringside, hitting him with chops the whole way. Strong answers with one of his own, allowing him to roll back in the ring.

    Lethal gets Strong outside the ring and hits the Trifecta (three straight dives outside the ring) and Martini does a victory lap. Both guys are down outside the ring. Both take until the count hits 19 before coming into the ring after that. Lethal hits a belly to back suplex for a two and then goes for a cross-face. Strong makes the ropes to break it up.

    Lethal with a series of Ric Flair chops in the corners and Nigel points out this his chest is starting to blister up from all the chops. In fact it looks like he might even be bleeding on the chest. Strong eventually starts no-selling the chops and Lethal hits harder and faster, almost Kobashi-style. This fires up Strong and he does the same, knocking Lethal to the canvas after a rapid fire sequence.

    Strong back body-drops Lethal outside the ring over the top rope. Lethal takes most of the 20 count to get back in. Lethal goes for the Lethal Injection but Strong counters with a Urinage. Strong with a Walls of Jericho in the centre and then into the Boston Crap. Lethal heavily teasing a tap before finally making the ropes.

    Strong follows up with more chops in the corner. At this point, it looks like Strong may have lost 15 lbs since the match started. Strong sets him up in the corner again, setting up for a Superplex. Lethal knocks him off the turnbuckles again. Lethal with the Hail to the King elbowdrop but only gets a two. Lethal Combination into a Koji Clutch by Lethal. Strong rolls him over and gets a two count, forcing Lethal to release the hold.

    Lethal picks up the Book of Truth and tries to use it but Strong blocks it. Strong with a double gut buster attempt Lethal grabs the book and nails Strong with it for an apparent 3 but Strong kicks out. Fans thought that was a finish.

    Match has to be getting close to an hour now, not sure if there’s a time limit. Strong drops Lethal back-first onto the apron and then covers him for a near-three. Another THIS IS AWESOME chant, which is kind of redundant at this point. Lethal tries the Lethal Injection but Strong back out of the way and charges Lethal. Lethal sees that and nails him with a hard superkick.

    Lethal ends up on the turnbuckles and again Strong sets up for a Superplex, hitting it this time. Backbreak by Strong, followed by a Sick Kick and Lethal kicks out. That felt like it shold’ve been the finish but the fans going nuts at this point. Nigel audibly cheering on Strong at this point. Strong tries for two straight suplexes. Lethal with a Lethal Injection but Strong kicks out. Lethal screaming at the ref and falls to the mat. Both guys down and Martini is losing it at ringside.

    Lethal to his feet first and acting like he’s going to be sick. Strong to his feet as well and they’re trading chops and punches. Both guys down from simultaneous shots. Strong hits two jumping knees to Lethal’s head. Lethal hits a superkick and the bell rings. Strong hits a Sick kick  but the ref is talking to the timekeeper. Fans chanting FIVE MORE MINUTES but Bobby Cruz announces that it’s a time limit draw.

    Fans chanting THANK YOU BOTH now as Martini comes in to attend to Lethal. MATCH OF THE YEAR chants start up and it very well may be. Both guys are down with refs attending to the them as the show closes.

    NO WINNER – MATCH IS A 60 MINUTE DRAW

    Kelly closes the show by calling it the greatest match in ROH history. Hard to argue.

  • Wrestling: In pro wrestling, defense doesn’t win championships

    By Ben Miller for WrestlingObserver.com

    When you’re at the bar of a popular seafood restaurant in Koreatown, it takes something to grab your attention. You come for the happy hour specials and the dollar oysters. You stay for the bevy of young Korean singles (not for me, I’m happily committed) and the vibe.

    The bar at the Koreatown restaurant has a television behind it, but unless there’s a big game going, it’s just background noise. Maybe SportsCenter or maybe some basketball game, but in the sports wasteland of July, there wasn’t supposed to be anything keeping anyone’s attention from a peak happy hour crowd on a Saturday night.

    Then, Jordan Burroughs came on. He’s an American wrestling for Gold at the Pan-Am games and ESPN was about to show his match. My friend (a non-wrestling fan who hates boxing and thinks that MMA is disgusting) needed prompting, but when you’re a sports fan and you’re told that a freak is about to compete, that’s enough.

    Burroughs did not disappoint. Of course he won a gold (scored an 11-0 victory via “Great Superiority” using Freestyle wrestling arcane scoring system), but that wasn’t the point. A non-wrestling fan barely cares about gold medals, yet my friend watched the entire match intently. He watched in part because Burroughs is, in fact, a freak. And freaks — like Jon Jones or Rey Misterio, Jr. in his prime — are naturally interesting.

    There was only one comment from the non-wrestling fan while watching Burroughs wrestle: “The American guy just plays defense.” Scoring eleven points in a wrestling match may seem like lots of offense, but my friend was correct. Burroughs spent most of the match — especially the early part — using his superior strength, balance, athleticism and gamesmanship to keep the Ecuadorian at bay. It’s not that Burroughs was afraid to go forward, but airtight defense was clearly essential to his game.

    Sports fans know defense because it’s everywhere in sports. The Golden State Warriors and the Cleveland Cavaliers played the best defense in basketball, and that’s the main reason they met in the NBA Finals.  UFC interim featherweight champion Conor McGregor played brilliant guard defense against Chad Mendes, and then whipped his ass when the time was right. There are always exceptions to any rule, but the rule is clear: defense wins championships.

    Except in pro wrestling where there is no longer any defense.

    Pro wrestling may not be a sport, but it thrives when its concepts are taken from the sports of its time. The 70s were a wild, experimental decade while the 80s were a time of crass ambition. In both decades, wrestling followed suit accordingly. There was no shame when the United States dominated a heavily boycotted Olympics in 1984 and there was no shame when Hulk Hogan teamed up with a muscled up actor a year later.

    In recent years, wrestling has certainly gotten further away from the concept of being a fake sport, both for good and for bad. Pro wrestling promoted as a sport (complete with modern accoutrements like lengthy pre-game shows, instant replay for referees and countless self-satisfied commentators reciting statistics) would be a turn off for some and a refreshing change for others. But whether a fan enjoys real sports or not, certain traits of real sports make wrestling more enjoyable.

    Real sports and wrestling both thrive when antagonism is strong.  McGregor fans celebrated his January 2015 demolition of Dennis Siver, but their reaction was nothing compared to the unbridled joy that was unleashed when he beat Mendes. Winning a championship was part of that, but the way he won it mattered. Conor overcame a perilous situation and he had to play great defense to do it. Mendes, an accomplished wrestler, was on top of him for several minutes at a time, but Conor kept his received damage to a minimum.

    All the while, suspense was building in the audience. Can Conor last? How can Conor get out of this? If he does, will he have the energy to overcome? When Conor answered those questions emphatically, the audience’s reaction was a joy that surpassed mere accomplishment. It was heightened by what Conor had to overcome.

    Modern pro wrestling has elevated false finishes and highspots above defense. In the moment, that change often feels good. The crowd popped for all of the near falls in the John Cena vs. Kevin Owens match at WWE Battleground, just as the crowd at the American Legion Post in Reseda, CA, will during the Young Bucks vs. Angelico/Jack Evans main event at Friday’s PWG show. It will be fun and the fans will love it, at least in the moment.

    For an indy promotion to offer a fun style makes sense. PWG shows are about the fans and their relationship with the wrestlers more than anything else. It’s more akin to a Yo La Tengo concert than a pro wrestling event. We love the promotion and the wrestlers and they love putting on a show. And for a promotion whose stated goal is to produce enjoyable wrestling at the local level, it’s perfect.

    WWE (along with TNA, New Japan, ROH and a few others), however, has larger ambitions. They want to be as big as possible. And while the false finish-heavy style gets great reviews, it limits how big the audience can get. Drawing big requires archetypal stories, powerful antagonism and charismatic babyfaces. The antagonism just can’t build to the level it needs to be when nobody plays defense and everyone kicks out of everyone’s finishing move.

    Freestyle wrestling has the benefit of being small, because when you’re small time, nobody takes shortcuts. There aren’t masses of impressionable young boys watching Burroughs and dreaming that they will become like him. Status and power don’t come from being a world class freestyle wrestler, and thus dreamers stay away. The few who do idolize Burroughs are left to learn the fundamentals of the craft.

    Pro wrestling is so popular that it attracts dreamers. Dreamers want to create moments, but they often attempt reverse engineering to do so. They see Misawa’s epic Budokan Hall matches with Kawada and they want the pop that those nearfalls created. They learn how to get finishers over and how to fit that moment into a match, but they overlook what wrestling is at its core: a fake sport. And sports require defense. And defense is no fun in the moment. So, defense goes and an emptier match is what’s left.

    All sports and all forms of entertainment must evolve. This is not a grouchy treatise wishing for a day that has passed. I well remember the bad old days of endless restholds and lumbering, waterlogged oafs wheezing their way around the ring. There must, however, be some kind of happy medium. And I hope that one of the great young wrestlers currently populating NXT, PWG or some other promotion, experiments with adding some defense to the story. It has the power to make the finished product championship-caliber.

  • VIDEO: UFC Chicago Q&A with CM Punk

    Following today’s UFC weigh-ins is the UFC Fight Club Q&A session with UFC fighter and former WWE Champion CM Punk from his hometown of Chicago. It is scheduled to begin at approximately 5:45 PM eastern time.

  • On this day in pro wrestling history (July 24): Kurt Angle wins Memphis title, Sherri Martel wins WWF title from Moolah, Lance Storm

    By Brian Hoops, WrestlingObserver.com

    1941 – In Kansas City, Kansas; Dorv Roche beat Orville Brown in 2 of 3 falls. Also, Steve Brody and Jack Hader wrestled to a 60 minute draw with falls tied 1-1.

    1947 – In Kansas City, Kansas; for the MWA Title, Orville Brown beat Tug Carlson 2 falls 1 to retain the title. Also, Cardiff Giant beat Ronnie Etchison and Sailor Fred Blassie drew Jack Hader in 30 minutes.

    1956 – Jesse James defeated Frank Jares for the NWA Southern Junior Heavyweight Title in Nashville, Tennessee

    1962 – In Minneapolis, MN; AWA Champion Mr M went to a 60 minute draw with Doug Gilbert, Ilio DiPaolo beat Tiny Mills and Moose Evans beat Bill Wright

    1964 – In Denver, Colorado; Wilbur Snyder beat The Sheik and Jack Lanza beat Mad Dog Vachon.

    1965 – In Minneapolis, MN; The Crusher & Verne Gagne beat Larry Hennig & Harley Race to win AWA tag team title. Also on the card, Tex McKenzie beat Chris Markoff, Junior Heavyweight Champion Danny Hodge beat Gene Anderson, Eddie Sharkey beat Paul Caruso and Kenny Jay beat Jose Quintero. Attendance was 8,156

    1969 – In Winnipeg; AWA Tag Team Champions Dick The Bruiser & The Crusher beat Mad Dog Vachon & Butcher Vachon in 2 out of 3 falls, Flying Redheads Red Bastien & Billy Red Lyons beat Larry Hennig & Dr. X in 2 out of 3 falls and Bill Watts beat Rene Goulet.

    1970 – Nick Bockwinkel defeated Paul DeMarco to win the Georgia Heavyweight Title in Atlanta, Georgia.

    1971 – In Minneapolis, MN; in a non title, Nick Bockwinkel beat AWA Champion Verne Gagne (sub Hercules Cortez. Cortez died the previous night in a car accident). Billy Robinson beat Edouard Carpentier, Bull Bullinski & Jean Ferre (Andre The Giant) beat Larry Hennig & Lars Anderson in 2 out of 3 falls, Ray Stevens beat Jose Betancourt (sub Red Bastien) and Vivian Vachon beat Kay Noble. Attendance was 6,123.

    1972 – In Orlando, Florida; Buddy Colt & Phil Robley beat Don Curtis & Eddie Graham, Southern Champion Zodiac beat Jerry Brisco, Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens beat Johnny Walker & Louie Tillet and Mike Graham beat Taurus

    1977 – Rocky Johnson defeated WWWF World Champion Superstar Billy Graham in a non-title match in Orlando, Florida.

    1981 – In Houston, Texas; AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel drew Tony Atlas

    1982 – Carlos Colon defeated Abdullah The Butcher for the WWC World Heavyweight Title in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

    1983 – Magnum T.A. & Hacksaw Duggan defeated Ted DiBiase & Mr. Olympis for the Mid South Tag Team Title in Tulsa, Oklahoma; Sgt. Slaughter defeated Canadian Heavyweight Champion Angelo Mosca to win the title in Toronto, Ontario

    1987 – Sherri Martel defeated WWF Women’s Champion the Fabulous Moolah in Houston, Texas to win the title; In Milwaukee, Wisconsin; AWA Champion Curt Hennig beat Nick Bockwinkel, Greg Gagne beat Larry Zbyszko, AWA Tag team Champions Soldat Ustinov & Boris Zhukov beat DJ Peterson & Wahoo McDaniel by dq and Kevin Kelly beat Mitch Snow

    1996 – Rick & Scott Steiner defeated WCW World Tag Team Champions Harlem Heat to win the titles in Cincinnati, Ohio.

    1999 – Kurt Angle defeated J.R. Smooth in Memphis, Tennessee, for the Memphis Power Pro
    Wrestling Heavyweight Title

    2000 – Lance Storm defeated Big Vito in Cleveland, Ohio for the WCW Hardcore Championship

    2005 – Road Warrior Animal and Heidenreich defeated Joey Mercury and Johnny Nitro to win the WWE Tag Team Championships.

    2009 – At the ROH Death Before Dishonor show in Chicago, Illinois; Kevin Steen and Lance Storm defeated Davey Richards and Chris Hero and ROH Champion Austin Aries defeated Tyler
    Black, Nigel McGuiness and Jerry Lynn to retain the title.

  • UFC On FOX 16: Dillashaw vs. Barao 2 weigh-in results and live video

    Welcome to WrestlingObserver.com’s live coverage of the UFC On FOX 16: Dillashaw vs. Barao 2 weigh-ins from the United Center in Chicago, Illinois kicking off at 4 PM eastern time. The event airs on Saturday on FOX at 8 PM eastern time. Preliminary card action kicks off on UFC Fight Pass at 4:15 PM eastern time before moving over to FOX at 6 PM eastern time. This marks the first title fight on network television since UFC On FOX 9 in December 2013.

    The event is headlined by UFC Bantamweight Champion T.J. Dillashaw defending the championship against the man he defeated for it at UFC 173 in May 2014, former champion Renan Barao. Unlike last time, Dillashaw enters this fight as the favorite to retain, but a win by Barao could set up a trilogy bout. The co-main event is a title eliminator bout in the UFC women’s bantamweight division as former Strikeforce champion Miesha Tate takes on rising contender Jessica Eye. Also on the main card is a pair of exciting lightweight match-ups as Edson Barboza takes on Paul Felder, and Joe Lauzon squares off with Takanori Gomi.

    Barao missed weight on the first try by 1/2 pound.  Removed the shorts and made weight!  Otherwise a very uneventful weigh-in.

    MAIN CARD (FOX- 8 PM ET/5 PM PT):

    T.J. Dillashaw (135) vs. Renan Barao (135) – UFC Bantamweight Championship
    Miesha Tate (135.5) vs. Jessica Eye (136)
    Edson Barboza (155) vs. Paul Felder (155.5)
    Joe Lauzon (155.5) vs. Takanori Gomi (155.5)

    PRELIMINARY CARD (FOX- 6 PM ET/3 PM PT):

    Gian Villante (205) vs. Tom Lawlor (203)
    Jim Miller (155) vs. Danny Castillo (155.5)
    Kenny Robertson (170) vs. Ben Saunders (170.5)
    Eddie Wineland (136) vs. Bryan Caraway (135.5)

    PRELIMINARY CARD (UFC FIGHT PASS- 4:15 PM ET/1:15 PM PT):

    Daron Cruickshank (155) vs. James Krause (155.5)
    Ramsey Nijem (156) vs. Andrew Holbrook (155.5)
    Jessamyn Duke (135.5) vs. Elizabeth Phillips (135)
    Zak Cummings (170.5) vs. Dominique Steele (170.5) 

  • WWE Total Divas season 4, episode 3 recap: Brie Bella’s fertility, Nattie speech

    By Ryan Pike for WrestlingObserver.com

    It’s WrestleMania Weekend, just like last week!

    Everyone Continues To Dislike Eva Marie

    Eva Marie and Nikki have a sit-down chat about everything to clear the air regarding the tension in the locker room. Nikki tries to be diplomatic – in contrast to Brie, who declares she’s “done with Eva” – but once Eva says she’s coming for the Divas Title in a short while, Nikki can’t contain her bemusement and also declares herself to be done with Eva.

    Nattie Gives A Speech

    Nattie introduces Alundra Blayze at the Hall of Fame. Her speech is edited beforehand by WWE producers, who trim it down and remove a reference to Arn Anderson that they feel nobody would get. Nattie is unimpressed but does a great speech anyway.

    The WrestleMania Tag Match

    The Bellas face Paige and AJ Lee at WrestleMania. AJ is briefly mentioned but never really discussed heavily, and everything focuses on making contrasts between how respectful and hard-working Paige is (compared to Eva Marie) and Nikki’s pride in seeing how well the Divas are represented at the big show.

    In a nice moment, Paige is super-emotional after her match – claiming with tears streaming down her face that it was a dream come true – and the Divas locker room all group-hug her. Afterwards, Brie tells her sister that she wants to stay. We also get some clips from the pre-show Tag Team Title match featuring Nattie and Naomi, including Naomi’s big dive over the top rope to the floor.

    Brie & Bryan Can Have Babies

    Also factoring into Brie’s decision is a trip to their fertility doctor, who informs them that they are super-fertile. Since she feels she can become a mom whenever she wants now, she decides to stick around in WWE.

    Three weeks without John Cena, World’s Most Reasonable Man. Oddly, also three weeks without any references to John Cena on the show.