Category: Post Type article

  • WWE increases subscribers overall but domestic down

    WWE just announced that there were 1,824,000 subscribers to the network as of today, the day after WrestleMania.

    That number sounds fantastic on the surface, and isn’t necessarily negative, but of that, 370,000 ordered the month for free and all growth from last year was from adding new international markets, as the number of paid domestic subscribers was actually slightly down from the day after WrestleMania last year.

    The real key will be the retention rate from those 370,000 free subscribers and comparison with last year.

    They expect that with the free subscribers expiring and turning into paid subscribers at the same rate as usual, that the free month will lead to an average of 1,480,000 to 1,550,000 subscribers during the second quarter, an increase of from 1,233,000 last year.

    George Barrios in the conference call noted that because of the free offer, that comparisons of paid vs. unpaid would be misleading and the difference after how many of this group transforms into paid after the one month trial.

    They also said that overall, they are expecting first quarter OIBDA of $19 million this year and talked about a $70 million to $75 million range for this year.  That figure would get profitability back in the range of where it was before the network was launched.

    Paid subscribers as of today are 1,109,000 listed in the U.S., down from 1,123,000 listed in the U.S. last year.  Keep in mind that the difference is a lot of outside the U.S. subscribers in foreign countries were listed as U.S. last year, so true U.S. numbers are likely up.

    International paid went from 192,000 to 345,000.

    Of the free subscribers, 281,000 are listed as U.S and 89,000 are listed as outside the U.S.

    The WWE averaged 1.29 million paid subscribers in the first quarter of 2016, up from 927,000 last year, so there is significant year-over-year growth, but because of the ease of getting Mania free, the paid growth for day after Mania isn’t as significant.

    Had they not offered WrestleMania free, no doubt paid would be significantly higher, but the question is where paid is one month from now before you can evaluate whether this was a success or not.

  • Daily pro wrestling history (04/04): Jack & Jerry Brisco win NWA World Tag Team Titles

    1945

    Des Moines, Iowa:
    – Earl Wampler beat Ken Fenelon to capture the Iowa State Heavyweight Title 

    1965

    St. Paul, Minnesota:
    – AWA Tag Team Champions Larry Hennig & Harley Race beat Mighty Igor Vodik & Ivan Kalmikoff
    – Crusher beat Bob Geigel 
    – Billy Red Cloud beat Pampero Firpo 
    – Reggie Parks beat Jack Pesek
    – Rene Goulet beat Bob Boyer

    1969 

    Atlanta, Georgia:
    – The Assassins (Jody Hamilton & Tom Renesto) defeated El Mongol & Louie Tillet in a tournament final to win the NWA
    Georgia Tag Team Titles

    1974

    Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada:
    – No dq Match: AWA Tag Team Champions Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens beat The Crusher & Mad Dog Vachon 
    – Billy Graham beat Red Bastien
    – Billy Robinson beat Baron Von Raschke dq 
    – Superstar Billy Graham beat Red Bastien 
    – Horst Hoffman beat Ken Patera
    – Geoff Portz drew Greg Gagne 15:00
    – Ivan Putski beat Moose Morowski 

    1983

    Memphis, Tennessee: 
    – The Moondogs defeated the Fabulous Ones to win the Southern Tag Team Titles 
    – AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel beat Jerry Lawler dq
    – Southern Champion Bill Dundee beat Terry Taylor
    – Masks at Stake: Galaxians beat Rock & Roll Express
    – Mask & Title vs $1,000: Mid American Champion Stagger Lee beat Plowboy Frazier
    – Bruise Brothers beat Dutch Mantel & Steve O
    – Bobby Eaton drew Ace of Spades
    – Duke Myers beat Bobby Fulton
    – Carl Fergie beat Sonny King dq

    1984 

    Spartanburg, South Carolina:
    – Jack & Jerry Brisco defeated Wahoo McDaniel & Mark Youngblood for the NWA World Tag Team Titles

    1988

    Memphis, Tennessee:
    – Stretcher Match: AWA Champion Curt Hennig beat Jerry Lawler
    – Doug Gilbert & Gary Young beat Jeff Jarrett & Billy Travis
    – AWA Tag Team Champions Badd Company Pat Tanaka & Paul Diamond beat Mighty Yankees
    – Eddie Marlin beat Tommy Gilbert
    – CWA Champion Maxx Payne beat Scott Steiner
    – Don Bruise beat Scott Levy
    – Brickhouse Brown beat Tom Brandi

    1993 

    Wrestlemania IX: Las Vegas, Nevada:
    – Yokozuna, with Mr. Fuji pinned Bret Hart to win the WWF championship 
    – Yokozune lost the title to Hulk Hogan in an impromptu match
    – Tatanka with Sherri Martel defeated WWF Intercontinental champion Shawn Michaels with Luna Vachon via DQ
    – The Steiner Brothers defeated The Headshrinkers 
    – Doink the Clown (Matt Borne) pinned Crush (Bryan Adams)
    – Razor Ramon pinned Bob Backlund
    – WWF Tag Team champions Money, Inc. (Ted DiBiase & Irwin R. Schyster) defeated Hulk Hogan and Brutus Beefcake by DQ
    – Lex Luger pinned Mr. Perfect Curt Hennig 
    – The Undertaker defeated Giant Gonzales via DQ

    1994 

    Hiroshima, Japan:
    – Tatsumi Fujinami defeated Shinya Hashimoto for the IWGP Heavyweight Title 

    1998 

    Buffalo, New York:
    – Rob Van Dam defeated Bam Bam Bigelow for the ECW World Television Title 

    Tokyo, Japan:
    – Tatsumi Fujinami defeated Kensuke Sasaki for the IWGP Heavyweight Title 

    2014 

    ROH Supercard of Honor: New Orleans, Louisiana:
    – Jay Lethal won the ROH TV Title from Tomasso Ciampa
    – Michael Bennett (with Maria Kanellis) defeated Mark Briscoe in a No DQ match

    DGUSA Open the Freedom Gate: New Orleans, Louisiana:
    – Richochet defeated Johnny Gargano to win the Open The Freedom Gate Title
    – Rich Swann defeated Biff Busick
    – Trent Baretta defeated Low Ki
    – Masato Tanaka beat Chris Hero
    – Michael Elgin defeated Kevin Steen
    – ROH Champion Adam Cole defeated Jay Briscoe in a Ladder War match

  • WWE WrestleMania 32 Fan Feedback

    Hey Dave,

    Thumbs: Down

    Best: Sasha/Becky/Charlotte

    Worst: Triple H/Reigns

    Well, where do I start? Six hours is definitely way too long for a WWE show – even if some of the questionable, odds-defying booking choices were ignored. Zack Ryder new IC champ after years of being forgotten? Charlotte retaining when they’re rebranding the Womens’ division? Building up a historic angle for WrestleMania, to end with… Undertaker winning and not even a hint of “what happens next”?

    The main event was interminable – this show did not need to be five hours long (well, seven if you count the pre-show). So many questionable booking decisions, and countless examples of the company damn near killing their full time guys at the expense of a pop for the returning stars. As good as Austin, Foley, Rock and Michaels are, they’re not going to be full-time again, and WWE badly hurt a good chunk of their roster to get “WrestleMania Moments”.

    Thank God this show was only $9.99 on the Network – if I’d paid anything close to standard PPV prices, I’d be angry and tired, as opposed to just tired right now.

    How can this be the same company that produced a blow-away show like NXT on Friday night? It’s almost like the people in charge of the main show are stuck in a timewarp, and are hell bent on alienating their hardcore fan base. 101,763 of them (by their count) are very likely to be counting themselves amongst the newly-alienated, going by the reactions to that main event.

    I’m not going to go overboard and say “Cancel WWE Network” or anything like that, but for a company that was able to give themselves a shot in the arm tonight, they’ve just ensured that their course remains set for the toilet.

    Ian Hamilton

    Thumbs up

    Best match: Charlotte/Sasha/Becky

    Worst match: Battle Royal

    Random comments: It amazes me that even with the non-existent hype and occasionally insultingly stupid storylines that WWE can almost always pull it together at WrestleMania time and put together a great show. I watched the entire 6+ hours and never got bored… I could see a case being made for match of the night for the Woman’s Title match, IC ladder match, Ambrose/Lesnar and even the Hell in a Cell match… Only big criticism: HHH/Reigns shouldn’t have gone on last. It was a flat end to an otherwise very entertaining show.

    Nick Randall
    Online subscriber

    Thumbs down.

    Best Match: Sasha Banks vs. Charlotte vs. Becky Lynch

    Worst Match: Diva’s 10 Woman Tag

    An okay wrestling show marred by horrible booking decisions up and down the card. The show started off great, with an excellent ladder match, a callback to Steen vs. Generico that we all wanted to see, and a legitimate feel good moment in Ryder winning, then it fell off a cliff like no show ever has before. We’ve all been saying for years how they need to start pushing new people and freshening up the product as a whole, and there was a real opportunity to do just that tonight, and it was squandered at an almost embarrassing level. 

    A.J. Styles was not helped, The New Day and Wyatt Family were arguably buried, and what should have been a star making performance for Dean Ambrose was a complete dud. Not letting Sasha Banks run with the ball when it is clear how incredibly over she was is also nothing short of baffling.

    By far the most disappointing thing on the entire show was the Ambrose vs. Brock match. Not only did Dean not win, but the match was a completely bland, and came off to me as nothing but a glorified squash. Considering who was in this match and the stage that it was contested on, I was expecting much more. More big spots, a more competitive battle, and more violence. What a waste of both guys. 

    And the Reigns winning clean need not be commented on. Everything that can and should be said has already been. I also have to say, the six and a half hour runtime for this show was absolutely brutal. It was an experiment that shouldn’t be tried again. 

    So basically what the show boils down to is that nobody got over and nothing changes. At least we’ll always have the Shane McMahon dive. 

    -Ryan Niepagen

    Bloomington, IL

    Thumbs way down

    Best Match: Women’s Three Way
    Worst Match: Reigns vs HHH

    A terrible show that went on forever. Andre Battle Royal was boring. Shane vs Taker was bad and boring with one spot of note that went for thirty minutes. Ambrose vs Lesnar was a huge disappointment.

    Zack Ryder winning was the emotional high point, I guess? The Rock vs Erick Rowan might have been the fourth best match on the show.

    Fred Morlan

    Good:

    -the women’s title match: they feel like the only thing from this show besides Baron Corbin, Zack Ryder, and Sami Zayn that were elevated in a positive way, Match of the Night definitely

    -the ladder match: spotfests for the sake of spotfests are not my thing, but they did it well; Zayn and Owens both felt like the 2 biggest stars in the match, Ryder winning the match is a shock in a nice way but feels 4 years too late. Does WWE feel so bad about him tag teaming with Mojo Rawley in NXT they gave him this?

    Bad:

    -Styles-Jericho: the match just wasn’t that awesome thing. I don’t get Jericho winning if he’s leaving in a couple months like he always does unless he’s going to be in a title match with Reigns pre-Summerslam . The finish from the camera angle just looked botched like Jericho never even touched Styles as he came off the top rope.

    -New Day-League of Nations: dead crowd, was hard to care

    -Battle Royal: not really bad, just it’s a battle royal, it’s late in the show, and 2 of your last 4 guys are Darren Young and Bo Dallas it’s hard to feel excited; Shaq was a neat surprise; I guess Fandango and Damien Sandow are getting future endeavored soon, nice to see the match buildup a new guy at least in Corbin

    Ugly:

    -Lesnar-Ambrose: one wrestler in this match used only his hands, power, and technique to wrestle, refusing to ever use any of the weapons laying around. The other wrestler could only do offense with the aid of weapons and cheap tricks, including trying a chainsaw to attempt dismemberment I guess. So, which one was the babyface? This match was so psychologically screwed up. Lesnar was the babyface from how they booked it. Ambrose is down in the midcard now, or maybe a Jericho feud.

    -Undertaker-Shane: the Undertaker match at Mania has become a cliche, and this match reviled in them. Shane’s “come at me” hands is a ripoff of Michaels’ throatslash on his knees. The match itself was bad pre-Huge Spot. Shane’s decent for what he is but he shouldn’t be in one of the top 2 matches at Wrestlemania. But his offense his bad, him putting Undertaker in trouble or kickout of major spots was laughable considering Undertaker’s past matches and the opponents he fought. The Huge Spot was just scary. Didn’t Vince tell Mick Foley once he never wanted to see that again?

    -Reigns-Hunter: first, was this match no DQ or not? Roman is kind of mechanically clumsy as John Cena is, but he doesn’t have close to Cena’s charisma to compensate; match was just plodding although not near as bad as Undertaker and Shane, but just felt draining the longer they went after 11pm, highlight of the match was Stephanie getting speared; hey, WWE has their champ, good luck with him on top…

    Ryan Day

    Thumbs down
    Best match: Triple threat for the women’s title
    Worst match: Shane McMahon v. The Undertaker

    About three or four pretty good wrestling matches in a four plus hour event isn’t quite enough.  I don’t think there is a single classic match or promo on this show.  The table stunt in the Hell in a Cell match will be remembered for a long time, but I don’t think that I will forget the 29 minutes of awful wrestling that surrounded it.  This would have been a very good B-ppv or network event, but only the nostalgia appearances made it feel like Wrestlemania.

    Casey Goldman

    Thumbs Down

    Best Match – None

    Worst Match – Reigns vs. HHH

    Dave,

         There was a time when I would get angry with a show like this, but I’m so used to the WWE way of booking now that I laugh.  AJ Styles losing makes no sense.  Zach Ryder winning the IC title came out of nowhere, yet again makes no sense.  The old guys destroying League of Nations makes your current guys look terrible, and the cheap nostalgia pop isn’t needed on this show.  And Shane didn’t need to take that bump off the cage for any reason whatsoever, it will be forgotten about no matter how cool it looked.
        The main event?  Well, the match itself was OK.  We all knew who was going to win, regardless of the early shocking outcomes tonight.  The muting of the boos and piping in of cheers comes across so poorly, and it was really obvious.  I’m sure more people will go more in depth, but I’m tired after this marathon show!  Let’s see what Raw brings tomorrow, but it looks to be more of the same old, same old.

    Mike Barton
    White Sulphur Springs, NY

    Thumbs Down

    Best Match: Sasha Banks vs. Becky Lynch vs. Charlotte

    Worst Match: Andre The Giant Battle Royal

    This was going to be a thumbs in the middle until the main event. WrestleMania used to feel the place where huge storylines ended and we got satisfying payoffs. Not this year. Apart from the women’s title match and possibly the IC title match, no match tonight felt like it was special, like it was a career highlight to them. Most of the feuds tonight either had a middle chapter that will continue it for weeks or months to come, or an unsatisfying finish. All the legends and celebrities appearances were perfunctory and served no real purpose. You could argue that the two people who left this PPV with the most momentum were Shane McMahon and Zack Ryder. Think about that.

    – The ladder match was pretty darn good, Zayn and Owens were the highlights. Ryder winning was a nice moment that came years too late.

    – AJ vs. Jericho was good, but I don’t even know if it was “very good”. Jericho and AJ just do not click together. Jericho has lost a half a step in terms of pace, but he continues to work like he hasn’t. There was some sloppiness and a stunning lack of reaction at times. Jericho is leeching the heat AJ brought with him to WWE, and the fact that their WrestleMania match ended with them just trading back a win for the fourth time is infuriating. End this feud.

    – New Day vs. The League of Nations was fine. The entrance was good. The legends post match was the most pointless waste of legends I’ve seen in quite awhile. If this was supposed to be a “big” segment, I no longer want to see big segments.

    – Lesnar vs. Ambrose was fine, but ended just when it felt like it was getting interesting. Brock doing almost nothing but german suplexes was once fantastically entertaining, but the more often he does it, the less novel it gets. Ambrose comes off like a complete chump, who even when he is allowed to use all the weapons he wants, as was his plan, is still beaten relatively easy.

    – Women’s three way was easily the best match of the night. A little sloppy and obviously heavily scripted, it was still the one match that felt like it was special to the wrestlers, Sasha in particular was bumping crazily and working 100 miles an hour. WWE did a good job of making it feel like a big deal with the new title, the entrances and the fireworks. The biggest disappointment was Sasha losing, as you could hear the crowd’s disappointment. Tonight was meant to be her night.

    – Undertaker vs. Shane was every gimmick match ever. Not very good but then Shane does an insane bump and everyone leaves not remembering anything else. This needed way more smoke and mirrors and way less trading of submissions and horrible Shane punches.

    – Battle Royal went way too long for a show that went this long. If this leads to a Corbin/Kane feud, help me God.

    – Rock/Cena segment was just there, we’ve seen Rock do his thing a hundred times. It serves no real point, and like Lesnar, the novelty is wearing off.

    – Main event was horrible. The fact that HHH worked a near 30 minute match after six hours of wrestling, after Shane’s bump, the Rock and the return of Cena, and against an opponent he had to know was going to get booed out of the building, shows his hubris. There might have been a good 15 minute match in here, I don’t want to try and find it. 

    This was the weirdest WrestleMania of all time. Only IX comes close.

    Trevor Dame

    Thumbs down

    Best Match: Women’s Title Match

    Worst Match: Andre the Giant Battle Royal

    This show reminded me a lot of the late 90s WCW shows. Good undercard, but main events that failed to deliver. When you include the pre-show matches it was a nearly 6 hour show and it became tedious to watch at the end. It also felt like the wrong person won almost every match. There were a few bright spots, but in the end there weren’t many feel good moments. 

    Mike Ritschel

    Somerset, NJ

    Thumbs way down for Wrestlemania. Can’t remember a show this out of touch in awhile.

    Opener was Kalisto v. Ryback. Nothing RAW match. *

    Naomi & Lana & Tamina & Summer Rae & Emma v. Paige & Natalya & Brie Bella & Eva Marie & Alicia Fox. A lot less missed spots than the women’s title match, although they only had four minutes. Emma looked really nervous, Lana’s outfit was the only highlight.  1/2* The entire build was centered around Lana and Brie but they ignored it because they forgot I guess or they just wanted to bury someone they don’t like? I don’t know which is worse.

    Usos v. Dudleys. Not sure which act is staler. The constant praise of Mark LoMonaco has got to end. He’s a midcard heel who can’t work. Match was worse than. a RAW match. 1/2*

    Kevin Owens v. Sami Zayn v. Dolph Ziggler v. Stardust v. Miz v. Sin Cara. A few decent spots, the best of which was a half-nelson suplex on a ladder. Match was disjointed and we’ve seen it all before and it was nothing more than a car wreck then. Nothing special and the finish was three years late. ** Burying Zayn with two losses makes him the new Tyler Breeze I guess.

    A.J. Styles v. Chris Jericho. Match was actively bad like all their other matches. Jericho was never smooth in the ring but he’s a shell of himself and Styles seemed content to let him call the match. I hope Styles’ salary is worth this. A ton of missed spots and confusion, nothing looked sharp at all. Jericho looks like a retired rock star, which I guess he is minus the star. Dan Henderson has more life left in him than Jericho’s act. *3/4 They had something with the team of these two, and that RAW match with the New Day was the best thing in the storyline by far. Maybe they’ll go back to Y2AJ so Jericho can stand on the apron, something he can feasibly do at this point in his career.

    Kofi Kingston & Big E & Xavier Woods v. Sheamus & Rusev & Alberto Del Rio. Match had Woods going the whole way and he’s helpless in the ring. It was all just build up for the spot with Foley, Austin and Michaels which made absolutely no sense and wouldn’t Austin have been better in the Wyatt segment? This was proof there’s still heat between Austin and the people in charge. * We’re hours into the show and it’s all been awful to this point.

    Brock Lesnar v. Dean Ambrose. This was bad for a brawl and there was no wrestling at all to speak of. Lesnar did less than Scott Steiner during his WWE run. I actually was wishing Lesnar had gotten Wyatt instead. Ambrose should just move on with his life and frankly his goofy facials and average physique aren’t star material anyway. He’s a second rate Brian Pillman, and how many world titles did that guy win? DUD If they aren’t going to do anything with Lesnar, would he consider fighting Conor McGregor?

    Charlotte v. Sasha Banks v. Becky Lynch. I mean, it’s nice that some people are pretending this wasn’t a trainwreck with a million blown moves, but the worst part of this was the psychology. Two babyfaces lost to one heel, and by the way every single heel went over on the main card of this show except for Zack Ryder and who cares about him?  Sasha botched tons of stuff and almost killed herself doing a space flying tiger drop. Becky’s work is so sloppy, and the personalities of these three don’t mesh at all. ** Go back to Natalya as challenger.

    Undertaker v. Shane McMahon. Laughable and dull most of the way. Crowd barely got into the stunt show. It could have been worse, I suppose, but this deserved a lot more smoke and mirrors. Something so sad and depressing about this. -** Hopefully this is the swan song for everyone involved in this turgid angle.

    Battle Royal was terrible, too bad they couldn’t get Shaq to train as a wrestler.

    Rock segment was a mess. The material was so dated. He seemed like a sad old cursed albino man until it picked up with the Bray impression. Way too self-indulgent and it set up nothing for the future.

    HHH v. Roman Reigns. It was the best match of the night, although that’s not saying much. Don’t understand not doing an angle here of any kind. Just felt really flat, although the humorous Steph intro was probably the highlight of this awful show. *** I don’t know what you do with Reigns except months of Brock Lesnar matches, and that already feels like a dead pairing given it was a Mania main event not too long ago.

    They made a million different signings of talent recently and not one was on this show. They made no new stars at all here, and the show itself was wretched. Worst Wrestlemania since XI.
    Alex Carnevale

    Thumbs down.

    Best match: Women’s title.

    Worst match: HHH vs. Roman Reigns.

    This show merely showed that no matter how much good stuff is on a PPV, it can be destroyed by excess.

    There was no reason for the main show to go nearly five hours. No reason for the main event to go 27 minutes. No reason for Shane McMahon to risk himself with that jump from the top of the cage. And, as much as it pains me to say it, no reason for Rock to do a segment that really helped no one. 

    Much of the show was good. The IC match was a fun spot fest. The women’s match was strong. A.J.-Jericho was good, if the booking was dumbfounding.

    Brock Lesnar and Ambrose had a good match, but Ambrose was treated like a joke the whole feud, only to lose, clean, to Brock. I don’t see how he can be a top guy after losing so much.

    The UT-Shane cage match was an exercise in removal of disbelief, including, but not limited to, Shane’s jump. The spot, the whole match, and the feud, seemed unnecessary. Especially for a 46-year old man who’s not even a part timer.

    And the HHH-Reigns was just too long. It wasn’t horrible, but it dragged, with a result few wanted. This is the third time I remember HHH closing the show at WM and just hoping his match would end.

    Again, if the show was 3 1/2 hours, it’d be solid. But at 5 hours it was just too much.

    Keep up the great work.

    Zach Baker

    Thumbs down

    Best Match: Charlotte vs. Becky Lynch vs. Sasha Banks

    Worst Match: Andre Battle Royale

    One of the worst Wrestlemanias of all time. This was like a mid 90s WCW PPV with great undercard matches killed by terrible finishes, old part timers making the young full time guys look like geeks and a guy who everyone hates going over in the main event. The only thing that had a Wrestlemania type feel was the women’s triple threat and that got ruined by the wrong person winning. Nothing came close to even the 4th best match on the Takeover show. And no show should ever go almost 7 hours long.

    Josh Hayes

    Thumbs in the middle
    Best: Women’s championship match
    Worst: Battle Royal

    Much like many Cowboys games in AT&T Stadium, Wrestlemania faltered in the fourth quarter and turned a great show into an average one.

    I don’t understand how they have 30 writers on staff, and they come up with straightforward matches for Hell in the Cell (that was ripe for run-ins like the Sting match last year) and the main event (which sorely needed some juice).

    This show was cooking along nicely through the women’s match (albeit some questionable results — Ryder, Charlotte…JERICHO??), but the plodding pace of the Cell match hurt things, along with an anticlimactic finish.  WWE spent the last month saying their product sucked and Shane would make it better. Instead, it will continue to suck.

    We need something more in Rock appearances too besides “promo, heel interrupts, Rock mocks them and beats them up.”  The Cena part was new, but figured he had to show up at some point.

    I don’t know what the battle royal was supposed to be.  Good for Corbin to win it, but that should’ve been done last year with Itami when they actually had a good story to tell in his winning.

    What can you say about the main event, except Vince does what he wants and HHH now has 3 flat Mania main events on his resume.

    This show was just way too long for what was presented.  I put this on par with Mania 29, where it seems like they were more interested in putting on a “show” instead of a memorable wrestling card.  Hopefully things get back on track for Orlando next year.

    – Chris Hughes

    Hi Dave,

    My Mania review. Really did not enjoy the show after last years awesome Mania exceeded all expectations. Was tediously long and had a weird pace and pretty bad uneventful booking overall that set up no new storylines. The commentary – even though I should be used to it by now – was so terrible amd added nothing to any of the matches and often took them down a notch.

    Thumbs Down
    MOTN: Ladder Match
    Worst: Usos vs Dudleys

    – US Title is a joke now. Poor Cena, he built it up so well.

    – 10 Women Tag was a nice surprise. WWE is always good at doing 10 person matches as everyone comes in quick to their trademark spots.

    – Dudley’s vs. Uso’s was terrible, but only because they were only given such a short amount of time. Why were Dudley’s faces today though?

    – IC Ladder Match was the best match, but had a ridiculous winner who’s been on TV twice in last year. Vince will be bored of Ryder in 2 weeks and he’ll be losing to L.O.N. in non-title matches.

    – AJ vs. Jericho was underwhelming. They seemed out of sync and never got a consistent flow. I knew Vince wasn’t putting over a TNA guy at Mania if he wouldn’t even put over Sting.

    – L.O.N. vs. New Day was a glorified Smackdown match, and after getting the win and JBL rambling about the 4 Horsemen comparison, they immediately get beat up by retired Attitude Era stars. Austin is my favorite wrestler of all-time, but all I could think was thank God the Brock match never happened.

    – Brock vs. Dean also underperformed. It wasn’t bad, but felt like an afterthought and could have been much more than it was.

    – The Women’s match was OK. People are giving it more credit than it deserves because it wasn’t a “Divas” match, but it was still pretty sloppy and telegraphed after watching Asuka on Friday.

    – HIAC was terrible. Shane’s offense was so horrendous (as expected). 5 minutes in all I could think was “thank God this isn’t on last.” The whole match was just filling time to get to the one pointless huge bump for the PG-era fans who have never had their own “Foley bump” moment. I was glad Taker won though, it would have been a joke him losing to Shane and I’m a proponent of not further devaluing The Streak. I think retiring with one loss is perfect, but I don’t want his Mania legacy turning into an Anderson Silva one.

    – Battle Royal was terrible as usual. I did like having Shaq though. Reminded me of Mania 2 Battle Royal with the football players. Good spot to mix some celebrities like that.

    – Thought The Rock segment was awful. Blah blah blah… fake attendance. Then he “breaks” Bundy’s record over SD Jones? Umm… OK? Are we supposed to care? Then once again have The Wyatt’s get beat up after they don’t even have a match.

    – Main Event… I was so tired and uninvested by this point. Decent match in other circumstances, but crowd didn’t care, everyone was too tired, heel/face roles were reversed, and just did not have a “biggest” Mania main event feel. Vince sacrificed his daughter and have male on female violence to try and get Roman over, but guess what? He’s still getting boo’d tomorrow and has NO heels to work with going forward.

    – Tim Dudley

    Overall: Thumbs in the middle. This was mixed bag of an event in the purest sense. The first 2 plus hours were very good. The Taker/Shane match was beyond a mess. It seems the live crowd was more forgiving than the captive audience at home. From my perspective it came across really poor.  Both of the legend segments were the far and away highlights of the show.  Triple H and Roman Reigns wrestled the wrong type of match for the temperature of their feud and the scenario at hand. Hard to argue; this show was way too long.

    Best Match; Out of everything, I enjoyed the opening ladder match the most.

    Worst Match; Shane and Taker was painful to watch.

    A. US Title Match: Kalisto vs. Ryback. Poor guys. With the troubles at the entrance gates, these guys wrestled in a 100,000 man stadium with less than 20,000 people in the building. As expected, they told the time tested David vs. Goliath story. The action was good and the story was told sufficiently. Decent opener. **

    B. Team BAD and Blond vs. The Total Divas. Longer than expected and certainly not offensive by any means. Enjoyable match with a solid finish. **

    C. The Dudley Boys vs. The Usos. The match did not have much to it. Felt like a third hour RAW match. Even the post match table spot got a lukewarm reaction. *1/2

    Opening video package was epic. Ties the past to the present like only WWE can.

    1. IC Title Ladder Match: Kevin Owens vs. Sami Zayn vs. Dolph Ziggler vs. Stardust vs. Zack Ryder vs. The Miz vs. Sin Cara.  Perhaps the best stunt show ladder match I have seen in some time. Innovative spots, a prevailing story thread, and a surprising victor. Awesome start to WM 32 and an incredible moment for Zack Ryder. ***1/2

    2. Chris Jericho vs. AJ Styles. A few timing issues and a subdued crowd aside, they won the crowd over with a number of awesome sequences leading toward another surprising finish.  Not a great, but a very good match. Disappointing that AJ did not get a better response. ***

    3. The New Day vs. The League of Nations.  Action was more hit than miss, but the match was not as interactive and “fun” as I expected. **

    and then… perhaps I was dreaming, or the access Pizza carbs sent me into a yeast induced state of euphoria. Did I really see this. HBK! Mick Foley! and by god, Stone Cold Steve Austin !! Un-be-lievable!!!!

    4. Street Fight: Brock Lesnar vs. Dean Ambrose. A new level of physical and intense. Essentially, this was the Punk/Lesnar story told at Summerslam three years back. Ambrose’s craziness added a unique element, but I do not know if it reached the level of Punk/Lesnar. Still a match that bordered on greatness. Props to Ambrose and Lesnar for not succumbing to the trend of multiple finisher/kickouts. People expect it too much at WM ***1/2

    5. WWE Women’s Title Match: Becky Lynch vs. Sasha Banks vs. Charlotte. With the new belt, the position on the card, and the time allocation, they really did give a platform for the women to shine. They wrestled a very ambitious match. In many spots it felt too rushed, too choreographed, and very rickety. The ladies looked nervous.  The effort shined through in the end, but I think the performance fell short of what they wanted it to be***

    6. Hell in a Cell: Shane McMahon vs. Undertaker. Way too slow and way too deliberate, and that is excusing an array of mistimed spots, terrible strikes, and senseless finisher kickouts. I wish they would have just rushed into the massive high spot and got it over with. With the exception of 2 or 3 highlights, this was a complete mess. With a payoff of this caliber, this has too be one of the worst WWE WM storyline and culminations in my memory.  The live crowd was way more forgiving then me. *

    7. Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal. The obligatory battle royal buffer between main events. It was a little but of fun and a whole lot of lame. Corbin winning was a pleasant surprise. *

    The Rock/ Wyatt family segment.  What started as a hype segment, evolved to a verbal joust, became a quick singles match and transformed into a babyface celebration and crowd pleasing jubilee.  People will question the segment, but the show needed a shot in the arm. This was a shot of cocaine laced epinephrine.

    8. WWE World Title Match: Triple H vs. Roman Reigns.  Methodical match that tried to mimic the title matches of yesteryear and fell well short. Unlike Taker/Shane, the work was believable, but after 7 hours of wrestling,  a match that never sped past second gear did not come across well to the live crowd. Roman is not the babyface he needs to be. The crowd appeared apathetic for the majority of the match, but they did come alive for the finish. This was the wrong main event for a show of this length. ***

    Derek Hubbard

    Overall: BIG THUMBS DOWN

    Best match: Charlotte vs. Banks vs. Bayley for Women’s title

    Worst match: Undertaker vs. Shane McMahon

    Not since Mania 16 has a Wrestlemania done so little to blow off any feuds or give the fans any sense of joy. Not since Mania 11 has there been such a terrible show overall. I guess the women’s match might have been 4 stars (the fuck finish was very lackluster), but other than that every match would have been lucky to crack 3 stars. The idea that the Reigns vs. The Authority angle must continue when the fan reaction and ratings make it INCREDIBLY clear that no one cares or enjoys it is just sad. I know the old stereotype of “he’s going to watch it no matter how much he complains” but I truly watch less WWE than I have in years. When I actually do watch Raw I skim through it in a bout 5-10 minutes. Vince McMahon is the George Lucas of wrestling and it’s long past time for him to pass the torch to someone else. Anyone else. 

    -Matthew Burrill @mattb425

    THUMBS UP for execution, though not planning.

    I mean, it is a $10 show, and a good one, but a failure in this respect: I do not want to tune in Monday to see what is going to happen now (assuming I was a casual fan).  WM should be a hook to draw lost fans back in, and the show seems to be a failure in that respect.

    It was, in many ways, a non-sequitur-Mania, with various entertaining nostalgia spots (Rocky promo, seeing Stone Cold deliver a stunner in some kind of sweat pants, an ill-advised re-dux of the off-the-top-of-the-HIC spot, a great entrance by Sasha Banks, Stephanie taking a spear like a champ!) but no angles were paid off, and no new ones were started (I mean, how far can Sasha’s beef with Ric Flair go?).  Shaq’s appearance was a surprise, and interesting, but it just has nowhere to go.

    I liked Baron Corbin’s win, and Zach Ryder’s win (which were nods to NXT on the big show); Brock Lesnar’s match felt pointless, which is not a good use of a talent like him.

    BEST MATCH: For me it was Jericho-Styles.  It reminded me of Steamboat-Savage, in that two excellent technicians were putting on a show down on the card, that managed to have some emotional resonance.

    WORST MATCH: Taker-Shane.  In one way, I think Shane is a believable opponent for Taker, in that a win was not unexpected.  But the match was not credible, and I would have preferred that Foley was the only person ever to come off the top of the Cell.  Another streak was broken in this match, and this one to me even more regrettable.

    A WORD ON THE TITLE MATCH: Looking at the nostalgia acts we saw tonight, all had 1 thing in common: they could TALK, which Roman cannot.  Circumstances being what they are, he can still get over as a heel, but they won’t let him.

    And why did fireworks go off after Roman won?  Shouldn’t the authority be mad?

    This was a decent match, but like a lot of the booking on this show, it left A LOT to be desired.  A very flat finish, and the Referee basically ignoring the sledge hammer was also ridiculous.

    Richard Orloski

  • The casual fan’s guide to Wrestlemania 32

    By Ryan Pike for WrestlingObserver.com

    WrestleMania is the Super Bowl of wrestling, a one-day menagerie of the best and brightest (of those not injured) from this great sport. Because of its prominence, it’s also a time of year where people that never watch wrestling wander back and have no idea what’s going on. In an effort to help out those casual fans that gravitate back to wrestling every spring, here’s a quick and dirty primer for this weekend’s big event.

    WWE World Heavyweight Championship Match: Hunter Hearst Helmsley (WWE Champion; 46; 9-10 at WrestleMania) vs. Roman Reigns (30; 2-1 at WrestleMania)

    Helmsley better known as Triple H, is appearing in his 20th WrestleMania (9-10) and has risen through the ranks from getting beaten by the Ultimate Warrior in 90 seconds at WrestleMania XII to the point where he’s a real-life WWE executive and the on-screen leader of a villainous corporate stable called The Authority. Reigns is the latest good-guy character to run afoul of The Authority – following Daniel Bryan and John Cena – and was twice briefly WWE Champion last year before the Authority stacked the deck against him and Triple H won the championship from him in the Royal Rumble match.

    Despite the Authority’s enmity towards him, he was able to earn another title match. They haven’t really established why either guy wants to be the champion, and the grudge between these two men seems to come from Triple H offering Reigns a spot in the Authority several months back (after Seth Rollin’s knee injury) and Reigns answering by attacking him without provocation. To the shock of few, Triple H is getting more cheers than Reigns is.

    Hell in a Cell for Control of RAW: The Undertaker (51; 22-1 at WrestleMania) vs. Shane McMahon (46; 2-0 at WrestleMania)

    The Undertaker is the longest-tenured member of the WWE roster, having debuted at the 1990 Survivor Series as a a spooky mortician. He’s gradually evolved into a less cartoonish character, but still retained some of the bad-ass mysticism of his character. He was undefeated at WrestleMania until two years ago, when Brock Lesnar beat him. He’s facing Shane McMahon, Vince’s son, for control of Monday Night RAW (the television show). Shane wrestled a bit as a special attraction throughout chunks of the late ’90s and mid ’00s, and was actually decent for somebody with no real training.

    Why the Undertaker was roped into this match-up has never really been explained on-camera, besides “The Authority told him to.” If Shane wins and gains control of RAW, the Undertaker won’t be allowed to compete at WrestleMania ever again. Based on the tepid fan response so far, it’s unclear if the audience really buys that either of the match’s stipulations will be followed. After all, The Authority were banished forever last year and it lasted for just a few weeks.

    No Holds Barred Street Fight: Dean Ambrose (30; 2-1 at WrestleMania) vs. Brock Lesnar (38; 2-3 at WrestleMania)

    This match has arguably the simplest build-up on the show. Both of these guys were in a match with Roman Reigns last month for a WWE Title shot. Ambrose cost Lesnar the match, and both guys are mad at each other for blocking their path to the WWE Championship and wish to fight to prove who is the best. Lesnar is a former UFC champion and legitimately one of the toughest men in WWE history, while Ambrose has developed a “loose cannon” character since debuting as part of The Shield a few years back, and the build for this match has been around how Ambrose is too crazy to be appropriately scared of a terrifying human being like Lesnar.

    Grudge Match: Chris Jericho (45; 4-7 at WrestleMania) vs. AJ Styles (38; WrestleMania debut)

    Chris Jericho debuted in WWE in 1999 as the hottest free agent in pro wrestling and earned many chants and much adoration from fans. AJ Styles debuted in WWE in early 2016 as the hottest free agent in wrestling and earned many chants and much adoration from fans. These men have had a “mutual respect” feud dating back to Styles’ debut in late January and after three matches this feud has turned into full-on hatred.

    Much of the build for the match has revolved around Jericho being jealous that the fans are chanting for Styles instead of him, but if you ignore how lame that sounds the feud is basically about an insecure character worried that the wrestling world is passing him by. Oh, and both guys are great in the ring so this could be the best match of the night from a technical perspective.

    WWE Divas Championship Triple Threat Match: Charlotte (Divas Champion; 29; WrestleMania debut) vs. Sasha Banks (24; WrestleMania debut) vs. Becky Lynch (29; WrestleMania debut)

    Charlotte is Ric Flair’s daughter, Banks is Snoop Dogg’s cousin and Lynch was trained by NXT champion Finn Balor. All three came up through NXT and had awesome matches. All three of these women debuted in July as part of the “Divas Revolution,” which changed the way women’s wrestling was perceived largely by showcasing the same women in short matches on RAW without finishes. (The concept was largely abandoned by September.) The women’s division was initially three teams which broke apart, and eventually the storytelling focused on Banks and Lynch facing off against Charlotte after she won the title and became a heel back in the fall.

    Fun Fact: This is the first triple threat match with all three competitors making their WrestleMania debuts since WrestleMania 2000 (where Chris Jericho, Chris Benoit and Kurt Angle faced off).

    Handicap Tag Team Match: The New Day [WWE Tag Team Champions Xavier Woods (29; WrestleMania debut), Kofi Kingston (34; 1-4 at WrestleMania) and Big E (30; 0-2 at WrestleMania)] vs. The League of Nations [Alberto del Rio (38; 1-2 at WrestleMania), King Barrett (35; 0-2 at WrestleMania), Sheamus (38; 1-3 at WrestleMania) and Rusev (30; 0-1 at WrestleMania)]

    The New Day describe themselves as “unicorns,” which is a weird way of describing them. They’re a trio of positive wrestlers who are over the top with their enthusiasm, which has led to them gradually becoming fan favourites because they’re so ridiculous that it’s tough to hate them. The League of Nations are four bad-guy wrestlers from foreign countries, with all three men lacking direction with their characters beyond being tough and mean and foreign. The New Day have been tag team champions for much of the last year, though the titles are not on the line.

    Fun Fact: This is the first handicap tag team match at WrestleMania since WrestleMania XX’s Evolution vs. Rock & Sock Connection 3-on-2 match.

    WWE Intercontinental Championship Ladder Match: Kevin Owens (Intercontinental Champion; 31; WrestleMania debut) vs. Sami Zayn (31; WrestleMania debut) vs. Sin Cara (38; WrestleMania debut) vs. The Miz (35; 3-1 at WrestleMania) vs. Stardust (30; 1-4 at WrestleMania) vs. Dolph Ziggler (35; 1-5 at WrestleMania) vs. Zack Ryder (30; 0-2 at WrestleMania)

    The primary recent feuds for the Intercontinental Title have been between Owens and his old NXT (and independent circuit) rival Zayn, and him and Ziggler (who has been perpetually in the mix for the Intercontinental and United States Titles). Literally everybody else was thrown into this match at the last minute, after Stephanie McMahon (a heel) berated Owens (a heel) for trying to engineer an easy title defense at WrestleMania. The winner is the first person to climb a ladder and retrieve the title belt.

    Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal

    Announced participants include Health Slater (32), Curtis Axel (36), Adam Rose (36), Bo Dallas (25), The Big Show (44), Kane (48), Tyler Breeze (28), Goldust (46), R-Truth (44), Darren Young (32), Mark Henry (44), Konnor (36), Viktor (35), Jack Swagger (34), Fandango (34) and Damien Sandow (33) in a 20-man over-the-top-rope battle royal. The last man standing gets the Andre the Giant trophy, which is basically a statue of the Hall of Fame wrestler who was renowned for his success in battle royals. It helps that he was quite large and really hard to move. Cesaro and The Big Show have won the last two battle royals and it hasn’t done their careers much good, sadly.

  • Evolve 59 iPPV results: Ricochet vs. Will Ospreay; Matt Riddle vs. Zack Sabre Jr.

    Submitted by Pat Laprade 

    – Attendance was at least 1,000 people

    – Drew Gulak & Tracy Williams b Drew Galloway & Johnny Gargano to win the Evolve tag titles. After the match, Galloway cut a promo and turned on Gargano. He got some good heat for that. 

    – Chris Hero b Fred Yehi

    Note: We are almost an hour in and there’s only been two matches.

    – Sami Callihan b Anthony Nese in less than 5 minutes 

    – Ethan Page b Darby Allin in another very short match. 

    – Tommy End b TJ Perkins in the USA vs Europe series. 

    – Matt Riddle b Zack Sabre Jr to even up the series.

    The finish surprised the fans as Riddle won by submission and they were not expecting Riddle to win. Riddle will make it to WWE for sure. He has the look, the shape, the uniqueness, he shows a lot of charisma and he’s already good in the ring. I can see why they are interested. Very good match against Sabre Jr. The only reason why it was not a great match is that they kept it a tad too short, especially compared to the length of the first two matches. I would have took 5 if not 10 more minutes of this match. Liked it a lot. 

    – Marty Scurll b Evolve champion Timothy Thatcher in a non-title match with the chicken wing.

    Good match but again too short compare to the first two matches. After the match, Callihan’s music hit and we only heard an audio of him pretty much challenging Thatcher. 

    – Ricochet b Will Ospreay with the Benadryller.

    Freaking awesome match. Tough to say if it was better than Zayn and Nakamura because it was a different match. Crowd was ecstatic for it. And it’s an understatement. Arguably the best match of the weekend so far, probably with Zayn and Nakamura and with Sabre Jr and Ospreay from Evolve 58. 

    After the match, all the Europeans and Americans involved in the series came to the ring, since the series ended up 2-2, until Kora Ibushi showed up to a huge reaction to build the main-event of the Mercury Rising show presented later tonight.

  • Daily pro wrestling history (04/03): Frank Gotch wins World Title; Batista wins WWE World Title

    1903 

    Buffalo, New York:
    – Tom Jenkins won the American Heavyweight Title by defeating Dan McLeod 

    1908 

    Chicago, Illinois:
    – Frank Gotch defeated Georg Hackenschmidt to win the World Heavyweight Title

    1961 

    Omaha, Nebraska:
    – Don Leo Jonathan defeated Dr. X (Bill Miller) for the Omaha World Heavyweight Title 

    1964 

    Salem, Oregon:
    – The Destroyer and Art Michalik defeated Nick Bockwinkel and Nick Kozak to win the NWA Pacific Northwest Tag Team Titles

    Dothan, Alabama:
    – Don Duffy defeated Dick Dunn to win the NWA Gulf Coast Heavyweight Title

    1967 

    Vancouver, British Columbia:
    – Rocky Johnson and Don Leo Jonathan defeated Chris and John Tolos for the Vancouver NWA Canadian Tag Team Titles

    Orlando, Florida:
    – Rocket and Sputnik Monroe defeated Don Curtis and José Lothario to win the Florida NWA Southern Tag Team Titles

    1969

    Jacksonville, Florida:
    – The Gladiator (Rick Hunter) defeated Boris Malenko to win the NWA Florida Brass Knuckles Title

    Cleveland, Ohio:
    – The Love Brothers (Hartford and Reginald) defeated Moose Cholak and Johnny Powers for the Buffalo NWA World Tag Team Titles

    1970 

    St. Joseph, Missouri:
    – Roger Kirby defeated Danny Little Bear to win the NWA Central States Heavyweight Title 

    1971

    Minneapolis, Minnesota:
    – AWA Champion Verne Gagne beat Mad Dog Vachon COR
    – Larry Hennig & Lars Anderson beat Hercules Cortez & Kenny Jay
    – Strong Kobayashi beat Bill Christy
    – Nick Bockwinkel beat Paul Diamond
    – Blackjack Lanza beat Billy Red Cloud
    – Big K beat George Gadaski

    1976 

    Portland, Oregon:
    – Dutch Savage defeated Jesse Ventura to win the NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Title 

    1979 

    Portland, Oregon:
    – Adrian Adonis and Ron Starr defeated Killer Tim Brooks and Roddy Piper for the NWA Pacific Northwest Tag Team Titles

    1980 

    Tokyo, Japan:
    – Antonio Inoki defeated Stan Hansen for the NWF Heavyweight Title 

    1982 

    Cloverdale, British Columbia, Canada:
    – The Canadian Wrecking Crew (Terry Adonis and Bruiser Costa) defeated Dean Ho and Sonny Myers for the Vancouver NWA International Tag
    Team Titles

    1983

    Greensboro, North Carolina:
    – Dick Slater won the NWA Television Title from Roddy Piper

    Tokyo, Japan:
    – Riki Choshu defeated Tatsumi Fujinami to win the WWF International Heavyweight Title

    1992 

    Dallas, Texas:
    – Sam Houston won a 15-man battle royal to win the vacant Global Wrestling Federation Television Title 
    – Danny Davis won the GWF Light Heavyweight Title from Barry Horowitz

    Radnor, Pennsylvania:
    – Don Muraco defeated ECW Heavyweight Champion The Sandman to win the title 

    1993 

    Memphis, Tennessee:
    – Miss Texas (Jacqueline) defeated Lauren Davenport to win the USWA Women’s Title 

    1995

    Poughkeepsie, New York: 
    – Alundra Blayze pinned WWF Women’s Champion Bull Nakano to win the title 

    Memphis, Tennessee:
    – Razor Ramon defeated Bill Dundee to win the USWA Unified World Heavyweight Title 
    – Brian Lee defeated Brian Christopher to win the USWA Heavyweight Championship

    1999 

    ECW Cyberslam: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania:
    – Jerry Lynn pinned Yoshihiro Tajiri
    – Nova and Chris Chetti defeated Rod Price and Skull Von Krush
    – Super Crazy pinned Mosco de la Merced
    – Taka Michinoku pinned Papi Chulo
    – ECW World Tag Team and Television Champion Rob Van Dam pinned 2 Cold Scorpio to retain the Television title
    – ECW World Heavyweight Champion Taz defeated Chris Candido to retain the title
    – Shane Douglas pinned Justin Credible
    – The Dudley Boyz (Buh-Buh Ray and D-Von) and Mustapha Saed defeated The Hardcore Chair Swingin’ Freaks (Balls Mahoney and Axl Rotten) and New Jack in an Ultimate Jeopardy Steel Cage (WarGames) match

    Guaynabo, Puerto Rico:
    – Ray Gonzalez defeated Pierroth, Jr. to win the vacant WWC Universal Heavyweight Title 

    Jonesboro, Arkansas:
    – Kid Wikkid and Derrick King defeated Vic Grimes and Erin O’Grady (Crash Holly) to win the Power Pro Wrestling Tag Team Titles

    2000

    Los Angeles, California:
    – Eddie Guerrero defeated WWF European Champion Chris Jericho (with Chyna) to win the title

    2001 

    Oklahoma City, Oklahoma:
    – Triple H (with Stephanie McMahon-Helmsley) pinned WWF Intercontinental Champion Chris Jericho to win the title

    2004 

    Wilmington, Delaware: 
    – Christopher Daniels defeated ECWA Heavyweight Champion Mike Kruel to win the title

    2005 

    Wrestlemania 21: Los Angeles, California:
    – John Cena win the WWE Championship from John “Bradshaw” Layfield 
    – Batista pinned World Heavyweight Champion Triple H to win the title
    – Booker T won a Battle Royal
    – WWE Tag Team Champion Rey Mysterio pinned WWE Tag Team Champion Eddie Guerrero 
    – Edge defeated Shelton Benjamin, Chris Benoit, Christian (with Tyson Tomko) Chris Jericho and Kane in the first-ever Money in the Bank Ladder match.
    – The Undertaker pinned Randy Orton 
    – WWE Women’s Champion Trish Stratus pinned Christy Hemme (with Lita) to retain the title
    – Kurt Angle defeated Shawn Michaels 
    – Akebono defeated The Big Show in a Sumo match

    2006

    Chicago, Illinois:
    – The Spirit Squad (Kenny and Mikey (with Johnny, Mitch and Nicky)) defeated The Big Show and Kane to win the World Tag Team Championship

  • Shimmer 80 iPPV results: Heart of Shimmer champion crowned; Shayna Baszler news

    Submitted by Pat Laprade and Craig Russell

    – Attendance was roughly 500 fans from Eddie Deen’s Ranch, Dallas Texas

    12 Woman Tournament to crown the first “Heart Of Shimmer” Champion

    1st round

    – Cheerleader Melissa b Leva Bates with a Kudo Driver. Bates was cosplaying from the Kingdom Hearts video game series

    – Candice LaRae b Cherry Bomb when LeRae crucifixed Cherry Bomb’s pin attempt and reversed it into a pin of her own.

    – Nicole Savoy b LuFisto with the Savoy Lock with a Sambo lock submission. 

    – Kimber Lee b Jessicka Havok with a roll up after Cherry Bomb interfered with a Roll Up (with a handful of tights) after Cherry Bomb comes out to distract Havok.

    – Heidi Lovelace b Veda Scott with a Senton Bomb off the top rope.

    – Nicole Matthews b Crazy Mary Dobson with The Vancouver Maneuver.

    2nd round

    – Candice LaRae b Cheerleader Melissa with three “Family Show Plexes” in a row. The “Family Show Plex” is what Amber Gertner called the move on the show. The move itself is the “Ball Plex” used by Joey Ryan, but that name could not be used for obvious reasons.

    – Nicole Savoy b Kimber Lee with the Cross Arm Breaker.

    – Heidi Lovelace b Nicole Matthews with a Senton Bomb off the top rope.

    – Lenny Leonard interviewed Shayna Baszler. She said she would start at SHIMMER 81 on June 24. 

    Finals

    – Nicole Savoy b Heidi Lovelace & Candice LaRae to win the Heart title. She first eliminated LaRae with the Savoy Lock. Heidi hit her Senton Bomb with which she won her two matches but Savoy kicked out at 2. Savoy won with her Savoy Lock. Good match. 

    – Marina Shafir and Jessamyn Duke were in attendance for the show. Bayley was also there. They announced that SHIMMER 81-85 were going to be taped from June 24 to June 26 in the Chicago area. 

    – Candice LaRae was probably the star of the show with very good matches against both Cherry Bomb and Cheerleader Melissa, plus the main event. Heidi Lovelace has improved so much from the last time I saw her. She’s very very solid in the ring. LuFisto vs Savoy was also one of the best matches on the card. 

  • NXT TV tapings results & notes: Nakamura, Samoa Joe, Austin Aries, Asuka

    Here’s some notes from today’s NXT tapings as part of Fan Axxess. Three weeks worth of tapings were held in a different part of the Bailey Kay Hutchison Center as the show the night before. It’s clear that a lot of stuff will be added between backstage and probably a lot of videos from the TakeOver shows as they didn’t tease much in the way of future directions.

    4/6 show

    – Asuka beat Eva Marie.  This was to set up Asuka vs. Nia Jax as a title program as they had a staredown.

    – Dash Wilder & Scott Dawson beat two wrestlers who weren’t named, possibly Scott Matthews & Scott Parker from Quebec.

    – Zack Ryder & Mojo Rawley beat Blake & Murphy.  No Alexa Bliss with Blake & Murphy. Dash Wilder & Scott Dawson jumped The Hype Bros after the match so that looks to be a new program.

    – Carmella beat Aliyah

    – Shinsuke Nakamura beat Elias Samson

    4/13 show

    – Jason Jordan & Chad Gable beat Enzo Amore & Big Cass.  There’s been talk of Enzo & Cass coming up to the main roster.

    – Nia Jax b Deonna Purrazzo

    – No Way Jose, whose debut has been pushed for the last few weeks on NXT, debuts on this show over Alexander Wolfe

    – Samoa Joe beat Apollo Crews via choke.

    – Austin Aries beat Angelo Dawkins.

    4/20 show

    – Alexa Bliss beat Tessa Blanchard

    Johnny Gargano & Tommaso Ciampa (who have signed NXT contracts but not developmental contracts, believed to be similar to the deal Austin Aries has, to where they can still work indies) beat The Vaudevillains.  So looks like they are now in for a push.

    – Baron Corbin pinned Tucker Knight in a basic squash

    – Bayley beat Liv Morgan.  Bayley cut a generic promo about it doesn’t matter how many times you get knocked down, it’s how many you get back up.  She never mentioned Asuka’s name.

    – Nakamura beat Tye Dillinger.  Nakamura was great at connecting with the crowd.

  • At last, the WWE women will have their chance at Wrestlemania 32

    This Sunday at Wrestlemania, WWE Divas Champion Charlotte will face Becky Lynch and Sasha Banks in a three-way title match that would have served as the logical narrative bookend to the concept that was the Divas Revolution. The payoff of these three facing off against one another on the biggest stage in professional wrestling, having climbed from humble beginnings and overcome negative stigmatization in a male-dominated industry to achieve at the highest level imaginable, would have been both the ultimate testament to the success of the Divas Revolution as a long-term storyline and the proper punctuation on the statement that WWE had reached a new era in the presentation of its female talent.

    Or at least it would have been were it not for the countless fatal decisions made along the way that ultimately lead to its failure. Had WWE’s faith in branding and hashtagging been enough to sustain through incomprehensible storytelling, numerous dreadful on-screen segments (including no fewer than two disastrous episodes of Miz TV), far too many unexplained and illogical changes in the heel-face dynamic, an overwhelming sense of purposelessness, and the tasteless invoking of Reid Fliehr’s name for the sole purpose of cheap heat, the Divas Revolution concept may very well have survived to see Wrestlemania.

    But because so many mistakes made it revolting more often than revolutionary, and because WWE’s commitment to the concept seemed to run only as deep as seeing a buzzword trend worldwide on Twitter a few nights a week, the #DivasRevolution is long dead.

    When Charlotte, Sasha, and Becky step into the ring on Sunday, they will represent all that remains of that misbegotten, in-name-only revolution. Fortunately, they were the only components of it that ever mattered at all.

    The title match at Wrestlemania this Sunday is not at all about the Divas Revolution, despite any possible attempts from WWE commentators to inform the audience otherwise. Rather, it will be above all else the crowning moment for three of the major players of the very real sea change that has been going on for far longer than a hashtag-revolution. It will be a career-defining highlight for Charlotte, Sasha, and Becky, whose work in NXT between 2013-2015 with each other and the likes of Bayley, Natalya, Paige, and Emma was a major catalyst for an actual change in that audience’s perception of women’s wrestling.

    Given their immense collective and individual potential, this should be far from the last big moment these three women will experience at a Wrestlemania.

    What this match could ultimately prove to be is one that may help direct the course of women’s wrestling in WWE for years to come, and one that could help pave the way for other women to enjoy their own much-deserved moments in the spotlight at that level. Someone like Bayley, for example, who has a very real potential to become one of the company’s top money-makers, full stop. The response of the live crowd, and the social response of the worldwide viewing audience, could create enough tangible evidence to convince those who may still believe otherwise that the future of WWE’s female performers is in emphasizing in-ring prowess and performance over aesthetics and sex appeal.

    If rumors of a new WWE Women’s Championship being revealed on the Raw following Wrestlemania prove true and result in the long overdue abandonment of the obnoxious “Divas” brand, then the match between Charlotte, Becky, and Sasha may just be the final, decisive nail in a coffin that they have all worked so hard to seal.

    Or, perhaps, it won’t prove to be that at all. Perhaps the notion of sweeping change in WWE’s philosophy regarding women taking place in just eight months’ time is as ill-fated as thinking that CM Punk’s 434-day championship reign or Daniel Bryan’s Wrestlemania triumph would turn back decades of big-man fetishism. Even today, with Charlotte, Sasha, and Becky on the precipice of taking their well-earned Wrestlemania moments, the company still seems adamant to draw blood from the stone that is Eva Marie, someone who epitomizes what WWE thinks of when it uses the malapropos term “Diva.”

    The fact that the expectation was that she would be cheered when she appeared on Raw (in Brooklyn, of all places) reinforces the idea of a considerable disconnect between WWE’s beliefs and reality. Slotting Eva in as the surprise 10th participant in the pre-show tag match doesn’t quite portend that she would one day be given a run with the championship (though her reemergence on the main roster certainly makes it seem no less plausible), but it also doesn’t dissuade from the idea that there are still those in the company who see a woman’s primary contribution to the product as being her ability to look good in as little clothing as possible.

    Regardless of what the match means or doesn’t mean for the big picture of WWE today and moving forward, it can be said with a fair degree of certainty what it means to the three performers involved: quite simply, everything.

    Charlotte vs. Becky Lynch vs. Sasha Banks will be culmination of years of tireless effort and struggle; in one instant, together in front of the largest audience WWE has ever drawn, everything that they have sacrificed along the way will have been worth it. For as much as the concept of the Wrestlemania moment has become another in WWE’s arsenal of trite branding terms, it will be just that for the three, and it will be a moment well deserved.

    Perhaps given the uncertainty of seemingly all things creative in WWE at present, it is simply the best course of action to not worry about whether this match can atone for the failures of the Divas Revolution or set the table for the future of the women’s division. It is unlikely that Charlotte, Sasha, or Becky will be thinking in such lofty terms this Sunday or in the days leading up to it. They will probably not be concerning themselves with starting a movement, causing a revolution, or sparking long-term change.

    Instead, they are much more likely to be focused on a single moment. On appreciating it, and on seizing it. On doing their utmost to steal the show, just as they have in NXT so many times before. With their talent and drive, there is no reason to believe that they cannot deliver on that promise once again, despite the amplified lens. Given their history of pulling off show-stealing performances, it is unlikely that most fans will leave their seats until the finish if only so that they, too, can share in that moment with them. That, in and of itself, speaks to the level of change they have helped affect.

    Before the #DivasRevolution hashtag, there was #GiveDivasAChance. It sprung directly from indignation at women being given so little to work with compared to their male counterparts, rooted in the idea that female wrestlers deserve, at the least, an equal opportunity to show the world what they could do in the ring. This Sunday at Wrestlemania, Charlotte, Sasha Banks, and Becky will presumably be empowered and enabled to go out in front of 85,000 fans — many of whom will be invested in the match to at least some extent – and tell a story.

    They should, and likely will, be given every tool available to put on a blow-away match in front of millions of people around the globe. It is fair to say that, despite WWE doing seemingly everything it could to get in its way, women’s wrestling is being given its chance at long last. It would be more appropriate, however, to say that it is an opportunity well earned. 

  • The Rock has arrived in Dallas

    Dwayne Johnson arrived late last night in Dallas to start preparation for WrestleMania.

    Johnson’s role on the show has not been announced and on Twitter he noted that last night at 2 a.m. he was in the stadium still working on what he was doing on the show.

    Johnson wrote on twitter: “2 a.m. and still working on the show.  Tomorrow night this stadium will be filled with 100,000 strong.  what a night we have planned.”

    Johnson has been working on the “Baywatch” movie but committed to the show publicly months ago.  For insurance reasons, he wasn’t able to wrestle a match on the show as he and HHH one year ago was scheduled to be one of the main events.

    At one point it looked like it was going to be difficult to even be a part of the show due to the filming of “Baywatch,” but he was able to make that happen.

    It was noted to us a few weeks ago when most of the plans for the show were being formulated that Johnson was going to do what he wanted to do, and at the time he hadn’t told the company yet exactly what his plans were.