Quantcast
Channel: The Wrestling Blog
Viewing all 4899 articles
Browse latest View live

AAA TripleMania Estará en Vivo Pago por Visión de América

$
0
0
Mysterio will be part of the main event available to American audiences via PPV
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Asistencia Asesoría y Administración, the largest purveyor of lucha libre in Mexico, will be offering its marquee event, Triplemania XXIII live on American pay-per-view providers. This marks the first time that the event will hit the normal PPV airwaves; last year's event, which featured the surprise return of Alberto el Patron and a questionably legal appearance from Rey Mysterio via satellite, was available on Internet pay-per-view (as it will also be this year). This year, several major satellite and cable providers, including DirecTV, Comcast/Xfinity, Verizon FiOS, and Time Warner, will carry the event. The complete listing of providers can be found here. The event will cost $29.95 for the HD feed (knock ten bucks off for the standard def), which is super cheap for a show of this magnitude, and it will air at 7 PM ET on August 9.

Three matches have been announced so far, and two of them are doozies. The ostensible main event is being billed as a lucha dream match as Mysterio will do battle against Myzteziz (fka Sin Cara Original Flavor, fka Mistico). While the latter's WWE career underwhelmed many fans, he is far more at home and enjoyable to watch in his home country. Mysterio is an old, savvy vet, so I expect big things out of this match. The other match of note announced is a lucha de apuesta, where both Brian Cage and el Patron will wager their hair. Cage's run in Mexico has seen him take up the mantel of "Lucha Destroyer," an insatiably bloodlusty wrecking ball taking out anyone and everyone who holds dear to lucha libre tradition. el Patron will put his hair on the line to defend his home country against the bruising interloper. Also on the card will be a trios match between the Psycho Circus and everyone's favorite numbered band of luchadores, Los Villanos (III, IV, and V to be exact).

Lucha Underground has whet the American appetite for the art of lucha, even though it still has more than a few Americanized elements to it. Triplemania should be, as the kids call it, the straight dope for those who want a real taste of Mexican wrestling. For those who want to watch on a reliable stream through a cable provider rather than through iPPV, they now have that option. It's great news for everyone involved.

I Listen So You Don't Have To: The Ross Report, Ep. 75

$
0
0
Jim Ross talks to a Fight Network honcho this week
Photo Credit: WWE.com
If you're new, here's the rundown: I listen to a handful of wrestling podcasts each week. Too many, probably, though certainly not all of them. In the interest of saving you time — in case you have the restraint to skip certain episodes — the plan is to give the bare bones of a given show and let you decide if it’s worth investing the time to hear the whole thing. There are better wrestling podcasts out there, of course, but these are the ones in my regular rotation that I feel best fit the category of hit or miss. If I can save other folks some time, I'm happy to do so.

Show: The Ross Report
Episode: 75 (July 22, 2015)
Run Time: 1:30:00
Guest: John Pollock (6:57)

Summary: Jim Ross’ guest this week is John Pollock, of Canada’s The Fight Network. While ostensibly reviewing WWE Battleground, they end up discussing comedy wrestlers, modern heel work, the NXT women, Ronda Rousey, WrestleMania 32, what went wrong with Roman Reigns and the Undertaker’s return before transitioning to a look at the Ring Of Honor/new Japan/NXT situation and the future of TNA.

Quote of the week:“They believe that their audience is now a more astute audience when it comes to match performances, and guys have more of a focus now on going out and having a good match as opposed to ‘What kind of match should my character be having?’ I really noticed this specifically in the Bray Wyatt match. I mean, here is a guy that kicked out of the Superman Punch, he does all of these little things that they’re generating a positive reaction — this was a crowd that was, at worst, split at the beginning of that match and by the end they were chanting ‘Let’s Go Wyatt’ with noting in favor of Roman Reigns. A lot of these great performers have to break down these characters and say ‘Why am I doing this maneuver, and what reaction is it going to generate from the audience?’ ”

Why you should listen: If you like John Pollock, he’s on this show. Pollock seems a nice enough fellow who tries to at least balance his opinions. The slightest compliment I can give Ross here is he does clarify his complaints about modern wrestling are not specific to WWE. Oh, and the Battleground review includes the preshow match, which Steve Austin overlooked.

Why you should skip it: Call me crazy, but if you’re going to review a wrestling card, might you consider reviewing the entire card? The discussion of the women’s match was actually about their RAW invasion angle and quickly became a chance for Ross to blow his own horn in regards to his WrestleMania plans for Rousey. There was no discussion whatsoever of the tag team title match and only the most cursory look at anything that actually happened in the main event. Ross’ condescending attitude toward fans bled through a few times, and most of the show ended up coming off as a current events breakdown with another talking head, which by now is of little value since Ross’ opinions rarely seem to evolve.

Final thoughts: Pollock was all too willing to join Ross in broad-stroke criticism of the industry at large instead of doing what Austin and Wade Keller did on Tuesday’s Austin podcast, which is to actually look at the Battleground matches and segments and cite specific examples and decisions that illustrated their talking points. Anyone coming to this show hoping to have a better appreciation or deeper understanding of Battleground will leave sorely disappointed, with the added bonus of hearing Ross’ miserable impressions of legendary wrestlers. Please do not listen to this show, it might make you a less good wrestling fan.

Mojo Rawley Is a #Nice Tipper

$
0
0
Rawley, center, proves even he can be nice
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Mojo Rawley gets a bad rap on NXT for good reason. Among the roster, he's one of the least-advanced in all facets of the game, and that's putting it nicely. He's improved, sure, but he's still got a long way to go. He hasn't done a whole lot on camera to ingratiate himself to WWE fans, but the following Tweet he sent out last night might help:

First thing's first, tipping $50 on a $19 bill is badass and way cool. That tip probably made that server's day, and in a business where waitstaff is oftentimes at the mercy of cruel customers who treat tipping far more a draconian exercise than their own bosses treat their own work evaluations, that kind of cash can be a godsend.

Of course, the funnier, more notable part is the total. IT'S THE SEX NUMBER, TWICE! Okay, the Twitter obsession with the number 69 can border on the absurd; I should know because it's one of my favorite things to drive into the ground. But it's even funnier to see celebrities, even minor ones from WWE's developmental brand, get in on the action. People on TV are just like me.

John Cena Wasn't Acting in THAT Scene in Trainwreck

$
0
0
Amy Schumer's awkward face during THAT scene with Cena came from a place of reality
Photo Credit: Richie Buxo/Corbis
John Cena could technically be called a "wrestler/actor" given the amount of roles he's had on the silver screen. Most of those parts have been as leads in WWE Films vehicles with questionable scriptwriting and direction. I refuse to pass judgment on movies like The Marine or 12 Rounds because I haven't seen them, but seeing as those movies scored 20% and 29% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes respectively, I'm not really in the mood TO see them. His role in the Amy Schumer star vehicle Trainwreck, however, has gotten a lot of advance buzz for positive reasons. He plays Schumer's character's ex-boyfriend, and he has an awkward sex scene with the protagonist that is prominently featured in advertising.

Well, according to Schumer an interview in Australia, the awkwardness was, well, a shoot. The comedienne revealed that Cena didn't know how to fake a sex scene and actually penetrated her vagina with his penis. His first cinematic sex scene was, in fact, really sex. This news really does nothing to dissuade the image of Cena as the ultimate goober, although if Schumer is alright with it, no harm, no foul right? Well, I guess Schumer and current girlfriend Nikki Bella would have had to have been alright with it, but I'm sure that topic has come up in conversation.

The most interesting part of this whole story is that that unexpectedly real scene is not the first time Schumer has been intimate with a WWE superstar. She used to date Dolph Ziggler for a time a couple of years ago. The funny thing about that nugget is Ziggler and Cena had a storyline where they both were romantically linked to AJ Lee, only instead it was Cena who wooed her first. Granted, that story wasn't exactly either competitors finest moment (and it certainly was a waste of Lee's talents just to be the meat dangled between the two superstars), but it's just funny how life works out sometimes.

ETA: A decent chance exists that Schumer and Hader were working the media here.

BATTLEWARS Is Happening Again

$
0
0
It was so good last year it's happening again this year!
Photo Credit: Kelly Kyle
Last year, Inspire Pro Wrestling welcomed the stars of Chikara into the Marchesa Theater for BATTLEWARS. The event was both a financial and a critical success; the hall sold out, and the show kinda ruled. The logical thing would be to do the dance again, It will happen in September at the Marchesa in Austin, and tickets will go on sale tomorrow, that's Friday, at noon, Central Time. You can get your ducats at the Inspire Pro website.

Last year's event featured Dasher Hatfield, Silver Ant, Fire Ant, Icarus, and Bryce Remsburg making the trip down. I'd imagine a similar contingent would arrive for this year's event too. Of course, the hope is that Chikara actually brings the whole kit and kaboodle down there one of these days so that the fans in Central Texas can get a taste of the entire experience. Chikara has worked with other promotions before, and in fact this weekend, it will be teaming up with Beyond Wrestling for a doubleheader at Fete Music in Providence, RI. I would love to see something similar go down in Austin between Chikara and Inspire, which are two of the three or four best indie promotions in the country right now.

Twitter Request Line, Vol. Ten Times As Unlucky

$
0
0
How would I fantasy book Jimmy Rave and his 15 SCI cohorts?
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
It's Twitter Request Line time, everyone! I take to Twitter to get questions about issues in wrestling, past and present, and answer them on here because 140 characters can't restrain me, fool! If you don't know already, follow me @tholzerman, and wait for the call on Wednesday to ask your questions. Hash-tag your questions #TweetBag, and look for the bag to drop Thursday afternoon (most of the time). Without further ado, here are your questions and my answers!

First thing's first, people should definitely be checking back to Free Wrestling to check out the Scenic City Invitational Tournament Project written by the asker of this question, and keep checking back until the tourney gets here on August 8. Okay, the first round matches are as follows:
  • Caprice Coleman vs. Jason Collins
  • Mark Vandy vs. Ace Rockwell
  • Kongo Kong vs. Tank
  • Jimmy Rave vs. Anthony Henry
  • Corey Hollis vs. Joey Lynch
  • Chip Day vs. Gunner Miller
  • Moose vs. KT Hamill
  • Gunner vs. Chrisjen Hayme
Assuming those matches are listed how the bracket plays out, the following is how I'd book the thing. Jason Collins pins Caprice Coleman in the longest match of the night. Coleman is Georgia royalty, and Collins getting a win over him would be huge, especially in a main event slot. Ace Rockwell gets the nod over Mark Vandy. Tank takes out Kongo Kong in what should be the most violent match of the tourney, if not the whole year. Jimmy Rave handily defeats Anthony Henry. Corey Hollis goes over Joey Lynch. Gunner Miller dispatches Chip Day. Miller seems to me to be Empire/Chattanooga's golden boy. He's a former football player, and he seems to be held in high regard by the people in the know and in charge of things down there. Moose bests KT Hamill in a classic, probably the second longest match. Gunner defeats Chrisjen Hayme.

The quarterfinals would unfold first with Collins taking out Rockwell, then with Rave escaping Tank by the skin of his teeth. Maybe Rave tries something a little underhanded as has been his wont lately. Miller pins Hollis, while Moose convincingly takes out Gunner. The semifinals would set up a Rave/Miller final with Miller taking the whole thing in a classic match. I'd also set up an angle afterwards where Rave fakes out on a handshake, takes him out, and destroys the trophy over his back because firstly, no wrestling trophy should ever go undestroyed, and second, because a follow-up program with Rave, whether in Empire or not, would be awesome for Miller.

Becky Lynch/Ringo Starr - Lynch is the newest in the fold, like Starr was the last Beatle to join. Starr was also the oldest member of the band, and while I'm not sure how old Lynch is compared to the rest of her Horsewomen mates, she seems to have the most-tenured, most-storied pre-NXT career of the lot.

Bayley/George Harrison - In the same vein as Harrison's genius being overlooked in favor of the songwriting prowess of the other two, Bayley feels like she's a clear third behind Charlotte and Sasha Banks despite the fact that she has a case for being considered the best of them. Harrison seemed to be the most affable of the group, the least ingrained in all the bullshit, and Bayley's character paints her as friendly. However, I doubt Harrison was as much a hug enthusiast as Bayley is, but these are rough approximations.

Charlotte/Paul McCartney
Sasha Banks/John Lennon - It feels as if these two will be entwined for their entire careers, although their enmity is worked whereas Lennon/McCartney had bad blood in real life. I correlate Banks with Lennon because like Lennon, she feels more experimental, bolder, and with more artistic cache in the ring. Charlotte, like McCartney, is great at what she does, but she seems to play it safer, take fewer risks, play to more of an accepted crowd. The biggest difference between the Lennon/McCartney and Banks/Charlotte comps is that it feels like time will bear out that Banks is on a different level than Charlotte completely, while Lennon and McCartney still pretty much felt like equals even with the stylistic differences. Charlotte could improve and get on a level comparable to Banks on an every day basis though, which is the trouble of making comparisons between a new entity like the Horsewomen and an overly studied and established group like the Beatles.

Only if you promise to give me your eternal, undying soul, well, either that or half your untaxed earnings for the next five years.

It's more the latter than the former. Elements in WWE like Stephanie McMahon and Triple H can talk a good game when it comes to social progression, but as long as drooling simpletons like Vince McMahon and Kevin Dunn man the creative decisions, then you have a good chance of seeing Young dress louder than he did as the NXT rookie to CM Punk and make "Exotic" Adrian Street look like Steve Austin. Be wary.

Absolutely not. You'll be missing the second and third weeks of a five week build towards SummerSlam that will more than likely spin wheels. The only two shows that will probably matter are the first one after Battleground that already aired Monday and the go-home show six days before the shindig in Brooklyn. Enjoy your vacation, and if you have to catch up on wrestling, absolutely watch NXT on your phone instead of trying to catch up on six hours of what will more than likely be pointless pap when you get back.

God, I hope so. Cena needs to go into that match as United States Champion as much as I need a hole in my head. The grand end to his US Championship Open Challenge should have been him dropping the belt at SummerSlam to a guy like Kevin Owens, Cesaro, or even a debuting Finn Bálor, but those plans seem to have gone up in dust because Vince McMahon gave himself an ulcer over ratings and because Kevin Dunn is an insecure piece of shit who can't bear to see any of the beauty of NXT bleed onto RAW and make it worth watching for more than 15 minutes at a time here or there. In a just world, Rollins would directly cause the US Championship to go to either Owens or Cesaro, and they'd wrestle an instant classic at SummerSlam over the belt while Cena does his best to carry the limp, lifeless body of Rollins' heel run across the finish line. But that ain't any of my business, kermy-sips-the-tea-dot-jpg.

He'll be able to reach his final form, which probably is his current frame with spikes protruding out of his deltoids, widening and darkening of his eyes, his hair turning into red peaks, and his sword tattoo coming out of his chest in manifestation as a real weapon. He'll also poop out a brass ring in the middle of the ring, and everyone who came out to break up his epic brawl with Undertaker on RAW Monday will try to reach for it.

First, one would have to talk talent. Adam Cole, Dalton Castle, ACH, Mike Bennett... all those guys could be in NXT at the expiration of their ROH contracts if Triple H wanted them there (and Cole is rumored to be working on a handshake right now). Then, Trips could follow through on his threats to squeeze ROH out of its normal arenas. It might dodge the bullet in Philadelphia if NXT sticks to the Tower Theater, and I doubt the duBurns Arena will budge in Baltimore, but what about Chicago? New York? Boston? Las Vegas? Nashville? Yeah, WWE could put the squeeze on. Then maybe Trips could offer a cushy job in creative to Hunter "Delirious" Johnston, although depending on which ROH observer one asks, that could be a blessing in disguise. Basically, the only thing off the table would be the Destination America contract, if only because NXT as a Network selling point seems important. WWE has no chill. None.

G1 Climaxing sounds like something Dave Meltzer does between shows. I keed, I keed.

I'm not watching it right now. I may revisit it if/when I end up getting New Japan World and some spare time to watch the rassles. But judging from what I've been reading and following about NJPW, I would place Hiroshi Tanahashi and Shinsuke Nakamura in the finals. As much as I want to say Nakamura is going to win to make good on his Intercontinental Championship loss to Hirooki Goto and set up a CHAOS implosion, the symmetry behind a Tanahashi/Kazuchika Okada rematch at WrestleKingdom 10, only with the IWGP Championship on the other waist, is too tempting to pick anyone but Tanahashi.

It's hard for me to say because I don't know what you're looking for in a woman. But sparks seem universally important, right? If you don't feel like you can make the sexy time with her or spend an extended amount of time with her as your exclusive companion, then it's probably better to cut bait now rather than string her or yourself along when the obligation to stay together grows stronger, even in the absence of love or a true connection. You don't have to feel ashamed to initiate entering the "friend zone" (which is never a bad place to be). You have fun with her, so she's obviously worth having around as a friend. Talk to her, let her know how you feel, and go from there. To paraphrase the band Nada Surf from its smash hit "Popular," unless she's a real jerk or a crybaby, you'll be friends.

Wrestlers pop up in movies all the time, mostly in cameo roles unless you're talking Hulk Hogan, Roddy Piper, Steve Austin, and The Rock. For the purposes of this question, I am disqualifying Rocky, because the dude owned acting better than any other wrestler who has ever lived. Anyway, my top five:

HONORABLE MENTIONS: Bam Bam Bigelow as Biker in Major Payne, Kevin Nash as Super Shredder in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: Secret of the Ooze, Ernest "The Cat" Miller as The Ayatollah in The Wrestler, Vader as Francis Stecchino, Sr. in Boy Meets World, Hulk Hogan as Thunderlips in Rocky III

5. Hulk Hogan as himself in Gremlins 2: The New Batch - The Hulkster had a checkered history as an actor in leading roles, but his cameo in the Gremlins sequel is on point. It's a fourth-wall breaking gag where he's in the theater watching the actual movie when the Gremlins get into the projector room and eat the film. Only Hogan can save the day, which he does by cutting a promo on them and ripping his shirt off.

4. Tiny "Zeus" Lister as Tattooed Prisoner in The Dark Knight - Sure, the scene with the boats is the weakest scene in the first sequel in the Nolan Batman series. And all Lister has to do is project his cross-eyed menace up until the point when he does the right thing. But he does a good job redeeming the most hackneyed part of an otherwise fine script.

3. Necro Butcher as himself in The Wrestler - I'll be honest; the Randy the Ram vs. Necro death match scene was the hardest for me to watch because it was so visceral and real, but damn, the Butcher pulls it off, both in his locker room conversation and the actual death match portion.

2. Randy Savage as Bonesaw McGraw in Spider-Man - Look, if you're going to do a pro wrestling scene in a superhero movie, you go out and get the fuckin' Macho Man, okay? He was the perfect combination of manic and fearsome to play as Spidey's ersatz first supervillain test. Okay, calling Bonesaw a supervillain might be a reach, but then again, he was a challenge Peter Parker had to overcome, right?

1. Roddy Piper as The Maniac in It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia - Piper's role on the show ended up being recurring, as his Maniac not only appeared in the pro wrestling episode, but in a later Ponzi scheme episode. In both his appearances, his deadpan and the self-deprecation he uses playing an almost autobiographical character just make either episode. It's hard to steal the show from a cast that includes Danny DeVito and Charlie Day, but by God, Piper does it.

Before you string me up by my toes, I've never seen They Live, which makes me the most shameful wrestling fan ever. I'm sorry, I'm so, so sorry.
Both my answers to this question are John Cena, and both of his opponents are named Brock Lesnar. The first post-return Lesnar/Cena match showed a different side of the latter. One should have expected Lesnar to work a stiffer, more MMA-influenced style, but Cena went along with it against all expectation. I mean, he's the most sports-entertainery sports entertainer ever, and while he didn't necessarily grapple Lesnar purely, he did enough to help make it the most unique match that was probably ever contested under a WWE banner. The second notable match was their SummerSlam '14 main event where Cena acted as a squash match victim for the first time in several years. Every other match he was ever in as Cena saw him get some sort of substantial advantage, but Lesnar just beat him like he was rag doll. It was so shocking, and while I don't think the match was technically as good as some make it out to be, it was definitely surprising and satisfying from a cathartic standpoint, one that ached for Cena to get that kind of prison beating after over a decade of LOLCENAWINZ.

From @jetta_rae, a private user:
what are ways we can cover WWE that don't gratify and give credence to their overwrought truman show esque media identity?
The best way to do that is to stay woke and always call the company out for its bullshit. Don't just assume that because Stephanie McMahon wants a gay character that the creative team will do right by it. Don't buy it sight-unseen that the Divas Revolution is going to stick. Always keep the company on its toes, whether you think it's going to listen to you or not. If the counternarrative can get enough voices behind it, then maybe WWE will listen. Or maybe not. Never underestimate the power of a corporate bullshit machine.

I've never listened to Persistence of Time, and I quite like Among the Living, so my answer is obviously Lightning to the Nations.

Well, Emma and Dana Brooke have two-thirds of a trio. I hate to pry Alexa Bliss from the Dubstep Cowboys, seeing as she's the one element of their act that has made them interesting, but the Evil Blondes as a fourth trio in the fray would work. But that would leave Paige, Charlotte, and Becky Lynch as the only babyfaces. They need reinforcements. They need... the Divas of Destruction to return. Nattie Neidhart charges in with her Mad Max-spiky gear and brings Beth Phoenix and VICTORIA out of retirement. Finally, Bayley needs to get in on this action, and let her ride into battle with the Aussies by her side. Jessie McKay and KC Cassidy, or Jessie and Cassie, come on down and ride with Bayley.

Much in the same vein as my number one choice for best acting performances, I gotta go with It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia's "The Gang Supports the Troops." From Piper's hilarious performance as The Maniac to the absurdity of the Birds of War to the final scene when the Garbage Man bites a hole in the Talibum's jugular and stands soaking in the cheers as Rickety Cricket bleeds profusely (but still survives, weird), it's perfection. Other pro wrestling episodes in other series have been good enough. Boy Meets World, That '70s Show, and even the Scooby Doo WWE special all warrant mention, but they can't touch It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia.

Daniel Bryan Hoping to Be Back for Royal Rumble, Wrestling Now Stuck in Time Loop

$
0
0
Bryan may be back by the Rumble
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Daniel Bryan has had a pretty good week so far. His autobiography, YES! My Improbable Journey to the Main Event of WrestleMania, was released, (read this review by TJ Hawke at 411 here) and he's been thrust back into the public eye doing press for it. The book has renewed interest in the former WWE World Heavyweight Champion, whose career was thrown into jeopardy first last year from residual neck and shoulder injuries and this year from a concussion that was exacerbated by boarding an airplane soon after. However, despite sick, fake interviews that have come up stating otherwise, Bryan's career is certainly not over, or at least he hopes it isn't.

In an interview on The Buzz podcast with Jimmy Traina, Bryan reveals that he's feeling great and wanted to be back by SummerSlam. However, despite his own personal doctor clearing him for wrestling, WWE doctors won't give him the okay to get back in the ring. His goal date to be back is now the Royal Rumble. Hm, Bryan wins a title at WrestleMania, has to give it up without losing it in the ring, has his career put in jeopardy, and then plans to make a return at the Rumble. What year is on the calendar again? The immense feeling of déjà vu is all-encompassing right now.

Of course, the biggest question becomes how Bryan's body will hold up after coming back from his second major upper body injury. It's worth noting that Bryan didn't change his style at all when he came back from his first injury, and it's possible that the concussion he suffered, which was reported coming in the ring against Sheamus, may have been possible because of his high-impact, reckless style of bumping. It's easy to blame Sheamus for the injury if he indeed caused with an errant kick or what have you, but it takes two or more to tango in a wrestling ring, and one might think that an observer wouldn't need to step into the ring to realize that. But then again, people of any walk of life can prove to jump to conclusions, so who knows.

Anyway, if Bryan is able to come back, I would love to see him take up a more mat-based, crowd-trolling technical style, much in the same vein as what is found in EVOLVE's main event scene right now. The core of Drew Gulak, Timothy Thatcher, Hot Sauce Williams, Biff Busick, and Chris Hero have made the identity of the Gabe Sapolsky-booked promotion one embedded deeply in the soul of 1970s and '80s World of Sport. WWE absolutely has a roster that is equipped to give Bryan more than enough challengers to work that style. Amateur wrestlers like Dolph Ziggler and Jack Swagger are the first names that come to mind. Cesaro, a former teammate of both Hero's and Bryan's, is studied in grappling, and would provide an excellent, HOSS presence. Hell, even Kane and Big Show traded grapples during one of the most trollworthy matches in RAW history.

The initial reaction to the change in style would obviously draw boos from crowds who want him to fly out of the ring and do the Solid Knee Plus on the reg, but heavy grappling is a style that, in my experience, is easy to get behind. If it's presented without the sort of stigma that technical wrestlers like the season one NXT version of Bryan had to carry, it can get over on its own. It's over in front of smaller indie crowds. It was over in an extreme variant at WrestleKingdom 9 between Minoru Suzuki and Kazushi Sakuraba (yeah, shoot/RINGS style may not exactly be World of Sport, but they're way more closely related than they are to WWE's normal offerings). It can get over with guys like Bryan, Ziggler, and Cesaro in America.

Of course, no style is completely safe, but the risk of major injury working the mat seems to be lower than by jumping headfirst into the barricades or taking sharp bumps on the shoulders, neck, and head. Additionally, staph infections, a common malady for grapplers, are easier to come back from in most cases than broken necks and concussions. Truth be told, Bryan could come back tomorrow as the next Santino Marella and I'd be happy. Also, far be it for a common shithead fan like myself to tell Bryan, a nearly two-decade veteran of wrestling, how to work his career or live his life. But it's not like he wouldn't be fuckin' awesome bringing the rough grappling style into WWE, right?

Either way, things aren't looking nearly as bleak for Bryan as they were even a month ago. Even if he never wrestles for WWE again, he'll still be in the fans' lives through vehicles like Tough Enough or for random appearances here or there in the three years remaining on his contract. Plus, nothing can ever take the magic of WrestleMania XXX away from the WWE fans who willed the events of that night to happen. All is not lost. Hopefully though, if Bryan IS back for the Rumble, his appearance, and basically the appearances of virtually everyone else in the match inexplicably aside from Big Show and Kane, is booked way better than it was in this past year's match.

WWE Scrubs Hulk Hogan from Its History over Racist Rant

$
0
0
Hogan's in deep shit
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Go and check WWE dot com right now and look for any and all references to Hulk Hogan without using the search function. You'll more than likely find no references to the Hall of Famer and former WWF/E World Heavyweight Champion. The reason is because a racist rant from his sex tape with Heather Clem, the now ex-wife of radio personality and former TNA employee Bubba the Love Sponge, has leaked. Gawker Media apparently didn't release the entirety of the incriminating material on said tape when it initially leaked the video. Hogan had sued the media outlet over the leak, and the case was nearing an end. Now, this diatribe, where Hogan ADMITS he's racist, has surfaced. In response, WWE has terminated its contract with the former Champion.

WWE has every right to distance itself from Hogan right now, obviously. However, the fact that the company would come down this hard on something racially sensitive in nature seems laughable in light of its history. WWE's track record on race relations is dubious at the very best. Whether it be Vince McMahon openly using the n-word ON FUCKING CAMERA in front of Booker T and Sharmell or the continued employment of Michael PS Hayes after several incidents backstage where he was accused of racial impropriety, the front office of WWE has barely any authority to come down hard on someone for being racist. When corroborated with the history of racist character traits and story elements, it becomes incomprehensible that WWE takes the blanking route on Hogan.

When the company atmosphere is hostile to African-Americans, how can one expect the employees to categorically fall out of company line and act appropriately towards minority peers? WWE should not be scrubbing Hogan from its history; that action is tantamount sticking one's fingers in their ears and pretending nothing's wrong until the problem blows over. Sitting Hogan down, denying him paychecks from Tough Enough or WrestleMania XXXII, would be a start, but punitive measures cannot be the only ones taken in this situation.

WWE as a company needs to get its act together. Right now, it has perhaps the highest concentration of African-American wrestlers in its history. While their collective success is at a peak compared to prior era right now, the fact that they still mostly play "Black" characters and tend to be segregated in their own stables and even now are segregated in feuds exclusively against each other (New Day vs. Prime Time Players, anyone?) is embarrassing.

The attitudes need to change backstage, and they need to change on screen. WWE has to acknowledge its poor history and work on it, not just stick its head in the sand because the arguable top superstar in its history went full Michael Richards on everyone's asses. WWE absolutely needs to improve its treatment of Black wrestlers and give its Black fans something to latch onto that didn't remind them of the way White America stereotypically thinks about them, now more than ever.

As for Hogan, he most definitely needs to be raked over the coals. WWE's toxic atmosphere may be overbearing, but the conversation about Hogan needs to continue, and he needs to pay the piper for it. It's 2015. No reason exists why Black Americans shouldn't be on an equal plane except for refusal of the status quo to give them a share of the wealth and power, and yet, things are arguably only marginally better than they were before the Civil Rights Movement. Prominent Caucasians in America continuing to make racially insensitive or offensive comments are a huge reason why the climate has only glacially changed. That in and of itself needs to change, whether or not the Hulkster is a legend in pop culture or not.

I Listen So You Don't Have To: Cheap Heat July 22

$
0
0
Bryan is the only part of Cheap Heat worth listening to this week
Photo Credit: WWE.com
If you're new, here's the rundown: I listen to a handful of wrestling podcasts each week. Too many, probably, though certainly not all of them. In the interest of saving you time — in case you have the restraint to skip certain episodes — the plan is to give the bare bones of a given show and let you decide if it’s worth investing the time to hear the whole thing. There are better wrestling podcasts out there, of course, but these are the ones in my regular rotation that I feel best fit the category of hit or miss. If I can save other folks some time, I'm happy to do so.

Show: Cheap Heat
Episode: July 22, 2015
Run Time: 1:18:22
Guest: Daniel Bryan (55:40)

Summary: Peter Rosenberg, David Shoemaker and Stat Guy Greg are in studio (without Rosenberg’s soundboard) looking at Battleground and RAW. They digest the Undertaker return, Kevin Owens and Cesaro, sidetrack to promote Trivia Slam and go back to the WWE women’s division before discussing if they’d rather take a Mark Henry splash or Big Show chest slap. They show the Miz some love, hear Greg’s corrections and revisit their Battleground party before welcoming Bryan, who is on a press tour for his new autobiography. Bryan talks about his real life highs and lows, his most recent injury, CM Punk and the evolution of WrestleMania XXX, tells some stories from book, analyzes his relationship with John Cena, how he tries to satisfying fans who followed him well before the WWE and more recent converts, shares why it’s hard for him to follow Brie’s career and how he feels about being on the shelf.

Quote of the week: Bryan: “Most people love their dads, are close with their fathers and stuff like that, so they understand. It happens to most of us at some point in our life. But it’s that rock bottom kind of feeling, where you’re like — I’ve always felt like a kid, right? Like what I do is very childish, right? You know, I’m a wrestler, I go out there in my spandex battle jammies, I do my sports entertaining and all that kind of stuff. I’ve always just felt like a child. And that moment that you realize, that like, ‘Hey, I don’t have my dad there anymore,’ it’s — it’s really tough.”

Why you should listen: To hear 25 minutes of frank talk from Daniel Bryan. Before that, Shoemaker has his usual sharp insights on the developments of the week, and without the soundboard Greg actually gets a chance to offer his own solid points. Anyone looking for optimism about the early indicators for SummerSlam will find it here. Bryan, of course, is fantastic. He demonstrates an excellent grasp of his place in the wrestling world, and it’s simply impossible not to root for the guy.

Why you should skip it: You really shouldn’t skip the Bryan stuff, but the rest is almost a complete afterthought. There’s really very little mention of what was a fairly significant pay-per-view, and if you’ve already read Shoemaker’s Grantland piece this week you know way more than what you’ll learn here. The guys are quite obviously stalling until Bryan gets to the studio, and nowhere is that more important than the riffing on the scene at the bar where they all watched Battleground. There’s easily 20 wasted minutes in the pre-Bryan show, and the remainder isn’t all that special.

Final thoughts: The best news of all is that when they finally get to Bryan, his book plugging seems secondary at most. It seemed he was relieved to find and island of understanding in the midst of the hectic promotional schedule. There’s nothing revelatory about his stint — especially since he’s giving dozens of widely available interviews these days — but having an A-list guest forces Rosenberg and Shoemaker to be on top of their game, and they absolutely are. It’s just a shame they bothered recording the rest of the episode.

Best Coast Bias: Daemonically Good

$
0
0
A red letter Wednesday night down in Orlando
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Since the start of his NXTenure the French Canadian Murder Bear disguised as a Kevin Owens has followed the same successful program: acquire target ¤ powerbomb said target into goo ¤ let the fam watch the money pile up. However, the past few weeks have turned into the summer of KO's discontent, and there's been no bigger spammer in his works than the Daemon who wrested and wrestled the Big X away from him in Tokyo who currently sits atop Full Sail's food chain.

For most of his coronation show as the newwwwww NXT World Champion, Finn Bálor spent most of it showing the same toothy and bashful smile he was flashing in his three-part Who Is series that led up to July 4th. He said all the right things in front of a rapturous bunch of Full Sailors to kick off the program (all the sacrifices being worth it to hold up the Big X, etc) and did all the right things to close it out in the Main Event Contract Signing, where despite Owens throwing the contract at him as an opening to slamming his head into the table and laying out GM William Regal, the Champ managed to come up with offense out of the initial attack and thwarted a follow-up sneak variant to stand tall in the ring with his prize as the credits rolled.

Leaving aside the furthering tease of the v e r y s l i g h t possibility this continuing Owens/Regal contretemps pays off with a match by the time we get to Brooklyn, all our familiar favorites played their roles well: having been chumped out by Cena on consecutive occasions and shorn of the familiarity of the NXT title, Owens is now going into newer, less defensible territory as an insufferable bully heel; per the course with him, it's big things like his cheapshot of Regal coupled with little things like hearing the crowd's reaction to not getting Bálor/KO III in Florida before he came out and making sure to accentuate the location of the next NXT live special after bragging about all the big names he's laid out in his short tenure.  Hell, if you were Regal, would you accept this apology? The Champ seems to be filling in well as the latest almost-NXT-exclusive babyface with attitude that doesn't turn into a cliche consumed and powered by his hatred *cough A-Ry cough* but rather saves genuine rancor for moments when it's deserved while being more than willing to share their achievements with the NXT Constellation and even give the Two Sweet to a little girl on their way to the ring before downplaying their impressive achievements while looking damn good in a suit.

With the main event players going more with verbiage than action, it was up to the women of NXT to bring the action the Leaders of the New School failed to supply in this hour and while two of the usual culprits were familiar to the longtime Wednesday night addict it was two others who also showed a spark of something that the future of the division will probably have to be built around with the biggest names now plying their trades on Mondays and Sundays.

The only thing more fun than watching Dana Brooke's continual headpats of Devin Taylor drive the backstage interviewer closer and closer to retaliating with violence (cue Linkin Park, since this week Ms. Taylor's fists clenched and came up before coming back down) is watching Emma discover the joy of being a Malenkoesque prick in the ring, even if she was doing it to Bayley. She came out strutting and showing off (and why the hell shouldn't she? Have you SEEN her? is as much lizard brain commentary as you will get) and alternated mock-playfully slapping at Bayley with one of her own snap braclets with cowardly ducking between the ropes to avoid the wrath before cheapshotting her way into offense.  And actually, maybe Malenkoesque wasn't giving the Aussie enough credit.  To make the modifier more appropriate for the show maybe the correct adjective is Regalesque as she not only worked the injured arm by stomping on it and swinging it into the post but even broke things down to such a molecular level that she was working on torquing individual fingers while she had a modified armbar on.

However, when the DanaBot got caught cheating and ejected, Bayley used that as an opening to set up her signature to Belly-to-Eponymous and get a win in her welcome back match to almost match the welcome she got coming out. Not done there, Bay from the Bay continued her usually unspoken Sami Zayn impersonation by announcing she was back for the belt and that in order to do that she had to prove herself against the best--Charlotte. Hm. While Charlotte accepted backstage, it quickly got moved to the backburner when the recently ejected Dana got in her face about all the opportunities given the former champion instead of her, probably due to nepotism. Of note, a new woman conducted that interview, and did not get the head pat from Brooke. So it is specifically endemic to Taylor, and we look forward to Taylor C.M. Punking out Dana with a Hardy microphone enhanced beatdown in due time.

The other divas match on the show featured the triumphant return of Eva Marie to the ring, out to right misconceptions and show off THE training she got at the hands of Brian Kendrick. The bad news is that she got the sort of reception Donald Trump gets in polite society and still has some literal and metaphorical stutter steps in her offense; you can almost see her thinking before executing and her rope-running still looks at times like she's doing it with a .04 BAC. That being said she did have a quietly talented opponent to go against Cassie, alumnae of both the Storm Wrestling Academy and Australia (bad night for the lasses from Down Under)? Neither of them seemed to be working heel -- you could quibble, possibly, over Eva yanking Cassie into the middle rope in the closing moments but as one person's arrogance is another's confidence so one woman's ring general amplitude can be reconstituted in the eyes of her detractors as weasel scumbaggery -- and pulled off her own Sliced (B)re(a)d in her first career W.

The fans who were so quick to give her the Cena treatment before the match had been a second old were far more accepted at match's end than they were at the beginning, though it was by no means a full-fledged rapturous response. But clearly the work in developmental and with Kendrick is paying off, and with all the sudden air in the room of the NXT women's division, there are worse things to have than a competent wrestler getting steadily better at their work while being guaranteed that their presence alone will garner an audience response and not get the dead air that's anathema to 21st century television. Remember, Charlotte used to once be Ric Flair's daughter, Sasha Banks was an associate, Becky Lynch was dancing a jig, and Emma used to actually smile and dance. It's obviously too soon to call the Red Rocket the John Cena of Full Sail. But in a multitude of ways, there's sudden potential there that there wasn't before, and given the recent call-ups the E's a bunch of monkeys trying to work a bunch of tablets if they don't exploit the yellow fruit falling in their backyard into trying to generate a refreshing beverage out of it.

The Vaudevillains got into shape for their title match next week by working over Sawyer Fulton and Angelo Dawkins, to the general dismissal of Alexa Bliss WHO WE ALL KNOW MAMA BLISS DIDN'T RAISE LIKE THAT, and Samoa Joe and Baron Corbin both made extremely short order of some fresh meat. Also, once he's recovered from Owens' cheap shot apparently Master Regal will have to find something for Tyler Breeze to do once Takeover: Brooklyn happens (please stifle your chortling). But if NXT's moved into the Daemonic Era, to the surprise of nobody watching they seem to have alighted on the right man who can carry them through these injury-plagued times and hold up their World Championship with a smile on his face and timely rage in his heart; just the thing we've always wanted out of our conquering heroes since the dawning days of kayfabe.

Tomoaki Honma Even Jobs in His Sleep

$
0
0
Liger: Legendary wrestler, innovative junior heavyweight, dick sleep-interrupter
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Jushin Liger may have made some news abroad with his upcoming appearance in NXT, but he's still making waves in his home country and promotion of New Japan Pro Wrestling. While most of the roster (and Michael Elgin) is embroiled in the G1 Climax, Liger has decided to have his own tournament, one whose opponents are asleep. That's right, Liger is straight up disturbing wrestlers as they sleep. The video depicting this wrestling thought experiment is after the jump:



That's right, Liger tried pinning Togi Makabe, Manabu Nakanishi, Hiroshi Tanahashi, and Tomoaki Honma. On one hand, he's ribbing guys trying to sleep off a night of drinking. In any country, that's a dick move. But on the other, it really is funny to watch, especially the one at the end. Honma is the only one who actually gets pinned, but he has a very good reason. I won't spoil it.

The Battle Hive Is Ready for Trios

$
0
0
The Ants flank a Pharaoh this year
Graphics via ChikaraPro.com
Team number 12 in this year's King of Trios tournament, as expected, will hail from a Challenge of the Immortal team. Ophidian's Snake Pit included the eponymous leader, Eddie Kingston, and Shynron, and now his tag team partner Amasis has revealed his flanks for the team representing the Battle Hive. Although "Smooth Sailing" Ashley Remington would have been a fine combatant, the Funky Pharaoh as chosen his two formicary teammates, Fire Ant and Worker Ant, to battle alongside him in the annual most-populated tournament in wrestling. Fire Ant has a King of Trios title to his name, winning with Soldier Ant, the currently brainwashed member of the BDK, and Silver Ant, whose brain may or may not have been washed as a member of the Nightmare Warriors (I think I messed this up in earlier entries... get on your game, TH). Worker Ant underwent a bit of his own Stockholm Syndrome, as he was a member of the Colony both in 2012's and last year's tournaments. The 2012 run came while he was still a member of the Swarm under the guise assailANT.

Four teams remain to be announced, and it is expected that three of them will represent the aforementioned Nightmare Warriors, the Arcane Horde, and Crown and Court, the three remaining COTI teams. That last trio is a bit of a question mark, but I get the funny feeling that it will be a team that may or may not have three members and are definitely familiar to Chikara fans. One of those last four teams will be announced LIVE on Wednesday during the series premiere of Journey Into Chikara on YouTube and Chikaratopia. Will the team be that mystery fourth squadron, or will that non-COTI team be saved for last? I guess you'll have to tune in at 7 PM ET on Wednesday to find out, shameless plug over.

The Battle Hive will join the following trios in this year's tournament: The Bullet Club (AJ Styles and the Young Bucks), Team Lucha Underground (Fenix, Aerostar, and Drago), Team Fight Club Pro (MK McKinnan and Moustache Mountain), Team Attack (Mark Andrews, Pete Dunne, and Flash Morgan), the Blue World Order (Big Stevie Cool, Da Blue Guy, and Hollywood Nova), the Devastation Corporation (Blaster McMassive, Max Smashmaster, and Flex Rumblecrunch), Dasher's Dugout (Dasher Hatfield, Mark Angelosetti, and Icarus), the above-mentioned Snake Pit, United Nations (Juan Francisco de Coronado, Proletariat Boar of Moldova, and Prakash Sabar), the Gentlemen's Club (Chuck Taylor, Drew Gulak, and the Swamp Monster), and the BDK (Jakob Hammermeier Nøkken, Soldier Ant). The team announcements are almost through, and this year's tournament might just end up being the most unpredictable one yet.

WWE's Excuse for Vince McMahon Saying the N-Word Is As BS As You'd Think

$
0
0
Vince McMahon unapologetic in the face of heat from past insensitivity? THIS IS MY SHOCKED FACE
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Hulk Hogan's racist tirade has rightfully caused a huge uproar over the disgraced icon. Much of the furor has rightfully been directed at Hogan, but other targets have gotten the brunt. The actual leak of a private conversation has garnered sympathy for Hogan, and I agree to an extent that he was done dirty, if only because privacy is a right. Still though, it's 2015, and that kind of shitty behavior should be rooted out. That entire aspect of the story pretty much has me conflicted, but at the same time, the world of shitty people battling with each other is one I'd rather not ever think about too much (and believe me, if it turns out that Gawker Media was the party that leaked the racist rant, then this truly is a battle between shitty people).

The other target of backlash has been WWE itself, which is backlash that the company eminently deserves. Whether it took 35 years and a wrestler who needed genetics and once-in-a-century charisma to get it to book a Black man as its Champion or the numerous incidents of racist activity in storyline, including Vince McMahon saying the n-word out loud to John Cena at Survivor Series 2005, WWE's moral authority to rip people for racism is about as powerful as Zack Ryder's stroke is to get himself a run with the WWE World Heavyweight Championship.

Of course, the company would have to react; it'd be foolish not to. But it could have taken one of two routes. The first route would be to deny any kind of wrongdoing in regards to anyone and play tone-deaf defense to make sure no one is able to attack the company. The second would be a more thoughtful approach, one not dissimilar in tone to how Warner Bros. presents questionable cartoons from the past. Guess which one McMahon decided to take.

The exact verbiage of WWE's defensive defense as given to TMZ (Via WrestleChat, obvs) is as follows:
[It] was an outlandish and satirical skit involving fictional characters, similar to that of many scripted television shows and movies.
I can think of a few situations where that defense might be okay, but honestly, none of them could be applied to WWE. For a company that has been so outwardly hostile towards Black characters in its history to be so self-righteous about questionable acts is pretty lame.

The past can be forgiven, not erased but forgiven, if the company makes a much more concerted effort towards embracing true diversity leading into true colorblindness (which to be fair, nothing in American society has truly become colorblind thanks to racists still infiltrating the media and other bastions of power) starting tonight on RAW. The attitudes have to change on camera and in the boardrooms and writing sessions, not just with lip service paid on social media from whatever interns are running Triple H's and Stephanie McMahon's Twitter accounts. Strides have been made since 2005, but as that statement proves, those strides have fallen short.

Of course, the heat shouldn't lessen on Hogan here. The whole situation continues to stink, even if it's not necessarily surprising. It just goes to show that the whole business needs a wakeup call.

Smackdown: Friendship is Magic

$
0
0
What if Ambrose embraced the fireflies instead of fought them?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Should Be Friends – Dean Ambrose and Bray Wyatt
Last week I wrote about Ambrose being the third wheel in the developing Wyatt/Roman Reigns love story, but this week I'm more confused than ever about what the point is of having Wyatt antagonize Ambrose. They've already had their feud, and Ambrose is no worse off because of it. It's clear that Ambrose can't be physically taken out; he'll always pop back up, and putting him in peril just adds fuel to Reigns' fire. So if Ambrose will always be there for Reigns, if Reigns will never be truly alone as long as Ambrose is there, if physically hurting Ambrose would just spur Reigns on, then why not try to recruit Ambrose into the Wyatt Family?

This is where Wyatt should be at his most dangerous anyway. Forget the pseudo Undertaker spoooooooooooky bullshit. Wyatt should be scary because he can convince anyone to do anything, even if the other person knows it's wrong. More of the charismatic, evil cult leader, and less of the flashy but ultimately pointless turning all the lights off. How effective would it be to have Ambrose as a Family member? He's had intense interactions with both Wyatt and Harper, as part of the Shield and on his own. He and Reigns have remained best friends since the Shield broke up and remain fiercely protective of each other. I think it would be a great twist to throw a wrench into their dynamic.

I know we're going to be in for a bunch of tag matches featuring Ambrose and Reigns against Wyatt and Harper, and I know those will be good (seeing Harper with Wyatt again brought joy to my heart), but I just think that something new would be welcome, if only to halt the seemingly endless cycle of Wyatt interrupting Reigns and Ambrose's matches. Ambrose faced Sheamus on this episode, and while the two men don't really have a reason to fight each other it still could have been a good time. Both men have very physical styles, and their characters are both down for a fight at any time. However, their match lacked any intensity, and they seemed to just be going through the motions in anticipation of the inevitable Wyatt inference resulting in a disqualification.

Most Depressing Friendship Situation – Adam Rose
It finally happened. Adam Rose has apparently even lost Rosa Mendes, as she didn't appear with him this week during his match against Neville. Said match was quick and resulted in a win for Neville. Poor Adam Rose. I have a soft spot for him, and I don't like to see him all alone.

Friend With Regrets – Summer Rae
At least, I imagined Summer Rae to be having some regrets as I watched her struggle to speed-walk while wearing heels and carrying the Bulgarian flag in Rusev's wake. She ditched the flag as soon as she got to the ring and continued to be nothing but supportive to Rusev, but I bet she's still wondering what she's gotten herself into. As for Rusev, he faced Kevin Owens in what was kind of a bizarre match-up since they're both heels. Owens had bailed on their tag match earlier in the week, so it kind of made sense that Rusev would be angry about it, but the crowd was clearly confused as to who they were supposed to cheer for. That said, I did enjoy the unconventional match-up, and the match was perfectly fine right up until Owens once again bailed and Rusev won via count-out.

Best New Friends – Naomi and Sasha Banks
First of all, I do want to say that I think it's shitty that Naomi never did get a title run after her heel turn, and she likely won't get one out of this “Divas' Revolution.” With that being said, I am loving her and Sasha Banks getting to hang out together. I've heard people complain that Banks is too good to be paired with Naomi and Tamina or that Naomi's heel character was just a rip-off of Banks.' I don't care. Out of the three women's trios, Team BAD is my favourite, even though it's hilarious watching Tamina just kind of stand there while Naomi and Banks get their attitude on. By far the best part of Naomi and Banks' match against the Bella Twins was the two of them gleefully destroying Brie. Of course, once Nikki entered the fray she quickly dispatched Naomi, which really makes one wonder why the hell Brie keeps getting to represent Team Bella when she's so utterly useless, but whatever. I'm not going to tell Nikki how to run her squad when she's still the one with the title

Better Off Without Friends – Seth Rollins
The main event featured Seth Rollins against Cesaro. Rollins, still being without the benefit of Authority cronies surrounding him, was forced to rely on himself. He ended up winning after poking Cesaro in the eye, but even with the cheating it was clear that he'd had to work hard for the win. Rollins looked competent for once, but Cesaro looked phenomenal. I like this. I like Rollins being increasingly abandoned by the Authority and floundering against superior opponents. It's forcing him to be strategic and actually build on his character, though, as has been pointed out by others, said character is pretty Flair-esque. However, I hated that, in addition to the eye-poke, they also had Rollins try to bail on the match. I suppose you could look at it as the impetus for his cheating – “this giant Swiss guy is just going to toss me back in the ring if I try to leave, guess I'd better actually try to win” – but I am so, so tired of this cowardly heel trope, especially since Kevin Owens had already done the exact same thing earlier in the show. More fighting dirty, less refusing to fight, please. Also, more Cesaro in the main event.

PWX Is Also Doing a Late Summer Tournament in the South

$
0
0
Moose is making the tournament rounds this summer
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
The Scenic City Invitational will not be the only tournament being run in Southern states this summer. Pro Wrestling Xperience, one of North Carolina's two biggest-name independent promotions, will be trying its hand at a 16-man single elimination tournament about a month after the SCI runs. If you're in Winston-Salem for VapeMania XV, then you'll be able to attend the X16 Tournament, a two-day extravaganza, on September 5 and 6.

Five names have been announced for the fray so far. Two of them will also be appearing for the SCI, Moose and Gunner. Two more are North Carolina standouts-turned-national names thanks to appearances in Pro Wrestling Guerrilla and Combat Zone Wrestling. The first is Andrew Everett, whose aerial pyrotechnics make nearly everyone else's look pedestrian, and the second is Trevor Lee, who is on a short list of guys who could dethrone Roderick Strong for the PWG Championship. The fifth name is internationally known high flyer extraordinaire, Ricochet, who might be the biggest unsigned name in pro wrestling right now (seeing as AJ Styles and the Young Bucks appear regularly for Ring of Honor and New Japan Pro Wrestling, and Ricochet has only appeared for NJPW in spot duty so far).

On one hand, the timing seems dubiously close to the organization and announcement of the SCI, but on the other, it's happening a month after the first tourney. Plus, it's not like tournaments are necessarily an innovative thing. They are, however, crowd-pleasing events, especially when they happen over the course of one weekend. While I expect more than a few local PWX/North Carolina locals to populate the field, I also expect more flash with the guest announcements. PWX has booked several name indie guys over the years including Kevin Steen, the Bucks, Adam Cole, the American Wolves, Roderick Strong, and Johnny Gargano to name a few. However, while this tournament is spaced from the SCI, it will run counter to King of Trios, which is happening the same weekend in Easton, PA.

Regardless, I expect the tournament to live up to the standards set by the wrestlers announced and PWX itself. The only thing that bugs me is that it's being held at a vaping convention. Yeah, vape culture creeps me out a bit, but then again, a lot of hardcore cultures creep me out, including some subcultures within wrestling. Either way, if you can stand being around people blowing water vapor with flavored oils all around, head up to Winston-Salem and check it out.

Not Just Another Promotion: Looking Back at Lucha Underground

$
0
0
Pentagón, Jr. is a huge part of Ultima Lucha
Photo via depmax.wordpress.com
So I tried to review every episode of Lucha Underground but couldn’t keep up because, you know, real life. And now we are almost at the end of the first season, and its time for Ultima Lucha. Instead of talking about the matches and the show episode-wise, I find that it suits me better to pen down some random observations and see what sticks.

Over the past few weeks, a little of my enthusiasm for the weekly shows has cooled off; not that the shows are bad or even remotely approaching the levels of crappiness and incoherence of Monday Night Raw, but they feel very much like place holders for the final volcano of awesomeness that Ultima Lucha is guaranteed to be. Wrestlers are taking pins in short two minute matches, there are disqualification finishes due to outside interference, no wrestling for wrestling’s sake, unofficial brawls outside the ring, the time and tested tropes to building up a PPV.

Of course, the good thing is that it makes sense for wrestlers, in kayfabe and reality, not to give it their all – because unlike WWE, Lucha Underground doesn’t get 14 “special events” a year. This is it, folks – an actual, honest to god climax to the stories that have been told over the past year or so. No doubt, we are going to see some extremely good matches by some of the best wrestlers on this planet, man.

The LU Championship Match Main Event has been built up extremely well, and the best moment came in the July 22 episode where Prince Puma showed off his flippy super powers and finally scored one over Mil Muertes and the Disciples of Death. I don’t know how it is possible to look intimidated behind a mask but till that moment in this feud Prince Puma was closer to Seth Rollins pre Battleground rather than the courageous baby face he has been all year. The Mil Muertes/Brock Lesnar analogies are too obvious aren’t they?

A side note, after watching Battleground, I had a strong feeling that Brock Lesnar just does not fit in the WWE anymore. He is super powered comic book super villain in a land of  normal human wrestlers. I have noted earlier on this blog about how Lesnar should be booked, more of Eddie Guerrero v. Brock Lesnar at No Way Out 2004, less of John Cena v. Brock Lesnar at SummerSlam 2014. But if you do have to go this way, then the best place for someone like Lesnar is LU, because LU is basically a comic book without the fluorescent death rays and CGI.

The second biggest story line has of course been the story of Pentagón, Jr. juxtaposed with the arc of Vampiro. There have been very few missteps on this show, and if they are letting Vampiro wrestle then I trust them that they know what they are doing and he can go. Outside of that, I have had zero problems with how he has handled his end of the bargain in this feud. The whole thing again has a very comic book vibe, as Pentagón becomes obsessed with his “maestro” about whose identity we will get to know once he can beat the caca out of Vampiro.

But, more importantly, looking back on the first season as a whole, LU has managed to do a few important things for wrestling in the year of our lord, 2015. So let us have a brief look :

A. People have often called for a offseason-based approach to wrestling. Depending on whether a second season is in play, LU could be the best proof you can offer to support your arguments for this. Wrestlers get some time off to rejuvenate after a satisfying season finale, and there is no chance of the viewer becoming jaded and saturated with the product. If you envision wrestling as watching the biography of a particular character in whom you are invested, it would be a good thing to have a couple of commas, full stops and paragraph changes in the story. An even better thing would be for the whole roster of your main characters go off the grid for a while because ideally if you are investing in their careers you would want every person who walks out on that stage to be important in their own unique way, wouldn’t you?

B. Wrestling shows needn’t be three hours long every week, even with a huge roster. A promotion needn’t demarcate five or six people as “main eventers” and have them go on last on all the shows all the time; everybody should be able to bring it in the main provided the time and place are right. I don’t mean to go on a rant here, but WWE is like that petulant upper class house wife or corporate boss who want the housekeeper/drone to do face time and be at the work place all the time even though there is no work to be done.

C. Fuck reality, but don’t screw with the internal logic of your show. Create your own rules but don’t randomly abandon them in the middle without warning. LU has done all of this really well. On the other hand (sigh), you have reality era in WWE. WWE tries to be as “real” as possible: women can’t wrestle men because they are not strong enough, not too much flippy stuff because it doesn’t feel like the right psychology etc etc. Ok, so arbitrary limitations on your soap opera in tights show with Irish Whips and perfectly co-ordinated back body drops, cool, fine, accepted, your show, your story. But then none of these real men and women go and behave remotely like anybody we can relate to. If X is feuding with Y then he will never care about Z who was his brother from another mother a month ago or about A with whom he had a blood feud like, three months ago. A Hell in a Cell match because it’s October? Really? We are supposed to believe that two wrestlers would put their bodies on the line in this hellish structure of steel (their words not mine) just because it’s that time of the year? See, they don’t even stick with their own logic of reality where women are too weak to become Tag Team and World Champions but Elimination Chamber in July and Extreme Rules in April.      
    
The one, final conclusion that I draw from having watched wrestling over all these years, culminating with LU, is that big ain’t necessarily better and corporatization hurts the business of art. The overwhelming drive for instant money to please shareholders and speculators on the stock market doesn’t lead to good story telling or employee and customer satisfaction. All it leads to is complacency, cronyism, inertia and exploitation of labor. 

Batten Down the Hatches: SummerSlam's Going Four Hours

$
0
0
Undertaker's entrance should take up a good portion of the extra hour added to SummerSlam this year
Photo Credit: WWE.com
The rumors that abounded for the last week have been confirmed to WWE's distributor in Italy, of all places. SummerSlam will be a four-hour telecast this year. The pre-show will start at 6 PM ET, and the main telecast will begin at 7 PM, as announced by Luca Franchini via a Facebook post. Franchini is the main WWE announcer for Sky Italia, which airs WWE events in said country. The increase by an hour makes SummerSlam the second four-hour extravaganza on WWE's calendar this year, the first being WrestleMania.

The extension appears to be the latest in a string of moves to give the event more of a WrestleMania-like prestige. It has already been coupled by a live NXT special in the same Barclays Center, and big, part-time names have either been announced (Undertaker) or are rumored to be booked (Sting). The fourth hour will do more to give it that "Mania of the Summer" feel, although I suspect the addition of time won't necessarily add more time for matches. Undertaker will definitely get an elaborate, time-consuming entrance, and I bet he won't be the only one.

The news won't dissuade people from accusing WWE of overkilling its product. The three hours of RAW, two of Smackdown, two C-shows, an hour for the separate NXT narrative, no fewer than two hour-long reality shows, and the various pre-and-post shows that go along with these kinds of events gives WWE's output the kind of saturation that might kill showrunners in other forms of scripted media aneurysms just thinking about it. However, people out there at least attempt to consume all of it, God bless 'em, and if the footage helps sell subs or boost ratings, then WWE is not going to stop. A four-hour spectacle for the second biggest event of the year falls in line with that MO.

Speaking of NXT, the latest in WWE using that developmental/premium arm to wage war against Ring of Honor has manifested itself in the latest set of dates announced. NXT will be hitting the east-central Texas loop September 17 through 19 in Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, respectively, not coincidentally at the same time ROH will be in the area. The indie-turned-corporate-owned promotion will set up shop in San Antonio on September 18 and 19 for a pay-per-view telecast of All-Star Extravaganza 7 and a second show that presumably will be reserved for television tapings. If any doubt remained on WWE's intentions on smoking out ROH and sending it back to the stone age, this announcement of dueling dates should dispel it completely.

Also, if you take a gander at Destination America's TV schedule Flash-thingy and scroll over to Wednesday at 8 PM, you won't find ROH's television show there. The slot is now occupied by Bigfoot in America, and the 11 PM replay that airs after TNA Impact is now the first-run on DA for the weekly show. For DA to lose such favor with the program it brought in to replace (or if you believe the fringe, "stimulate/challenge") TNA so quickly either speaks to the network as too impatient for its own good, or that it's easily compromised by bigger money. The implication is that WWE had a talk with the outlet and maybe flashed some money at it to knock ROH down a peg or two. Either way, WWE appears to be showing more of a killer instinct with less of an established opponent than its war with World Championship Wrestling in the '90s. Honestly, if ROH survives the year intact with its same momentum, I will be shocked. I hope I'm wrong though. WWE pervading the scene like Sauron-with-the-One-Ring is bad for everyone, no matter how good NXT is or how much money it can pay your favorite wrestlers.

But hey, SummerSlam's gonna be four hours, so yeah.

I Listen So You Don't Have To: Art of Wrestling, Ep. 260

$
0
0
Gulak visited Cabana's show this week
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Show: Art of Wrestling
Episode: 260
Run Time: 1:01:21
Guest: Drew Gulak

Summary: Cabana describes Drew Gulak as a “no-knee pad guy” in the mold of Frank Gotch, a straight shooter. Gulak’s in-ring style comes through in this interview, as he describes his life in a no-nonsense manner. We hear a great deal of Gulak’s origin story, getting addicted to wrestling by attending PPV parties with friends where they watched shows like WrestleMania X. Gulak was ushered into indie wrestling by his high school chemistry teacher who regularly attended ECW shows (Gulak grew up in Philadelphia). When Gulak was 14, this teacher took him to a CZW show, where he became hooked, and then began training with CZW a couple years later. Cabana asks him about the training process with CZW and about Gulak’s current position as head trainer at CZW. The rest of the episode deals in little stories about Gulak’s life in wrestling, competing in places like Chikara and PWG.

Quote of the Week:“Quack (Mike Quackenbush) always gives the best locker room speeches. One of them he gave was … ‘No matter what you guys do today, I want you to take this with you: No matter who you are, no matter how popular you are, there’s probably one person out there who came to this show to see you. You made a lasting impression on that person, so go out there and do it for them.’ … You do make these connections with people, whether you realize it or not.”

Why you should listen: Gulak’s story about being taken to a CZW show at the age of 14 by his chemistry teacher is a crazy one, met with shock by Cabana, but Gulak’s poker-faced reaction to this shock is hilarious. This is just his life, and it’s normal to him. Gulak shows much humility even as he takes some partial credit for having trained people like Adam Cole and Solomon Crowe. It’s nice to hear a wrestler who has no attitude and no interest in cutting anyone down, which perfectly lines up with Cabana’s podcast ethics.

Why you should skip it: Cabana and Gulak are so comfortable with each other that they sometimes sound as if they don’t care that other people are listening. They occasionally delve a bit too deep into the little details about Gulak’s childhood, and I don’t think we really need to hear the intricacies of Gulak’s parents struggling to sell their house when he was a kid. I also would have liked to hear more about Gulak’s adventures in Chikara and PWG. Even Gulak seemed confused as to why the episode was ending so early, as there definitely was more ground to cover.

Final thoughts: For those who complain that most podcasts are just two friends sitting in a room talking to each other about nothing, this episode at times confirms that misconception. Their familiarity makes for a laid-back listen, but there really are a couple fun stories that make the chill vibes worth your time. Just remember: when Gulak starts talking about his parents selling their house, skip a couple minutes and then jump back in.

Don't Ever Say "Wrestling Is Fake" to Toru Yano (Or John Cena)

$
0
0
Ouch
Photo Credit: Toru Yano
The G1 Climax Tournament is in full-swing right now, with one-third of the shows in the books by the time anyone reads this post. In a slate of shows as packed together as the G1 is, injuries are bound to happen. For example, Shinsuke Nakamura injured his elbow at some point this past weekend, and it was severe enough for him to miss this morning's card. Here's to a full recovery for the former IWGP Intercontinental Champion. However, the goriest, most grotesque injury was another one that hasn't cost any missed time yet, but man, if it didn't leave a nasty scar on Nakamura's CHAOS stablemate, Toru Yano.

The above-pictured scar came when three-time G1 Climax winner Hiroyoshi Tenzan hit Yano askew with a headbutt. Both guys apparently busted open, but Yano's wound was just a bit more severe. It didn't stop him from winning the match however, and ten stitches later, and he was able to live to tweet about. It doesn't take much to turn a work into a shoot, a couple inches here, or a slip-up there. Luckily, Yano was able to come out of it mostly intact. No matter who wins, he definitely has the most notable souvenir.

Of course, not to feel left out of the whole ordeal, one John Cena had to go and get his face rearranged as well. He took a knee from Seth Rollins in their United States Championship main event on RAW last night, and well, yeah:

OUCH
Photo Credit: WWE.com

NOSES AREN'T SUPPOSED TO BEND THAT WAY, JOHN. In all seriousness, I hope Cena's alright after that collision with Rollins' knee. He may have lucked out with the broken nose, as if that sort of thing goes awry, it could lead to even worse injuries. Wrestling may be worked, but it's not fake in the least. Yano and Cena have the battle scars to show that.

Drew Galloway and Rhino Made the Front Page in Scotland

$
0
0
Broadsheet mayhem!
Photo via @ScottishSun
Usually, when pro wrestling makes the front page of a newspaper, it's because of something bad that happened in a ring or to a wrestler. Owen Hart's death, [REDACTED] going nuts, and most recently, Hulk Hogan's racist tirade have all been instances where the biz made headlines for the wrong reasons. However, over in Scotland, two former WWE superstars (well, one former and one NXT moonlighter) made headlines for something they actually did in a wrestling match.

Drew Galloway and Rhino did battle for Scotland's Insane Championship Wrestling, and the action got so hot and heavy that it spilled out into the streets and stopped traffic. The Scottish Sun took note and dedicated an entire page with photos and everything to the brawl. The positive press was a welcome change to the public perception of wrestling in old media, even if the Sun, Scottish version or not, isn't exactly the most reputable newspaper in the United Kingdom.

Hopefully, it won't be the last time wrestling gets positive press for stuff that happens in the ring or on the show. I'm hearing rumblings that ESPN might actually cover SummerSlam, which is not actually surprising in the least. WWE chose ESPN as the medium where it announced its re-signing of Brock Lesnar. The negative shit, especially from Hogan lately, is always going to reinforce societal stigmas, but if companies attempt to get and actually received that good press, maybe some of the bad perception of wrestling will go away.
Viewing all 4899 articles
Browse latest View live