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The First Six Names for National Pro Wrestling Day '14 Have Been Announced

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Two of the first six announced for NPWD '14
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein

Via the website

The site for National Pro Wrestling Day has begun announcing wrestlers who will appear at this year's extravaganza, six to be exact. Those wrestlers are...
  • Mike Bennett - Bennett is no stranger to the Chikaraverse, having competed at King of Trios. I was surprised not to see him at Cibernetico on Kevin Steen's team, but regardless, he's a solid addition to the card.
  • Maria Kanellis - Normally, I'd say Bennett's announcement would make her's a no-brainer, but given that the organizers made a point to include her in the announcement, will she actually wrestle? I hope she does, just so I can see if she's improved since her WWE days.
  • Green Ant - I'm a bit surprised that he's the first member of The Colony announced for the event. Nonetheless, whatever contest he's involved in immediately becomes a favorite for Match of the Night.
  • Drew Gulak - I know this Gulak will be "Wrestlings Are/Beyond whitebread competitor" version (nothing wrong with that, actually), but a part of me hopes that he shows up in full "Campaigning for a Better Combat Zone" regalia with Kimber Lee and everyone else in tow.
  • The Estonian Thunder Frog - The Frog is the least surprising but perhaps most satisfying announcement to date. That dang frog has become quite the fan favorite and favorite of mine over the last year.
  • Colt Cabana - Obviously, Cabana's the trump card of announcements so far. A propos of nothing, I hope he does a live Art of Wrestling podcast, just so I can experience one in person.
Also, if you go to any of the deceased Wrestlings Are sites (Intense, Cool, Awesome, Art), they will redirect you to National Pro Wrestling Day's site. An omen?

Year End Sorting Bins, 2013: *Sigh* I Guess So

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What happened to you, man?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Yeah, this is where it starts getting real. I'll only blurb 20 of these personalities and just list the rest, because, what, do you think I have all day? The "Begrudging Toleration" bin contains all the wrestlers I don't really actively root for, but that I don't necessarily have a problem with. They're just there with flashes of good performance.

CM Punk - A lot of bloom has come off the rose for Punk in the last year. While I still contend he's one of the best in-ring wrestlers WWE has on its roster, his character, ever since the Undertaker feud from WrestleMania, has stagnated. Real talk, he was boat-raced by Paul Heyman on the microphone during their feud (and I don't even think that was Heyman's best work on the stick), but as he started to degenerate, the cacophony of support around him got really loud. While I try not to let the Twitter stuff inform my opinion on characters, some of the things he posts are just so unlikable. He's 2013's Sheamus - excellent wrestler, gross character.

Los Matadores - They repackaged Epico and Primo for this gimmick?

Brooke Tessmacher - To me, she was the mascot of what the Knockouts Division had become before I stopped watching TNA for the most part. She certainly tries hard, and I'd have nothing against her if she were seconding the renaissance-level women division containing Angelina Love, Awesome Kong, Gail Kim, Sarita, Alissa Flash, and Daffney. The problem is she's replaced those people along with Velvet Sky and a bunch of other wrestlers hired in order to mimic the WWE Divas. That reason alone is why I can't totally dislike her, but I still would rather have something resembling what the Knockouts used to be.

JT LaMotta - I hate to crap on a dude who just retired, but I never really got his oversexed misogynist shtick in ACW. He was a decent wrestler, and his antics more often than not got him some comeuppance, but I am not sad to see him retire.

Josh Mathews - Every booth he's ever been in has suffered from repeated bouts of random dead air. Not the sign of a good PBP guy.

Rob Terry - I've warmed up considerably to Terry (the cardigans helped a whole lot) but considering I used to hold him in the same esteem as Kurt Angle, I'm not sure saying that means much.

Jerry Lawler - The only reason Lawler is in this bin and not the HATEHATEHATE one is that I still can't let go of what he can do in a story or in the ring. Plus, if one can believe, he actually is a better option on RAW by himself with Michael Cole than he is in a three-man booth, mainly because he doesn't have to compete with JBL's constant "MAGGLE"-ing.

Aaron Epic - He one of the most boring wrestlers I've ever watched. However, he seems to try hard, and he actually had a spade of really neat matches at Tournament for Tomorrow.

The American Pitbulls - I have to give Davey Richards (John Cahill??) his props in that in all the times I've seen him wrestle in 2013 (which so far has been maybe twice or three times?), he hasn't pissed me off. I'm interested to see what the Wolves can do in WWE though.

The Bella Twins - I think a lot of their problems stem from WWE having no idea how to employ their skillsets as actors, and that is a non-starter for me whenever they're on camera. But they both seem to try hard, and the way Brie and Daniel Bryan interact with each other is way adorable.

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If only he could reform by melting...
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Michael Elgin - When I watch him wrestle, I am reminded of the T-1000, a great movie villain, but not something I especially want to see in a wrestling ring.

Super Dragon - I love what he does with PWG, but the continued attitude towards women feels a bit off to me. Even when he looked to be pushing Candice LeRae to the moon, he had to go and take her match with Adam Cole away because Chris Hero showed up. I understand the logistics and wanting the best match possible, but still...

Hornswoggle - The JBL and Cole Show actually has gone a long way in normalizing him for me, and a lot of my malaise towards him is WWE Creative's fault, but regardless of context, he still makes me groan most of the time he's on camera.

Façade - I still can't get over how corny his "white boy dreadlock tagger" gimmick is, but I do admit he has some hops in the ring.

Kyle O'Reilly - He's okay, I guess, but he's no Reilly O'Kyle.

Seleziya Sparx - She's only playing the game, and I feel bad for her since she's obviously more talented than having quarters thrown at her by disgusting assholes in the crowd. But she feels like she's accepting of her role a bit too eagerly, which makes me sad.

Shane Matthews - The shame part of his ham-handed attempt at satire through blunt misogyny on Twitter is that I continue to love 3.0 as an act in the ring.

Mason Ryan - He actually got a little better down in Full Sail, but he still walks like he's stop-motion animated, which is hilariously sad.

Rickey Shane Page - Page represents a cluster of dudes in Cleveland who get rave reviews from the home crowd, but whom I just don't get. I don't dislike them per se, but I just feel nothing when they're in the ring most of the time.

Swagger forever in Zeb's awesome, moustachioed shadow
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Austin Aries - What a precipitous fall this guy had from a year or so ago. But hey, when you reveal yourself to be a scumbag who sexually harasses a ring announcer because she screwed up your name, well, you don't deserve to be considered among my favorites. I won't hate on his talent though.

Kenny King - As much as I want to blame TNA for not cultivating a character out of King more than "athletic black dude," he really has never done a good job of doing that himself before he got there.

Jay Briscoe - I so want to like him because his character is right in my wheelhouse, but man, I cannot reconcile someone who can't keep his hate to himself with anything they do in a wrestling ring.

Jack Swagger - Watching Jack Swagger regress over the last few years has been both sad and hilarious. He's found his groove again, mainly because all he has to do is wrestle and tag with one of the two or three best pure wrestlers in the world while Zeb Colter continues to be microphone Jesus, but I'm done investing too much in SWAGGAH.

Michael Cole - I am convinced a good announcer exists in Michael Cole, but I can't shake the feeling that a lot of his bad habits that can be blamed on direction or partnership. I think if he were separated from JBL and if he just concentrated on calling action and shilling and if Vince McMahon wasn't in his ear, he'd be great, but conversely, I just dropped a lot of "ifs" to try and justify how he could improve.

Stephanie McMahon - The fact that I consider Stephanie McMahon as one of the best characters on TV right now may not seem to reconcile with her placement in this bin. However, like her husband, she's left a lot of scars on my wrestling fan soul, and I still can't get over her when she makes her cameo appearances dressing down AJ Lee. Seriously, what is the point of her even attempting to do that, especially when WWE has shown no inkling of making Lee part of the resistance against the Authority?

And the rest...

Darin Childs
BxB Hulk
Shitty
Darin Childs
Brodus Clay
Jay Lethal
Jaykus Plisken
Cary Silkin
Chasyn Rance
Too many wounds, man, too many wounds
Photo Credit: WWE.com
B-Boy
Silas Young
Ricky Romida
D'Arcy Dixon
Velvet Sky
Shawn Vexx
Hunico and Camacho
Chest Flexor
Teddy Long
Marty Jannetty
Cheech Hernandez
Eva Marie and Jojo
Truth Martini
Alicia Fox
Christian Rose
Mike Mondo
Eric Ryan
Shelton Benjamin
Booker T
Vik Dalishus
Yoshi Tatsu
The Ascension
Gunner
Hernandez
Annie Social
Hale Collins
Bobby Beverly
Johnny Cockstrong
Jeremy Borash
The Rock
Killa Kash
AJ Styles
Ezavel Suena
Carson
Egotistico Fantastico
Shawn Michaels
Wink Vavasseur
Ezekiel Jackson
The Kentucky Buffet
JTG
Great Khali
Sin Cara
Taryn Terrell
SAT
Abyss
Dragon Kid

Throwback Thursday: I'm Not Telling You Anything You Don't Already Know

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One of the great missed opportunities by WWE in the early Aughts was Sean O'Haire. The statuesque, agile high-flyer had a money look and was regarded as one of the most promising wrestlers to come from the purchase of WCW. All he needed was a gimmick. I certainly thought his "Devil's Advocate" character had legs, but WWE didn't know how to implement it within a dynamic wrestling narrative. Why does that not surprise me in the least? Anyway, someone made a playlist of all the vignettes, so watch 'em and marvel at what could have been.



This week's post is brought to you by @thegnc, who not only provided the superstar's name for this week's entry, but also the specific promos.

The 2013 Bloggie Awards Nominations: New to Me, Feud

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An epic WWE feud
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Just chugging along with these nominations, yo.

Let's get on to the next group of nominees, shall we?

The New to Me Award - For the best rookie or heretofore new wrestler to major promotions known to me in the last year or so.

Prior Winners:
2009 – Sheamus
2010 – Wade Barrett
2011 – Mia Yim
2012 – Mark Angel/Angelosetti

And the nominees are:
Andrew Everett - He began the year as a wrestling soccer goat, but masked or not, he tore up the indies this year after toiling in relative obscurity. Chikara, CZW, Gabe-Land, and AIW all got a taste of what he could do, and in turn, he helped heap attention on his home territory in North Carolina.

Biff Busick - Busick went from being a guy with a little bit of buzz at the beginning of the year to being one of the surest things on any card he was booked on. I don't think it a coincidence that his feud with Eddie Edwards came about the same time Beyond Wrestling was going on a bigger schedule. Plus, as Frank O'Rourke, he became as much of a stalwart for the Wrestlings Are as anyone else.

Enzo Amore - When I first heard that WWE had given a dude a loud mouth New Yorker gimmick, I was a bit hesitant to accept it, but then I saw Amore chew up scenery with his speed-addled and insanely charming promo style. The man was money in any segment he was in, and his wrestling is surprisingly not far behind his mic skills.

Estonian Thunder Frog - The first time I ever saw him at National Pro Wrestling Day was one of the happiest days in my wrestling fan life. Even though he's only technically wrestled for main company once, he is probably the most Chikara wrestler ever. In his first year as a character, the Frog had good matches, a money gimmick with the hammer, and even some story work against the Polar Baron's Union.

Tyler Breeze - A dude who takes selfies all the time? Even in today's society, where something like that could come off as trite, Breeze made it work. He threw himself so much into character that he made it work past superficial trappings. Breeze is easily one of NXT's best characters, let alone new characters.

Feud of the Year - For the rivalry between two or more wrestlers or groups of wrestlers that best exemplified storytelling or match quality

Prior Winners:
2009 – CM Punk vs. Jeff Hardy
2010 – Kevin Steen (and Steve Corino) vs. El Generico (and Colt Cabana)
2011 – CM Punk vs. John Cena
2012 – Daniel Bryan vs. Kane

And the nominees are:
Amasis vs. Ophidian - The build for the Implosion of the Osirian Portal was a lot longer the payoff portion of it was, but that six months between Under the Hood and Aniversario was hot. Having an epic blowoff match helped tons.

Antonio Cesaro vs. Sami Zayn - This match was based mostly on three incredible wrestling matches on TV. The setup was simple; Cesaro demanded better competition, and Zayn provided it. And he provided it again. And then he provided it in a best two-out-of-three falls match. Cesaro won the feud, but Zayn was minted as a bona fide star in the process.

Biff Busick vs. Eddie Edwards - Most feuds are based in personal issues, but Busick and Edwards engaged in what most would probably call "rivalry." No hate was developed between the two, but the matches kept escalating and escalating, creating the most unique feud in years.

Daniel Bryan vs. Randy Orton - Even with their tepid story run between SummerSlam and Hell in a Cell, Bryan and Orton still brought the heat in the ring. Where this feud shone best for me was in the summer time, when Bryan, Orton, and Kane were still embroiled in a feud with The Shield. Their dissension provided great subtext to the main story and again generated some spiffy matches.

The Rhodes Boys vs. The Shield - WWE anomalously put together a concise, two-month story with some of the best of their characters and saved the fall months when the WWE Championship scene was floundering. The Rhodes family's struggle and redemption was one of the best heroic arcs of the last few years, and The Shield was the perfect foil group for them.

Any Shows This Weekend? Heroes and Titans, Cages and Battles

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Tremont steps into the Cage of Death once more
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Real talk. My birthday is on Monday. I am a humble man (STOP LAUGHING, JERKS), one who doesn't want much from you, the readers. All I ask for my birthday is that in the weekend preceding it, you go out, you find a wrestling show this weekend, and you go have yourself a grand ol' time. Plenty of wrestling shows are happening perhaps in your neighborhood this weekend. If you need help finding one that I may not be describing below, check out Pro Wrestling Events. However, if you're in the area of one of the shows I'll be describing below, then go right on.

FRIDAY

SHINE kicks the weekend off with an Internet pay-per-view broadcast of their 15th show live tonight at 9 PM Eastern Standard Time on WWN Live. If you're going live, be at the Orpheum in Ybor City, FL for that 9 PM bell time. In the main event, SHINE Champion Rain will defend her title against Amazing Kong in her final match ever. Will Rain get to retire as Champion, or will Kong keep the lineage intact and put the Champ out on her back? Another huge match on this show pits elseworlds allies Jessicka Havok and Allysin Kay against each other in one-on-one action. Mia Yim and Ivelisse Velez will square off in hard-hitting singles action as well, while Leva Bates will tackle Neveah in a Friday the 13th Anything Goes match. Mercedes Martinez will face a challenge from Heidi Lovelace. Also appearing on the show will be Sassy Stephie, Angelina Love, Su Yung, Santana Garrett, and Amber O'Neal.

If you're in the Canadian Pacific Northwest, head on over to Port Coquitlam, BC for Elite Canadian Championship Wrestling's Wrestling with Hunger, a fundraiser benefit for those in need in the greater Vancouver area. Donations of toys, cash, or food will be taken, and a prize raffle will be drawn for those who do donate. The show is at the Elks Lodge, and the doors open at 7:30 PM local time. Nicole Matthews, Scotty Mac, and several other ECCW stars will be there.

SATURDAY

Combat Zone Wrestling's year-end extravaganza, Cage of Death XV, will be broadcast on CZW iPPV at 7:30 Eastern Standard Time. If you want to get there live, head to the Flyers Skate Zone in Voorhees, NJ, and if you've purchased your tickets online, be there at 4 PM local for a Q and A with the wrestlers of CZW. The company will also be collecting unwrapped, unopened toys to donate to Toys for Tots, so if you're headed out tomorrow, make sure you mix in a little generosity with your bloodlust and help out some disadvantaged children.

The titular main event match will pit the Nation of Intoxication against the team of Matt Tremont, Drew Blood, Rory Mondo, and Ron Mathis. However, the most interesting match on my end will see Chris Hero returning to CZW for the first time in almost three-and-a-half years to face his protege and current Combat Zone World Champion, Drew Gulak. Gulak's gold is on the line, but what he lacks in experience, he gains in entourage, as the Campaign for a Better Combat Zone will most certainly be at ringside. BLK-OUT will defend their Tag Team Championships against David Starr and JT Dunn, while Alex Colon defends his Wired TV Title against Shane Strickland. Willie Mack comes east to join Chuck Taylor, Latin Dragon, AR Fox, and Andrew Everett in a Showcase Scramble. In trios action, the Brothers Crist and Neveah will battle Sozio, Biff Busick, and DJ Hyde. Greg Excellent will clash with Freight Train, while Davey Richards will make one last stop in CZW before he becomes John Cahill to get into a kick war with Chris Dickinson. Kimber Lee battles Christina von Eerie. Azreal and Bandido Jr. take on Alex Reynolds and John Silver. THIS SHOW IS GODDAMN LOADED.

Ring of Honor's year-end tradition, Final Battle, will be taking place at the Hammerstein Ballroom in the heart of Manhattan, NY, at 7:30 PM local time. The main event is a triple threat for the Undisputed ROH World Championship. Adam Cole won the tournament to crown the new Champ when Jay Briscoe was stripped of the title via injury. Both Briscoe and Michael Elgin have beef with the way Cole has conducted himself since becoming Champion, namely for sneak attacking both of them. Briscoe has gone so far as to get his own title belt seeing as he never lost his in the ring. They'll all wrestle for the right to be the man. Longest reigning Television Champ in company history Matt Taven will defend his title against Tommaso Ciampa, while the team of Bobby Fish and Kyle O'Reilly will defend their Tag Championships against Homicide and Eddie Kingston. In another tag match that will tickle many people's fancies, the Young Bucks will go up against ACH and TaDarius Thomas. Eddie Edwards will have a mystery partner when he collides with Roderick Strong and Jay Lethal, while Kevin Steen and Mike Bennett will compete in a stretcher match for the right to continue using the piledriver. Mark Briscoe will take on Silas Young in a strap match, while Matt Hardy makes his ROH return against Adam Page. This show is also GODDAMN LOADED.

Titan Clash also takes place Saturday. What is this show, you might ask? Well, three of the top promotions in Georgia, Platinum Championship Wrestling of Porterdale/Atlanta, Deep Southern Championship Wrestling in Blue Ridge, and Empire Pro Wrestling of Rossville, GA/Chattanooga, TN, are combining forces to create a triple-shot supershow at the DSCW Arena in Blue Ridge. The doors open at 4 PM local time, and as this hype video says (an EXCELLENT hype video by most standards), the clobberin' starts at 5 PM. Fred Yehi will take on Chip Day in the PCW main event. Johnny Viper vs. Chris Ganz headlines the Empire portion, and Kyle Matthews vs. Jason "The Gift" Kincaid will anchor the DSCW portion. Shane Marx, KT Hamill, Cody Hall, Lamar Phillips, Cyrus the Destroyer, Tank, and Ace Rockwell will all be there too. Scott Hall will also make an appearance to manage his son. Another show that is GODDAMN LOADED.

International Wrestling Cartel's Winner Take All happens at the Court Time Sports Center in Elizabeth, PA with a special bell time of 7 PM local. The main event will pit IWC Champion John McChesney against Dalton Castle. Johnny Gargano, Colt Cabana, and Facade will compete in a three-way match to decide number one contendership to the Super Indy Championship. Also wrestling at this show will be Matt Striker, Asylum of the Flatliners (!!!), Colin Delaney, Shiima Xion, and Logan Shulo, who will be wrestling his final match before heading off to Full Sail to become a WWE Superstar.

Vintage Wrestling will be helping to raise funds for Winter Springs High School at their gym in Winter Springs, FL for Bear Brawl. The show starts at 7 PM, and Mike Cruz, Frankie Ciatso, Kory Chavis, and many more will be appearing.

Cornelia, GA, will be rockin' with another set of Anarchy Wrestling television tapings at the Anarchy Arena. Bell time is 8 PM, and appearing on the card will be Shaun Tempers, Mike Posey, Corey Hollis, Sal Rinauro, "Hit for Hire" Bobby Moore, and Champion Mikael Judas.

Pro Wrestling Syndicate will be holding a doubleheader with their main show and a "Bombshells" show in Avenel, NJ at the Knights of Columbus. The PWS show starts at 5:30 PM local time, and features Dan Maff and Starman among others. The Bombshells show starts at 8:30 PM, and will feature La Rosa Negra, Hania, Lexxus, Mia Yim, Annie Social, and Sumie Sakai.

SUNDAY

Anarchy Championship Wrestling's Delusions of Our Childish Days will take place at the Mohawk in Austin, TX, with a door-open time of 5:15 PM. The Submission Squad will battle Jason Silver, Darin Childs, Jessica James, and Ricky Starks in atomicos action, while Rhia O'Reilly will venture across the pond to make her ACW debut in an American Joshi Championship match against titleholder Su Yung. Shawn Vexx will attempt to throttle the Heaviest Sumo in the Land, Jojo Bravo, Scot Summers battles Bolt Brady, and The Business will look to take out a measure of revenge against Jack Jameson with his two partners, JC Bravo and Stan Summers. Also, Matthew Palmer will answer Darin Childs' challenge for Guilty by Association.

SMASH Wrestling presents Tapped Out at the Can Lan Sportsplex in Mississauga, ON at 3 PM local time. They will host a WWE TLC viewing party at Fox and the Fiddle after the show is over. The main event will pit Chris Hero against Lance Storm in a rematch of sorts from ROH. Matt Cross will take on Tyson Dux, while the Super Smash Bros. will battle Josh Alexander and Sebastian Suave. Also on the show will be Johnny Gargano, Vanessa Kraven, and Gregory Iron.

Seriously, if you can go to a wrestling show this weekend, go to one. Whether a well-known company like CZW is promoting it or whether you just found out about the promotion today, go and support local wrestling. The art of wrestling only survives if we nurture it. Besides, your favorite wrestling company or wrestler may be out there, and you just don't know it yet.

Instant Feedback: All Bryan Everything

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More than just a knee to the face
Photo Credit: WWE.com
I would be repeating not only myself but scores of other commentators around the World Wide Web if I recounted how "no one" thought Daniel Bryan could be a main event player in WWE. I will spare the tale of the tape, but instead use tonight's opening match of Smackdown to show how Bryan has already mastered what it means to be a top guy within the company. Having the gift of gab or being able to have broadways with any wrestler don't make a guy a blue chip prospect. Their body size or quality of physique are irrelevant. Attaining main event status within WWE is all about crowd manipulation, and Bryan might be the best in the company right now.

All one would have to do is look at how he orchestrated the match with Erick Rowan and the post-match shenanigans. He showed off in the way he bumped for Rowan during the match, how he played cat and mouse with the two bearded henchmen of the Wyatt Family towards the end, soaring through the air onto both of them by the announce table. Most jarringly was his final salvo. When he appeared to have Rowan and Luke Harper befuddled, rather than going after them, he attacked Bray Wyatt, who spent the entire match and fracas afterwards at that point in his rocking chair (with the exception of getting up to trip Bryan, causing the disqualification). In one seamless motion, Bryan launched into him with his busaiku knee, stuck the landing, and flawlessly started into his "YES!" side-skipping to the back.

That one motion, from running charge to leaping, up-pointing "YES"-ing, encapsulated how well a puppetmaster Bryan has become. He didn't have to stop and pause. The killshot to Wyatt's head was the explosion, and Bryan knew to capitalize on it by doing his own version of coolly walking away from the blast with his sunglasses on. He created a moment, and then seized it. The truth is that he's been doing that ever since he won the World Heavyweight Championship.

Daniel Bryan right now is the best thing WWE has got going for them for reasons completely different than when he was wrestling under his real name as the franchise for Ring of Honor. Sure, he's still embodying those ideals on the bigger stage; Bryan comes out and has a balls-out, pay-per-view quality match every week whether he's in the main event against Randy Orton or jerking the curtain against Fandango.

But creating a zeitgeist and knowing how to cultivate it is a special talent that only a select few all-timers can do. Bryan showed that even on a seemingly inconsequential show before a pure storyline three-on-one beatdown of a match at the coming PPV, he could make the crowd rock like they were about to see Buddy Rose and Roddy Piper tear down the old Rose Garden. For a WWE superstar, no greater currency exists.

Best Coast Bias: Let's Have A Toast For The Scumbags

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Enough side dishes; we want the main course, Full Sail!
 Photo Credit: WWE.com
The next episode of NXT is the 200th, and it looks to be bursting at the seams. Triple H will be making an appearance for the first time since he appointed the idea of JBL to General Manager. There'll be a Neville/Dallas rematch NXT Championship rematch with lumberjack rules. And per their survival in this week's opener, the Ascenion will be putting up their titles in an open challenge that will be met with no comeuppance whatsoever.

What? I'm serious.

Master Regal noted that teams that go in against the Darkside have this nasty habit of disappearing off of the mat, let alone the occassional breakup here and there. And so down went Hunico and Camacho, even if Camacho is opening up his offensive stash and Hunico is so good he should find some way to be on RAW every week beating formerly relevant World Champions. Even when things worked for the challengers, the Champs found a way to turn the tide; being hiptossed to the floor gave Rik Viktor the opening to drag Hunico off the apron when Camacho wanted to tag out, and the Fall of Man was a fait accompli after that. Seriously, what awesome babyface tag team is there left for the Ascension to bowl over, implode, or fissure? Is there even any at all? And is this the ceiling for the Champions, who still haven't put together a blowaway match to put on their C.V. and aren't necessary the most compelling ring generals when the lights come back up?

Say this for Full Sail--despite the problems they faced later on in the show with repetition, the Alexander Rusev project continues to move apace, and well at that. Save a competitive loss to Dolph Ziggler on his rebooting, he's looked like a land monster in swallowing up the bottom elements of the roster. This person he faced this week who bears no resemblance in any way, shape, or form to Chris Hero got pretty much squashed. Rusev had injured the back, so in the match he worked the back with only a break to get off about six or seven knee strikes to the gut when he had Oherno trapped in the ropes before he flattened him with a standing avalanche and broke his back and made him humble. Rusev seems well on his way to being a top contender for the big X, if the big roster doesn't snap him Laaaaaaanaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa! up first.

Who will stand in his way betwixt now and then is up for debate, but perhaps another big man who's riding a wave of wins will--let Mojo Rawley get in the ring with him for what'll certainly be a hoss skirmish. Rawley got a win over Scott Dawson with his Rear View/Hyperdrive combo that gave him a modicum of retribution for the upbraiding Sylvester Laforet and SD gave him last week after he refused to become a Legionnaire. But Dawson laid him out afterwards, so This Feud Must Continue (assuming, and maybe for as little as another week).

This is where NXT runs into the problem du jour, as after the main event between Leo Kruger and Sami Zayn, Kruger tried to pile on his win and Zayn ran him from the ring and tope con hiloed him for good measure. Granted, Dawson isn't going to pull off a tope con hilo...well, probably. But it's pretty indefensible to have two matches in a 41-minute show not only happen back-to-back, but to close the program. Again, it's entirely possible by ep201 these will all be things of the past and the four participants involved will have moved onto other dance partners. But jeez, you have one of the three best wrestlers in the world. Maybe you want to have him go in for more than five minutes against a guy he hates enough to not chain wrestle at any point and would rather go out there and start punching about the head and face. At least in the Beat The Clock challenge there was a logical reason for the brevity.

So after Regal informed Cesaro his problem was with the former villain and not Byron Saxton in the most concise way possible, it turned out the Women's division took best match of the show honors for a second consecutive week. Bayley teamed up with Natalya to take on the Biffles, and it was a master class in character development with a damn good match to boot. NattieKat thought Bay was cray, but clearly in an acceptable fashion and liked getting the love. Bayley was supermegapsyched per usual to have someone from the main roster have her back and like her. And as it should be, Sasha played Gretchen to Summer's Regina.

Even more fun was the fact that Bayley came out fighting, just as Zayn would. The lines of nicety have been eradicated, so the need for decorum was kaput, and in slamming Sasha's face into the mat repeatedly noises of surprise, but pleasantly so went out from the announcers and the viewers. Think of it as a variant on the Eugene Corollary, or the Festivus Modifier, the Cruise Theorem: don't make Bayley angry. You won't like her when she's angry. Sadly, her instincts were on point (see her tagging in when Natalya had gotten laid out by Summer and sprawled by their corner) but she fell victim to Sasha's straightjacket neckbreaker.

Just as on every non-get-and-stay-hyped match on the evening, the black hats got the final bows. And while BayKat commiserated over their loss, Summer continued to be the best worst person in the arena, taunting all the way to the back "WHAT ARE ARE YOU GONNA DO ABOUT IT, HUH?NOTHING! NOT A DAAAAMN THING!" This after she and Sasha checked each other's faces for lasting damage. They're so vain they should be friends with Tyler Breeze.

[note: THIS TOTALLY NEEDS TO HAPPEN]

For nearly 200 shows, NXT's been seen as a quasi-utopia to the bigger, popular shows the E does. But it's easy to forget the point of the show--to develop the future. From Camacho to Rusev, Bayley to Sasha, and Dawson to Kruger, even if the results were sometimes mystifying or not infused with the excitement of the higher-end Zayn matches, it showed a roster literally improving by the week and adding the little touches that make a character stick--and that's the purpose; what it's for.

Sure wouldn't mind another 199 episodes, I can tell you that much.

2013 Year in Review/2014 Year in Preview: Chikara (welp)

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Welcome. Oblivion.
Photo Credit: Zia Hiltey
Promotion: Chikara

What Happened in 2013: Hoo boy…

Everything seemingly started out alright in Chikara. As 2012 segued into 2013, things seemed like they would start normalizing. The final skirmishes in the ROH vs. Chikara feud would play out in the opening weekend. Delirious' greater forces fell at Under the Hood to the Spectral Envoy and friends, and his consigliere, Ophidian, was on a collision course with someone he thought a ghost. Even though Jigsaw had fallen to the dark side, the Gekido seemed to be a vanquished entity, and Soldier Ant would be released to his former troupe any day, right?

Well, as soon as the festivities started, the weirdness began to overtake the company. Sure, Kevin Steen's threat was finally put down, but Wink Vavasseur's increasing impatience and annoyance with Eddie Kingston caused him to throw challenger after challenger at the War King. Amazing Kong, Green Ant (who actually defeated Kingston in non-title action), Hallowicked, Mark Angelosetti… anyone and everyone got a shot at Kingston, who kept mowing down his challengers with increased efficiency.

Vavasseur's meddling wasn't limited to keeping Kingston busy. He blocked Soldier Ant's return to the Colony by giving him a new troop to command. The Colony: X-Treme Force debuted on Soldier's atomicos team in Florida, but they soon realized that they didn't need the Militant Mat Mite. Soldier soon after went AWOL, while the flashy new cadre of ants picked up a familiar yet inflammatory face in deviANT. Vavasseur's meddling continued by retroactively awarding the 2011 King of Trios to this anathema of a Colony by proclaiming them the real holders of the stable's name.

Tim Donst went from challenging Kingston at Under the Hood at the end of '12 to collecting any lost soul he could find to serve as his canvas for bullying. In addition to Jakob Hammermeier, Donst accumulated Steve "the Turtle" Weiner and Veronica Ticklefeather in his gang. Predictably, their attitudes went even sourer than they may have been before the New Year, and Ticklefeather ended her 2012 by getting slopped by one Archibald Peck. Donst didn't limit his bullying to his own cronies. He started picking fights with Gavin Loudspeaker, going to the point of cutting off locks of the ring announcer's flowing mane and EATING them.

Speaking of Peck, his sporadic appearances caused just as much concern than any time he was a regular on the roster. He'd been seen creeping around different places, almost like he was trying to hide something. Soldier going AWOL was just one of the weird occurrences happening during the first five months of the year. Partnerships started to deteriorate further. Team FIST absolutely fell apart to the point where Johnny Gargano was dropped from the roster page. Mike Quackenbush got a strange envelope from a man who presumably writes a blog called "No Private Army" at WrestleCon, and was nowhere to be seen afterwards.

It was only a dream...
Photo Credit: Zia Hiltey
Most bizarrely was the role reversal between Kingston and Icarus. After Tag World Grand Prix in Chicago, Kingston suffered a meltdown, throwing a temper tantrum the likes the fans haven't seen from him in a dog's age. Icarus, in the meantime, started playing peacemaker within FIST, going to bat for Sugar Dunkerton, and using the Chikara Special.

Aniversario: Never Compromise, on June 2, was to be a day of reckoning for so many of these parties. For the second year in a row, Donst had his head shaved at the Trocadero in June, this time because his maltreatment of his charges, especially Hammermeier, caused his foolproof plan against Loudspeaker to backfire. Derek Sabato appeared with information about Vavasseur's father and his parent corporation, information that was quashed before he could reveal it by Condor Security. In the weirdest twist, Icarus challenged Kingston for the Grand Championship. The twist had Icarus, the man heralded as the "Worst in the World" at Chikara's first Internet pay-per-view had the vociferous support of the crowd, while the inspirational first Champion at that same event got jeered and catcalled. Icarus fought off Kingston's most brutal barrage, including a bevy of hellacious chairshots, and got him locked in the Chikara Special.

Then, when he was about ready to tap out, all hell broke loose.

Condor Security poured out from the back, chasing everyone from the ring, tearing down the set, shooing the fans, and disrupting the iPPV feed. Wink Vavasseur, looking disheveled and beaten up, sat on the stage, eating an apple. The next day, every show announced for the rest of the year was cancelled. The parent company, the Worldwide Media Development Corporation, started selling off all the assets.

Furthermore, bad guys from Chikara's past began to sprout back up and shut down various Wrestling Is promotions. The Gekido came back and shut down Intense. Dr. Cube bubbled to the surface and ended Awesome. Sinn Bodhi squelched Art, and Ares with some knockoff BDK members recently put the kibosh on Cool. Someone apparently doesn't want Chikara or anything associated with it to exist anymore.

One person bent on making sure the company stays not only in everyone's memories but in corporeal form is Icarus. Being robbed of his Championship was immaterial against losing his home. He went on a quest to find others who'd share his vision, but only found Hallowicked and a bunch of students to stand by his side. However, Quackenbush and Sabato met at a café, Vavasseur had a falling out with his father, and the Condors are growing more and more restless. Something is around the corner, but what it is still feels shrouded in mystery.

Coming for the rags 'n bones
Photo Credit: @LolitaSinn
2013 MVP: How does one adjudge a most valuable wrestler for a company with a narrative driven by plot rather than character, and one that has been functionally dormant for seven months of the year? Arguments could be made for Tim Donst, Eddie Kingston, Jigsaw, or even Archibald Peck. My selection, however, is Icarus. Most of his driving action came both in the death spiral of the company as an active promotion and in the current dormant stage. However, of all the characters in Chikara, his has been strongest.

What's Going to Happen in 2014: I find forecasting the coming year for a company that technically doesn't exist anymore to be quite difficult, especially when most of its outlets are also being picked off as well. Keeping with pattern, Wrestling Is Heart and Wrestling Is Respect can neither be too long for this world, but who will be the evil entity to take them out? Delirious killing his creation in Respect makes sense since he himself has been a Chikara big bad in the past. Heart is a different story. The ultimate choice to end Heart (or maybe even Fun! as a final boss battle) would be Chris Hero, given his palpable real life heat with Quackenbush. I feel like awaiting Hero's return as an instrument of the Titor Conglomerate is like hoping for the Empire to come out victorious in Return of the Jedi (although I'm sure if you give George Lucas enough time and money, he'll release a special edition to make it so.).

Other than waiting for each domino to fall, the two dates to keep on the calendar are National Pro Wrestling Day and WrestleCon. The former will be taking place on February 1, and it is very much a Chikara-centric deal, even down to the assumed venue, the Easton Funplex. The slogan is "Wrestling can change the world," which on the surface ties into the charity monies they're raising to treat malaria. However, since most of the last two years has been so wrapped in symbolism and double meanings, I wouldn't be surprised to see something go down here. WrestleCon is the other date where something could go down. While nothing has been announced for the WrestleMania weekend, I can't imagine the Chikaraverse not being involved in the weekend celebration of the art.

Chikara_WIF-833
Big man, pig man, haha, charade you are
Photo Credit: Zia Hiltey
Five Wrestlers to Watch in 2014:The Polar Baron's Union - The foils to the Baltic Siege seemingly have an agenda that involves a grand unification of former Soviet republic avatars. IN the grand narrative, the individual Wrestling Is promotions' stories may not register, but the temporally displaced USSR Civil War has carried Wrestling Is Fun! for the year. An ending is looming, but what kind of resolution is in place? And if so, what will become of the Union, who seem like a disposable troupe of baddies? Do they have staying power?

Private Eye, Jr. - Hallowicked was shown training a bunch of students in the Ashes video series, but the one who seems to have the most cache is Private Eye, Jr. His detective skills have set him apart of the rest of the trainees. Having him debut in the Chikara fabric by being an integral part in the company's return would be no bigger a shine to start out with.

Gekido - Their demise in late 2012 felt curiously incomplete within the narrative. They returned to end Wrestling Is Intense and seemingly disappeared afterwards, but then again, those minions Dr. Cube and Sinn Bodhi had with them didn't look like any cohorts they'd consorted with in the past. Could the bizarre world mirror images be working to undo the Chikaraverse behind several different masks?

Soldier Ant - His disappearance has been the most abrupt of the ones who left, and he's the only one whom anyone seems to care about finding. He more than anyone has felt the sting of the Vavasseur administration, and thus he has more motivation than just restoring his home. What kind of vindication will the Militant Mat Mite seek when he returns, if he even does?

Knight Eye for the Pirate Guy and Princess Kimber Lee - Not every thread within the Chikaraverse is full of doom and gloom. One of the most fun side effects of the expansion of the family of promotions has been the resurgence of pre-"modern" masked gimmicks and characters coming back to fill out spots. Jolly Roger and Lance Steel have been among the most successful of these returnees, but their alliance with the royal Kimber Lee has caused some tension between the normally fan favorite team and the crowd, whom Lee demeans at every turn.

Three Things I Want to See Happen in 2014:1. A satisfying resolution to this whole story - I can sympathize with all the folks out there who want their Chikara back. Heck, I want my Chikara back too. However, I've also been enjoying this alternate reality game stuff. It feels different in a good way for a wrestling company. However, an ARG can turn out good (Nine Inch Nails) or it can be a giant red herring (LOST). Which will it be for Chikara?

2. Restoration of all the Wrestlings Are - I honestly hope that when the timeline is set right that all the Wrestling Is… promotions are also restored. I've been to shows for Cool and Fun! and they provide a familiar yet unique atmosphere with more intimate crowds for less money than the big show. Chikara as an extended universe makes the most sense for any current indie promotion, so I would love to see them keep that ethos alive as much as they can.

3. California shows - The shows announced for Reseda and San Diego for this year were teases. I would have loved for Blog Bro Butch to get a chance to see Chikara live as well as having been able to see how the raucous West Coast crowds would have reacted to a brand of lucha libre that they weren't all that familiar with. When Chikara comes back, I would love to see them make good on those faux-shows and bring the Left Coast a dose of East Coast sensibility.

Twitter Request Line, Vol. 57

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Rock/Lesnar can still happen this year, but it also could never happen again. SCHRODINGER'S WRESTLEMANIA
Photo Credit: WWE.com
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, especially around Friday night after Smackdown, and wait for the call. Anyway, time to go!

First up, Rich Thomas of the Sad Salvation podcast asks what matches he'll be seeing at WrestleMania XXXI at Levis Stadium in Santa Clara, CA.

Truth be told, I have no idea what the WrestleMania XXX card is going to look like, and that one is only three months away. This year has been one of the most volatile, unpredictable ones in recent memory, because they could go in any one of several directions to construct this card. For one, what if The Rock decides last minute that he wants a piece of the action? Does WWE dare to promote a match Thrice in a Lifetime? Or would they stick him against Brock Lesnar, who's a far better fit for a return match against CM Punk, but is heavily rumored to be Undertaker's Streak opponent this coming year.

So, with that much uncertainty shrouding XXX, XXXI sounds like a much harder gambit to forecast. However, uncertainty has never stopped me before, so my crack at fantasy booking this thing follows:

The Streak
John Cena vs. The Undertaker - While I feel like this year is the year to put Cena against 'Taker, I get the sinking feeling that Lesnar will be the Dead Man's opponent. Cena is the last guy who HAS to face the Undertaker (anyone who says "BUT STING! STING! STEEEEEEEENG!" can line up to get fired into the goddamn Sun), and next year is probably the last year WWE can count on Taker to wrestle at least once.

Undisputed Championship Match
Brock Lesnar (c) vs. Daniel Bryan - Lesnar is reportedly done after next year's Mania (although 15 months is a ghastly long time in pro wrestling), so why not have him go out with a title run spanning from the Rumble to Mania and putting over the future of WWE in the process. If you don't think Bryan's the future, well, then you aren't paying attention, or you're stubborn. And if you're Triple H or Vince McMahon and are stubborn, well fuck you if you don't push this dude. His "YES!" chant was heard prominently at a college football game this weekend, a fairly prominent one at that (insofar as the FCS Playoffs are prominent).

Sami Zayn vs. CM Punk - Mania XXXI could also be Punk's farewell to WWE, if his threats to retire end up being more than just empty ramblings of a dude who likes to troll people. Zayn receiving the torch from Punk would be a nice moment.

Big E. Langston vs. Mark Henry - HOSS SO HARD SAN FRAN FEEL LIKE IT GOT HIT WIT' ANOTHER EARTHQUAKE.

Randy Orton vs. Shawn Michaels - Honestly, I think Michaels is going to come out of retirement for spot duty here and there. I think he'll wrestle Bryan at Mania this year. I also see Orton and Triple H engaging in a longer term feud over the next year, so this match makes sense.

Kalisto vs. Sin Cara - WWE wants to be in the Guinness Book of World Records for some silly shit, and I don't see the lucha mask idea going away anytime soon. By March/April 2015, I see Hunico settling into the Sin Cara role comfortably, and Kalisto should be a big enough deal by then that this match would be a fun undercard affair.

Of course, watch none of those matches come to fruition, and the main event be something arcane like, I don't know, AJ Styles vs. Scott Hall. Wrestling is weird, man.

Next, @GayWrestlingFan asks if Wrestling Is Cool had stayed in Deptford, would the BDK have been scared off by the giant werewolf bulge?

REFERENCE PICTURE:

Photo Credit: TH
Yeah, that werewolf is packing some major heat in his trunks there. However, werewolves are quite entrained with the Germanic cultures, right? Maybe Ares would have seen the giant werewolf dong as a sign of good luck, and his rampage at the end of the show would've been even WORSE.

@TheEnforcer4 asks if the sky turned black, would it matter?

Of course not, because unless you live in Mr. Burns' Springfield, you'd know the Sun was coming up.

Crack reporter Ken Borsuk asks if WWE is making the audience think something is going to happen just to pull the rug out from under them.

I just don't know. I would like to say WWE is the only scummy company who'll continue and continue to delay the payoff until a point in time when it loses peak impact, but wrestling promoters rarely have a sense for the moment, even Mike Quackenbush. As much as I want to believe that WWE is going to do the right thing, unify the titles, and make a coherent push into Mania season without muddling the story, um, hello, you and I just experienced one of the most frustrating arcs between SummerSlam and Survivor Series ever. The only saving graces were the cornucopia of phenomenal in-ring action and the fantastic Rhodes Boys/Authority and Shield story (and maybe Big Show's acting as a standalone?). My hopes aren't up.

@dajerseyboy wants to know upon the inevitable breakup of The Shield whether Seth Rollins is fated to be the guy that makes people look good and nothing more.

Rollins has a bit of that "Jeff Hardy" appeal to the pre-teen rebellious crowd in him and a lot of the "Jeff Hardy""I will kill myself for less than hazard pay because something might be wrong in my head" in him too. I see him translating better within WWE than Ziggler, whose disconnect between how well he can wrestle as a good guy and how poorly his out-of-the-ring character comes off when not a heel may keep him from attaining ultimate stardom.

@ray_fuck asks if WWE were to start its own political party, who would their ideal Presidential ticket be.

Well, the Presidential candidate would have to be Triple H, right? Dude allegedly knows how to politic like a mofo. His running mate on the surface would be Stephanie McMahon, but I'm not sure this country's ready for a husband-and-wife ticket (and if they were, wouldn't Bill and Hilary Clinton or Barack and Michelle Obama have been more logical choices?). With that being said, his running mate, in the vein of Obama picking Joe Biden, would have to be Ric Flair, right? Gotta court the Southern vote.

@OkoriWadsworth wants to know if I now wish WWE had never signed Mistico in the first place.

Looking at hindsight is too easy and supremely lazy. Sure, WWE would have been better off from jump debuting Sin Cara as Hunico from jump, or maybe scrapping the idea altogether, but the gamble had to be made, right? Mistico getting hurt all the time wasn't WWE's fault as much as WWE's rampant impatience with him and all the alleged heat he got for being "arrogant" wasn't his own fault. What the fuck was Triple H expecting when he signed the biggest star in Mexico, that he wasn't going to have an ego? This union could have worked out - maybe in an alternate timeline it currently is - but to say that he wasn't worth signing at all or wishing that he'd have turned WWE down spits in the face of all the excitement I felt when he was signed in the first place.

@NielJacoby asks why you aren't watching Johnny To's Drug War right now.

I don't know why my readers aren't watching it. Personally, I'm not watching it because why would I want to see a movie adaptation of a calculator game?

@MatthewTimmons wants me to book the Royal Rumble, which, if the audience gets an actual Undisputed Champion, could be the most exciting since '92.

Well, as I noted above, getting an Undisputed Champion is a HUGE if at this point. However, assuming that John Cena or Randy Orton or someone comes out of TLC with both belts, I would have the final three wrestlers in the Rumble match be Orton, assuming that Cena wins tomorrow, Ryback, and Daniel Bryan. Ryback meathooks Bryan over the top rope in an apparent elimination, but by the tips of his fingers, Bryan hangs on for dear life, flailing and struggling until he gets on the apron, where he lays in wait. Ryback charges into Orton, who deftly counters into a RKO OUT OF NOWHERE. Orton dumps the Big Guy and wipes his hands like he's just won the match until BOOM, a Busaiku Knee from Bryan sends him to the outside over the top rope. The arena melts, and Bryan wins in memorable fashion.

@georgemucus asks what my favorite and least favorite holiday foods are.

Favorite is the Christmas ham. Sure, the ham isn't necessarily a holiday-exclusive food, but it is the signature entree of Christmastime for me. My least favorite is by far the candy cane. They're great decoration, but try eating one, and it's sticky and overly minty and gets stuck in my teeth. No thanks.

@Doc_Ruiz2012 wants to know what Chikara DVD he should get for his 8 year old nephew.

I would stay away from 2013 altogether, because this year has contained some heady themes and scary moments. I would probably recommend King of Trios '11, Night 3. The colorful masks of the Colony and Osirian Portal are on full display, the big bad at the end is Team FIST, who are more cartoonish than dastardly, the tag gauntlet is always a barrel of laughs, and you'll hook your nephew on quality wrestling at a young age with the trifecta of Manami Toyota/Madison Eagles, Akira Tozawa/Eddie Kingston, and 1-2-3 Kid/El Generico.

@mikepankowski asks which former Champion I would have liked to have seen at the Ascension Ceremony Monday who would have fit into the brawl.

Bob Backlund is the no-brainer choice here. I'd imagine someone bumping into him accidentally, causing him to fly into a crazy-old-man rage, locking the chicken wing on everyone and anyone in a six-inch vicinity of him. I mean, if you want chaos in the ring, you pretty much have to go all the way with it, right?

@indiandeathlock asks if Dean Ambrose and Roman Reigns are this generation's John Cena and Randy Orton.

I would lean more towards them being the Triple H and Batista of their generation. They're closely allied, but they don't really trust each other. When Reigns finally breaks free from the Shield, he'll be a bonkers good guy with how much potential goodwill is behind him. I guess that makes Rollins the Randy Orton, right? Who would be John Cena then? Big E Langston? Antonio Cesaro? Or is Cena never going to die and just keep hooking himself up to the Mammon Machine for eternal life?

@bdbdbdbd asks if indie kayfabe is dead due to all the Twitter fraternizing and wrestler working everywhere.

I think most fans of independent wrestling are smart enough to know how to separate Twitter and the storylines, but I also think that the most enterprising wrestlers out there know how to stay in character no matter what the circumstances. Even if that wasn't the case, I don't think kayfabe is dead. It's just changing. Into what? I don't know, but I don't think it'll ever truly die.

@LPishko wants my thoughts on the career of Scott Steiner.

He's had one of the longest, weirdest careers in wrestling history. I respect the hell out of him for staying on so long and going through so many changes in character, whether major like the transition from All-American good guy to Big Poppa Pump, or subtle within each persona. Plus, he always knew how to give 141 and 2/3%.

@PatrickEhland: Army or Navy?

Neither? I'm kinda over the Army/Navy game because it's the college football game for the people who don't give a shit about college football otherwise. I'd rather burrow in the weekend prior and watch all the conference Championship games. Or the weekend before that with all the rivalries. Or any other Saturday that isn't filled with the SEC/SoCon Challenge and clunker conference games like Ohio State/Purdue.

Besides, everyone knows the superior service academy is Air Force...

@detectorsarcasms asks since everyone knows Die Hard is the best Christmas movie, what's the worst, stipulating that it has to be fairly mainstream?

Well, if you want to see some terrible Christmas movies only shown with entertaining trappings, I suggest you check out Mystery Science Theater 3000's holiday episodes. If I'm being completely honest though, what moron greenlighted Santa Clause 3? That movie's a genuine piece of crap.

RossWB of Black Heart, Gold Pants asks how long Big E Langston will hold the Intercontinental Championship, and whether he'll be the second most important titleholder in WWE after Sunday.

First half, I'm not exactly sure, actually. WWE has seemingly skewed longer with title reigns for their secondary Champions, if we're not counting Miz's 24 hour Intercontinental run at Mania. So I can see him dropping the strap either in a similar unification scenario with Dean Ambrose at Mania, or somewhere further down the line. WWE seems to have big things planned for Big E, and part of it has to do with him restoring the glory of the IC Championship.

For the second half of that question, I'd say no, even if the titles do get unified, I think at this point the Tag Team Championships are the next best thing. I would believe better if Cody Rhodes leaped from the Tag Titles to the Unified Championship than Langston at this point.

Despite having very little homegrown talent and a roster laden with flaky ex-WWE/TNA guys, @JohnJohnPhenom asks if FWE considering going on the road is a mistake.

Well, they seem to be one of the only companies who consistently get Internet pay-per-view right, so my guess is they probably have a loyal remote fanbase that tunes in, right? I wouldn't know without seeing their books or knowing how much money they made, but going on the road can be a gamble for any company. However, they book a lot of name talent, so if anything could give them a leg up on getting a bigger gate for leaving their stationery home, then I would say their roster of dudes like the Young Bucks, Tommy Dreamer, John Hennigan, and the rest would work, right?

Scott T. Holland of Irresistible vs. Immovable asks which pre-WrestleMania X WWF or WCW title match would have been better as a TLC match.

"Macho Man" Randy Savage vs. Ric Flair at WrestleMania VIII is the first match I can think of off the top of my head. Sure, that match was a pretty decent match if I remember right, but if one feud demanded an uptick in violence, wouldn't it be Flair/Savage? Flair doctored pictures of Savage's wife to try and get under his skin, and I know if I were the jealous type (and Savage was, by all accounts), I'd want something more than just the legal means at my disposal to beat the everloving crap out of the guy making the accusations.

@jakeupham insists that it's gotta be Cena/Taker at WrestleMania XXX, right?

If I were booking, I would be putting all my eggs in this basket for Mania this year, but like I wrote above, I just don't know at this point.

@brandon120 asks my thoughts on the validity of the theory that Jon Snow is actually the child of Lyanna Stark and Mad King Aerys Targaryen.

If the theory involves the Mad King, then I think it's bullshit. However, replace King Aerys with his dashing son, Rhaegar, and you have something. I think Ned taking the fall here makes sense. He's way too honorable to admit that his sister didn't love Robert Baratheon and rather preferred the company of the enemy (even if Rhaegar, like his lil sis Daenerys, didn't inherit the inbred Targaryen crazy genes), so risking his own marriage was the better option for him. I'm not saying Ned was a particularly smart man, but man, the morals of Westeros, as the viewership of the show and those who have read the books have already seen, make modern American patriarchy look radically feminist by comparison.

Finally, @wildvulture asks if I think Wade Barrett and Dolph Ziggler can be salvaged.

Sure. If Mark Henry can be salvaged, if Kane and Big Show can get rebooted as many times as they've been, then guys as talented as RED BELLY and Ziggler can be as well. Wrestling fans seem to have short memories. If a promoter puts out a wrestler compelling enough or with a story that speaks to a crowd, they probably won't care that that wrestler lost x amount of times to y different kinds of wrestlers. However, I will say "Bad News Barrett" as it is executed right now isn't getting the job done, nor is just wrestling random matches with no story for Ziggler.

John Cena, Ring Boy: WWE TLC '13 Review

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John Cena, ring crew extraordinaire
Photo Credit: WWE.com
In the TH style, always.

Highlights:
  • Kofi Kingston took umbrage with The Miz shit-talking him during the pre-show, invaded the set, and instigated a fracas that took Miz off the panel.
  • Fandango shoved Dolph Ziggler off the top after a Summer Rae distraction and won with the guillotine leg drop.
  • CM Punk took advantage of miscommunication among The Shield and pinned Dean Ambrose after Roman Reigns speared him.
  • AJ Lee reversed a Sharpshooter into an inside cradle to retain her Divas Championship against Nattie Neidhart.
  • Big E Langston retained the Intercontinental Championship with a Big Ending on Damien Sandow.
  • Cody Rhodes and Goldust survived the four-team elimination match for the Tag Team Championships as Rhodes countered a Rey Mysterio casadora into CrossRhodes for the win.
  • Brodus Clay was abandoned by both Sweet T and the Funkadactyls, en route to losing to R-Truth via a gamengiri and roll up.
  • Kofi Kingston used an exposed turnbuckle and the Trouble in Paradise to defeat The Miz.
  • Daniel Bryan's best efforts to take out the Family came up just short, as he fell to Sister Abigail's Kiss from Bray Wyatt.
  • Randy Orton sent John Cena crashing from the ladder into a table before ascending, grabbing both titles, and becoming WWE Unified Champion.

General Observations:
  • Right at the beginning of the pre-show, Miz brought up the Royal Rumble and how important it would turn out to be after unification. Hmm...
  • Kofi Kingston emerged to get Miz to stop his shit talking the hard way. I really do hope this turns out to make Kingston a heel, but not in the "hey, we're Cryme Tyme and embody every single negative black stereotype" way that crusty old white promoters seem to like.
  • Not a minute into the Fandango/Dolph Ziggler match, and Ziggles went to the max on his bump scale by going HIGH over the top right to the floor. The scene then cut to commercial, which had to have been a record for quickest mid-match hook during the pre-show.
  • Hm, the pay-per-view was in its beginning stages and a limousine just happened to roll up? WWE is becoming more and more like WCW by the passing day. Then again, Vince McMahon actually shows up to more WWE events now than Hulk Hogan did as Champion back then...
  • The Authority came out for a pre-show promo, and Stephanie McMahon herself uttered the words "Professional wrestling." Pretty sure I almost had an aneurysm at that point.
  • Ricardo Rodriguez was pulling duty on the Spanish announce team tonight. Given how garbage the English three-man booth has been for the longest time, I wished I had pressed the SAP button right then and there.
  • Someone brought a Colt Cabana fathead to the show, and they were sitting facing the hard camera all night. Luv u, fans.
  • CM Punk started the handicap match against The Shield with Dean Ambrose. After a few exchanges, Punk yelled "I already beat you twice, give someone else a chance." Cold, Punk, especially since in one of those matches, you shoved your shitty tights in his face.
  • During an exchange on the outside, Roman Reigns was sizing up Punk for a spear into the announce table, but Punk oled it and sent Reigns flying. At that point, I was wishing with all my heart that Reigns would've shoot-caught JBL not looking and put his ass into Doc Sampson's office for the rest of the night.
  • Punk and Seth Rollins actually popped me pretty big when the former blocked the latter's punch and went into a flurry of his own. I totally thought they were going to do an overdone strike-trade. Defense should count for something.
  • Ambrose had Punk on the top turnbuckle and hooked his arms. I totally thought he was going to at least try a Pepsi Plunge, which would've been exquisite trolling.
  • At the tail end of the AJ Lee promo backstage, Tamina Snuka gave Renee Young the dirtiest of dirty looks. I'm all for intimidation, and yes, I know this is all staged, but if anyone lays a finger on Young, I will flip my lid.
  • For as much regression as Natalya Neidhart has undergone this year, she looked pretty crisp and with it during the Divas Championship match. Lee made her look stellar bumping, especially on that barricade toss, but I'll take what I can get.
  • Neidhart sidestepped a charging Lee on a corner run, and the Champ went FULL ZIGGLER into the buckles, one of the most impressive, non-Cena/Orton bumps of the evening. Even more impressive, she actually was with it enough to segue right into a guillotine choke counter right afterwards.
  • The inside cradle counter to the Sharpshooter would have been a load more effective if every women's match in WWE didn't end in a goddamn rollup.
  • Damien Sandow came out and heeled on Texan slang before the match. Just put a rocket up his ass and let him spar with Punk or Cena on the mic, please.
  • I dub the big splash Big E Langston does to an opponent's back the Shadows over HOSS.
  • Vince McMahon and Randy Orton shared a backstage segment and shook hands. PORTENTOUS OMEN?
  • I totally dig the Real Americans' new ring entrance where they charge down the aisle and toss their black Gadsden flags into the ring. I dreaded this teaming when they first got together, but man, they have gelled something fierce in all facets.
  • Curtis Axel showed me a bit of the athleticism when he straight hurdled over Goldust like he was an Olympic runner. For all his faults, I still think he can pull it together, at least in the ring.
  • Goldust as the face-in-peril was magic, especially when in exclusive domain of the Real Americans, whose tag team offense is probably the best I've seen in WWE in years. I especially got a pop when Goldust tried crawling between Antonio Cesaro's legs to get to Cody Rhodes.
  • I dug the Cesaro Swing on Goldust a lot, but part of me felt unfulfilled that he didn't swing The Big Show as well.
  • Goldust continues to reinvent himself which is why I dig him so much as an in-ring wrestler. He's become an excellent spot monkey, which when you consider he's taller than anyone else in that role, is super impressive. In this match alone, he busted out a hurricanrana, a counter springboard back elbow, and an out-of-nowhere Yoshi Tonic, and each singular move fit within the context of the match.
  • The entire finishing sequence between Rhode and Rey Mysterio was magical, even if some of the exchanges felt a bit sloppy. I gave them points for ambition, and the segue into the Cross Rhodes was just sublime.
  • I wonder if WWE's marketing department has given up on making ideas of their own. I'm not complaining; their strategy of "giving the talent cocaine and telling them to ad-lib" has been entertaining to say the least, as referenced by the Brawling Buddies backstage segment.
  • Brodus Clay hit a Banzai Drop on R-Truth, and it WASN'T the finish? Oh man, no way in hell that move should be a transition move. NO WAY.
  • They've pulled off Clay's heel turn well so far, and having his entourage walk out on him felt like a watershed moment.
  • Apparently, the Kingston/Miz match set up by the pre-show confrontation was no disqualification. Despite having all the plunder JUST SITTING there at ringside, neither guy thought to use any during the match.
  • The announcing was just as bad, as Jerry Lawler chastised Miz for undressing the top turnbuckle, even though the match was no disqualification. Thank God I had company over to drown out the three-man cacophony. I wish WWE offered a "no-commentary" option for events, because I want those jackasses turned off while still being able to hear crowd reactions, in-ring banter, and the SFX.
  • Kingston, however, was on point most of the match, playing both sides of the fence with aplomb. He was fierce and aggressive on offense, like a heel, but when it came time to sell the leg, he did so pretty well.
  • I will never get tired of Daniel Bryan hooking up the legs in the surfboard and then segueing into a nosehook on the front end.
  • "WE COULDA BEEN FRIENDS, BRYAN. I COULDA HELPED YOU." Right after saying that to Bryan, Bray Wyatt fluidly swing around and went into his freaky reverse crab walk that drew a "THIS IS CREEPY!" chant from the crowd.
  • The move of the night may have been Wyatt recklessly throwing Bryan down to the mat from the suplex position. No fucks were given at all.
  • Wyatt extended his hand, and then Bryan kicked it away in the most brazen act of defiance of the night. Again, Bryan knows how to manipulate a crowd.
  • Bryan had so much fire clearing out Luke Harper and Erick Rowan in the final flourish of the match that I almost mistook him for Prince Zuko.
  • Three minutes into the main event, and I was already sold on this match being the best one Randy Orton and John Cena had against each other in the last five years.
  • Even though it made him the DUMBEST MAN IN WRESTLING (© @wrestlefeed), seeing Cena hit the Five Knuckle Shuffle from the ladder was a cool visual.
  • Orton knocking the ladder from underneath Cena and smacking him with the chair like a hardcore pinata may have been my favorite spot of the night until, well...
  • I can't tell you how much I loved seeing Cena undo the bottom turnbuckle to escape the handcuffs. Dylan Hales pointed out to me over Facebook chat that the announcers blew a golden opportunity to put over that Cena learned that strategy from his days in the UPW ring crew. Again, why are those three assholes out there?
  • That bump Cena took from the ladder to the table looked sickening on first glance, but the replay showed him landing shoulder to the canvas first. I hope that first landing absorbed most of the shock, because if not, then Cena might be on Concussion Street.
  • Orton waiting that extra second before snagging the belts was perfect for his unwarranted, bratty character.
  • No swerve? I'll take it!

Match of the Night:John Cena vs. Randy Orton, WWE and World Heavyweight Championship Unification TLC Match - Cena and Orton wore each other out in 2009 so much that I wouldn't have minded if they never had wrestled each other for fifty years afterwards. Four years later, they were once again across a ring from each other with all kinds of plunder in play, and they produced one of the best main events in a WWE year where the bar was considerably raised for what a main event match had to be, both on pay-per-view and free television.

The match started out like a classic, ECW-style brawl with plunder coming into play early and often, but it quickly took on some of the different strains that one might have seen in a WWF ring during the Attitude Era with how ridiculous some of the exchanges and comebacks went. Strange that fifteen years after the fact, WWE has finally perfected the schmozzy, ridiculously overbooked main event they wanted to in said Attitude Era. I guess all they needed was a savvy roster, and it was the two guys who came of age and even got overexposed in the last decade who got them there for the third time this year.

Orton did his part by bumping huge, which in the past was not an attribute one could hang on his mantel. In fact, he took nearly every big bump until the very end, when Cena took two risky bumps. First, he hung from the double belts after Orton knocked the ladder from underneath him and then played him like a giant, hustle-loyalty-and-respect-filled pinata. Second, the final bump of the match, Orton knocked Cena from off the ladder, and Cena landed FACE FIRST on a table set up in the corner. Brutal.

But where this match was won for me was when Orton called back to a prior match and handcuffed Cena to the bottom rope. Instead, Cena, drawing back to his UPW ring crew days (h/t to Dylan Hales for that reference), undid the bottom turnbuckle and dragged the ropes with him to climb the ladder. That kind of ring savvy is worth more than most anything a wrestler could do in a match, and it set apart the main event from any other match on what turned out to be a loaded event.

Overall Thoughts: From top to bottom, TLC was jam-packed with great wrestling action. If I'm a paying customer, then I couldn't ask for anything more (although technically, this PPV was gifted to me, so yeah). Of the nine matches I was presented, only three of them were average or worse, and one of them was the pre-show match. I can't hate a show with so much going on in the ring, especially one that presented two three-on-one handicap matches that were among some of the best that they've ever produced.

Speaking of those matches, I felt a lot of dread both internally and among my friends and peers on social media going into those affairs. WWE has had a spotty record at best with handicap matches, and having two on pay-per-view seemed like a bad idea at the time. However, each match managed to tell its own unique story and made sense. CM Punk defeating The Shield worked for me because it was a superstar in waiting taking advantage of a group undergoing an apparent death spiral to shrewdly get to the finish line. Daniel Bryan actually looked more a world-beater against the more cohesive Wyatt Family, but because they were all together now (ALL TOGETHER NOW), his efforts were futile. From a booking standpoint, everything felt like it was in the correct place, which is rich, savory gravy on top of the intelligently and excellently worked meat portions of the match.

But for a match that was done to death in 2009, one that captured my imagination as much as a Dallas Cowboys vs. Dallas Cowboys mirror match Super Bowl would have, the main event was intriguing and satisfying despite the fact that Orton won without any incident or any shenanigans. Sometimes, laying all the cards on the table in an actual wrestling match works in lieu of having a post-match swerve or some kind of interference to come into play, especially when the competitors are the best big match worker in recent WWE history in Cena and a guy who has really found his niche as a dickbag spoiled brat heel in Orton.

WWE really hit on a vein starting with this past RAW going into TLC, but even if this past week is just one, self-contained stretch of programming, it has been one of the best of an unusually good year. When the main portion of the pay-per-view has eight matches that all had well-developed stories behind them, with most of them delivering in the ring? Well, I think that formula for success would win out each time.

The 2013 Bloggie Award Nominations: Indie, Talker, Steamboat

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Jack Swagger looks on at two Bloggie nominated personalities
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Getting into some of the bigger nominations!

Independent Wrestler of the Year - For the wrestler who excelled the most outside the confines of the corporate environment, thus promoting the critical and artistic growth of wrestling

Prior Winners:
2009 – Austin Aries
2010 – Claudio Castagnoli
2011 – Sara del Rey
2012 – Rachel Summerlyn

And the nominees are...
Biff Busick (Frank O'Rourke) - I would argue no one has been more important to the success of one company in 2013 than Busick was to Beyond Wrestling. Any company worth its salt builds around one native or "homegrown" guy, and Beyond's voyage into the upper tier of indie companies has been tied to Busick and his feud with Eddie Edwards. Plus, as O'Rourke, he stormed the Wrestling Is... universe and made his mark there.

Cheerleader Melissa - Of all the midseason heel turns by Champions, Melissa's held the most impact. She turned on a retiring Allison Danger and set the stage for the rest of the year in women's wrestling. She started the "Female Fight Year" with a hot cage match against Saraya Knight, and established herself as THE big bad within SHIMMER by the end of the year.

Chuck Taylor - Taylor's been all over in 2013 - Chikara, DGUSA, CZW - but his biggest impact has come over Instagram video with the 24/7 Championship. He's always a favorite because of his comedic stylings and unpredictability in the ring, but the entrepreneurial spirit puts him over the top this year.

Icarus - Icarus' 2013 was weird, mainly because most of it revolved around character building and alternate reality game material. However, his change from most hated wrestler in Chikara to its spiritual leader has been one of the most remarkable and surreal. He has taken his mantel well.

The Young Bucks - Being a heel in indie wrestling is hard for various reasons, but the Bucks, no matter what the surrounding, are able to bring the crowd to oppose them and thus elevate their opponents. They've been the MVPs of PWG forever, and their runs in Chikara, FWE, DGUSA/EVOLVE, and ROH have been extensions of that excellence.

Talker of the Year - For the wrestler who showed the most prowess at inciting a crowd, building a story, or entertaining the audience via the spoken word

Prior Winners:
2009 - CM Punk
2010 – The Miz
2011 – CM Punk
2012 – Damien Sandow

And the nominees are...
CM Punk - Punk is a perennial nominee for this award and for good reason. Even though he was seemingly down this year, his silver tongue was still able to carry segments that might have faltered with a lesser gabber.

Damien Sandow - Sandow continued his award-winning streak from 2012 into the next year and built on it by evolving from erudite cheap heat grabber into something a bit more vicious. He's still able to do the crowd work that won him the award last year, but he developed a verbal meanstreak to go along with the one he'd always had in the ring.

Enzo Amore - Amore burst into NXT with a metric ton of charisma, a money catchphrase, and a handle on the microphone that seemed years beyond his developmental paygrade. I could sit and watch him riffing with Big Cass for entire hours of NXT programming and not find him boring.

Paul Heyman - Heyman as Punk's second was good, but he really shone brightest as an adversary to his former charge during the summertime. While he seems to be at his best as a slimy master of all things law-related, his balls-out, insane RAW promo was an act of sheer brilliance.

Zeb Colter - Zeb Colter came in to help Jack Swagger get over as a Tea Party parody. While his rhetoric was designed to make me hate him, I couldn't help but be enthralled by how well the moustachioed elseworlds-Dutch Mantell was able to charm me as a viewer while saying some of the most vile things known to man. I guess you need a certain talent to make xenophobia sound entertaining.

The Ricky Steamboat Award - Named for one of the most universally respected and beloved professional wrestlers of all-time, this award is for the wrestler who excelled the most between the ropes during matches to tell stories and build characters through the physical art of professional wrestling.

Prior Winners:
2009 – Christian
2010 – Daniel Bryan/Bryan Danielson
2011 – Dolph Ziggler
2012 – ACH

And the nominees are...
Antonio Cesaro - Cesaro has been unleashed in WWE, and the results have been magnificent. On the main roster, he started the year as United States Champion, having good-to-great matches with a wide variance of opponents, including a series with Miz that no one seemed to want to see but everyone seemed to enjoy the actual matches. Then, he moved into the tag ranks and had an excellent run with Jack Swagger. And of course, the series of matches with Sami Zayn in NXT will be talked about for generations.

Athena - 2013 has been a weird year for in-ring excellence, as outside of a couple of wrestlers who've been consistently great all year long, the major players have been spotty. That reason is why Athena is nominated for the Steamboat this year. Despite missing a huge chunk of the year, including the fall Female Fight Season where she would have had opportunity after opportunity to show her wares, Athena's downright excellent first eight months in the ring propelled her to a nomination when very few could claim 12.

Daniel Bryan - Bryan has pretty much gone out and had excellent matches on every platform given possible. He was part of a revolution on RAW, where the game was raised exponentially for what a free TV main event should be. His pay-per-view performances, vs. Dolph Ziggler and Big E Langston with Kane, against the Wyatt Family, opposing Randy Orton, and especially against John Cena at SummerSlam were amazing.

Kevin Steen - Steen was about the closest thing to a surety on the indies in terms of entertaining matches in 2013. He spread his wings, worked for any company who'd take him, and offered his unique mixture of brawling and technical prowess. Whether in Ring of Honor, Pro Wrestling Guerrilla, Beyond Wrestling, or in any number of local companies.

Sami Zayn - Zayn picked up in NXT where he left off on the indie scene with magnificent work in the ring. His series with Cesaro got most of the acclaim, but he also tore the house down with contests against Jack Swagger, Leo Kruger, and Adrian Neville. Zayn showed an adaptability that has served fellow indie-to-WWE success stories well. I would be surprised if within a year, he's not on RAW, having the same excellent matches that Bryan, Ambrose, Rollins, and Punk are having right now.

From the Archives: John Cena vs. CM Punk, SummerSlam 2011

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Remember the Summer of Punk? The second one, in WWE, that inexplicably paid off with a Triple H/Kevin Nash match in 2011? Yeah, if the whole thing had ended with the finish of the Punk/John Cena match at SummerSlam, the whole thing would've been nice. But no, Triple H reminds everyone why WWE fans can't have nice things. Ah well, at least this SummerSlam match was pretty swanky.

2013 Year in Review/2014 Year in Preview: Women's Promotions in America

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Melissa sent Danger out unceremoniously
Photo Credit: Gregory Davis/DDS
Promotions: SHIMMER Women's Athletes, Women's Superstars Uncensored, AIW Girls' Night Out, SHINE Wrestling, nCw Femmes Fatale

What Happened in 2013: This year was quite the interesting year for women in independent wrestling. Absolute Intense Wrestling expanded their Girls' Night Out series to be more like SHIMMER's taping schedule, SHIMMER ventured away from the Eagles Club for a special WrestleCon appearance, WSU partnered with CZW, and SHINE continued building upon its debut year. Organizers within the promotions created the "Female Fight Season" as a way to capitalize on having a cluster of the best women wrestlers in the world converging for a series of cards around the country.

Unfortunately, the other theme of 2013 has been injuries. Kalamity, whose star had been rising, suddenly went on leave after the Fight Season in the spring. Athena suffered an injury at a secret show before she was to wrestle Jessicka Havok in a best two out of three falls match for the WSU Championship. Courtney Rush's year was derailed by injury as well. LuFisto took an errant dive at WrestleCon and missed the entire rest of the spring and most of the summer. In perhaps the most crushing blow, both Ayumi Kurihara and Allison Danger had to retire due to nagging injuries. Kurihara's injuries were chronic in nature, but Danger, who founded SHIMMER and has been one of the pioneers of women in wrestling in the last decade, fell victim to a series of strokes.

SHIMMER capitalized on Danger's retirement by having Cheerleader Melissa attack her at the end of the spring tapings, a two-week period that saw Melissa go from the highest high of vanquishing Saraya Knight in a steel cage at WrestleCon to regain World Championship to the deepest depths of jealousy and spite. While Melissa successfully retained the title through the end of 2013, she didn't make too many friends in the process, most notable among them being Danger's Regeneration X tag partner Leva Bates.

SHINE Wrestling saw the rise of a new stable, Valkyrie. Rain gathered an impressive array of followers in Ivelisse Velez, Allysin Kay, Taylor Made, and April Hunter, and the group managed to reign terror over the Florida monthly. The group helped Rain retain the SHINE Championship, one she threatened to abscond with in retirement at the most recent show. However, she reneged on her promise before defeating Amazing Kong.

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Who will stop Havok's reign of terror?
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Jessicka Havok had another huge year, going wire to wire as WSU Champion and making her long-awaited debut in SHIMMER. Her run in WSU was a bit checkered, however, as her challengers for the title kept getting knocked out before the matches beforehand. Cracks also began to show in the Midwest Militia as Sassy Stephie had some unkind words to say about Havok at points during the year.

In AIW, Allysin Kay also went wire to wire as Women's Champion, facing various threats along the way. Girls' Night Out 8 in January saw Mickie Knuckles return to claim the title she never really lost in the first place. Kay put that challenge down, but spent most of the year prepping for an assault from Veda Scott, who won a ladder match at that same show for a shot at the title, which didn't happen until October. Kay turned back the threat, but Scott still looms as a major player within AIW, both within the GNO brand and in the normal narrative.

2013 MVP: Cases could be made for Veda Scott, Rain, or even Allison Danger, but my choice for MVP this year is Cheerleader Melissa. Of all the midterm heel turns that took place among various Champions of indie promotions, hers was most effective and probably the most needed. SHIMMER's roster of plucky babyface stars - including Athena, Leva Bates, LuFisto, Courtney Rush, Ayako Hamada, and Serena Deeb - was in need of a menacing big bad to go up against, and Melissa filled the bill by turning heel the only way should could have.

What's Going to Happen in 2014: Several companies have Champions who are ripe to lose their titles in big moments next year. Havok has been WSU Champion for nearly two years. Kay's run with the AIW Women's Championship has been just a shade longer. Rain has been the only holder of the SHINE Championship, and while Melissa's second run with the SHIMMER Title has been short compared to the three before her, well, she still hasn't eaten any in-character comeuppance for the way she treated Allison Danger on the way out. The question now becomes who will be the wrestlers to unseat this slate of Champions?

For Melissa, three potential reign-enders come into my mind at least. First, even though Bates had an unsuccessful shot at the title, she has to be the one to give Melissa her ultimate comeuppance for ending Danger. Whether that comes in the form of a title win or some other blowoff remains to be seen. Madison Eagles, to my knowledge, never got her rematch after losing the title the first time to Melissa. Her comeback has been one of the most inspirational stories in wrestling, and I feel like her run was truncated due to her slate of nasty injuries. Athena is the third one. I feel like she was headed for a reckoning until she got hurt, but once she's recovered, I can't see her not going right back into her stride towards the main event.

A rising star
Photo Credit: Gregory Davis/DDS
Oddly enough, I only think Havok is still WSU Champion because Athena got hurt. While the apparent implosion of the Midwest Militia might lead to a showdown between Havok and Kay in a place other than SHINE (where they're feuding, oddly enough), Athena still might be the favorite to dethrone Havok and reign supreme busting hussies on the East Coast just the same as she's been doing in Texas. If not Kay or Athena, I would look at Christina von Eerie as a dark horse candidate to dethrone Havok.

As for SHINE, dissension in Valkyrie will come to a head at their first show in 2014, as Velez gets a crack at Rain. The Champion has been hinting at retirement, and while she said she wasn't going to go gently into that good night before her match with Kong, I get the feeling that she might end up dropping the title to a wrestler who has been a protege to her of sorts in her final match.

Five Wrestlers to Watch in 2014:Athena - The Hussy Buster's run to the top of the world in 2013 was delayed by an unfortunate injury at a WSU secret show. When she comes back, I see no reason why she shouldn't continue her hot streak. She could end 2014 with three major title wins under her belt - the SHIMMER World, WSU, and Anarchy Championships. She's already proven to be one of the surest things for a good match, regardless of style, gender, or standing, and no matter where she goes, she's popular as hell. This year could be the year where she enters the pantheon of indie wrestling names for good.

Sweet Cherrie - She's been making a lot of noise in the Montreal-based nCw: Femmes Fatale. LuFisto and Kalamity have proven Quebec to be a fertile breeding ground, and she's been tested against the best wrestlers in the world. I think 2014 will be a year where she breaks out and heads south into America.

Ivelisse Velez - The former Tough Enough contestant may not have gotten into TNA, but that snub could have been one of the best things to happen to her from an artistic standpoint at least. She has seemingly been anointed as the next big star of SHINE Wrestling. I doubt she will end 2014 without having won that title, and her win may come as soon as SHINE 16. The next question is whether she'll make the jump and start competing in SHIMMER, where she'll no doubt find several new opponents against whom she can test herself.

Allysin Kay - Kay is running out of challengers to slaughter in AIW, but her star is still rising rapidly in the rest of the world of women's wrestling. She could conceivably be in main events in three different promotions by the end of the year. Anyone who's been paying attention to her in AIW knows she can handle being in the top match as easily as she can wield a machete. She's already been testing the waters against most-of-the-time ally Jessicka Havok in SHINE; could that be a portent of the future for WSU?

Hania - The unmasked Saturyne has made a splash in WSU and Beyond Wrestling near the end of this year. Although she's hurt right now, I can see her gung-ho, high-flying style making a huge impact in any promotion she might wrestle for. As she gets more and more matches under her belt, she'll get more and more comfortable within her own style, and she'll definitely fill the need for female high spot artists that exists on the scene right now.

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No more mask, just as bright a future
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Three Things I Want to See Happen in 2014:1. More integration between SHIMMER and SHINE - When SHINE was created last year, the company was heavily tied to SHIMMER. I understand wanting its own identity, and having different bookers can make collaboration problematic. However, the related branding between the two companies can expand creative boundaries and create a dynamic breeding ground for both companies. If SHINE were to be the "monthly TV" arm and SHIMMER as the "supercard," I wonder how much the face of women's wrestling would change for the better.

2. Manami Toyota wrestling for at least one of the Female Fight Season bloc promotions - I love that Chikara brought the veritable joshi legend over for several shows, but I find it curious that no other company has successfully brought her over. Maybe Mike Quackenbush has connections that the other folks don't have. Still, Toyota could have so many memorable matches with the plethora of amazing wrestlers who work for companies like SHIMMER. I want someone to call up Quack and find out how to make Toyota vs. Cheerleader Melissa or Athena or Nicole Matthews or Allysin Kay or Jessicka Havok happen.

3. More integration of women's wrestling within regular cards across America - The only major active promotions that regularly have females competing for it in America are Beyond Wrestling and Anarchy Championship Wrestling. That number is way too low. While ACW has a bit to be critical about, their fortitude towards integrating genders on their shows, even if that integration is just in the form of having more women's matches on a show, is my favorite thing of any promotion in America. Some of the best wrestlers in the world are women. Why can't AIW have more than one "Girls' Night Out" match per non-branded show? Why does AAW only seem to have more than two women on a given card around SHIMMER weekend? The talent is there; promotions need to start putting it on their shows and fighting the awful stigma perpetrated by WWE and TNA that one could comfortably skip a women's match.

The Wrestling Blog's OFFICIAL Best in the World Rankings, December 16

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Way better than you, regardless of what puerile reports come out
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Welcome to a feature I like to call "Best in the World" rankings. They're not traditional power rankings per se, but they're rankings to see who is really the best in the world, a term bandied about like it's bottled water or something else really common. They're rankings decided by me, and don't you dare call them arbitrary lest I smack the taste out of your mouth. Without further ado, here's this week's list:

1. AJ Lee (Last Week: 6) - Honestly, all this grade school bullshit happening in WWE around Lee only reinforces my idea that the company is absolutely toxic if you've got the wrong set of genitalia. Regardless of what happened at Tribute to the Troops, if I saw my boyfriend talking to someone who openly pines for him in Twitter, I might have blown a gasket too. Remember, CM Punk's the women's wrestling world's bicycle. Everyone's had a ride. Then again, since he's not a woman, that's okay? Fuck that. Oh yeah, Lee actually got a decent match out of Nattie Neidhart last night, the first time that's probably happened since she was in SHIMMER (that match with Paige in NXT notwithstanding).

2. Rachel Summerlyn (Last Week: 3) - I don't know why my go-to for Rachel Summerlyn entries always falls back to Texas football. Maybe that program needs a literal kick in the ass, and no one could do it better than Summerlyn.

3. Daniel Bryan (Last Week: 2) - I would have ranked Bryan higher, say, on Tuesday morning. He took that closing segment by the horns and rustled it to the ground. As of right now, I'm not sure if the Wyatts dragged him backstage after TLC last night and let their alligator draw phalluses on his face, so I can't rank him too much higher.

4. Drew Gulak (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Not only did he retain his CZW World Championship, but he won the 24/7 Championship by beating a snowman. HE'S HARDCORE! HE'S HARDCORE!

5. Kimber Lee (Last Week: Not Ranked) - I don't care if the name on the banner says "CZW." No way, no how, not ever would I let anyone put skewers in my goddamn head. I have to rank her out of respect.

6. Burritos (Last Week: Not Ranked)OFFICIAL HOLZERMAN HUNGERS SPONSORED ENTRY - I could subsist off burritos for as long as I'm still alive, which if I keep eating burritos, won't be too much longer anyway.

7. Mark Henry (Last Week: 7) - When Summerlyn gets the Texas football job, I hear she's going to hire Mark Henry as defensive coordinator and assistant coach for HOSS interests. Gotta keep the linemen in the trenches in shape.

8. Paige Turner (Last Week: Not Ranked) - So she finally debuted for ACW last night, which means I have more of a chance of getting to an honest to God book fair when I finally make my way down there!

9. JT Dunn (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Apparently, he won an egg eating contest by consuming 30 eggs. Not only was it a feat to win the contest, but he now ensures no one will sit next to him for the next century, so he can finally finish the Song of Fire and Ice books like he's been wanting to.

10. Sara del Rey (Last Week: 10) - SARA DEL REY FACT: The reason why Jojo hasn't been seen on Total Divas lately is because del Rey's training was so intense that she turned into a fine powder.

Instant Feedback: Togetherness

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The knave situated between the two allies
Photo Credit: WWE.com
The theme of RAW tonight was heavy emphasis on tag teams and multi-man matches. With the tag scene burgeoning to the point of attaining a near critical mass, one might come to expect that one of these shows would feature nothing but twofers and stable battles. Excepting the excellent Daniel Bryan/Randy Orton main event at the show's close, the entire show was built around teams and their battles.

I don't think the timing of this week's show was all too curious, however. Christmas is a little over one week away. All the mythological trappings of the holiday, whether religious or secular, point to one unifying theme - togetherness. The holidays aren't really about the birth of Jesus inasmuch as the Church wanting its patrons to get together to do it. Worshipping by oneself is creepy; doing it communally breeds community. In the same breath, receiving gifts is greed, but exchanging gifts promotes warm feelings.

While the main thrust of the show was building off the discord sown by last week's show ending segment, the meat of RAW was centered around men working together to engage in athletic contest against other men, or in one case, women waging battle against other women. None of these teams were first-time pairings either. Wrestlers building camaraderie with other wrestlers in another time and place would feel natural, but in WWE, when the seeds of hate and mistrust have grown into thorny, tangled weeds, the warmth and positivity of an extended network of fraternal bonding is new and at least in my opinion, welcome.

I would like to think the thematic structure of RAW was not an accident. Christmas is coming, as the dueling Santa promos for next weeks show gave warning. If the holiday season is about spending time with friends and loved ones, shouldn't a healthy tag team and budding friendships be the pole that each segment is tethered to? Even the main angle was a juxtaposition of two allies banding together to fight a common enemy, a dysfunctional family that seems to be one bad day from exploding.

I questioned the logic of John Cena speaking for Bryan to start the show, but my brain was switched into lizard position, looking for a way to reconcile the fact that Bryan wasn't speaking for himself was a sign of weakness. Granted, if he is to be a main event player, he can't let Cena continue to talk for him, but at the same time, Cena himself has been a loner. He's been the emblem for WWE's ronin-based hero structure. Why shouldn't I welcome him as a herald for Bryan, an advocate in a time when Bryan is in sore need of one? Isn't that what I've craved from Cena, to shed his tough exterior and let someone in to love him, whether fraternally or otherwise?

In true Goofus and Gallant style, Orton's fracases with the Authority made him the perfect foil for the unbeatable new best friends. His relationship with Triple H and Stephanie McMahon is built on entitlement, handouts, the superficial. He can't trust the Authority, and that relationship is unraveling before the audience's eyes in spectacular fashion.

Of course, the question must then be asked as to whether Bryan can trust Cena. Even though wrestling logic dictates that relationship has to deteriorate at some point, for this week, in the spirit of the holiday, on a show where every match of importance featured tag teams, I will choose to bask in the moment, that Bryan and Cena fell together as friends on the battlefield to the treacherous snake, a man who has to resort to totally-against-bro-code nut shots and surreptitious skulking to get his advantage because he doesn't have any friends to make up the numbers disadvantage he has. Hey, if you're gonna die, you might as well die knowing you weren't alone, right? Nothing is a more fatalistically pro wrestling way to celebrate Christmas.

But What About Sweet T?

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Photo Credit: WWE.com

In Vince McMahon's America, all the black people wanna do is dance, even if their friend is out in the elements dying. Okay, so maybe Tensai wasn't actually in the cold on his way to expiring, but the whole scene after Brodus Clay's final heel turn was emblematic of everything still wrong with WWE's portrayal of black people. People can have thoughts and feelings that aren't grossly stereotyped, but on a show where the announcers would rather take selfies than pay attention to the match, I guess this is a piddling concern in the grand scheme of things.

This Week In Sid History: The Steiner Starrcade

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This column/feature will be a chance to highlight some of the great moments in the career of one Psycho Sid or Sid Justice.

We start this first edition of This Week in Sid History with this moment:

December 17, 2000

It was on this date in 2000 that Sid Vicious lost to Scott Steiner in a WCW World Heavyweight Championship match.

This match was the main event for Starrcade, which at one point in time was considered WCW’s version of WrestleMania. In other words, yes, Sid Vicious and Scott Steiner were the headliners for WCW’s version of WrestleMania. But to be fair, Sid did main event Wrestlemania 13 versus the Undertaker and Wrestlemania 8 versus Hulk Hogan.

The final Starrcade in the history of WCW took place at the MCI Center (now known as the Verizon Center) in Washington D.C.

The Starrcade card featured such matches Mike Awesome vs. Bam Bam Bigelow in an ambulance match, Shane Douglas versus General Rection and Goldberg vs. Lex Luger.

Sid-Steiner was rated one of the higher matches on the card. The Wrestling Observer Newsletter gave the match two-and-a-half stars. Three other matches were ranked higher. Terry Funk’s Hardcore Title match versus Crowbar was two-and-three-quarters stars. Diamond Dallas Page and Kevin Nash had a three-and-a-quarter star tag match against Meat Stasiak and Chuck Palumbo. The highest rated match was four stars - the three-way tag team ladder opening match, in which Shane Helms and Shannon Moore defeated Kaz Hayashi and Yun Yang and Evan Karagias and Jamie Knoble.

Being that this was a WCW Main Event, of course they would pay the money to have Michael Buffer announce the entrants. Since Buffer wore his patented tuxedo, he more likely than not was the best dressed person in the MCI Arena that night.

Sid was introduced first, given that he was the challenger for the title. For reasons I’ll never know (didn’t watch 2000 WCW), Sid wore long tights. But Sid did wear his vest, so I’ll let it go for this instance. As a side note, when Buffer introduced Sid, he described his weight as “three hundred twenty one and one half pounds.”

It was of course Steiner’s turn to make an entrance. He walked out to the arena wearing his big gold Heavyweight Championship title (the one that dates back to 1905 or whatever) with his entrance music composed entirely of blaring sirens. Steiner also had a corner person with him. It was none other than Midajah.

Midajah, known in real life as Melinda McCullum, was recruited by Terry Taylor and was part of the Power Plant program. According to her resume, she was also part of Battle Dome.

The commentary team for this pay-per-view was comprised of Tony Schiavone, Scott Hudson and (sigh) Mark Madden who played the role of heel commentator. Madden boasted, “Here comes the pinnacle of wrestling” about Steiner. I didn’t hear an audible sigh from the other two, so maybe somebody was using the cough button.

Hudson quickly noted as the bell rang that Sid never lost the title. It was in fact taken from him back in April, which coincided with the return of Vince Russo and Eric Bischoff.

“He’s the uncrowned champion. He’s going to crown Scott Steiner tonight at Starrcade,” Hudson said.

The match started and Steiner got Sid into a corner, attacking with punches and chops. Sid reversed, put Steiner in the corner, and threw a couple of punches at Steiner’s chest before climbing the turnbuckle and punching Steiner.

Steiner grabbed Sid and gave an inverted atomic drop, which had no effect on Sid. He leveled Steiner with a couple of clotheslines. Sid hit Steiner with a side slam and went for a pin attempt. There was barely a one count before Steiner rolled out of the ring to regain his composure.

After a few seconds out of the ring, Steiner got back in and immediately got into a test of strength battle with Sid. During the strength battle, Steiner, ever so friendly with the paying audience, took a couple of seconds to told fans ringside to sit down and shut up.

After one failed attempt, Sid reversed with a northern-lights suplex, attempted a pin and barely got a two-count. Sid took advantage with a leg drop, followed by a pin attempt for a two count, and then a big boot to the face. Steiner got up and is clotheslined over the top rope, onto the floor.

Sid got out of the ring to fetch Steiner. While Sid wasn’t looking, Midajah walked up behind Sid and hits him across the back with a lead pipe. Under normal circumstances, this would've been grounds for a disqualification. However the referee (Mark “Slick” Johnson), turned the other way right as Midajah was approaching Sid.

Steiner got a steel chair (with the Slick Johnson on the ring floor and presumably aware that one of the wrestlers in a match was using a steel chair for nefarious reasons) and hit Sid in the chest/stomach region and got him two more times around the head (wasn’t a full-blown chair shot).

Madden noted the referee could call for a disqualification, but said the ref realized it was a championship match.

Steiner chirped with some fans at ringside some more. “F*ck you,” Steiner yelled. Schiavone talked about how Steiner often had “unkind words” for the fans.

Steiner threw Sid back into the ring and worked to put him away. In the process though, Steiner taunted and wasted time, doing push ups and flexing his biceps.

“That’s why he’s the best wrestler in the world today, because he does it his way,” Madden said.

Steiner continued to work over Sid, eventually doing a belly-to-belly suplex. We got a quick shot of Midajah arguing with the fans and then back to the ring where Steiner got Sid in the Steiner Recliner.

Of course, Steiner didn’t have Sid in the right spot of the ring to get the submission win. It’s kind of hard to get that win when you’re right by the ropes. Sid grabbed the ropes and Johnson ordered Steiner to break the hold, but not before Steiner hit Sid in the back.

Steiner argued with the referee, suggesting Sid gave up. He abandoned the argument quickly and gave Sid a vertical suplex. If you’ve ever wondered whether or not Sid could be suplexed, well, watch the video.

Steiner got Sid back in the Steiner Recliner. Sid refused to give up and looked for crowd support to get him back in the match. As he started to get up and away from the Recliner, Midajah, ever persistent, climbed the top rope and jumped. Sid escaped from the move and Midajah landed on Steiner for a cross body.

Dazed, Steiner got up, and Sid latched onto his throat for the one-hand/one-arm/one-something chokeslam. Sid caught his breath briefly before covering Steiner for the pin, but he only got a two count.

Both men took their time getting up, but were able to get up before the referee’s ten count. Sid grabbed hold of Steiner and locked him in the cobra clutch. In a desperate move, Steiner punched Slick Johnson and knocked him out. Sid turned the cobra clutch into a slam and went for the cover right as Johnson rolled out of the ring.

Midajah got on the ring apron to distract Sid. Steiner used the opportunity to grab the conveniently placed lead pipe and whacked Sid across the back. He knocked down Sid once more with the pipe.

Charles Robinson, aka Litttle Naitch, who even in WCW was the back-up referee for instances when an official was incapacitated, ran into the ring right. Steiner yelled at Robinson about something and immediately scrambled to hook the leg for a pinfall. Sid kicked out at two. Steiner got mad at the ref.

But wait, Jeff Jarrett came out to save the day, yellow-shaded sunglasses and all with his nice guitar. Jarrett got on the ring apron with the guitar, while Steiner grabbed hold of Sid. No, not this way!

Jarrett swung, but Sid got out of the way. Steiner got waylaid by the guitar. Sid hooked the leg for a pin. One, two... but Jarrett grabbed Robinson and pulled him out of the ring. He charged to clothesline Robinson, but Robinson ducked, got back in the ring and counted, only getting a two count.

Sid got Steiner up, whipped him into the ropes, kicked him, and set up for a powerbomb. Steiner cut him off with low blow, not once, but twice, courtesy of a rear kick. Steiner gave him a T-bone suplex and went for the recliner once more. Sid eventually faded. Robinson called for the bell and Steiner retained his title.

“...He’s already one of the greatest world champions of all time,” Madden said.

Agree with Madden if you feel the need to, but what’s done is done. It took a bit of effort, but Steiner retained the belt and Sid didn’t get his defining Starrcade moment.

Sid would get a few more opportunities over that next month at a title shot, but an in-ring instance would change his career.

Card information courtesy of Pro Fight Database. Part two is linked below.

Year End Sorting Bins, 2013: Oh This Guy/Gal Is on TV? Cool!

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Who knew Orton would be a major WWE player?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
This one's by far the biggest list of the five. What can I say? I'm full of like, and I want to enjoy what I watch. NOVEL CONCEPT, AMIRITE GUISE? These are the folks that I enjoyed and continue to enjoy to the point where I like their presence on camera and want to see them generally do well. Twenty-five will get write-ups, the rest will be list-o-mania'd.

Randy Orton - I would be lying if I said I was a stone cold Randy Orton fan right now. However, I have to give him his props. He's worked really hard in the ring, and his character right now is my favorite on the show. I always have the creeping fear that he'll return to the malaise-inducing snorefest persona that plagued him, but for now, I'm digging him.

Paul Heyman - We'll always have the volcano meltdown promo, Paul.

Leo Kruger - I was sour on Kruger until I saw he got a real character, which basically was Kraven from the Spider-man comics. I'm warm on him now.

Insane Clown Posse - Look, I'm not gonna go out and get their back catalog right away. I still don't think they make great music, but as wrestling entrepreneurs, I respect them. They're fans. Who cares if they also happen to drink Faygo and have dreadlocks?

MASADA - I still have a little trepidation seeing him jam skewers into people's heads, but the man is entertaining when he's not inducing cringes.

Colt Cabana - Gotta give it to Cabana, he's managed to keep the Art of Wrestling sharp after all these years.

At least he has a running art project about him...
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Curtis Axel - I feel bad for Curtis Axel, because he's actually not bad; he's just miscast. He wasn't ready for the mantel of Paul Heyman Guy, he didn't deserve to be the conveyance for Triple H's head hurt, and he never should've been let near a microphone. However, he was pretty good in wrestling matches, which should count for something.

Christina von Eerie - She's the most hardcore woman in wrestling, which is a good thing. Again, the skewers give me pause, but anyone who can wrestle in a Mohawk the way she can is impressive.

Maria Kanellis - I really dig that she stuck with wrestling after leaving WWE, specifically because she's actually good at being a manager. An indispensable part of the Mike Bennett act.

Jaka - The savage character is a bit passé for wrestling in 2013, but Jaka embraces it. He's a damn good wrestler in-ring too.

The Usos - Speaking of the "savage" archetype, the Usos not only getting to be something other than Samoan stereotypes, but actually getting over through being great wrestlers is one of the most heartwarming developments of 2013.

The Batiri - My main beef with them in 2013 is that they didn't troll NEARLY as hard as they did in years past.

Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug
We all scream for ice cream!
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Fire Ant - The man (ant?) gave me ice cream on a hot day.

Ray Rosas - If Pretty Peter Avalon likes you, then you're okay by me.

The Miz - He's taken a lot of lumps in the last year, and yeah, his babyface run has been nothing short of a failure. Part of that shortcoming has to go on him for not really being able to hit the beats he needed to, but could bad direction also be to blame? I mean, you can't just tell Mike Mizanin just to go out and stop going "YOU PEOPLE" as the only change in his character and expect the fans to latch onto him. Plus, he's still always improving in the ring, which goes a long way with me.

Mike Bennett - I was wrong about Bennett. He's actually quite good.

Derrick Bateman/ECIII/Michael Hutter - I'll admit to Derrick Bateman not tickling my fancy as much as I would have liked, but his turn as Ethan Carter III in TNA is the only thing that is making me want to tune into that company.

Mark Andrews and Pete Dunne - I only saw them once so far this year, but that one time was enough for me to want to see way more of them.

Caleb Konley - Shock, Gabe Sapolsky didn't get a guy that he had to build himself at first.

Scott Dawson - He's a far more likable version of Larry the Cable Guy. Believe it or not, I'm complimenting him.

 Best export from Winnipeg since, well, you know
Photo Credit: Gregory Davis/DDS
Nicholas Kaye - The best way to get my attention is shooting a YouTube promo where you kidnap your opponent's knocked out body and talk shit over his unconscious ass.

Courtney Rush - She just has a magnetism about her. She's so emotive and expressive, and she throws a mean suplex too.

assailANT - In character, I still don't completely trust him not to be a mole for Titor/the Gekido. Out of character, he's grown so much that I find it hard not to get into anything he does.

Jimmy Jacobs - He's become a "venerable veteran" on the indie scene, which is cool. The indies need venerable veterans.

Vince McMahon - I vacillate on McMahon. He's so magnetic and charismatic, even as he wanes in years. But the guy is at the root of nearly every major problem in professional wrestling. I'll just put it like this; Vince McMahon, the performer, is wonderful and I want him on my screen. Vince McMahon, the person, needs to be fired into the Sun.

Mad Man Pondo
Arik Cannon
Naruki Doi
Colin Delaney
Adam Page
Mark Sterling
Tony Chimel
Isys Ephex
Ricky Starks
Jollyville Fuck-Its
R-Truth
Christian Able
Blind Rage
Matt Taven
Tensai
Barbi Hayden
Super Smash Bros.
Wade Barrett
Paige
Vickie Guerrero
Juan Francisco de Coronado
Soldier Ant
ODB
A grand character but man...
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Andrew Everett/Chiva Kid
John Hennigan
Ayako Hamada
Byron Saxton
Mark Briscoe
Dalton Castle
Eric Corvis
Su Yung
The Shard
STIGMA
Latvian Proud Oak/Lithuanian Snow Troll
Ivelisse Velez
Christy Hemme
Chris Sabin
Leonard F. Chikarason
Logan Shulo
BJ Whitmer
Ryan Taylor
Reed Bentley
Jimmy Susumu
The Funkadactyls
Bill Carr
Gail Kim
Masato Yoshino
Cody Rhodes
Kahagas
Chris Trew
EFYBO
Crazy Mary Dobson
Serena Deeb
Nigel McGuinness
Robbie E
Lei'D Tapa
Masaaki Mochizuki
Delirious
Jolly Roger
Emma
Jon Davis
Biff Busick
Samoa Joe
Orange Cassidy
Miss Natural
Angelus Layne
Khris Wolfe
Zack Ryder
Mickie Knuckles
Briley Pierce
Josh Prohibition
Marti Belle
TJP/Manik
Jessica James
Magnus
Cheerleader Melissa
Darin Corbin
Mike Posey
Heidi Lovelace
Brad Maddox
Kofi Kingston
JT Dunn
Kory Chavis
Alberto del Rio
Ayumi Kurihara
Milk Chocolate
Eddie Kingston
Shane Hollister
Hiroyo Matsumoto
David Starr
Sasha Banks
Corey Hollis
Josh Alexander
Tamina Snuka
Da Hoodz
Alex Shelley
Lilian Garcia
Mercedes Martinez
Dolph Ziggler
John McChesney
QT Marshall
Lince Dorado
Taeler Hendrix
Mark Angelosetti
Luke Gallows
John Silver
Aeroform
Johnny Gargano
David Otunga
Tripp Cassidy
Kassius Ohno/Chris Hero
Mike Quackenbush
Gregory Iron
Sugar Dunkerton
Jewells Malone
Maxwell Chicago
ZSIII
Jerry Lynn
Ricochet
Neveah
Tomoka Nakagawa
Anthony Stone
Bobby Roode
Cherry Bomb
Chris Dickinson
Sheamus
Low Ki
Sassy Stephanie
Irish Airborne
Thunderkitty
3MB
Rosa Mendes
Xavier Woods
Matt Cross
Shane Strickland
Santana Garrett
Justin Gabriel
Fandango
Pinkie Sanchez
Tracy Smothers
Tommaso Ciampa
Hallowicked
Devastation Corporation
Brian Kendrick
Jeremy Wyatt
Rory Mondo
Brutal Bob
Sam Shaw
John Cena
Scot Summers
James Storm
Jeff Hardy
Da Soul Touchaz
Colony: Xtreme Force
Lexxus
Samuray del Sol/Kalisto
Darius Carter
Drake Younger
Corey Graves
Jason Axe
Zema Ion
Necro Butcher
Rey Mysterio
Vader
Nattie Neidhart
Roderick Strong
Bobby Cruise
Polar Baron's Union
Saraya Knight
MVP
Bayley
Melanie Cruise
Justin Roberts
Johnny Miyagi
Tadarius Thomas
Myke Quest
Prince Nana
Undertaker
Timothy Thatcher
Tyson Kidd
Addy Starr
Hulk Hogan
Darkness Crabtree
Scott Parker
Kane
Adrian Neville
Bolt Brady
Curt Hawkins
The Lost Boys
Matt Tremont
Bully Ray
Trent?
Mia Yim
Aiden English
Steve "The Turtle" Weiner
Carlito Colon
Gran Akuma
Saturyne
Famous B
Jushin Liger

The Past is Prologue: Total Divas Season 1 Finale (for real, this time)

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So cute!
Photo Credit: WWE.com
It is that time to admit that Total Divas is now away from our lives for a few months, leaving us a world without people that say things like "girl bye." And chances are, if you're reading this column, that's a lesser world to live in. Or something. I don't know why you read this. Anyway, after the sort of odd treading of water that seems to have occupied a network-mandated "we gotta do seven more of these episodes, gang" policy, there were at least some of the more wonderful heartwarming things I've wanted from the show since say Nattie and TJ's wedding. Let's list this.

1. Daniel Bryan

OMG HAS THERE BEEN A MORE WONDERFUL MAN AT EXPRESSING HIS LOVE IN THE BEST OF WAYS THAN DANIEL FREAKIN BRYAN? HAS THERE? THERE HASN'T. I KEPT THIS AT CAPS LOCK BECAUSE THIS IS LEGITIMATELY HOW I FELT. I SHOOK WHEN HE MADE THE TYPE OF PROCLAMATION THAT COULD BE CHEESY AS HELL, BUT BECAUSE HE'S DANIEL BRYAN, HE MEANS IT SO MUCH. THANK YOU, BRYAN.

2. Brie Bella

Woo, sorry about that. But for real, Bryan and Bella make a fantastic couple. It's hard to fake their chemistry and the way they sort of look at each other. Did you see how Bryan petted her hair? That's freakin' adorable. Not that it wouldn't be. And of course, retroactive congratulations on the engaged couple. Thank you for making me have the feels for this great moment in y'all's lives.

3. Natalya

While it came from revealing herself to be an awful person (if the truth about drinking is true in that one gets more honest the more inebriated they are), Natalya's drunk voicemails were some of the most fascinating developments for her character all season. It says way more about Nattie than the silly "I'm jealous of Eva Marie, who can barely move her arms right" storyline. It goes back to the Nattie we were introduced to in the pilot, namely this veteran who does anything the company asks of her with a clear undertone that she wants to grow in the company. And for as much as wrestler Natalya has mainly just been a shade near competent in 2013, her drunken frustration at not being the champion in a company that for all we know has about one other consistently talented female performer is palpable. And also her sexting is saying, "I'm not wearing any underwear and I'm ready to ride."

4. Fandango

With one purely pervy and glorious line, Fandango added to his streak of weird ass Dirty Curty appearances on Total Divas. As Nattie expressed her frustration for having drunk dialed Stephanie, the following occurred:

Nattie: "Ugh, I did something I shouldn't have done."
Fandango: "Did you make out with her?"

Never change, you gross dirty man.

5. Alicia Fox

There weren't very many performers on the show in general, and fewer that I enjoyed being around, so I should give my honorable mention award to Alicia Fox for essentially ensuring herself a likely spot in season two by being "person who talks to the Total Divas." I guess they realized they need more girl byeness and less Jojo. Poor Jojo.

6. Ariane

She had deserved outrage when Nattie turned into the worst person on earth and called her moves like what a prostitute would do. Because what in the utter fuck, Natalya?

7. John Cena

Cena gets points for a shockingly mature approach to not wanting kids. Cena understands his own materialism and how toxic that is to forming a human relationship outside of sex. And while I haven't made up my own mind on the subject, it is weird how the show became a meditation on what makes a person happy. Is Cena really happy? The show, of course, cannot give us that answer and left us on a cliffhanger as to if the Cena/Nikki thing will still be a thing come the show's return in March. But I like the idea of a man admitting that maybe he doesn't want to be a shitty absent-minded father whose child resents him.

But then he also said the sentence, "Is there a woman alive that doesn't want to be married and have kids?" The correct answer is YES, John. Those women also exist. And not even the cliche "well, they're definitely lesbians" types. Straight women also are out there that don't care about marriage or children. I don't think he meant it as anything more than silly table talk, but I'm just putting that out there.

8. Jojo

Good night, sweet angel.

9. Eva Marie

The only reason she did not end up at 10 is:

10. That fiancee of Eva Marie

I should say that I currently work at a retail job. Yay, actual work! But anyways, I get a whole gaggle of customers because I'm told that's how retail works. And not a single one of them in a month's time has ever been as universally stupid and awful to look at as Eva Marie's fiancee. Not a one. That includes the ones angry that you have to pay a dollar for something haphazardly put back in the 50 cent bin. But hey, at least Corey Graves has a competitor for worst person on WWE television now.

FINAL POWER RANKINGS:

1. Daniel Bryan
2. Trinity
3. Ariane
4. Brie Bella
5. Natalya
6. Fandango
7. John Cena
8. Nikki Bella
9. Sandra the Seamstress
10. Jojo (sorry, girl)

And with that, see you in March or whenever I find an old wrestling show and only think about the music or interviews or Kwang.

The Best Moves Ever: Cross Rhodes

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Hey, do you like Cody Rhodes? Do you like seeing him do his finisher? Well, have I got news for you. Below is a video of him doing the Cross Rhodes 20 times! Enjoy.

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