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A Couple of Major Injuries Befalling Cool Women Wrestlers

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Get well soon, Angelus!
Photo via Ms. Layne herself
The curse of the WSU top contender has struck again, as Ring Belles has reported what has been sort of known for the last couple of weeks but kept on the down low for various reasons. Mickie Knuckles, the unquestioned star of WSU's secret shows in 2014 and number one contender to LuFisto's Championship at Uncensored Rumble, needs to have surgery on her ankle. She suffered a spiral break in the lower part of her leg. She didn't place the time of the injury, but several people noticed her with a walking cast on her leg prior to her three-matches-in-one-night performance at King and Queen of the Ring. No one can ever accuse her of not being absolutely and supremely tough to work on such a painful injury. She'll miss a few dates, but she promises to be back in the ring by June 13 to defend her Resistance Pro Women's Championship.

In other injury news, the Veda Scott/Athena match at Inspire Pro Wrestling (which, reported by the folks at Voices of Wrestling contained Scott getting shaken up during the match herself, sheesh) was supposed to be a three-way dance featuring Angelus Layne. The sparkplug missed the date because she broke both of her wrists at IWA Mid-South on Thursday. I don't know what I'd do with myself if I ever broke both of my wrists, and no, that statement isn't a thinly veiled reference to feats of onanism, thank you very much. She hopes to be back in action by the end of June, which is good since she is the sixth competitor announced for the ACW Queen of Queens Tournament.

Speaking of Inspire Pro, the company announced that it was joining the ranks of the National Wrestling Alliance, the oldest governing body for wrestling in the world. The NWA has accumulated a LOT of affiliates in the great state of Texas, and hopefully, that affiliation will mean more high profile title defenses like Barbi Hayden putting her Women's Championship on the line against Portia Perez. Say what you want about the relevance of the NWA, and believe me, I've written a lot of disparaging words over the years about it, but people people still seem to flock to that name. Joining up with promotions like Inspire Pro should mean nothing but good things.

Buff Bagwell Did a Canadian Destroyer

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As it turns out, 2014 might just be the year of the Buff Daddy after all. After returning to the public eye with his foray into the world of male escort services and his eye-opening appearance on the Art of Wrestling podcast, Absolute Intense Wrestling capitalized on his newfound nostalgia buzz and booked him for the JT Lightning Tournament. I am not sure how many people thought he'd pan out as anything more than a familiar face to stoke the fires of fandom past, and honestly, I haven't seen either of his two matches vs. Jock Samson or Ethan Page to judge. However, something is endearing about a man whose heyday came and went five years before the move even came into prominence pulling of a cot dam Canadian Destroyer:



At this point in time, I don't care how good either of his matches were on the whole. As Friend of the Blog Joe Roche pointed out last night on Twitter, Bagwell has successfully added more new moves to his arsenal in the last 15 years than Rob van Dam has. Who cares if that number is only one?

Is Cesaro Being Served? On Paul Heyman and His Efficacy As a Manager

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Has his partnership with Heyman really benefited Cesaro?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Paul Heyman is one of the most eloquent and persuasive voices in wrestling history. His managerial runs are the stuff of legends, whether as the head of the Dangerous Alliance or as the advocate for Brock Lesnar, and he was able to spit hot fire when ECW needed something to get people's attention. Common knowledge would dictate that anyone paired with him ought to get some kind of boost. Yet, Curtis Axel and Ryback both were failed by being represented by Heyman. To be completely fair, neither guy was really booked particularly well. Axel was dead on arrival as soon as he was debuted thanks to being programmed tangentially against Triple H, and Ryback's yo-yo year of start-stop pushes leading into a poorly-understood relationship with Heyman that bordered on homoeroticism (which would be fine if WWE crowds didn't seem to be filled with the kinds of people who'd support measures like Prop 8) led to general malaise towards him that really hasn't dissipated yet.

However, Antonio Cesaro should have been different, or more accurately, he should be different. He's awesome in the ring, has unstated coolness in his body language and facial expressions, and when called upon to talk, he can deliver a decent promo despite the heavy accent, which makes him a prime candidate to have his overall stature elevated by an A-plus talker like Heyman. Yet, whenever I see Cesaro come out nowadays, I can't help but notice two things. First, his reactions are muted to pre-WrestleMania levels, and two, Heyman doesn't really talk about him all that much. The big question is, however, are the two related?

I know the "MY CLIENT BROCK LESNAR" shtick is pretty amusing to a mass majority of the hardcore fan variety (even though I personally find them annoying). Entertainment value is subjective, but what isn't up for debate is how well or little this line of promoing is helping Cesaro get over. A manager is not worth a thing if he or she is not helping enhance the talent that person is paired with, and I can't for the life of me see how talking about Lesnar ending The Streak is in any way, shape, or form helping Cesaro keep his momentum. I don't know whether Heyman has carte blanche to say what he wants and riff as he pleases, or whether Vince McMahon loves the crowd-trolling and is making Heyman repeat it in the same way that he wants JBL to be a confrontational, miserable kiss-ass in the broadcast booth. Either way, it's not helping at all.

Then again, is the problem actually Heyman's shtick, or is it the fact that Cesaro has been paired with Heyman at all and is currently continuing on his path as being a heel? The pop when he won the Andre the Giant Battle Royale was deafening, and his partnership with Jack Swagger and Zeb Colter was fraying at the seams. WWE has this obsession with making long-winded promos the center of attention for wrestlers nowadays; Triple H, Bray Wyatt, John Cena, Stephanie McMahon, Daniel Bryan, and The Shield all get huge chunks of mic time on any given show. However, Cesaro certainly didn't get popular as a face through Zeb Colter's Tea Party characterization. He, like Daniel Bryan, got super popular thanks to the things he did in the ring. And much like Bryan is hurt by opening his mouth and spouting off the typical WWE too-cool-for-school, slightly misogynistic antihero babyface tripe, Cesaro gets hurt by the words said for him by his proxy.

The truth is that Cesaro should never have been paired with a heel manager, not even one as theoretically great as Heyman is. Either Heyman should have turned face (a longshot anyway since he is also the proxy for the most hated man in WWE in the last five years), or he should have gotten another wrestler to help, or in this case ruin, as a "Paul Heyman Guy." Like many wrestlers in WWE right now, Cesaro is in dire need of a reset, and the narrative seems to be hinting at Payback being a place where everyone can collect themselves and move onto something different, hopefully something better. My hope is that WWE realizes this Heyman experiment is only helping one person, two people tops, and neither one is named "Antonio Cesaro" (or just plain old "Cesaro" for those who are anal about what wrestling companies officially call their talent). If by this time next week, Cesaro hasn't turned on Heyman or been turned on by Heyman and is still playing second fiddle to Brock Lesnar being the ONE in 21-and-one, then WWE will have wasted a phenomenal chance to have a new populist hero created in the short term.

And hoo boy, doesn't this company need a hero right about now.

The Wrestling Blog's OFFICIAL Best in the World Rankings, May 27

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My only complaint is that it wasn't an atomic wedgie
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. Alicia Fox (Last Week: 4) - Dude, she gave someone a wedgie last night. A WEDGIE. If that action isn't worthy of a number one slot this week, nothing is. NOTHING I SAY YOU.

2. "Smooth Sailing" Ashley Remington (Last Week: Not Ranked) - If Remington is not your favorite wrestling character, not even Chikara character, but dude in the entire world of wrestling, by the end of September, I will eat his hat. Or maybe I'll just eat one of his delicious-looking fruit baskets.

3. Daniel Bryan (Last Week: 3) - Bryan's not delaying the payoff of him dropping the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. He's biding his time until his bionic neck brace that will allow him to wrestle and increase his strength levels to Class 100 is ready. Trust me, I'm a nerd.

4. Paige (Last Week: 2) - I don't blame her for her loss last week. WWE has a special win-ability decreaser that it puts on every time a wrestler is near his or her hometown. In the case of those wrestling in non-North American locales, that power is multiplied exponentially. How else would it be explained to work when Norwich is 100+ miles away from London?

5. Mark Henry (Last Week: 8) - Look, I can't blame him for what happened on Main Event. If it takes Antonio Cesaro that kind of chicanery to get one over the The World's Strongest Man, then no one can get one over on The World's Strongest Man.

6. Buff Bagwell (Last Week: Not Ranked) - I know it seems like I'm overrating a single wrestling move, but c'mon now, if someone told you a WCW superstar-turned-gigolo would be doing flippy shit in a wrestling ring in 2014, wouldn't YOU be at least intrigued?

7. Heidi Lovelace (Last Week: Not Ranked) - She would've won the Absolute Championship on Saturday had she faced Eddie Kingston. Everyone knows the immutable laws of wrestling in that "if you beat someone once, they'll never ever beat you again." I think that's how the law goes. Or does it? I don't know. What I do know is that while I didn't see the match, my bet is that Michael Elgin defeated her by boring her to death by stating how he really, REALLY wants to be in the New Japan G1 tournament this summer.

8. Neko Case (Last Week: Not Ranked) - She had such a rad response to a sexist tweet. When are people gonna realize that a woman musician/actor/wrestler isn't some dainty breed that needs to stay separate from being compared to their male counterparts?

9. Hot Dogs (Last Week: Not Ranked)OFFICIAL HOLZERMAN HUNGERS SPONSORED ENTRY - The iconic American sandwich was eaten by the million this weekend. I didn't have any, but by the time they came off the grill at both barbecues I was at, I was too full to eat anything else.

10. Sara del Rey (Last Week: 10) - SARA DEL REY FACT: In response to Kobald using the Royal Butterfly at the Chikara show Sunday, Sara del Rey spent Monday and Tuesday traveling to her destinations via the toilet transit system. She came out smelling as she normally would, because she knows how to keep the waste away.

The Best Moves Ever: Camel Clutch

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Hey! Sheiky Baby come to break your back make you humble with the Camel Clutch! *hock-ptooey* America! Iran greatest country in the world! Sheiky Baby the real unlike that dead dog's dick the Virgil! Fuck the Hulk Hogan, he not deserve respect like The Sheik!

Best Coast Bias: Where's Your John Cena Now?

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Erick checking Luke's math, but Bray knows it's correct
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Chess has never been the forte of the Bias, but there's some things known to everybody. What pawns are is obvious, but apparently they can change look.

And in the hands of dangerous enough of a cult, they can reform into the reigning Tag Tag Champions.

Where the Usos relied on their familial bond in pre-match chatting up of Renee, Bray's soliloquy before the centerpiece of Main Event stated that if they stood with Cena, they'd fall like he'd fall on Sunday: so far, one for one on that count.

Every time the Wyatt minions go in against the Samoans you can expect quality in your violence, and vice the versa.  In direct opposition to last week's abomination or the little-hit-mostly-miss nature of RAW, WWEME simply put an hour of Perfectly Acceptable Wrestling that saw a majority of its minutes go into full Mike Sanders territory (and unlike Full Ziggler, going Full Sanders is perfectly fine given this context.  Trigger warnings to any Chicken Boos reading this) and it culminated with this non-title match.  While it's unsure if the Kingdom of Bray is going to use this to form the basis for gaining the belts proper or if their message would only be muddled by trinkets, one thing is very, very clear: Mr. Rowan is not the brains of the team.

The match was in the little moments, too: Rowan going into BERZERKER MODE when Jey punched his mask off, the way Harper could rattle off chained underhook suplexes or, say, a dropkick and then suddenly have a 500-yard-stare to the rafters as the ultimate signal of bulbs brightening up a vacant residence, and the way outside of using the full five seconds to pull off some double team maneuvering the brothers acted like they were in for a fight instead of a wrestling match and did work accordingly.  Apparently making jokes about Cena being on Main Event are back on.

Also back on was a match with R-Truth and Damien Sandow, a return bout from last week's traveshamockery beyond the pale.  And maybe that's how some people felt about the chameleonic intellecutal coming out as D-Sizzle and getting in at least a solid .84 on the Regal Mad Skillz scale.  Somehow this latest iteration seemed to be right in the wheelhouse, especially given pro graps' using of white rappers for three decades now and all the Fun Wacky Tag Team Championship Possibilities of putting together two guys on the roster who really don't have much else to do right now besides trade victories every week on Main Event and the like.  There's nothing g g g g gangsta about that at all.  Hashtag Truth Sizzle para la victoria.  Yes boy.

From the ridiculous to the subpar -- the poor, poor Rhodeses..es.  When Evolution isn't using them as piñatas for their second Shield showdown Sunday they're getting pushed around by AxelBack post match.  And Cody, miles away from his stomping grounds in Marietta, found himself leveraged down after a chop block and his tights in Axel's hand while his shoulders were down for two.  Diamonds form under this much pressure, but they're the exception that proves the rule.  It's one thing to be compared to Barry Horowitz and another to can't see your way to skip your lou towards a victory, especially when you were coasting to victory before your brother got manhandled on the floor.  Yet the Rhodessi (?) aren't the only ones who can't get out from under and found themselves getting whittled away by another L on WWEME.

In this installment of As The Beard Turns, facing future unemployment this Sunday if her husband doesn't relinquish his titles -- the sort of thing Cody himself will tell you one just doesn't come back from when it comes to the Authority -- Brie Bella Danielson went against fellow Total Diva NattieKat and really shone.  The match was mostly contested in a series of hold v. counterhold, and she hung in with the Hart Dungeon grad about point for point and even outshone her on a few occasions.  In the end, Nattie was more focused on the effort at hand and taking on Charlotte for the NXT Women's belt at Takeover imminently while Brie called out something insulting towards Stephanie.  Sister, if you think Cena barely shows up for this show...you'd have a better chance of yelling for Bertha Faye. While Bella had a decent half crab, Nattie had the power and the family Sharpshooter on her side.  It wasn't that she was unfeeling; Brie got a pat on the back from the victory on the way out, but Brie's troubles were clearly that.  It's that sort of cloudy thinking that can lead one to think they can get a Hart family member to tap out without some chicanery involved.

Say this for Main Event: every time they utter bomb on a show (and it happens once or twice a year, how could it not) they always seem to rebound in fine form.

Would that make them the bishop?  The rook?

Your Midweek Links: Misogyny Personified

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Read my thoughts on this and more this week
Photo Credit: Zia Hiltey
It's hump day, so here are some links to get you through the rest of the week:

Wrestling Links:

- The People's Poop Goblin: Chikara You Only Live Twice Review [The Wrestling Blog]

- The Mandible Claw Podcast, Inspire Pro Edition - Rachel Summerlyn [The Mandible Claw]

- Biss (Inspire Pro Wrestling) [Voices of Wrestling]

- The Best and Worst of RAW: In This Episode, Zack Ryder Loves America [With Leather]

- Bill Goldberg made his college decision based on bourbon [SB Nation]

- Which Shawn Michaels run is his best? [Voices of Wrestling]

- Meet the man who makes official WWE Championship belts in his garage [Gizmodo]

- The Best and Worst of Impact Wrestling: Not All Eric Youngs [With Leather]

- The Art of Gimmickry: The American Militaristic Wrestler [Old School Jabronis]

Non-Wrestling Links:

- The case for reparations [The Atlantic]

- The Day of Retribution: On Elliot Rodger, the Butcher of Santa Barbara [Echidne of the Snakes]

- Why is it so hard for people to get that Elliot Rodger hated women? [Gawker]

- Your princess is in another castle: Misogyny, entitlement, and nerds [The Daily Beast]

- "I will murder every single spoiled stuck-up blond slut..." [Talking Points Memo]

- When Women Refuse chronicles what happens to women who reject men [Jezebel]

- I was a Nice Guy™ [Free Thoughts Blog]

- Here's basically every pro-gun cliche that exists on the Internet [Gawker]

- The myth of the "chubby chaser" [The Powder Room]

- Stan Lee, co-creator of She-Hulk, responds to David Goyer [Gamma Squad]

- Ray Rice's press conference sends a disturbing message [Sports on Earth]

- Being an NFL cheerleader really sucks [Jezebel]

- Why tomorrow's conservatives will reject the death penalty [io9]

- Darren Rovell visits the 9/11 Memorial Museum [Boring as Heck]

- 15 reasons I regret not getting hit by that car [Cracked]

- It's time for the DH in the National League [The Good Phight]

- Jon Stewart just messed with the wrong city after that epic rant [Warming Glow]

- How to cook a giant t-bone steak the size of your head [The Concourse]

- The best burgers in the US [Business Insider]

- Here is your Memorial Day menu [Deadspin]

- The Evster: Chips, ranked [The 700 Level]

- Absurd State Fair Foods - The Meatening [Kitchenette]

- Velveeta's social media accounts are delightfully weird [Jezebel]

- Breakfast Sandwich Smackdown: Dunkin' Donuts vs. Starbucks [The Concourse]

- This is the best smackdown of Pat Sajak you'll ever read [io9]

- Where I write about (and debunk) chemtrail theory [The Vane]

- Texts from Cephalopods is everything you expect it to be [io9]

- How the Red Wedding broke Game of Thrones [Pajiba]

- Do not ship: Eight TV couples who should never hookup [Warming Glow]

- The time travel of Bill and Ted, visualized [The Concourse]

- Steve Perry joined Eels on stage [UPROXX]

- Watch look-alikes Will Ferrell and Chad Smith have a drum-off [The Verge]

- Threesomes in Music: A Secret History [Flavorwire]

- David Schwimmer, crimefighter, helps solve NYC stabbing case [Warming Glow]

Is Eddie Kingston Retiring?

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Is Kingston's Dying Breed finally going extinct?
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Eddie Kingston lost the Grand Championship at You Only Live Twice in a move that many saw as a natural progression of story, the logical conclusion of what should have happened at Aniversario: Never Compromise last June. His time as Champion has both come and gone, to be honest. Some people thought he should have lost the belt long before that fateful day anyway, with the general consensus putting the strap on Tim Donst at Under the Hood in December of 2012. However, was his loss a sign of something a bit more severe bubbling under the surface? He went on an interesting Twitter repartee yesterday. His account is now locked and protected, but the folks over at the I Don't Like Wrestling Tumblr page were kind enough to screenshot the Tweets:


He doesn't come right out and say he's retiring, but the hints are strong. Obviously, he could change his mind after working those dates for Chikara, AIW, and the other promotions where he's booked. Or maybe this whole thing is a work that will set him up to be Chikara's savior once again like he was during the BDK crisis a couple of years ago. Then again, maybe his heart just isn't in it anymore. If he's really going to retire, no one can blame him. He's an indie wrestler who works for peanuts and has broken his body over 12 years of a career that saw its fair share of huge bumps and hardcore bouts. For selfish reasons, I hope he's not retiring, but man, if he is, best of luck to him.

Who's Taking Over, Really? NXT Takeover Preview

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What if Kidd's behind the real takeover?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
NXT's first "special event" was called ArRIVAL, a show name that fit the bill of description in two separate ways. Much like the WWE Network was arriving into the mainstream of the company's distribution methodology, the NXT superstars were arriving into the general consciousness of the fans at large. Of course, WWE officials didn't count on coming in so low on its projections for subscribers, but still, NXT in 700K+ households is better than the program in front of far fewer people who bothered to check it out on Hulu Plus. The emphasis on the word "RIVAL" in the name rang true as well, given the top three matches - Antonio Cesaro vs. Sami Zayn, Paige vs. Emma, and Bo Dallas vs. Adrian Neville - were rematches in feuds that had at least one if not more marquee matches preceding.

If ArRIVAL was the perfect name for the first NXT supershow, then where does Takeover rank for its second? Does the name fit the card thematically? Who is taking over? If it's a reference to how NXT wrestlers are slowly but surely taking over the main roster, the card presented is not a representation. Camacho, Nattie Neidhart, and Tyson Kidd don't even represent the chaff on the floor of the WWE mill (well, Camacho and Kidd do... Neidhart at least has Total Divas to fall back upon). They're physical stalks that get thrown out when the wheat buds are removed during threshing. If anything, the NXT system is doing those wrestlers a favor instead of the other way around. Superstars like Cesaro, Paige, Emma, and Dallas who have made it to the main roster have about as much to do with this card as I do with creating Federal policy on intervention in politics abroad.

Neville, Adam Rose, and Charlotte defeating Kidd, Camacho, and Neidhart respectively don't represent taking over anything. Sami Zayn vs. Tyler Breeze, frankly, is a step down for the former and a slight step up for the latter. The only match that might resemble a true takeover would be El Local and more fittingly Kalisto yanking the Tag Team Championships away from an Ascension team that needs a better set of tests laid before its feet. But what if the takeover isn't being perpetrated by NXT of WWE superstars, but rather the other way around?

The doomsday scenario for tomorrow's highlight show would see Kidd and Neidhart capturing their respective belts, and Camacho chasing Rose away to the main roster with a loss. Or would it? NXT right now is in a period of flux. The people who made the show so hot last year are slowly filtering onto the main show, and the next crop of wrestlers are either still being prepped for television or they haven't been signed yet. Mojo Rawley aside, those who remain in NXT comprise a solid if unspectacular core led by a guy in Zayn who is the best WWE prospect in years but who will also probably be called up in time for the build to SummerSlam. In the absence of a transcendent wrestler, an ensemble cast banding together to fight bitter, jaded low carders from the main roster jealous of the platform these rookies are getting might not be the worst idea ever.

So if Kidd suddenly gathers an army that features his wife Neidhart as well as Camacho, Brodus Clay, Curt Hawkins, and Kofi Kingston for test purposes and good measure, the name of the show would not only fit, but the gap between welcoming guys like Simon Gotch, Solomon Crowe, Becky Lynch, and those rumored to have signed already (Kevin Steen, Willie Mack, KENTA, Prince Devitt, possibly Kota Ibushi) to the roster would have something interesting holding the fort down. Of course, since this reverse Nexus idea is supremely interesting and makes too much sense, I doubt WWE will run with it.

And even if the company doesn't have some kind of big swerve, this show ought to be at least half as enjoyable as ArRIVAL was. For as awful as his promos have been in the lead-up to his title match, Kidd at least has proven at times to be an invaluable hand in the ring. He and Neville have similar yet complementary styles, and their main event should at least be worth the $10 subscription fee for the month. Zayn has never had a bad match that I've seen, and Breeze is a more than capable in-ring player himself. It won't be Zayn/Cesaro IV, but to be completely fair, maybe one or two matches all year have been as good as the opening match from ArRIVAL.

Basically though, unless WWE has something mostly unexpected up its sleeve, I wouldn't expect Takeover to live up to its grandiose name. Not every supershow can be as epic as ArRIVAL was, but not every show NEEDS to be ArRIVAL. If you're going in expecting something huge, then I would wager you'd be setting yourself up for disappointment. But if you're looking for a show with matches that have solid builds to them, well, Takeover might fit the bill, even if the name doesn't fit the show.

Smooth Sailing on the Radio

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Not only the captain of your heart, but also of your afternoon rush hour in Albany
Photo Credit: Zia Hiltey
"Smooth Sailing" Ashley Remington took Chikara by storm in his first appearance at You Only Live Twice, but apparently, he's been rocking the boat for much, much longer in a different way. His alter ego, Dalton Castle, in addition to being a wrestler is the afternoon drive-time DJ for Albany's rock station, Q 103. I perused the station's recently played list, and it seems to purvey the standard butt-rock offerings that WWE is so fond of co-opting for random pay-per-view themes. Shame, as I was hoping Castle would be able to play some cool, easy-listening yacht rock to go with his awesome new Remington character.

I always find the non-graps careers of indie wrestlers to be fascinating, since payouts on the average show below the mainstream can be peanuts compared to actual monetary needs for surviving in this cruel world. While Castle's primary career probably isn't the best paying one (hello, analytical chemist MsChif!), it's probably one that provides a good measure of notoriety and non-monetary perks. Castle gets to be in the public eye twice, which is really cool.

A tip of the hat to Friend of the Blog Joey O. for this bit of information.

Vince Russo Has Twitter, and I Can't Make Fun of Him Anymore

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He's actually... cool?
Photo via the Pyro and Ballyhoo Facebook
Vince Russo has long been one of the Unholy Trinity of Targets of Wrestling Scorn to me, along with Triple H and Eric Bischoff. While Triple H, the character, remains a prolonged fart noise with a smell ten times worse, Paul Levesque the person seems to be not as bad as his onscreen character (in an unrelated but hilarious note, he tooled a certain journalist yesterday something fierce). Bischoff, however, remains an utter and complete chode, but nothing remains perfect in this world.

Russo went the road of Triple H in terms of taking me offguard with likeability as he opened up a Twitter account, @pyroballyhoo. It is a surprisingly essential follow. Nothing suggests that Russo has learned from his mistakes or became some kind of booking maven. Then again, who wants to follow a goddamn former industry know-it-all anyway? Jim Ross may be the greatest announcer ever, but his Twitter account suuuuucks.

Russo embraces his manic personality, and he does so with self-deprecation. Nothing's out of bounds, and he's at least cognizant of both current WWE and TNA. He also answers a whole lot of tweets sent his way. I can forgive a lot of ills if you interact with people who are thirsty for your thoughts in good faith. Sure, I still think a lot of his influence on wrestling is negative, and I won't go out of my way to praise his work, but the guy right now seems to be in a good place.

Twitter Request Line, Vol. 78

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Will the robe ever make a comeback?
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, and wait for the call on Wednesday to ask your questions. Hash-tag your questions #TweetBag, and look for the bag to drop Thursday morning. Without further ado, here are your questions and my answers!

Robes were HUGE in pro wrestling thanks to guys like Buddy Rogers and Ric Flair. I don't think the style made the wrestler inasmuch as the wrestler made the style. In order for the robe to make a comeback, someone hugely popular with the right gimmick would have to adopt wearing them. As much as I liked the look for Damien Sandow, him donning a terrycloth robe with the character he portrayed didn't exactly do much for the fashion statement. However, should someone like a Big E Langston or someone with the appropriate level of potential swag as a Big E don a robe and blow up, then maybe the popularity of the garment will in fact rebound.

In theory, Michael Elgin should be my favorite wrestler, right? He's compact, strong, and he's got a rep for working tremendous matches. Yet, most of the times I've seen him wrestle, I've either been bored to tears or openly angry at some of the awful spots he and his opponents have charted in their match. Imagine if Davey Richards sold less and moved like a Claymation golem. That description would fit Elgin perfectly. I wanted to like him, but outside of a few tag matches where his weaknesses have been hidden and his one singles match with Kevin Steen at Death before Dishonor last year, I just couldn't. I always keep an open mind, and quite frankly, he's not going anywhere for awhile. SO maybe either he'll evolve or my tastes will change. I'm not holding my breath, though.

Protected Twitter user @brianbrown25 asks:
rank these 4 structures: War Games cage, Triple Cage Tower of Doom, Hell in a Cell and Elimination Chamber. #tweetbag
1. Hell in a Cell: I think becoming the signature, non-Royal Rumble gimmick match of WWE probably counts for something, right?
2. Elimination Chamber: I love the match type, and the extra fabrication on the steel structure makes it look so ominous.
3. War Games: I'm docking some points because you need two rings to pull it off. It's hard to pay attention to the action spread out that far.
4-999,999,999. Any other possible steel structure one could dream up for a wrestling match
1,000,000,000. Triple Cage Tower of Doom: Oh, fuck that match so hard, man. SO HARD.

I find it hard to say either way, actually. Chikara has only had one Grand Champion in its history, so it's not like I can go on past history for the belt to see who has held it for how long and in what circumstance. On one hand though, Icarus just ended the title reign of the only Grand Champion ever, a veritable Chikara legend in Eddie Kingston. On the other hand, a big huge freakishly strong behemoth who just killed the resident poop demon just debuted, and he's the perfect kind of big bad to hold the title as a set-up for a huge fall later on in the season/early in 2015. My gut feeling is that I agree, Icarus is probably just facilitating the change of hands from one era (Eddie Kingston as Chikara ace) to another (The Flood having control of the richest prize in the promotion).

#FollowAdam_Jacobi. I hear that guy LOVES horses.

I have a sneaking fear that people in WWE read this blog, so please, don't give them any ideas.

Is King of the Ring by this point the equivalent of "trying to make fetch happen?" The dang tournament seems cursed. I don't need all my monthly special events to be themed anyway. I just would like to have them properly built, or more accurate from my standpoint of being a Network subscriber, I just want them to have at least one or two really good matches a month. Payback this month has been built like a rickety house on sand in Florida during hurricane season. However, I can probably guess that Sheamus/Cesaro, Evolution/Shield, Paige/Alicia Fox, and Hornswoggle/El Torito will be good. Wyatt/Cena could be good on paper as well. Is a gimmick going to improve that card? Probably not. In fact, I kinda wish that WWE would take at least one gimmicked PPV off the schedule. Elimination Chamber is a great concept for a yearly special event, and I've learned to live with TLC, but Hell in a Cell should probably be saved for blood feuds, not "just to have one" every year.

Since I really didn't follow the Championship League this past year, my answer is Queens Park Rangers ONLY because they were in the Premiere League in 2012-'13. That year down in the B-tier seemed to do them good. I'd like to see what that side can do, as long as they don't force Aston Villa into relegation next season.

I would be fine with WWE banishing on-screen authority figures back to Tunneyland altogether. I think a huge reason why WWE has had difficulties creating new stars over the years is because feuds between wrestlers have been made to be passe. If you want to get over huge, you have to feud with an authority figure, most of the time one that doesn't get into the ring all that often. That statement is a generalization, but look at how limp feuds below the main event have been? You give creative members an outlet to put themselves over, and boom, the midcard and some main event feuds suffer. WWE has to train its audience to expect wrestler vs. wrestler feuds again, and it needs to make those feuds count for more than just trading victories with no protection whatsoever.

Not only is that team majestic, but all three guys presumably will be available for King of Trios this year. Speaking of Trios, I had a half-baked Six Pack I was working on Tuesday night before I got busy with real life stuff and lost interest. You know that Chikara drew 1,497 people paid to the Easton Funplex on Sunday? Add that into the Internet pay-per-view buys, and Quack and co. made a hefty chunk of change with the return show, a show that had zero "guest stars" so to speak. While I wouldn't mind an all-rostered approach to every other card of the year, I feel like King of Trios needs to have the guest star element to it. Also, I hope this year is the year I get my Mean Street Posse entrance into the tourney. DON'T KEEP DEPRIVING ME OF JOEY ABS, RODNEY, AND PETE GAS! DON'T DO IT.

Ideally, Main Event would be the show that had the big-time matches between main event players who maybe aren't in feuds, and title matches that aren't bound to be blown off on pay-per-view, while Superstars would go from the "hey, let's give you the guys we forgot about wrestling for half the show and RAW recaps for the other half" to a show where the midcard feuds got some development. In layman's terms, I would make Main Event "the wrestling for wrestling's sake" show, while Superstars' matches would be angle driven for what they couldn't/didn't care to fit on RAW.

*takes the cyanide pill*

If WWE screwed anything up, it was switching course from Leo Kruger to Adam Rose and only giving him six weeks to get used to his new character. Notice the difference between Rose and Tyler Breeze, both one-dimensional party-boy characters on the surface. Rose got pushed to the main roster before the novelty of his gimmick wore off and before he had a chance to develop other character traits, nuances, and in-ring stylings. Breeze has been in NXT as himself for about a year now, and he's evolved past his "take selfies ad infinitum" start without really abandoning the spirit of it.

The truth is, the Rose gimmick might have been dead in the water in the main roster no matter the lead time, but WWE had to try something. Ray Leppan had been in developmental forever, and obviously, the office saw something in him to keep him around for that long. The Aldous Snow gimmick was a chance the office took to get him on the roster in a meaningful way and get something out of him. Sometimes, the best gimmicks aren't the sure things, but they do come with risks of failure. Failure is a part of life and wrestling, and maybe it just wasn't meant to be.

Not only was Bobby Heenan the best manager ever, he was the best color commentator ever, or at least he was the best heel color commentator ever. The only two people who meant more to the first boom of the WWF were Hulk Hogan and Cyndi Lauper.

Paul Bearer would be second, because without him, Undertaker wouldn't have had the career. He was instrumental in getting him over early in his career, and he provided an excellent foil for the Dead Man in the middle part. Taker, Kane, and Mick Foley all owed some bit of their successes to Bearer, and in case you haven't noticed, those three are among the best in WWE history. Heyman carries the rear, although coming in third to Heenan and Bearer is no disgrace.

Regal could handle himself, sure, but would he have been considered a hooker and not just a tough guy? I really don't know what makes a hooker a hooker like a Lou Thesz. I would assume one would have to have a strong amateur background at least, right? Like Kurt Angle theoretically could be one if his spine wasn't one, continuous, fused-together bone, right? I just don't know.

@HummerX with this question via DM:
#Tweetbag question: Has anyone ever tweeted a semi-insulting thing about Meltzer that one of his weird goons did not find & respond to?
I wouldn't put the onus on Dave Meltzer here himself. His most vocal, rabid fans are more like Beliebers than anything else, taking it upon themselves to defend the honor of a guy they help earn six figures with their subscription fees. I don't know what drives anyone to think celebrities need their constant defense, but the best thing to do is block the really offensive parties and move on. The preceding isn't to say that anyone who defends Meltzer is a goon and a troll. Guys like the Voices of Wrestling crew are Meltzer supporters, but the difference between them and certain illiterate folks who are way more obsessive of Meltzer critics than the levels of obsession they accuse those critics of having for Meltzer is that the sane parties are, well, sane. I do think discussion about what the reasonable expectations from wrestling journalism and what should pass for good reporting has to happen though, sooner rather than later.

The only way Chikara could use time travel in a way that would be over the line for me is if it somehow used it as a way to invalidate the entire story. Like, if the endgame is that a wrestler or two (or more) somehow manipulated the timeline to say that entire swatches of time in the company didn't happen at all, then I'd feel gypped for the experience. Honestly, if the decision was made to snag a version of Kobald from the past, I would personally mark out, mainly because Chikara would be borrowing a plot point DIRECTLY from one of my favorite games ever, Chrono Trigger. I would just hope that if the Batiri and Archibald Peck and whoever else happen to need a clone, they get it from everyone's favorite floating set of a head and jazz hands, Norstein Bekkler.

I'm gonna be honest here, I've only ever seen the first Mighty Ducks film. But I am not one to shy away from rankings, so I will list my TOP HOCKEY MOVIES THAT I'VE SEEN:

1. Miracle - I know it's schmaltzy and Disnified, but I do love me a good retelling of the USA USA USA beating them blasted Commies in the only battlefield that mattered during the Cold War.
2. Slapshot - The first time I saw the Hanson Bros. take the ice, I fucking lost it.
3. Happy Gilmore - That's kind of a hockey movie, right?
4. The Mighty Ducks - The most sneakily awesome part of this movie is that all the rich people were portrayed as assholes, and that Adam Banks has to overcome being such a shitty person for being rich to be accepted.

For posterity, the comment:
My fantasy booking idea:

Strip Bryan of the titles. Announce a block-style, round-robin tournament to find a new champion. Four groups of four guys, each group winner goes on to the PPV for semi-finals and finals matches.

Best thing about this setup is it allows the company to potentially build-up MULTIPLE guys in this story.

Here's a sampling of groups…

A. Cesaro, Fandango, Jack Swagger, and Mark Henry
B. Big E, Rusev, Damien Sandow, and Rob Van Dam
C. Dean Ambrose, Randy Orton, Alberto Del Rio, and Cody Rhodes
D. Dolph Ziggler, Batista, Seth Rollins, and Golddust

Each of these matches can take place on Raw, Smackdown, Main Event and Superstars.

You get the final 4 at the PPV. Winner gets crowned, gets a month with the belt…and then BROCK LESNAR shows up and beats that guy to take the unified titles.

Daniel Bryan returns in time for Summer Slam and wants to "cash-in" his title shot straight up. No warm-up bout or anything. Everybody is petrified that Bryan is going to get destroyed. Shades of Ric Flair going up against Vader.

Bryan comes back and wrestles Brock at Summer Slam with 1 of 2 outcomes: 1. DBry wins the belt outright or (and I actually prefer this option) 2. Time limit draw. DBry SURVIVES and proves he can take what Brock Lesnar can dish out. But because he didn't win, he's got to start from the bottom and claw his way back into title contention.

DBry gets to wrestle anyone and everyone as he climbs the ladder yet again, and Brock gets a brief run as top dog for a few months.

DBry earns his rematch at SURVIVOR Series and wins the belt there (see what I did there?). Triumph.
The round-robin tournament sounds somewhat interesting, which is why I wouldn't have any faith in WWE to pull it off. However, the idea of replaying the first two Rocky movies with Bryan and Lesnar IS something that sounds eminently intriguing. I think you would run the risk of pissing off a lot of people with a time-limit draw closing SummerSlam though. However, the payoff having a huge Survivor Series moment might offset that dismay. I still don't think Bryan's going to drop the title at all at Payback, and that WWE is just biding its time to make sure that Bryan is okay to wrestle. Why else would it have waited so long to get a final decision on whether or not to strip him? Therefore, all that fantasy booking would be moot. Still, it's a good concept.

The best use of an animal in professional wrestling was and always will be Jake "The Snake" Roberts' draping of his boa constrictor on a fallen opponent. The worst use of animals in wrestling happened during the ill-fated Kennel in a Cell match. The dogs weren't fearsome at all, and honestly, the prospect of seeing dogs maul someone on live television is not appealing, it's appalling. Also, dog poop, on wrestling TV? Nope. I don't like cleaning it up out of my backyard. Why would I want to see it during my entertainment time?


To be honest, I haven't listened to any podcast in like two months, so I am out of touch with everything I listen to or used to listen to. That being said, I stopped listening to Cheap Heat, not because of the personalities involved, but because the show topics weren't interesting enough. The conversation was the most basic level of wrestling discourse, which is fine for some, but for me, I kinda filter that kind of talk out even when I'm on Twitter. No offense to Rosenberg or Shoemaker at all, the latter whom I find engrossing when he writes about wrestling on Grantland himself. But if I'm spending time in the car listening to conversation about the thing I write about, I want it to be on a different level.

Sausage! I've become somewhat of a sausage enthusiast over the last few years, and food artisans have helped that obsession by combining different meats and spices and even cheese and vegetables together for great links. While I've become a fan of chicken sausage lately for health reasons, if I were to make my own links, I would go with pork, primarily a mix of the butt and the fatback. I would double grind the meat with several cloves of fresh garlic for that acidic, pungent bite. I would then mix the ground meat with some cumin and chili powder before stuffing it in natural casings and letting it smoke. Yeah, that sausage sounds mighty tasty. Mighty tasty indeed.

Tween Spelling Bee Contestants Running to the Ultimate Warrior Theme

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Via Deadspin

A tradition among kids who get selected as Scripps National Spelling Bee Semifinalists is that they run to the stage like they just heard their parents brought home a puppy. And why not? Placing well in THE spelling bee this country has to offer is on the same level as being a Heisman Trophy finalist is for college age students. An entrepreneurial soul, Tim Burke, to be exact, set a b-roll of those kids running to the stage to the Ultimate Warrior's theme song. The only thing missing is Jesse "the Body" Ventura remarking about how those kids are wasting their energy running to the stage, while the kids who calmly walk there won't get blown up during the bee.

Does the Titan of Titor Have to Be "Somebody?"

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What if the mask is all that the Titan has?
Photo Credit: Zia Hiltey
The latest maleficent marauder, known only as the Titan of Titor, to be added to the ranks of the nefarious Flood Sunday was a masked man, clad in black, who had tubes feeding into his headpiece from the rest of his gear. I described his general look as akin to Bane from the Batman mythos, while others compared him to Kabal from the Mortal Kombat universe. Either way, the fearsome presence made an impact through the chokebreaker-induced "death" of Kobald. If he's not the final boss battle target in this battle, to keep it in Mortal Kombat terms, he is the Kintaro to whoever is Shao Khan. In this comparison, Jimmy Jacobs is Shang Tsung.

Of course, the debut of a new masked character led to some questions as to what face might be under said mask. Far be it from me to cast aspersions on those who were guessing, as I was in my seat at the Easton Funplex asking myself and those around who it could be. In a story where so many old and familiar names have come back to stake claims of revenge, it's completely natural to speculate on secret identities whenever someone new under a hood debuts.

But what if "no one" is under the hood? What if this Titan of Titor is just another new character to be added into the fray, much like Tursas was with the advent of the BDK, like the members of the Gekido were, like the Colony: Xtreme Force and Baltic Siege both seem to be? Chikara debuts masked wrestlers all the time without any pretense of denuding their faces and revealing someone who used the anonymity for ulterior motives.

Then again, at times the promotion has used misdirection with masks. Tim Donst, Larry Sweeney, and Pinkie Sanchez have all used various shrouds to conceal true identities before unmasking at opportune moments. And during the Ashes video where 3.0 found Archibald Peck in Parts Unknown, a sign on Peck's evidence board asked "Who is the Titan of Titor?" as if to indicate this behemoth may have lurked in Chikara's ranks before or was someone important to the narrative under another name. While that possibility remains in play, I'm not sure an unmasking is the only satisfying endgame.

Right now, the Titan of Titor is a terrifying figure in his own right. As far as big bads go, he makes his fellow HOSSES within The Flood look at least slightly less imposing. Right now, I think worrying about how this kaiju is going to be stopped by anyone on the roster is the best question to ask. While an unmasking could be in play later on down the line, I wouldn't put a whole lot of stock in him being more than just a terrible beast in the guise of a man right now.

Throwback Thursday: Zeb Colter and Jack Swagger Have Words for Glenn Beck

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Dirty Dutch Mantel has a rep for being one of the best promo men of all-time, and his words have gotten him in trouble before. His most recent critic, however, was roughly a 15 months ago when serial whiner and crocodile tear-shedder Glenn Beck got his widdle feewings hurt when he thought WWE was lampooning the Republican Party and its platform on immigration. I wouldn't be surprised if Vince McMahon wanted to run with the idea to take the piss out of the fringe Tea Party candidates given his propensity to make fun of everyone he can, but all in all, it's just character work in a vast pastiche of personalities, both wacky and grounded. Mantel, under his current appellation Zeb Colter, along with his charge Jack Swagger, calmly broke the fourth wall and explained that to the largely irrelevant talking head.


This week's inspiration comes from benevolent wrestling fan algorithm @robot_hammer as a makegood for all those weeks I didn't pick Jos LeDuc and the blood oath.

Lookit This Ska Kid

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.gif credit Alex Jones

Takeover was the goddamn truth last night, but I'll let Butch handle the effusive praise on the latest NXT supershow. However, after the show, the antics were not finished. Sami Zayn may not have left Full Sail University victorious, but he certainly celebrated like he won life, skankin' like he was at a Reel Big Fish concert or something. Of course, Adam Rose looked on in approval because he don't care how you party just as long as you're partying. I swear, if Zayn isn't the biggest thing in WWE, maybe even bigger than Daniel Bryan, in two years, someone done fucked up. He is the single most likeable wrestler I have ever seen in my life.

The Polling Place: Takeover, Payback, Hot Sauce

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Takeover had some great moments, but what was the show like overall?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Welcome to the Polling Place this week, where I ask the questions and you pick from a preset array of answers in these wonderful polls I post. The main topic of conversation today has to be Takeover, the second WWE Network special for the developmental territory NXT. While the show wasn't as heralded as the original offering, ArRIVAL, the chatter online seems to indicate the actual offering was as good if not better overall than the first show. I want to know your thoughts. How did you receive Takeover last night?


Second, the big show, WWE, is having a pay-pe... err, I mean "special event" this weekend. The build for Payback has been, in a word, dreadful. The main attraction, storywise, is whether Daniel Bryan will allow his wife Brie to be fired or whether he'll surrender the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. However, despite how awfully some of these matches have been built, the card itself doesn't look too bad on paper. How hotly are you anticipating Payback on Sunday?


Finally, the Huy Fong factory in California has been granted a permanent stay of execution, as the town where it resides has withdrew its nuisance complaint. That factory produces sriracha, my personal favorite hot sauce ever. While the green-spouted rooster-labeled sauce has eminent popularity, the personal choice of hot sauces can be as diverse as the sheer number of products available. Simple question, what is your go-to sauce when you want piquancy and heat? If it's not listed in the poll, select "Other" and list in the comments.

The Mars Volta of Wrestling: WWE Payback '14 Review

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Yeah John, I'd have been freaked out too
Photo Credit: WWE.com
TH Style TH Style Yeah Yeah TH Style. Watch the replay on The Network. Trust me, you'll want to see this one.

Highlights:
  • In the pre-show match, El Torito defeated Hornswoggle with a springboard asai moonsault. Afterwards, per the stipulations, Torito and Los Matadores shaved Hornswoggle's head.
  • Sheamus retained the United States Championship by countering an Antonio Cesaro Neutralizer attempt with an inside cradle.
  • Rybaxel defeated Them Fightin' Rhodes Boys when Ryback countered a Disaster Kick from Cody Rhodes into the Shellshocked. After the match, Rhodes told Goldust he deserved a better tag team partner.
  • Alexander Rusev survived taking a spear off the apron to the outside from Big E Langston, tapping him out with the Accolade.
  • The announced Bo Dallas/Kofi Kingston match was a no-contest when Kane rampaged before the first bell.
  • Wade Barrett defended the Intercontinental Championship successfully with a Bullhammer to Rob van Dam.
  • Rather than make Daniel Bryan forfeit the WWE World Heavyweight Championship, Brie Bella voluntarily quit WWE.
  • John Cena hit Bray Wyatt with an Attitude Adjustment through a box, and secured a Last Man Standing victory by entombing him with an oversized equipment chest.
  • Paige retained the Divas Championship by tapping Alicia Fox out with the PTO (Scorpion Crosslock).
  • The Shield overcame an ass-whupping to defeat Evolution in a clean sweep in their no-holds barred elimination tag match. Roman Reigns eliminated Triple H last with a spear.

General Observations:
  • Oh Kofi Kingston, you're not doing anything for WWE's perceived problems with minorities by saying you and Booker T often get confused for one another.
  • El Torito came out with a basketball jersey that said "2/3" and was red just like the color of the bull in the local NBA franchise's logo. Way to play it up to the hometown crowd.
  • JBL showed his propensity for shoving his nose straight up Vince McMahon's ass early by saying this hair vs. mask match was "42 years in the making," referring to a Gorgeous George/The Destroyer match that wasn't even promoted under the Capitol Sports banner. Then again, 42 years felt like it was an off number anyway, since George died in 1963, 51 years ago.
  • Early spot of humor in the lucha de apuesta saw Hornswoggle repeatedly kicking out of lateral presses, only to have Torito land in the outstretched arms of referee Charles Robinson. Whenever Lil Naitch would catch Torito, he'd put the bull back on Hornswoggle for another pin attempt. Then, when Hornswoggle got the upper hand and Torito kicked out, Robinson shirked back from catching the smallest member of 3MB. That spot really needed Jesse "The Body" Ventura on color commentary to get over.
  • Heath Slater gave chase with a pair of shears to Torito under the ring. When they reemerged, it was Torito as the aggressor with the shears. I wonder if they had a sojourn in Little People's Court, and Torito won the scissors in litigation. I hear time moves a lot differently under the ring.
  • I noticed a "Mountie for Jinder" sign during this match and couldn't help but think that it was slightly racist. Also, I'd rather see Jinder Mahal at this point than Jacques Rougeau, but that's just me.
  • Normally, I'd have groaned at Torito using the mini-scissors to cut Hornswoggle's hair, but then again, mini-scissors are never not hilarious. Also, I'm glad to see that they left Hornswoggle's hair in a fashionable Paul Heyman skullet for the entire night, as referenced by his appearance on the post-show press conferences with nothing but the top of his head shaved.
  • Speaking of Paul Heyman, so glad he decided to spend more time on his spiel on the mic trolling CM Punk and talking Brock Lesnar than he did talking up Antonio Cesaro. Then again, Cesaro is the kinda guy who hosses the shit out of dudes in the ring and doesn't need a Heyman to talk for him to get over. But I already covered that topic, didn't I.
  • "Look at the smile on the face of the Paulrus?" Man, if someone in the back cut Jerry Lawler's mic and never allowed him to talk on commentary again, I would've been the happiest.
  • I could watch Cesaro counter moves with the European Uppercut all day. Sheamus' battering ram, yes. All day.
  • Sheamus was on point this match with his transitions too. Funny, it's almost like a match between two elite WWE wrestlers was destined to be good from jump...
  • WWE ending a hoss fight on an inside cradle definitely seemed like a troll move, but it continued the feud (because Cesaro was whipping him a good bit of the match), and Sheamus is the rare taller wrestler who can actually pull the move off believably.
  • Just when I thought Goldust was done showing me surprisingly awesome stuff, he went and countered a Curtis Axel ducking telegraph not with a striking move, but by tossing him into the ropes for a whip. I want to say he's done that before, but this match felt like the first time I noticed it in an appreciative manner.
  • If the announcers tried to get over any fucking angle as enthusiastically as they did slumps and losing streaks, I don't think I would be complaining about them as much.
  • I will always pop for old, lanky man Goldust doing the fucking Yoshi Tonic.
  • Ryback powerbombing Cody Rhodes into Goldust gets filed under "little things that elevate a match from good to great." Seriously, Ryback is getting better as his push decreases.
  • In some other, idyllic, artistically nuanced promotion, I might dig Rhodes losing confidence and having a crisis of faith. In WWE's macho bullshit strewn environment of bravado and needing to look strong though? Yeah, I have no faith that Rhodes walking out on Goldust for personal reasons will end up as well as it could.
  • Both Alexander Rusev AND Big E Langston need to retake Flag Waving 101 at HOSS State University.
  • For whatever reason, Langston's spear of Rusev off the apron at this show was a shit-ton more impressive looking than the one he did to Wade Barrett at Extreme Rules.
  • What I liked best, however, was that after Rusev started his comeback and made that PRIMAL SCREAM, he held his gut as if his guttural shout hurt his injured ribs from said spear off the apron. That, my friends, is psychology you cannot teach.
  • Seriously, Bo Dallas' first non-Royal Rumble pay-per-view match got preempted so Kane could come out and have a reason to shoot his pyro? Ugh.
  • Then again, the beating Kofi Kingston took gave Dallas the best opportunity to give a BOtivational speech. Y'know, the only thing that would've made that whole segment better and more worthwhile is if Dallas had tried to pin him anyway.
  • I know Barrett was supposed to be the heel and all, but then again, maybe if you wanted me to boo him, you shouldn't have let him go out and say he was going to put Rob van Dam down like Old Yeller. I totally agree with that sentiment.
  • "How many times have we seen RVD do this?" Michael Cole unironically said before he would do that same spinning leg drop to an opponent draped over the barricade he's done in every match since 1997. Cole could've said those words before anything RVD did during that match, and they would have fit.
  • Short aside about crowds and CM Punk chants. Those chants aren't going away, especially in Chicago. Seeing a chorus of tweets chiding a crowd that will probably never see them feels like wasted energy at this point.
  • That all being said, Stephanie McMahon shutting down the crowd with her "These people want you to quit just like CM Punk did" was the sickest of sick-ass burns. I don't care that it felt somewhat childish knowing she's like the number three person in the company at the very least. In the moment, it was awesome.
  • No, Daniel Bryan, never call a woman a bitch, even if you have My Wife™ Brie Bella do it as a proxy. I feel gross having to watch my favorite wrestler act like such a turd when he's not wrestling.
  • John Cena corpsing in the beginning of the match felt oddly out of place, but it was redeemed by Bray Wyatt dancing with him around the ring.
  • Wyatt getting up from his first taken Attitude Adjustment via the reverse crab walk would have been an epic, amazing-looking moment had the build to Payback been at least slightly better than a wet fart.
  • I don't care that those corrugated ring steps are probably light as hell in real life. Watching Cena launch them over the top rope at Wyatt at ROCKET SPEED may have been visually the most stunning thing in the match, until, well...
  • ...Luke Harper killed himself and one of the Usos with a superplex from the top rope TO THE FUCKING FLOOR through a table. Seriously, the ancillary characters may have taken bigger bumps than the main ones in this match.
  • I felt so bad for Paige and Alicia Fox to have to go out after that match. Then again, they got time, which is more than Dolph Ziggler, AJ Lee, Langston, and Kaitlyn could say after they followed up Brock Lesnar and Punk at SummerSlam last year.
  • Fox was on point with her offense this match. Whether tripping out Paige's heel from underneath her on the apron or dumping her out of the ring out of a tilt-a-whirl, she held up her end of the bargain.
  • I also thought it refreshing that Paige got to get more than one offensive maneuver in.
  • "She's trying to ruin my face!" Never change, Alicia Fox. I mean that unironically.
  • Batista caught a lot of shit for his ring attire, but man, everyone else was wearing black. Why not break out the color scheme a little bit with an all-blue attire?
  • Another one to file to the "little things that elevate matches" file, Dean Ambrose fluttered his fingers in front of his face as to say "C'MON, COME AND GET ME" as Evolution and The Shield faced off before their match began. Dude has such manic energy, it's great.
  • I got a little confused how abruptly the match went from "All over the goddamn arena" to "everyone neatly back into their corners." I didn't feel like they segued that well.
  • This match might have been Batista's best performance in a WWE ring since he's been back. He actually has rounded into shape in the last few weeks, and has gotten back to his pre-departure levels of match quality. If rumors are true and he's leaving again, then, well, ah fuck.
  • HOLY SHIT, TRIPLE H COUNTERED SETH ROLLINS DIVING AT HIM FROM THE EQUIPMENT AREA BY SMASHING HIM WITH A TV.
  • I got where they were trying to go with that dreadfully plodding middle portion where Evolution just beat the ever-loving shit out of The Shield. I just wish they had cut like five or ten minutes from it and got Evolution's hubris over a bit more succinctly.
  • Triple H's last stand with the sledgehammer at the end was visually stark and put an exclamation point on The Shield's win. That being said, I was just a little bit afraid he would take out at least two if not all three members with the weapon and win the match. Sorry, I just get bad flashbacks sometimes. REALLY bad flashbacks.

Match of the Night:John Cena vs. Bray Wyatt, Last Man Standing Match - I thought their prior two matches on pay-per-view were pretty good if not flawed, but if y'all would indulge me in a cliche, the third time would be their charm. The last two matches seemed like they wanted to hit on that certain Attitude Era-sweet spot that matches like Cena/Randy Orton at TLC, Brock Lesnar/CM Punk, and The Shield/Rhodes Brothers on RAW after Battleground all hit last year, but the overbooking was either nonsensical or off-timed. In this match, all principals got it right this time around. I think in this match, the two primary combatants finally got their senses of escalation correct and were able to build towards an epic finish instead of landing big bombs throughout and shrugging at where to go in sequence.

Forgoing all of the extracurricular activity, both wrestlers broke out some visually impressive spots that might have carried the match regardless. I will never tire of seeing Wyatt hit the Sister Abigail's Kiss on a running opponent or as a counter to a flying move. He broke both out in separate spots in this match, the latter being off a Cena dive from the apron. My least favorite Cena trope of all-time is his instant energy renewal he'll do after taking a beating, but even though it reared its ugly head in this match, by the end, he was showing effects from the bombs he took, which to me was more notable than anything he broke out in terms of offense. Still, his wobbly-legged Attitude Adjustment attempt mid-match was one of the better variations of the move that he pulled off, and whether accidental or on purpose, it aided the story of the match along ably.

Of course, I don't want to say that the Usos, Luke Harper, or Erick Rowan were more important to the fabric of the match than Wyatt or Cena were, but they added to the car crash atmosphere, and the Usos especially were the last pieces to this feud in the ring. Cena having to deal with minions was not a well-told element to the story out of the ring, but Harper and Rowan in matches were nuisances. Having them battle as ancillary combatants was a nice touch, especially since they all took big bumps during the proceedings, none more memorable than Harper giving one of the brothers a superplex to the outside through a table. I don't care if you're in the match or just an interfering element; that shit was fuckin' intense.

Overall Thoughts: WWE has this nasty habit where the writers and Vince McMahon will produce drizzlingly shitty television shows in advance of the pay-per-view, uh, I'm sorry, "special events," and then the talent will go out and produce outstanding shows as a payoff. Most of the matches at Payback blew away the builds each of the matches received before television, if they even got builds in the first place. The show was bookended with several strong matches that had memorable spots and brutal, crowd-pleasing action.

Addressing the elephant in the room, however, the middle of the show nearly sucked the life out of the whole thing. The three absolute worst things on the show happened in succession, and it was in danger of taking the positive momentum built by the preshow and the first three matches and flushing it down the drain. The Kofi Kingston/Bo Dallas stuff was nonsensical and something that probably could have happened on RAW. Rob van Dam still is an absolute shitbag in the ring. The title-decision segment highlighted all the things that make the Daniel Bryan an unlikeable misogynist in character and make it hard to get behind him before and after his matches happen.

And yet, all three segments at least had some kind of redeeming qualities to them. Dallas' pre-and-post-match promos probably did more to establish his character than wrestling a full match would have (although I would have preferred him to pin Kingston just to set more of an underlying dickishness to his faux-positive exterior). Wade Barrett seems to be growing a little more comfortable in his own skin as a wrestler, even if I'm not sold he's the kind of guy who can go in a WWE ring on a regular basis like Sheamus or Cesaro at this point. And Stephanie McMahon, God bless her, at least was able to punctuate her end of the segment by getting in one last dig on the crowd and the guy they were chanting for. It was a sick burn, even if I still think it a bit childish at this point for anyone in the office to make comment (even if those officers are also in-character heels).

But then John Cena, the Usos, and the Wyatt Family came out and brought the crowd back to life. If anyone out there still wonders why Cena is the franchise, his resuscitation job on the crowd is a huge reason why he's still one of the best performers in wrestling history. WWE's roster right now probably hasn't been stronger in its history, and noting that two of the three biggest failures on the show came from writing or poor planning, it's not the wrestlers who aren't holding up their ends of the bargain.

Still, it's funny that my guests tonight and I got into a conversation about music during one of the recaps, specifically about The Mars Volta. One of the guests said that their songs would have five minutes of music and like three minutes of static. As an aficionado of the group, I actually had to agree. Payback was like a Mars Volta song in a way. Two-thirds of the show was "music" and that middle portion was "static." But much like an exceptional Mars Volta song, the music part was phenomenal.

It's Official, Metro Pro's Returning to Television

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ACH will be back on Metro Pro TV
Photo Credit: Kelly Kyle/Texas Anarchy
Metro Pro Wrestling's return card at the Turner Rec Hall in Kansas City, KS happens in two weeks. The company upped the ante substantially with the following announcement on its Twitter page:
Huge, huge news. Hopefully, the promotion will follow suit for its televised run before hiatus and put all the episodes on YouTube. Metro Pro was always good for a nice chunk of wrestling and story, an alternative to the big box shows. The card has been completely announced, and is highlighted by Jeremy Wyatt defending the Metro Pro Championship against Ace Steel, the third Second City Saint and trainer of the other two (Colt Cabana and CM Punk, obvs). ACH will defend the Central States Championship against Mark Sterling. Since Metro Pro withdrew from the National Wrestling Alliance, the belt doesn't have the NWA affiliation anymore. I wonder if it will come under the blanket of the United Wrestling Network.

Also scheduled to appear are The Hooligans, SBC, Cobra Kai Dojo (or the Sex Bob-Ombs if you will), the Commission (or the Submission Squad if you're nasty), Mike Sydal, Dan Walsh, and Stevie Richards. And of course, the proceedings will be kicked off by Wrestless, the documentary shot and made about the promotion last year. However, television is the big news. I am beyond thrilled that the crew is back. When it left, Metro Pro left a huge void in the indie wrestling community. For the time being, it is rectified.

LIST-O-MANIA: Michael Elgin Has Beef

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WHOM DOES ELGIN THINK IS A PIECE OF SHIT???
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
I was just trolling along Twitter Saturday, minding my own business, until I saw THIS tweet from indie wrestling superstar and serial pesterer of New Japan Pro Wrestling on social media Michael Elgin:
Such language! But regardless, Elgin has heat with someone, but who? All this subtweeting only makes a PRIVATE TWITTER DETECTIVE curious. I went on the investigative trail to see who Elgin could have a problem with.
  • Ethan Page
  • Rickey Shane Page
  • Ellen Page
  • Anna Paquin
  • Hugh Jackman
  • Patrick Stewart
  • Ian McKellen
  • Christopher Lee
  • Hayden Christiansen
  • Hayden Panettiere
  • Wladimir Klitschko
  • Vitaly Klitschko
  • Evander Holyfield
  • Mike Tyson
  • "Stone Cold" Steve Austin
  • The Rock
  • Rocco Rock
  • Johnny Grunge
  • Bubba Ray Dudley
  • D-Von Dudley
  • Dances with Dudley
  • Dudley Dudley
  • Spike Dudley
  • Spike Eskin
  • Howard Eskin
  • Suomi Eskin
  • Teemu Selanne
  • Ryan Getzlaf
  • Bobby Ryan
  • Brian Dawkins
  • A tall wide receiver
  • A new kicker
  • MURDERLEG
  • The Cincinnati Redlegs
  • Bronson Arroyo
  • Charles Bronson
  • Clint Eastwood
  • Imaginary Barack Obama sitting in a chair
  • Barack Obama
  • #BENGHAZI
  • Hilary Clinton
  • Bill Clinton
  • Jerry Jones
  • Tony Romo
  • Carrie Underwood
  • Kelly Clarkson
  • Clay Aiken
  • Al Franken
  • Jesse "The Body" Ventura
  • Vince McMahon
  • Shane McMahon
  • X-Pac
  • Kane
  • Mankind
  • Val Venis
  • TAKA Michinoku
  • Jado and Gedo
A-ha! So he's angry at Jado and Gedo for not booking him in New Japan! I knew I'd get to the bottom of this...
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