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Throwback Thursday: The Human Springboard Experience

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Seth Rollins broke everyone's hearts on Monday, but the fact remains that he's still one of the most exciting wrestlers in the company and has a bright future ahead of him because he is the best possible Jeff Hardy. He has always had a flair for the big spot even in the indies as Tyler Black,as shown in this footage from a match he wrestled against Chuck Taylor. They're brawling on the outside when Black sees a wide fan. He leaps onto the fan, using him as a springboard to hit a moonsault on Taylor. Sure, he may have mostly whiffed on the impact of the move, but it's not every day that you see a wrestler use a fan as that intrinsic a part of the show. He was probably a plant, but if not, then Black took a really gutsy risk using him as a prop.


This week's quite topical inspiration comes to you from @thegnc, who dispenses with the question-answering on Twitter as well as with the HOT WISCONSIN TAKES at Bucky's 5th Quarter.

Bad Influence Set to Invade Ring of Honor

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Bad Influence invading Ring of Honor
Photo Credit: ImpactWrestling.com
Via ROHWrestling.com

The worst-kept secret in wrestling was officially announced today, as Christopher Daniels will indeed be bringing Frankie Kazarian with him to Ring of Honor's re-debut on live pay-per-view, Best in the World '14. The show happens on June 22 in Nashville.

Bad Influence's first match back will be against the Tag Team Champions, Bobby Fish and Kyle O'Reilly, known collectively as reDRagon. The match will be for the titles. Daniels announced his return to the company at the end of War of the Worlds, and he said he'd be bringing someone else with him, which everyone knew was going to be Kazarian anyway. Still, despite the fact that this announcement was telegraphed, it's not any less cool from my perspective. Bad Influence was one of the best things going in TNA when I was still watching it, and I imagine their match against the Champs will be pretty sweet as well.

Twitter Request Line, Vol. 79

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STOP MAKING ME RELIVE IT, .GIF
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!

No foreshadowing of Seth Rollins' motivations is what kills this angle for me, to be honest. If they had worked something into the pay-per-view match, or even the Extreme Rules match, that would have signified some kind of reason for him to bail, I might have been more okay with it than I am now. Which is to say, I would have been somewhat okay with it instead of the NOPE. that I am right now. Every action has to have a motivation, and right now, because Rollins hasn't had a chance to explain himself, no real motivation exists. Having someone do something for the heck of it just doesn't work unless it's their stated goal.

Petyr "Littlefinger" Baelish on Game of Thrones is a prime example of an agent of chaos who has said on a few occasions that he's lighting powder kegs for the heck of it. But for him, attaining the ultimate goal, the Iron Throne, is tangible through him helping the force of entropy take hold in Westeros. Rollins has proven that he can get WWE power without Triple H's help, and WWE history has proven that the position of authority figure is the most volatile. Even if the only way to singles glory was either with Triple H's blessing or without him in charge, couldn't he have just waited another month or so for Vince McMahon to get back?

Maybe I'm not a reliable source for objective analysis here because The Shield was one of my favorite things about WWE broadcasting for the last year-plus. If any WWE group was to stay together forever like the Four Horsemen, it should have been them. But if they were going to break up, warning signs should have been there before the deed happened. It just doesn't make sense right now, and forgive me if I don't have any faith in WWE to follow it up with some grand master plan right now.

My kneejerk answer here would be a variation on a themed wrestling show, like a tag team show or a women's wrestling show, or even a riff on the Beyond Wrestling secret show concept where a selected group of fans gets to sit in on shows featuring NXT/unused WWE guys riffing and self-booking. However, the former two shows might do more harm than good to their respective divisions, and WWE is probably not ready for the latter, especially when the wrestlers start booking their own intergender matches and showing up the agents and writers on how the world should really work. Anyway, I digress.

The show I'd watch more than anything else would be an all-wrestling personality version of Whose Line Is It Anyway?, the show where the points are made up and the results don't matter. Joe Drilling said to me on his episode of the podcast (remember when I had a podcast guys?) that he thinks every wrestler should take an improv class if he/she wanted to get in the biz. Basically, wrestling at its core is improv, although in WWE, it's more scripted in the ring than out of it anymore. However, putting the focus on extensions of personalities and developing charisma through performance might revitalize character work and promos on the main show. Not only would it be entertaining, it could serve as practice. Besides, who wouldn't want to see various wrestlers out of their elements for amusement purposes only?

Nothing in wrestling is ever FUBAR. The quickest fix would be to have him stop focusing on how bad a "bitch" Stephanie McMahon is and start addressing his legitimate grievances using his big boy voice. And furthermore, he should probably start addressing John Cena in all of this as well. If I were in Bryan's position, I might be a little resentful that Cena is taking it upon himself to be the world's worst spokesman. I secretly hope that direction is where this story is headed, because if Bryan ends up being cleared to work in time for SummerSlam, I would rather see him in there vs. Cena one more time instead of against Brock Lesnar, which is what's rumored.

If that definition of a great ending is put in play, then yes, I might be inclined to agree. However, in art (and wrestling is art, don't let anyone tell you otherwise), definitions are hardly absolute. I may end up being wrong about the whole ordeal in the long term, but right now, The Shield was a thing that I didn't think ever had to end in any capacity. They had the chance to be the exception to the rule in WWE, that friendships are only made to be broken. Of course, no accounting for taste exists, and I know I could be in the extreme minority with my resistance to this happening. But I won't let my objections die, dammit, no matter what Greek philosophers may have said.

Someone from a message board I used to frequent sent me a tape that I had requested of some Japanese wrestling that included the 1994 Super J Cup tournament won by [REDACTED], and the most famous All-Japan Pro Wrestling match of the '90s, Mitsuharu Misawa vs. Toshiaki Kawada from June 3, 1994. I actually wanted to write about that match since the anniversary came up on Tuesday, but I just never got around to doing it. I remember watching it and being amazed at how many times they spammed moves like the powerbomb and German suplex, and yet the match didn't feel like it was getting old or repetitive. That tape came in the mail sometime in the year 2000. For as big as wrestling was in the late '90s, it was amazing how limited the scope was unless you wanted to import stuff from Japan or Mexico.

Because I'm so protective of The Shield name and dynastic lineage, I would make Rollins a sleeper agent within Evolution to take them out once and for all from within. I would certainly prolong the operation for longer than Daniel Bryan was "held captive" by the Wyatt Family, but I would go full bore. The first part of Rollins' plan, the elimination and alienation of Batista, was carried out to perfection. While inside Evolution, he will help them attain brass rings on the surface, but he would also be working to drive the wedge between Triple H and Randy Orton that was initially struck back in the fall when they first started having friction. Then, once Orton has been driven away from the fold, Rollins would strike last, taking Trips out when he was about to do the unthinkable and finally reclaim the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. He is, after all, the brains of the operation. This plan would be a perfect way to drive that point home.

While I'm a huge fan of things like Lord of the Rings, Star Wars, or Game of Thrones, would I really want to be thrust into a war-torn landscape? I mean, even Lego The Mountain would be one scary dude, and I'm not sure I would want to live in fear of my village being ravaged by the Uruk-Hai or my home planet being blown up by Lego Death Star. So, I would wuss out and go for the Lego beach set. Generic, but relaxing, and since I'd be a Lego, I would have no fear of sunburn.

"Pretty" heels are nothing new, although they mostly took on effeminate traits traditionally. Gorgeous George, for example, made everyone boo him because the crowds were hella homophobic and he acted like a "sissy boy." However, I don't think "pretty" is the problem when it comes to Reigns. I have yet to really hear him cut a good enough promo for him to be a bad guy standing on his own. If you're a heel with no mic skills, you either need a manager, which could work, or you have to be hired muscle. Faces can get along fine without being able to speak if they can bring it in the ring in ways that will pop the crowd. But I'm also unconvinced that Reigns can be a solo star now, at least in the short term. I have yet to see him in a singles match that made me say "Wow, he's the next dude," and all of his big spots have come in tag matches. I think he has the tools to be a player on either side of the ledger, but he's still the most raw of any of the three guys in the former Shield.

Speaking of ol' Solomon, the last I read, his planned gimmick of being a computer hacker was being scrapped, which is awful timing. Watch Dogs, a game where the protagonist is basically Solomon Crowe, has just been released to great fanfare. The synergy would've been off the charts. But anyway, while I'm starving to see Crowe on my TV, the only answer I could possibly give right now is Kevin Steen. I have seen him the most on the indies, and I know that he has been ready to take on the challenge of WWE for at least the last three years. I don't know a whole lot about Prince Devitt and KENTA, and Willie Mack is good but not Steen good at this point. Let me see Steen in NXT and then on the main roster, because I know he'll knock that shit right out of the park.


THAT'S WHY, BECAUSE ONCE YOU GO AGE OF THE FALL, YOU AIN'T LEAVIN' AT ALL.

Protected Tweeter @brianbrown25:
Top 3 WWF/E in-arena talk shows? (Piper's Pit is not eligible) #tweetbag
1. The Abraham Washington Show - Tony Atlas laughing like a damn fool? ALL THE BUYS

2. The Highlight Reel - Only because Shawn Michaels once Goldberg'd himself on it while punching through a monitor

3. Miz TV: No, not because Miz was a great host, or because memorable moments happened during it, but because in the early days, someone was guaranteed to wreck the set or throw some furniture. Ryback tossed a goddamn sofa out of the ring once. HOW COULD I NOT LOVE THAT?

Part Man, but All Model

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NXT followed up Takeover last night with a strong episode out of the gates. Butch will cover the overall offering, but by far, he might agree with me that the best part was Tyler Breeze debuting his music video for his new theme song, "MMMM Gorgeous." I am in love with this theme. It's catchy, he sings it himself, and it's just annoying enough that it can get the aggro-butt rock-loving main WWE crowds in such a lather. Plus, he made a fuckin' video for it. When WWE says it's an entertainment company, stuff like having its roster make music video is what it should be promoting on all levels.

The Polling Place: Rollins, AJPW, SPORTS

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WHY SETH WHY
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Welcome to this week's Polling Place, where I ask the questions and you vote anonymously for your choices. First up, the hottest topic of the week is Seth Rollins turning on his brothers in The Shield to join Evolution. A lot of words have been said and written about the move, but do you think it's the right one going forward?


Next up, All Japan Pro Wrestling is in a state of extreme flux right now. Jun Akiyama is taking control of the company, but the rumors state that he'll take the titles and all the wrestlers to a new company with a rebranded name. The loss of the AJPW name would be a blow to the history of puroresu, even if the promotion has been sucking wind ever since most of the roster split to form Pro Wrestling NOAH at the turn of this century. I don't pretend to be an expert on current Japanese wrestling politics, but I do know my history. Who do you think has been the greatest competitor in AJPW history?


Finally, the NBA Finals kicked off last night between the Spurs and the Heat, and the Stanley Cup Finals kicked off Wednesday night between the Rangers and Kings. Simple question, what is your favorite Championship in American sports?

Impact Now Has More Awesome People Writing Reviews about It Than Writing Scripts FOR It

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Read Dylan's thoughts on the Wolves IMPLODING and other things
Photo Credit: ImpactWrestling.com
Voices of Wrestling's Impact Review by Dylan Hales

TWB alumna and super cool wrestling fan type person Danielle Matheson has long written the only words that have mattered about TNA's Impact on the Internet at With Leather. She now has someone else joining her in writing pertinent, salient things about NXT's Thursday night competition. Dylan Hales, a frequent guest on that podcast thing I used to have, has taken over the mantel of reviewing the show for the inimitable Voices of Wrestling site. While Danielle writes from a position of love and hope, Dylan's point of view is from an unabashed non-fan and critic of the company. He puts his cards on the table early in his first review linked above that he thinks TNA is the worst wrestling promotion in history.

So why should you read someone's reviews of a promotion they're inclined to be biased against? Firstly, they'll be well-written and intelligent. Dylan knows his shit. Secondly, he's the yang to Danielle's yin. Not everything in this world is positive and happy and cheery, and sometimes, you just need raw, unadulterated Haterade to go with your main course of joy and wonder. Thirdly, you'll probably get a few laughs out of it. Make the Best and Worst of Impact and Dylan's reviews of the show on VOW weekly appointment reading, even if you don't even think to watch the show.

WRITERS WANTED: Apply Within!

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I want YOU to write for ME
Photo Credit: Amanda Holzerman
Hello everyone, and happy Friday! As you may or may not have noticed, several longtime (or even onetime) TWB writers have moved on from writing for the site. While Butch and Mr. Lutefisk still contribute, many of the other folks who have written have either lost interest, got too busy with other gigs, or are slaves to their job and don't have time to sleep let alone watch wrestling and write (Hi Shane!). So, I am putting out the call again for writers. If you want to write about wrestling for free on a site that gets read by HUNDREDS of people, well, you have come to the right place. If you're confused as to what I might want from you, well, a good start is that I would like writers who can form complete sentences, write intelligently in English about pro wrestling, and who aren't just into recapping events without putting any kind of their own spin on it. While I don't "need" specific topics, I will now list a few things that I might want to have on the site that are not currently being filled:
  • Impact reviews/TNA commentary
  • New Japan Pro Wrestling reviews/commentary
  • Live independent show reviews
  • Total Divas coverage
  • Miscellaneous puroresu/lucha libre/European wrestling reviews and commentary
  • General wrestling commentary from minority voices (women, racial minorities, LGBT, etc.)
  • HOT SPORTS TAKE style satire
  • Unique features or hooks
Of course, those options are only a fraction of what I'd be looking for. But if you're interested, please let me know either on Twitter or through e-mail. If you are interested, you will have to send me a sample of your writing for my own perusal. If I like what I see, I will welcome you aboard. The e-mail address for all writing samples is tom DOT holzerman AT gmail DOT com. I will get back to you within a couple of days of submittal.

I look forward to adding more folks to the family. If you have a hankerin' to write about wrestling, and you're tired of the same ol', same ol' star reviews and dry recaps out there, help me change the culture (or at least provide an alternative voice). Join us! JOIN THE DARK SIDE MUHUHUAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

Kevin Steen at His Most Animated

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Not shown: Steen and Garfield in a poutine eat-off
Graphics Credit: The enterprising soul behind Saturday Morning Steen
Via Saturday Morning Steen

Kevin Steen is already one of the most animated wrestlers on the indie circuit. His excess personality has to be one of the reasons why he's rumored to have signed a developmental contract with WWE. Some enterprising soul out there decided they were going to make Steen's animated nature literal by putting him in various Saturday morning cartoons. The site only has seven cels up right now, and I don't see any attribution to who is doing these. Regardless, that person has struck on the perfect combination of indie kitsch and nostalgia, and if wrestling fans, whether hardcore or casual, like more than anything, it's nostalgia.

A Crowe Left of the Murder: The Former Sami Callihan for The Shield, Please

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Believe in the Death Machine?
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Dean Ambrose and The Shield are now at a glaring numbers game disadvantage right now, and many names have been brought up to replace Seth Rollins in their war against Evolution. Sami Zayn has been toiling on NXT television, having the best spotlight matches of anyone and showing the kind of boyish charm and babyface fire that gets crowds of all sizes behind wrestlers. But is he the kind of wrestler who should dress up in SWAT gear and adopt excessive force as a way of life? Colin Cassady is a name bandied about, but he's not a whole lot of anything without Enzo Amore and he also would be redundant in the face Roman Reigns. Solutions on the roster already might feel retready except for one in Big Dave Batista. He won't be back until he's done doing press for Guardians of the Galaxy. One wrestler in NXT feels right, however, and he's the wrestler least likely to be added to the fray. To know who that ideal replacement is would mean to look back in pre-WWE history.

Five years ago, a stable formed in Combat Zone Wrestling called the Switchblade Conspiracy. Joe Gacy, Sami Callihan, and Jon Moxley terrorized the indies in a way that turned heads and got people to notice. Among those who did turn their heads were WWE scouts, as both Callihan and Moxley were eventually signed to the company. Moxley became Ambrose, who stands at a crossroads after having his brother leave The Shield for unknown reasons (ones that Rollins may reveal tonight on RAW). Callihan traded in his Death Machine in 2013 for the name Solomon Crowe. He was rumored to have had a hacker gimmick, but he's yet to debut on WWE television despite being at the Performance Center for nearly a year now. As for Gacy, well, he used to be in the Switchblade Conspiracy.

The rumored hacker gimmick seemed to get scuttled as quickly as it was ideated for Crowe, which leaves him in the precarious position of Creative having nothing for him. However, he as a replacement for Rollins in The Shield makes infinite sense if one really knows what Crowe brings to the table. For one, he has one of the most unique looks in WWE right now. He's a cannonball in build, low to the ground, eccentric in the face and hairdo, and he looks natural in black. He was also one of the most unique workers in the indies, a brawler with a frenetic pace and wildly exaggerated movements.

The Shield on the surface may seem like the last place to accentuate such a special presence, but all three original members were able to break out and distinguish themselves as individuals in addition to building a new kind of brotherhood within the company. The members of The Shield were not interchangeable, they presented themselves as cogs in a machine that needed them to perform different roles. Ambrose acted as the Wild Card, Reigns the Muscle, and Rollins as both the Brains and the Resilient Front Line Shield.

The fact that Crowe already flirted with the idea of being a computer genius able to control electronics better than anyone else makes him an ideal replacement for Rollins as the Brains of the group. He not only would be able to fill the void left by Rollins, but he'd be an improvement, and evolution if you will. In that way, his addition to the group would complete the narrative of the entire feud. Plus, since REALITY ERA and such, Ambrose would then have an easy in for him into the group by referencing past history and alliance. Plus, Ambrose seems like the kind of guy who "knows a guy," and Crowe gives off the aura of being that sketchy, unknown actor that would associate with the likes of a batshit crazy sparkplug like Ambrose.

The biggest knock on Crowe, of course, would be his lack of experience on a NXT television. No one goes right from the Performance Center to the main roster, not even someone who came into the company as ready as Sami Callihan. If Bryan Danielson had to go to developmental to become Daniel Bryan, then everyone probably has to, right? Crowe has been in the wringer for nearly a year, but nothing is a better acclimator to a new job than on-the-job training. NXT is that training, and no one seems to pass go and collect $200 without it. If Crowe bypassed that level for WWE, he would be the first, and I am not comfortable enough with saying that he will.

But curiously enough, WWE has a situation where it could try sending someone right from school to the bigs. The situation is perfect for Crowe to make the leap. He fits The Shield better than anyone else who isn't promoting a movie right now. He's not the only answer for this angle, and he's certainly not the most likely one to show up tonight to even the score. However, I would be hard-pressed to name any wrestler who would provide as much of a fit for the group than Solomon Crowe in the long term if this angle isn't some sort of sleeper plot by Rollins to take Evolution down from within.

And even then, Rollins and Reigns could use a little help from Ambrose's weirdo buddy with an iPad and a working knowledge of how to fuck with WWE's technological infrastructure, couldn't they?

From the Archives: Sting and Ric Flair vs. Terry Funk and The Great Muta... IN THE THUNDERDOME

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The first-ever Halloween Havoc took place in Philadelphia, and it featured a main event extreme enough to foreshadow the rise of ECW five years later. The Thunderdome cage had a concave ceiling with a hole in the middle, but escape was impossible because it was electrified. The only way either team could win is if the other team's manager threw in the towel. On one side of the cage, Ric Flair teamed with Sting with Ole Anderson in their corner. In the other, Gary Hart held the towel for Terry Funk and The Great Muta. Additionally, Bruno Sammartino acted as the special guest referee. If anything else, this match was an amazing spectacle.

Best Coast Bias: The Man That Off Weeks Forgot

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Welcome once again to Adrian and Tyson Land, where no rematch could possibligh go wrong
Photo Credit: WWE.com

Different year, different show, but at the end of the different day it was the same thing: a hopeful Canadian asking -- really, beseeching -- for one more match.

And Adrian Neville, Fighting Champion (probably soon to be his given name ™WWE) gave it to him.

It was exactly as unshocking as his victory over Justin Gabriel, the ex-partner of TK, in the main event.  This is what the Jumping Geordie does in 2014: he faces somebody from the main roster, a back and forth ensues, he uncorks the Red Arrow Art Carney Audrey Meadows Sheila McRae goodnight everybody.  Tyson came out contriter than contrite, saying all the right things and mortgaging whatever dignity he hadn't forfeited last week due to his loss (reality) or the loss of his cool (the reality his lips were saying).  With the #1 contender T-Breezie somehow allowed to pick his shot and spending the show debuting his music video that gave him 18 IMDB credits and slowclapping for himself after it played like he was aiming to win the election for the Grand Exalted Leader of North Doucherea, it opens the door to Kidd/Neville II and in all likelihood the final unfraying of the few threads left in Tyson's carrying of the white hat.  But again, note Neville's confidence here and how his words last week continued to be backed up by his actions.

As well they should be when you haven't put an L on the board all year, the Champion has gone from underdog with the Crazy Ass Aerial Armageddon Finisher to favorite who's always able to win with the Crazy Ass Aerial Armageddon Finisher but can also match anybody, especially the style dopplegangers, with both mat work and out defying gravity where they can only stare up at the level he's on.  His mic time was kept short as he quickly agreed to the rematch but his best work was done off-mic as Kidd continued to bow and scrape near literally in retreat at show's end.  Off mic but on-camera, he was seen belt on shoulder mouthing clearly "One more shot. One more." It's great character work that makes him likeable without being a chump; the mirror inverse, appropriately enough, of Tyson faux good cheer and suddenly found hail-fellow-well-metness that was a 180 of his actions last week post-match and postgame show. It's the easiest way to get what he wants and he's deluded himself into thinking This Time Things Will Be Different, but....well, you know.  Let us get stock in Nattie's Husband chants while the price is still accessible to the common folk.

It was those developments and only those developments that made the ladies take a backseat, as Full Sail built on over a year's worth of development from six individuals through the prism of a Bayley/Charlotte match.  Good as the match was (hint: damn would be the modifier of choice) what followed when Charlotte made Ay Bay Bay Bow Down cleanly was super tremendous and not only Number One And The Best But Numbers Two And Three And In Solid Contention For The Best Status.  Charlotte, having now leveled up so hard she doesn't get distracted by mid-match entrance music playing but immediately goes into smart counter > smart location attack > FINISH HER like some T-1000 with awesome DNA was able to ignore the fact that Summer Rae and hew new theme had returned to NXT to ostensibly reclaim her throne as NXT's Queen and the resident evil in sexy human form.  (Thus, Sasha is Gretchen and Charlotte early Act III Cady, but I'm not telling you anything you don't already know.)  Summer, after helping Sasha up and hugging her, then making sure Charlotte's post-match was all about her by handing the Champion her new title before hugging her and then jumping Bayley.  Any scuttlebutt seen around the intertubes about babyface Flair again were quickly dashed as Bayley had no choice but to get RSVPed yes to the BFF's Stomp Party.  But lest you think this ends badly, Lo A Wild Emma And Paige appeared and ran off the Full Sail Plastics.  Joy, joy, joy.  We may get our NXT all-female equivalent of the Shield/Evolution wars sooner rather than, and why shouldn't we?  Sasha's on her Rick Ross because Summer spun sweet acid in her ears, and she was merely the first to turn her back on Bayley now under the BFF banner as Charlotte acted as her dad to Bayley's Stinger when they were in a tag match against RaeBanks Enterprises.  Paige looks evil but has a heart made out of nearly as much gold as Bay's, and Emma in Full Sail is like Dr. J in the ABA: yeah, some NBA stuff happened, but for the real heads it's about the magic specifically NXT lets her weave in lieu of being Minkus with a barely explicable weakness for pink fabric when she could easily be a Cory or a Shawn.   But yeah, Team Awesome v. the Biffles.  Elimination style, if possible.  Oh, we're ready for it, come on bring it.

One final note, specifically towards Jason Jordan and Tye Dillinger.  Whether you guys are Team Scrubs or the non-union Mexican equivalent of the World's Greatest Tag Team, if you're going to be babyfaces, DO SO.  Matching tights are merely step 2 in a five-mile walk, and against a couple of randos you didn't have enough Hey Cheer For Us Now stuff going on.  It created a heat vacuum in the match where there didn't need to be one.  Tandem offense, a two-man finisher, saying things about not just becoming more meat in the grinder that is the Ascension's title reign: all of these and any could only help.  Most infuriatingly, they're on the doorstep of having something as a go-to as Dillinger hit a superkick to eliminate a possible save and Jordan finished with what can only be called the Original Slam (a sad reminder that Kurt Angle nearly died on the way back to his planet with a broken freakin' neck and as a result has spent the better part of the century in purgatory); chained as a 1-2 combo it'd be sure to provide the long-reigning Tag Champions with an exceedingly interesting evening.

Yet again with these three main elements in play, on a non-special show NXT still provided forward momentum and time for all three Championship divisions in under an hour with all the wrestling being perfectly cromulent or above.  It may still be the early days of June, but the latest editions of Championship-level wrestling from Florida seems an absolute lock to retain their unofficial crown and go back-ro-back as the BCB's Program of the Year.

(That six-woman elimination match would lock it in though, to be fair.)

A Quick Opinion on TNA Attendance Pictures

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Photo Credit: @TubbyEmu

The above is a picture of a TNA Basebrawl event held at Cal Ripken Stadium in Aberdeen, MD over the weekend. The event didn't draw well, as the picture illustrates. This picture is not the first of its type to emanate from various TNA live events across the country. Sparse attendance has plagued the promotion, and these pictures don't do anything to lessen the embarrassment. However, much in the way that I feel too much commentary is levied on crowd chants and whether or not fans in attendance are "behaving," ragging on TNA for poor attendance seems to be piling on at this point. I'm not sure what the bad crowds tell me about the quality of the promotion's output, especially when I don't know how much TNA actually advertises for its local appearances. I've heard rumblings that the campaign blitz to get people aware that a show was actually taking place was pretty sparse in the Baltimore and DC areas. I don't care how good or bad a product is; advertising is the key factor, not quality of the show.

But of course, that fact isn't going to stop anyone from ragging on the company. I don't watch it anymore, so I can't really say what TNA is doing right or wrong. But I do feel like posting pictures and pointing and laughing is pretty much passe at this point. That statement isn't so much a defense of the company. But laughing at awful attendance seems to be distracting from the real issues. For example, do the wrestlers still get paid sub-sweatshop wages? Are the stories and wrestling on point? Worthwhile discussions need to be had about the company, and none of them center around how many or few people are going to house shows. That number seems like an effect rather than a cause, and the latter doesn't change without discussion on how to change the former. The biggest thing to remember is that none of those pictures really illustrate whether TNA is on the verge of closing or not anyway. As long as it is on Spike TV, is seen by a million people, and pulls in ad revenue, it will probably tread enough water to get by on minimal losses. Doing the Nelson at bad attendance feels puerile for the sake of puerility though. I mean, by all means, I don't necessarily believe being puerile is a bad thing if done in small enough doses, but at the same time, if it leads to intellectual dishonesty, then it can scoot right the fuck outta here.

The Wrestling Blog's OFFICIAL Best in the World Rankings, June 9

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Superfriends!
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. Paige (Last Week: 1) - Paige not only showed that she's a formidable WWE Divas Champion, she showed that even the daughter of a demonic warrior can know the value of friendship. You know Bayley was certainly appreciative that Paige made the save for her.

2. Kevin Steen (Last Week: Not Ranked) - HUGE HUGE HUGE Steen update: He installed his air conditioner today! DOES ANYTHING EXIST THAT THIS MAN CANNOT DO?

3. Candice LeRae (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Not only did she and Joey Ryan win the Dreamwave Tag Team Championship, they apparently also won the old WWF Tag Team Championships too. Oh wait, the Dreamwave Titles just LOOK like those belts? Ah dang.

4. Alicia Fox (Last Week: 2) - Now that she's reunited with Aksana to reform FOXSANA, no Diva in WWE is safe. Literally. They will break everyone's arms. And orbital sockets. And skulls.

5. Mark Henry (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Mark Henry would have joined The Shield, but he still remembers them fuckin' with him way back without getting them back for it. Like The North, Mark Henry remembers.

6. Hafþór Björnsson (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Not only did he "win" the Trial by Combat on last week's Game of Thrones, he dressed up as the Incredible Hulk and actually put the real Hulk to shame with his muscles.

7. Taco Bell Quesarito (Last Week: Not Ranked)OFFICIAL HOLZERMAN HUNGERS SPONSORED ENTRY - Every time I try to get out of eating fast food, Taco Bell has to go and drag me back in...

8. Maria Sharapova (Last Week: Not Ranked) - She won the French Open this past weekend at the ripe old age of 27. That sounds young, sure, but in women's tennis terms, she's like 78. Impressive.

9. Daniel Bryan (Last Week: 7) - Shame he had to go down and lose his title without losing it, but at least we'll have the memories of his combined title reigns... uh, on second thought...

10. Sara del Rey (Last Week: 10) - SARA DEL REY FACT: She is currently giving Bayley special lessons on how to properly hug a wacky waving inflatable arm flailing tube man.

Instant Feedback: Three of a Kind

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A man on his own
Photo Credit: WWE.com
If any good was going to come from the dissolution of The Shield last week, it would have to be all three members showing readiness to emerge from the nest and become emergent icons on their own. As a group, the three men were an indomitable force, a trio that held the paradoxical properties of being uniquely individual but desperately and necessarily interchangeable. Their camaraderie was WWE's greatest asset for the last 18 months, and something far greater would have to be at stake in order for those bonds to be rent asunder in a nuclear reaction. One night is the smallest sample size that exists in pro wrestling. But one night can also be a beacon of hope, a foreshadow, a sign of a right decision. For one night, all three men had their auditions in their new roles, and their grades came back with the highest of marks.

Dean Ambrose was the surest thing. With wild-eyed intensity backing a stunning clarity of message, his voice was the rock upon which the trio was chained to upon its arrival to the main roster. For months, his message was the only one that wasn't garbled by droning or repetition. He said his piece and backed it with both force and style that made folks remember. But tonight, flames followed the tire tracks of his words. He called upon the power of all his words uttered in wrestling rings before, whether in WWE or NXT or CZW, and he broke down the door towards WWE's upper echelon. His was the least surprising star turn but lack of surprise rarely ever means lack of worth.

Roman Reigns already had the presence. Even when Ambrose laid the groundwork in the past, he was the only member of the group with stature enough to affix its signature imprimatur to any segment. When he told you to believe in The Shield, you best better have believed in the fucking Shield. But for all his debonair looks, his imposing stance, his flashy smile, and his signature spot delivery dripping with panache, he had never carried his end of an extended promo. Hell, he'd rarely if ever had been asked to do so. What was unknown prior to RAW this evening became an apparent, sterling positive however. He exuded confidence behind his threats to Seth Rollins, promising no emptiness behind his words. And while his threat to make Randy Orton the "butt" of WWE instead of its face consisted of a puerile playground threat, his delivery made it seem like comic relief well above its deserved paygrade. When a man takes total command of the microphone the way Reigns did, he is giving a glimpse into a future where he sits on a throne and holds dominion over others.

Rollins, like Ambrose, was a known quantity going into his audition. However, when he spoke, the masses pleaded with him to take it home, to say what he had to say and leave. Rollins at his best meandered to a point that Ambrose could have driven home like a jackhammer. At worst, he mystified the intended audience on what he meant to say. Then again, Bond-villaining one's way to a motive is far easier than defending a position from a moral background. Still, curve or no curve, Rollins found confidence. He found self-editing. He found a voice, one that wasn't the lost sheep of the flock, but one that could represent itself and stand on its own against a presumed future showdown with a man who considered him a brother but whom he only considered a business partner in Ambrose.

While again, one night is an erratic sample upon which to base a future of performance, the fact that Rollins looked like he belonged with Ambrose had to be promising for a future showdown. While I still question the logic of breaking up a group that could have changed the way WWE looked at stables forever (and frankly, they may still have done just that even though their permanence was never guaranteed from start), at least the first impression of their opening salvos as singles stars has been an overwhelmingly positive one. Maybe the plan all along was to have three ace prospects make it to the roster with the hook of being the most badass stable known to the history of WWE proper, and they just caught fire along the way as a group. Either way, I don't feel as bad as I did last week when the fracture first occurred. Great performance has a way of dulling the pain of unwanted results, after all.

Oh No, Not Foxsana

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Photo Credit: WWE.com

The most unsung teaming in WWE imploded last night. Or did it? Sure, Alicia Fox may have stolen a dude's popcorn and water to dump all over her partner, Aksana, but she still acted friendly and apologetic to her after wasting that poor fan's concessions on her. LAYERS! I wonder if the infamous WWE Creative Whiteboard had "food fight" underneath the Divas last night, because Fox's outburst was the second culinary attack on the show involving the women. Summer Rae perpetrated the most Minnesota attack on a wrestling show ever on Layla backstage by dumping buttermilk (or whole milk, either way, it looked thick) and flour all over her. Leave it to WWE to thin the patience by spamming a good thing.

It's Not Delivery, It's RAW Live-Tweeting

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PIZZA! TWITTER! WRESTLING!
Photo Credit: TH
DiGiorno Pizza is known for its frozen pizza and the mildly annoying advertising campaign attached to it with the tag line, "It's not delivery, it's DiGiorno!" Well, the company's Twitter account has taken to a different way of attracting customers - live-Tweeting Monday Night RAW. For the last two shows, whatever intern was tasked with handling the account started zanily tweeting musings from the show. I would be lying if I didn't think the whole thing was amusing, to be honest. Then again, Weird Advertising Twitter has become a thing now. I guess low-end food manufacturers like Denny's and Totino's Pizza Rolls are trying to get the socially liberal and millennial crowd to dip in.

I hate to be cynical, but yeah, DiGiorno's is just trying to get people who watch RAW to do so with a hot pizza in front of their maws. I would be lying if I said that pizza and wrestling didn't fit each other like nuts and bolts, and I doubt I'm an outlier. So yeah, I guess the strategy is a good one, especially when the tweets have been as entertaining as these:




Now, full disclosure, I have not been paid for what amounts to an advertisement for DiGiorno. Yuck, I feel like Darren Rovell, except where he probably might feel pride here, I feel shame. So, take this post with a grain of salt. I am endorsing the Twitter feed, not the pizza. Then again, I haven't had DiGiorno Pizza in a dog's age; I don't even know if it's good or not. I am fortunate to live in the Pizza Belt, after all. So, buy DiGiorno Pizza or don't buy it. I don't give a fuck. But at least the Twitter account is amusing, and really, isn't that fact what really matters?

A Cavalcade of Failure: The Sad Title Reign of Daniel Bryan

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Bryan's last two months have been a tragedy
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Daniel Bryan's story between SummerSlam and WrestleMania XXX was nothing short of a classic, triumphant hero story. His run with the WWE World Heavyweight Championship afterwards was supposed to be fodder for a historical retelling of his first real reign as ace of the company. But ever since Mania, he has been the subject of a tragedy. The last two months have seen everything in his character's life (and some bits of random chance in his real life as well, but including the deaths of his father and Connor "The Stone Crusher" Michalek would feel cheap in an essay such as this) fail him, and now, he is at a crossroads.

The most subjective and perhaps shakiest argument is that Bryan has failed himself, or at the very least, the writing of his character while he was primed exclusively against Stephanie McMahon and The Demon™ Kane has. While he hasn't totally gone off the MRA deep end, he might as well wear a fedora and crow about how his atheism online. His casual use of McMahon's femininity against her as a negative and his assumption that My Wife™ Brie Bella cannot handle herself at all is off-putting at least.

Sure, Bryan's crowd support has seemingly not wavered, and his one match that he's had since Mania against Kane showed to me why I can easily ignore awful character writing when he's still active in the ring. However, I'm also a white male, the epitome of privilege. How many times can women fans look at Bryan as someone to like and root for a person who treats characters like them in patronizing or worse manners. Still, I am willing to chalk that situation up to WWE's backwards treatment of women altogether rather than a flaw in Bryan's character alone. John Cena is transphobic, trivializes women like Bryan does, and isn't afraid to use a misogynist slur here and there. The problem is endemic of the entire company and needs to change. But maybe the point that I'm grasping for is that I expect Bryan to be better.

Still, regardless of whose fault Bryan's character dourness is, his booking has been left flat since Mania. His run from Mania to Extreme Rules should have at least been at the forefront of the WWE card against a prime opponent. Granted, I was into Kane as a challenger in a vacuum. He and Bryan had history, and if anyone could get a good-to-great match out of him, it would be Bryan. However, going from beating the entirety of Evolution at WrestleMania to being in a feud with a guy who hadn't been relevant in the ring since he teamed with Bryan.

After getting the most VIP treatment in WrestleMania history, a victory lap for a month would have been too much to ask for, I admit. But if Bryan was going to get a stopgap feud while Evolution was off fighting The Shield, why not get sucked into the vortex of the John Cena/Bray Wyatt feud? Or even better, if Antonio Cesaro was going to be a Paul Heyman guy, and Brock Lesnar was always the plan for SummerSlam, then why not put Cesaro in that spot against Bryan the way that Bryan himself was a stopgap for CM Punk between Mania and his heel turn in the summer in 2012? Sure, Cesaro may have been on a similar spot on the totem pole as Kane, but he'd come off with more story momentum. It wouldn't have felt so much a demotion for Bryan as it would have an elevation for Cesaro, and of course, an epic series of matches.

But the sequence of events that have taken place since his initial announcement have been infuriatingly random and endemic of WWE's lack of a cohesive vision for something like Bryan's injury. Granted, the air of confusion around the status of his neck provided a stumbling block for anything concrete, but to have Bryan and Bella defiantly come out on the pay-per-view and seemingly outsmart the Authority for the medical circumstances force WWE's hand only makes him look as dumb as another babyface who failed to get over on a huge level in part because booking failed him on the reg, Sting. Smarter options could have been taken. Bryan could have been put on the injured list right from jump with an Interim Champion being crowned at Payback. WWE could have played wait and see.

But all parties involved wouldn't have had to have acted in any fashion if Bryan's own body didn't fail him. That circumstance is the most tragic of them all. The style that made him so famous and popular with fans is the most likely culprit for his injury. Sophocles couldn't have written a sadder tale. Of course, looking back on the last two months with great sadness is only good for cathartic purposes. I am sure that when Bryan returns, he'll have chances to tweak his in-ring style to retain masterful storytelling without the risk to his health, which is the great equalizer in the face of bad character work and worse booking. But for now, what should have been the start of one of the great runs in WWE history has been squelched by injury at a point where it was bungled horribly on all angles. If that doesn't qualify as an all-time tragedy in wrestling, I don't know what does.

The Best Moves Ever: Steiner Screwdriver

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In retrospect, Scott Steiner was always crazy. I mean, who else would drill a dude on his head and then, instead of pinning him, roar around the ring like he just scored a touchdown for the Maize and Blue. Big Poppa Pump was always lurking in the heart of Scott Steiner, even when he had the brunette bouffant and wore the singlet.

This Week in Off-Topic: The World Cup for World Domination

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Photo credit: FIFA.com
Starting Thursday June 12th is the World Cup. Great, what does that mean? A lot in the grand scheme of things. It will show how there are many other countries in the world better at football (Soccer for us in the U.S.) and Americans will be fans of it for a month or however long their favorite teams stays competitive. There are people from many of the countries playing living here in the States. Sacrilege, right...not cheering for ‘Murica, what are these people thinking? Home is where the heart is after all, not always where the body ends up.

How can you make sporting events like the World Cup, Olympics and Tour de France more interesting to everyone rather than their niche of fans? Have the overall winner take control of World Domination. Imagine the PPV buys, the merchandising, the “real” patriotism each country would receive. This would be better than a war, well in theory no one would die, but we know “shit happens” from time to time. There may be 2 or 3 hundred random, but associated deaths involved with a spectacle like this. Less than a war and no more than any average soccer game from any of the major football leagues.

It would have to be built up however, like a good angle/storyline. A yearly event like the Tour de France, Giro and Vuelta (Tours of Italy and Spain, they just wanna be different and fancy) wouldn’t mean total domination, maybe and we still have to work out the rules, but maybe they can take over another country if they win. Giving them better odds of winning going into the bigger events. Picture this, Williamsport, PA on a lovely sunny weekend afternoon. Teams have played hard throughout the tournament and it comes down to the team representing the USA and Taiwan in the Little League World Series. Today, young Billy Smith is pitching to take over Uruguay, where his opponent is pitching for control of the Philippines...no pressure Billy, do your best, we all get trophies in the end. It’s just one of the trophies will say 2nd place and the other will be a country.

It would also eliminate calling winners of the Super Bowl and all the other big sports in ‘Murica, “World Champions,” because come on...who did you really beat the Houston Astros, Jacksonville Jaguars, Cleveland Cavaliers? You could get a pick up team together and beat those teams. The only league coming close to a World Champion is the NHL, because they have more than one team in Canada (which is really just an extension of the Midwest, and everyone is nice in the Midwest), so that doesn’t even count. Also, no one watches hockey on TV, unless it’s the Olympics.

It’s just a way to balance out the power in the world as we know it. Everyone is up in arms over bullying, so why not try to make it a bully free world by having equal competition for high stakes. Maybe the Cote d'Ivoire (I don’t know where that is, but it sounds lovely) could be a huge Cinderella, underdog and every other sport cliche you’ve ever heard and take over the world, for just a moment. I wonder what they’d do...

Your Midweek Links: Rollins and Game of Thrones Fallout

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Seriously, watch NXT
Photo Credit: WWE.com
It's hump day, so here are some links to get you through the rest of the week:

Wrestling Links:

- The Wrestling Hipster: Five reasons why watching NXT makes you a better fan than everyone else [With Leather]

- Believe in Dean Ambrose [False Underdog]

- Why it had to be Seth Rollins [Brad to the Bone]

- Sami Zayn to The Shield, please [¡Olé! Wrestling]

- The Best and Worst of RAW: Requiem for Foxsana [With Leather]

- SB Nation Reviews: Vince McMahon [SB Nation]

- The octet of opportunity: Eight great names who should be in either Money in the Bank ladder match [TJR Wrestling]

- Vintage Best and Worst: SummerSlam 1996 [With Leather]

- Pro Wrestling Guerrilla DDT4 review [Voices of Wrestling]

- TNA Impact Review: June 5 [Voices of Wrestling]

- The Best and Worst of Impact Wrestling: The American Don Wests [With Leather]

- Why doesn't TNA base itself in Britain? [Voices of Wrestling]

Non-Wrestling Links:

- Video: Game of Thrones Mountain vs. Red Viper alternate ending [Warming Glow]

- When The Mountain dresses as The Hulk, children cry [Kotaku]

- Science says spoilers don't ruin enjoyment of show, Game of Thrones proves it [Warming Glow]

- The broccoli theory of bad television [Pajiba]

- Allow this infographic to explain the awesome history of Ghostbusters [Film Drunk]

- Ten words The Simpsons invented [Hello Giggles]

- Ten standalone Star Wars movies we actually want [io9]

- Why you're wrong and this NBA Finals matchup is awesome [Hardwood Paroxysm]

- Everything you know about cramps is wrong, and Gatorade is full of shit [Regressing]

- The myth of the myth of the hot hand [Regressing]

- It's really hard to be a good guy with a gun [Gawker]

- The 28 most infuriating (TRUE) statistics [Cracked]

- Ladies love being rape victims says asshole [Jezebel]

- No, Casper Smart sexting trans women doesn't make him gay [ROYGBIV]

- What Europe will look like in 2035 if Russian tabloids have their way [io9]

- Seven geek prejudices that should have been dropped by now [Topless Robot]

- Chemtrails are a symptom of a larger, potentially dangerous problem [The Vane]

- Is your dress code sexist? A guide [Jezebel]

- I made a fake Donald Trump quote and he retweeted it [SB Nation]

- We give them nothing - On amateurs doing professional work [Polygon]

- Gamma Squad's 50 Best-Looking Games Ever [50-41|40-31|30-21|20-11|10-6|5-1]

- REPORT: Johnny Manziel to forgo NFL career and play professional baseball [Good Bull Hunting]

- Critics of Jon Singleton's deal sound like real d-bags [The Mighty MJD]

- Stop with your anti-fast food moralizing [io9]

- Performance artists swap wine labels for funnier ones [Kitchenette]

- Cookin' ATVS Style: Barbecue Chicken [And the Valley Shook]

- Two simple, foolproof methods to cook a steak to perfection [Sploid]

- How to make deviled eggs and reign as lord of the side dishes [The Concourse]

- Taco Bell merged a burrito to a quesadilla [UPROXX]

- On hockey's fetish for finding "The Next Best Player in the World" [Deadspin]
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