WWE SmackDown TV Report 5-28-15: Kevin Owens interview, Rusev hurt, Dean Ambrose & Roman Reigns vs. Seth Rollins & Kane

By Steve Khan, WrestlingObserver.com

– Air Date: May 28, 2015 (May 27 in Canada)

– Location: Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza in Wilkes-Barre, PA

News:

Kevin Owens made his first SmackDown appearance, Rusev is hurt, and Seth Rollins laid out Dean Ambrose with a pedigree.

Show Recap:

They announced that the Raw opener would be the main event of SmackDown.

Dean Ambrose came out to a good reaction. He said The Authority always has a Plan B and their plan was to get him arrested. Ambrose knows from experience that jail is not a fun place to be. He considered using his one prison phone call to order pizza, but instead called his only friend Roman Reigns, whose name got a big pop.

Ambrose also considered digging his way out of jail but instead used WWE’s own YouTube clip against the Authority to get cleared. He said NYPD were big fans of his and let him drive the paddy wagon back to Raw (and Reigns bought him enough time to get there). Ambrose said there was going to be a fight on Sunday for the richest prize in the business, he would end Seth Rollins’ reign and the Age of Ambrose would begin.

(Ambrose never cut to the screen to show replays. Instead, they showed pictures and clips as he spoke. This wasn’t really an improvement however, as the clips with sound completely distracted from Dean’s promo.)

Lumberjack Match: Lucha Dragons beat Tyson Kidd & Cesaro w/Natalya via pinfall

The lumberjacks were the Prime Time Players, Los Matadores, Ascension and New Day. On the Canadian airing, they introduced the lumberjacks and the commentators cut to commercial. Except the commercials didn’t air. The screen went black for a second and they came back.

Really good, lengthy match. With two babyface teams, they didn’t do the usual tag match formula. Kidd countered a Kalisto hurricanrana into a sharpshooter. Sin Cara broke up the cover so Cesaro hit him with a superkick. Cesaro was tossed over the ropes onto a few lumberjacks. Woods grabbed Kidd’s foot as a distraction and Kalisto hit Salida del Sol for the win. Lots of “New Day sucks” chants.

Backstage, Rollins complained to Kane about having to face Ambrose and Reigns again. Jamie Noble told a story about his old Aunt Baby. Kane told Rollins not to worry because he has a plan. Rollins believed him.

R-Truth beat King Barrett via pinfall

Truth did a completely serious in-set promo pushing the Chamber match, saying he doesn’t worry about danger, danger worries about him. That was refreshing. Barrett also did an in-set promo, saying he’d win back the IC Title. Barrett controlled the match for a couple of minutes but Truth won rather quickly with a reverse STO. Afterwards, Sheamus laid out both men with brogue kicks.

Backstage, Lana told Renee Young that she almost believed that Rusev could change, but she realized his ways and said she belongs to no man. Renee asked about her relationship with Ziggler and Lana said she has no relationship with him. Rusev showed up. Basically, Rusev was unbothered by Ziggler. Lana didn’t believe that Rusev wasn’t jealous. Rusev said Lana has dug her own grave and now has to lie in it.

Ryback beat Rusev via DQ

Ryback worked over Rusev for while and hit a nice delayed vertical suplex. Rusev came back with a kick and clothesline. Rusev used a fallaway slam on the outside and they went to commercial.

After the break, Rusev visibly limped around and Jerry Lawler pointed it out. Ryback tried a power slam but Rusev slid to the outside, favouring his ankle. Ryback eventually went after him but Rusev slammed him twice into the ring post for a DQ. Rusev tossed Ryback into the steel steps for good measure.

Rusev leaned against the ring to take pressure off his ankle/foot. Ryback’s music played and he got to his feet and began walking away, even though the guy who attacked him was still just standing there. The referee checked on Rusev and they cut to the announcers who moved on to the women’s title feud.

The match was enjoyable until the finish, where they obviously had to call an audible. I’m not sure if they ever do any editing once the show airs in Canada, but they might want to edit out Ryback getting to his feet and walking away.

Paige beat Naomi w/Tamina via pinfall

They both did good in-set promos before the match. Paige won after kicking Tamina in the face and hitting Naomi with Ram-Paige. It was fine but short. Afterwards, Nikki Bella came out with Brie to pose with the Divas title.

Michael Cole brought out NXT Champion Kevin Owens. They showed replays of Owens powerbombing John Cena twice. When they came back from the replays, Owens was laughing and pointing at the screen to make sure Cole was watching. Cole said Owens has been in WWE for 2 weeks and Owens interrupted him immediately to say he’s been in this company for 2 weeks but has been in the business for 15 years.

He’s been dominating for years and will dominate Cena. Owens knows Cena’s list of accomplishments: 15 world titles, 52 terrible t-shirt designs and a thousand different ways to suck. Owens doesn’t have to prove anything to Cena, Cena has to prove himself to Owens. Owens showed his apron powerbomb to Sami Zayn from NXT. He explained that Zayn was his best friend, so imagine what he would do to Cena. Owens ended the promo by saying the real champ is here.

As Owens left, Dean Ambrose entered for the main event. Ambrose walked right by Owens without looking at him, but Owens did stop to look at Ambrose.

Dean Ambrose & Roman Reigns beat WWE Champion Seth Rollins & Kane w/J&J Security via DQ

The story of every this match was the heels using the numbers game to their advantage. They worked over Ambrose forever. Ambrose knocked J&J over the announce table and used a tornado DDT on Kane.

Reigns made a hot tag and hit Rollins with clotheslines, a forearm and Samoan drop. Ambrose took out Kane with a flying elbow and plancha. After a quick back-and-forth exchange, Reigns hit Rollins with a superman punch but J&J broke up the cover for the DQ.

Ambrose took them out with a dive and began pummeling Rollins. Kane executed his plan, calling out The New Day who attacked Ambrose. Reigns knocked them all down with a dive over the top.

Xavier Woods managed to avoid this, but Ambrose jumped in the ring and hit him with Dirty Deeds. Ambrose hit Big E with a rebound clothesline, Reigns took out Kingston with a superman punch and Big E with a spear.

I thought this was the end with Ambrose and Reigns standing tall, but no, there’s more. Kane chokeslammed Reigns (without help or distraction), Rollins attacked Ambrose from behind and hit him with a pedigree. Rollins and Kane stood tall to end the show.

Final Thoughts:

Overall, this was a fine show that had some noteworthy stuff. I could have done without the DQ in the main event and overbooked finish, but with just 2 weeks between big shows, they’ve had to cram a lot in. That also explains why we got the Kevin Owens interview here as well. The main story from the main event is that Rollins and his crew are on the same page and that means trouble for Ambrose.

Match Results:

  • Lucha Dragons beat Tyson Kidd & Cesaro via pinfall
  • R-Truth beat King Barrett via pinfall
  • Ryback beat Rusev via DQ
  • Paige beat Naomi via pinfall
  • Dean Ambrose & Roman Reigns beat WWE Champion Seth Rollins & Kane via DQ

WWE NXT 5-27-15 results & TV report: Kevin Owens vs. Solomon Crowe, Samoa Joe returns

By Emerson Witner, WrestlingObserver.com & Wrestling Outsiders Podcast

The Big News

I now do a “The Big News” header. Plus this was the Kevin Owens Show. He started the show with a 15 minute promo and ended the show destroying Solomon Crowe before having another meeting with Samoa Joe.

Show Recap

The show opened with a very nice video package recapping everything that happened on Takeover last week. We went inside the arena and the first thing we hear is Sami Zayn’s happy, uplifting music. However instead of the former NXT Champion, we got the current NXT Champion! Kevin Owens is here, wearing a John Cena shirt.

They were able to splice in footage of Owens laying out Cena this past Monday, combined with promoting the show Sunday. Owens mockingly said he was going to issue an NXT Title Open Challenge, but he is not an insecure person who needs to defend his title every week to make people like him. Owens said he is not a bad person, he is a good man. He is a good man because we will never hear Sami’s “horrendous song” because of what he did last week. People should not be surprised or upset because he did what he told Zayn he was going to do.

He also said he was a good person because when Samoa Joe came out and the arena exploded, he allowed the fans to live in that moment. He is not scared of Samoa Joe and the reason he backed down is because he wanted the fans to have a positive note to go home to. He noted that if Joe ever steps in the ring with him again he will drop him. He also promised to drop John Cena this Sunday and prove that the real champ is here.

This brought out Mr. William Regal, who said the only reason Owens still works here after headbutting William last week is because Mr. Regal attacked him first. Regal noted that Riley, Neville, Zayn and Itami all got taken out since he started. Owens said that he did not attack Itami and that he told Zayn what would happen. He also blamed William for making the match, knowing what would happen.

This brought out Solomon Crowe, who is tired of listening to this garbage. Crowe said Owens is scared that on any given moment someone from the back could beat him for the title. Crowe said he is a piece of crap. Owens said he was such a good guy that Crowe earned himself an opportunity against Owens. Owens said we will add Crowe to the list of people stretchered out after tonight.

– They re-aired the video where Hideo Itami was left lying last week. Hideo cut a pre-taped promo that someone attacked him last week. He doesn’t know who, but when he returns from his shoulder injury there will be no stopping him.

– Last week, Zack Ryder was at Takeover, sitting next to Mojo Rawley, of all people. Mojo ran in and screamed and yelled about being hyped. Well someone is back.

Emma (w/Dana Brooke) submitted Bayley

Bayley now has slap bracelets she gives out before the match to little children. There was a little girl dressed like Spiderman in the crowd, which seemed oddly out of place. Emma got new, more serious music and no longer dances or even teases the pull up to get in the ring. This match was not bad. Not good, but certainly better than the last time these two had a one on one match. Emma won with the Emma Lock.

After the match, Dana Brooke ran in for a 2-on-1 beat down until Charlotte walked in for the save. She seriously was in no hurry getting to the ring to make the save for her friend. Charlotte got a brief flurry on them, but got laid out, leaving our heel girls standing tall.

– Last week Baron Corbin was happy with his win, calling himself the only unstoppable force. Rhyno stampeded in and wanted a rematch.

– The Becky Lynch video aired. It’s a very good video but they really air it a lot, don’t they?

NXT Tag Team Champions Wesley Blake & Buddy Murphy (w/Alexa Bliss) defeated Mike Wallace & Elias Sampson

Blake and Murphy must have been having flashbacks to 5 months ago when they were the nameless, faceless jobbers. It is so weird to see teeny tiny, pixie-like Alexa Bliss as a heel. The champs got the heat on Wallace, who looked pretty good. His offense is crisp, his selling is good and this may be the start of something for him. Sampson has been used a few times and isn’t bad himself. The champs won with their running vertical suplex/frog splash combo. The fans chanted for Enzo and Colin to no avail. Alexa and her boys cut a promo after. Alexa pointed out that Staten Island is a garbage dump and next week when the girls wrestle she is sending Carmella back to the garbage dump.

Finn Balor pinned Tye Dillinger

Finn’s entrance seemed to be longer than the match itself. Dillinger got to get in a little bit of offense and mocked Finn while doing so. However the #1 Contender won again with the Coup De Grace. I hate that name.

– Earlier today Jason Jordan said he has a game plan and has found the perfect partner. In walked Chad Gable, who bragged about being a wrestling champion and now has a towel with his name on it. Jordan said he already has a partner.

NXT Champion Kevin Owens defeated Solomon Crowe

Owens is the champion and in one of the main events of the Elimination Chamber show. Solomon Crowe is just another guy in the NXT Universe. The end result was not in question. Owens started the match on the floor, drawing Crowe out, so he could beat Solomon up on all sides of the ring. Crowe got to punch Owens in the head a few times, but Kevin shoved him of the top rope, sending him crashing on the pretty black mats outside.

Owens just beat on Crowe and beat on Crowe and beat on Crowe some more. Crowe kept dragging himself to his feet and pulling himself into the ring to get over his toughness. Crowe got the briefest of brief comebacks before winning with the Pop Up Power Bomb.  Owens was about to give Crowe the Power Bomb on the ring apron when Samoa Joe came out dressed to wrestle. The crowd didn’t react like they did last week. Just like last week Owens left, but not before threatening Joe about what he will do to him. The show ended with Kevin warning him that he should have stayed in oblivion.

That does it for this week. What happens next week? Will Joe and Owens finally touch? Until then, make sure to say your vitamins and take your prayers!

Lucha Underground 5-27-15 results & TV report: Prince Puma vs. Hernandez title match

By Jeremy Peeples, WrestlingObserver.com

The Big News

Prince Puma retained his title against Hernandez and The Crew’s loss last week resulted in one of them being killed off by Dario’s Cueto’s “monster” brother. Mil Muertes also powerbombed Fenix through the ceiling of Cueto’s office and sent him to Hell in the process to win their death match.

Last week, Marty the Moth debuted against Prince Puma and did fairly well against the champion. Daivari also paid off Big Ryck to be his hired thug and take out Texano during their match to give him his first win in the company.Johnny Mundo had a sitdown interview with Vampiro and explained just why he tossed Alberto through Cueto’s office window. Speaking of that busted window, one of The Crew went flying through it during the show’s Crew vs. Havoc, Angelico, and Ivelisse trios title ladder match. It featured not only that, but a slew of other crazy things, including an Angelico dropkick to the ladder off the office. It was a pretty good show overall and yet anotherå easy watch for Lucha Underground. This week, Hernandez gets his title shot against Prince Puma and Mil Muertes returns from the grave to fight Fenix in a death match.

This week’s show begins with a recap of Mil Muertes’s life and demise in the casket match before being revived by Katrina. The history of problems between Prince Puma and Hernandez is run down to set up tonight’s match, while Mundo’s attack on Alberto is shown too. Black Lotus arrives at the Temple, but Chavo tells her that Dragon Azteca wants her to be protected. Chavo says his grandfather was there when her parents were killed, and the Guerreros hate the Cuetos as much as she does. Well, that’s a ridiculous thing to add to the story. Striker and Vamp run down tonight’s card while Varmp rocks out to the house band.

Mid-ring, Melissa Santos introduces Aerostar. Striker says that he lost the best of five series to Drago, but wound up still having a job. Mundo comes down, and Santos has a nice silver dress and matching tiara. Striker says the fans appreciate all of the luchadors.

Match 1 – Aerostar vs. Johnny Mundo

Mundo and Aerostar have a little tieup won by Mundo. Mundo grinds his boot into his face with him pinned against the ropes. Striker says that Mundo didn’t just shatter Cueto’s window, but he shattered the glass ceiling. Aero gets a top rope 619 and gets 2 off a springboard splash. Mundo gets him on the apron and stomps his head in. Aerostar prevents a dive by dropkicking the knee and hitting a flip dive. Aerostar gets his knee kicked in while coming into the ring and Mundo hits a neckbreaker over the knee and a Russian legsweep for 2.

Mundo hits an awesome raw liftup slam right out of the Brock or Swager playbook. Sidearm choke by Mundo is locked on, but Aero gets the ropes. Vamp talks about there being a drinking game for whenever he says “brother”, so he says it a bunch. Apron high kick from Aero leads to a springboard double knee strike for 2. Aero prevents the End of the World, so Mundo just beats him up with punches. Aero goes for a tornado DDT mid-ring, but Mundo hits a northern lights suplex into the buckle and gets the End of the World for the win. Mundo going for a more grounded, realistic style is far better for him.

After a break, Vampiro meets with Sexy Star who says she isn’t afraid of Pentagon Jr. We get a montage of arm snapping and Vamp asks if she’s still friends with Super Fly after unmasking him. Vamp says she let Fly get his arm snapped and she says she couldn’t get to him. Vamp says Cueto made Sexy vs. Pentagon Jr. in a submission match. She says she’s got a lot of submissions, and the Sexy Star vs. Pentagon Jr. rivalry will end next week.

Melissa Santos introduces the next match – Hernandez vs. Prince Puma, so the death match will be the main event. Hernandez has new velvet tights and a black top – each adorned with a white crucifix. Puma comes down slapping hands while Konnan greets him at the bottom of the steps.

Hernandez vs. Prince Puma – Lucha Underground Title Match

Puma uses his speed to evade Hernandez, but he eats a flapjack soon enough. Puma gets a sliding dropkick to the knee and a sliding kick to the head. He sends Hernandez to the floor and does his own strut against him. Outside-in shoulderblock is met with an armbar Codebreaker from Puma. Puma gets a darting corner crossbody and kicks him down, but only gets 2. A pair of uppercuts are met with a mid-ring bodyblock by Hernandez. Hernandez chops him in the corner before doing a surfboard with the ropes.

That only gets 2. Some shoulder blocks in the corner lead to a big leaping senton by Hernandez. Hernandez picks him up off a sunset flip attempt, but eats a kick. Cracker Jack sends the champ from one side of the ring to the other and only gets 2. Hernandez gets an over the shoulder backbreaker and a Train Wreck for 2. Puma kicks him off a corner charge, but eats a rock a bye baby powerbomb for 2.  A back elbow prevents a Border Toss, and Puma gets a chair while Konnan distracts Hernandez on the apron. Puma nails him with a chair and dashes into the ring. Puma gets a dive to the floor to prevent a countout.

An apron Border Toss hits Puma just like it did in the tag match where Hernandez officially turned on him. Hernandez can’t get a Border Toss into the balcony area, but Puma runs past him and hits a corkscrew moonsault off of it on the floor! Big dive hits, but only gets 2 while the 630 misses! Inverted torture rack drop gets 2 for Hernandez! Puma goes for a leaping move, but Hernandez plants him with a powerslam. Hernandez’s splash is met with a pair of knees and then a kneeling superkick and more kicks get a 2.9!

This is by far the best match Hernanez has ever had. Puma goes up, but gets taken down. Puma avoids a superplex and lands a series of punches and kicks. He finally sends Hernandez down and gets the 630 for the win! This greatly exceeded any expectation you could really have going in, and Hernandez worked really well with Puma.

Back in the Temple, Melissa Santos announces that the death match is next. Fenix comes out first in flame red and yellow with black trim. Fenix does his ropewalk and spins off into the ring. Mil Muertes and Katrina come down to the ring with three new enforcers. Muertes has traded in his blue-striped gear for black, which looks better.

Main Event – Fenix vs. Mil Muertes – Death Match

A Fenix dive is met with nothing, and Muertes just punches him down. Muertes chops him in the corner as we see the enforcers on the floor. Muertes powerslams Fenix down, but Fenix gets some kicks to the back. He knocks Fenix down as Vamp says Mil scares the shit out of him. Fenix crotches Muertes up top and eats a corner-to-corner kick. Fenix gets an Asai moonsault, but eats a shortarm lariat. Muertes grabs a chair and just clobbers Fenix’s head in. Well, that was needless. Muertes smashes Fenix’s head into the barricades, but Fenix fires back with kicks and dives off the top of them to take Mil down.

Fenix only gets 1 off of that. Fenix gets a series of kicks on the mat and standing, but he is hiptossed to the floor by Muertes. Muertes climbs up top and dives onto Fenix with a crossbody block. That was insane to see given how huge he is. Mil smashes him into the announce table and nails another chairshot to the head before breaking a land-speed record while running up the steps with Fenix in a fireman’s carry.

Muertes and Fenix fight on top of the office, and MUERTES POWERBOMBS HIM THROUGH THE CEILING OF DARIO CUETO’S OFFICE! The ref bangs on the door to be let in and Striker says we’ll go to a break. Wow. That was in-freaking-sane! After the break, we get the first replay in the history of the show and the goons break down the office door. They carry Fenix out much like Mil was carried out, but without the casket. Muertes hits the snap flatliner and scores the win via three count. So then a death match in LU is just a regular match with no DQ apparently. Katrina gives Fenix the lick of death while the heels stand tall. Cueto meets the Crew in his brother’s lair and he forces them to choose a member. They choose Castro, who is put against the bars and seemingly killed as blood splatters the faces of the other two members Well, that got dark pretty quickly. This was yet another really good episode of the show, with two must-watch matches.

WWE Raw ratings 5-25-2015

Raw on Memorial Day did 3.59 million viewers, which was identical to the Memorial Day number of 2014. 

It would be the second lowest number of the year, beating only the 5/4 show that did 3.57 million viewers.

All things considered, the number isn’t that bad, given the Warriors-Rockets game head-to-head with the last two hours did 8.28 million viewers.

The three hours were:

8 p.m. 3.79 million viewers

9 p.m. 3.59 million viewers

10 p.m. 3.42 million viewers

WED. UPDATE: Special ROH/TNA chaos edition

by David Bixenspan | [email protected]Follow @davidbix

TV notes for tonight:

NXT at 8:00 p.m. ET on WWE Network has Kevin Owens vs. Solomon Crowe in a non-title match, Bayley vs. Emma, Finn Balor vs. Tye Dillinger, and the team of Blake & Murphy vs. Elias Samson & Mike Rallis.

Lucha Underground at 8:00 p.m. ET on El Rey has Fenix vs. Mil Muertes in a Death Match, Prince Puma (c) vs. Hernandez for the Lucha Underground Title, Johnny Mundo vs. Aerostar, and Vampiro conducting a sit-down interview with Sexy Star. The official description from El Rey…is basically just what I told you without any colorful flourishes, so no reason to include it this week.

Tonight’s UFC programming on Fox Sports 1 is…

8:00 p.m. ET – New episode of UFC Tonight.

9:00 p.m. ET – Last week’s episode of The Ultimate Fighter.

10:00 p.m. ET – A new episode of The Ultimate Fighter titled “Fight Through the Pain” which is being described like so: American Top Team finds support through each other as the fighters look to get through the challenges presented to them, while the Blackzilians find that the competition does not always go through their way and must get through the turbulence. If you DVR the show andwant to catch the “TUF Talk” segments that open the subsequent episode of Fox Sports Live, either make a point to record that show or pad your DVR recording by half an hour.

**** 

The newest issue of Figure Four Weekly is up on the site for subscribers (subscribe here) with a detailed look at the history of popular music being used in pro wrestling, including:

* Who actually did the first pro wrestling music video?

* The role of popular songs gtting major acts over.

* What made the use of music in ECW so special.

* How “real” songs make wrestlers stand out in a sea of in-house productions.

And much more. Plus, as always, we have  all of the usual reviews and international news.

Also, now available for the first time on Kindle (meaning Kindle devices and anything with the Kindle app) is Fall Guys, the seminal 1937 book that has been described as being like the 1930s version of the Wrestling Observer. It was surprisingly not on Kindle already, so we put together a nice version with a full table of contents w/ chapter marks, proper formatting on everything, etc. Right now it’s available from the AmericanCanadian, and Australian Amazon/Kindle stores OR you can also buy it from anywhere in the world on PayHip, who will provide you with both Kindle and ePub (every other e-reader) format files, and you can either sideload them to your device or have them email it to your Kindle. 

**** 

The new issue of the Wrestling Observer is among the most talked about of the year, with a detailed lead story on the plight of every key non-WWE promotion, as well as details of TNA’s future with Destination America, ROH viewership and more, a detailed look at how MMA is going to be changing with far more serious repercussions for drug test failures and the story behind the changes, a look at Elimination Chamber, a rundown of Payback, a detailed update NXT with coverage of its Northeast tour, and of the ROH/New Japan tour.  We also look at the Urijah Faber vs. Frankie Edgar show and the death of Corey Hill.

The new issue is up on the site here.

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The Wrestling Observer ranges weekly from 35,000 to 50,000 words covering pro wrestling and MMA internationally. Each issue has coverage and analysis of all the major news, plus every issue breaks major news stories before the Internet sties and has the most complete look at the pro wrestling and MMA business anywhere, plus history pieces available nowhere else.

The lead story looks at the battle for the No. 2 spot in American pro wrestling.  We look at ROH, TNA, GFW and Lucha Underground, as well as how WWE may have created the real No. 2.  We look at where things stand with all the groups, both in going forward, if they even can go forward, the TV situation with everyone, tons of changes in TNA television with the move to Wednesday. 

We also look at the background of the changes in drug testing penalties in Nevada, what it means for the sport, how the business will change for many, the realities of drug testing with these penalties, injury rates, careers ending earlier, the Wanderlei Silva case, the marijuana threshold and far more.

We also have coverage of the Elimination Chamber lineup, questions regarding the show, business for Payback and match-by-match coverage of the show with star ratings and poll results.

We also look at the attempt to make NXT a third WWE touring brand.  We look at the plans for the next few years for the brand, ideas Paul Levesque talked about, long-term plans for shows in and out of Florida, business notes from the Philadelphia and Albany shows and full coverage of all three nights.

We also look at the last three nights of the ROH/New Japan tour with shows in Philadelphia and Toronto, with notes on the business and iPPV, as well as when ROH is trying to cut a deal to bring New Japan talent back. 

We also look at the update on the Steve Austin/WWE relationship and some podcast notes, Update on injuries to key talent and how some of them happened, promotions, Ronda Rousey talks a WWE return, Vince McMahon on WrestleMania, What WWE performer has ESPN and FOX wanting them, Notes on how this season’s Tough Enough will work, view on women in WWE going forward, Samoa Joe in WWE, WWE Studios looking to make major moves, what WWE star is in the biggest grossing movie of the weekend, more on the box office for Dwayne Johnson’s latest movie, ABC airing a piece on WWE and Finn Balor talks NXT.

We also look at the next group of wrestlers getting WWE tryouts, what group in WWE is history, what person from another sport was a guest trainer last week, and a former MMA fighter signs with WWE.  We’ve also got business notes for all the weekend WWE shows and highlights of the events.

We’ve also got full coverage of UFC’s morning show from The Philippines, including the retirement of Mark Munoz, Urijah Faber vs. Frankie Edgar and business notes from the show.

We also have a story on the death of former UFC fighter Corey Hill, as well as one of the worst injuries in UFC history, why people thought he had championship potential and what happened.

We’ve also got notes on AAA’s big show of he weekend, Verano de Escandalo, with many of the stars of Lucha Underground, as well as Rey Mysterio Jr.

The Observer is the world’s most detailed weekly pro wrestling publication, in its 32nd year of publication, and is read by the biggest names in the pro wrestling, industry, MMA industry, sports world and on Wall Street.

We also have our regular features such as the most complete look at ratings, plus results of the major house show events each week in pro wrestling and MMA, and complete inside rundowns of all the TV shows.

Also in this week’s issue:

–One of biggest stars in Mexico under a police investigation and has been pulled from bookings

–Full details on how this went down

–Octagon first Arena Mexico appearance

–Big tournament coming up

–New Japan star headed to CMLL

–Huge head-to-head battle on Sunday with loaded shows a few miles from each other

–Lineup for the AAA World Cup tournament

–Notes on this week’s iPPV of World Cup

–King of Gate tournament coming up to this finals this week

–One of the greatest pro wrestling stars of the 70s returns to Japan at the end of the month

–A look at all the New Japan Super Juniors shows of the week and complete New Japan World lineup of multiple shows

–Update on health of one of 80s biggest names

–More details on Global Force Wrestling including lineups for the first four shows

–Who are newcomers that they have added

–Who was pulled from the promotion

–An update on Scott Hall

–Update on Bill Goldberg and his appearance on a pro wrestling event

–Huge fund raiser to commemorate regional wrestling from the 70s with tons of area stars involved

–Notes on ROH Final Battle

–More on ROH signing of Moose

–Who else had made a play for him

–Main events for the next few ROH shows

–A look at ROH television over the next month

–Why this week’s first-run Impact show didn’t air in the U.S.

–A look at the Impact schedule and more on the time slot change

–TNA’s U.K. tour notes

–More on Billy Corgan in TNA

–Dixie Carter talks to Steve Austin, fact vs. fiction

–TNA loses anther time slot

–A look at this coming week’s UFC show

–Lots of UFC card changes and why

–UFC debuts in South Korea in the fall

–Who are the biggest stars from there

–Will UFC’s books be made public due to lawsuit

–UFC expected to sign WSOF champion

–A look at all the activities in July in conjunction with UFC in Las Vegas and Fight Week

–Lots of new UFC fights

–A look at Bellator’s last show and next show

–Former Pride star put in jail

If you are a new subscriber ordering 24 or more issues, you can get one free classic issue of your choice sent to you today.  With a 40 issue subscription, you can get two free classic issues sent to you today.

New subscribers ordering 24 or 40 issues have to let us know what major stories of the past 11 years you are most interested in and we’ll send the issue with the best coverage of that story. We’ve got coverage of every major PPV event and world wide spectacular, every major star switching promotions, histories of companies like FMW, Rings and New Japan, retirement and obit issues of every major star who fits into those descriptions over the past 11 years, as well as our biggest issue every year, the annual awards issue, and our most controversial issue of every year, the Hall of Fame issue.

Our most requested issues in our history are:

*November 17, 1997 (full details of everything leading to the most famous wrestling match finish of modern times at the Survivor Series plus a history of in-ring double-crosses)

*December 21, 1998 (the complete Vince McMahon-Bret Hart conversation right before the Survivor Series match so you’ll know exactly what was said–the conversation played in edited form both on the inaugural broadcast of Confidential as well as in Wrestling with Shadows, but everything that was said between the two about the match that was going to take place that same night)

*August 1, 1994 (the most detailed coverage anywhere of the Vince McMahon steroid trial, an issue praised in numerous newspaper article and Sex, Lies and Headlocks)

*March 26, 2001 (death of WCW and history of pro wrestling on the Turner networks)a

*October 22, 2001 (why the adult audience has left pro wrestling in such great numbers and what needed to have been done to save them)

*July 8, 1991 (Ric Flair leaves WCW as world champion/Zahorian steroid trial)

*February 8, 1993 (the life and times of Andre the Giant)

*May 13, 2002 (the life story of the most incredible pro wrestling career ever, a look at Lou Thesz, in one of the largest issues of our history)

*January 27, 2003 (part one of the two-part series covering the career and life of The Sheik)

*February 3, 2003 (Part two on The Sheik including thoughts from people who worked with him and where he stands historically)

*March 24, 2003 (history of the WWWF title, inside behind the Sammartino, Backlund and Backlund era)

*April 21, 2003 (history of WWF continues with the expansion nationally, the death of the regional territories and the rise of Hulk Hogan)

*May 12, 2003 (The life and death of Elizabeth and the rise of fall of Lex Luger)

*June 9, 2003 (Part 1 of history of WWF vs. WCW wars and what many say was the greatest year in U.S. wrestling; plus a look at Fred Blassie)

*June 16, 2003 (Freddie Blassie through the eyes of his biggest rivals and friends)

*July 28, 2003 (Part 2 of the history of the WWF vs. WCW war and the plans to make new superstars in the early 90s, what happened, and the night where the three biggest wrestling companies in the world combined for a joint show and what happened)

*August 25, 2003 (2003 Hall of Fame issue with huge profiles on the controversial career of Shawn Michaels, Chris Benoit as well as historical features on Earl Caddock and Francisco Flores)

*September 22, 2003 (Part 3 of the history of the WWF vs WCW war with the seeds that caused the collapse of the industry in the 90s, Zahorian trial, Gulf War controversy, Flair leaves WCW while holding world title and much more)

*October 27, 2003 (The fascinating life of Stu Hart plus the story of Road Warrior Hawk)

*January 19, 2004 (2003 Awards issue)

*February 2, 2004 (History of Toronto wrestling, Jack Tunney life story, Royal Rumble and Battle Royal history)

*February 23, 2004 (History of Guerrero family with Eddy’s win over Brock Lesnar)

*March 1, 2004 (History of WWF continues with the period that brought the company down in early 1992, the mistakes, the real stories and how the business changed)

*March 8, 2004 (History of Wrestlemania, its greatest matches and best and worst shows as voted both by wrestlers and non-wrestlers and Wrestlemania history books)

*July 5, 2004 (A look behind the scenes and Ric Flair’s book and his background with Eric Bischoff and Hulk Hogan)

*July 12, 2004 (A look at more on Ric Flair’s book and his comments on Bruno Sammartino, Bret Hart and Mick Foley)

*August 16, 2004 (History of the Olympians in pro wrestling)

*August 23, 2004 (2004 Hall of Fame issue and biggest issue of the year with huge profiles on Kazushi Sakuraba, Undertaker, Bob Backlund, Masahiro Chono, Ultimo Dragon, Kurt Angle and Tarzan Lopez–this counts as one issue if you are asking for a free issue, but ordered separately, due to size, is $6 in North America and $7 overseas)

*October 4, 2004 (the life and times of Big Bossman; as well as details of the life and times of one of the most influential men world wide in pro wrestling history, Jim Barnett)

*November 15, 2004 (the full story of what happened between Kurt Angle and Daniel Puder, plus coverage of the most important week in the history of TNA)

*January 24, 2005 (2004 Awards issue, Rock and WWE part company)

*March 14, 2005 (the 50 biggest money players in the history of WWF and a look at their Hall of Fame)

*May 9, 2005 (the life and times of Chris Candido)

*June 20, 2005 (The full story behind Paul Heyman and the death of ECW, as well as coverage of One Night Stand, Hardcore Homecoming and behind the scenes of both shows)

*July 18, 2005 (death of Shinya Hashimoto and his records with a look at the fall of New Japan, the Matt Hardy angle, tons of WWE firings, Cornette firing in detail as well as problems of a WWE developmental territory in our biggest news issue of the year which is a double-sized issue and would be $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

*August 24, 2005 (2005 Hall of Fame issue with career profiles of Paul Heyman, HHH and Freebirds plus debut of MMA Hall of Fame)

*September 12, 2005 (History of Mid South Wrestling)

*October 10, 2005 (Life and Times of the Ultimate Warrior)

*November 21, 2005 (Life and Times of Eddy Guerrero and Crusher, double issue $6 on its own and $7 overseas)

*December 5, 2005 (The Eddy Guerrero special issue, double issue $6 on its own, $7 overseas)

*January 9, 2006 (The life and times of Superstar Billy Graham, plus New Year’s Eve 2005 coverage)

*January 16, 2006 (2005 Awards double issue, $6 or $7 overseas)

*April 3, 2006 (Story of Ann Calvello and the history of Roller Derby–many called this the best issue of the Observer ever)

*April 10, 2006 (Behind the scenes at the 2006 Wrestlemania/Hall of Fame week)

*July 24, 2006 (The History of the Von Erichs and World Class Championship Wrestling–the most unreal story ever in wrestling)

*September 4, 2006 (The Rise and Fall of Kurt Angle; 2006 Hall of Fame inductions of Eddie Guerrero, Paul Bowser, Masakatsu Funaki, Aja Kong and Hiroshi Hase including tons of wrestling history around the world from the 20s through the 60s, the evolution of working to not working in Japan, and a look at Guerrero in hindsight, double issue $6 or $7 overseas)

*October 9, 2006 (A look back nine years later at the life and legacy of Brian Pillman with tons of inside information about what made him tick as his real objectives)

*November 15, 2006 (History of WCW part one, Eric Bischoff’s book and how the industry was changed forever)

*November 20, 2006 (History of WCW part two, Why Jim Ross left WCW, How Bischoff changed the company, signing of Hulk Hogan, Beginning of Nitro, Jesse Ventura, Brian Pillman, Chris Jericho and signing Wrestlemania planned celebrity away)

*November 27, 2006 (History of WCW part three, When Bischoff challenged McMahon to fight; Truth and fiction around Bret Hart signing with WCW and why it didn’t click)

*December 6, 2006 (details behind Pride’s offers to sell promotion and Part four of History of WCW part four, Hogan-Goldberg match and why there was no rematch, WCW loses NBC network deal in 1999 and the real reasons the company fell apart)

*January 22, 2007 (2006 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

*February 14, 2007 (Life and Times of Bam Bigelow)

*March 5, 2007 (WWE begins plans that will change the business)

*March 12, 2007 (Life and Times of Mike Awesome)

*March 19, 2007 (Life and Times of Ernie Ladd)

*April 4, 2007 (Life and Times of Badnews Allen Coage–which many are calling one of the best issues in history)

*July 2, 2007 (Part one of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

*July 5, 2007 (Part two of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

*July 10, 2007 (Part three of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

*July 19, 2007 (Part four of the Benoit double murder-suicide)

*July 23, 2007 (Part five of Benoit double murder-suicide)

*July 25, 2007 (Part six of Benoit double murder-suicide)

*August 15, 2007 (The legend of the God of Japanese wrestling and his influence on MMA, Karl Gotch)

*October 15 (2007 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas including inductions of The Rock, Tom Packs and the original Strangler Lewis)

*November 12, 2007 (Life and times of Fabulous Moolah and history of U.S. women’s wrestling) .

*December 31, 2007 (History of Ric Flair and the heyday of wrestling at the Greensboro Coliseum)

*January 21, 2008 (2007 Awards issue, double issue $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

*March 17, 2008 (Life and times of Johnny Weaver)

*March 24, 2008 (Life and times of Gary Hart)

*April 10, 2008 (Farewell to Ric Flair; My thoughts, Shawn Michaels talks of Flair’s meaning to him; Hall of Fame; Wrestlemania double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas)

*August 11, 2008 (Ric Flair leaves WWE; Updated history of pro wrestlers and MMA fighters who went to the Olympics)

* September 8, 2008 (2008 Hall of Fame double issue, $7 on its own, $8 overseas; part one of Killer Kowalski bio)

* September 15, 2008 (Life and Times of Evan Tanner)

* September 22, 2008 (The amazing career of Killer Kowalski, one of our most in-depth bios)

You can also order any of these issues on their own for $4 in North America or $5 overseas.

We now have available personally autographed copies of Tributes II, our latest book, as well as a DVD that comes with it talking more about the subjects in the book. The book covers the life stories of Lou Thesz, Wahoo McDaniel, Elizabeth, Fred Blassie, Road Warrior Hawk, Andre the Giant, Curt Hennig, Johnny Valentine, Davey Boy Smith, Terry Gordy, Owen Hart, Stu Hart, Gorilla Monsoon, The Sheik and Tim Woods..

To get all of those biographies as back issues of the Observer would be a $60 value today. This is a collection of some of the best Observer articles of the past several years in a hardcover, full-color format that is 239 pages. There is also a foreword by Bret Hart. The book price is $12.95 plus $3.50 for shipping costs in the U.S., $20 for shipping costs to Canada and $25 for shipping costs outside North America. You can order the book the same way you order the newsletter.

****

Wednesday Daily Update

— As noted earlier, Destination America announced on Twitter that Ring of Honor debuts on the network a week from tonight at 8:00 p.m.—meaning they’re going to be TNA’s lead-in for Impact Wrestling in its new time slot. And, well, that’s about all we know right now in terms of the really important, substantive details. On the TNA side, Dixie Carter is holding a conference call for employees and talent today, and we’ll have breaking news audio for subscribers from Dave and Bryan when the dust clears from the call.

The press release frames it as ROH increasing its footprint (specifically mentioning New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, and Los Angeles) outside of the Sinclair-owned stations and their handful of syndication partners. Also per the press release, the first episode will feature the Briscoes vs. the House of Truth in the main event plus Moose vs. BJ Whitmer and a NJPW vs. ROH match.

— MVP was tweeting about the news, saying none of the TNA talent received advanc notice, sarcastically called the move “classy,” tweeted his booking contact information, and promised to retire within a few years. But morale is great!

— For however much you may want to fault TNA for not having exclusivity, remember that United Talent Agency negotiated the deal for them.

— Rockstar Spud was scheduled to do a media day to promote this week’s episode of Impact, but it was cancelled at the last minute.

— Figures Toy Company announced that The Young Bucks will be coming to the new ROH action figure line.

— To recap, in the last day or so, ROH has announced:

* Their action figure of pushed WWE/NXT talent Kevin Owens, beating WWE to the market.

* Pushed NXT talent with his own t-shirt Samoa Joe working the June TV taping in New York.

* A TV deal with Destination America as TNA’s lead-in.

Pure chaos in every direction.

ESPN.com and Five Thirty Eight have a new documentary short about Jesse Ventura being elected Governor of Minnsota in 1998.

Jim Ross’s latest blog post is up with lots of good stuff on everything from TNA to the ROH action figures…well, at least with how everything stood yesterday.

Myself and Dylan Hales have a new edition of The Trade Marks podcast talking to Kevin Kleinrock about the rise and fall of DVDs as a viable revenue stream in pro wrestling. Dylan and I are also on the latest episode of Kris Zellner’s Exile on Badstreet podcast talking about the last three months of 1988 in Jim Crockett Promotions/WCW.

Breaking News: Ring Of Honor coming to Destination America (updated w/matches)

By Josh Nason, WrestlingObserver.com

In the latest twist in the Destination America/pro wrestling story, the network announced via Twitter Wednesday that Ring Of Honor will be airing on their airwaves starting Wednesday, June 3rd at 8 PM EST. The agreement is for 26 weeks, according to a press release ROH sent out.

The debut will feature the Briscoe Brothers vs. the House Of Truth, Moose vs. BJ Whitmer, and ‘athletes from New Japan Pro Wrestling’ against ROH talent which will be matches from the recent Global Wars Night 2 TV taping in Toronto, Canada.

This news follows last week’s WrestlingObserver.com exclusive where Dave Meltzer revealed that the network is cancelling TNA Impact Wrestling this September. Just 12 days ago, Destination America announced that TNA Impact is moving to Wednesdays at 9 PM EST starting on June 3rd. ROH retweeted the Destination America tweet, essentially validating the news.

The following is the official release:

(Silver Spring, Md.) –Destination America announced today that it has signed a national broadcast deal with professional wrestling league RING OF HONOR, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., bringing one of the most respected wrestling organizations to the only network dedicated to all-American entertainment. Destination America is now the one-two-punch to professional wrestling, adding RING OF HONOR (ROH) to its line-up after launching IMPACT WRESTLING in early 2015. RING OF HONOR has been delivering top wrestling matches for ten years with captivating hard-hitting stars such as Jay & Mark Briscoe, AJ Styles, Samoa Joe, The Young Bucks, Maria Kanellis, Adam Cole and Jay Lethal. Destination America will pack on the action beginning Wednesday June 3 with the series premiere of RING OF HONOR at 8/7c leading into brand new premieres of IMPACT WRESTLING at 9/8c.

“With the electric and intense matches that RING OF HONOR provides, Destination America is the network for fans to get an entire evening of jaw-dropping entertainment on Wednesday nights,” said Marc Etkind, general manager of Destination America. “RING OF HONOR showcases tenacity, athleticism and passion and it serves as the place where America’s favorite wrestling stars are born.”

“We are very excited to be partnering with Destination America for the broader distribution of the ROH programming,” commented Joe Koff, Chief Operating Officer – Ring of Honor Wrestling. “ROH will now reach an additional 57 million households including those in New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia and other large cities where Ring of Honor is not currently airing. ROH has a loyal fan base and is one of the fastest growing major wrestling franchises in the country. With this great partnership with Destination America, we can continue to expand our footprint and reach while producing entertaining, original content and continuing to provide wrestling fans some of the best wrestling content available.”

RING OF HONOR will premiere on Wednesday, June 3 leading into IMPACT WRESTLING, making Destination America the home for wrestling every Wednesday evening. The first match will feature the Briscoe Brothers, Mark and Jay, as they face off with the House of Truth in the main event. Also catch athletes of New Japan Pro Wrestling battle it out with the RING OF HONOR stars and follow former NFL lineman Moose compete against BJ Whitmer.

On this day in pro wrestling history (May 27): Owen Hart wins IWGP gold, Jimmy Snuka wins WCCW belt

By Brian Hoops, WrestlingObserver.com

1887 – In Minneapolis, Minnesota; William Muldoon failed to throw Evan Lewis twice in 60:00 (Muldoon won the first fall in 47:00, then gave up the match)

1956 – Doug and Red Donovan defeated Herb Freeman & Larry Chene for the Pacific Northwest Tag Team Title.

1957 – Red Bastien ends the second NWA Texas Junior Heavyweight Title reign of Rito Romero in Fort Worth, Texas.

1959 – Eddie & Dr. Jerry Graham defeated Mark Lewin & Don Curtis for the WWWF Tag Team Title in Bridgeport, Connecticut.

1960 – Thor Hagen defeated Lee Henning to win the NWA Central States Heavyweight Title in St. Joseph, Missouri.

1965 – In Kansas City, Kansas; The Mongolian Stomper beat Johnny Valentine, Bob Geigel and Dutch Savage beat Doug Gilbert and Ron Reed, Sonny Myers beat Buddy Johnson and the Missouri Mauler beat Steve Bolus.

1965 – In Minneapolis, Minnesota; The Crusher beat Pampero Firpo in a cage match. Also on the card, Verne Gagne & Reggie Parks beat AWA Tag Team Champions Larry Hennig & Harley Race by DQ, Chris Markoff beat Eddie Sharkey and Rene Goulet went to a draw with Tiny Mills.

1966 – In Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Verne Gagne & Wilbur Snyder beat AWA Tag Team Champions Larry Hennig & Harley Race. However, the decision was later reversed as the wrong man was pinned. Also on the card, The Crusher beat Chris Markoff and Ernie Ladd beat Moose Cholak.

1967 – Billy and Jimmy Hines won the Mid-America version of the NWA World Tag Team Title by defeating The Blue Infernos in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

1968 – Ken Lucas & Dennis Hall defeated Don Carson & The Red Shadow for the Mid-America version of the NWA Southern Tag Team Title in Memphis, Tennessee.

1971 – At Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kansas; Steve Bolus & The Viking defeated Baron Von Raschke & Benny Ramirez, Rufus R. Jones defeated The Great Sakaguchi by count out, Harley Race defeated Danny Little Bear in three falls and Buddy Austin & Bob Orton defeated The Stomper & Bob Geigel.

1974 – Mr. X (Guy Mitchell) & The Brute defeated Leo Madril & Dan Kroffat to win the Vancouver version of the NWA Canadian Tag Team Title in Vancouver, British Columbia.

1976 – Jackie West & Yukari Lynch defeated The Beauty Pair (Jackie Sato & Maki Ueda) for the World Women’s Wrestling Association World Tag Team Title in Kawasaki, Japan.

1977 – Jimmy Snuka defeated El Gran Goliath in Houston, Texas for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Title.

1978 – Carlos Colon & Chief Thunder Cloud defeated The Hollywood Blondes (Jack Evans & Larry Sharpe) for the WWC North American Tag Team Title in Bayamon, Puerto Rico

1985 – At the Forum in Montreal; Jos Leduc & Rick Martel beat Road Warrior Animal & Paul Ellering via dq, Abdullah the Butcher beat King Tonga, Dino Bravo beat Richard Charland and Jacques Rougeau, Jr. beat Jim Garvin via dq.

1988 – Owen Hart defeated Hiroshi Hase in Sendai, Japan to win the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Title.

1989 – Steve Strong defeated Carlos Colon to win the WWC Universal Heavyweight Title in Caguas, Puerto Rico

1990 – Villano III defeated Sangre Chicana for the WWF World Light Heavyweight Title in Naucalpan, Mexico.

1997 – Kenta Kobashi & Johnny Ace defeated Toshiaki Kawada & Akira Taue to win the AJPW Unified World Tag Team Title in Sapporo, Japan

2001 – D’Lo Brown & Shane defeated The Starr Corporation (Chicky Starr & Victor the Bodyguard) and Los Boricuas (Miguel Perez Jr. & Jesus Castillo, Jr.) for the IWA World Tag Team Title in Puerto Rico

2006 – 1 Pro Wrestling holds “Know Your Enemy: Night 2” in Doncaster, England. Jonny Storm and Jody Fleisch defeated A.J. Styles and Christopher Daniels to become the first-ever 1PW Tag Team Champions. Also, Steve Corino defeated champion Abyss and Christian Cage in a three-way match to win the 1PW World Heavyweight Title.

WWE: Rusev injured during Smackdown tapings

Rusev was legitimately injured last night in his match with Ryback at the WWE Samckdown tapings in Wilkes-Barre, PA. 

He was limping badly due to what appeared to be an ankle injury, but that is not confirmed. He needed medical help after finishing his match and was helped out during what was likely a commercial break for the show that airs in Canada Wednesday and in the U.S. on Thursday.

He was in a wheelchair with his leg in a cast later in the night. 

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors Yamagata report 5-26-15: Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Beretta

By Bryan Rose, WrestlingObserver.com

Day 4 of the Best of the Super Juniors tournament took place early Tuesday morning in Yamagata. Here is a full report of the matches as well as the current standings.

Gedo vs. Barbaro Cavernario

Cavernario won after Gedo submitted with the la cavernia. This was pretty fun. Gedo controlled the first portion of the match, then Cavernario came back, hitting his big turnbuckle suicide dive. He aimed to go for his big splash off the top rope to the floor, but Gedo moved out of the way. He game back after posting Cavernario and looked to get the win after a superkick and a Gedo clutch attempt. Cavernario blocked it, however, and then submitted him. Crowd was into it and helped it become a pretty good match, though they were rooting for Gedo the whole time.

Kushida vs. David Finlay

Basic match with Kushida winning with the hoverboard lock. Finlay controlled him early, but Kushida made a comeback on the ropes. Finlay made one last comeback with a stiff looking European uppercut, but Kushida made the comeback once more and submitted him. Everything worked really well, but was just a match.

Nick Jackson vs. Rocky Romero

This was one of the longest matches so far on the tour. Pretty good match, however, as it was a lot back and forth between the two and they gel well. Jackson goaded him to punch him but Romero raked his eyes instead. He went for a sliced bread but Jackson tried to counter into a tombstone, then a rollup for a near fall. Romero made a comeback and pinned Jackson with a spinning tombstone.

Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Beretta

Taguchi tried his hip attacks early but Beretta laid him out and took him into the crowd to brawl, playing the heel in this match. Beretta worked on his hip (read: butt), but Taguchi made a comeback with his hip attacks. Beretta comes back with a belly to belly suplex off the top rope and hits a running knee strike for a nearfall. Taguchi comes back and hits the dodon for a nearfall, then gets the win with a sliding dropkick. This was fine, though Taguchi’s new gimmick turns a lot of his matches into goofy comedy.

Current Standings:

Block A:

Babaro Cavernario (4)

Gedo (4)

Kyle O’Reilly (4)

Ryusuke Taguchi (4)

Jushin Thunder Liger (2)

Beretta (2)

Chase Owens (0)

Yohei Komatsu (0)

Block B:

Tiger Mask IV (6)

Kushida (6)

Bobby Fish (4)

Nick Jackson (4)

Mascara Dorada (4)

Rocky Romero (4)

Alex Shelley (2) (Out of tournament due to injury)
David Finlay (0)

WWE Smackdown 5-28 spoilers: Roman Reigns & Dean Ambrose vs. Seth Rollins & Kane

From Scranton/Wilkes Barre, PA, airing Wednesday in Canada and Thursday in the U.S.:

– It opened with a Dean Ambrose interview. He talked about Roman Reigns helping him on Raw, brought up Justin Bieber once again and having to race to get back to the arena in time to sign the contract.

– Ambrose & Roman Reigns vs. WWE Champion Seth Rollins & Kane was announced as the special Groundhog Day main event, plus Naomi vs. Paige and Ryback vs. Rusev.

– Lucha Dragons b Tyson Kidd & Cesaro in a lumberjack mach with all the other teams as the lumberjacks. Hot crowd and great match. The New Day interference led to Sin Cara & Kalisto winning.

– R-Truth b King Barrett – Sheamus laid out R-Truth after the match with a Brogue Kick.  He also gave Barrett a Brogue kick.

– Lana did an interview saying she won’t be fooled by Rusev again.  She said she and Ziggler are just friends.  Rusev came out and started yelling at her.

– Ryback b Rusev via DQ for Rusev throwing him into the ringpost.  What is this, 1972 AWA?

– Paige b Naomi.

– Michael Cole interviewed Kevin Owens.  He said he may have been on WWE TV for two weeks but he’s been wrestling for 15 years all over the world.  They showed clips of Owens hurting Sami Zayn and he said if he would do that to his best friend, imagine what he’d do to somenoe he doesn’t care about like John Cena.

– Roman Reigns & Dean Ambrose b Kane & WWE Champion Seth Rollins via DQ. Reigns had Rollins pinned when J&J Security interfered for the DQ.  The New Day came otu and attacked Ambrose.  Reigns did a dive over the top onto everyone. It ended with Kane chokeslamming Reigns and Rollins giving Ambrose a Pedigree to end the show.

WWF Tuesday Night Titans episode 22 review: Roddy Piper smashes Lou Albano in MSG, stage set for Hulk Hogan vs. Piper

Airdate: Feb. 15, 1985
Runtime: 41:22

Maybe it was Vince McMahon’s orange jacket or the new opening where Dr. D. David Schultz, Sgt. Slaughter and Ivan Putski were dropped in favor of Andre The Giant slapping Bobby “The Brain” Heenan, Capt. Lou Albano managing the U.S. Express, and The Junkyard Dog giving a power slam, but TNT felt fresh and new this week.

The show served as a lead-up to Monday’s “War to Settle the Score” in Madison Square Garden, where Hulk Hogan will face “Rowdy” Roddy Piper for the WWF championship.

I don’t know if this match was thrown together on the fly, or if MTV agreed to broadcast the show at the last-minute, but there was no mention of this huge angle the week before. Suddenly, Hogan is no longer goofing off training Hillbilly Jim and is not in a hot feud with Piper.

They mentioned the Monday show several times, without ever saying that it would air on MTV. Perhaps they weren’t allowed to mention a competing network. I guess they know wrestling fans are smart and would figure it out. The show opens with McMahon in a horrendous orange jacket.

We go to Madison Square Garden where Dick Clark is presenting an award to Cyndi Lauper and Capt. Lou Albano for their work on multiple sclerosis.

Albano enters the ring in a suit, followed by Piper in his blue wrestling trunks. Piper grabbed what appeared to be a framed gold record and proceeded to smash it over Albano’s head. It should be noted that Albano sold this like he was Shawn Michaels, falling flat on his back while swinging his arms back. This was awesome.

Lauper then jumped on Piper’s leg and Piper kicked her off of him, in a spot that deserves props considering that Lauper is not a wrestler. Heck even Ronda Rousey wouldn’t sell at WrestleMania.

Piper then body slammed David Wolff, who unlike Albano and Lauper, totally no-sold it. Piper actually struggled to pick Wolff up. Lauper’s boyfriend apparently didn’t know to jump in the air to help Piper because Piper’s slam was slightly better than Hogan’s of Andre at WrestleMania III. The segment had that “this could be real” heat since it involved mainstream celebrities.

Piper and his new bodyguard, Ace Cowboy Bob Orton, were the first official guests on the show. Piper said that a man of his stature needs a bodyguard. You never know, he said, when someone will take a shot at him, “even old suckers,” like Lord Alfred Hayes.

Piper then touched Hayes’ hand and said “you’re ghostly, man,” adding that he only had about two years left.

Piper then did what he did best — ramble on taking jabs at everyone. He told McMahon his voice was “high-pitched,” that MTV was “music to vomit by” and that he scared Dick Clark so badly that he would never be the same. Piper said that he’s a legend killer and that he wants to take Hogan’s title. They cut back and forth between Piper and taped interviews with Hogan and Mean Gene Okerlund, where Hogan was promising to destroy Piper.

Throughout the segment, Piper was infatuated with his chest hair. Every time the camera cut back to him, he lost a button, displaying more and more of his chest hair.

He asked McMahon if he had hair on his chest. He then said Hogan and Wolff don’t have any hair on their chest, but that Cyndi Lauper does.

We go to the ring and see Piper and Orton vs. “Superfly” Snuka and The Tonga Kid. Snuka is suddenly back after disappearing for several months. The match is pretty much a brawl with Snuka hitting a high-cross body block on Piper, but Orton making the save. The referee called for a double disqualification.

Back in the TNT studios Piper is analyzing the match, with Orton standing behind him, when he starts asking “what stinks?” Piper sends Orton to investigate and when Orton returns he says that what stinks is that “Snuka and Albano” are in the building. Piper leaves the set, surprisingly without hitting anyone. In his two other TNT appearances he slapped Hayes and decked Albano. Cowboy Bob Orton leaves with him.

Capt. Lou Albano, who has now surpassed SD Jones as the man who has appeared the most on TNT, is the next guest. Albano is apparently now the manager of Barry Windham and Mike Rotundo, the U.S. Express, who are now the WWF tag team champions.

Albano literally turned overnight, going from a guy who was berating midgets and women at Paul Vachon’s December wedding, to Lauper’s No. 1 defender and spokesman for Multiple Sclerosis awareness. Albano promised not to yell and scream on the show, but he was very upset with Piper’s MSG antics. He said that Albano dislocated the third lumbar in Wolff’s back with the body slam.

Albano said Piper sent wrestling back 20 years with his assault on Lauper and Wolff. 

Snuka is not only back in the ring, but he’s back as a guest on TNT. McMahon says, “It’s an honor to have someone of your caliber on TNT.” He cuts to match with Snuka against a very average-looking Bobby Bass. Bass did the typical heel moves, trying to force Snuka into a handshake only to turn on him, but Snuka did not fall for it.

Instead Snuka dominated him with chops, and head butts and pinned him with a tremendous Superfly splash

McMahon seems desperate to push Snuka, saying “no one in professional wrestling can do what you do in the squared circle.” McMahon says that the fans get behind him more than any other WWF superstar. If that’s true, why is Hogan champ? Snuka refuses to comment on Piper, who several months prior hit him over the head with a coconut.

Snuka says he will do all of his talking in the ring.

The final guest this week is Wolff, who seems to enjoy being part of professional wrestling. Wolff said the awards presentation was meant to bring to very good industries together, but that Roddy Piper wiped it out.

“He did a horrible thing to her,” Wolff said of kicking Lauper. Wolf claimed that the slam was so hard that he could not walk for a couple of days because “the muscles on my back were badly bruised.” Wolff made a prediction before the show ended: “Hulk Hogan all the way. I think he is going to destroy this guy.”

McMahon thanked fans for watching and the wrestlers who appeared on the show, including Mr. Fuji and Jim “The Anvil” Neidhart, both of whom were not on the show, or who were cut off the WWE Network broadcast.