NXT WarGames preview: The end of the Black and Gold era?

Editor’s Note: The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the writer and not of our website.

Welcome, cats and kittens, to the new version of NXT: NXT 2.0.

Did you ever wonder what it would be like if NXT was just like every other WWE product? Would it still be fun? Would it still have great wrestling and compelling (if, at times, overwrought) stories? Or, would it be a place replete with manic Kevin Dunn camera cuts and very little of what you used to love? Folks, I have news. It is very, very much the latter. The things that are bad are seriously bad, but that’s because I am still comparing them to the NXT I fell in love with where the bad was still fun and it didn’t make you want to change the channel.

However, not everything is all doom and gloom. There are some notable standouts. If Carmelo Hayes and Trick Williams aren’t stars yet, just give it some time. Malcolm Bivens getting weekly screen time has almost made 2021 bearable. But the best thing to happen in this version of NXT is Young Steiner, aka Bron Breakker. What an absolute rocket this guy is. Going from never being on screen to multiple main events in such a short time is kind of staggering.

In the past, the people fast-tracked have come in with a ton of indie cred like the Finn Balor, Shinsuke Nakamura and Kevin Owens types. Bron has wrestled a grand total of 11 matches total on TV and is already this good. For someone to be this good while being this inexperienced is unprecedented. The sky is truly the limit for the big bad booty nephew.

Sunday night: some good and some bad! Never forget that even though life is pain and we continue to exist in a hellscape, soldier on, we must. And I will soldier through previewing this card.

It’s time for WWE NXT WarGames.

Women’s WarGames match: Raquel Gonzalez, Io Shirai, Cora Jade and Kay Lee Ray vs. Dakota Kai and Toxic Attraction (NXT Women’s Champion Mandy Rose, NXT Tag Team Champions Gigi Dolin and Jacy Jayne)

Rose rules so hard. She’s not the best in ring talent, but she is certainly not bad, regardless of what a large portion of the wrestling Twitter echo chamber would have you believe. She has the best V-trigger in the business and that is not up for discussion. Kenny Omega could never. I simply have no time for Rose slander, so miss me with it. She came in and added immediate credibility to Dolin and Jayne, and does not look out of place as the Women’s Champion.

The team of faces in this match really do transcend the term ‘thrown together.’ Is KLR someone I’m supposed to root for? Her greatness notwithstanding, but come on. Talk about going against someone’s natural alignment in Jade. What exactly is she supposed to be? Is carrying a small skateboard and being obsessed with CM Punk a personality? And then, there’s Gonzalez and Shirai.

Both WarGames matches feel rushed and disjointed which makes me sad. These matches are brutal for the wrestlers to go through and it’s a real bummer that all 20 people involved are going to put themselves through hell for something that means so little. Specifically, I am sad that Shirai is going to take more insane bumps for something that means this little. What a curious use of such an incredible talent.

Toxic Attraction is clearly being pushed as the main female group of NXT 2.0, so they get the win here.

Hair vs. hair match: Cameron Grimes vs. Duke Hudson

Why, exactly, are we doing this? Grimes, someone who got a butler gimmick over in roughly two weeks, can’t make this work. God help him because he’s doing his best, but he can’t work miracles. A hair vs. hair stipulation is especially dumb when only one person has long hair. Hudson (who is tall) has the hairstyle where you point to a picture of it on the wall of SuperCuts and say ‘Give me that.’

And why exactly are we leaping to something that usually blows off feuds that mean something? They certainly aren’t done after *checks notes* someone getting mad over a poker room or something? I don’t even know if that’s right and I truthfully do not care. This is so dumb that I’m done writing about it. Grimes wins, but who cares?

NXT Tag Team Champions Imperium (Fabian Aichner and Marcel Barthel) vs. Kyle O’Reilly and Von Wagner in a title match

NXT has become such an afterthought that I forgot Imperium were the champs. As I was putting this preview together, I was confused this wasn’t a triple threat. Who knew some embarrassing parents had so much stroke they could get MSK off TV? This is a reminder that the worst type of fan is all of them, especially me.

This match is just kind of weird. Why is it even happening? O’Reilly’s contract is up this month and Wagner is already getting airtime on SmackDown as Adam Pearce’s bodyguard. Does this really sound like a team that’s about to get strapped up? I assure you, it does not. Regardless of whatever happens in O’Reilly’s future, he has been one of the most memorable performers that never got an extended singles run at the top of the card. Kyle, I love you and I hope that whatever comes next is exactly what you want and need. Let me be your Doom Boy.

Imperium retains. Bye bye Kyle. 🙁

NXT Cruiserweight Champion Roderick Strong (w/ The Diamond Mine) vs. Joe Gacy (w/ Harland) in a title match

Malcolm Bivens, my god. Why are you so perfect? Somehow, some way, you have managed to bring Catch Point into WWE and bless you for that. Diamond Mine is such a good way to introduce some of the ‘”real athletes” that NXT is going to feature moving forward. The man formerly known as Big Stoke can handle the heavy mic work and get the group over without the in-ring talent having to worry about any of that. They can just go out, bust ass, and look good. It’s a wonderfully simple formula and shows the value of a real, actual manager. And there are very few managers as good as Malcolm Bivens.

As sure as I am about Bivens, I am really confused by Gacy. The gimmick is intentionally weird, but he’s doing his absolute best to get it over. His commitment certainly can’t be questioned, but I just don’t know if it’s any good. I don’t even know if it’s supposed to be good. I do know that it, most likely, is in service of getting Harland over. Before Harland was name-neutered by the fed, he had name recognition. People knew who he was and it was his name that got him signed. There were Brock Lesnar comparisons, pictures with Eva Marie, etc., etc., etc. There are plans for this guy and we probably can’t say the same about Rod Strong or Gacy.

Look, the Cruiserweight title hasn’t meant anything since it was brought back. This is probably a way for Roddy to drop the belt and have it be repurposed into something else. What that something is, I have no earthly idea. But it will be something. Gacy goes over and wins gold.

Men’s WarGames match: Team Black & Gold (NXT Champion Tommaso Ciampa, Johnny Gargano, Pete Dunne and LA Knight) vs. Team 2.0 (Bron Breakker, NXT North American Champion Carmelo Hayes, Grayson Waller and Tony D’Angelo) (w/ Trick Williams) 

A full eulogy requires far more time and far more Internet pixels than I have available. If this really the end of the Black & Gold era of NXT, let us remember it for the incredible moments it gave us, rather than its abrupt, undeserved end. Many times, I have written that I don’t have a romantic relationship with wrestling. It was never there for me like it has been for so many others. It was never a beacon in the darkness. But that doesn’t mean I don’t love it and NXT really ignited that love in me. I remember losing my shit when PAC got signed. I couldn’t believe it when Kevin Steen and El Generico went to the company. Guys I loved and only got to see on DVD or on demand were going to a place where I could see them all the time. How could I not love it?

NXT was the type of wrestling that resonates with me. The matches were great and meant something. WWE is a company that is fixated on creating moments and the moments NXT created are some of the most iconic in the last ten or so years of modern wrestling. Bayley and Sasha in Brooklyn. Shinsuke Nakamura’s Dallas debut. Finn Balor bringing out the demon. The return of WarGames. Asuka’s entire NXT run. DIY’s triumph over The Revival in Toronto and later, their destruction. I could go on forever, baby.

NXT was beautiful and nearly perfect and proved that there was a market for just good ass wrestling on American television. Would AEW exist without NXT proving there’s an appetite? Sure, probably. But NXT paved the way for an alternative. They showed what a real wrestling TV show could be, and they changed wrestling forever. It’s sad that the end is here, and it’s sad that it’s going out with something resembling a whimper, but eventually the end comes for us all.

2.0 beats 1.0. The end of the era is here.

AEW Full Gear preview: The coronation of a cowboy

Image: AEW

Editor’s Note: The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the writer and not of our website.

When was the last time you were compelled to watch WWE? Aside from the individual bright spots (the career best work of Roman Reigns and otherworldly talent of Bianca Belair, mainly), what is there that is truly can’t miss? When’s the last time you felt a buzz around WWE like there is with AEW right now? This entire card is filled with storylines and matches that will fill up Wrestling Twitter™ and its collective wrestling heart. That heart is everything.

The passion of AEW and the people who wrestle for them set it apart from WWE. Much like a Kraft single is a disgustingly delicious cheese product, WWE is a homogenized wrestling product. And much like a Kraft single, it has extremely limited uses. To say that they don’t make individual moments would be disingenuous. The moments are certainly here and there, but they exist in an emotionless vacuum — done so they can be included in video packages down the road.

There are no stakes and nothing of substance ever really happens. If it does, it’s usually immediately undone. It’s an old abandoned church with empty pews and empty aisles, haunted by the ghost of what used to fill it up. That’s why WWE leans on nostalgia acts so much. They remind us of what we used to feel, but also puts a spotlight on the fact that we don’t feel those things anymore.

The intentionality of AEW calling itself a professional wrestling company is notable. They lean into the emotion of pro wrestling by creating storylines and characters that are evocative. Everyone is created to make the audience feel something…or somethings…or many, many somethings. They aren’t afraid to tell layered stories and allow their audience to feel complex emotions. It is all done while not forgetting what they are at their heart: a pro wrestling company.

Nine matches. 3000 words. My parents are so proud. Let’s preview Saturday’s AEW Full Gear from Minneapolis, Minnesota:

Bryan Danielson vs. Miro | AEW World title eliminator tournament final

People ease into existence slowly; mere blips in the universe. They can be even slower trying to find their purpose. Finding meaning on this big blue marble is tough! It can be tough to figure out what your purpose in life is or what purpose even means. For people like Danielson, it is clear what that purpose is and clear what he was put on this earth to do.

Bryan Danielson was put on this earth to f*cking wrestle, man.

It’s impossible to imagine him doing anything else. And he wrestles better than anyone alive and maybe better than anyone who has ever even lived. Jon Moxley called Danielson the best wrestler of all time and who am I to correct him? Wrestling, like all art, is subjective. There is no “correct” way to rank wrestlers, no matter what the hellscape of r/squaredcircle will have you believe, but Danielson is on any short list for the best of all time.

Seeing an unshackled Danielson again is a sight to behold. At his peak, he was one of the most popular acts in wrestling history. Even then, he was holding back a bit in the ring. Just check his comments from this week about being on autopilot. He still had the restrictor plates on. Now? Those are gone and he’s free to be The American Dragon again. And what a treat that is for us and what a delight it is for him.

You can see just how much this means to him. He absolutely loves this. He lives for this. Danielson never has to work another day in his life, let alone get his chest turned an uncomfortable shade of purple. Yet here he is, willingly doing that because this is the only thing he wants to do. He’s been in AEW for barely a hiccup and he’s already put on two of the best matches of the year. I’m so happy he’s back, for however long he decides to do this.

In the beginning, there was Alexander Rusev: a greasy-haired Bulgarian who broke boards (?) with his opponent’s name on them (??). Now, there is only Miro, the best thing going in AEW. All of his promos are absolute must-sees. His matches are brutally frantic and his character work is spectacular. The fact that all of this was inside him isn’t surprising. What is surprising is that this was inside him and WWE thought the best use of him was to get cucked on live television — truly a breathtaking work of staggering genius.

Miro is angry about being forsaken by his god. He gets the chance to take his anger out on the real god of pro wrestling. Apologies to Kenny Omega and super not apologies to JBL and Moose, but that’s exactly what Bryan Danielson is. It kills me that he’s going to lose, but there is no one better to hand him an L. Bryan wins while Miro continues to look for his redemption.

CM Punk vs. Eddie Kingston

I was watching Rampage with a native New Yorker and told them that they might like Eddie because of how, you know, New York he is. When Eddie steamed down to the ring, they barely looked up from their phone to say “Ehh, I don’t like him.” But then he started to talk and everything changed. Eddie connects like no other. One promo is all he needs. One video package is all he needs. No one in pro wrestling makes you feel their words like he does. We can feel his passion and his desperation — the type of desperation that can drive people to do incredible things.

Eddie significantly outclasses most everyone on the microphone, so it’s just wonderful to see him paired up with someone on his level. Punk was gone for such a long time and his return has been mostly happy — so much so that I forgot what an engaged and on-edge Punk sounds like. It was never his ring work that made him the star he was and now once again seems to be. Rather, it was the character and mic work that took him to the stratosphere. Leave it to Eddie Kingston to let this version of Punk begin to show himself. Make no mistake that Punk is the heel here. Calling someone a bum to their face in an arena full of people is extremely good heeling, pal.

Beating Punk here wouldn’t just be Eddie’s signature moment in AEW, but arguably the most significant moment of his entire career. Eddie has made it clear that he doesn’t care if he wins or loses. He’s only concerned with hurting Punk. This normally would reek of a Punk roll-up win followed by a post-match beatdown or something like that, but the timing of the incredible Player’s Tribune article from earlier this week (if you haven’t read it please do and if you have read it, read it again) makes me wonder if it’s time to put the rocket on the King’s back?

The upset special: Eddie goes over.

Christian Cage and Jurassic Express (Jungle Boy & Luchasaurus) (w/ Marko Stunt) vs. SuperKliq (Adam Cole and The Young Bucks) in a falls count anywhere match

Is this the match where Luchasaurus finally, finally proves he’s more than just a guy in a dinosaur mask that doesn’t hit his cues? Dear readers, I assure you, it is not. If it’s not there now, it certainly never will be. I fully acknowledge the gimmick is not for me and the gimmick is really all he is. He’s hidden behind Jungle Boy and kept largely to “hot” tags, but the constant overexposure is confusing. He is significantly outclassed by the other five participants in this match and there is no hiding a talent gap like that on a PPV. The rest of them will be wrestling a PWG main event while he counts to three before completely whiffing on a spin kick.

Look, this is going to be fun and probably good but Cole has been in AEW for three months and has only really engaged with Jurassic Express. This is rapidly approaching Kofi Kingston/Dolph Ziggler levels of repetition here. Understanding that not everyone can do everything and that there is only so much room at the top of the card, this is still a story that has significantly overstayed its welcome. I’m done with it, you are done with it, we are all done with it. The SuperKliq wins. Can we please move on?

Cody and PAC vs. Andrade El Idolo and Malakai Black

Silly me thinking I could make it through an AEW preview without writing about yet another Cody match. I had this largely done and ready to file when I saw that, yes, this had been announced for Full Gear.

In a way, I am conflicted. On one hand, I’m never going to get really upset at something that gets PAC, Andrade and Malakai on the card. On the other hand, Cody. But, hey, whatever. Life remains a slow march into the sea, nothing matters, etc., etc., etc.

This would be one heck of a main event segment on Dynamite, but is clearly forced into this card. Hopefully, Andrade and Black get the win so Malakai can move past Cody, but the more likely case is Cody and PAC taking this to even the Cody and Black score at 2-2 so they can blow it off in a tiebreaker. Cool. Yay.

Darby Allin (w/ Sting) vs. MJF (w/ Wardlow)

These are two of the supposed four pillars of AEW. (Big LOLs by including Sammy Guevara in that group and the biggest possible LOLs to anyone who bought that egregiously bad t-shirt.) This match has had a simple, by the book build — something we all can appreciate. Not everything needs to be complex and layered. Easy stories can be good and this is as easy as it gets: rich, cocky guy from New York who doesn’t get along with a melancholic SK8R BOI from the Pacific Northwest. Not everything needs to be a reflection on confidence, self worth, and identity. Sometimes it can just be “I don’t like you.”

I used a lot of my internet pixels on the first two matches in the column, so this one stays short. Allin is a rare type of wrestler in that he’s never really hurt by his losses. The crowd still loves him and they kind of add to his character, in a way. That, combined with the fact that MJF would be a perfect foil for (spoiler alert) one of Page’s first title defenses, means he gets the win on Saturday and moves toward that.

The Inner Circle (Chris Jericho, Jake Hager, TNT Champion Sammy Guevara, Santana & Ortiz) vs. Men of the Year (Scorpio Sky & Ethan Page) and American Top Team (Junior dos Santos, Andrei Arlovski, Dan Lambert)

As an unbiased, national wrestling writer who is in no way on the AEW payroll, I must speak the truth. I speak for the trees, for the trees have no tongues and I must unburden myself, and burden you, my wonderful and beautiful readers, with my truth. The truth that The Inner Circle has long since served its purpose and is past its expiration date. I know that everyone in AEW needs to be in a faction, or associated with a group or whatever, but this particular one can’t end soon enough.

When AEW first started, this group was necessary. They existed to be the foil for any babyface on the roster and now, what are they doing? I’s either at best, doing nothing for the individual (Hager, Jericho) or, in the case of Santana & Ortiz, actively hampering them. They don’t get enough of a chance to shine which is a real shame. They are so much more than the requisite tag team in a mid-card faction.

Your mileage may vary on Lambert, but it would be an outright lie to say the man can’t work a microphone. I didn’t know who he was when he first spoke on AEW, but I immediately hated (and kind of loved) him. But wow, is this just not it. I don’t really understand the weird obsession wrestling seems to have with current and former MMA guys. What is the cross-section of the audience that both loves Jericho and Dos Santos? That is a genuine question and not sarcasm veiled in a rhetorical one. I truly don’t know and don’t get it. I love wrestling and have almost no interest in MMA so I just don’t understand why these guys get long TV segments every week, especially at the expense of *checks notes* literally anyone else.

This is the “Paul Wight Memorial catch up on your Twitter timeline special” match of the evening. Inner Circle wins.

AEW Tag Team Champions The Lucha Bros vs. FTR title match

When I say I can’t wait for this, my pals, I am excited. This is a level of excitement that is usually reserved for when I see the late night food arrive at a wedding reception. FTR calls themselves the greatest tag team of all time. I’m not going to argue the validity of that statement because doing so is nothing but shouting into the void. What I will use this space to do is to submit the following hot take to the academy: the Lucha Bros are the best big match tag team in the world. When the stakes are the highest, they show up. Of course they’ve been aided by having some incredible dance partners, but Fenix and Penta constantly put on historically memorable performances on the biggest stages.

Their affinity for the bright lights pairs them perfectly with FTR, a tag team that made their name wrestling in some of the best tag team matches in NXT history. Their no frills, grounded offense is the ideal complement to the Lucha Bros flying around the ring. No one is better at building heat for big spots like FTR and no one is better at delivering in those big spots than the Lucha Bros. Two great tastes that go great together. We really do love to see it.

FTR has all of the heat in this match and the Bros just won the belts. There’s no way they lose them Saturday.

AEW Women’s Champion Dr. Britt Baker, DMD vs. Tay Conti title match

A good thing: your champion is a bonafide star. A slightly less good thing: your champion is such a star that she dwarfs everyone else in her division. A significantly less good thing: your company hasn’t dedicated enough time to building up credible challengers. The simplest solution is to make more stars. And if it were me, I would simply put women on TV more and build those stars :). The top five “ranked” women in AEW are:

  1. Tay Conti: We’ll get to her
  2. Jade Cargill: Not quite there yet
  3. Thunder Rosa: Coming off of injury
  4. Nyla Rose: We know who and what she is and we’ve done this already
  5. Kris Statlander: Hasn’t had a non-Dark singles match since May

That is, in order, the no. 1 contender, someone who is not ready in the ring, someone coming off an injury, someone who isn’t quite good enough, and someone who hasn’t wrestled a non-Dark singles match since May. So, yeah. This is not a reflection of the talent on the roster, but a reflection of AEW not providing enough screen time to create a challenger with enough gravitas to take down the dentist. Lord knows that there has to be a 15-minute Inner Circle segment every week instead of building towards that, so I get it (I super don’t get it).

That aside, Conti is the complete package. She’s someone AEW should be throwing their full weight behind. She’s going to have this title one day. But that day is not coming this Saturday. It is emphatically NOT coming this Saturday because Baker is still doing it whenever she gets screen time. With a little more time and a little better build, Tay could do the damn thing. Oh well, maybe next time. Once again, Baker retains.

AEW World Champion Kenny Omega vs. Hangman Page title match

“You better hold on tight to it. You got ten days.”

With eleven words, Adam Page showed he’s ready for this. Talent-wise, he’s been ready. But character wise? That had been an entirely different story. Recapping his character arc since AEW’s inception has already been done elsewhere and been done far better than I ever could so I’m not going to do that here.

Hangman returned emboldened and complete with the most powerful strength there is: dad strength. This is a different Adam Page. One that is focused, and, more importantly, one that finally, finally believes in himself and believes he is worthy of top billing. He believes he is worthy of being champion. The confidence is oozing out of him. At no other point in his AEW career could he have pulled off the ten days line. He is fully actualized and fully realized.

Kenny is the only person he can take the title from. Not just based on their unique and intertwined history, but because he’s such a slime puppy. It’s a testament to his character work that someone who people usually are dying to cheer for are completely turned off. There will be no split crowd. There will be no “both these guys” chant. Kenny Omega has created the perfect foil for the returning hero to conquer. He has created the perfect environment to make Page’s ascension to the top as impactful as it can be.

One of the clips making the rounds on the world wide web this week is Bully Ray saying Hangman needs more heat on him before he gets strapped up. Miss me with that garbage. The egregiousness of that take can not be overstated. Should Daniel Bryan’s coronation not have come at WrestleMania because there was a chance it could be 3% bigger? Please, bro. The crowd comes unglued as soon as Hangman’s music hits and the only thing they want more than him winning the title is for Bully Ray’s antiquated takes to go away.

The title of this column gave it away, but here it is. For the annals of Wrestling Observer dot com history: Hangman Adam Page leaves Minneapolis as AEW World champion.

AEW All Out preview: CM Punk, CM Punk, CM Punk

Image: AEW

Editor’s Note: The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the writer and not of our website.

I should lead with the fact that this is a CM Punk article disguised as an All Out preview.

Now, I would never not do my duty to you, my beautiful readers, and neglect to preview the matches. But this show, and this past month of wrestling entirely, has been all about Punk’s return: a historic one and one the people wanted. Daniel Bryan’s return was great, but he never fully left. He was on TV, around wrestling, and was openly campaigning for the opportunity to come back. Edge’s return after 9 years was an incredible moment, but just like he moved on to other things, so did the fans.

The fans never moved on from Punk and who knows if they ever would. Seven years gone and WWE crowds still chanted his name, especially in Chicago.

There are other things happening on this All Out card but they all very clearly take a backseat to Punk’s return. His shadow looms large over the rest of the card and AEW smartly booked around that. The only real storyline that is (probably?) paying off here is the neverending MJF/Chris Jericho storyline. Some of the other matches certainly have interest and while most of them will be good,there isn’t anything that is truly a must watch.

AEW continues to be a company that know who they are and what their fans want to see. And that., folks, is beautiful.

CM Punk vs. Darby Allin (with Sting)

On Friday, August 20th, I was as happy as I have been in a long time. I watched Punk return with one of my best friends who is also my best wrestling friend. We sat outside with a few sweaty bottles of Miller High Life and were just genuinely excited. The boys were buzzing. We kicked around some ideas about what we thought would happen and none of them were close. Nothing we brought up even came close to happening because what happened was simple and pure. CM Punk came back and was happy.

Happiness is a weird thing in wrestling. In a world of manufactured moments and emotions, pure happiness is elusive. We see satisfaction, anger and triumph. We are conditioned to expect those story beats and feel those emotions. But to see pure joy in a man so authentically happy was moving. Punk had to leave the thing he loved the most for nearly a decade, but it was actually longer than that.

Like he said in his promo, he hadn’t been a pro wrestler since he left Ring of Honor. The emotional toll it takes to be away from something you love so much for so long is equal parts staggering and devastating. We could see the waves of emotion wash over him; the emotions of a man that could not believe he was finally reconnected with the thing he loves.

Punk connects with the audience in a way that so few wrestlers do. The typical wrestler does so by being a larger than life caricature. Punk connects by being just the opposite. He connects on a different level because we know and share his experiences. We know what it’s like to have the love of something taken from you and to have your passion bled out. We know how much a bad job can impact the rest of your life.

He went through a trauma so deep that it took him seven years to heal enough to even entertain doing it again. Seven years! Really, think about that and about having to work through that trauma and grieve the loss of love while thousands and thousands of people just want you to come back on their TVs. The sense of obligation to the people vs. the obligation to himself is an unimaginable struggle.

Happiness and fulfillment can be frustratingly elusive. Most of us spend our entire lives chasing something that isn’t always, or even often, attainable. It’s why we cycle through jobs, relationships, hobbies, whatever. We are always searching and always grasping for something that feels just out of reach. That is exactly why we feel it so profoundly when we recognize it in others. It resonates with the very deepest parts of ourselves because of how badly we want it. Seeing someone else find it fills the rest of us with the hope that we can, too. The calm that washes over us if we do find it is one heck of a drug and one hell of a feeling to chase after.

CM Punk is back.

Women’s Casino Battle Royale for a future title shot

In the past, AEW has used these matches as a way to rocket someone to the top of the card. Nyla Rose, Hangman Page and Jungle Boy have all won in the past and all of their careers are significantly better for it. Matches like this are an opportunity to make a star. Here are four women to watch out for:

  • Jade Cargill: She looks like a star, talks like a star, and is presented like one. I’m not sure if she’s ready in the ring, but her ceiling as a performer does not exist.
  • Thunder Rosa: She is one of the best things going in women’s wrestling with a great theme and great in-ring work. She has everything. Plu, Punk is right: being billed from “the graveyards of Tijuana” is just cool as hell.
  • Tay Conti: Whew, does she work SNUG or what? There’s so much talent here and she’s already getting herself over. I like her a lot and think she’s going to be a star.
  • Hikaru Shida: She hasn’t really been around Dynamite since dropping the title a few months ago. She carried everyone she worked with to a good/great match and deserves more than being an afterthought.

Rosa makes all the sense in the world to win. She has the combination of name recognition and a built in program with Britt Baker already lined up. She climbs the ladder on Sunday. 

Paul Wight vs. QT Marshall (w/ Aaron Solo and Nick Comoroto)

I say this with all the respect in the world for Paul Wight, a legend in this business and everyone involved with this match, but who gives a sh*t? Big chokeslam, 1-2-3, let’s keep it moving.

Chris Jericho vs. MJF: If Jericho loses, he will retire from in-ring competition

The Labours of Jericho made for some pretty good TV. Seeing Nick Gage doing like 80% of his normal act on cable television is still something I don’t believe happened. Juventud Guerrera coming back was dope as hell. Those things were good, but this feud has been going on for over a year and I’m just ready for it to be done. The Blood & Guts match was great and individual moments of this feud have really popped, but how much juice is really left to squeeze after 12+ months of interactions? They have said it all, have done it all, and it’s time to move on.

If this was a few months ago, I would say there is no way this is the end of Jericho in the ring. He was too important to the fabric of AEW. He provided the initial credibility they needed to establish themselves. They don’t need that anymore. They have made new stars and with the additions of Punk, Daniel Bryan, and whoever else is coming, there just might not be time for Jericho at or around the top of the card.

I have gone back and forth on this. Jericho is on the record saying when he retires, there wouldn’t be much pomp and circumstance. Most of the greats go out on their back and that’s when Uncle Chris does in Chicago.

Jon Moxley vs. Satoshi Kojima

The opening of the “Forbidden Door” has been largely disappointing. While it has been cool seeing wrestlers pop up in other places here and there, it has been more of a vehicle for Kenny Omega to collect titles as opposed to a fundamental change in the landscape of wrestling. He went to Impact and wrestled Rich Swann and Sami Callahan which, sure, that’s kind of neat. But if The Good Brothers are the only thing to consistently walk through a Forbidden Door, is it even open?

Moxley is doing what he always does to get a match over, but this isn’t a pay-per-view caliber match. Kojima is a bonafide legend, but once the tease of Hiroshi Tanahashi got everyone far too horny for the Ace of The Universe, nothing was ever going to live up to expectations. And hey, maybe that still happens. AEW has earned our trust enough that we can watch things play out a bit before we react and judge. The long term goal of this probably is one or two cross-promotional mega-matches, but we just aren’t quite there yet. The beat still needs to build. Mox wins this slugfest.

TNT Champion Miro vs. Eddie Kingston title match

If I hadn’t spent almost my entire word count on Punk, this match would get a whole bunch of words and heart emojis. In another life, under another name, Miro was massively over. He got himself massively over multiple times. Even when he was getting huge reactions, he was never as good as he is now. Gone are the video games and the guy just having a good time. He’s been replaced with a man who is on a mission from god. He will forgive you and will absolve you, but first, he’s going to hurt you. Imagine having this guy on your roster and putting him into a cuckold angle?.

Eddie Kingston is so good, but this isn’t about him. The only way Miro should be dropping the TNT title is if he’s moving on to the heavyweight title. It’s only a matter of time before The Redeemer comes for us all.

AEW Tag Team Champions The Young Bucks vs. Lucha Brothers in a steel cage match for the titles

This is going to be an absolute ripper of a match and should probably close the show. These guys have insane chemistry and are all on the top of their games. Rey Fenix continues to be the most consistently spectacular performer in the company. Penta El Zero Miedo, when motivated, is as good as it gets. And the Bucks? Well, this is the best they have been since AEW started. These are two great tastes that go great together, so what happens when you add a steel cage to the equation? Baby, you get fireworks.

The brothers Buck have been sensational with the belts, but I am not sure they need them for their gimmick to work. They have always carried themselves like they are the best and quite frankly, they have been one of the best tag teams in the world for the better part of a decade. Which is all to say that the Lucha Brothers can use the titles so much more. This is the only title change happening on Sunday, but it’s the one that’s most needed.

AEW Women’s Champion Dr. Britt Baker, D.M.D. (w/ Rebel and Jamie Hayter) vs. Kris Statlander title match

If you’re looking for a whole bunch of effusive praise for Baker, read anything I have ever written about her. It all still stands. Through August 20th, she was the biggest star in the company and it’s through no fault of her own that she’s now only second biggest. Yet, here I am, once again, asking for her to get more TV time. It’s not that hard. If The Elite warrant multiple entrances and segments, surely the top non-Punk star deserves the same amount of time? Surely? Surely!

I’m slightly concerned about this match considering both can be prone to bouts of sloppiness. Baker’s match against Red Velvet wasn’t great and all of her best matches are with people who are better workers than she is (Shida, Rosa, etc.). Statlander, for all of her many, many talents, is still kind of green. She’s only four or so years into her career which is scary considering how outrageously talented she already is. It’s only a matter of time before she has a title. Unfortunately for her, now is not that time. That’s because, as always, the Doctor is in. D-M-D.

AEW World Champion Kenny Omega (w/ Don Callis) vs. Christian Cage

The on-screen Callis character is legitimately one of the best things in all of wrestling: a perfect example of what a good heel manager can do. He never fully runs down Omega’s opponents. Sure, he’s poking at them, but he’s always putting them over, but he’s never totally running them down. He’s always saying how talented they are, how bright their future is and so on. It makes them feel like actual threats and makes Omega look stronger when he beats them. Since he has had the title, most of his opponents have left the feud stronger than when they started it. Look at Jungle Boy. He was over before, but during his run at the top, he was getting absolutely nuclear crowd reactions. Donny C was a huge part of that.

If Jericho brought legitimacy and the more casual wrestling fan to AEW, Omega brought the people who were looking for some real ass wrestling. When he was in Japan, his matches became must-see events. Yes, he was blessed with generationally talented opponents, but he was always up to the task because of his own other worldly wrestling talent. The eyeballs that were on him in Japan followed him to AEW. His matches don’t feel quite as special now that they are a more regular occurrence, but that doesn’t make them any less great (exploding barbed wire deathmatch notwithstanding).

There are bigger names in store for Kenny Omega than Christian Cage. With all the talent coming in and all the potential dream matches that could be set up, it would feel like a bit of a letdown to drop the title this weekend. Omega vs. Daniel Bryan for the big boy strap will just mean so much more than if it were just a regular old match. Plus, there’s still a story to tell. Kenny’s fall needs to be long and dramatic and this doesn’t feel like the place for a title change. Omega retains.

NXT TakeOver36 preview: The Undisputed Finale

Editor’s Note: The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the writer and not of our website.

So, a lot has happened since we last shared some internet space, hasn’t it?

Saying NXT is “just going through it” undersells what’s been happening, especially when a realistic possibility is the brand not existing in a few months. What has happened over the past few weeks that makes anyone feel good about the future of NXT? Was it their champion being jobbed out on Raw? Was it the swaths of releases that touched every part of the card? Was it the cancelling of the pre-TakeOver media call? Or was it when this site reported that Triple H is being blamed internally for “losing the war” with AEW? Everything seems bad!

All of this makes it tough to get invested in both these matches and these characters. Are they even going to be around? Will the show even be live, pal? There are a whole bunch of questions and scarily, very few answers. This whole thing feels like going to a wedding when you’re in the middle of breaking up with your significant other. You wear a big smile, pose for some pictures, and act like everything is okay, but on the inside, everything hurts and you’re dying.

This Sunday’s NXT TakeOver has to put on a brave face and pretend like everything is just fine. They will blow off a long-term feud and maybe even have some titles change hands — anything to distract from the band softly playing in the background. This might not be the actual end, but NXT as we know it is going to look fundamentally different in the immediate future.

Anyway, let’s preview the card like nothing is wrong. They’re about to cut the cake!

Million Dollar Champion LA Knight vs. Cameron Grimes (w/ Ted DiBiase) title match

The stipulation here is that if Grimes loses, DiBiase must become Knight’s butler.

Grimes, God love him, is doing absolutely everything in his power to make this whole thing work. Our guy getting a corny butler gimmick over in 2021 is proof that God exists and that he doesn’t totally hate us. 

Knight continues to be a perfectly acceptable foil for Grimes and that’s probably all he will ever be. He’s got the whole gimmick down pat and his skills on the stick really can’t be questioned. He might not be for everyone, but denying either his usefulness or his talent is simply lying to yourself.

Did DiBiase really come back to be a recurring TV butler? This whole program probably could have been blown off at a regular episode of NXT TV, but hey, who knows how many more of those will even exist? Grimes gets the win, and his freedom, this weekend. 

NXT UK Champion WALTER vs. Ilja Dragunov title match

There is so much intrigue here and so much promise, but if someone is becoming a star on NXT UK, does anyone care? The United Kingdom version of NXT is fine, I guess. If something compelling happens, maybe I’ll seek it out. Maybe I won’t. That is a very polite way of saying that I hardly ever watch it.

When I do watch, it’s for one of these two guys, particularly Dragunov. What a manic, frantic, and captivating presence he is and someone well worth all of our eyeballs. There’s certainly no one else like him in all of WWE. His energy and style are unmatched and wholly unique. It feels like that if he stops or slows down, even for a second, it’s all over for him. Everything that he is, everything that he stands for, all goes away. He can’t let up. He won’t let up. This is all he has.

WALTER, on the other hand, requires less of an introduction even though he more than deserves one. A singular entity in wrestling, not unlike his opponent this weekend, the Ring General is a generational performer. No wrestler makes their audience wince quite like WALTER. His signature move is as basic as it gets — it’s the peanut butter sandwich of moves. But, my God, does it feel like the most powerful move in wrestling. His chop forces souls out of their bodies. He’s as good as it gets and Dragunov isn’t far off. Their last match was preposterous and my hopes are sky high for this rematch.

Dragunov is the only wrestler on the roster that can make a compelling case to beat WALTER, the guy who ate Pete Dunne’s lunch a few years ago and has largely been unchallenged since. If he doesn’t lose now, when does he lose? He’s held the belt for 865+ days. He’s established it as a title that means something, but he loses it on Sunday.

NXT Women’s Champion Raquel Gonzalez vs. Dakota Kai title match

I personally love it if my champions believe that a normal presidential election was fraudulent. I love it even more if they really, really, wish they could have been at the “peaceful protests” at the US Capitol. The last few years have, if nothing else, proven just how badly people want to show you who they really are. In a vacuum, that is wonderful. We should all try to be our full, authentic selves at all times. I just wish that when people go full mask off, that the person underneath was a little more accepting. That’s all.

Kai is great, though, and it’s beyond time for her to get her shine at the top of the card. The timing has just never been quite right for the captain of Team Kick. But that’s showbiz, baby. Sometimes there is someone bigger, someone better, or someone with more of a name brand running the division. But not anymore. Shirai, for reasons that are entirely unclear, is off doing something else. Rhea Ripley isn’t around anymore. Gonzalez’ reign has been fairly underwhelming.

There has never been a better time for Kai to have a legit run at the top. She can work, she can talk, she resonates with the crowd, and her character is stronger than ever. She’s always had it all, just without the recognition. I wish I could say she gets that recognition this weekend, but I don’t think that’s in the cards. She’s already jobbing out to Aliyah on WWE Main Event. Gonzalez stays champ.

NXT Champion Karrion Kross (w/ Scarlett) vs. Samoa Joe title match

Joe is so back and I am so happy. I am over the moon that the big man is returning to the ring for the first time since October 2020. You should be, too! We should all be happy that someone who is great at what they do is getting the chance to be great at what they do. It’s a beautiful thing. I love consuming content that starts off positive before taking a hard, hard left. Okay, here comes the hard left: even with Joe being one of the best wrestlers of the modern era, this match is extremely not it.

This match isn’t interesting because of anything related to Joe. The only reason that this match has any level of intrigue surrounding it is because of Joe. I have made it 10+ sentences in this section and have yet to mention the actual champion in the match. There is a reason for that and it isn’t surprising and it isn’t anything you haven’t heard before. The reason the champion hasn’t come up, is because the champion is boring. The champion does not make you want to tune in. The champion is not great. The champion is milquetoast replaceable wrestler #328 and has all the hallmarks:

  • Muscle guy with tattoos
  • Pretty woman accompanies him to the ring
  • Is a “real fighter”
  • Likes suplexes 
  • Has a thesaurus and is really excited for you to know that

His name is Karrion Kross and he is the NXT champion. Strip the name and entrance away and what is there? Someone who is outclassed at every turn by just about everyone and someone who makes you feel empty inside. Wrestling’s purpose, if it’s being done well, is to make the audience feel something. And I ask you, my dear and precious readers, what does Karrion Kross make you feel other than a yearning for someone, anyone, better?

Sometimes I use my big dumb brain to make these predictions. I just look at what’s been on my TV and connect the dots. Former WWE writer Kaz from The Masked Man Show says something that has always stuck with me: WWE shows you what they’re going to do before they do it. He’s right. Would Joe really come back to lose? Would Kross really stay the champ and wrestle on Monday night? Sure doesn’t seem like it! Kross goes away, and Joe is here to stay as the new NXT Champion.

Kyle O’Reilly vs. Adam Cole 2-out-of-3 falls

One way or the other, it’s all over this weekend.

Removing the uncertainty around NXT’s future, this has to be the end of Cole in NXT. Whether that involves him moving to Raw or Smackdown or to another company entirely, this has to be it. He has accomplished everything possible in NXT and then some. If the list of greatest male NXT performers starts with Finn Balor (which it certainly does) Cole is right behind him. In terms of match quality, he’s even ahead of him.

Balor’s most recent run was an incredible stretch of matches. But Cole’s entire career has been matches like that. He has elevated every program he has been in and made them feel like the most important thing on the card. I love Kyle O’Reilly, you love Kyle O’Reilly, heck we all love Kyle O’Reilly, but if he’s in there with anyone other than Cole, how closely are we actually watching?

Kyle, I’m sorry, and I love you. You know that already, but I still feel compelled to state it publicly for the entire world to see. The talent has never been in question, but we certainly need to question the presentation. He had all the momentum in the world after the Great American Bash and then…nothing. He won some inconsequential matches, cut some unremarkable and kind of weird promos and got some egregiously bad entrance music. Those things do not a star make.

Cole staying would truly be a shock. Every report about Cole, the human, is that he is a sensational person who stayed well past his contract expiration to help the company. He’s about to help his IRL pal O’Reilly by giving him the biggest win of his career and leaving NXT on his back.

NXT TakeOver In Your House preview: How did we end up like this?

Image: WWE

Editor’s Note: The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the writer.

Have you ever wondered what a main roster pay-per-view would look like in NXT? Wonder no longer.

NXT is back on our TV sets and in our homes Sunday with TakeOver: In Your House with a lineup that looks, well, not great. It’s taking a considerable amount of willpower not to just shrug at this entire card and watch just about anything else. Where is the intrigue? Where are the captivating storylines that made NXT so great for so long?

Nothing here is required viewing and it’s barely DVR worthy. I have been on this NXT preview beat since 2016 (shoutout to me) and this is the first TakeOver card I can remember that feels skippable.

For me, the biggest issue is the overwhelming lack of anything interesting. The absence of that commanding presence at the top of the card is noticeable now more than ever. There is no Finn Balor. There is no Io Shirai (who mercifully returned this Tuesday). Heck, there’s not even a Bo Dallas. The two top champions are either kind of boring (Karrion Kross) or still figuring out how to be on top (Raquel Gonzalez). If it wasn’t for me writing about this, there’s nothing that really compels me to give up two hours of my Tuesday evenings.

When I say this is a main roster PPV, I mean it. Just look at what we have here:

  • A hastily thrown together multi-person scramble for a championship 
  • A match for a made-up title
  • A match with spooky markings and smoke monsters

Throw in a “Can they coexist?!?!?” storyline and you have next week’s episode of Raw, minus Lilly.

The most glaring Raw-ness in all of this is, unfortunately, Kyle O’Reilly. What in the world is going on here? In his first appearance after his match with Adam Cole, KOR came out and dropped both Austin Powers and Dumb and Dumber references in one promo. It wasn’t funny, wasn’t clever or even tongue in cheek. It was just flat-out bad. You know how if Vince McMahon finds out someone is funny, he then makes them do the WWE’s version of funny? That’s exactly what happened here, but just replace ‘funny’ with ‘hipster.’ Watching the segment filled me with actual, physical, pain. Come back, actually Kool Kyle. We miss you and we need you.

Since this isn’t a standard TakeOver, I’m going to deviate from my standard format. For each match I’ll look at how we got here, does it matter (spoiler alert: nothing matters because life is just a slow march to the sea.) and where we go next.

LA Knight vs. Cameron Grimes in a ladder match for the Million Dollar Championship

How we got here

Grimes made a bunch of money off meme coins and Reddit stocks and is now a rich boy. Ted DiBiase kept one upping him and laughing, so they had a “confrontation”. I’m not exactly sure why Knight got involved, but he’s certainly here now. Both are now vying for Teddy’s affection and for the honor of becoming his large adult son.

Does it matter?

Despite Cameron Grimes doing the lord’s work, nope. Not even a little.

Where we’re going

Who the heck knows. Are they really going to bring back the Million Dollar belt? Gimmick belts mean less than nothing. Brian Cage has the FTW title in AEW and, truly, who cares. He loses all the time and looks like a chump carrying that thing around. I am very thankful this became a ladder match, because even the worst ladder matches are usually still fun. Even though Grimes is significantly better, Knight’s gimmick might have more legs at least in the short term. It’s LA’s night and wow, I’m so sorry.

Xia Li (with Boa and Mei Ying) vs. Mercedes Martinez

How we got here

Martinez did her cool entrance, won a match, and then had a spooky ‘X’ on her hand. Li got big mad about losing to Martinez in the Mae Young Classic years ago and then attacked Mercedes on the way to the ring. That’s it. That’s the build.

Does it matter?

Not really. This matters in the sense that it gives Xia Li a real opportunity against a real opponent on a TakeOver card. She’s been with the company since 2017 and hasn’t had even more than a sniff of forward momentum until this current iteration of her character. It matters less to Martinez, who is an indie wrestling legend with the aura that comes with that. She’ll be fine no matter what happens.

Where we’re going

I truly don’t know. Martinez has been in some high-profile matches during her time in NXT but doesn’t have a signature win yet. Li hasn’t even had a real chance until now. If they are really invested in the Mei Ying/Tian Sha storyline going somewhere, Li has to win. It’s a bit worrying that after the initial rollout and excellent intro video package, there hasn’t been much from this group on TV. I’ll say that changes with a Li victory Sunday.

NXT North American Champion Bronson Reed and NXT Tag Team Champions MSK vs. Legado del Fantasma (Santos Escobar, Raul Mendoza and Joaquin Wilde) in a winner takes all match

How we got here

Reed put his belly on Santos Escobar to make sure MSK retained the tag titles over the rest of Legado del Fantasma. No one was really happy about that which led to this. The winner take all stipulation adds some much needed intrigue as if this was just a regular old six-man tag, it wouldn’t have nearly the appeal even if the outcome isn’t really in doubt.

Does it matter?

As much as a Reed match can matter, I guess. He seems like a legitimately great dude and appears to have a much more progressive view of the world compared to most of his colleagues, but his gimmick is really that he’s big. The whole size gimmick has a finite shelf life because there is almost always someone bigger and better that comes along. I wish they let him develop a personality that’s more than a big splash off the top rope. Being a big boy got him here, but it won’t get him any further.

Where we’re going

Escobar remains the complete package. He and Reed are as opposite as it gets. One has the aforementioned lack of character, while Escobar has it in spades. The slick looks, smooth words, and superb in-ring work are all there for him. This is him firmly moving on from the cruiserweight ranks and on to, literally, bigger things. If all the belts weren’t on the line, I would say Escobar and his boys would win, but MSK is too hot to drop the tag belts now.

Oh, and where are we really going? We are really going towards a Swerve Scott run with the North American title because Hit Row is one of the few really, really good things on NXT. It’s excellent and Scott’s a full-on star. His first title reign is happening sooner rather than later. 

NXT Women’s Champion Raquel Gonzalez (w/ Dakota Kai) vs. Ember Moon (w/ Shotzi Blackheart)

How we got here

These two have been feuding with their tag team partners for a while now. Moon got very upset when Gonzalez beat down Blackheart after a match a few weeks ago, called the champion out, and she obliged. So, now it’s time to fight!

Does it matter?

Actually, it does! There’s plenty of history between these two. Moon and Blackheart won the tag titles from Gonzalez and Kai the very first night they had them. I, too, would be angry if that happened to me. Then again, if it were me, I would simply never wrestle because it seems like it hurts a lot.

Where we’re going

We are barely into the second month of Gonzalez’ reign as women’s champ. NXT typically stays away from the transitional championship reign and one does not dethrone Io by god Shirai only to lose the title a few months later. Apologies to Moon, the Moon family, and the actual moon, but Sunday is not her day. Gonzalez retains, but what’s next? Shirai is back and due for a rematch. Franky Monet will probably get heated up, and they clearly see big things in Zoey Stark. The NXT’s women’s division keeps on keeping on.

NXT Champion Karrion Kross (w/ Scarlett) vs. Adam Cole vs. Kyle O’Reilly vs. Pete Dunne (w/ Oney Lorcan) vs. Johnny Gargano five-way title match

How we got here

*Takes deep breath* O’Reilly, Dunne and Gargano had a triple threat match to see who the no. 1 contender would be. Cole came out during the match and beat the bag out of everyone. Later that night, Cole and Kross had a face-off in the ring and a good one at that. Cole’s line about how if NXT wants to make him feel special, they just ring the bell was particularly excellent. Then, big King Regal came out, Kross demanded to fight everyone, and off we went.

Does it matter?

For all intents and purposes, sure. It’s for the NXT title, so I guess it does. This feels like they had no real idea of how to build the next major title program, so they just threw absolutely everything at the wall and hoped something stuck. Maybe something will, but this was disjointed from the start. Even the no. 1 contender’s triple threat didn’t have a cohesive build to it as Gargano was kind of just thrown into that. NXT title matches will always matter, but I’d be hard pressed to find one that matters less than this. 

Where we’re going

Cole continues to bend NXT to his will; he is still the biggest male star on the brand and that includes the current champ. His gravity is just too strong. My affections for Dunne and O’Reilly are vast and endless, but let’s be clear: Cole is in a different league as a performer. I thought Cole would be done with NXT after the last TakeOver and I’m not coming off that prediction. With all the releases, there are some spots on the main roster that NXT can fill and I think Cole is one of them. Kross is really the better choice to fill that spot, but he just beat Finn Balor twice, so he’s probably sticking around. Kross retains, but Cole doesn’t take the pin.

AEW Double or Nothing preview: The Dr. will see you now

Image: AEW

Editor’s Note: The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the writer. 

We (well, me) are used to the beats of WWE where it’s pay-per-view rematch, rematch, rematch, and then a rushed build to the next pay-per-view. But since AEW only runs four major shows a year (special episodes of Dynamite notwithstanding), they have a longer time to build to the events like this Sunday’s Double or Nothing which, for whatever reason, they don’t always like to do.

Some matches get announced far in advance, and some, like Miro vs. Lance Archer, get announced a couple weeks before they happen. Even the triple threat for the big belt came about quickly. And you know what? I don’t care. If this process continues to produce an incredibly high quality weekly TV show and stacked cards like this, I really can’t complain.

It’s almost like there’s a switch they can flip that makes their talent the best versions of themselves. Miro was an afterthought for months, but look at him now. He became a captivating monster in like three weeks. They know the levers to pull and when to pull them. For us, as fans, waiting has always been the hardest part. We need and demand satisfaction right away.

What AEW has proven is that they have plans for everyone. Even if we aren’t getting what we want right away, we can reasonably assume that it’s coming. It feels nice to be able to trust the stories a wrestling promotion is telling.

This card? It’s good, my pals. Nine matches with every major title defended and intrigue up and down the card. Is this the end of The Inner Circle? Is this the coronation of Britt Baker, DMD? Is Cody writing a love letter to Cody? Does Orange Cassidy shock the world? In order: No, yes, yes, no. The rest of the predictions? Just keep scrolling.

Hangman Page vs. Brian Cage

This is a man with a unique connection to the fans vs. a man with the charisma of lawn clippings. Much like green grapes are a blight on all of fruit, Cage is a blight on Team Taz. He’s not the biggest (Powerhouse Hobbs), not the most charismatic (Ricky Starks), not the best talker (Taz), and not Hook (Hook). He’s just…there, chock full of muscles and with a tremendous “has a vanity plate” vibe. It’s strange when the top-billed member of a faction is, by far, its least compelling member but hey, here we are. Cage is a perfect example of how someone can have just about everything, yet have nothing of substance to offer.

Meanwhile, Hangman has it all: the ring work, the mic skills, the charisma, and the connection to the crowd. He’s got it all and whenever AEW decides to pull the trigger on his title run, they will have a babyface champion for as long as they want. Let me be more declarative: they will have THE babyface champion for as long as they want. Over the past few months, he’s been heated up and cooled down to fit whatever role is necessary. The lack of fans has hurt his ascent up the card more than anyone. He thrives off their reactions and they love nothing more than reacting to him. Now that fans are coming back, I wouldn’t be surprised if the Cowboy-boy is main eventing All Out.

It’s Hangman’s time. Cage won earlier this year, but Page gets his win back here.

Casino Battle Royale for a future AEW World title match

A funny thing: at one point, the Wikipedia page for this show listed CM Punk as being in the match. I will be the living embodiment of the coffin emoji if that actually happens (it won’t). As is often the case with these kinds of matches, there are very few people who can actually win it. In this particular one, there are even less. The only realistic possibilities are Christian Cage, Jungle Boy, and possibly Penta El Zero Miedo. Considering Christian is the latest big signing and has talked about wanting a title shot, this is the easiest way to get him to the top of the card.

Jungle Boy has been close a few times and Penta is kind of living in the same world as Hangman Page where he can get moved up and down the card depending on where he’s needed. Neither of these guys are really needed at the top, but Christian sure is. With Jon Moxley otherwise busy in a tag team, he’s the biggest name with mainstream reach that AEW has. He wins this gimmick.

Sting and Darby Allin vs. Ethan Page and Scorpio Sky

Sting, please don’t die, my guy. You don’t need to kill yourself trying to elevate a midcard feud. It was uncomfortable watching him in the cinematic match from the last PPV and I fully plan on watching this with my eyes half covered. Every bump could seriously reduce the man to ashes and it’s worrisome. I’m going to try really hard not to write about Sting like this every time he has a match, but it’s hard not to. I do love him wrestling in a long sleeve t-shirt with his face on it, just like all wrestling legends are legally required to do.

I’m all in on All Ego. I like just about everything he’s ever done and he’s one of the more creative guys in wrestling. And folks, we appreciate creativity in this column. We really do. What we do not like is seeing Page and Sky wrestle almost exclusively on the Dark series of shows. I know those do decent-ish numbers, but it seems like AEW wildly overestimates how much the audience cares about those matches. Does wrestling 30 minutes spread over seven episodes of Dark/Dark: Elevation really matter?

The larger wrestling world is probably not nearly as aware of Page and Sky compared to their more diehard fans. The same thing happened with the Varsity Blonds. They never wrestled on Dynamite and all of sudden, they were getting a tag team title match. Put at least one of these lead-up matches on the big show and make us care about these guys. Tell some of the story on Dynamite and let Dark fill in the gaps.

This is a weird one. Is Sting really going to lose to these guys? Then again, what purpose does winning serve? I’ll say Page and Sky get the win with Allin taking the pin.

Cody Rhodes vs. Anthony Agogo

A heterosexual, cis-gendered white male like me has no business weighing in on the actual content in Rhodes’ “focus group approved” promo from a few weeks ago. All I can say is that at best, it was a meandering, self indulgent mess. At worst, it was something significantly worse. What I will touch on is the end: the American Dream.

Most of us are, in some way, consumed by our fathers. We want to make them proud. We hate them. We love them. We wonder where they are. We want to be them. We want to be nothing like them and everything in between. But we are not our fathers and never will be. For all his faults (of which there are many), Cody Rhodes is a talented performer. He has made his own legacy (not this one). By constantly invoking the memory of his father, we are constantly thinking of Dusty Rhodes and we are constantly reminded of everything Cody is not. Comparison, as always, is the thief of joy. He will never be his dad, nor should he try to be. He’s his own successful individual. Just be happy with that.

I have no idea what the point of The Factory is other than a vehicle for this feud. No one was clamoring for more QT Marshall’s bowling shirts on TV. We didn’t care about him when he was tagging with Dustin Rhodes and we certainly don’t care now, no matter how big of a steel steps guy he becomes.

The silver lining to this otherwise kind-of-embarrassing cloud is Agogo who comes off like a serious star. If he can wrestle even a little bit, there’s really something here. Hopefully his rib injury doesn’t limit him too much because all the potential in the world exists with him. If everything that has happened serves as a way to establish him as an actual player in AEW, then I’m with it. Ultimately, no one will remember the lameness and the eye rolls that brought us here if we wind up with another star. But if all of this was so Cody could whip someone with his weight belt and have his hand raised, that’s a tremendous yikes from me. Agogo gets the win here, hopefully.

Stadium Stampede II: The Pinnacle (MJF, Wardlow, FTR, Shawn Spears) vs. The Inner Circle (Chris Jericho, Jake Hager, Sammy Guevara, Santana and Ortiz) with the Inner Circle disbanding if they lose

The Blood and Guts match blew away expectations with the obvious exception of the finish. I’m firmly on the (correct) side of history that says a subpar ending does not ruin a half hour of incredible work. What an ending like that does do, however, is put a whole bunch of pressure for AEW to deliver from start to finish the next time they do a big match with a violent lean.

Between that and the impossibly bad ending to the exploding barbed wire deathmatch from Revolution, they really need to stick the landing. Yes of course, no one expected anyone to actually explode and yes, no one wanted 50-year-old Chris Jericho to take a full bump from the top of the cage, but both of those things needed to land better: pun very much intended. No one is better at pivoting from a mistake than AEW, but their two landmark moments of 2020 are significantly tarnished. Say what you want about WWE, but the moments they want to be big and memorable are just that. The next stipulation match AEW runs live needs to be a tremendous success.

Luckily, they don’t need to worry about that during this match. Gone is the pressure of getting it right live and a world of creativity is open to them. The first Stadium Stampede was fantastic and this one could be even better. The Inner Circle and The Elite was a nice program, but this is a full-on blood feud. 

The Inner Circle is a proven commodity, so it’s The Pinnacle I’m excited to see here the most. MJF’s willingness to show ass is matched only by Jericho. FTR continues to be the best tag team in the world. Wardlow is going to be a singles star sooner rather than later. That leaves Shawn Spears. I’ll say something nice this time: this is the best version ol’ Double S there ever has been.

All that said, everything in this feud feels two months early. Blood and Guts happened very quickly and having a match with this stipulation feels even more rushed. Maybe this is my WWE-poisoned brain that’s been conditioned to expect things to be stretched out more, but this could have marinated a bit longer. I think The Inner Circle wins and this gets a proper, epic, blowoff down the road.

TNT Champion Miro vs. Lance Archer

It was funny when people thought Miro was anything but an absolute star. Even in a previous life when he was saddled with storylines that daytime soap opera writers would laugh at, he was a star. Sure, it was lame he was in a video game based storyline with Kip Sabian, but ‘it’ never went away. It just wasn’t time, yet. But now, it’s time. Now the chains are off and Miro looks and talks like a total star. The promos he’s been cutting are not quite Eddie Kingston quality, but have Kingston intensity. It’s all there and always has been. This is him fully realized and the TNT title might not be big enough for him.

It’s all there for Archer as well minus the wins. He’s still looking for his first real signature moment since he came to AEW. When I think of the big man, I think of his entrance and throwing guys out of the tunnel. That’s cool, but that’s nowhere near enough. I also think of the husk of Jake Roberts limping out week after week and while that may confuse me a bit, I’m largely with it. Jake’s wardrobe choices are nothing if not inspired and if he keeps throwing fits like he does, he’s forever welcome on my TV.

Miro just got the belt and has serious momentum behind him. No shot he loses on Sunday.

AEW Tag Team Champions The Young Bucks vs. Eddie Kingston and Jon Moxley

The Corny Christian Boys vs. Full Grown Men should be an absolute treat — two teams that are as opposite can be making for such a great pairing. Where The Bucks come off as caricatures of wrestlers, Kingston and Mox are as real as it gets: two grumpy, grimy guys that love to throw down. 

We all know what a big stakes Young Bucks match is at this point. For whatever you think of them and for all their shortcomings, their ability to perform at an extremely high level under the brightest lights is unquestionable. And Moxley will bring those bright lights. Even without the belt, he’s the top draw in the promotion and his presence means people are watching. This will probably be the match everyone is talking about after Sunday.

Then there’s Kingston who continues to create incredible moments. The King has been doing this so well and for so long that it shouldn’t be surprising that he’s, well, great. His magnetism stems from his passion, one that borders on desperation. It’s like he thinks that if he loses focus or gets complacent for even a second, everything is gone. He doesn’t care what he looks like, what he wears, or what people think about him. All he cares about is this and right now, the brothers Buck are getting in the way of this, so they gotta go.

Styles make fights and this is going to be a good one. Mox/Kingston can provide the grounding that sometimes eludes the Bucks in their matches and the Bucks will certainly bring the athleticism and high spots. This can go either way, but I think AEW is invested in the story of Kenny and his pals having all the gold. The Bucks keep the gold, for now.

AEW Women’s Champion Hikaru Shida vs. Dr. Britt Baker DMD

Britt Baker (D-M-D) just does not miss. She has fully arrived and is fully realized. She is miles and miles from the performer she was when AEW first launched and legitimately the best part of whatever show she’s on. This is what an all-caps SUPERSTAR looks like. Even though she’s so clearly the best thing on Wednesday night, she is somehow losing TV time to an overwrought Bullet Club drama that would have been bad six years ago when most of those guys were actually popular. That popularity allowed AEW to form, but it won’t take them to the next level.

People like Britt Baker (D-M-D) can, and will, take them there. Give her more TV time! She’s in a world title program! Did we really need to see The Bucks wrestle the god damn Varsity Blonds at the expense of a feud with actual heat? It’s a testament to her talent that she hasn’t really cooled off after her MOTY contender with Thunder Rosa despite a lack of screen time on Dynamite. She’s just that damn good.

Shida has been the champ, and a strong one, for over a year. She’s pulled good-to-great matches out of just about everyone she’s worked with and deserves all the praise in the world for what she’s done during the pandemic era of wrestling. She has openly spoken about her desire to defend her belt in front of a full crowd and how much that means to her. She more than deserves her time in the spotlight and I just hope this match gets all the time it needs. 

Even though Shida will finally get to defend her belt in front of a crowd, she won’t be leaving with it. The doctor’s reign starts this weekend. C-H-A-M-P. 

AEW World Champion Kenny Omega vs. PAC vs. Orange Cassidy

It speaks to the popularity of Cassidy that PAC is almost an afterthought in this match. PAC, a legitimate top five wrestler, is getting third billing in this one. If this is reading as a criticism, I assure you, it is not meant that way. It speaks to the phenomenon that Cassidy has become. His level of popularity is one of the great things about wrestling.

In a vacuum, none of this should work at the main event level but it absolutely does. He’s so different and so unique. There really isn’t anyone else like him. If you had told me that one of Beyond Wrestling’s staples was going to be a massive star in AEW, Cassidy would not have been my first, second or third guess. But that’s what he is: a star of a different type. It’s great to see something that is so different resonate with so many.

The more the old Bullet Club guys get pulled back into Omega’s orbit, the less I care about all of them. Yeah, the band is back together, but do we really want them to play their hits? The Bullet Club was a phenomenon in pro wrestling when it first started, but by the time Omega became the absolute top guy, he was more a part of The Elite than anything else. He was bigger than the group. His success wasn’t because of the Bullet Club and it didn’t belong to them, it was his.

Sure, being a part of them helped, but being a transcendent, generational talent helped even more. He’s the one who people came to see, not Gallows and Anderson, and, sorry, not The Young Bucks either. Kenny is the draw, Kenny is the main event and the more people there are around him, the more it takes away from him.

As great as Cassidy and PAC are, neither of them have a prayer of winning. The story of Omega as the belt collector and the biggest prick in pro wrestling is not even close to being over. He didn’t go into all these promotions to win their titles, just to lose the top prize in his home promotion. Kenny’s reign continues.

NXT TakeOver Stand and Deliver night two preview: The end of an Era

Editor’s Note: The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the writer. This is the second part of a two part preview of both nights of NXT TakeOver: Stand and Deliver. Check out Mike’s look at night one.

NXT Women’s Tag Team Champions Shotzi Blackheart & Ember Moon vs. The Way’s Candice LeRae and Indi Hartwell

This is fine, I guess. Against all odds, The Way have endeared themselves to me…except Austin Theory. He’s real bad! Seemingly every week, LeRae adds bigger wings to her entrance gear and I’m fully expecting her to actually fly to the ring come SummerSlam. She’s a perfect partner for someone like Hartwell who is clearly talented but still very green in the ring. You can see her getting more and more comfortable by the week and that’s not a coincidence. Being paired with someone as talented and experienced as LeRae will do wonders for her career. (Can we please give her a title at some point soon?)

Blackheart and Moon continue to not do it for me. It’s clear they are both having the time of their lives, but the high school drama class levels of camp in their characters is a bit too much for me. They’re both good, but it’s just not clicking all the way. My feelings aside, it’s obvious NXT has big plans for Blackheart provided she doesn’t, you know, kill herself in the ring. Kota Ibushi watched that and even he thought that was too much. I’m begging every wrestler that reads this to please stop taking unnecessary neck bumps because it makes my tum-tum take up permanent residence in my throat.

I would say it’s too soon for a title change here, but the first NXT Women’s Tag Team title reign lasted all of an hour. Still, this match didn’t have enough build to warrant a title change so Blackheart and Moon retain.

North American Champion Johnny Gargano vs. the winner of the gauntlet eliminator match from night one

It’s finally happened. I’m a full-on Johnny Gargano fan and I just hope my friends, girlfriend, and you, my dear readers, will still love me. Since I’m writing this before night one of Stand and Deliver, I think that Dexter Lumis should win the battle royal and the title here. He should win the battle royal because he’s the only one that makes sense. He’s been around the North American title scene for a while and probably would have already won it if he didn’t get hurt a few months back. His story with Gargano and The Way has gone on long enough and deserves a proper blowoff here. Plus, it would be interesting to have a guy who never speaks carry a mid-card title. Let’s do it. Let’s strap up Lumis one time.

Cruiserweight Champion Jordan Devlin vs. Interim Cruiserweight Champion Santos Escobar title unification match

One of these guys is a bilingual luchador crime boss and the other is just an Irish guy with the biggest head on the planet and abuse accusations. One of these guys has something we can connect with and appreciate and the other is Jordan Devlin. Tough choice. Escobar is just so smooth. He looks great, he talks great, and he wrestles great. He is everything the company should be looking for in a Latino superstar. But then again, so was Andrade.

Has anyone really missed Devlin? Was anyone out there clamoring for his return? Sure, he’s fine at wrestling but there are 1000 guys that are good at wrestling and he could be replaced by, like, four dudes in NXT UK and no one would notice.

All of this is to say Escobar should, and will, become the undisputed cruiserweight champion on Thursday night. His legacy continues.

Adam Cole vs. Kyle O’Reilly in an unsanctioned match

This is the real main event for NXT Wrestlemania week. For a long time, The Undisputed Era was what people thought about when they thought about NXT. They are synonymous with the brand. From the second Cole debuted at TakeOver: Brooklyn III, Cole and O’Reilly were linked. Their individual identities mixed with the identity of the group, one spearheaded and dominated by Cole. They supported each other, they held each other up, and became the most successful group in NXT history.

It’s fitting that Cole’s ego and insatiable drive for individual success is what broke them up. As soon as O’Reilly stepped up and as soon as Cole’s ego was even somewhat threatened, he snapped and brought the whole Era down.

This is a history that spans Ring of Honor, New Japan, PWG, and now, NXT. 10+ years of history, 10+ years of Cole always being just that much better than O’Reilly and knowing it. Cole was the celebrated signing, he was in Bullet Club when it was still cool, he was the marquee. No matter how much we love Kyle, and we really, really love Kyle, he was always outshined. These two are forever linked, forever tied, forever destined to do this forever (full apologies to Kevin Steen and El Generico). Just watch the prime target video package NXT released. It’s an absolutely incredible video and does a better job setting this up than I ever could.

He might have been cast as one, but O’Reilly is no sidekick. From bell to bell, he’s as good as it gets. This is really the last story for The Undisputed Era to tell in NXT and I wonder if it is Cole’s last as well. Like Io Shirai, he’s done it all. Is it time for him to move on and how fitting it would be for O’Reilly to end his run in NXT? This is the match of WrestleMania week and one that sees Kyle O’’Reilly come out on top.

NXT Champion Finn Balor vs. Karrion Kross

Sorry for the very obvious pun, but the clock on Kross’ time in NXT has been ticking ever since he debuted. A big, muscular dude that wrestles a slow, deliberate style is a Vince McMahon dream and pairing someone like him with someone like Scarlett is a Vince McMahon wet dream. It’s surprising that they aren’t already on the main roster and the only explanation has to be that Vince doesn’t watch his own product. (And why would he?) He simply can’t resist a boring big man with a good look.

His entrance is a spectacle and the music is great, but that’s kind of it. He and Scarlett look outrageously good, but man, is he all caps BORING bell-to-bell. Ok, maybe he’s not that boring, but he just happens to wrestle a slower, less dynamic style than just about everyone else, so he stands out and not in a good way. 

Finn, however, does stand out and is exciting. He remains one of the best things going in wrestling today. He is, without a doubt, the Wednesday night MVP of the Pandemic Era and has a case for MVP of the whole company. The only three people with better cases are Bayley, Sasha Banks and Asuka. He carried NXT for the better part of a year while continuing to get better week after week. The confidence, the charisma, and the quality of his matches really make you wonder how all Vince saw in this guy was “big time smiles.” The men’s division is somewhat lacking in star power, but that’s not something their champion lacks.

Balor is still too good to take the title off of him now. He’s elevated everyone he’s been in the ring with and should carry the title until the next generation of top stars is ready. Kross takes the loss and moves on while The Prince leads the gold brand to Tuesday nights.

NXT TakeOver Stand and Deliver night 1 preview: The last act of a Genius?

Editor’s Note: The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the writer.

The Wednesday night war was over before it really began, but don’t tell that to NXT. 

After announcing their obvious AEW driven move to Tuesday nights, NXT is putting on their biggest and most ambitious TakeOver card to date with ten matches over two nights, all on a new live streaming service. It’s almost like they are trying to run a card so big it distracts from being “bullied” out of “their” time slot! Curious! 

This is not a results focused column (even though I predict the result of every match), but if the results lead to ten midweek bangers that set up the next few months of NXT, I’m willing to slightly overlook the process.

With the move to Peacock, it’s fair to wonder if this is the end for a lot of the current NXT mainstays. With the Undisputed Era breaking up, is this Adam Cole’s last “Bay Bay” at the Performance Center? Is Karrion Kross, a main roster act masquerading as an NXT one, moving up already? That doesn’t even mention Io Shirai, who warrants her own full section, possibly being ready to move on. Or, do the new Peacock overlords want established stars at the top? Who knows? Let’s find out! If it’s time for some mainstays to move on, I’m with it. I’ll be as proud as Jaime Escalante was after his students passed that calculus test.

Kushida vs. Pete Dunne

A crazy thing: this match might open night one meaning arguably the two best pure wrestlers in NXT are gonna jerk the damn curtain. I refuse to sell this match, because everyone should already be at full blood flow just thinking about it. I am frothing at the mouth for it. As soon as Dunne made the claim to being the best technical wrestler in the world, my brain, and just about everyone’s brain, went to Kushida. I’m just glad to be right for once.

Two guys who are great at this getting the chance to be great at this together is a beautiful thing. Dunne’s last TakeOver match with Finn Balor was great, but Kushida’s last TakeOver match was even better. It was easily his best match since he came to NXT and it’s curious that they haven’t pulled the trigger with him yet. Maybe they never will. Who knows? Wrestling is weird!

Kushida’s momentum has been stopped and started so many times that I can’t let myself get excited for another aborted push. He’s yet to get that defining win that really spurns him forward and he isn’t getting it Wednesday. Dunne takes this one.

MSK vs. Grizzled Young Veterans vs. Legado Del Fantasma triple threat for the vacant NXT Tag Team titles

God, this is going to be so good.

Unfortunate injury notwithstanding, the rollout of MSK (Wes Lee and Nash Carter) in NXT has been a masterclass in how to rocket an exciting new team to the top of the card. They were an established brand prior to NXT and once there, they didn’t get a weird rebrand; they kept their identity in and out of the ring.  Legado Del Fantasma (Raul Mendoza and Joaquin Wilde) is a bit slept on, but you can absolutely count on them to show out when they get time in the ring. Wilde has been doing this for a long time and Mendoza is one of the more underrated talents in NXT.

Both these teams go a thousand miles an hour at all times and Grizzled Young Veterans (James Drake and Zack Gibson) are the perfect foils for them. In any triple threat, there always needs to be one person or team that holds everything together and that’s exactly what GYV is great at doing. They will gladly let the other four ping pong around the ring while they keep the action grounded. 

AEW has done a lot in a year, but no one does tag matches like NXT. Whether it’s multi-team sprints or a standard tag affair, NXT is the gold standard in pro wrestling. The list of tag champs is a veritable who’s who in tag team wrestling over the past eight years or so: The Wyatt Family, The Undisputed Era, DIY, The Revival, I could go on forever, baby. All three of these teams have the skills and bonafides that wouldn’t be out of place on that list.

This will be the spotfest of the first night. In all likelihood, MSK was winning the belts right after the Dusty Cup, but Lee’s injury delayed those plans. Their coronation happens during WrestleMania week.

Leon Ruff vs. Isaiah “Swerve” Scott vs. Bronson Reed vs. Cameron Grimes vs. Dexter Lumis vs. LA Knight: Six-man gauntlet eliminator match to determine who challenges NXT North American Champion Johnny Gargano on night two

I’m all for getting as many people on the card as possible, but there had to have been a less convoluted way to get here. I needed some Alex Jones recommended brain supplements to make sense of Wednesday’s qualifying match. (Please don’t buy those or even try to Google them. Oh god, why did I leave this lame joke in wow I really didn’t have much to say here!)

I have like 4000 words to write so I’m dropping some bullets here. People who I would like to see win this match, ranked:

  1. Cameron Grimes: One day we’ll all wake up and Cameron Grimes will rule the world.
  2. Swerve Scott: The new character is working and the in-ring has always worked. His time is coming.
  3. Dexter Lumis: Makes all the storyline sense in the world. Been floating around the North American title scene for awhile now.
  4. Leon Ruff: No real strong feelings here.
  5. LA Knight: Him yelling ‘Yeah’ always pops me. Him in the ring never pops me.
  6. Bronson Reed: Nope!

As much as I want Grimes to win this and every match, sadly, I don’t see it happening. The only real story with meat on its bones involves Lumis. Not having Lumis win here would just be weird. He’s been involved with the Garaganos for months now and will move on to night two.

NXT UK Champion WALTER vs. Tommaso Ciampa

There will be nothing pretty about this: a giant baby vs. the oldest looking 35-year-old in history. It’s gonna be painful and it’s gonna be kind of gross, but all of WALTER’s matches are kind of gross. They are all these beautifully violent spectacles that are entirely his own. WWE is a whole bunch of (largely terrible) things, but they are becoming more and more homogenous by the day.

Who is truly unique? Who stands out for having their own individual style?  The answer, folks, is not many of them. Even in NXT, every color is a similar shade. WALTER is one of the unique ones — a stark contrast to the Diet-PWG style of NXT as a whole. And, WALTER’s gonna kill you.

When Ciampa looks at WALTER, he sees himself. He sees himself as the biggest, toughest dog in the yard; the man who intimidates everyone. That’s fine, I guess, but there is a big ol’ reality check coming, one with frying pan hands. This should be disgustingly hard hitting. I’m not anticipating it being at the level of WALTER’s match with Ilja Dragunov, but there’s a decent chance it’s in the same ballpark. Very few matches even approach that level of brutality. If you haven’t yet, find it on the Network and just push play.

I would take it as a betrayal if Ciampa actually beat WALTER for the belt here, a personal affront that I simply could not stand for. It would make no sense. WALTER’s reign continues and should last for as long as he wants it to.

NXT Women’s Champion Io Shirai vs. Raquel Gonzalez

I have written about every match Shirai has ever had at a TakeOver. Part of that is because I will never log off, but a bigger reason is her transcendence. She’s one of my favorite wrestlers and is, in my opinion, one of the two or three best wrestlers in the world. She’s also the best non-Asuka Women’s champion in the history of the company.

I write a lot about how the most important thing for a wrestler to do is matter, how we should feel something when they are on the screen, how they should leave an impression on us, and how they should require our attention. For almost three years, Shirai has demanded our attention. She is a flawless, peerless performer — one that came in with high expectations and has exceeded them. Whatever we have done to deserve her, surely it isn’t enough.

There’s never a bad time to be effusive with praise for Shirai, but I’m doing it here because I think this is the end of her run on NXT. She’s done it all time and again and with WrestleMania kind of being the unofficial season finale in WWE, it would make total sense for her to drop the belt and move on. It doesn’t matter which brand she moves to as stars that bright shine regardless.

Raquel Gonzalez is ready now to be at the top of the women’s division for as long as she wants. It’s the first time where it really feels right for someone to take the belt. If this really is Shirai’s last match in NXT, you know she’s going to do everything she can to make it memorable. 

If she does move on, the women’s division is in more than capable hands with Gonzalez. She can be the dominant champ that a very talented, very capable women’s division can come after. It’s time for Big Mami Cool to get a run at the top.

Watch for the night two preview Wednesday.

AEW’s Tony Khan needed to channel UFC’s Dana White post-Revolution

The following is a column and reflects the view of the author.

There’s a lot you can say, and has been said, about the character of UFC president Dana White, but one thing you can usually count on is that he’s honest when a big fight doesn’t deliver. 

When then-middleweight champion Anderson Silva listlessly defeated Demian Maia at April 2010’s UFC 112 and completely embarrassed the company in front of their new Abu Dhabi investors and hosts as a result, White famously ripped the fight, ripped Silva, and said he would make it up to fans. Eleven years later, we’re still waiting on what that make good is, but that’s beside the point.

Following AEW Revolution Sunday and The Grand Finale Explosion That Wasn’t, Tony Khan needed to be a little more like Dana White.

Anyone reading this saw what didn’t happen following Kenny Omega’s win over Jon Moxley in the exploding barbed wire deathmatch that main evented the show. After a way too long heel beatdown, Eddie Kingston ran out to protect his old rival and pal. After failing to get Moxley out of there before the final round of, ahem, explosions, he covered up Moxley in a true act of friendship. 

As Goldberg-esque flares went up from the ring posts and a few poofs could be seen and heard from outside the ring, Kingston laid on top of Moxley for what felt like an hour, selling as if he had withstood a massive blast protecting a fellow soldier during war. The aftermath was even worse. (I’d share a link, but DMCA requests on Twitter are resulting in some of those specific GIFs being pulled down. Weird, huh?)

Womp womp isn’t a strong enough description for the emotional letdown and instant mocking on social media from all corners of the wrestling world immediately followed. It was AEW’s Shockmaster moment at a point when the moment called for anything but.

As is the case after big shows and to his credit, Khan spoke to the media and when asked about what happened, he played it off as that Omega wasn’t a good bomb maker and that his plan ultimately failed, pointing to a crude crayon drawing he released of the setup before the show as proof.

Then, Khan said this:

“But at the end, I don’t know what people really wanted unless you wanted us to actually explode the guys at the end. There’s only so much you can do.”

Again, womp womp isn’t a strong enough description for that statement.

Khan, a veteran of pro sports where placating fans goes hand-in-hand with revenue generation, needed to have a better answer. Slyly chiding fans for having expectations of something he hyped up so heavily is pretty rich, even in pro wrestling. 

Of course, fans weren’t expecting someone to actually be killed or even severely injured, but there is zero chance anyone involved wanted that last scene to play out as it did, effectively negating the match, the Kingston moment, and even the PPV itself for some.

There’s where the White mentality comes in. As UFC really began its rise in the TUF era, one of White’s then-charming personality traits was that he was a fight fan “like us.” While he dished out the classic pre-show hyperbole any promoter did, he didn’t piss on your shoes and tell you it was raining if something didn’t land like it was supposed to. Even today, that hasn’t really changed with him.

In those situations, White is as visibly annoyed as the fans he serves — a living, breathing conduit of the frustration they have watching at home, making them feel as if they have a proxy who would actually do something about the situation even if “it” was a shrug behind closed doors.

The easiest thing for Khan to do Sunday was simply say, “It didn’t land like we wanted to. We need to make it right.” He didn’t need to bury anyone, but to essentially blow the situation off like he did in the press conference was jarring. By not admitting that things went askew and leaning into the explanation they way he did, he made it worse and more of a joke than a valid complaint from those that bought the show.

Khan has been a pro wrestling fan for decades and having heard him speak a lot, there is little to no chance he would accept such an explanation from a company he followed and loved. So why is it suddenly different when he is behind the big desk?

For the paying public, both those in attendance and watching on PPV, Khan has to make it right. Hopefully, fans aren’t waiting eleven years before that happens. 

AEW Revolution preview: An exploding barbed wire deathmatch?

Editor’s Note: The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the writer.

It’s almost Sunday, so you know what that means: AEW Revolution.

The first hour of “the product” last Wednesday was the most fun I have had watching a wrestling show in forever. The Shaq match was just a blast and so much better than it had any right being. God damn ONITA showed up in a promo package!?!? JJ Dillon?!? Tully Blanchard actually wrestling!? Even Jurassic Express was there to give me something to hate! What I’m saying is AEW is the best.* They have something for everyone and I’m so glad they are a part of my life.

(*Editor’s note: Like all of our staff, Mike was contractually obligated to say this. ^JN)

Wednesday showed how a wrestling show can have good wrestling and make moments for social media. WWE’s insistence that only the moments matter is their biggest problem. Sure, we remember those moments, but we also remember how we got there. Daniel Bryan winning at WrestleMania 30 would have meant nothing without the journey. Living your life one three minute YouTube clip at a time isn’t a way to live, especially when we all should be living our lives a quarter mile at a time, anyway.

Do me a favor: try skipping Raw (but watch SmackDown as it’s good) for a couple weeks and just watching the clips on YouTube. I promise you won’t miss a thing.

But don’t skip this show because it’s going to be a good one. Just like this past Wednesday, there’s something for everyone Sunday night. Every tag team in the company in one match, a new signing, Sting, a women’s title match, and an exploding barbed wire deathmatch?!??

Folks, they’re going to do it live and in living color.

Miro and Kip Sabian vs. Best Friends (Chuck Taylor and Orange Cassidy)

There is a lot of discussion online about how Miro is “better than this”. Most often, that idea comes from a place of fandom and reflects the quality, or lack thereof, of the work being done. But the work in this feud has been good. None of it is going to be in the AEW history books or even remembered in a month, but it’s solid. Not everything can be your favorite thing of all time. Wishing everything was “better than this” is an exhausting way to live and makes me want to log off but I refuse to log off. 

This whole program is intended to be silly and will probably continue to be on Sunday. The very nature of the acts involved don’t allow for being full serious. Cassidy will stand out like he always does, but make no mistake that Miro is the star here. He is the one who allows everyone else to play the roles they are perfectly suited to play. Taylor is a perfect, charming goof, Sabian is a perfect, worthless airhead and Ford is just perfect. Miro holds everything together with his gravity. This is his first real feud in AEW and is just keeping him warm until something bigger comes along. He’s just too good.

I don’t think I have ever predicted a Cassidy match correctly and I probably won’t now. This is Miro’s PPV debut so it’s game over for OC and Chuckie T.

Casino Royale for a future AEW Tag Team title shot: Bear Country (Bear Boulder and Bear Bronson) vs. The Dark Order (Alex Reynolds and John Silver) vs. The Dark Order (Evil Uno and Stu Grayson) vs. Santana and Ortiz vs. The Butcher and The Blade vs. Private Party (Isiah Kassidy and Marq Quen) vs. Top Flight (Darius Martin and Dante Martin) vs. Death Triangle (PAC and Rey Fenix) vs. Varsity Blonds (Griff Garrison and Brian Pillman Jr.) vs. Matt Sydal and Mike Sydal vs. SCU (Frankie Kazarian and Christopher Daniels) vs. The Natural Nightmares (Dustin Rhodes and QT Marshall) vs. Chaos Project (Luther and Serpentico) vs. TBA

I’m writing this last and this column is already over 2500 words so let’s keep it brief. This has just about every tag team in the company in it for God’s sake. I’m just picking the five that I want to say something about

  • Santana & Ortiz: Still one of the best things going and should have won the titles a few weeks ago.
  • Butcher & The Blade: Just outrageous, off the charts sex-haver vibes coming from these two.
  • Death Triangle: Both of these guys are too good to be in a battle royal or even a tag team, really. Fenix should win this and the ladder match.
  • Chaos Project: LOL
  • Evil Uno and Stu Grayson: I really just love them and want them to do well.

I can see this going two ways. If Santana and Ortiz win, look for Jericho and MJF to win the tag belts later on to further the end of The Inner Circle. The other option would be Death Triangle winning because they are just so clearly the two best wrestlers in the match. Those are the predictions and thank you for reading.

Team Taz (Brian Cage and Ricky Starks) (w/ Taz) vs. Darby Allin and Sting in a street fight

The best thing in this match is not the TNT champion, not a big muscle man and not the 61-year-old legend. It is absolutely Ricky Starks: a king on the microphone, a fashion icon, and the best performer in Team Taz.

There’s a reason they let him cut a promo on Sting this week. Cage is, relatively, a bologna sandwich. Every bite has the same, underwhelming flavor. You’re eating it, but you aren’t happy about it. Our guy Ricky is a muffaletta, an impeccable sandwich. Each bite is so wonderful that the only thing that can be better is the next bite. It makes me sad that he’s the one that’s probably going to take the fall in this match because let’s face it, Sting ain’t losing. Pretty Ricky continues to stand out and be special — a star in the making. 

I guess it’s time to talk about Sting, huh? As much as I’d love to dedicate column space to the tantric singer and wonder whether or not he has finally climaxed, I will not. But yeah, Sting is back. He has been powerbombed and boy, did my stomach curl into a ball when it happened. If I were 61, I would simply not wrestle. I 35 and if I sleep funny, I’m incapacitated for like three days, so I can’t even imagine what a septuagenarian with spinal stenosis feels like even just existing.

If this is what he really wants, then god bless, my man. I’m just never going to be excited, or even comfortable, watching him try not to perish in the ring.

His arrival brings up the question: is AEW bringing in too many legends and/or ex-WWE superstars? This is a fairly loaded question and I, shockingly, have some thoughts. AEW is still a company in its infancy and still firmly in a growth period. One of the ways to grow a company, wrestling or otherwise, is to bring in someone with credibility. There’s a difference between bringing in your favorite indie wrestler vs. bringing in an established name. With one, you can reasonably count on for ratings and media buzz, while the other is more speculative. Let’s be real: signing the indie wrestler de jour isn’t really moving the needle or adding that credibility.

Signing Warhorse or whoever isn’t bringing new eyeballs to the product. Anyone who knows and likes Warhorse is probably already watching the product. A move like that isn’t putting them over the finish line. You know what can do that? Bringing in someone like Paul Wight. That demands attention and on a global scale. That is what a new company has to do to succeed. You can build a foundation that is strengthened by, and not totally comprised of, these established performers.  Once they’ve succeeded and the foundation is stable, there’s more opportunity for all our favorites to get that contract.

Striking the balance is hard. It’s so easy to be on the wrong side of the tipping point. WWE’s over reliance on “legends” is no secret and it comes at the expense of the talent that is there week after week. I’m cautiously optimistic that AEW can strike that balance, even though it goes against my very nature. Maybe I’m too much of a fan of what they’re putting out there, but I believe.

Alright then, his is as easy a prediction as it gets. Darby and Sting take this one.

Winner receives the loser’s 2021 first quarter earnings: Hangman Page vs. Matt Hardy 

This has been a very nice and totally acceptable time filler for Page. Everyone’s favorite feelings feeler always has the most layered stories in AEW. He’s the most well-rounded character they have because he’s been allowed to feel and experience an entire spectrum of emotions on screen. Loss, inadequacy, love, fear, pride, hate, anxiety, all of it. We relate to Adam Page because we are Adam Page. Well, we aren’t handsome, famous, funny pro wrestlers or even one of those things, but we are all human. In a sport that so often leans away from humanity and into spectacle, the humans stand out so starkly.

Hardy is not someone I’m super interested in seeing week after week, but his work continues to range somewhere between acceptable and good. Even with his in-ring capacity significantly diminished, he maintains the air of importance that comes with being a legend. He also does the most vital thing in pro wrestling: he makes whatever he is a part of matter. As long as he keeps mattering, there’s a place for him on TV, even if it’s not in segments I personally care about.

The idea of this big money match is very pro wrestling. If the winner doesn’t get a Publishers Clearing House style check afterward, I will be mad online. This doesn’t feel like a feud that goes past this match. Page wins in a fun cooldown match.

Face of the Revolution ladder match: Cody Rhodes vs. Scorpio Sky vs. Penta El Zero M vs. Lance Archer vs. Max Caster vs. TBA for a TNT title shot this Wednesday

For a match that has reasonably high stakes, this falls flat. Where’s the build? Who are we supposed to care about? Is it Rhodes getting another 17-minute entrance just to throw awful cutters? Certainly not. Credit to Rhodes though: the Shaq match was incredible. Sky hasn’t wrestled in two months because of a torn meniscus. Somehow, Penta has felt like an afterthought, but this whole match feels like an afterthought. In their short history, AEW has made almost all of their matches exciting because of the time they invest in the builds. This one just doesn’t have it. Nothing really memorable has happened.

I would love for the unannounced entrant to come in and win, kind of like what happened when Brian Cage popped up in that battle royal. Except, you know, good. I would love it so much that I’m predicting TBA to take this one. (TBA is Ethan Page, right?)

AEW Tag Team Champions The Young Bucks vs. Chris Jericho and MJF (w/ Wardlow)

I must address the best thing the Bucks have done in years and perhaps the best thing in all of wrestling: Matt Jackson’s dangly earring. Rarely have I had a chance to gaze upon such beauty, to stare at such splendor, but Matthew has graced the world with this gift. It reminds me of one of my all time favorite things (Dean Ambrose’s subtle earring) so it’s only natural that I am head over heels for this. For as much sh*t as the Bucks get online, and it is a whole lot, I have no choice but to hand it to them for such an inspired fashion choice.

The earring, while spectacular, also confuses me. Do babyfaces get a piercing like that? They do not. The good guys never slap a dangly cross on an earlobe and call it a day. That’s a bad boy move. Matty J walked into the Claire’s in the Jacksonville strip mall and got the Shawn Michaels cosplay special. This just continues the frustrating alignment of the Bucks since AEW started. They have flipped between heel and face on a seemingly weekly basis which is…not the best viewing experience. Also not the best is any time the Bucks get on the mic because holy moly, is it bad. We do have some clarity in this feud considering Jericho and MJF beat up a balding, weird dad. This will always be a very pro-dad column.

The pairing of Jericho and MJF is, somehow, just fine. The idea of the two of them together works much better on paper than it does in execution. They have the same strengths so instead of filling in each other’s gaps, they just take time away from what the other does well. The setup they had this week worked very well, though. Both of them had their turn to talk and interact with the guests and it also showed just how much better Jericho is at all of this than MJF is.

A title needs to change hands during the show and I think it’s here. The Bucks can focus on whatever is happening with The Good Brothers and whoever else might come in from New Japan. This gives Jericho the title he wants and can continue the slow disintegration of The Inner Circle if Santana and Ortiz win the battle royal.

AEW Women’s Champion Hikaru Shida vs. Ryo Mizunami

Mizunami rules, huh? Sporting just an outrageous amount of swagger and charisma, she and Nyla Rose hossed it up on Wednesday in easily one of Rose’s best matches in AEW. I was really worried that they were just gonna run Rose vs. Shida back for what feels like the 100th time. I’m so glad they didn’t. This is something different and something that should be great. The post-match standoff where Ryo and Shida just stiffed the living heck out of each other got me so hyped for this match. The tournament had some issues, most notably where the matches were broadcast and the amount of time it got on TV, but we wound up with an exciting title match.

Shida has been the one constant of the women’s division. She has great matches and carries herself like a champion, She just hasn’t been on TV, or really even mentioned, in like a month. Yes, she was in Japan coordinating and running the tournament over there, but that wasn’t addressed on TV. Surely they could have worked that in at some point, giving her the respect that comes with having held the belt for almost 300 days.

If this had more than a one segment build, I’d say it would be a place for a title change but alas, it did not. Shida retains.

AEW World Champion Kenny Omega (w/ Don Callis) vs. Jon Moxley in an exploding barbed wire deathmatch

I’m assuming this is a newer concept for most of our audience, so I thought hearing from an expert on these types of matches would help. I’m not that expert, but Chris Silva absolutely is. Chris runs stashpages.us, an online store specializing in imported and original Japanese wrestling and deathmatch-adjacent merchandise. Check out the store and check him out on Instagram. Here’s what he has to say:

“To some people, a barbed wire exploding deathmatch is a cool sounding idea and something they found out about a few weeks ago on TV. For others, the idea of a real, FMW-style explosion match in the USA is something that has been thought about, teased, false alarmed, and false started for decades.

The concept is just preposterous. A wrestling ring with the ropes replaced by barbed wire. The barbed wire lets off an explosive charge when anyone runs into it. Blood, pain, and smoke everywhere. No one leaves the same way they came in. The whole thing is an amazing, sick idea usually only reserved for old clips on the internet from Japanese promotions. Places like the Tokyo Dome (Onita vs. Chono 4/10/99), Kawasaki Stadium (Megumi Kudo vs. Combat Toyoda 5/5/96) or Shiodome (Masato Tanaka vs. W*ING Kanemura 8/2/97).  There have been rumors and attempts to get something like this in the U.S. to happen for decades, but nothing took.

In the mid-90’s during the early days of wrestling on the internet, people traded tapes – copying a video tape, mailing it, and hoping the dude on the other end of the trade didn’t rip you off just so you could watch a show from various Japanese promotions that you didn’t have yet. Among those promotions was the one that introduced exploding barbed wire matches to the world in 1990 (you can find Atsushi Onita vs Tarzan Goto from the Shiodome on 8/4/90 wherever you get your not-really-licensed wrestling clips), FMW.

FMW founder Atsushi Onita was in various stages of talks with WWF in 1997, ECW in 1998, XPW in 2000 to participate in different variations of exploding deathmatches in the U.S. None of these actually happened for a number of reasons (logistical, legal, financial, or otherwise.) ECW made a poor attempt in 2000 with their exploding barbed wire board match between Vic Grimes and Balls Mahoney that featured boards that did more “farting out smoke” than they did exploding. Years later, in 2017, Onita would be involved in an exploding bat match for CZW in a skating rink that was a far cry from his famous explosion matches with Hayabusa (5/5/95) and Terry Funk (5/5/93).

Even seeing 60-year-old Onita swing an exploding bat in New Jersey in person was more than a teenage me would have ever thought was possible watching those FMW tapes every day after school. It took a combination of wrestlers that grew up on the 90’s Japanese deathmatch heyday, a wrestling promoter who used to frequent Internet forums in his younger days to discuss those same deathmatches, and a state like Florida that has shown us all year that they aren’t much into following safety guidelines to make the real deal happen. In other words, a whole lot had to happen. Everyone that knows me knows there’s little FMW clips playing in my head at all times, so when this was announced my phone blew up with texts and alerts. The AEW World Championship may be on the line, but to all the ghouls out there that are just like me, that’s secondary. This is going be all of our childhood and teenage imaginations brought to the bright lights of American pay-per-view after decades of only dreaming about it.”

If the forbidden door is truly open, then Omega is probably keeping the belt. The Best Bout Machine™ was born in Japan, and if that crossover is going to continue, having him on top makes the most sense, especially considering who’s at the top of New Japan. Omega stays champ after one hell of a spectacle.

Mike DellaCamera writes about wrestling on the internet, sometimes. He’d willingly risk it all for a good turkey club. You can find him here on Twitter.

NXT TakeOver Vengeance Day preview: Shotz to the Heart

Editor’s Note: The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the writer.

Friends, pals, and acquaintances, I come bearing wonderful news. Yes, there is a pandemic that continues to ravage the country and the world, but nevertheless, NXT returns to our literal hearts this Sunday with the horrendously, yet perfectly, named Vengeance Day.

It is imperative that whenever you see the words “Vengeance Day,” you read it in your finest Vince McMahon voice. VENGEANCE DAY is here, complete with having a useless ‘a’ that makes it impossible for me to spell correctly. It also fills me with a yearning for the remarkable and perfect WCW/NWO Revenge more today than ever before. What a game. Surpassing the sterling quality of its predecessor WCW World Tour, Revenge was a Nintendo 64 fixture in the musty basements of my shockingly abstinent teenage years. I’ll always love you intensely with a fire that burns…always.

With there finally being some light at the end of the exhaustingly bleak tunnel that was the past year, I miss wrestling more than ever. I miss going to shows and having the energy of the crowds take a match from good to memorable, memorable to great, and from great to unforgettable. They are the unlisted participant in every match. With that comes the obvious caveat that a bad crowd can just as easily ruin something good. (Picture me making exaggerated hand motions in the direction of “the night after WrestleMania crowd.”)

Without that energy, everything is just kind of this weird, quiet murmur. Nothing stands out and nothing feels special. It’s just noise serving as the soundtrack to nothing. A fun game to play is to imagine the crowd reactions to big moments that have happened during the quarantine era of wrestling. Think about the crowd reaction to KENTA last week. Think about the reaction to Sting debuting in AEW. There were plenty of moments destined to be forgotten in the malaise of the past 12 months — some that could have made us feel something.

And in the spirit of imagining, let’s run through the card for Sunday’s action. Complete with a special Valentine’s Day haiku for each match, because, yes, I do love you just that much.

Men’s Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic Finals: MSK (Nash Carter and Wes Lee) vs. Grizzled Young Veterans (Zack Gibson and James Drake)

As is tradition, a last minute, seemingly nonsensical pairing made a run in the Dusty Classic. I am beyond thrilled to see that they didn’t pull the trigger on having Tom Champs and Tim Thatcher in the finals over the Veterans who are just so good and so deserving of this spot for the second year in a row. They are probably the most underappreciated tag team in all of wrestling and can absolutely hang with any of the best teams out there today. Zack Gibson is such an absolute heat machine on the stick that James Drake never actually has to talk. He can just show up and show out in the ring.

MSK is (are?) very good and very, very fun. MSK probably stands for something, but I must admit that I really don’t care. Both of these guys have all-time NXT names. Why did Jake Atlas get to keep his name but Wes Lee and Nash Carter exist? What was wrong with Dezmond Xavier and Zachary Wentz? Were those somehow too normal? They should have a sister in NXT named Kayleighn Jaymes who has a very well-defined Instagram aesthetic.

Names aside, NXT has done a great job in letting us know that yeah, these dudes are #good at this and have positioned them for success in the future. They have the music, the presentation, and most importantly, an outrageous amount of talent and energy in the ring.

I don’t think MSK debuted as part of the tournament without the plan for them to win it. NXT needs a fresh face tag team at the top of the card more than another heel team. Losing two years in a row gives Gibson something to get mad about and provides great promo fodder.

Valentines Haiku:

Wes Lee, Nash Carter
Is that the best we can do?
Perhaps, I suppose

NXT North American Champion Johnny Gargano vs. Kushida

His steed is unsteady, pulling gently against his bridle. The moon splits the field below in half. Snow lightly falls and with it comes the accompanying quiet. The type of quiet that can mute a city like the world is catching it’s breath. The rider’s exhale whispers through the air before fading into it. He pulls his cloak tight and readies his scythe. He is unceasing. He is inevitable. His non-existent lips form one haunting word: “…Gargano.” The horse spurns gently forward. Death draws ever closer.

It pains me to admit this, but John G. was very entertaining this week. Even being as corny as he is, he always goes all in and, unfortunately you gotta hand it to him. Kushida wins because he’s better in every conceivable way.

Valentine’s Haiku:

Johnny please leave, now
Kushida, go all the way
Back to the future

Women’s Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic Finals: Dakota Kai and Raquel Gonzalez vs. Ember Moon and Shotzi Blackheart

The pairing of Moon and Blackheart in theory makes perfect sense. The character alignments are logical, it’s a great mesh of styles, and even their gear/look compliment each other well. There’s just a little something missing. It’s one of those cases where individually I am all in, but together, I’m just not. I’m fully aware that objectively they are good. My opinion is just a bit different, which, as always, is both allowed and encouraged.

How do you measure a year? A smattering of “Who are you?” chants greeted Gonzalez when she re-debuted last year at NXT TakeOver: Portland. Not from me though. I would never dream of engaging in such behavior. I am condescending enough in my real, actual life and I would rather log off (I will never log off) than participate. There was a bit of validity to the chants, though. Who was she? Was she ready? Would this work? The truth is she wasn’t ready then but so few of us are. She is now though and we sure know who she is. The growth she’s had over the past year is staggering. From “who are you” to the top female heel on NXT is a successful year by any measure.

Gonzalez did not put over Rhea Ripley to lose here. She isn’t being groomed as a Women’s title contender to lose here. The only way I can see that happening is if Kai does something that leads to their break up. There’s more story to tell with the two of them and splitting them now would rush that. Raquel and Dakota take it and hopefully take the Women’s Tag Team titles sooner than later.

Valentine’s Haiku:

Tank Tank Tank Tank Tank
Tank Tank Tank Tank Tank Tank Tank
Tank Tank Tank Tank Tank

NXT Women’s Champion Io Shirai vs. Mercedes Martinez vs. Toni Storm triple threat

Martinez made the business decision of the decade in getting as far away from Retribution as possible. She saw the writing on the wall immediately and dipped as soon as she could. Shout out to her for knowing what she’s worth and recognizing something that was dead in the water. Grinding the indies for as long as she did only to wind up there was unfortunate, but fortunately, she’s back in NXT where she can get to work good matches and be appreciated for what she is.

I have a hard time rooting against Storm because she is such a delightful weirdo. It’s even harder to root for her because, well, she just has absolutely everything. She’s 25 years old and has already wrestled in Stardom, won the 2018 Mae Young Classic, and is a former NXT UK champion. To accomplish so much at such a young age is annoyingly impressive. Since she came back to NXT, she is so much more comfortable in her character and owns it every second she is on screen. It’s a testament to all the incredible, young female talent in WWE that she can have her credentials, all her accolades, and be as good as she is in-ring and still be like, the fifth best young woman in the company.

As always, this all ends with Shirai who is still the ace and still the best of the best. The only person that has a reasonable case for taking the belt from Shirai is Gonzalez. Since she is not in this match, the champion keeps the title. Deductive reasoning at its absolute finest, folks.

Valentine’s Haiku:

Mercedes is good
So is Toni. But it’s all
Io, everything

NXT Champion Finn Balor vs. Pete Dunne

The phrase “inject this into my veins” is as overused as something can be. It’s pervasive and constant. Look at the reply tweets for any new Marvel content, it’s there. Look at the replies to any Star Wars content, it’s there. Heck, look at the replies to Taco Bell bringing back their crispy potatoes, it’s there! With that said, find a good spot in the superior vena cava and just fill me up with this. I’ll be so full of love that I could barely speak.

Balor continues to do the best work of his career, making everyone feel important and more relevant than ever. I have been saying some variant of this for the better part of a year now, but it doesn’t make it less true. He continues to have incredible matches that are matched only by the intensity of his promos. The legitimacy he provides to the NXT title makes it actually possible that Edge might wanna dance with the Balor come April. Will that happen? Probably not. But the fact that it’s even a point of conversation speaks to the level he’s at. When the spotlight is on the Prince, it’s hard to look away.

It’s great to have young Peter back in our lives, isn’t it? His success pre-pandemic as a babyface was fairly surprising because of just how much it goes against his innate heel nature. Snapping fingers, brutal joint manipulation, and mean mugging for the camera are not behaviors of a good guy. Yet there Pete was, doing it live and doing it well. Now that he’s back towards his natural alignment, we’re getting the full Pete Dunne Experience. Gently convincing your significant other to watch two stalwarts of modern European wrestling do the damn thing for 20-30 minutes on Valentine’s Day is what love is all about.

As wonderful as it is to have Dunne back, this is not the moment for his formal coronation as the top dog of the gold brand. Not now and certainly not at the expense of Balor. Finn seems destined to, unfortunately, drop the belt in the next few months to Karrion Kross, so he closes the weekend here with his hand raised. Just watch out for some hourglasses or whatever.

Valentine’s Haiku:

Handsome Finn, sweet Prince
Pete’s looking real jacked, baby
Only one winner 🙁 

Dave Meltzer’s 2020 5+ star matches: Young Bucks, Okada, Takahashi

Image: AEW/Lee South

Even with the pandemic changing the way pro wrestling operated around the world, there were still plenty of outstanding matches in all organizations, 12 of which earned five stars or better in Dave Meltzer’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

As we do at the end of every year, we present Dave’s top-rated matches from the past 12 months with a slightly edited excerpt from the corresponding linked WON.

After starting with those which attained five stars, we now move onto the seven matches that went above five stars: five of which were in New Japan and two of which were in AEW and involved the Young Bucks. One of those was Dave’s top-rated match of the year, garnering six stars.

With the wrestling new year officially kicking off with Wrestle Kingdom 15, here’s a final look back at 2020’s top-rated matches.

IWGP Junior Heavyweight Champion Hiromu Takahashi vs. Will Ospreay | Wrestle Kingdom 14
January 4, 2020 | *****1/2

Note: Originally, Dave rated this five and 1/4 stars watching it live. After watching all the WK matches back on TV, he bumped it up 1/4 star.

“The show turned around with Takahashi’s junior title win over Ospreay in the best junior heavyweight match ever in the building. You could tell from the December Korakuen Hall shows that Takahashi hasn’t missed a beat. These two have wrestled in the past before Takahashi’s injury and, of course, it was great. But, this was their best match together up to this point.

Ospreay was injured in the match landing on his feet in a crazy series of moves when doing a space flying tiger drop to the floor. He never reacted like he was hurt and continued to do two more spots landing on both feet, hitting a second space flying tiger drop over the next seconds. After the show came word he was injured and may have broken his heel. He said he didn’t feel that bad when he got up two days later and worked New Year’s Dash. But that night he was really hurting bad. He underwent X-rays and had suffered a fractured heel.

This was the third best match in Tokyo Dome history at this point, although that only lasted about an hour.”

IWGP Champion Kazuchika Okada vs. Kota Ibushi  | Wrestle Kingdom 14
January 4, 2020 | *****1/2

Note: Originally, Dave rated this five and 1/4 stars watching it live. After watching all the WK matches back on TV, he bumped it up 1/4 star.

“Okada vs. Ibushi was an all-time classic.

This was Okada’s record-setting 30th career title defense, breaking Hiroshi Tanahashi’s record of 28 when he beat Sanada in October. I’ve seen everyone on big stages who has been considered the all-time best of the last 50 years, whether that be Jack Brisco, Terry Funk, Ric Flair, Mitsuharu Misawa, Bret Hart, Shawn Michaels, Hiroshi Tanahashi, Kenny Omega, Ibushi, Ospreay, Jumbo Tsuruta, Genichiro Tenryu, Randy Savage, Ricky Steamboat or anyone else you want to throw in that mix. Okada right now is a step above every single one of them. There are those better at mentally putting a match together. There are those at his level as athletes. There are those who execute as good. There are those with more natural charisma. But Okada is unique in that a few years ago, he was a super wrestler who was clearly behind Shinsuke Nakamura and Tanahashi when it came to charisma. He comes out now with that aura that you are seeing a guy like the Jordan of his sport which was really something only Kobashi had and Flair had and Tanahashi was maybe slightly shy of.”

AEW Tag Team Champions Hangman Page & Kenny Omega vs. Young Bucks | Revolution
February 29, 2020 |  ******

“After the match was over, the immediate reaction was that it was one of the greatest, if not the greatest, tag team match of all-time. Jim Ross called it the greatest tag match he could remember broadcasting and Tony Schiavone said it was the greatest tag team match he’d ever seen. Then again, given they are AEW announcers, you have to temper that. Still, my reaction when it was over that it was the best tag team match ever in the U.S., and the only stuff that may have been comparable was early 90s All Japan stuff in the Mitsuharu Misawa, Kenta Kobashi, Toshiaki Kawada and Akira Taue days, and the All Japan women stuff in the Manami Toyota & Toshiyo Yamada days.

So this past week, I watched in a row: Misawa & Kobashi vs. Kawada & Taue, Midnight Express vs,. Fantastics (which I always considered the beat American tag team match I ever saw, a match from Chattanooga where the Fantastics won the U.S. tag team titles) and Bucks vs. Omega & Page for the third time in four days. Pardon the pun, but those were three fantastic matches and completely different — different times, different places and different audiences. The key is that with the first two matches, if you transported them to 2020, decades after they both took place, and could bring the audience with them, they are still ***** matches.

…As for Saturday’s match, watching it after the other two, it was clearly the best match of the three for a 2020 crowd. While both of those matches would still be among the best, Midnight-Fantastics would be the fourth best match I’ve seen this year (better than Sabre-Ospreay in London but well below Okada-Ibushi and Ospreay-Hiromu Takahashi). The All Japan tag match would be about the same while Saturday’s would be first or second.

It had the best storytelling, but it was not that far ahead of Midnight vs. Fantastics in that realm, but did beat the All Japan match handily. It was the most spectacular of the three, easily. It did not have the sports feel of the Japan match, but it had a very different and more respectful and smarter audience than the NWA match. In many ways, it was the most healthy atmosphere because while the guys were going too far with the risks, without a doubt, the audiences appreciated them for what they were doing. There was no con involved, no attempt to pull the wool over the eyes of the audience or pretend, which you can’t do in a modern world. There was no guy along for the ride like Taue or Stan Lane (who both brought something to their matches but were clearly the least talented of the four).

Part of that is that the person who would be thought to be ahead of time as the guy on that spot in this week’s tag match, Page, was the key player in the key story. The story of the match is that, in the end, Page was to outshine the other three by design and win strongly at the end. But this match not only had more stories and more layers, but also far more depth to the storytelling. All were close to perfect for their audiences. All would transport into different eras and be among the best matches of the year. Nobody had an edge in pacing and none of the three bouts, all over 30 minutes, had a second of down time or ever dragged or felt too long. All actually left much shorter than they really were.

In the end, this week’s match was the best, but saying any of the three weren’t among the best tag matches of all-time seems ludicrous to me now.”

Kota Ibushi vs. Minoru Suzuki | New Japan G1 Climax
October 10, 2020 | *****1/4

“This may have been the best match of Suzuki’s career and he’s had match of the year wins with Tanahashi and A.J. Styles. This was just insane. It was more like a one-take movie fight scene with the hero of the movie facing the monster that won’t die. 

…Ibushi did the Urijah Faber-style jumping knee but Suzuki got the choke again. He went for the Gotch piledriver, but Ibushi used a jumping knee which Suzuki caught. They traded sick headbutts and there was a double headbutt. Ibushi finally connected on a jumping knee and hit the kamagoye for the pin. The scene was spectacular because the idea was the only way to stop Suzuki in a fight was to knock him out cold. So, Suzuki laid on his back like he was knocked out cold and got a big smile on his face.”

Kazuchika Okada vs. Shingo Takagi | New Japan G1 Climax
October 10, 2020 | *****1/4

“Okada vs. Takagi was not the best match of either man’s career, but would have won match of the year in the vast majority of years. This was totally different from the Ibushi-Suzuki match but every bit of the same level of a classic that would have won match of the year more years than not over the past 30. 

Okada hit a spinning tombstone, put on the money clip and hit the rainmaker but Takagi came back with a pumping bomber. Takagi used a headbutt, punches and then a rainmaker for a near fall. Takagi hit last of the dragon for a near fall and a pumping bomber. This was again where time calls are effective especially when everyone knows that every win or loss makes a difference because this race is going down to the wire. At this point, most figured a 30:00 draw after this classic of a match. Okada hit another rainmaker and put on the money clip. In desperation, Takagi got up, doing this incredible sell job on the money clip, grabbed the referee (Red Shoes Unno) and pulled him down. Okada used a neck snapper and put on the money clip again. Takagi did an unreal struggle. Unno was screaming at him about giving up and then Takagi passed out without tapping, so Unno stopped the match.”

AEW Tag Team Champions FTR vs. Young Bucks | Full Gear
November 7, 2020 | *****1/4

“Ever since The Revival broke out as the best working heel tag team in pro wrestling in NXT with matches against Johnny Gargano & Tommaso Ciampa and Chad Gable & Jason Jordan, there had been an underlying social media feud with The Young Bucks.

It was the perfect battle of philosophies: old school vs. new school style, The Revival’s tagline of “no flips, just fists” was in response to the Young Bucks perception of doing flips, which at one point led to a spot doing a bunch of flips to do a back rake to play into the criticism. From that point, both teams wanted to do the match. During the ROH years, the Young Bucks & Cody would say “F*** the Revival” as a chant at the end of shows. The Bucks would sometimes wear FTR on their outfits.

The Revival turned down ridiculous money from WWE (at a time WWE didn’t want to lose anyone) to come to AEW, choosing fun and personal fulfillment. They knew there was a low ceiling for them in WWE as tag teams are slotted in a certain way and they had the handle of very good workers but not particularly charismatic: the kiss of death in WWE. Sometimes, they’d be featured at a certain level and other times they’d be ignored.

In leaving WWE, they played on the feud, changing their ring names to FTR. They spent months building for their first match on this PPV. It started with them as clear rivals but not enemies. They both vyed for a tag title shot at Adam Page & Kenny Omega, but Page cost the Bucks the match with the idea that FTR had manipulated him. FTR then won the gauntlet and beat Page & Omega to win the titles. Then, the Bucks behaved heelish with the idea they weren’t turning heel but needed to get into the dark space for the match. Then they added the stip to where if the Bucks didn’t win, they would never challenge for the titles again. This was the same stip that Cody used one year ago for his match with Chris Jericho which he lost, and at least thus far, has never reneged on. To try and create the drama, FTR won every match since their arrival.

The Bucks won the titles in a match where you could see that both teams wanted to make a statement with and have an all-time classic. It was a clear-cut match of the night on a show filled with great action. Many remarked it was one of the best tag team matches ever held in the U.S., and some even ranked it above the Bucks vs. Page & Omega earlier this year (which I would still say is the best U.S. tag match I’ve ever seen).”

Dave Meltzer’s 2020 5-star matches: Okada, WALTER, Naito, Shiozaki

Even with the pandemic changing the way pro wrestling operated around the world, there were still plenty of outstanding matches in all organizations, 12 of which earned five stars or better in Dave Meltzer’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

As we do at the end of every year, we present Dave’s top-rated matches from the past 12 months with a slightly edited excerpt from the corresponding linked WON. We’ll start with the five star matches first and look at the seven matches that earned more than five stars in a separate post.

IWGP Champion Kazuchika Okada vs. Intercontinental Champion Tetsuya Naito | New Japan Wrestle Kingdom 14
January 5, 2020

Note: Originally, Dave rated this four and 3/4 stars watching in person (remember those times?) but after watching it on TV, he bumped it up to five.

“(Fans) got up for the key spots (the Liger retirement, the Minoru Suzuki run in on Jon Moxley, Jericho vs. Tanahashi) and where Naito beat Okada to conclude a multi-year storyline that started six years earlier when fans voted he and Okada out of the Tokyo Dome main event, and that continued in 2018 when most expected Naito to win the title only to have it not happen. The fatigue was not enough to hamper the great moments, but did hurt some of the undercard bouts.

It is true that Naito peaked as a cool character and merchandise seller in 2018. If the world was only about Naito, he should have won the title that night. Most second-guessed Gedo’s decision, but in hindsight, for the company, Okada on top in 2018 was far superior to Naito because of the Tanahashi and Omega storylines and the chasing of records. 2019 had to be revamped due to Omega leaving, but there was no way they could have gone to Naito that year where it would have ended up as big as it was here.

But after doing all that and with the emotions the highest, Gedo took away the celebration by having KENTA attack Naito. He did give Naito time to recover and cut the closing promo, so everyone went home getting to see the experience — a big moment that culminated a six-year-long quest.”

Best Friends vs. Ortiz & Santana parking lot fight | AEW Dynamite
September 16, 2020

“The company had one of the craziest and best matches in its history with the parking lot match. I’d go ***** as it was among the best matches of its kind I have ever seen and while totally different, the only thing I can compare it to was the Ted DiBiase vs. Jim Duggan tuxedo street fight coal miner’s glove match in Houston in the 80s. Jim Ross said it was the best street fight match he had ever called. It’s not my personal favorite kind of match because all four guys killed themselves taking bumps on car hoods, roofs, windshields and other crazy spots with all kinds of hardway blood all over people’s bodies. It highlighted what was one of the best Dynamite shows to date.

The backstory: when the pandemic hit in March, Tony Khan had two immediate ideas. One was putting the wrestlers in the crowd with faces on one side and heels on the other, taken from watching Jimmy Kimmel using the staff as his audience. The other was a parking lot match which came out of a long weekend of brainstorming while working on the 3/18 show. The match was set up for Best Friends vs. Penta & Rey Fenix and advertised for the 3/25 show. But things happened with the tapings and it was simply impossible to do the advertised match and show.

The match was put together by Jerry Lynn and the four guys with Khan also having some influence. It was a one take match, not edited. The Orange Cassidy coming out of the trunk finish was the scheduled finish for the original match in March. The idea changed when Santana pitched Khan on doing a program with Best Friends with the idea of destroying Sue’s (Trent’s mother) minivan to start the feud. When Khan agreed, the destroying of the minivan idea led to Khan thinking that ,if possible, the angle blowoff should be the parking lot match where they finally did the Cassidy finish. So, at that point, they laid out a three match program with this as the final match.”

Shingo Takagi vs. Will Ospreay | New Japan G1 Climax
September 27, 2020

“This was only the second time these two have ever wrestled and the first was the 2019 match of the year winner. They did an insane opening spot, channeling Low Ki and Samoa Joe from early ROH. Takagi hit a death valley bomb on the floor followed by a Billy Graham throat drop and a DDT. They traded wicked chops like explosions. Ospreay used hard kicks until Takagi used a dragon screw. Takagi tried a brainbuster, but Ospreay flipped in mid-air and somehow ended up doing a stunner, followed by a phenomenal forearm and a space flying Tiger drop….

…Ospreay went for the hidden blade but Takagi ducked. Ospreay then used a rolling elbow. Takagi did the Hansen/Kobashi clotheslining the guy off the top rope spot and a death valley bomb off the middle rope, but was slow in going for the pin. Ospreay kicked out at one. Takagi then got the win after a pumping bomber and Last of the Dragon. This was among the top five matches of this year.”

NXT UK Champion WALTER vs. Ilja Dragunov | NXT UK
October 29, 2020

“Probably the most brutal match in WWE history took place on the NXT UK weekly TV show with WALTER retaining over his longtime rival in 25:09. It’s a ***** match, but one I almost hesitate to give it to because of the brutality level. If you compare it to one of the great Minoru Suzuki matches, the offense wasn’t nearly as crisp as far as looking like a trained fighter. WALTER, who is close to 300 pounds, just chopped the hell out of Dragunov who is a master seller. Dragunov also has one of those pale bodies where the damage shows up, so he was all beet red throughout the chest and upper back mostly from hard chops. WALTER’s chest was beat up as well.

Dragunov was whipped into the ropes and went throat first into the middle rope and whiplashed himself on purpose. Dragunov did a missile dropkick three quarters of the way across the ring. WALTER gave him a choke suplex on the floor. Dragunov is like Ishii in the sense his selling is legit in a different manner than most pro wrestlers. WALTER gave Dragunov a power bomb on the apron, a second in the ring, and a splash off the top rope but Dragunov kicked out. WALTER finally beat him with a choke. By this point, Dragunov was bleeding heavily from the mouth. It was gruesome. To pull this off at this level with no fans was unbelievable. I thought WALTER vs. Tyler Bate last year was better due to the superior storytelling, but this was still an incredible performance by both.”

GHC Champion Go Shiozaki vs. Takashi Sugiura | Pro Wrestling NOAH 
December 6, 2020

Shiozaki’s title retention over Sugiura was one of the best matches of the year. There are natural comparisons between this and Shiozaki’s win over Katsuhiko Nakajima which a lot of people talked about for match of the year. Both matches were exceptionally hard hitting. This match was even longer, had more variety, and peaked better. I think the pacing for this match was perfect and it went 51:44, and obviously felt long, but not that long because of the slow pace and the great selling of every move.

To go that long given the restrictions on cheering is a risk. I’m sure some would feel it went too long, but I never got that feeling because it was always intense and never felt slow or rushed. I don’t know about match of the year, but I would say it’s a match that if you are voting for match of the year, you should go out of your way to watch.”

NXT TakeOver WarGames preview: Love is like War

The Internet is nothing if not a supremely safe space — one that is warm, accepting, and even encouraging of all viewpoints.

Such a safe space means I can comfortably unburden myself by admitting WarGames is my least favorite NXT TakeOver every year. Don’t get me wrong: the matches are consistently good. It’s just that I enjoy matches with higher stakes. I love popcorn matches as much as anyone, but we all have our preferences.

It’s also why I think the Survivor Series matches should be launched into the sun. Brand supremacy is not something anyone even pretends to care about. It’s not a thing! Wearing a blue SmackDown t-shirt is the equivalent of Rob Lowe wearing an NFL hat. Modern Survivor Series stinks, but at least WarGames matches are wildly entertaining.

The point of those matches aren’t to serve any substantive storylines. Sure, there are stories that got us to this point, but that’s not the real appeal. The appeal comes from the spots and the movez. What the matches can accomplish are two things: kicking off major storylines (Dakota Kai turning heel last year) and giving the wrestlers signature moments for their video packages (Ricochet’s double moonsault off the top of the cage). Those needs are always going to exist, so WarGames is gonna keep on keepin’ on.

WarGames also provides a way to get more wrestlers on the card; something that we all love to see. And, what a card this is. This is the best of the best of the current era of NXT; a nice blend of established stars and newer faces.

So for the last time in 2020, let’s run down the card and make some terrible predictions! 

Tommaso Ciampa vs. Timothy Thatcher

Thatcher is a droplet from God and for some reason, he remains slept on. The old argument that he doesn’t have a personality is lazy and weak. Sometimes, I think those critics are only remembering his long, intentionally boring EVOLVE title run and just assume there isn’t much there. I’ll repeat for the people in the back: my man intentionally wrestled as boring as possible to make his character more unlikable. What a maneuver. What a beautifully meta maneuver.

However, I think an unfortunate outcome of that is people thinking that is only what he is: boring and slow. In reality, it was just a conscious choice. Rarely does the grinding and grappling style invite the casual viewer, but Big Tim makes stretching someone entertaining as hell. He’s been so good for so long, and, with the exception of flips, there isn’t much he can’t do in the ring.

I’m not quite sure what’s going on with Tom Champ, though. When he came back with a cool jacket and vest, it was clear he was a bad dude. He put a big-time beatdown on Jake Atlas after a match and everything! But then, he cut a sunshine day-esque promo after NXT went off the air which means he cut a ‘thank you NXT Universe’ promo to…his coworkers? All of a sudden, he was then a good guy?

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

This week, he showed up to interrupt Thatcher’s class which is just plain rude. We all know that the number one quality WWE looks for in a babyface is rudeness. 95% of what I write is a joke or sarcastic, but that fact is actually true. Rudeness and terrible senses of humor are the starting point for every WWE face.

Ciampa is at the same point as Johnny Gargano is where wins and losses don’t matter. He can get reheated whenever they need a challenger for a belt and can withstand a bunch of losses. Thatcher is far less established, and needs the win. Thatcher is also better so he’s going to get that win.

Strap match: Dexter Lumis vs. Cameron Grimes

My working title for this column was “The Greatest Love Story NXT has ever told” which is a not at all subtle way to introduce my theory that these two are, you guessed it, very much in love. When I think about why this feud is still going on, I can only conclude they are two soulmates wrestling (no pun intended) with their own realizations of this. Unwilling to deal with these feelings, they resort to combat. Or, you know, it’s just another wrestling feud. (No, I haven’t been outside in nine months. Why do you ask?)

I personally love Grimes more than I love most things, so I get it. I’m into Lumis slightly less, but I get the appeal. My affection aside, and possibly theirs, this feud has to end.

A quick recap of this program so far:

  • Haunted House of Terror match in October
  • Blindfold match in November
  • Strap match in December

The only logical end to this is a casket match on Valentines Day with a video package soundtracked by Alkaline Trio. The world hasn’t exactly been set on fire by this program, yet it soldiers on. Lumis and Grimes, much like death, is a slow march into the sea. 

Even though Grimes got a hat over, it seems like NXT has bigger plans for Lumis. He was poised to get a midcard run before getting injured. He plays his character really well and has a dope theme song ripped right out of Tron: Legacy. Lumis gets the win here.

NXT North American Champion Leon Ruff vs. Johnny Gargano vs. Damian Priest

One of the things I loved about NXT was that there was always something new and different happening. With wrestlers constantly being moved up to the main roster and new signings, the roster always churned. It was great to write about because there was always something to say or a different story to explore. When I previewed the last TakeOver, I wrote about the audience needing to realize this isn’t the old NXT anymore. Wrestlers are going to stay for a lot longer and, sometimes, forever.

I realized that I was actually talking to myself which happens a lot. My expectations need to change as well. I can’t keep recycling variants of “Wouldn’t be a TakeOver without a Johnny Gargano match included, lol.” NXT is the only brand that some of these wrestlers will perform on and it’s time to talk and think about it from that perspective. God bless anyone who previews the main roster shows.

I have seen far too much wrestling over my illustrious 35 years on this planet that is delicately perched on a turtle’s back. I have forgotten more matches than I remember but I will never forget March 15, 2019, in Melrose, MA, for EVOLVE 123.

On that unusually warm winter evening, I witnessed Ruff take the worst in-ring beating I can ever remember. Anthony Henry and JD Drake (The Workhorsemen if you’re a real one) chopped the absolute life out of him to the point it was uncomfortable. Just to make sure I wasn’t misremembering, I texted one of my friends who was at the show with me. He instantly responded and said, “It was like watching an assault. I was actually uncomfortable.” If any of you are feeling particularly masochistic, take this match out for a spin.

Seeing Ruff go from that to being the North American champion is borderline unbelievable. From getting the living hell beaten out of him in a crappy auditorium to being an absolute delight on NXT, here’s to you, Leon. Here’s to you.

This story has been such a fun and welcome surprise. I don’t think anyone thinks Ruff is in for a long run with the belt, but it would be incredible if that was the case. Johnny G has some spooky guys, Damien Priest has some mesh shirts, but Leon Ruff has the belt and will somehow keep it on Sunday.

WarGames: Undisputed ERA (Adam Cole, Kyle O’Reilly, Roderick Strong & Bobby Fish) vs. Pat McAfee, Pete Dunne, Tag Team Champions Oney Lorcan & Danny Burch 

2020 continues to be very much on its bullshit, but even in this decade-long feeling hell year, who saw “Pat McAfee is the biggest star in NXT” coming? That might sound hot takey, but is it?

He just gets this. He is #good at this. He strolled into the company as a fully-formed mega heel, one that is capable of cutting groan-inducing promos, GIFable moments, and actually doing some work in the ring. And, in what can only be a sign of the existence of God, he made Burch and Lorcan matter. Going from opening shows to the top of the card is good work if you can get it. I’m not entirely sure Dunne needs to be a part of this as he just doesn’t really fit this style of stable. Him leading British Strong Style was one thing, but this is a different animal. Still, I don’t think anyone is ever going to complain about more Peter on their TVs.

Undisputed Era being the “good guys” while still acting pretty much the same as they always have is really fun. They aren’t doing a ton different as lot of it is subtle and speaks to the versatility of Cole and O’Reilly. Cole has kept the same promo delivery, but just redirects his disdain and dislike from “you people” to Pat Mac and his pals. KOR has toned down the cartoonish goofiness but is still wildly entertaining with his promo ahead of his match with Finn Balor as a perfect example of this. Rod Strong, well, he’s not doing much at all which is kind of the perfect use of Rod Strong. And, full offense, but we are super not talking about Bobby Fish when he is *checks notes* out here supporting Q-Anon conspiracy theories.

Like I said at the beginning, WarGames doesn’t matter but that doesn’t mean this match won’t absolutely rip. Still, it’s hard to really get my dander up about the UE bros getting revenge on McAfee when they have been largely terrible to everyone for years. I don’t think McAfee came to NXT to lose twice in a row, so he and his boys take this one home.

WarGames: Candice LeRae, Toni Storm, Dakota Kai & Raquel González vs. Women’s Champion Io Shirai, Shotzi Blackheart, Ember Moon & Rhea Ripley

The real star power in NXT is on the women’s side. Just look at this staggering amount of talent:

  • Ripley: Already wrestled a marquee WrestleMania match. 
  • Shirai: A transcendent champion. Please slowly run me over with an Oldsmobile.
  • Blackheart: Hosted Halloween Havoc. Has a cool lil’ tank.
  • Storm: Won the 2018 Mae Young Classic. 
  • Moon: Best finisher in wrestling. 
  • LeRae: Still the most underappreciated worker in the world. 
  • Kai: Really good!
  • Gonzalez: She gets her own section below!

It’s all good. Make this match the main event and let the women shine. I wonder if this is where they officially, officially pull the trigger on Gonzalez as it’s been close to happening for a minute now.  Her move up the card has been a deliberate one and she’s proved she’s ready for more. According to the indisputable Cagematch, she hasn’t even wrestled 200 career matches yet, so there’s plenty of room to grow. While we’re here, shoutout to Cagematch for being a valuable and absolutely insane resource for me when I write. It’s especially great, because where else can you find a comprehensive list of every wrestling match ever AND see that Austin Ares has a higher match rating than both Ric Flair and Randy Savage? The people who categorize and catalog this content are even wilder than people who update Wikipedia pages regularly. I love the internet so, so much.

Any team that has Ripley and Shirai on it is never losing. The other side could have the Four Horsewomen and I would still think they would win. Shirai had the big spot last year and I think this time, it’s all Blackheart. She’s clearly not afraid to die in the ring, so she gets to have the moment people are going to text their friends about. But I just can’t help but think that it’s Raquel’s time. She made her debut at the first TakeOver of the year in Portland, OR, (remember that?) and bookends the year with a W.  Big Mami Cool holds it down for the bad girls.

Mike DellaCamera refuses to log off. Be his friend or tell him how wrong he is here on Twitter.

The History of Pro Wrestling on Thanksgiving by Dave Meltzer

Editor’s note: The following is the lead story from the December 6, 2010 edition of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter. From all of us here at F4WOnline, we hope you have the best Thanksgiving possible. We’re incredibly thankful for all of the support that our subscribers and readers give us.

**********

A long time ago….In a galaxy far far, well, not that far away…..

“Starrcade 83, don’t miss your chance to be part of the sports event of a lifetime. See Rowdy Roddy Piper vs. Greg Valentine, first time ever in a collar match. A Flare for the Gold, Ric Flair vs. Harley Race for the world heavyweight championship and Jack & Jerry Brisco vs. Ricky Steamboat & Jay Youngblood for the world tag team title. Starrcade 83, Greensboro Coliseum, a Flare for the Gold, don’t you miss it.”

Tony Schiavone: “Fans, 9 super spectacular matches that night. You’ll see Maniac Mark Lewin & Kevin Sullivan vs. Johnny Weaver & Scott McGhee, The Assassins 1 & 2 with Paul Jones against Bugsy McGraw & Rufus R. Jones, another big tag team match, Dick Slater & Bob Orton Jr. vs. Chief Wahoo McDaniel & Mark Youngblood. You’ll also see Abdullah the Butcher there, against Carlos Colon. TV title against the mask, Kabuki with Gary Hart against Charlie Brown from Outta Town. The world tag team title is at stake, Jack & Jerry Brisco taking on Ricky Steamboat & Jay Youngblood w/2 special stipulations we will talk about in just a minute (the title can change hands via DQ and Angelo ‘King Kong’ Mosca as special referee). The collar match you want to see, Rowdy Roddy Piper vs. Greg Valentine. And in the cage, no disqualification, for the world heavyweight championship, former champion Ric Flair taking on Harley Race.

Ric Flair: “Alright Harley, it’s come down to this, brother. You and I in the cage. Two men walk in, you the world heavyweight champion, me wanting it. The people in this part of the country have never seen the world championship change hands. Thanksgiving night, they’re going to see it. Believe it, Whooo!”

A lot of people, when thinking about when Thanksgiving was the biggest night of the year in wrestling, think about Starrcade 83. In many ways, it was the show that launched the modern era of pro wrestling, some 16 months before the first WrestleMania. The event was held not only live at the Greensboro Coliseum, but closed-circuited to 17 locations around the Carolinas as well as into Puerto Rico.

The actual debut of pro wrestling on closed circuit television was in 1971, shortly after John Tolos threw Monsel’s powder in the eyes of Freddie Blassie on KCOP-television’s live Saturday night wrestling show from Hollywood, CA. But that era, when the promotion was on fire in 1971 and 1972, was limited to broadcasting some shows that they knew the Olympic Auditorium couldn’t hold to two or three large movie theaters in the city.

Closed circuit wrestling had been done similarly by the mid-70s in Madison Square Garden during Bruno Sammartino’s second title reign, where when the Garden would sell out well in advance, they would book what was then called the Felt Forum, a 4,000-seat arena that was part of the MSG complex, to get the overflow.

In 1976, there was actually an event much bigger than Starrcade, the Muhammad Ali vs. Antonio Inoki fight, which was on closed circuit throughout North America. The wrestling promoters booked the show and in hundreds of closed-circuit locations around the country. The idea was to combine the boxing audience with its biggest draw, and the wrestling audience by using Andre the Giant (against boxer Chuck Wepner) and closed circuit of top stars in the area. There were a number of live events, in cities like San Francisco, Los Angeles, Houston, Atlanta, Chicago and Shea Stadium in New York to air the area’s biggest wrestling stars for the undercard that night.

But outside of the Northeast, where the real draw was Sammartino coming back from a broken neck against Stan Hansen and drawing 32,000 fans, and not Ali vs. Inoki, the event was a major financial disappointment.

This was something different, as there was no Ali involved, which meant no mainstream publicity. This was a regional wrestling company booking most of its regular major arenas for a closed-circuit showing of the biggest event it ever produced. The event is still probably the single most memorable and talked about wrestling show ever held in that part of the country. Closed-circuit was hit-and-miss, with the promotion blaming terrible weather, but there were still an additional 30,000 fans watching besides the 15,447 which sold out the Greensboro Coliseum in advance. Flair won the title for a second time, beating Race in a match with Gene Kiniski as referee. Flair vs. Race is generally considered one of the two best memorable wrestling matches in the history of Carolinas wrestling. The other, held eight months earlier in the same arena, was Steamboat & Youngblood vs. Sgt. Slaughter & Don Kernodle in Greensboro. That match was actually responsible for Starrcade. That even sold out the Coliseum, turned away 6,000 at the door (which has been exaggerated as the years have gone by), and was responsible for one of the cities most famous traffic jams, with fans coming from all over the territory for the match. Between the traffic jam and turning so many people away, this led to the idea of the first Starrcade. Instead of having their fans who wanted to see what they were promoting as a once-in-a-lifetime event have to drive into town, they would beam the show into their home arenas.

Every major match had a storyline, but the key was that Flair had become the area’s biggest star in the 70s, and on September 17, 1981, became the first wrestler based in the Carolinas to win the NWA world heavyweight title, when he beat Dusty Rhodes in Kansas City. However, on June 10, 1983, in St. Louis, Race regained the title. There was politicking over who would beat Race for the title, which mostly came down to Flair and David Von Erich. At the time Flair was clearly the stronger candidate, and they ran a series of angles for months. Race came into the territory in July for defenses against Flair in most of the major cities, and after disputed finishes, announced he would never defend against Flair again. He then put up a $25,000 bounty to anyone who would injure Flair and put him out of action. Dick Slater and Bob Orton Jr. gave Flair a stuff piledriver, putting him out of action. Flair even did a retirement speech with a neck brace in one of the most memorable interviews of his career, only to come back chasing Slater and Orton Jr. around with a baseball bat, and then working around the territory in grudge matches beating both men. Race agreed to one last title shot, with no DQ, in a cage.

An interesting note regarding that show. Dusty Rhodes, who was at the show, but didn’t wrestle, and was soon to take over as booker of the territory, came up with the actual name “Starrcade.” Gordon Solie, the Florida and Georgia announcer, who did not broadcast in the territory, was flown in to be the lead announcer even though he wasn’t fully familiar with all the wrestlers and their angles. And forgotten in history, is that the head booker of the territory, who set up all the angles, was not even there for the event, as Dory Funk Jr. was in Japan for the annual All Japan Real World Tag League tournament.

The show was nearly ruined. A far bigger story than Starrcade and the first closed circuit event was going on in pro wrestling. Vince McMahon Jr., Vince McMahon Sr., and Jim Barnett (their Director of Operations at the time) all resigned from the NWA at its 1983 convention, as a prelude to the WWF’s national expansion. They were attempting to sign every big star with the strategy that they take the top draws in the local areas, and buy the television time slots in the existing areas, and then run in those areas using the local stars and a crew of national stars. It didn’t work out exactly like that everywhere, as many wrestlers liked who they worked for, including Flair, but that was the idea. McMahon Jr. had a secret meeting with Race right before Thanksgiving, offering him a big guarantee to bring what most fans believed to be the legitimate world heavyweight title to WWF, where no doubt he’d drop it in a unification match with Hulk Hogan, who McMahon had just signed to be his flag bearer and was about to make champion.

Race, who was part owner in a money losing regional promotion in Kansas City, as well as a traditionally strong St. Louis promotion that had just started a decline, turned it down out of loyalties to the companies he owned, his partners, and the people who trusted him for so many years to hold the championship. Race claimed he told McMahon, while in a bathroom where the secret discussion was taking place, to look in the mirror. McMahon didn’t understand where he was going, but Race said that every day when he wakes up, the first thing he has to do is look in the mirror. And if he signed that deal, he’d have no respect for the reflection for the rest of his life. One version of the story Race used to tell, but now when asked changes the subject (as noted by Race’s high placing in the recent WWE DVD) is that McMahon was so furious, as they were walking out of the bathroom with the deal dead, McMahon charged and tried to tackle Race, who quickly reversed and subdued him. Whether true or not, the story, minus the physical aspect, was identical to the story Howard Cosell, the legendary sportscaster told, when he was approached by McMahon to be his lead announcer at that same time, and Cosell gave it no consideration and turned down McMahon, noting McMahon snapped and laid into him verbally like he couldn’t believe.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 24, 1983

Greensboro Coliseum – Starrcade ‘83 A Flare for the Gold

  • Rufus R. Jones & Bugsy McGraw b The Assassins (Jody Hamilton & Ray “Hercules Hernandez” Fernandez)
  • Kevin Sullivan & Mark Lewin b Johnny Weaver & Scott McGhee
  • Abdullah the Butcher b Carlos Colon
  • Dick Slater & Bob Orton Jr. b Wahoo McDaniel & Mark Youngblood
  • Charlie Brown (Jimmy Valiant) b Great Kabuki to win the NWA TV title and retain his mask
  • Roddy Piper b Greg Valentine in a dog collar match
  • Ricky Steamboat & Jay Youngblood b Jack & Jerry Brisco to win the NWA world tag team titles with Angelo Mosca as referee
  • Ric Flair b Harley Race to win the NWA title in a cage match with Gene Kiniski as referee

Attendance: 15,447 sellout

Closed-circuit attendance: 30,000

Thanksgiving in most of the 80s meant some of the biggest wrestling shows of the year. The tradition was at its peak from 1983 to 1987, with the early Starrcades in Greensboro and later Atlanta as well, Star Wars at Reunion Arena in Dallas, the AWA at the St. Paul Civic Center, Mid South Wrestling at the Superdome in Louisiana and the early Survivor Series events. But it’s been largely extinct for almost two decades.

The mentality espoused by the wrestling promoters who had success that night was that families would get together in the afternoon and by evening, wanted to go out and do something. The movie business had its traditional best weekend of the year, that showed that at night, people wanted to go out, often with their families. That meant bigger crowds. It was not just Thanksgiving night, but the Thursday through Sunday of Thanksgiving weekend that, along with Dec. 25-30, became the two best periods of the year for the industry. But those holiday traditions are now long gone, and few modern fans even think of wrestling on Thanksgiving, Christmas or any other holiday.

It’s hard to know exactly what started the tradition, but it was not something that was part of wrestling as long as people can remember. In the 1950s, Thanksgiving was avoided for major shows, thinking you couldn’t draw well on that holiday. Except in Greensboro, it really wasn’t until the 70s that there was really evidence of Thanksgiving being a great date to draw people to shows. Sure, some regular Thursday night cities, like Sacramento, drew well above average, running normal shows, but Greensboro (and later Norfolk as well) for Jim Crockett Sr. would try and build that date for its big show of the year, and by the late 60s, had created a tradition.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 23, 1972

Sacramento Memorial Auditorium

  • Manuel Cruz (Jose Gonzalez) b Beauregarde
  • The Samoans (Reno Tuufuli & Tio Taylor) b Fritz Von Goering & John L. Sullivan (later to become Johnny Valiant)
  • Crazy Luke Graham d Pepper Gomez
  • Great Mephisto b Pepper Martin (later to become a movie actor)
  • Paul DeMarco & Lars Anderson b Pat Patterson & Rocky Johnson via DQ in a three out of five fall match to retain NWA world tag team championships

Attendance: 4,200 sellout

The earliest record we can find of a major Thanksgiving event was November 26, 1959, when Barnett promoted a show at the Indianapolis State Fairgrounds Coliseum headlined by Roy & Ray Shire (Ray Stevens) defending the NWA world tag team titles against Dick the Bruiser & Yukon Eric, and drawing a sellout of 13,000 fans. This was when the Shire Brothers were on fire as world tag champs and they drew three crowds of that size in a five week period against Bruiser and partners, so it wasn’t as if it established Thanksgiving as a special day to draw.

But the two cities where Thanksgiving wrestling was the longest lasting tradition started over the next two years.

Minneapolis-St. Paul had a Thanksgiving tradition from 1960 to 1987, until the AWA could no longer draw decently. The only exception was in 1972, when the promotion ran Saturday night of Thanksgiving weekend.

And it’s little known trivia that the first pro wrestling event ever held at the Greensboro Coliseum was on November 23, 1961, Thanksgiving night, and wrestling was held in the arena on Thanksgiving through 1987. Unlike Minneapolis, where Thanksgiving was not really pushed as anything bigger than a usual show, it was Greensboro that had the biggest cultural Thanksgiving wrestling tradition of any city in the country.

A 1984 newspaper story in the local paper noted, “In Greensboro, Thanksgiving has become synonymous with the spectacle of big men hurling each other about in a small ring in front of thousands. Wrestling has become part of Thanksgiving in this city for more than a quarter of a century.”

The newspaper story for that debut talked more about the main event than the beginning of pro wrestling in what would be one of its most successful arenas, or the idea of a show on Thanksgiving night.

“Big Bob Orton (grandfather of Randy Orton), rough and rugged part-Indian from Kansas City, will provide the championship tests for world-famed Argentina Rocca in the feature wrestling event at the Greensboro Coliseum Thanksgiving night at 8:15. These two giants of the wrestling world met at New York’s Madison Square Garden a month ago in the feature (sort of true, the MSG main event in October of that year was Rocca & Miguel Perez vs. Orton & Buddy Rogers), and they will be renewing their 1961 competitive series in the Coliseum’s first wrestling performance which is expected to draw a near-capacity crowd.”

The Coliseum held live wrestling every Thanksgiving night through 1986, drawing many of the largest crowds in the history of the territory. Ric Flair even points to the decision of moving Starrcade out of Greensboro, to Chicago, in 1987 as the key moment that killed the Carolinas territory. While that is a little simplistic, there was a lot of bad will among the fans in Greensboro when they took Starrcade away from them. Pretty much at the time, everyone thought it was a bad move. With the benefit of hindsight, it was still a bad move, but not one that changed history any.

Still, Thanksgiving 1987 was among the most pivotal days in the history of the industry, and played a big part in the death of Jim Crockett Promotions. Although that was probably inevitable as well, as Jim Crockett Jr. simply didn’t have the money, the developed revenue streams and cash flow to compete on an even playing field with Vince McMahon. He expanded into new markets second, wasn’t as good at making stars, didn’t have as much money to spend on production and was facing insurmountable odds by not being from New York.

Crockett announced his company would do its first PPV event, the fifth Starrcade event, on November 26, 1987, called “Chitown Heat,” at the UIC Pavilion in Chicago. At the time, Crockett was desperately trying to combat the perception that his company was a Southern wrestling promotion strong in the Carolinas, and thus, secondary to Vince McMahon’s WWF, based right outside of New York. Moving the company offices from Charlotte to Dallas, and moving Starrcade from Greensboro & Atlanta (the prior two years were dual events closed-circuited with half the matches in each city, alternating back-and-forth), to Chicago was part of that strategy.

But the big story of that night was not Crockett taking Starrcade from Greensboro, killing the Thanksgiving tradition his father had started 26 years earlier. It was Vince McMahon creating the Survivor Series to run on PPV from Cleveland that same night to prevent Crockett from a successful debut. In those days, PPV events were rare, and most systems only had one channel, so you couldn’t run two PPVs at the same time. The key was, McMahon was a proven success on PPV, coming off WrestleMania III, which was a huge success, doing in excess of 400,000 buys at a time when there were only about 5 million addressable homes.

Knowing who had the leverage, Crockett agreed to move his show to the afternoon, which negated the whole key of why Thanksgiving worked. The afternoon was when families were together and not a time for live events. There was fear that in Chicago, with no wrestling tradition on that day, and an afternoon show, which seemed to be a bad idea given that’s when families get together, there was fear the live event could be an embarrassment. But that turned out not to be an issue, as the UIC Pavilion only held 9,000 fans, and actually sold out two weeks ahead of time.

Cable companies, short on PPV product, were thrilled, looking at marketing the two events together as a package deal, Starrcade in the afternoon, and Survivor Series at night. McMahon, realizing that what he just did may have benefitted him as the greater awareness would have helped both sides, did not run a show to also benefit his competitor. He told the cable companies that they would have to pick one show or the other, knowing he had all the leverage as a proven PPV winner. To make it more emphatic, he said that any company that aired Starrcade would not be allowed to have WrestleMania on PPV in 1988. Only five cable companies bucked the system – four in the Carolinas where Starrcade was expected to do more business, and one in San Jose, CA, where the company said they had made a verbal deal with Crockett, and unlike every other company in the country, their word was their bond, and, despite WWF being the home promotion and them admitting they were making a decision that would cost them business. But they said they weren’t going to be strong-armed. Despite the threats, all five companies were allowed to air WrestleMania the next year.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 26, 1987

The most important Thanksgiving night in history

First Survivor Series – Richfield, Coliseum

  • Jim Duggan & Randy Savage & Ricky Steamboat & Brutus Beefcake & Jake Roberts b Harley Race & Hercules & Honky Tonk Man & Danny Davis & Ron Bass 24:00 **1/4
  • Velvet McIntyre & Itsuki Yamazaki & Noriyo Tateno & Rockin Robin & Fabulous Moolah b Leilani Kai & Judy Martin & Dawn Marie (not the later WWE/ECW valet) & Donna Christanello & Sensational Sherri Martel 20:00 **
  • Brian Blair & Jim Brunzell & Jim Powers & Paul Roma & Tito Santana & Rick Martel & Dynamite Kid & Davey Boy Smith & Jacques Rougeau Jr. & Raymond Rougeau b Greg Valentine & Dino Bravo & Demolition Ax & Smash & Bret Hart & Jim Neidhart & Haku & Tama & Nikolai Volkoff & Boris Zhukov 37:00 ****
  • Andre the Giant & One Man Gang & King Kong Bundy & Butch Reed & Rick Rude b Hulk Hogan & Bam Bam Bigelow & Paul Orndorff & Don Muraco & Ken Patera 22:00 ***3/4

Attendance: 21,000 sellout

PPV buys: 350,000

Starrcade 87 Chitown Heat – UIC Pavilion – Final Starrcade on Thanksgiving

  • Michael Hayes & Jimmy Garvin & Sting d Rick Steiner & Larry Zbyszko & Eddie Gilbert 15:00 **3/4
  • Steve Williams b Barry Windham to retain the UWF title 7:00 DUD
  • Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson b Stan Lane & Bobby Eaton in a scaffold match 9:35 ***
  • Nikita Koloff b Terry Taylor to unify the NWA & UWF TV titles 18:20 *
  • Tully Blanchard & Arn Anderson retained the NWA tag team titles losing via DQ to the Road Warriors 14:00 ***½
  • Dusty Rhodes b Lex Luger to win the U.S. title 16:00 *
  • Ric Flair b Ronnie Garvin to win the NWA world title in a cage match 17:25 **½

Attendance: 9,000 sellout

Closed-circuit attendance: 41,000

PPV buys: 16,500

Crockett had signed his top talent to lucrative contracts, and spent heavily, including using private planes to transport his top talent to shows–and on vacations and to party after shows in Las Vegas. He was counting on the idea of doing four PPV shows per year with an expanding PPV universe that would bring in millions of revenue with each show. Not getting the expected PPV revenue from Starrcade caused him to fall behind in his contract payments and run deeply in the red. Realistically, the McMahon move cost Crockett $2 million, or possibly a little more. While he eventually was $5 million in the red in early 1988 before feeling forced to sell, the $2 million may have given him some breathing room and hope. And the ability to generate that money, and hope that larger numbers would follow and more people had PPV capability, for four similar events per year, could have given at least degree of hope of turning that red into black. But after McMahon was able to sabotage his first and second PPV shows by pressuring systems not to carry them, Crockett had to go to Turner Broadcasting, a powerhouse in cable, for the muscle to get all the cable systems his third PPV show. But in doing so, Turner Broadcasting became a partner, garnering a sizeable percentage of the PPV revenue. But even if the day had gone as expected, Crockett would have faced serious problems in continuing because he financially wouldn’t be able to compete with McMahon’s ability to do bigger PPV events and draw more fans at the live shows.

Fortunately for the competitive balance of the industry, Turner Broadcasting wanted to maintain the programming as wrestling was among the most popular shows on TBS, and at times the most popular show on the station, since it went from being a local UHF channel in Atlanta to becoming the first major satellite station in 1976. In November 1988, Turner Broadcasting purchased a majority interest in Jim Crockett Promotions, creating the company that would be known as World Championship Wrestling for $9 million. While some members of the family, most notably David Crockett, were against the sale, thinking it was a cyclical business that would turn around, Jim Crockett Jr. felt that the losses were going to threaten their mother’s retirement account that their father worked his life to build up, and that was the one thing they couldn’t risk. Eventually, Turner Broadcasting purchased the remainder of the stock from Crockett Jr., who when selling, expected that he would be kept on to run the company, which didn’t happen. Vince’s move, attempting to keep Crockett out of PPV and eliminate him as competition, backfired. His rival operation, instead of being run by a family out of Charlotte that had overspent in order to compete, was run by a major media corporation with far deeper pockets then McMahon had, and led to McMahon having to fight for his life a decade later, although eventually the constant mismanagement of the promotion ended up its undoing despite its advantages of being owned by such a major corporation.

Of course, the benefit of hindsight also showed that the new company didn’t have the understanding of the industry that Crockett had, and wrestling on TBS, with the exception of the period from 1997 through the first quarter of 1999, could never match the level of popularity the Crockett brand brought to the table.

A lot of people don’t remember it, but there was a show at the Greensboro Coliseum on Thanksgiving of 1987, an afternoon show featuring five forgettable live matches, headed by Ivan Koloff vs. Mighty Wilbur, an aging Hiro Matsuda vs. Kevin Sullivan and a women’s Battle Royal. The Chicago card followed on closed-circuit. Between the weak live matches and being in the afternoon, only 6,000 fans attended. The next year, Starrcade was moved to the day after Christmas, to Norfolk, and wrestling was held on the Saturday of Thanksgiving weekend in Greensboro, so that Atlanta’s Omni, which had its own tradition, could get Thanksgiving night.

The Minneapolis tradition began in 1960 with a four-match show at the St. Paul Auditorium, opening with Bob Rasmussen going to a draw with a young Pretty Boy Larry Hennig, Judy Glover & Annette Palmer beating Lorraine Johnson (the mother of Nickla “Baby Doll” Roberts and along with Penny Banner considered the best worker of the women wrestlers of that era) & Ella St. John, amateur great Joe Scarpello beat Aldo Bogni in the semifinal, and AWA champion Verne Gagne retained his title beating Gene Kiniski, before 10,661 fans. That show may have been the first example of Thanksgiving being a great night for wrestling as the crowd was far larger than for any wrestling show in the Twin Cities that year.

Cleveland also held a major event that night, drawing 10,105 fans to the Public Auditorium for top babyface Lord Athol Layton facing Duke Keomuka, and a battle of top heels with Sato Keomuka (Kinji Shibuya) facing Fritz Von Erich. That’s notable since Von Erich years later, after the big Dallas office broke into different pieces meaning Corpus Christi was no longer the weekly Thursday town, would promote regularly on Thanksgiving.

For most of the 60s, Gagne and Jim Crockett Sr. seemed to be the only promoters who pushed the idea of Thanksgiving as a great night for wrestling. And it wasn’t the case consistently immediately. A lot of promotions in the 60s and 70s ran shows, but they were not in the company’s key arena as much as simply running their weekly Thursday down, like in cities like Jacksonville, Amarillo, Bakersfield, Corpus Christi, Kansas City, Indianapolis and Sacramento. Crowds were usually up from usual, often the biggest of the year in those cities, but the idea of running major shows on those dates was still largely relegated to Minneapolis and Greensboro.

Minneapolis had some big matches in the 60s. In 1962, it was the battle of The Crushers, with The Crusher (Reggie Lisowski) against Krusher Kowalski (Bert Smith, who played college football with Gagne and Leo Nomellini at the University of Minnesota), with the loser never being able to use the Crusher name again, won by Lisowski. Kowalski for the rest of his AWA career was known as Stan Kowalski, the Big K, although in the 70s he did use the name Krusher Kowalski at least once at the Cow Palace in San Francisco.

In 1963, Crusher beat Gagne to win the AWA title before 5,594 paid and 1,300 kids who were let in free that night.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 26, 1964

Minneapolis Auditorium

  • Ivan Kalmikoff b George “Catalina” Drake
  • Bob Boyer d Eddie Sharkey 30:00
  • Mighty Igor b Klondike Bill
  • Larry Hennig & Harley Race b Rene Goulet & Reggie Parks
  • Mad Dog Vachon retained AWA title losing via DQ to Verne Gagne

Attendance: 9,109 sellout

In 1965, a near sellout of 8,116 saw Vachon retain the title beating Crusher via DQ. 1966 was a Battle Royal won by Killer Kowalski. 1967 was notable for the Twin Cities debut of one of the city’s all-time most memorable performers, Indianapolis manager Bobby Heenan. Heenan managed Harley Race in the main event, as Race lost to Gagne, on a show that included Cowboy Bill Watts & Rock Rogowski (who later became famous as Ole Anderson – both of whom became promoters and bookers who pushed Thanksgiving as one of their key nights of the year) beating Mitsu Arakawa & Dr. Moto (later known as Tor Kamata), and Victor the Wrestling Bear beat Dr. X (Dick “Destroyer” Beyer) via DQ. In the 70s, the shows mostly drew average crowds of 5,000 to 6,000. It wasn’t until 1977 when there was another Thanksgiving night sellout, for a gimmick match as Crusher teamed with long-time opening match job guy George “Scrap Iron” Gadaski, to beat Super Destroyer (Don “Spoiler” Jardine) & manager Lord Alfred Hayes, who had been harassing Gadaski.

The real glory days of Thanksgiving in the Twin Cities started with the Hulk Hogan era, in 1981, where 17,000 fans came to the St. Paul Civic Center for a Hogan vs. Jesse Ventura arm wrestling match as well as a Nick Bockwinkel AWA title defense against Sheik Adnan Al-Kaissie.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 25, 1982

St. Paul Civic Center

  • Lone Eagle & Tiny Tom b Little Tokyo & Hillbilly Pete
  • Tom Lintz b Kenny “Sodbuster” Jay
  • Steve Olsonoski d Bobby Duncum
  • Ken Patera b Baron Von Raschke
  • Jerry Blackwell & Sheik Adnan Al-Kaissie b Mad Dog Vachon & Jim Brunzell via DQ
  • Nick Bockwinkel no contest Rick Martel to retain the AWA title

Attendance: 18,000 sellout

The 1983 show did 13,163 with Bockwinkel over Vachon via DQ in an AWA title match, with Ray Stevens as referee. In 1984, they drew 16,000 with the Road Warriors against Blackwell & Boom Boom Bundy (King Kong Bundy) and Martel vs. Billy Robinson.

The peak of the Thanksgiving tradition in the Twin Cities was 1985, with the AWA and WWE running head-to-head. The AWA ran with The Road Warriors vs. Freebirds and a Battle Royal, drawing 14,300 fans to the St. Paul Civic Center. The same night, the WWF drew 15,000 to the Met Center in Minneapolis, with Hogan, managed by Mr. T, vs. Randy Savage, managed on that night only by Heenan. But after two shows did nearly 30,000 fans the year before, by 1986, the AWA was dead, as even on Thanksgiving they were down to 4,000 fans.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 28, 1985

St. Paul Civic Center

  • Leon White (later to become Vader) d Bill Irwin
  • Mongolian Stomper b Kevin Kelly
  • Scott Hall b Boris Zhukov via DQ
  • Buck Zumhofe b Steve Regal (not William Regal) to win AWA light heavyweight title
  • Jerry Blackwell b Michael Hayes
  • Road Warriors b Michael Hayes & Buddy Roberts
  • Scott Hall won Battle Royal

Attendance: 14,300

Minneapolis Met Center (prelim results unavailable)

  • Uncle Elmer b Jesse Ventura via DQ
  • Paul Orndorff b Roddy Piper via DQ
  • Hulk Hogan (managed by Mr. T) b Randy Savage (managed by Bobby Heenan) to retain WWF title

Attendance: 15,000

The final Thanksgiving event was in 1987 before 1,800 fans at the Minneapolis Auditorium, headlined by Curt Hennig defending the AWA title against Greg Gagne. The finish saw Larry Hennig try to interfere, when Verne Gagne, 61, with the idea of building for another comeback match, cleaned house on Larry Hennig, and then knocked out Curt with a roll of coins to apparently give Greg the championship. Like the people who left Starrcade ‘85 thinking they had seen the title change hands, when they watched television a few days later they were told that due to the outside interference, the title change was rescinded. If you were a wrestling fan who lived in Minneapolis, on that day you had the chance to watch Starrcade on closed-circuit, Survivor Series on PPV, or see the local matches, and at that time for most fans the AWA was a distant third. In 1989, when WWE tried to revive the tradition with a show the night before Survivor Series, Hogan vs. Mr. Perfect Curt Hennig drew only 3,700.

Greensboro’s Thanksgiving tradition continued as Jim Crockett Sr. would put in a bid to get the world champion to Greensboro for the traditional show. Lou Thesz defended in 1963 against Swede Hanson and 1965 against Pat O’Connor. Gene Kiniski then defended in 1966 against the Missouri Mauler and 1967 against Johnny Weaver. The Coliseum held 8,600 fans before its expansion in 1967, and 9,000 through 1972. The Thanksgiving shows in the 60s usually drew right near capacity.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 23, 1967

Greensboro Coliseum

  • Bulldog Lee Henning b Bob Nador
  • Rip Hawk & Swede Hanson b Rudy Kay & Les Thatcher
  • Haystacks Calhoun & Amazing Zuma b Missouri Mauler & Pampero Firpo
  • George & Sandy Scott & George Becker b The Infernos & J.C. Dykes
  • Gene Kiniski retained NWA world title going to a 60:00 draw with Johnny Weaver

Attendance: 9,017 sellout (turn away crowd, largest crowd for any event in the arena up to that point)

In 1968, they didn’t get the world champion, and instead brought in Joe Louis, the boxing legend, to referee Weaver & George Becker vs. Lars & Gene Anderson, drawing a near sellout. The next year, Weaver & Becker vs. The Infernos, managed by J.C. Dykes, for the Atlantic Coast tag title also drew a near sellout.

During the 70s, there was a dual tradition, as Greensboro and Norfolk both had big shows.

1970 featured Dory Funk Jr. as world champion, going to a one hour draw with Jerry Brisco, drew only 5,968 fans. It was the first time Funk Jr. had ever appeared in Greensboro even though he had been champion for more than 18 months.

In 1971, they debuted a cage match, with Weaver & Bobby Kay (of the famed Cormier wrestling family) & Argentina Apollo vs. Missouri Mauler & Brute Bernard & Art Nelson with Louis as referee, which drew a sellout of 9,000 fans. Interestingly, they had Funk Jr. in the territory, but booked him at the Norfolk Arena that night against Jerry Brisco.

In 1972, after the Coliseum was expanded to 13,000 seats, a match with Jack & Jerry Brisco beating Dory Funk Jr. & Dory Funk Sr. in two of three falls set the territory’s all-time attendance record, and also set the all-time attendance record for the arena for any event, and was the largest indoor sports crowd up to that point ever in the city, as well as the largest pro wrestling crowd in the history of the territory. To show how much things have changed, 9,500 of those tickets were sold the night of the show. Keep in mind that at this point in time, there were only 150,000 people living in the city.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 23, 1972

Greensboro Coliseum

  • Ronnie Garvin b Joe Soto
  • Randy Curtis b Billy Hines
  • Klondike Bill b Evil Eye Gordon (Guillotine Gordon aka Enforcer Luciano)
  • Gene Anderson b Les Thatcher
  • Sandy Scott d The Menace
  • Freddy Sweetan & Mike DuBois (later to become Alexis Smirnoff) b Jim Dillon (J.J. Dillon) & David Finlay (David Crockett)
  • Thunderbolt Patterson b Ole Anderson in a lumberjack match
  • Jack & Jerry Brisco b Dory Funk Jr. & Dory Funk Sr.

Attendance: 13,000 sellout (largest crowd in the history of the promotion and for any event in the history of the expanded Greensboro Coliseum

In 1973, the show was billed as a memorial for Jim Crockett Sr., who had passed away at the age of 64 earlier that year. As part of honoring their father, the Crocketts brought in the classic match of the generation, with Jack Brisco defending the NWA title against Dory Funk Jr., with Thesz as guest referee, which drew 8,000 fans. The semifinal had Jerry Brisco defending the Eastern states title against Terry Funk.

In 1974, Jack Brisco retained the title via disqualification against Wahoo McDaniel by throwing him over the top rope before 11,268 fans in a match where Brisco played heel. Louis was brought in to referee a cage match with a battle of long-time tag partners, Rip Hawk vs. Swede Hanson. It was noted in local publicity that even though the attendance wasn’t as high as 1972, the show did almost a duplicate of that show’s record gate in excess of $50,000.

The 1975 show had Brisco defending against McDaniel in a no DQ match, losing via count out, while U.S. champion Terry Funk dropped the title to Paul Jones before 12,102 fans. Mid Atlantic had head-to-head competition from the rival IWA running in Winston-Salem that night with Mil Mascaras vs. Bulldog Brower. Mid Atlantic also ran at the Scope Arena in Norfolk the same night with an Andre the Giant vs. Superstar Billy Graham arm-wrestling match and Andre & Ken Patera & Rufus Jones vs. Graham & Ole & Gene Anderson.

In 1976, Greensboro featured a two-ring 24 man Battle Royal built around Andre, Haystacks Calhoun, McDaniel, Blackjack Mulligan, Dusty Rhodes, Missouri Mauler, Ric Flair, Superstar Graham, Chris Taylor, Patera, Greg Valentine, Dino Bravo, Angelo Mosca and Jerry Blackwell ending when McDaniel pinned Mulligan before 11,063 fans. Norfolk ran the same night with Terry Funk as world champion defending against Paul Jones.

In 1977, Greensboro again ran the two-ring Battle Royal, won by Mulligan, again featuring Andre, and a Valentine vs. McDaniel match. World champion Harley Race went to Norfolk to defend against Ricky Steamboat.

In 1978, a Flair vs. Mulligan cage match broke the area’s attendance record with 13,447, while Race wrestled Paul Jones in Norfolk in the world title match. Even though some shows drew better, within Greensboro, with the exception of the Starrcade shows, the Flair-Mulligan blow-off in the cage after the two split up their tag team is probably the most remembered of the Thanksgiving matches.

When Flair does sports talk shows these days in the Carolinas, the fans in the area rarely talk about anything after 1986, and the Flair-Mulligan feud to this day remains a topic he’s constantly asked about.

In 1979, Andre winning a Battle Royal plus Jimmy Snuka vs. Tim “Mr. Wrestling” Woods for the U.S. title and a Mulligan vs. John Studd street fight drew 11,387 fans. The same night in Norfolk, Flair vs. Buddy Rogers and Steamboat & Youngblood vs. Jones & Baron Von Raschke drew 10,000 more.

In 1980, a double main event of a cage match with Snuka & Ray Stevens losing to Jones & Masked Superstar with the titles vs. Superstar’s mask, plus Stevens & Snuka having to hand out $1,000 to the fans if they lost, co-headlined with a Flair vs. Valentine cage match for the U.S. title, which drew 12,000 fans.

In 1981, a cage match with Flair, now as world champion, beating Ole Anderson in a cage match set the record with a sellout 15,136 fans.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 25, 1982

Greensboro Coliseum – This time the Carolinas guy is the defending world champion against the outsider

  • Mike Davis b Masa Fuchi
  • Bob Orton Jr. b Private Jim Nelson (later to become Boris Zhukov)
  • Johnny Weaver b Ken Timbs
  • Frank Monte b Ron Ritchie
  • Bad Leroy Brown won 20 man Battle Royal to become Mid Atlantic TV champion
  • Abdullah the Butcher & Jimmy Valiant b Jos LeDuc & Sir Oliver Humperdink in a cage match
  • Jack Brisco b U.S. champion Greg Valentine in a non-title match 23:00
  • Ric Flair b Roddy Piper via DQ to retain world title in 24:00

Attendance: 15,498 sellout

The second Starrcade, in 1984, was built around the $1 million challenge. Jim Crockett Jr. was shown going to the bank and withdrawing $1 million, with the idea the winner of Flair vs. Rhodes for the world title would get the money, and borrowing what his father did with Joe Louis, he brought in Joe Frazier as referee. The show drew an advanced sellout of 15,821 live and another 26,000 on closed circuit around the territory, ending when Frazier stopped the match because Rhodes was bleeding. The idea was to build to a Rhodes vs. Frazier match, but that never materialized.

Things got even bigger in 1985. Crockett Jr. that year had bought the TBS time slot contract from Vince McMahon for a real $1 million, as opposed to the money Flair got. Atlanta’s Omni by that point had its own long Thanksgiving tradition, so the idea was “Starrcade ‘85: The Gathering,” with half the show in Greensboro and the other half in Atlanta. This was the first Thanksgiving event promoted on a national basis, as the first two Starrcades were really just promoted within the territory. Rhodes pinned Flair in the main event to apparently win the title, and people left the arena believing they had seen a title change. However, on television that Saturday, it was announced that due to outside interference coming before Rhodes pinned Flair, that the correct result should have been a DQ, and Flair retaining. This led to a lucrative series of rematches throughout the U.S. That show was also notable for the Magnum T.A. vs. Tully Blanchard I Quit match, one of the most famous I Quit matches in history and a match recently voted on an Observer on-line poll as the greatest Thanksgiving match of all-time.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 28, 1985

Starrcade ‘85 The Gathering

Greensboro Coliseum

  • Don Kernodle b Tommy Lane
  • Denny Brown b Rocky King to retain NWA jr. heavyweight title
  • Krusher Khrushchev (Barry Darsow/Demolition Smash) b Sam Houston to vin vacant Mid Atlantic title
  • Ron Bass b Black Bart in a bullrope match
  • J.J. Dillon b Ron Bass in a bullrope match
  • Buddy Landel b Terry Taylor to win National heavyweight title
  • Magnum T.A. b Tully Blanchard in an I Quit match to win U.S. title
  • Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson b Ivan & Nikita Koloff to win NWA world tag team titles

Attendance: 16,000 sellout

Atlanta Omni

  • Thunderfoot (Joel Deaton) b Italian Stallion
  • Pez Whatley b Mike Graham
  • Manny Fernandez b Abdullah the Butcher in a strap match
  • Jimmy Valiant & Miss Atlanta Lively (Ron Garvin in drag) b Dennis Condrey & Bobby Eaton in a street fight
  • Superstar Billy Graham b The Barbarian via DQ in an arm wrestling match
  • Ole & Arn Anderson b Wahoo McDaniel & Billy Jack Haynes
  • Ric Flair retained NWA world title losing via DQ to Dusty Rhodes

Attendance: 14,000

Closed-circuit attendance: 31,000

In 1986, “The Night of the Skywalkers,” built around the Road Warriors vs. Midnight Express scaffold match, as well as Flair defending against Nikita Koloff and Rhodes vs. Tully Blanchard in a first blood match, drew another sellout in Greensboro and the Annex of more than 19,000, plus 14,900 at the Omni and 29,000 more on closed-circuit with a total gross of more than $1 million, the only non-WWF/WWE show in that era to ever hit that mark when it comes to tickets sold. The tradition of wrestling on Thanksgiving in Greensboro had never been stronger. And nobody in the Coliseum that night could have had a clue that it would be the last time wrestling was held in that arena on Thanksgiving night.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 27, 1986

Starrcade ‘86: The Night of the Skywalkers/The Super Bowl of Wrestling

Greensboro Coliseum

  • Tim Horner & Nelson Royal b Don & Rocky Kernodle 7:30 ***
  • Baron Von Raschke & Hector Guerrero b Shaska Whatley & The Barbarian 7:25 **½
  • Wahoo McDaniel b Rick Rude in an Indian strap match 9:05 *
  • Jimmy Valiant b Paul Jones with Valiant’s wife’s hair up against Jones’ hair 4:00 *1/4
  • Tully Blanchard b Dusty Rhodes to win the NWA TV title in a first blood match 7:30 *1/2
  • Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson b Ole & Arn Anderson to retain the NWA world tag team titles in a cage match 20:20 ****1/4

Attendance: 16,000 sellout plus 3,500 closed-circuit next door

Atlanta Omni

  • Brad Armstrong d Jimmy Garvin 15:00 *1/2
  • Ivan Koloff & Krusher Khrushchev b Dutch Mantell & Bobby Jaggers to retain the U.S. tag team titles in a no DQ match 9:10 ***1/4
  • Sam Houston b Bill Dundee via DQ to retain the Central States heavyweight title ***1/4
  • Big Bubba Rogers (Big Bossman) b Ronnie Garvin in a Louisville Street fight 11:50 ***3/4
  • Road Warriors b Dennis Condrey & Bobby Eaton in a scaffold match 7:00 ***½
  • Ric Flair b Nikita Koloff via DQ to retain the NWA world title 20:00 ****

Attendance: 14,900

Closed-circuit attendance: 29,000

They continued to run Thanksgiving weekend in Greensboro, and by 1990, with a show headlined by Ron Simmons pinning Ric Flair in a cage match (it was scheduled as Doom vs. Flair & Arn Anderson for the tag titles in a cage), they were down to 700 people.

Atlanta’s Thanksgiving tradition at the Omni dated back to 1975. Even when business in the city was bad, the Thanksgiving show almost always drew well. Thanksgiving in Atlanta in that era included lighting of the Christmas tree lights downtown at sundown, which saw hundreds of thousands of people out. So people were already out, and Barnett would put on often his most loaded up show of the year. For several years, Thanksgiving would feature a traditional tag team tournament, as they would always have some sort of controversy leading to the titles being vacated.

Unlike the other cities, which would base their shows around one strong main event, Atlanta, like the later Starrcades, was about a complete loaded show.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 27, 1975

Atlanta Omni’s first Thanksgiving show

  • Crazy Luke Graham d Dean Ho
  • Tony Charles b Ronnie Garvin
  • Jerry Brisco & Bob Backlund b Dick Slater & Bob Orton Jr.
  • Lonnie “Moondog” Mayne b Chief Bold Eagle
  • Chief Jay Strongbow b Brute Bernard
  • Ernie Ladd & Bobo Brazil b Harley Race & Ox Baker
  • The Spoiler (Don Jardine, managed by Gary Hart) b Mr. Wrestling II in a mask vs. title match to win the Georgia heavyweight title
  • Abdullah the Butcher b The Sheik (managed by Eddie Creachman) in a cage match with no referee

Attendance: 13,000

In 1976, Ole & Gene Anderson beating Mr. Wrestling I & II to retain the NWA tag titles, plus The Sheik over Mighty Igor via count out and Thunderbolt Patterson over Georgia champ Dick Slater via count out drew 11,300.

In 1977, with Tony Atlas over Abdullah the Butcher, Ernie Ladd & Thunderbolt Patterson over The Sheik & Pak Song and Dick Slater & Mr. Wrestling II over Stan Hansen & Ole Anderson, they drew 11,000.

In 1978, the first of the traditional Thanksgiving tag team tournaments drew a sellout of 16,500.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 23, 1978

Atlanta Omni – The first tag team tournament

  • Rick Martel & Tommy Rich b The Islanders (Afa & Sika Anoa’i)
  • The Assassin (Jody Hamilton) & The Superstar (Bill Eadie) b Bugsy McGraw & Rufus R. Jones via DQ
  • Jack & Jerry Brisco b Pak Song & Angelo “King Kong” Mosca
  • Dory Funk Jr. & Terry Funk b Haystacks Calhoun & Klondike Bill
  • Ernie Ladd & Stan Hansen b Mr. Wrestling I (Tim Woods) & Mr. Wrestling II (Johnny Walker)
  • Dory Funk Jr. & Terry Funk b Rick Martel & Tommy Rich
  • Jack & Jerry Brisco b The Assassin & The Superstar
  • Dusty Rhodes & Dick Slater b Ernie Ladd & Stan Hansen
  • Dory Funk Jr. & Terry Funk b Dusty Rhodes & Dick Slater
  • Thunderbolt Patterson b Ole Anderson
  • Dory Funk Jr. & Terry Funk b Jack & Jerry Brisco to win the Georgia tag team championship

Attendance: 16,500 sellout

The second tag team tournament in 1979 drew 12,000, which also included Rich over Bobby Heenan in a loser leaves town match, a lights out match with babyface Ole Anderson & Thunderbolt Patterson beating Ladd & mystery partner (Anderson’s former tag partner Ivan Koloff), and Mr. Wrestling II no contest with the fake Mr. Wrestling II. Austin Idol & Superstar beat the Briscos in the finals of the tag team tournament which also featured Hansen & McDaniel, Atlas & Ray Candy, Ox Baker & Killer Khan and Rhodes & Wrestling II.

In 1980, they drew another sellout of 16,000 plus with Race going to a no contest with Atlas and The Freebird team of Terry Gordy & Buddy Roberts winning the tournament beating Robert Fuller & Plowboy Frazier. Other teams included Afa & Sika, Ole & Gene Anderson, Idol & Kevin Sullivan, Jack & Jerry Brisco and Terry Taylor & Steve Keirn. They also pushed a women’s lib match which was unique for its time as Joyce Grable & Judy Martin, the world women’s tag team champions, demanded to be in the tournament. They worked an interesting, believable match with the babyface team of Steve Olsonoski & Jerry Roberts (Jacques Rougeau Jr.), where the faces were cautious, didn’t attack, got slapped around, but quickly came back to win.

In 1981, the talent went way down, drawing 10,000 with Bob & Brad Armstrong over Mr Saito & Mr. Fuji and Superstar winning the National title in a Texas death match over Rich. The tournament was loaded with no-shows of major advertised teams including three of pro wrestling’s most legendary duos, Ole & Gene Anderson, Jack & Jerry Brisco and Pat Patterson (scheduled to team with most famous partner Ray Stevens, who instead teamed with Scott Irwin).

In 1982, business was even lower, and the talent level had gotten bad. The Moondogs won the tournament over Tommy & Johnny Rich. In 1983, a crowd of 12,000 saw Butch Reed & Pez Whatley win the tournament over the unique team of Randy Savage & Magnum T.A., on a show headlined by long-time rivals Tommy Rich & Buzz Sawyer over the Road Warriors in a non-tournament match.

The tradition continued in 1984, but by this point Vince McMahon purchased Georgia Championship Wrestling. With the purchase, he got the already booked Thanksgiving date. Ole Anderson started up opposition and ran the Omni on the Sunday before Thanksgiving with the tag team tournament, with Bill & Scott Irwin beating Brad Armstrong & Jacques Rougeau in the finals. The talent was way down from prior years, with the Road Warriors and Jerry Lawler & Jimmy Valiant the only name teams. WWE ran on Thanksgiving with a Battle Royal won by Paul Orndorff and Sgt. Slaughter vs. Nikolai Volkoff, but in the 80s, the WWE brand wasn’t clicking in Atlanta. Even with all those people downtown, they only drew 4,800 fans to the show.

The Omni tradition as far as the show on Thanksgiving night being a big deal in town ended in 1986. There was no show a the Omni in 1987, but Crockett brought it back in 1988, drawing 8,000 with Sting & Lex Luger no contest with the Road Warriors and Rhodes & Bam Bam Bigelow over Flair & Barry Windham via DQ. In 1989, they ran with Flair over Great Muta via DQ, drawing 7,500. They drew 6,500 in 1990 with Sting over Sid Vicious, Doom (Butch Reed & Ron Simmons) over Flair & Arn Anderson in an elimination match and Steiners over Nasty Boys in a cage match. In 1991, after Flair had left for WWF, it was down to 3,800 for Luger vs. Rick Steiner for the WCW title and Steamboat & Dustin Rhodes vs. Arn Anderson & Bobby Eaton 45:00 draw for the tag titles. The final Thanksgiving show was in 1992, drawing 5,715 for Simmons & Sting & Van Hammer & Dustin Rhodes over Windham & Rick Rude & Vader & Cactus Jack cage match.

The Dallas tradition was actually rather short, but still was memorable. Dallas had run Thanksgiving shows at the Sportatorium, but moved to Reunion Arena in 1983, drawing a sellout of 18,500 fans for the Kerry Von Erich vs. Michael Hayes loser leaves town cage match. In one of the most heated matches I ever saw live, a short match with a great finish including Buddy Roberts on the top of the cage, and Fritz Von Erich shaking the cage, causing Roberts to crotch himself, and Fritz slamming the cage door on Hayes’ head (as retribution for the angle that started the Freebirds vs. Von Erichs feud when Terry Gordy slammed the cage door on Kerry Von Erich’s head when Von Erich was facing Ric Flair in a world title match). Hayes did end up returning in late January, with the storyline that The Freebirds had cheated to win the World six-man tag team titles in Atlanta over the Von Erichs (no such match took place), and the Von Erichs, in order to get a rematch for the titles in Texas, had to let Hayes return. What made this hard in Dallas is that the world champion was always in the Carolinas, and that meant they had to run a major show without a world title match on top.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 24, 1983

Dallas Reunion Arena

  • Johnny Mantell & Mike Reed & Jose Lothario b Boris Zurkov (later to become Zhukov) & Black Gordman & Tonga John (later to become The Barbarian)
  • The Missing Link (Dewey Robertson) b Buddy Roberts
  • Kevin Von Erich b Terry Gordy
  • David Von Erich b Kimala via DQ to retain the Texas title
  • Mike Von Erich (Dallas area debut, billed as first pro match but actually he had debuted a week earlier in San Antonio) b Skandor Akbar
  • Super Destroyers (Bill & Scott Irwin) retained American tag team titles going to a double disqualification with Junkyard Dog & Iceman King Parsons
  • Chris Adams (managed by Sunshine) b Jimmy Garvin (managed by Precious) to win the American heavyweight title
  • Kerry Von Erich b Michael Hayes in a loser leaves town cage match

Attendance: 18,500 sellout – thousands turned away

In 1984, they drew 15,325 with Chris Adams over Kevin Von Erich and Terry Gordy over Killer Khan in a death match with Kerry Von Erich as referee. In 1985, they drew 12,000 with Gino Hernandez & Adams over Kevin & Kerry in a cage match to win the American tag titles. In 1986, they were down to 6,000 for Fritz Von Erich, at the age of 57, beating Abdullah the Butcher via DQ. In 1987, before 7,000, Kerry Von Erich beat Al Perez the last time they ran a major Thanksgiving event.

New Orleans ran Thanksgiving shows in the early 70s at the St. Bernard’s Civic Center, but it wasn’t any kind of a big deal. But when Bill Watts opened up the Superdome, they started the holiday tradition there. Watts was part owner of the Georgia office so was well aware of how it was always successful in Atlanta, and also worked for Gagne in the 60s and appeared on some of the Minneapolis Thanksgiving events. Thanksgiving was tough for Watts, because his quarterly Superdome shows used both the local crew and brought in the biggest names from around the country to make the events seem special. But on Thanksgiving, it was very difficult to get the top outside talent, particularly when Starrcade and the World Class shows came around, plus with All Japan and New Japan both running their tag team tournaments at that time of the year, that also removed a lot of the biggest stars from the equation.

The first Superdome Thanksgiving show was in 1980, drawing 18,000 fans with Ladd over Orndorff in a lights out match, The Grappler over Killer Karl Kox to keep the North American title, Junkyard Dog & Bill Watts over Ladd & Leroy Brown and Dusty Rhodes over Ivan Koloff.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 26, 1981

New Orleans Superdome

  • Terry Orndorff b Don Serrano
  • Jerry Novak b Tony Charles
  • Ed Wiskoski (later Col. DeBeers) b Jimmy Garvin
  • Frank Monte & Barbie Doll b Rick Ferrara & Diamond Lil
  • Iron Sheik b King Cobra
  • Ernie Ladd b Kerry Von Erich via count out
  • Dusty Rhodes b Great Kabuki
  • Ted DiBiase b Bob Roop to retain the North American title 23:00
  • Junkyard Dog & Mike George b Paul Orndorff & Bob Orton Jr. to retain the Mid South tag team titles 46:00

Attendance: 18,000

The 1982 show drew 15,000 as Stagger Lee, who was JYD under a mask, beat DiBiase to win the North American title. They didn’t even run in 1983, going the week before Thanksgiving because of so much top talent working Dallas and Greensboro, and were down to 8,000 fans with JYD over Butch Reed, Rhodes no contest Volkoff, Road Warriors over Wrestling II & Magnum T.A. and David Von Erich over Kimala via count out. The 1984 show drew 14,000 with Rock & Roll Express over Midnight Express in a scaffold match and Magnum over Ernie Ladd via DQ in a North American title match. In 1985 they drew about 10,000 for a closed-circuit of Starrcade. It was kind of an ugly scene as even though the TV hammered home it would be a closed circuit show, when the fans got to the arena, a lot of them were furious thinking all the stars would be there live. The final show was in 1986, where they drew 13,000, but that was with cutting ticket prices way down as the company was having trouble drawing by this time. In early 1987, the promotion, falling deeply in debt due to a combination of a local collapse of the oil industry and a failed national expansion, was sold to Jim Crockett promotions. The show featured two cage matches going on at the same time, with Steve Williams vs. Michael Hayes and Terry Taylor vs. Buddy Roberts, and the winner of the cage match that ends the quickest was allowed to join his partner in the other cage to make it a handicap match.

The final Thanksgiving tradition was the best known nationally, the Survivor Series, which debuted on Thanksgiving night of 1987, and still exists 23 years later. The show was originally built around ten-man elimination tag matches, with the debut event selling out the Richfield Coliseum just outside Cleveland with 21,000 fans. The original main event was Andre & One Man Gang & Reed & Rude & Bundy over Hogan & Orndorff & Don Muraco & Patera & Bigelow.

The 1988 version saw attendance fall to 13,500 in Cleveland, with a main event of Hogan & Savage & Hercules & Koko Ware & Hillbilly Jim over DiBiase & Big Bossman & Akeem (One Man Gang) & Red Rooster (Terry Taylor) & Haku. Because the crowd was so far down, it was moved from Cleveland the next year.

In 1989, in Chicago, they drew 15,294, with Hogan & Jake Roberts & Demolition over DiBiase & Zeus & Warlord & Barbarian.

THANKSGIVING FLASHBACK – November 22, 1990

Hartford Civic Center – Survivor Series – The Final Curtain

  • Ultimate Warrior & Legion of Doom (Road Warriors) & Kerry Von Erich b Mr. Perfect (Curt Hennig) & Demolition (Ax & Smash & Crush) 14:19 **½
  • Ted DiBiase & The Undertaker (WWE big show debut) & Greg Valentine & Honky Tonk Man b Dusty Rhodes & Koko B. Ware & Bret Hart & Jim Neidhart 13:59 ***½
  • Rick Martel & The Warlord & Paul Roma & Hercules b Jake Roberts & Jimmy Snuka & Shawn Michaels & Marty Jannetty 18:06 ***1/4
  • Hulk Hogan & Jim Duggan & Tugboat (Fred Ottman) & Big Bossman b Earthquake (John Tenta) & Dino Bravo & Haku & The Barbarian 14:50 **
  • Nikolai Volkoff & Tito Santana & The Bushwhackers (Luke Williams & Butch Miller) b Sgt. Slaughter & Boris Zhukov & Pat Tanaka & Akio Sato 10:37 *
  • Hulk Hogan & Ultimate Warrior & Tito Santana (all surviving babyfaces from previous elimination matches) b Ted DiBiase & Rick Martel & Hercules & Paul Roma & Warlord (all surviving heels from previous elimination matches) 9:08 *1/2

Attendance: 13,000

PPV buys: 380,000

The last true major Thanksgiving show was in 1990, at the Hartford Civic Center. The WWE Survivor Series drew 13,000 paid (2,000 shy of capacity) and $216,000. The main event of Hogan & Warrior & Tito Santana won a three-on-five handicap match over DiBiase & Martel & Warlord & Hercules & Paul Roma in just 9:08, winning five falls to one, in a battle of the survivors of a series of elimination matches underneath, was anti-climactic and a poor main event overall, and the last time they did a show with that format. The show drew what at the time was considered disappointing numbers on pay-per-view, leading to the mentality that Thanksgiving was a good night to get people to go out and see live matches or go to the movies, but it wasn’t a great night to get them to stay home and watch on television.

In 1991, Survivor Series was moved to Thanksgiving Eve, which actually worked out a lot worse. It was later moved again, and now takes place on a Sunday in mid-November, and stays away from the Thanksgiving weekend.

Thanks to help from files from James Zordani, Matt Farmer, Mid Atlantic Gateway and Wrestling Observer historical files