Impact Hard to Kill notes: Santino Marella, Masha Slamovich, Rebellion

Impact Hard to Kill saw several returns and debuts which included former WWE star Santino Marella.

Teased on Thursday, Marella made his return to Impact after nearly five years as the company’s new Director of Authority. He temporarily replaces Scott D’Amore who was taken out by Bully Ray last Thursday and is injured in storyline.

In December, it was revealed that Impact filed a trademark for the Santino Marella name.

He made his presence felt during Friday’s Digital Media title match between champion Joe Hendry and Moose, restarting the match after Moose cheated to win the title. Hendry then hit his Standing Ovation finisher to get the pin and retain the title.

Marella appeared at 2017’s Bound for Glory and began hosting a Twitch show for the company. He cornered a BattleArts wrestler of his during a 2018 taping and was a guest commentator at last year’s Sacrifice for the title match between then-Impact World Champion Moose and Heath.

It was the second return of the night as former Impact Tag Team Champion and X-Division Champion Frankie Kazarian announced he has signed a long-term deal.

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Regardless of who wins in the main event, the Knockouts Champion already has her next challenger in Masha Slamovich.

Slamovich survived a four-way Friday that included former champions Taylor Wilde and Deonna Purrazzo in addition to Killer Kelly.

If it’s Jordynne Grace, she and Slamovich had a rivalry last year that saw Grace retain the title at October’s Bound for Glory and again at November’s Over Drive in a Last Knockout Standing match. If it’s James, it would be their first-ever meeting.

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While they do have streaming specials on Impact Plus the next two months, Impact announced they will return to pay-per-view on Sunday, April 16th in Toronto, Canada.

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PCO made his return Friday, attacking Eddie Edwards after his victory over Jonathan Gresham. The two were members of Honor No More before Edwards attacked him as the group broke up.

Taya Valkyrie returns to Impact, challenging Deonna Purrazzo at Rebellion

Taya Valkyrie has returned to Impact Wrestling. 

The former Impact Knockouts Champion confronted ROH Women’s World Champion and AAA Reina de Reinas Champion Deonna Purrazzo following Purrazzo’s match at Friday’s Multiverse of Matches event, issuing a challenge for the AAA title at Impact’s Saturday, April 23 Rebellion event. 

Purrazzo retained the AAA title at Multiverse of Matches, defeating Faby Apache. As she was addressing ROH crowning an interim Women’s World Champion in Mercedes Martinez, Valkyrie made her surprise return. 

Valkyrie was written out of Impact storylines in January 2021 after a run of three-plus years with the company. She signed with WWE in February 2021, then debuted on the NXT brand in April 2021. She was released by WWE in November 2021. 

Six matches are now set for Rebellion. The lineup: 

Impact Rebellion, Saturday, April 23 —

  • Impact World Championship: Moose (c) vs. Josh Alexander
  • Impact Knockouts World Championship: Tasha Steelz (c) vs. Rosemary
  • Impact X Division Championship: Trey Miguel (c) vs. Ace Austin vs. Mike Bailey
  • AAA Reina de Reinas Championship: Deonna Purrazzo (c) vs. Taya Valkyrie
  • JONAH vs. Tomohiro Ishii
  • Jonathan Gresham vs. Eddie Edwards

Josh Alexander re-signs with Impact, challenging for World title

Josh Alexander has re-signed with Impact Wrestling.

Alexander made his return to Impact at Saturday’s Sacrifice event, laying out and challenging Impact World Champion Moose to a title match at the Saturday, April 23 Rebellion pay-per-view, while also announcing that he had re-signed.

Alexander’s Impact contract and US work visa had expired.

Alexander had been sent home in storyline by Impact executive Scott D’Amore. After his return and attack on Moose, Alexander stated that he had visited Anthem’s headquarters while he was sent home, and secured a multi-year contract with Impact that also guaranteed him the title match. 

Alexander’s attack came after Moose successfully defended the Impact World title against Heath in Sacrifice’s main event. 

Tickets for Rebellion went on sale on Friday. The event will be held at the Mid-Hudson Civic Center in Poughkeepsie, New York. 

Moose’s title defense against Heath was one of six title matches at Sacrifice. Deonna Purrazzo retained the ROH Women’s World title with a win over Chelsea Green on the show, plus Trey Miguel retained the X Division title with a victory over Jake Something. 

Three titles changed hands on the show, as Violent By Design won the Impact World Tag Team titles, Tasha Steelz defeated Mickie James to win the Knockouts World title, and The Influence defeated the IInspiration to capture the Knockouts World Tag Team titles.

Kenny Omega wins Impact World Championship at Rebellion

AEW World Champion Kenny Omega defeated Rich Swann at Impact Rebellion, winning the Impact World Championship.

Their match was a title for title match, meaning the winner would walk away with both the Impact and AEW World titles. Omega pinned Swann following the One Winged Angel. Swann held the championship for 184 days, defeating Eric Young at Bound for Glory back on October 24.

With tonight’s win, Omega is now champion in three different promotions. He has been AEW World champion since December, defeating Jon Moxley. He is also the AAA Mega Heavyweight Champion, pinning Rey Fenix back back on October 19, 2019.

Prior to the main event, an interview with Tony Khan aired where a second referee, AEW referee Aubrey Edwards, was added to the main event along with the Impact referee Brian Hebner. This did not play into the finish of the match, although Edwards did take away a steel chair from Omega towards the latter part of the match after a ref bump temporarily took out Hebner.

Other title changes on tonight’s show had Josh Alexander winning the X-Division title and the team of Jordynne Grace and Rachael Ellering winning the Knockouts Tag Team titles. 

New X-Division, Knockouts Tag Team champs crowned at Impact Rebellion

Even before the title vs. title main event, Sunday’s Impact Rebellion saw a pair of title changes as both the X-Division and Knockouts Tag Team titles changed hands.

In the show opener, Josh Alexander won the X-Division title for the first time, defeating incumbent Ace Austin and former champion TJP in a three-way. 

The end saw TJP hit a mamba splash on Alexander but he got pulled out of the ring by Austin cornerman Madman Fulton. Alexander recovered and hit his Divine Intervention finisher to get the pin on Austin to win the title. Austin’s second title reign began at last month’s Sacrifice when he defeated TJP.

Later in the night, the debuting Rachael Ellering and former Knockouts Champion Jordynne Grace defeated Fire N’ Flava to win the Knockouts Tag Team titles.

Ellering was introduced Thursday as Grace’s surprise partner as regular partner Jazz retired following a title vs. career match against Knockouts Champion Deonna Purrazzo. Ellering got the win for her team, hitting a suplex version of the Sky High on Kiera Hogan for the pin.

The night’s other title matches saw Purrazzo retain with a win over Tenille Dashwood while FinJuice retained the Tag Team titles with their victory over the Good Brothers.

The title vs. title main event featuring AEW World Champion Kenny Omega vs. Impact World Champion Rich Swann is going on now.

Impact Rebellion live results: Kenny Omega vs. Rich Swann title vs. title

Preview by Josh Nason

The next step in the belt collector angle Kenny Omega began back in December when he won the AEW World title continues Sunday as he attempts to take the Impact World title from Rich Swann in the main event of Rebellion. It’s a winner-take-all affair as someone will walk away a double champion.

The match is the most high-profile the company has had in quite some time and they are pulling out all the stops, bringing in combat sports announcer Mauro Ranallo to call the match. 

Rebellion will also feature several other title matches as Knockouts Champion Deonna Purrazzo defends against Tenille Dashwood; Tag Team Champions FinJuice (David Finlay and Juice Robinson) return to defend against former champions The Good Brothers in a rematch; Knockouts Champions Fire ‘N Flava (Kiera Hogan and Tasha Steelz) defend against Jordynne Grace and the returning Rachael Ellering; and X-Division Champion Ace Austin defends against Josh Alexander and TJP in a three way.

Other matches include Matt Cardona vs. Bryan Myers; a last man standing match between Sami Callihan and Trey Miguel; and an eight-man tag with Violent By Design against James Storm, Chris Sabin, Eddie Edwards and Willie Mack.

Our live coverage begins at 8 PM Eastern.

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Josh Alexander defeated X-Division champion Ace Austin (with Madman Fulton) and TJP to win the X-Division title

In what feels like flashbacks to 2000’s TNA, the X Division was revolved around a couple of wrestlers that, no matter the combination, yield top level matches. All three men involved in this match have been trading wins and loses for months now, as of late, Austin defeated TJP to recapture the X Division title, while Alexander has earned wins over both men in the last couple of weeks. 

Match was fast paced from the very start, whether it was 3-way action or pair ups between two, it was constant action. The nature of the wrestler saw Alexander go more for submissions and slams, TJP has a signature style combination of submission work and high flying moves, and at the end, Austin is a more flashy wrestler with a couple of dirty tactics at hand. 

All men got good near falls towards the end, Austin first hit the fold on TJP, but Alexander cut him off. Alexander got a huge near fall after hitting divine intervention on TJP, only to get stopped by Austin. TJP also had a strong near fall when he hit the mamba splash on Alexander, only to get pulled out of the ring by Fulton. 

At the end, with TJP and Fulton both out, Alexander hit divine intervention on Austin for the win and became the new X Division champion! Great match.

– D’lo Brown & Matt Striker ran down tonight’s card. They announced that Eric Young is being replaced in tonight’s match after suffering an injury against Eddie Edwards. 

– Violent By Design cut a promo with EY saying that he is injured, but still leading the group. EY addressed his replacement, saying that he’s not ready for the group and truth, but this is his opportunity to show he is.

Violent By Design (Joe Doering, Deaner & Rhino) & W.Morrissey (w/ Eric Young) defeated Eddie Edwards, Willie Mack, James Storm and Chris Sabin

VBD has been antagonizing the Impact roster for months, and slowly, EY has been recruiting more and more people to join his cause. This feud has gone from The Deaners to the Beer Guns to Tommy Dreamer, and now it reaches the peak as they face a team of the most representative wrestlers in Impact.

The man replacing Eric Young is W. Morrissey, FKA Big Cass. 

Match started with a couple of pair ups between both teams, mostly going back and forward since the VBD team is now full of big lads. Morrissey paired up with Storm, and while Storm had some speed advantage, Morrissey ran over him like a freight train. 

Morrissey successfully cut off Storm from his corner, allowing VBD to work over him for some time, but not long enough to really call him a babyface in peril. Nonetheless, Mack got a hot tag against Deaner, who surprisingly recovered and took down Mack. 

Match got really chaotic with the babyfaces running wild, taking down Morrissey and Doering outside by a double dive from Edwards and Sabin. In the ring, the babyface team hit a couple of signature moves on Deaner coming close to the win, but Morrissey came in, destroyed them all, and got himself a tag before the brawl spilled to the floor.

We got a great spot with Sabin Superplexing Deaner into the floor over all men involved. 

Back in the ring, Mack took out Doering with the stunner, but Morrissey was the legal man. He blocked Mack’s stunner, hit a big boot, hit the east river crossing, and picked the win. Good match, really chaotic.

After the match, he kept attacking Mack until the referees calmed him down. I think EY is gonna love him for the team. Happy to see Morrissey look great and have a good performance.

Brian Myers defeated Matt Cardona

This is a match that has been brewing for months in Impact, but years between the two. Ever since Cardona came to the company, he and Myers started finding themselves on opposing sides. Myers claims that Cardona came to Impact because he was there and wanted to take his spotlight, while Cardona responded that he wasn’t there for Myers, but for himself as he wanted to wrestle the top competition in Impact. After months of tag matches with Edwards and Hernandez and Myers rejecting Cardona’s challenges, the match finally happens tonight.

With the story between these two being that Myers kept running from Cardona, the start of the match played into it, with him doing hit and runs until he hurt Cardona’s back against the guardrails outside. 

Once Myers had control, he worked over Cardona’s back in the ring. Cardona kept trying to start a comeback and gain some momentum, but Myers would cut him off. It was until Cardona had to rely on going after Myers’ newly recovered eye that he got him off his back for enough time to recover and get some offense in. 

The match spilled to the floor where Cardona hit radio silence on the ramp, selling that the landing had hurt Cardona’s lower back, but even after that, Myers kept his hit and run approach to once again take down Cardona. 

Last couple of minutes saw both men exchange near falls. At the end, Cardona went for radio silence again, only to get tossed over and have a bad landing on his left leg. The fall indeed looked bad, so when the referee hit the arm signal, it felt somewhat legit, instead, Cardona got him up, hit two roster cuts, and picked the win. If the referee hit the arm signals, why didn’t he call for the bell and allowed for the match to continue?

Good match, Myers looked way better than Cardona, even when relying on cheats

– Gia Miller interviewed Tony Khan and company. Schiavone, Lynn, and referee Edwards. They tried to big time Impact whe D’Amore cut him off. The referee tonight on Impact’s side is Brian Hebner, so Khan doesn’t trust him.

Jordynne Grace & Rachael Ellering defeated Knockouts Tag Team Champions Fire ‘n Flava (Kiera Hogan & Tasha Steelz) to win the titles

Kiera Hogan and Tasha Steelz don’t have a good relationship with Grace, but ever since Grace started teaming with Jazz, the teasing grew more and more. In yet another act of antagonism, Hogan and Steelz interrupted Jazz’s retirement speech, pushing D’Amore to making an impromptu match between the two teams, where Jazz won the match. Jazz rejected getting a title shot at the champions, since she would stay true to her Impact retirement, but instead, found a partner for Jordynne Grace — Rachael Ellering.

Commentary said that Jazz has filed for a manager’s license and is looking to continue her career as a manager. 

This was what seems to be turning into Hogan and Steelz’ specialty. A power vs speed match, that the smaller wrestlers manage to gain control out of their tag team proficiency over their opponents. 

Match started with Ellering and Grace overpowering Hogan and Steelz, but a couple of minutes in, Steelz cut off Grace with some help from Hogan, successfully getting her away from her corner. With Grace isolated, they worked over her, going for constant tags, pin attempts, and kicks from all corners. Eventually Grace managed to trick Hogan and Steelz to take each other out and tagged Ellering in.

Ellering had a good hot tag, she and Grace already had some double team moves ready for this match. 

There was a scary spot with Steelz being flipped over the ropes and landing ugly on the apron, followed by a dive from Grace that also looked scary. Hopefully, they’re ok.

At the end, it came down to Ellering and Hogan, with the former hitting a suplex version of a sky high for the win. Grace and Ellering win the tag team titles. Ellering is a champ on her first match.

Trey Miguel defeated Sami Callihan in a last man standing match

Ever since Miguel returned to Impact, Callihan started targeting with his aggressive approach at finding protégés. Callihan claims that Miguel has no passion and can’t handle the stress when things don’t go his way, and so Callihan offers Miguel to join him and together they’d capitalize on Miguel’s rage and dominate Impact. Miguel rejected Callihan’s offer, provoking him to come back at him in a vicious way, calling for a Last Man Standing match.

Match started on all cylinders, within a minute, Callihan just tossed Miguel to the floor for a stiff landing. The match continued on the floor with some back and forward action, but whatever Miguel did, it kept ending bad for him. He went for a dive that Callihan moved away from, letting Miguel just crash and burn against the rail. Callihan continued the attack with chains, chairs, and a wrench. At one point, he slammed Miguel into the erected legs of a table, but after all of that, Miguel kept getting up. 

There was a spot where Callihan hit a piledriver into the table, but the table, instead of breaking, only got the legs bent. It was just the placing of the weight, but it was a good visual.

Callihan hit a second piledriver on the steel steps, put him under the steps and sat on them to keep Miguel trapped, but it was against the ring, so Miguel just snuck out, and got him from behind with a running cutter on a table, where Miguel was able to stand up, but Callihan couldn’t. Miguel wins. Match had a strong start, but it slowed down as it went. Miguel took a hell of a beating to earn this win.

– Gia Miller interviewed Rich Swann prior to his match. Swann said this was the biggest match in the industry. He said he Callis did get in his head at first, but he is now perfectly focused. He said that tonight is both men’s biggest match in their careers because neither he or Omega have ever been in a title vs title match between promotions. Swann said that this was his house and he wasn’t gonna let Omega win in his house.

Impact Tag Team Champions FinJuice (Juice Robinson & David Finlay) defeated The Good Brothers (Karl Anderson & Doc Gallows) to retain

A little over two months ago, NJPW’s Juice Robinson and David Finlay, collectively known as FinJuice, debuted for Impact, quickly got themselves a shot at the tag titles, and won them at Sacrifice. After their win, they agreed to give the Good Brothers their rightful rematch, but not until Rebellion, making them wait while FinJuice would go and wrestle in Japan. The last month has been agony for Anderson and Gallows, as everyone makes fun of them for losing the titles and not being able to get even, but now that FinJuice returns, they face a Good Brothers team that is serious and focused, that is not underestimating FinJuice, and ready to show that the title loss was a fluke.

Match started with FinJuice in control, they got a couple of double team moves on both Anderson and Gallows, but after the referee managed to get some control in the ring, Gallows was left alone with Finlay, who he cut off from his corner.

Good Brothers worked over Finlay for a good couple of minutes, took a beating at the hands of Gallows specially, but after pushing Gallows to tag out, he dodged Anderson’s rush and got the tag to Robinson.

Robinson had a strong comeback, he got a near fall on Anderson with the rolling cannonball. FinJuice landed a couple more double team moves on Anderson, took out Gallows, but when they set up the doomsday device, Gallows threw Finlay off the top turnbuckle to the floor. 

Good Brothers went for the magic killer, but Finlay made it in time to save Robinson, who used the momentum to roll up Gallows to retain the titles. Great match, didn’t get as much time as I wanted.

– Miller interviewed Don Callis, she hoped for Omega, but obviously Callis was there to do the talking. He said he is the man who put all of this together and once again, they’re ready to make history again. Callis congratulated Swann for getting him out of his head, but he still had to wrestle the greatest wrestler ever. 

Callis told Swann that he thinks he has a family in the roster, but will they be there when he loses the title? Callis is fantastic.

Knockouts Champion Deonna Purrazzo (w/ Susan & Kimber Lee defeated Tenille Dashwood (w/ Kaleb with a K) to retain

Not a lot of story between these two, rather two top wrestlers in the division that are to collide for the first time. Dashwood won a 6-way #1 contendership match at Hardcore Justice to earn this title shot. 

As usual for Purrazzo, she immediately started focusing on Dashwood’s arm, working towards the Fujiwara armbar or the Venus de Milo. Dashwood showed that she had the speed to counter and escape Purrazzo’s offense, and instead, focused on Purrazzo’s head, working towards the spotlight kick.

At one point, Dashwood locked in a Muta lock on Purrazzo for a near submission, but Susan and Lee distracted the referee. Kaleb tried to take them out, only to get taken out.

Purrazzo went for a diving headbutt, but Dashwood moved out of the way, hit the spotlight kick for a big near fall, only to get pulled by Lee. Dashwood took out both Susan and Lee. Back in the ring, Dashwood escaped the Fujiwara armbar, only to take the queen’s gambit for the 1-2-3. Purrazzo retains.

Match started somewhat sloppy, but it seemed it was a matter of getting accustomed to each other’s pace. Wasn’t a fan of Lee and Susan interfering.

After the match, the trio attacked Dashwood, but out came Taylor Wilder for her big return. She’s wearing her old gear, so even less rockabilly than her vignettes. Wilde took out both Susan and Lee. Purrazzo escaped.

– Brown and Striker announced Under Siege for May 15th, Against All Odds for June 12, and Slammiversary pay-per-view for July. Commercial had footage of Lauren Van Ness and Samoa Joe.

– Mauro Ranallo has joined commentary.

AEW World Champion Kenny Omega defeated Impact World Champion Rich Swann in a title vs. title match to win the Impact title

What else is there to say, this is arguably one of Impact’s biggest matches in their history, if not wrestling history altogether. Not often that you see two promotion’s champions put their biggest prize in a winner takes all match. 

The story coming in to this match comes all the way from the Hard to Kill main event, where Omega pinned Rich Swann with the one winged angel, the one thing that both Omega and Callis made sure to remember Swann each and every day since, that Swann can’t get the OWA out of his head and knows that he has no chance at kicking out of the move that no one has kicked out of. However, as many people have pointed since, every time Swann and Omega were in the ring at Hard To Kill, Swann always had the upper hand and only lost it because of the Good Brothers, and so now Swann has Omega alone in the ring, with no Good Brothers, no Storm, and no Sabin, and while he accepts that he may not be able to kick out of the OWA, he has proven now that he can escape it before he gets hit. Omega was the weapon to win, all Swann needs to do is dodge it.

Match started with Omega getting too cocky for his own good, as Swann repaid all of Omega’s cheap shots from the last month. Swann had a good amount of offense for some minutes, but it all turned around when Omega tossed Swann overhead on the floor into the ropes, Swann tried to rebound, but Omega tossed him upwards, having him land head first in the apron, injuring his neck. From there on, Omega started working over Swann’s head and neck. 

Swann made a quick comeback, which triggered a series of back and forward spots between both men. Omega started going for V-triggers, OWA attempts, and a couple of big bombs for near falls; on the other hand, Swann kept chasing trying to fully recover, mostly openings to kick Omega down and chase near falls with a frog splash. 

There was a botched spot with Omega going for a top rope electric chair, it seemed like Swann was going to counter into either a sunset bomb or a poisonrana, but kinda fell sideways, and Omega just threw himself down. 

After recovering, Omega snapped and started landing dragon suplexes, but as Swann countered and went to hit a Lethal injection, Omega pulled Hebner, who took the cutter instead. Omega went to use a chair, but referee Edwards took the chair away from him. The distraction allowed Swann to recover and catch Omega with the cutter and Magistral for a near fall.

Swann dodged a V-trigger, hit a Michinoku driver for a near fall. Swann went for the phoenix splash, but Omega dodged, hit the V-trigger, and Croyt’s wrath. Followed with a Jay driller, but Swann kept kicking out.

Omega landed a series of unprotected V-triggers, until Swann just dropped for the last one. Omega hit a third one in front of Edwards and Mack. As Omega went to the kill, Swann woke up for one last hope spot, going for the phoenix splash, but Omega moved out of the way, hit a V-trigger and the one winged angel for the win. 

Omega is now a world champion in three promotions while Swann is going to have to answer to a roster full of disappointed wrestlers.

Daily Update: Impact Rebellion, UFC 261 fallout, Chris Weidman

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WON NEWSLETTER: April 26, 2021 Observer Newsletter: WWE financials, Ben Askren vs. Jake Paul

We have a loaded issue of the Wrestling Observer this week, with business and history features.

We update WWE financials, with comments from Nick Khan, Vince McMahon, Stephanie McMahon and Kristina Salen talking about the state of the company, the state of sports business, what media companies are looking at right now, AEW, plus a look at WWE revenue and profits.  We also look behind the numbers at what they mean, how every category is doing and what categories the company is no longer reporting on.  We also look at the decline of WWE ratings as compared to that of cable television  and network television.

Also in this issue:

The new attempt at a unique concept PPV with the Triller promotion and Ben Askren vs. Jake Paul, the show, the match, the blitzed announcers, Ric Flair, comparisons to other similar things and long-term sustainability.

Kenny Omega vs Rich Swann match,  followed by a story on famous title unification matches throughout pro wrestling history. We look at some of the biggest and most important matches of all-time that were two champions unifying a world title from 1920 to the present.

WrestleMania business numbers when it came to the two live shows, with real attendance, real gates and what it means.

New Smackdown announcing team, Pat McAfee talks his debut, Daniel Bryan talks his current situation and contract, thoughts on Daniel Bryan’s future, new hires and departures at WWE, change in show distribution, former star talks coming out of retirement, how the WWE & AEW shows rank among sports programming, WWE star bio released, Damien Priest talks Bad Bunny, more on Kalisto being let go, Dr. Wagner Jr. talks WWE, political reason for a winning streak, and most-watched YouTube segments on his week’s WWE programming.

A major feature on the career of Steve Austin and the A&E special, his background, how he got into wrestling, the WCW years, the Stone Cold name, life after wrestling, and what were key things not talked about on the documentary.

Mickie James garbage bag situation and the firing of Mark Carrano.

MLW’s new television deal, who else was in talks about that deal, MLW returning to shows with fans and a spinoff planned.

Coverage of this past week’s UFC show, business notes, where the top fighters are headed plus match-by-match coverage.

More detail on ratings than any other source, we have how every segment on NXT and AEW did as well as how it did with different age groups, genders and more, plus a look at all other wrestling shows of the past week.

Results of the major pro wrestling events of the past week.

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SUNDAY NEWS UPDATE

Bryan and I will be back tonight talking Impact Rebellion and other wrestling news on Wrestling Observer Radio. We also have shows the past two nights, last night’s show talking UFC, Lou Thesz and the latest wrestling news and a Friday show with Garrett Gonzalez.  

Dana White last night was asked about Jake Paul and didn’t have bad things to say even though the UFC fan base seems to hate him. Well, most people do.  He said the guy has found a way to make money and wishes him luck on the ride, but White said that the kind of stuff he does is not what they do.  Last night’s show is what they do.  White also said that the Triller show last week did nowhere near the numbers people are reporting.  It did really well, but from what I’ve heard, nothing at the level reporting.  It was one of those events that did well, but there was huge general public interest in but it wasn’t a thing that they would pay $50 to watch, as compared to say a Conor McGregor fight.  It’s Google trends were more than double last night’s UFC 261, but the PPV numbers will almost sure not be anything like that.  I would actually think last night beats it but it could go the other way.

There was a confrontation last night with Jake Paul and Daniel Cormier which I’m sure both will give their sides of in the next few days at. It started last week after the Ben Askren fight where Paul challenged Cormier and called him fat.  Cormier said “I’m not gonna punch down and fight a guy that’s on YouTube. It’s stupid,” Cormier said. “I’ve fought for world titles my whole life. Why would you start to punch down at a guy that’s trying to, I don’t even know. This dude would never fight me. I would kill him. It’s like, why would I ever fight someone like that? But my immediate reaction was, ‘I can’t stand this kid.’ So it works.”  Paul then said, “I’ll beat the f*** out of your fat ass, too.” During the show last night, the crowd continually chanted “F*** Jake Paul, which he egged on. It was bad because they even did it when Chris Weidman was being carried out on a stretcher. Cormier said to Joe Rogan, on the air, about Paul, “Don’t play with me,’ because I’ll smack him in the face. He’s right there. I’ll slap him. I don’t play those games, Joe.”

Then this happened at the show during a break between fights.

Jake Paul then wrote today: “Dana you claimed you would bet $1M on me losing. Set up Askren to train with Freddie Roach… gave him full access to the UFCPI.. and he still got his ass handed to him. Seems like you are the reach douche… not Ariel. In my 3rd fight I made more money in total pay than any fighter in UFC history. Maybe it’s time to pay your fighters their fair share? No wonder they all want to get into boxing,” Jake Paul wrote. “Dana you say you make the fights fans want to see… so hurry up and make Jones vs. N’gannou. Pay them their fair share… $10M purse for each guy, plus PPV. Why are UFC fighters so underpaid vs. boxers? Why did I make more in my 3rd fight than all but two (Khabib & Conor) UFC fighters have in history? I know why.”

Chris Weidman had surgery on his leg that snapped earlier this morning.  His wife Marivi wrote:

Well that was horrible. Freak things happen in life and plans get crushed. It’s been a lonnnggg day but so happy to finally see this man of mine post surgery. Everything went well thank you Lord! Very thankful for the medical staff, UFC family @danawhite @reedharrisufc #allieraimondo, our management team @vaynersports @sarahzemonek and our family and friends here rallying to help with the kids,” Marivi Weidman wrote. “My heart breaks for my husband because I know the work and dedication that he puts into his training everyday and the great man that he is, so I only want the best for him. While this absolutely sucks in the moment and for some weeks to come, we are completely overwhelmed by the love and support we have far and wide and are very aware how blessed we are. All of that overpowers the awfulness of this situation. We are blown away by our friends and family offering to hop on flights to come help us without hesitation. We are so grateful and love you all!! It’s been a crazy year so far but us Weidmans are a force and covered in Grace and Mercy everyday! We were reminded this year how precious each day is and I am so thankful to be spending another day on earth next to my love even if it’s in a hospital room far from home.

Impact Rebellion PPV tonight at 8 p.m:

  • Kenny Omega vs. Rich Swann for the AEW, Impact and TNA world titles in a unification match
  • Juice Robinson & David Finlay vs. Doc Gallows & Karl Anderson for the Impact tag titles
  • Matt Cardona vs. Brian Myers
  • Ace Austin vs. TJP vs. Josh Alexander for the X title
  • Deonna Purrazzo vs. Tenille Dashwood for the Impact Knockouts title
  • Sami Callihan vs. Trey Miguel last man standing
  • Rhino & Cody Deaner & Joe Doering & ? vs. Eddie Edwards & James Storm & Wilie Mack & Chris Sabin
  • Kiera Hogan & Tasha Steelz vs. Jordynne Grace & Rachael Ellering for the Knockouts tag team titles

Based on advanced orders as of yesterday, this was ahead of any Impact PPV show in a long time.

We’re looking for your thoughts on last night’s UFC show as well as tonight’s Impact Rebellion, you can leave a thumbs up, down or middle, best and worst match for each show to [email protected]

If you have ESPN+, I would highly recommend watching the Liang Na vs. Ariane Carnelossi and Jeff Molina vs. Aoriqileng fights. They were the first two fights of the prelims.  The women’s fight that opened was back-and-forth almost like it was a top tier old UWFI/RINGS era top flight fight.  Molina vs Aoriqileng was good enough to be fight of the year.  It won’t win because the names aren’t big, but they did get the $50,000 bonus each for fight of the night, and considering the opener and Kamaru Usman vs. Jorge Masvidal, it’s not like there wasn’t stiff competition.

The show did 3.3 million searches on Google, which would be about what you would expect. Daniel Cormier was No. 4 so far today.  Yesterday, UFC 261 was first.  Chris Weidman has 500,000 due to his ghastly leg break which was No. 2 and Rose Namajunas was No. 3.  Valentine Shevchenko was No. 5 at 200,000   Anthony Smith was No. 16.  On Friday, Steve McMichael was No. 9.  On Thursday, Loga Paul was No. 10 and Jorge Masvidal was No. 16.  On Wednesday, Ronda Rousey was No. 13 due to her pregnancy announcement.

A few more notes on last night’s show. Dana White said Kamaru Usman would face Colby Covington in his next welterweight title defense. Nick Diaz was at the show and Dana White said that Diaz, 37, wants to fight again.  There were stories going around about Diaz vs. Khazmat Chimaev.  In the Dwight Grant vs. Stefan Sekulic split decision that we discussed on last night’s show, Derek Cleary gave Grant only the first round.  Chris Lee and Howard Reichbach gave Grant the first two rounds and a 29-28 win.  Media scores were 68% for Sekulic.  The first two rounds were close enough that they could have gone either way, but this fight was the perfect example of the flaws in ten point must, because the overall winner of the fight as  whole was clearly Sekulic, but because of the nature of ten point must, you could give two rounds to Grant.

Reports are the reason the Tyson Fury vs.  Anthony Joshua fight is being made is that Saudi Arabia is paying the promoters $150 million or more to get them to bring them the heavyweight boxing title unification match.

Gary Cassidy reported Bill Morrisey, the former Big Cass, would be debuting on tonight’s Impact show.

Raw tomorrow night has Drew McIntyre & Braun Strowman vs. T-Bar & Mace and a Bobby Lashley interview announced.

A&E tonight has the Roddy Piper episode of Biography at 8 p.m. and then the Paul Levesque & Stephanie McMahon search for WWE Hidden Treasures at 10 p.m.

New Japan runs Hiroshima Sun Plaza Hall tomorrow at 5:30 a.m. Eastern for a live New Japan World show:

  • Minoru Suzuki & Desperado & Yoshinobu Kanemaru vs. Sho & Yoh & Tiger Mask
  • Zack Sabre Jr. & Taichi & Douki vs. Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa & Jado
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi & Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Master Wato & Ryusuke Taguchi & Toru Yano vs. Evil & Dick Togo & Taiji Ishimori & Yujiro Takahashi & Gedo
  • Will Ospreay & Jeff Cobb vs. Shingo Takagi & Bushi
  • Aaron Henare vs. Sanada
  • Tetsuya Naito vs. Great O’Khan

WWE

  • John Cone is back in his former position in Talent Relations.  The company had taken him out of the position on Thursday and then changed its mind and put him back on Friday.

UFC

  • SportsBetting.ag has put odds at -500 for Daniel Cormier and +350 for Jake Paul if they were to do a boxing match.
  • Israel Adesanya is a -250 favorite over Marvin Vettori for their 6/12 fight.  Kamaru Usman is -300 for a potential fight with Colby Covington. 

OTHER NOTES

  • Daga has vacated the AAA Latin American title.  The new champion is expected to be decided on the 5/1  Rey de Reyes show.
  • Pro Wrestling Phoenix from Thursday night in Omaha:  Purple b Pat Powers, Duke Cornell b Xander McIntosh, Mack Riggs b JD Parker, Seto Kobara & Tim Boston DCOR Lars Metzger & Johnny Ruckus, Joey Daniels b Nino Hatchet, Moonshine Russell b Branden Juarez, Omar Pachecco & Brett Bishop b Pat Powers & Con Artiest.  Next event is the company’s 16th anniversary show on 5/20 at the Waiting Room Lounge in Omaha.
  • The top results from yesterday’s KSW show in Lodz, Poland:
  • Phil DeFries (20-6) b Tomasz Narkun (1q-4) via TKO at 3:37 of the second round to keep the heavyweight title
  • Marian Ziolkowski (23-8-1) b Maciej Kazleczko (7-2) via choke at 4:24 of round two for the light heavyweight title
  • Marek Samociuk (3-1) b Izu Ugonch (1-1) via punches in :27 of round one
  • Patryk Kaczmarczyk (7-0) b Michal Sobiech (4-1) via straight 29-28 scores
  • Tom Lawlor vs. Marshall Von Erich headlines Wednesday’s MLW Tv show.
  • Qatar Pro Wrestling announced a February 28, 2022 show in Doha at the Lausail Sports Arena and has announced Eric Bischoff, Bret Hart, Booker T, Mark Henry, Ron Simmons, The Godfather, D-Lo Brown, Will Ospreay, Sammy Guevara, Brian Cage, Cinta de Oro (formerly the second Sin Cara in WWE), EC 3, Jon Moxley and Hiroshi Tanahashi.
  • Paradigm Pro Wrestling with a UWFI rules tag tam mach with Tom Lawlor & Dominic Garrini vs. Matt Justice & Bobby Beverly airing on IWTV at 10 p.m. Eastern on Wednesday night.
  • CBS Sunday Morning did a cameo piece showing Ricky Morton, Torrie Wilson, and others on Cameo (thanks to Mike Lano)

Daily Pro Wrestling History: WWF Backlash 1999

CONTACT INFORMATION

Jordynne Grace vs. Kiera Hogan announced for Impact Wrestling

A new match has been added to next week’s Impact Wrestling card.

Kiera Hogan will face Jordynne Grace in a singles match. This follows Jazz’s retirement ceremony that took place this week on Impact after losing to Deonna Purrazzo at Hardcore Justice last weekend. Jazz’s final match for Impact took place this past Thursday, where she and Grace defeated Fire ‘n’ Flava (Hogan and Tasha Steelz) in a non-title match.

Later backstage, Scott D’Amore made a Knockouts Tag Team title match for Rebellion on April 25 after Hogan and Steelz complained about being put in a match. However, Jazz told Grace that she was a woman of her word and was done. She suggested that Grace should team with a mystery partner against Hogan and Steelz.

Also announced for this week’s Impact Wrestling:

  • Eric Young vs. Eddie Edwards
  • Tenille Dashwood vs. Susan
  • The Good Brothers vs. The Decay (Taurus and Crazzy Steve)

New date set for Impact Wrestling Rebellion PPV

Impact Wrestling’s next pay-per-view has been pushed back one day.

It was announced today that Impact Wrestling’s Rebellion PPV will now take place on Sunday, April 25. The show had originally been set to take place on Saturday, April 24, which is the same night as UFC 261.

Rebellion will be headlined by AEW World Champion Kenny Omega vs. Impact World Champion Rich Swann in a title vs. title match. Impact Tag Team Champions FinJuice (David Finlay & Juice Robinson) defending their titles against The Good Brothers (Karl Anderson & Luke Gallows) has also been announced for the PPV.

Impact notes that Deonna Purrazzo’s Knockouts Championship, Ace Austin’s X-Division Championship, and Tasha Steelz & Kiera Hogan’s Knockouts Tag Team titles will also be on the line at Rebellion.

“Sunday night has traditionally been the night for the big wrestling events in the sport’s history – and REBELLION is as huge of an event as any of them,” Impact Wrestling Executive Vice-President Scott D’Amore said in a press release. “Swann vs. Omega, champion vs. champion, title vs. title is a happening that every wrestling fan will want to witness … it just feels right that REBELLION take place on Sunday.”

A welterweight title fight between Kamaru Usman and Jorge Masvidal will main event UFC 261 on Saturday, April 24. Valentina Shevchenko vs. Jessica Andrade for the women’s flyweight title and Zhang Weili vs. Rose Namajunas for the women’s strawweight title are also set for UFC 261.

Rebellion will be Impact’s first major PPV since this January’s Hard to Kill event. Omega & The Good Brothers defeated Swann, Moose & Chris Sabin at Hard to Kill, with Omega pinning Swann after hitting the One Winged Angel. This year’s Hard to Kill drew Impact Wrestling’s second-highest PPV buys since the promotion stopped airing on Spike TV in 2014. Last year’s Slammiversary was the only Impact PPV to draw more buys since the end of the Spike TV era.

Daily Update: WWE releases, Rebellion, ratings

DAILY UPDATE

Latest News:

Latest Audio:

WON NEWSLETTER: April 13, 2020 Observer Newsletter: UFC postpones all future shows, WrestleMania 36 review

The battle to keep UFC 249 alive is the lead story in our annual WrestleMania double issue, which shows how big a story that became. 

We look at how a U.S Senator, government agencies, doctors and Dana White all chimed in and what killed plans for the show next week. We look at the fighters who dropped out of the top two bouts, the reaction locally, the commission, how the association of commissions didn’t back the California commission, how UFC was to be regulated, what happens next, what the doctors said, the business reasons behind why UFC pushed so hard for the show, and what the show originally had.

The new issue also covers:

The wrestling industry going forward after WrestleMania, with a look at WWE, AEW, Impact, MLW and New Japan and what has and hasn’t been taped, who returns to WWE this week, Money in the Bank, Double or Nothing, AEW California crew wrestling, and more.

WrestleMania with a look at the good and the bad of the show, business numbers, the stories of the different unique matches, Roman Reigns update, television ratings for the prelims, and media criticism. We also have match-by-match coverage of both nights with poll results.

President Trump’s meeting with the key players in the sports world including Vince McMahon and Dana White as well as others talking about when or if spectator sports can return.

The key numbers to look for at the next WWE investors call, new WWE TV deals, Paul Levesque talks Wednesday night ratings, Michael Cole’s new role, WWE new documentaries including thoughts on the Edge documentary, new angles, Drew McIntyre talks about a number of subjects, new WWE movie, NXT booking, Kurt Angle talks Brock Lesnar, C.M. Punk talks Vince McMahon, FS 1 TV block, TV sports ratings, Charlotte Flair talks WrestleMania, WWE market value and the most-watched shows of the past week on the WWE Network.

A story on one of the strangest lawsuits you’ll ever see against Dana White.

A story on the break-in of the home of Anthony Smith.

A huge back-of-the-book story on the life of Danno O’Mahoney, one of the biggest short-term drawing cards in pro wrestling history. We go back to the 1930s, the politics that led to the creation of O’Mahoney, how Paul Bowser put the plan in place, the story of Jim Londos, the biggest drawing card in U.S. history and his role in this, some of the biggest matches in wrestling history and why the O’Mahoney vs. Shikat match changed the industry for a dozen years after and some historians call it the most important match in history. It’s all here, creation of world titles, promotions not getting along, in-ring double-crossess, stadium shows and the tragic story about how happy ever after end up lasting five weeks.

Coverage of all the WWE and AEW television shows from the past week.

In-depth looks at the ratings of all the major shows, the key demos and quarters for AEW and WWE, what happened head-to-head and what can be learned from them.

Results of all the major pro wrestling events around the world over the past week. 

ORDERING INFO: Order the print Wrestling Observer right now and get it delivered via mail, by sending your name, address, Visa or Master Card number and an expiration date to [email protected] or by going to www.paypal.com directing funds to [email protected].

Rates in the United States are $14.50 for 4 issues, $35.50 for 12, $70 for 24, $116 for 40 and $149.50 for 52.

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WEDNESDAY NEWS UPDATE

WWE

  • Today’s episode of The Bump featured Otis and Mandy Rose, Big Show, Christian, Io Shirai, William Regal and IRS.
  • A number of talent have released statements on Twitter regarding their releases (or, for producers, furloughs), including Lio Rush, Drake Maverick, Curt Hawkins, EC3, Deonna Purazzo, Fit Finlay, Heath Slater, Shane Helms, No Way Jose, Kurt Angle, Maria Kanellis, RusevZack Ryder, Mike Kanellis,Lance Storm and Pat Buck
  • Andrea Listenberger, a writer for WWE who wrote the Otis/Mandy Rose storyline, wrote on Twitter that she had been released today: “Lots of people getting let go at #WWE today and regrettably, I am one of them. But I’m proud of the work I’ve been able to do since starting in Dec., and glad that the storyline I worked on resonated with so many people. That’s what writing is about for me. #OtisandMandyForever”
  • Florida Governor Ron DeSantis dismissed the idea during a coronavirus briefing that a super PAC connected to President Trump’s re-election campaign, which is headed by Linda McMahon and contributied millions of dollars to the state just a day prior to WWE announcing they were running live shows again, played a part in his executive order deeming WWE and other sports as an essential business.
  • WWE Backstage scored 161,000 viewers last night, up from last week’s 140,000.
  • The first three episodes of WWE’s Ruthless Aggression documentary scored 302,000 (9 p.m.), 224,000 (10:00 p.m.) and 226,000 (8 p.m.) viewers respectively.
  • Los Angeles mayor Eric Garcetti told CNN this afternoon that large gatherings, such as concerts or sporting events, may not come back until 2021. Next year’s WrestleMania is currently planned to take place in the Los Angeles area on March 28, 2021.
  • Full matches added to WWE’s YouTube page today include Eddie Guerrero vs. The Big Show from the April 15, 2004 edition of SmackDown and Paige vs. Naomi for the WWE Divas title from Money in the Bank 2014.
  • Alexa Bliss spoke to CBS Sports on the ‘Fight Like a Girl” series on Quibi as well as Ronda Rousey’s recent comments.
  • The Daily Show covered WWE being deemed an essential business.

Other Wrestling

  • The first night of Impact’s Rebellion event, which will take place on April 21 on AXS, will have Sami Callihan vs. Ken Shamrock, Ace Austin vs. Willie Mack for the X-Division title, Rhino & Tommy Dreamer vs. OVE and Kiera Hogan vs. Kylie Rae.
  • Last night’s Dark Side of the Ring, which focused on Jimmy Snuka and the death of Nancy Argentino, scored 209,000 viewers, down from last week’s 226,000 viewers.
  • Vice has released a trailer for next week’s episode of Dark Side of the Ring, which will cover the death of Dino Bravo.
  • Jim Cornette is in the process of trademarking his own name for use in pro wrestling.
  • Chris Jericho will co-host the season premiere of The Last Drive-In with Joe Bob Briggs on April 24.

MMA

Daily Pro Wrestling History: Team 3D wins TNA Tag Team Titles

CONTACT INFORMATION

Brian Cage gives update on back injury after Impact Rebellion

After suffering a back injury at Sunday night’s Rebellion pay-per-view, Impact World Champion Brian Cage appeared on Busted Open Radio this morning and gave a positive update on his status.

“Yeah, it doesn’t look like I’m going [to be] out,” Cage told Busted Open Radio when asked if he was going to be fine and able to get back into the ring soon.

Cage said the doctor told him that he thinks Cage is going to be fine and just has severe inflammation and a bone bruise. The doctor said there could be a small fracture and he’d like to rule that out, but the doctor doesn’t see it being a major fracture. Cage said that even if there is a fracture, the doctor told him there isn’t much more that can be done for it.

Cage was injured when taking a Spanish Fly from the ramp to the floor against Johnny Impact at Rebellion. Cage finished the match and won the World title, with Michael Elgin then making his Impact debut in a post-match angle. Elgin went face-to-face with Cage and laid him out with a powerbomb.

Dave Meltzer reported that Cage was barely able to walk and was rushed to the hospital shortly after the show was over. Meltzer also noted that Cage went into the ring with cupping marks all over his back, which could indicate that he went into the match with some back issues.

Brian Cage suffers back injury at Impact Rebellion

Additional notes by Bryan Rose

Brian Cage, who captured the Impact championship tonight from Johnny Impact at the Rebel Complex in Toronto, suffered a back injury in the match.

The injury is believed from the spot where he took a Spanish fly off the ramp and onto the floor. He continued the match, but shortly after the show was over, Cage was barely able to walk and was rushed to the hospital.

Cage had gone into the ring with cupping marks all over his back. Cupping is a therapy treatment popular in Japan since the 70s and gained some American use in the 2016 Olympics. But that would indicate that he went into the match with some back issues.

After the match was over, Cage was confronted by the debuting Michael Elgin. It ended up being physical when Elgin attacked Cage, laying him out with the Elgin bomb, setting up a possible future title match between the two.

Michael Elgin makes Impact debut at Rebellion

Michael Elgin made his debut for Impact Wrestling tonight, immediately catapulting himself into their world title scene.

Brian Cage defeated Johnny Impact to win the Impact World title at tonight’s Rebellion pay-per-view. After the match, Elgin appeared on the stage and made his way to the ring. Following a staredown, Elgin jumped Cage, took the title and gave him the Elgin bomb. He then posed with the title before leaving.

Elgin has been associated with New Japan Pro Wrestling since 2015, winning both the Intercontinental and NEVER titles on one occasion. He did not re-sign with the company earlier this year and left last month on March 24, teaming with Colt Cabana and Toa Henare to defeat Satoshi Kojima, Hiroyoshi Tenzan and Shota Umino. His contract officially expired on 4/1.

Since leaving NJPW, Elgin has mostly worked the Canadian independent scene. He’s also previously worked for Ring of Honor, where he held their world championship on one occasion.