Marty Scurll, PCO advance to semifinals of ROH tournament

Two members of Villain Enterprises have advanced to the semifinals of ROH’s Final Battle number one contender’s tournament.

Marty Scurll defeated Colt Cabana in a first-round match at Friday night’s Death Before Dishonor pay-per-view. PCO also advanced to the semifinals by defeating Kenny King in a no disqualification match at Death Before Dishonor.

Scurll and PCO are on opposite sides of the bracket. The remaining two first-round matches are taking place at ROH’s post-Death Before Dishonor television tapings in Las Vegas tomorrow. In the semifinals, PCO will face the winner of Dalton Castle vs. Mark Haskins. Scurll will take on the winner of Jay Lethal vs. Bandido.

Scurll’s contract with ROH is set to expire in November.

The semifinals and finals of the tournament are being held at Glory By Honor in New Orleans, Louisiana on October 12.

The winner of the tournament will challenge for the ROH World Championship at Final Battle in Baltimore, Maryland on December 13. Matt Taven is defending the ROH World Championship against Rush in the main event of Death Before Dishonor tonight.

ROH reveals bracket for number one contender’s tournament

After the participants were confirmed last week, ROH has now revealed the bracket for their number one contender’s tournament.

The left side of the bracket has PCO vs. Kenny King and Dalton Castle vs. Mark Haskins in the first round. The right side has Colt Cabana vs. Marty Scurll and Bandido vs. Jay Lethal.

The winner of the tournament will challenge for the ROH World Championship at Final Battle this December.

PCO vs. King and Cabana vs. Scurll are set for ROH’s Death Before Dishonor pay-per-view on Friday, September 27. Castle vs. Haskins and Bandido vs. Lethal will take place at the post-Death Before Dishonor television tapings on Saturday, September 28. Sam’s Town Live in Las Vegas, Nevada is hosting both shows.

ROH World Champion Matt Taven is defending his title against Volador Jr. at ROH & CMLL’s Global Wars Espectacular night two this Saturday. Rush will challenge for the ROH World title at the Death Before Dishonor PPV.

The semifinals and finals of the number one contender’s tournament are taking place at Glory By Honor at the UNO Lakefront Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana on Saturday, October 12.

Marty Scurll’s ROH contract up this November

It’s a good time to be a wrestling free agent and another big name could be testing that market later this year as SI’s Justin Barasso reported Tuesday that Marty Scurll’s Ring of Honor contract is up this November.

Our Dave Meltzer verified the news which he had initially discussed on a June edition of Wrestling Observer Radio.

The 31-year-old has been with ROH since August 2016 and has been the central figure in Villain Enterprises, a stable he started with Brody King and PCO that are currently the company’s six-man tag team champions. Scurll will be part of ROH’s Global Wars with CMLL this Friday in Dearborn, MI, and this Saturday in Chicago, IL. He is listed for the meet and greet for Sunday’s Milwaukee, WI, show, but isn’t listed on the card yet.

Scurll has been announced for the number one contender’s tournament which kicks off at the Death Before Dishonor pay-per-view on September 27th. It runs through October, concluding with the winner getting a world title shot at December’s Final Battle pay-per-view.

The current world champion is Matt Taven, whose contract is up at the end of September, first reported by PWInsider

First four wrestlers set for ROH number one contender’s tournament

ROH has confirmed the first four participants for their number one contender’s tournament.

It was announced today that Dalton Castle, Jay Lethal, Kenny King, and Marty Scurll will be participating in the eight-man, single-elimination tournament. The other four wrestlers for it will be announced tomorrow.

ROH wrote that the bracket will be revealed on Monday (September 2).

The winner of the tournament will challenge for the ROH World Championship at Final Battle, which is taking place at the UMBC Event Center in Baltimore, Maryland on Friday, December 13. Matt Taven currently holds the title.

The first round matches for the tournament will be held at ROH’s Death Before Dishonor pay-per-view on Friday, September 27 and their post-Death Before Dishonor television tapings on Saturday, September 28. Both of those shows are taking place at Sam’s Town Live in Las Vegas.

The semifinals and finals will then be held at Glory By Honor on Saturday, October 12. The UNO Lakefront Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana is hosting that show.

LifeBlood to challenge for Six-Man Tag titles at ROH Honor for All

The ROH Six-Man Tag Team titles will be on the line at Honor for All later this month.

ROH has announced that Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) will defend their titles against LifeBlood (Bandido, Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams) at Honor for All. The show is taking place at the Nashville Fairgrounds Sports Arena in Nashville, Tennessee on Sunday, August 25 and will air live on HonorClub.

Villain Enterprises were supposed to defend their titles against LifeBlood at Mass Hysteria last month, but Brody King couldn’t wrestle at the show due to an ankle injury. The night before Mass Hysteria, LifeBlood & PJ Black defeated Villain Enterprises (Scurll, PCO, King & Flip Gordon) at Manhattan Mayhem.

Villain Enterprises retained against Haskins, Williams & Black at June’s Best in the World pay-per-view. LifeBlood then defeated Villain Enterprises in a non-title street fight at the post-PPV television tapings.

Scurll vs. Bandido has been confirmed for ROH’s tapings at Center Stage in Atlanta, Georgia on Saturday, August 24. ROH announced last month that the top matches from their TV tapings will be live streamed on HonorClub going forward.

Villain Enterprises to defend Six-Man Tag titles at ROH Mass Hysteria

The ROH Six-Man Tag Team titles will be on the line at Mass Hysteria later this month.

ROH has announced that Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) will defend their titles against LifeBlood (Bandido, Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams) at Mass Hysteria. The show is taking place at the Lowell Memorial Auditorium in Lowell, Massachusetts on Sunday, July 21 and will air live on HonorClub.

Villain Enterprises retained their titles against Haskins, Williams & PJ Black at Best in the World in June. After the match, Flip Gordon was revealed as the newest member of Villain Enterprises. A brawl between Villain Enterprises and LifeBlood ended with Gordon hitting a 450 splash through a table on Williams.

Scurll, PCO, King & Gordon will face Bandido, Haskins, Williams & Black at ROH’s Manhattan Mayhem TV tapings on Saturday, July 20.

Here’s the current lineup for Mass Hysteria:

  • ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) defending against LifeBlood (Bandido, Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams)
  • Rush vs. Dalton Castle
  • The Bouncers (Beer City Bruiser & Brawler Milonas) challenging for the ROH Tag Team titles (The Bouncers will challenge the team that wins the Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa vs. The Briscoes NYC street fight from Manhattan Mayhem)
  • The Kingdom (ROH World Champion Matt Taven, Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) vs. Jay Lethal, Alex Shelley & Jonathan Gresham
  • ROH Television Champion Shane Taylor defending against Eli Isom
  • Silas Young vs. PJ Black

ROH TV results: Two title matches on episode 400

From Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Ian Riccaboni and Caprice Coleman called the action.

ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (PCO, Marty Scurll & Brody King) defeated Jay Lethal, Jeff Cobb & Rush to retain their titles

Lethal and PCO started it off for their respective teams. Lethal nailed PCO with a lot of kicks, but PCO was barely phased. PCO begged Lethal to dive on him, which distracted Lethal long enough for Scurll to cut off Lethal. PCO tagged in Scurll, and Lethal tagged in Rush.

Kenny King and Amy Rose joined the announce team mid-match and Kenny immediately brought up his “eye surgery.” Throughout the match, he kept asking what was happening because he couldn’t see.

In the ring, Rush and Scurll wrestled to a stalemate. Rush tagged in Cobb, and Scurll tagged in King. A quick exchange led to Cobb nailing a dropkick. However, King fired back and landed a running crossbody and then pulled off a hurricanrana on Cobb.

King was sent to the floor by Rush. Lethal dove on him, but King caught him. With a kick assist by Scurll, King suplexed Lethal onto the floor.

After the break, Lethal was in the ring with King attempting to suplex him but instead used a cutter to drop the big man. King tagged in Scurll, and Lethal tagged in Rush. Rush ran wild and decimated his foes until he got arrogant and Scurll cut him off with a superkick to the knee.

Scurll called for the chicken wing, but Rush nailed him with a headbutt and tagged in Cobb, who came in and gave two stalling suplexes to King and PCO. He then launched Scurll and followed it up with a moonsault.

PCO broke up the pin, but Cobb managed to hoist King and Scurll up at the same time for a double suplex. This brought in PCO, who came in and tossed Cobb to the floor. King hit a flipping dive onto Cobb and Lethal, then PCO hit a Scurll-assisted flip dive of his own and took out all three of their opponents.

Back in the ring, Scurll and King combined forces to hit a sunset German suplex on Cobb. They then hit a 619 and cannonball combo on him. Scurll tagged in PCO and grabbed Cobb, but he ate a Cobb superkick. Lethal then came off the top with an elbow, but PCO stood up. Rush then hit him with an overhead belly-to-belly.

Lethal again hit a top rope elbow, but Scurll broke up the pin. In the chaos, Lethal hit a Lethal Injection on Scurll and went for it again on King, but King caught him on his shoulders and landed a crazy spinning powerbomb. PCO followed it up with a moonsault, which got the win for Villain Enterprises.

During the commercial, as Lethal was leaving, Kenny King jumped Lethal from behind and used his cane to choke him out.

ROH World Champion Matt Taven defeated Flip Gordon to retain his title

After an early exchange sent Taven to the floor, Gordon hit a suicide dive. As Gordon was on the ring apron, TK O’Ryan attempted to get involved. That distracted Gordon enough to allow Taven to knock him to the floor. Taven launched Gordon into the ring post and then threw him back into the ring.

Gordon got the advantage and landed a kick and a one-legged moonsault. Taven kicked out at two and bailed to the floor. Taven baited him to the outside and then drilled Gordon in the knee. Taven went to follow that up with a running dropkick to the floor, but Gordon evaded and landed a superkick. Gordon charged after Taven, but Taven hip tossed him into the guardrail.

After the commercial, Taven was attacking Gordon’s injured knee with punches. Gordon fought to his feet and landed a knee to the head of Taven. However, Taven kept going back to the knee with a dragon screw leg whip, which sent Gordon to the floor. As he was out there, Taven distracted the referee. That allowed O’Ryan to attack Gordon.

Taven locked on a half Boston crab back inside the ring, but Gordon got to the ropes. Finally, Gordon managed to hit a springboard spear to buy himself some recovery time. A striking exchange ended with a huge knee by Gordon. He then hit an inverted driver to get a two count.

After the final break, Taven had Gordon perched atop the turnbuckle and landed a superplex, but it was Gordon who hooked the inside cradle. He only got a two count. Gordon fired up and landed a Russian leg sweep from the second rope and a spinning Falcon Arrow, getting a two count.

Taven spit in the face of Gordon and landed a pop-up powerbomb and a Just the Tip knee. He went for a cover, but Gordon kicked out at two.

Gordon fought back up and hit a swinging TKO. He went up top, but as he was on the top rope, the red balloons floated up from ringside, distracting Gordon long enough to allow Taven to hit the Climax DDT off the top to pick up the victory and retain his title.

Crockett Cup live results: One-night tournament, Aldis vs. Scurll

The winners of the 2019 Crockett Cup will be crowned in Concord, North Carolina tonight.

Eight teams will face off in a one-night tournament, with the winners also becoming the NWA Tag Team Champions. The left side of the bracket has The Briscoes vs. The Rock ‘n’ Roll Express and Satoshi Kojima & Yuji Nagata vs. PCO & Brody King. The right side has Stuka Jr. & Guerrero Maya Jr. vs. Flip Gordon & Bandido and Crimson & Jax Dane vs. the winners of a wild card battle royal.

Three other title matches are also set for tonight. NWA Worlds Heavyweight Champion Nick Aldis puts his title on the line against Marty Scurll, Allysin Kay and Santana Garrett face off for the vacant NWA World Women’s Championship, and Willie Mack defends the NWA National title against Colt Cabana.

The NWA and ROH are partnering for tonight’s show. It begins at 7 p.m. Eastern time and will air live on HonorClub, Fite TV, and pay-per-view.

**********

Joe Galli, Ian Riccaboni and Jim Cornette were on commentary for tonight’s event. The ring used for this Crockett Cup looked different from the one they used at the 70th Anniversary show in November, with the plain old school NWA logo in yellow on the blue canvas, with the old ROH logo — the one that wasn’t inspired by tribal tattoos — on the apron. The graphics were very ‘80s throughout the night, too, and gave the show a nostalgic feel. 

Royce Isaacs & Thomas Latimer won a tag-team battle royalty qualify for the Crockett Cup tournament. 

The Boys, Will Ferarra & Rhett Titus, Royce Isaacs & Thomas Latimer (Bram in TNA), Jay Bradley & Jocephus, Zane and Dave Dodson, and a handful of other young talent were included in this match. Everyone was in the ring before the bell rang and were each briefly introduced by the ring announcer. 

In the ring, Rhett Titus flexed in front of all the teams until the Boys eliminated him, and here is when the match really kicked off. 

The Dodsons, the local team from North Carolina, were put over on commentary for being the kinda-sorta hometown heroes. They were the two biggest contestants in the battle royal, but were ironically eliminated by some of the smallest wrestlers in the match with a double clothesline.

The other teams were eliminated quickly, and the last two groups in the ring were Bradley and Cephus vs the Boys. The Boys thought they got the upset win until Royce Isaacs and Tom Latimer, who feigned elimination, jumped back into the ring to eliminate the Boys and win the battle royal. 

This wasn’t great but it was quick and painless. I’m not sure how familiar the crowd was with the teams outside of the ROH teams or locals.

Crockett Cup Round 1: 
Flip Gordon & Bandido (ROH) defeated Stuka Jr. & Guerrero Maya Jr. (CMLL)

Really nice match to kick off the tournament. Gordon wore Bandido’s sombrero and Bandido wore FLIP t-shirt to the ring. People sounded really excited for the ROH team here. 

Jim Cornette’s mini-history lessons during dead spots during the broadcast are just terrific. He gave an abridged version of EMLL/CMLL in about a minute or two before the match. It’s one of the best parts of these NWA specials, actually.

This wasn’t as lightening-fast as you’d imagine it might be.  Guerrero Maya Jr. was the first wrestler to really shine in the match and used four tilt-a-whirl backbreakers in a row on both Gordon and Bandido. Stuka and Maya did a very cool double-team lucha-styled submissions on both Gordon and Bandido. At one point they did a double Romero Special to Bandido but Gordon slid in and pinned both for a quick two-count.

The CMLL team dominated much of this match. Stuka did a torpedo plancha onto Bandidoto the floor; Maya did a tope con giro through the ropes onto Gordon.

Team ROH made a comeback halfway through the match and started diving all over the place. Gordon used a big moonsault to the floor and landed on his feet. The crowd was very much into Gordon tonight. He and Bandido together had good chemistry together despite not having teamed all that much.

Stuka mounted a comeback for his team and hit a string off flying and power moves, including a giant torpedo splash. Maya used innovative offense here as well and got a very close count after a modified neckbreaker. 

Towards the end of the match, Stuka went for a cross body from the top rope. Bandido caught the stout luchador mid-air and passed him off to Flip Gordon who hit a modified TKO on Stuka for the win.

Crockett Cup Round 1
Royce Isaacs & Thomas Latimer defeated Crimson & Jax Dane (NWA)

Solid and hard-hitting match but a bit short. The crowd was pretty into the NWA team for obvious reasons. The heels, Isaacs and Latimer, controlled much of the match in their corner, beating down Crimson until Jax was tagged in. Jax took both Latimer and Isaacs from the top rope and did a double-Samoan Drop. As the NWA team mounted their comeback, Isaacs was able to score a roll-up pin with his foot on the ropes to advance to the next round.

Crockett Cup Round 1:
The Briscoe Brothers (Jay & Mark Briscoe) defeated The Rock ‘n’ Roll Express (Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson)

Jim Cornette went to the ring to introduce the Rock ’n’ Roll Express, who received a warm reaction from the crowd. Cornette interviewed the team in the ring, specifically Morton, who was so fired up at points during this promo his face turned red. He explained how it’s been their goal to  win the Crockett Cup, that that’s what they’re all about, and then Morton got the crowd to chant “Rock and Roll.” The Briscoes’ music hit midway through the chant as Jay and Mark came to the ring to cut a promo of their own. Their reaction was really loud and positive.

Jay threatened to whoop Cornette’s ass if he didn’t give him the mic. He then cut a promo offering them to forfeit the match. Morton responded by decking Jay and the match was on. Morton hit a frankensteiner on Mark just after the bell. Wow. RNR knocked him to the floor with their patented double dropkick after this and the chants for the NWA legends started over again. 

Gibson opened the ropes for Morton to dive through them moments later, hitting a tope suicida onto both Briscoes. This happened in 2019. 

The Briscoes were able to gather themselves on the outside and started abusing Morton back inside the ring. Morton had already bladed at this point. The Briscoes kept the flash to a minimum here and controlled the match with forearms, chin locks and neck cranks. They screamed at the crowd and at Robert Gibson as he yelled for Morton to get to the opposing corner. 

The crowd was split here, and there were equal chants for both teams. Gibson did get a tag that the ref didn’t see so he was ordered back to the apron, which got a lot of heat. He did finally get himself tagged into the ring where he cleaned house. He and Morton did the Rocket Launcher spot into the ring onto Mark Briscoe for two. 

The Briscoes were able to make a quick comeback and put the Express away after Mark pinned Morton after a Froggy Bow. Like the others, this was a short match though both teams looked great, and that’s after we’ve shelved our nostalgic feelings for the Rock ’n’ Roll Express. I never had the feeling like either were struggling in the match despite their ages and states of their bodies, and the Briscoes always know what they’re doing, so yeah, this was good stuff. Briscoes were awesome heels in this, as well.

PCO & Brody King (ROH) defeated Satoshi Kojima & Yuji Nagata (NJPW)

This was another solid match that had a slower pace than the others so far tonight. Nagata and King started the match off, but the crowd really seemed to perk up for Kojima and PCO together. After PCO no-sold a shoulder block from Kojima, he used a discus lariat to knock him out of the ring and followed up with a tope suicida. This is turning into the Night of Amazing Middle-Aged Men.

Nagata entered the ring in House of Fire Mode and hit all of his signature moves, including an exploder suplex and the extreme arm breaker where he rolls his eyes into the back of his head, the shiro-me (“white eyes” in Japanese) spot. PCO broke it up.

Kojima and PCO traded machine gun shops in opposite corners. They traded big spots after this, Kojima with a Koji Cutter, PCO with a Michinoku Driver II. It’s almost strange to see King and PCO in a regular wrestling match; these days they tend to be booked exclusively in gimmick matches. 

Back in the ring, King landed a fireman’s carry into a Michinoku Driver on Kojima for the clean pin. They’ll face the Briscoes in the next round.

NWA Womens’ Championship match: Allysin Kay defeated Santana Garrett

Madusa came out with the NWA Women’s Championship. She called herself the Queen of Carnage and said she wasn’t going to trash any titles tonight. It was unfortunately quite awkward. It sounded like she kept forgetting what she was going to say. Just as she was wrapping up, Allisn Kay’s music hit. 

The story for those who haven’t heard is that Jazz, the former NWA Women’s champion, vacated the titled earlier this week due to health and personal reasons. 

Earlier on in the broadcast aired a selfie promo from Kay, formerly Sienna in TNA. She dominated much this one. Kay is a good heel and abused Garrett throughout. Garrett used some acrobatic offensive moves towards the end of the match, but Kay used a spinning lariat to pin Garrett to become the new NWA Women’s champion. This wasn’t bad, but it sure didn’t feel important.

Crockett Cup Semi-Finals:
Royce Isaacs & Thomas Latimer defeated Flip Gordon & Bandido (ROH)

The teams started things off at a medium pace. Isaacs and Latimer were knocked to the floor early on, but instead of diving onto them, Flip and Bandido did a dance inside the ring. As Team ROH were flossing (I swear) in the ring, Madusa was out at ringside and whispering something into the freelancers’ ears. 

Latimer and Isaacs made a comeback midway through the match and worked over Gordon towards their corner. Not all that much happened in this match, actually, because Latimer scored an a quick upset win on Gordon with a schoolboy to advance to the finals of tonight’s Crockett Cup. What a swerve.

Crockett Cup Semi-Finals:
Brody King & PCO (ROH) defeated The Briscoe Brothers (ROH) by DQ

PCO and Mark Briscoe had a chop-off early on. PCO’s chest was still red from his match with Kojima and Nagata. Mark hit a huge corkscrew senton to the floor which popped the very pro-Briscoes crowd. 

PCO used a thrust kick to counter the Briscoes offense. From here, he had his partner, King, chop him a number of times to fire him up, and was whipped by King into the opposite corner. King followed up by cannonballing himself into the then prone Mark Briscoe in the same corner. 

The Briscoes did a lot dives in this match. Jay did a pescado to the floor but then King chokeslammed him onto the edge of the apron. Mark dove through the middle ropes with a dropkick. PCO did a tope con giro through the ropes, but then missed a somersault senton onto the edge of the apron. It looked brutal, as per usual. Mark did a running elbow drop to King on the floor, just like Cactus Jack used to do. 

The match morphed into another version of the Briscoes vs. Villain Enterprises matches that we’ve seen on the big ROH cards over the past two months. They circled ringside, brawling, until each wrestler found a chairs. Both teams were then in the ring with chairs until everyone started smashing each other. Referee Scott Turner then called for the bell and DQ’d the Briscoes, allowing for Villain Enterprises to advance to tonight’s finals. 

After the match, the Briscoes jumped their opponents and ref Scott Turner. Jay used a not-great looking Jaydriller on Turner, then Mark hit a somersault senton onto PCO, who had a chair across his chest, on the apron. Jay then grabbed the mic and essentially said to hell with the NWA and they left.

NWA National Title match: Colt Cabana defeated Willie Mack (c)

This wasn’t bad but was again another short one making it harder to judge fairly. Both wrestlers shook hands before the match. Mack hit a big swinging bodyslam on Cabana early on. He attempted a running dropkick to Cabana in the corner but Cabana moved out of the way and Mack slid right through the ropes and bumped back-first onto the floor, in essence doing a modified Chris Hamrick bump. Cornette sold it as purely accident and worked it into the story of the match. 

From here, Cabana took control for a couple of minutes until Mack was able to counter the attack with a Samoan drop and standing moonsault for two, and later a deadweight upside-down cannonball for another two. 

Cabana landed a quebrada for a two of his own. Mack landed some really stiff looking kicks and forearms and seemed to be picking up momentum when Cabana, basically out of nowhere, used his Superman Press pin to score what some might consider the upset victory. The crowd was shocked but didn’t seem to love the result. Colt Cabana is your new NWA National champion. 

As Mack walked to the dressing room, a tall fellow in a hood walked by him, who happened to be James Storm. Storm got into the ring and grabbed the mic. He congratulated Cabana on his win and then cut a promo about how the “management” holding him down when he held the NWA title and that the “management” only wants a certain type of person to hold the title, not a hell raiser like himself.  He then challenged Cabana to a match and did his catchphrase, which a good portion of the crowd already knew, and walked to the back.

— Billy Corgan and Joe Koff came to ringside with members of the Crockett family. Bobby Cruise then announced Nikita Koloff who came to the ring. He boasted about how he is now a preacher and has toured the world preaching. Magnum T.A. came out and he put over the NWA fans.

Crockett Cup Finals: 
Brody King & PCO defeated Royce Isaacs & Thom Latimer (w/ Madusa)

Isaacs and King were first in. They exchanged strikes up front, lots of fists and chops. Isaacs inched his way back towards his team’s corner. He and Latimer pounded down on King, slowing things down with forearms and wear-down submissions. After a few minutes of punishment, King back body dropped Latimer into the corner and inched his way to the corner and tag PCO.

PCO here started screaming “Brody, fix my arm!” on the apron, so King did an arm breaker across the top rope to “set” his arm back into place. He then unloaded a few lariats and then passed Latimer off to King. King did that fireman’s carry driver again and set Latimer flat, prone and ready to take a monstrous PCO moonsault and easily walk away with the victory. Villain Enterprises win the Crockett Cup and are now the new NWA Tag Team champions. The crowd chanted for PCO after this. Nikita Koloff and Magnum TA congratulated the team and presented them with the gigantic Crockett Cup trophy.

NWA Heavyweight Title match: Nick Aldis (w/ Kamille) (c) defeated Marty Scurll

Both wrestlers got really long entrances. They showed the Ten Pounds of Gold mini-docs before and during the broadcast. They made it a strong point to make this match feel like it meant a lot, on commentary, in the ring, and with regard to the match’s live programming. Legendary NWA referee Tommy Young came out and gave both wrestlers instructions before the match, noting that it’s a wrestling match and not a fight, and that the fans paid to see these two wrestlers wrestle, not to see him referee. This got a few boisterous albeit scattered cheers. 

They exchanged holds for the first few minutes of this one. Cornette digressed a bit on this style of chain wrestling, the World of Sport-inspired style these two often employee. For me, these little tidbits throughout the broadcast are always fascinating to listen to and enhance the overall experience on television. 

I want to note that here Cornette claimed that Billy Robinson invented what’s known in the BJJ world as a cartwheel guard pass, which I’m not entirely sure if that’s true or not. Kazusashi Sakuraba was one of the first people I saw use it in a pro fight, before the term “guard” was so frequently used, and Sakuraba is a Robinson devotee, so it could in fact be true. 

After being whipped into the ropes, Scurll bumped face-first onto the mat and acted as though Kamille tripped him. Referee Brian Hebner ejected her from ringside, even though Tommy Young, officiating from the floor, claimed not to see her do anything. Scurll tapped his temple with his finger to let the audience just how villainous he is. 

It didn’t matter for long, though, as Aldis powered back to control much of the middle part of this match. He used a super fall-away slam from the top turnbuckle, and later chokeslammed Scurll clean through a ringside table. 

Aldis continued to dominate for a bit longer until Scurll summoned some sort of inner fire, first spitting in Aldis’ face, later landing a tornado DDT and later a low thrust kick from the apron into Aldis’ face. The two brawled around the ring for a while here, with Scurll getting the better of this second spill to the floor. Aldis bled a ton here and Cornette called it as though Scurll popped him in the eye with a fist.

Scurll put Aldis into a figure-four leg lock back inside the ring. Aldis was bleeding heavy now. He came back with a tombstone piledriver, a Michinoku Driver II off the ropes and then a diving elbow drop from the top rope. 

The two exchanged strikes on the top rope. After a few more moments of fisticuffs, Scurll was able to reverse Aldis’ offensive attempt into a big superplex for two. Much of the crowd in attendance was on their feet at this point.

Aldis went for the Cloverleaf but Scurll snapped Aldis fingers before he could lock the submission in. Scurll hit a CrossRhodes. Scurll went for the chicken wing but ended up crashing into ref Brian Hebner. Kamille then ran out and went to spear Scurll in the ring while the ref was out, but Aldis got in the way and insisted she get out of the ring because he wanted the honorable win. Despite this, Scurll then gave Aldis a low-blow and went for a pin but couldn’t finish.

Aldis fought from behind for much of the end of this. Scurll had him locked in the chicken wing for a minute or two but Aldis countered out with a pinning attempt. He was finally able to lock in the cloverleaf, and after dragging Scurll to the middle of the ring, the bloody Nick Aldis was able tap Scurll for the win. The two shook hands after the match, and Scurll raised Aldis’ hand to celebrate his victory. 

This was excellent. The crowd was going wild towards the end of this. Both wrestlers busted their asses not only physically but in terms of match layout, pacing, structure and aesthetic. It was competitive and had drama pulled from a pretty strong backstory. 

Afterwards, Scurll grabbed the mic and put Aldis over huge. He explained how he not only helped him at the beginning of his career but he helped Scurll become the man that he is today. He put over the match tonight, to the delight of the crowd, and put Aldis over once more. Aldis then took the mic and said Scurll is the biggest self-made star today. He said that tonight was for the one’s that laughed at the idea of the NWA coming back, and that the NWA is filled with people who had courage and valor and such. Everything felt authentic and classy, both from he and from Scurll.

— Final thoughts

This was a good card that had not only solid wrestling quality television production. Compared to the 70th Anniversary show back in November, this was leaps ahead in terms of production quality, without any major technical issues or on-screen flubs. The custom ring looked really nice, especially on camera, and entrance area lighting looked high-calibre. The announce team was terrific, especially Cornette, who knew how to fill dead spots in matches with either logical kayfabe-centric storytelling or miniature crash courses in pro-wrestling history.

The matches themselves, aside from the battle royal and weaker women’s match, were all quite good but short, though that’s the nature of the programming with these tournaments, especially if the plan is to go long in the main event, which they did do. The main event was also terrific in that it always felt important on television because of a combination of the ringside pageantry beforehand, the great job of the announce team and the conviction both Aldis and Scurll displayed in their promos and in the ring.

Six-Man Tag Team title match set for ROH War of the Worlds: Buffalo

ROH has announced several matches for War of the Worlds: Buffalo, including a Six-Man Tag Team title defense by Villain Enterprises.

Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) will defend their titles against Jeff Cobb, Yuji Nagata & Satoshi Kojima in Buffalo. The show is the first stop on the War of the Worlds tour.

Cobb is the ROH Television Champion and NEVER Openweight Champion. He defeated Will Ospreay in a title vs. title match at G1 Supercard to win the NEVER Openweight title.

War of the Worlds: Buffalo is taking place at Buffalo Riverworks on Wednesday, May 8. There are three other shows on the tour, with stops in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on May 9, Grand Rapids, Michigan on May 11, and Villa Park, Illinois on May 12. The Villa Park show is a television taping, while the rest of the tour will stream on HonorClub.

Guerrillas of Destiny defending their ROH Tag Team titles against Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham is the main event of the Buffalo show. Here’s the updated card:

  • ROH Tag Team Champions Guerrillas of Destiny (Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa) defending against Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham
  • ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) defending against Jeff Cobb, Yuji Nagata & Satoshi Kojima
  • Flip Gordon vs. Bandido
  • Rush vs. Silas Young
  • Los Ingobernables de Japon (SANADA & EVIL) vs. LifeBlood (Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams)
  • Hikuleo vs. Shane Taylor
  • PJ Black vs. Alex Coughlin
  • The Kingdom (Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) vs. Clark Connors & Karl Fredericks

ROH TV results: Villain Enterprises win Six-Man Tag Team titles

A recap aired highlighting the feud between The Kingdom and Villain Enterprises.

Dalton Castle joined Ian Riccaboni and Caprice Coleman on commentary for the first match to scout his upcoming opponent, Rush.

Rush defeated Mark Haskins

Some fast switches led to a standoff. Rush bated Haskins to chop him repeatedly. Rush followed up with a monster chop and the brawl spilled to the floor.

Back in the ring, Rush hit Haskins with kicks to the chest. Haskins fired back with kicks of his own and finally knocked Rush down with a leg lariat. He followed that up with a suicide dive to the floor. He tossed Rush back in and went for a pumphandle driver, but it didn’t land flush. That allowed Rush to connect with a big German suplex.  

Rush faked his running stomp in the corner — which was a mistake as his arrogance allowed Haskins to lock on a triangle submission attempt. Rush powerbombed him to escape. Haskins got to his feet and landed a roll-through slam. Haskins hit a tornado DDT, but each man got to their feet and hit a simultaneous big boot to put each other down.

Each wrestler looked worse for wear, but Haskins ran at Rush. He launched Haskins into the corner and followed that up with his running double stomp to pick up the win.

In the ring, Matt Taven and Marty Scurll argued over who should get the World title shot at G1 Supercard. Jay Lethal offered a triple threat — but each man said no, citing that they didn’t want to be in a match where the other man could lose it for them.

Lethal then offered a triple threat ladder match and they all agreed.

Jeff Cobb offered to put his ROH Television title on the line if Will Ospreay would put up his NEVER Openweight Championship in their match at Madison Square Garden.

A recap showing Mayu Iwatani defeating Kelly Klein played. Klein then spoke about how the loss made her question who she really is. Klein said that she needs to change her approach to Iwatani. Klein and Iwatani are tied at two wins each going into the MSG show.

Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) defeated The Kingdom (Matt Taven, Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) to retain their titles

A brawl ensued, but Brody King broke it up with a huge flip dive to give the Villains the advantage. In the ring, Scurll was about to attack the fingers of Taven, but The Kingdom broke it up.

The Kingdom cut off Scurll and went to work. Marseglia started it off with a double underhook backbreaker. Next, Taven came in with some big punches. Finally, Scurll landed an enzuigiri, allowing him to tag in PCO.

PCO came in and cleared house. He landed a pop-up powerbomb on O’Ryan and a package piledriver on Taven. Marseglia hit a tornado cutter but missed with a flipping senton. The Kingdom were forced to retreat to the floor.

Scurll launched PCO over the top rope onto Taven and Marseglia. Chaos reigned on the floor. Eventually, The Kingdom got back in control by swarming King. They used the Rock Star Supernova slam on King, but he wasn’t the legal man. All three members of The Kingdom did dives on PCO, but they didn’t stop him. PCO then hit a flip dive on Taven. That sent us to the final commercial break.

Marseglia powerbombed PCO off the apron onto the steel ramp. That finally neutralized the big man. This left Scurll alone in the ring with O’Ryan, and Scurll managed to catch him in the chicken wing to get the submission win. Villain Enterprises are the new ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions.

ROH World title ladder match added to G1 Supercard

When Jay Lethal vs. Matt Taven at Ring of Honor’s 17th Anniversary pay-per-view was over, the ROH World Championship match for G1 Supercard hadn’t been officially confirmed.

That changed at ROH’s television tapings in Las Vegas, Nevada on Saturday night. It was announced that Lethal will defend his World title against Taven and Marty Scurll in a triple threat ladder match at G1 Supercard, which is taking place at Madison Square Garden on Saturday, April 6.

Lethal and Taven went to a 60-minute draw in their title match at Friday’s Anniversary PPV. There was a spot during the match where Lethal went for an elbow drop onto Taven as he was laying on a ladder that was set up between the ring and the guardrail. Taven moved — and Lethal went crashing through the ladder.

Scurll came out after Lethal vs. Taven, picked up the ROH World title belt, and then left with it.

It was announced before the Anniversary PPV that Scurll would be challenging for the ROH World Championship at G1 Supercard. Scurll getting a future title shot was a stipulation of him winning last year’s Survival of the Fittest tournament.

Marty Scurll to challenge for ROH World title at G1 Supercard

An ROH World Championship challenger has been announced for G1 Supercard at Madison Square Garden.

A promo from Marty Scurll aired at the end of the press conference/contract signing video for Jay Lethal and Matt Taven’s World title match at this Friday’s ROH 17th Anniversary pay-per-view. Scurll announced that he’s cashing in his title shot to challenge the ROH World Champion at G1 Supercard on Saturday, April 6.

Scurll is owed a World title shot as a stipulation of winning ROH’s Survival of the Fittest tournament in November 2018.

Lethal has been ROH World Champion since June. Taven has been claiming to be the “real” champion and carried around a fake World title belt, which Lethal destroyed in an angle during the build to their match at the Anniversary PPV.

Scurll vs. Kenny King is also set for the Anniversary show.

Here’s the updated lineup for G1 Supercard:

  • IWGP Heavyweight Champion Jay White defending against the winner of the New Japan Cup
  • Marty Scurll challenging for the ROH World Championship
  • IWGP Junior Heavyweight Champion Taiji Ishimori defending against Dragon Lee and Bandido in a triple threat match
  • IWGP Tag Team Champions Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa vs. ROH Tag Team Champions The Briscoes with both sets of titles on the line (The Briscoes also have a title defense against PCO & Brody King at Friday’s Anniversary PPV)
  • Honor Rumble (pre-show)

Marty Scurll vs. Kenny King official for ROH 17th Anniversary PPV

Another match has been made official for next month’s Ring of Honor 17th anniversary pay-per-view.

ROH announced today that Marty Scurll will face Kenny King at the Anniversary show. The match was set up when King challenged Scurll at ROH’s television tapings in Lakeland, Florida on February 9.

King defeated Scurll, Willie Mack, and Silas Young in a four corner survival match at Bound By Honor in Miami earlier this month. King low blowed Scurll and pinned him while holding onto his tights. Scurll had the chicken wing locked in on Silas Young right before the finish, but King was trying to bring a chair into the ring and the referee didn’t see Young tapping out.

Scurll has a future ROH World Championship shot as a stipulation of winning last year’s Survival of the Fittest tournament, while King’s storyline since losing to Jay Lethal at Global Wars: Toronto in November has been arguing that he deserves a title shot due to pinning Lethal. King had his feet on the ropes for leverage, the referee waved off the finish and had the match continue, and Lethal retained the World title.

The 17th Anniversary PPV is taking place at Sam’s Town Live in Las Vegas, Nevada on Friday, March 15. Here’s the updated card:

  • ROH World Champion Jay Lethal defending against Matt Taven
  • ROH Tag Team Champions The Briscoes defending against Villain Enterprises (PCO & Brody King)
  • Rush vs. Bandido
  • Marty Scurll vs. Kenny King

Marty Scurll to challenge for NWA title at Crockett Cup

The NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship will be on the line at April’s Crockett Cup event.

An angle at tonight’s Ring of Honor television tapings in Lakeland, Florida set up Nick Aldis defending his NWA title against Marty Scurll at the Crockett Cup. Given their friendship and history together, Aldis wanted Scurll to be his partner in the tag team tournament. Scurll instead challenged Aldis to the title match. Aldis accepted the challenge.

The Crockett Cup is taking place at Cabarrus Arena in Concord, North Carolina on Saturday, April 27. The NWA is partnering with ROH for the tournament, and it’s also been announced that New Japan Pro Wrestling and CMLL are sending teams to take part in it.

Crimson & Jax Dane and Villain Enterprises (PCO & Brody King) are the first two teams to be confirmed for the Crockett Cup. Ian Riccaboni, Jim Cornette, and Joe Galli will be the commentary team, and The Rock ‘n’ Roll Express (Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson), The Midnight Express (Bobby Eaton, Dennis Condrey, Stan Lane & Cornette), Nikita Koloff, and Magnum TA will be making appearances in Concord.

Villain Enterprises challenging for ROH Six-Man Tag Team titles

Villain Enterprises are getting their first shot at the ROH Six-Man Tag Team titles.

ROH has announced that Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) will challenge for The Kingdom’s (Matt Taven, Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) titles at the promotion’s television tapings in Lakeland, Florida on Saturday, February 9.

Villain Enterprises have been feuding with The Kingdom since forming at last month’s post-Final Battle tapings. An angle aired on this week’s episode of ROH TV where Villain Enterprises were supposed to face The Kingdom for the titles, but The Kingdom said they hadn’t earned a title shot yet. Scurll, PCO & King defeated Cheeseburger, Eli Isom & Ryan Nova instead.

This is the second title match to be announced for the Lakeland tapings, with Jeff Cobb set to defend his Television Championship against Silas Young. ROH has also announced Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Rocky Romero for the tapings.

The Lakeland tapings are part of Bound By Honor weekend, which also includes an HonorClub show in Miami on Sunday, February 10.