The Big Takeaway: ROH Dojo competitors competed in a tag team contest, while Ring of Honor’s biggest stars battled it out in a massive Christmas ten-man tag team match.
Surrounded by Christmas decor, Quinn McKay welcomed us to the broadcast. She ran down the card for tonight, including a massive ten-man tag main event match. In this match, Jay and Mark Briscoe are captains of their own respective teams.
A video package for Jay Briscoe aired, featuring him opening “gifts” that were supposed to reveal his partners for tonight’s match. His partners were kept a secret.
*****
A promo aired for Eric Martin and Ken Dixon. Both men tell us they’re from the ROH Dojo. Martin and Dixon ran down their wrestling history with both men coming off very awkward. Dixon revealed he has worked a few ROH squash matches before.
Dante Caballero and Joe Keys, who are also from the Dojo, spoke next. Caballero revealed he’s from Puerto Rico and moved to the US to pursue his wrestling dream. Keys says they’ve earned their spot in ROH, and they’re not gonna lose it now. Keys came across well.
*****
Dante Caballero & Joe Keys defeated Eric Martin & Ken Dixon (10:20)
Caballero and Martin began the match. Caballero trapped Martin in some early pinfall attempts, but Martin escaped quickly. After Martin began to pick up some steam, Caballero tagged in Keys. Keys and Caballero tagged in and out constantly, hitting multiple double team maneuvers. Martin finally got some space and tagged in Dixon. Dixon hit a few really nice shoulder tackles on Keys. With Dixon in control, we went to commercial break.
Back from the break and Martin and Keys are in the ring. Keys power slammed Martin and made the hot tag to Caballero. Caballero clotheslined Martin in the corner but Dixon had tagged himself in. Caballero caught Dixon in a crossface immediately but Martin broke it up. Dixon threw Caballero into the turnbuckle and used the bounce back momentum to hit a Buzz Sawyer Slam. Keys got the hot tag from Caballero and unloaded on Dixon. Joe Keys locked in a high angle Boston Crab and Dixon tapped out.
*****
Brian Johnson joined Riccaboni and Coleman at the announce desk. He gave both of them gifts. The gifts were shirts that said “Bozo #1” and “Bozo #2”.
Team Jay Briscoe defeated Team Mark Briscoe (14:12)
Team Jay included Jay Briscoe, Flip Gordon, Brawler Milonas, John Walters, and PCO.
Team Mark included Mark Briscoe, Beer City Bruiser, Dak Draper, Tracy Williams, and Dalton Castle.
Walters and Williams began the contest. Williams downed Walters quickly after picking his ankle. Draper tagged himself in while Williams was plotting his next move. Gordon tagged himself in while Walters was distracted and drop kicked Draper. Gordon tagged in Milonas. Draper tagged in Beer City Bruiser to combat Milonas being in the ring. Milonas and Bruiser brawled for a moment before colliding into each other while running. Castle and PCO both tagged in. PCO hit an awful looking spine-buster to take us into a commercial break.
Back from break as Castle tagged in Mark Briscoe. PCO also tagged in Jay Briscoe. After running the ropes together for a minute, Mark chopped Jay. Jay retaliated with an hurricanrana. This prompted both teams to rush the ring and all hell broke loose.
Everybody spilled to the outside, which prompted a PCO moonsault onto an entire crowd of competitors. Both Briscoe brothers made their way back to the ring and began fighting again. Jay tagged in Walters who delivered a back elbow to Mark. Walters tagged in Gordon who kicked Mark once and tagged out to PCO. PCO did light work on Mark then tagged out to Walters. Mark finally tagged out to Beer City Bruiser, who delivered a few clotheslines to Walters.
Back from break and Williams was the legal man with Walters. Bruiser tagged in and hit a chokeslam cutter on Walters. All hell broke loose again as both teams were fought on the outside again. Williams was poached on the top rope and Jay Briscoe followed him up there, but Williams planted Jay with an elevated DDT.
Williams locked in a figure four leg lock on Walters while Bruiser came flying off the top rope onto Walters. Draper came in and tried to boot PCO, but he was caught and planted into the ground with a DDT. PCO went to the top and hit his signature PCO-sault for the win.
*****
Final Thoughts:
This was a fun, easy-going holiday filler episode of ROH TV. The Dojo tag team match didn’t really wow me or anything; it was bare bones and average.
While the ten-man tag contest was fun, the result was questionable. With this ROH “reset”, I figured guys like PCO wouldn’t be pinning up and comers like Dak Draper. PCO almost botched a few moves too, which is concerning. I also think Tracy Williams deserved a lot more shine in the match, considering he’s a part of the biggest stable in the company right now. I assume that next week we’ll get back to progressing storylines for the next PPV event.
ROH has confirmed two more matches for this Friday’s 18th Anniversary pay-per-view.
Villain Enterprises stablemates PCO & Brody King will team against Rey Horus & Alex Zayne at the PPV. Eli Isom is also set to face Bully Ray in a singles match.
Bully Ray interrupted Isom vs. LSG at Bound By Honor on February 28. Isom then challenged Bully Ray to a match. Bully Ray won and went to attack Isom with a steel chair after, but Cheeseburger and Caprice Coleman came out to make the save.
At Gateway to Honor the next night, Isom made a save for Coleman and Cheeseburger after Bully Ray defeated Coleman. Isom went to put Bully Ray through a table, but Bully Ray low blowed him and powerbombed him through it.
ROH hyped that Bully Ray “has said that he’ll leave ROH for good if anyone can defeat him” and Isom is determined to rid the company of him.
Zayne made his ROH debut by defeating Bandido at Honor Reigns Supreme in January. The night before that, Bandido, Flamita & Horus won the ROH Six-Man Tag Team titles from Villain Enterprises.
Sam’s Town Live in Las Vegas, Nevada will host ROH’s 18th Anniversary PPV this Friday and ROH Past vs. Present on Saturday.
Here’s the updated card for the Anniversary PPV:
ROH World Champion Rush defending against Mark Haskins
ROH Television Champion Dragon Lee defending against Bandido
ROH Tag Team Champions Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham defending against Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll & Flip Gordon)
The Briscoes vs. Dalton Castle & Joe Hendry
Villain Enterprises (PCO & Brody King) vs. Rey Horus & Alex Zayne
Dealer’s Choice match: Dan Maff vs. Kenny King vs. Shane Taylor vs. Bateman (winner gets a future title shot of his choosing)
The NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship will officially be on the line at ROH Supercard of Honor XIV.
ROH confirmed this morning that Nick Aldis will defend his NWA title against PCO at Supercard of Honor. The match was set up at the end of ROH’s Free Enterprise show last month.
PCO & Marty Scurll defeated Aldis & Rush in the main event of Free Enterprise. After dissension between Aldis and Rush, PCO pinned Aldis to get the win.
Scurll then cut a promo about his NWA title match against Aldis at the Crockett Cup on Sunday, April 19. Scurll said he would personally write Aldis a check for $500,000 if Aldis beats him. Scurll also said Aldis would face PCO at Supercard of Honor.
That would have set up a match between the ROH and NWA champions, but PCO lost the ROH World Championship to Rush last weekend. That was in a triple threat match that also included Mark Haskins. The finish involved Aldis Interfering and hitting PCO with the NWA title belt.
Rush is defending his ROH World title against Haskins at ROH’s 18th Anniversary pay-per-view on Friday, March 13. Flip Gordon will get a title shot against the winner at Supercard of Honor.
Supercard of Honor is taking place at the RP Funding Center in Lakeland, Florida on Saturday, April 4. Marty Scurll vs. Jay White, KENTA & Taiji Ishimori vs. Jeff Cobb & Dan Maff, and Bandido, Flamita & Rey Horus defending the ROH Six-Man Tag Team titles against Will Ospreay, Rocky Romero & Amazing Red are also set for the show.
The show aired Saturday night live from St. Charles, MO in front of a small but energized crowd, their second show in two nights after Friday’s Bound By Honor show.
Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, Brody King & Flip Gordon) defeated the Briscoes (Jay & Mark Briscoe) and Slex
Like Friday night, this was a ripper of an opening match and if it happened under a different roof, it would have been torn to shreds.
Slex was impressive over this weekend. He and the Briscoes worked Gordon over for the first part of the match and both he and the Briscoes looked awesome here. King eventually got in and cleaned house, leading to some Villain Enterprises-led offense. They pulled off a handful of innovative and GIFable three-man attacks.
Mark Briscoe used a brutal looking uranage on Scurll that would surely make Sen. Hiroshi Hase proud. Then, because he’s Mark Briscoe, he busted out a flurry of Redneck Kung Fu and hit a huge dive from off a chair over the corner turnbuckles onto his opponents on the floor. Don’t sleep on the Briscoes.
When Jay called for the finish and was about to put Gordon away, Slex tagged himself in. Jay didn’t know what was going on. Slex went at the fully recovered Gordon and ate a crescent kick as a result of the hasty tag.
He bounced back and hit the Business Bomb, a spinning torture rack into a sit-out bomb which the crowd responded to. Gordon responded with a springboard spear and the Flip 5 for the win in a quick, all-action match. This was impressive stuff from everyone involved.
Shane Taylor and Sons of Savagery went after Slex after the match. Slex fended the heels off and was able to take Taylor out with a running dropkick to escape the ring.
Dan Maff defeated Alex Shelley
The two shook hands before the match, but right after the bell sounded, Shelley ran at Maff and blasted him with a low dropkick to the left knee. Maff later muscled Shelley back into a corner and connected with a big headbutt.
The mini-story inside this match was Shelley trying to get the much bigger Maff up and slam him somehow. First, he called for a German suplex and tried it on Maff, who countered and threw him to the mat with a rough waistlock slam. Shelley then shouted “You’re goin’ up!” to Maff before trying to bodyslam him. Maff ixnayed that and tore Shelley up with sharp chops in the corner.
Maff no sold a couple of Kawada-style soccer kicks to the head and screamed “COME ON YOU SON OF A B****!” which really woke the crowd up. Maff went on a tear late and whenever Shelley would try and rally back, Maff had an answer, shutting him down with a number of big power spots.
Shelley finally came through on his promise to slam Maff, getting him up into a bodyslam, followed by a German suplex and then Sliced Bread for a two count. It didn’t help though as Maff eventually took Shelley out with the Burning Hammer for the win to wrap a really nice match between these two.
— A training montage with PJ Black and Brian Johnson aired next. They were at the ROH dojo inside the ring. Black asked Johnson if he had a finishing move. Johnson got indignant with his mentor and asked Black what he could possibly teach him. Black then put Johnson out with a modified neckbreaker move and said that it would probably be his finisher.
By the end of the segment, Black had trained Johnson to focus his crazy misplaced anger and improve his in-ring skill at the dojo. He then offered Johnson his first white belt, which Johnson was ecstatic about.
The Righteous (Vincent and Bateman w/ Vita Von Star & Chuckles) defeated 2 Guys 1 Tag (Josh Woods and Silas Young)
Vincent and Bateman took Woods and Young out as soon as they stepped onto the entrance ramp. Vincent went after Young’s left knee in the ring. Ref Todd Sinclair signaled for the bell as soon as he had wrangled two men into the ring.
Bateman and Vincent both continued working over Young’s knee. Young powered out of a Vincent front facelock with a suplex and went to tag out to Woods, who was still gathering himself from the sneak attack on the entrance ramp. Woods eventually recovered and made into the match. He tossed Vincent and Bateman around with a few suplexes. He powerbombed Bateman onto Young’s knees as his knee was still tenderized from Vincent and Bateman’s cheap shots before the match.
The crowd fired up when Woods dove onto Bateman with a somersault off the apron. He’s getting into the zone and appears more comfortable with the charisma aspect of the game and is improving in sizable chunks every couple shows. He’s got some upside and ROH might have something with him.
A voice boomed over the PA and Brian Johnson stormed down the ramp and taunted 2 Guys 1 Tag for not having won the ROH tag titles Friday at Bound by Honor in Nashville. He said that when he and PJ Black got their shot at the tag titles, they wouldn’t lose like a “bunch of bozos.” Woods went after Johnson in the aisle while Vincent used the Acid Drop on Young for the crafty win.
Angelina Love defeated Session Moth Martina
The Bouncers (Brawler Milonas/Beer City Bruiser) were on commentary for this one and did a bit where Brawler Milonas has a crush on Martina.
Martina danced on her way to the ring, clad in a leopard print Snuggie, kissing a few older gentlemen on the hands around ringside. She didn’t have a problem getting over tonight and both she and Love looked to have some chemistry off the bat.
Martina offered Love a beer and everyone started chanting “Beer!” She made referee Steven Dumeng dance with her before the match. Love then attacked her at the bell and took her out with a running forearm.
Once the wrestling started, this was fine. The crowd was into the comedy and Mandy Leone interfered now and then. Midway through, they took each other out with a double clothesline. Love locked on a Koji Clutch until Martina got her foot on the bottom rope. Martina landed a pretty springboard codebreaker, but when she went for the pin, Leone stood up on the apron as a distraction so Dumeng ejected (or tried ejecting) her.
Martina came close to pinning Love with a few quick roll-ups, but Love finished her with a Botox Injection kick in a well-worked match.
The Bouncers got in the ring and offered Martina beers of condolence, and Martina went head-over-heels for the Bruiser but not Milonas.
Dalton Castle (w/ Joe Hendry) defeated Tracy Williams, Kenny King & Jeff Cobb
This was all action from the start. Cobb was on fire midway through, first ragdolling Williams with a spinning backdrop suplex and then planteing King with an Oklahoma Stampede powerslam, wrapping up the sequence by landing a standing moonsault onto all three opponents only to get a frustrating two count. Later, he busted out a tope con giro over the top to the floor onto all three. The guy is from another planet, I swear. This spot got an “R-O-H!” chant going.
Castle landed a spinning hurricanrana onto Cobb from off the apron, and Cobb then was launched into King at ringside with both crashing into the barricade. Castle went on to pin Williams after using the Bang-a-Rang to get the win.
— Bully Ray came out next and got tons heat from his promo. He made fun of fans for not being able to hit him with streamers, and once someone did nail him, the crowd popped. He also wanted to give a shoutout to Stan Kroenke (sports owner that also owns the stadium next year’s WrestleMania will be at), plus that Ring of Honor fans are the worst fans on the planet. He made fun of Bobby Cruise and went on to challenge anyone in the back to a match. If the winner won, he’d leave the company.
Caprice Coleman then stepped down from the announce table walked to the ring. Coleman told Bully Ray he understood what he was trying to prove. Since Ray said in his promo that none of the veterans would challenge him because he had dirt on them, Coleman responded that Ray didn’t have any dirt on him, and that he was ready to take Ray on in a match. Ray argued that Coleman was only an announcer now and wouldn’t wrestle him. Coleman said it was happening right here in St. Charles, MO, and the match was on.
Bully Ray defeated Caprice Coleman
Coleman speared Ray at the bell and laid in some punches. Ray countered with the Bubba Bomb and pinned Coleman in a squash that lasted under a minute or two.
Cheeseburger came out and made the save, but ate a big boot from Ray. A fiery Eli Isom ran out next and took Ray out, smashing him with a steel chair a couple times. Isom went to the floor and grabbed a table to the joy of the crowd, but once the table was set up inside the ring, Ray hit him with a low blow and powerbombed him through the aforementioned table.
Ray ordered referee Steven Dumeng to raise his hand and then called him stupid, pusheing him over before walking to the back.
ROH TV Champion Dragon Lee defeated Dak Draper to retain
Brian Zane joined Ian Riccaboni for commentary.
Instead of shaking hands, Draper teased Lee about his height. (Draper has to be at least a foot taller than Lee.) This was booked to have Draper look strong while in the ring with a national name as he dominated much of the match.
Lee rallied and caught Draper with a diving double stomp while Draper hung in a Tree of Woe in the corner. Draper later responded with a press slam into a powerslam for two.
When Draper went for a springboard attack, Lee caught him with a knee strike that looked a bit off. As Lee went for another running knee, he noticed Draper wasn’t in position to take the move and had to stop, get his attention, and then do the move.
Lee picked up the win after the Incineration knee to the back of Draper’s head.
ROH Tag Team Champions Jay Lethal and Jonathan Gresham defeated Mexasquad (Bandido and Rey Horus) in a Proving Ground match
The stipulation in Proving Ground matches is that If Bandido and Horus defeated the champions or took them to a time limit draw, they earn a future title shot.
Lethal and Gresham attacked Mexasquad at the bell. They both worked Bandido over for a couple minutes until he tagged out to Horus, who went on a run of nonstop flashy spots including a big dive over the corner turnbuckle to the floor.
Gresham and Horus looked great in the ring together, especially in the middle of the match which is where the crowd really started to heat up.
Bandido used a Shooting Star Press but sold his knees after he landed and missed his chance at a three count. The finish came a bit after this when Lethal countered Bandido’s X-Knee and locked on the figure four for win via submission. Another solid match on tonight’s show in St. Charles.
Rush defeated PCO and Mark Haskins in a three-way to win the ROH World Championship
The crowd was chanting PCO’s name over and over before the match. Rush cursed at the crowd told them to shut up in both English and Spanish. It was all action from the start with lots of brawling and a number of dives. Haskins went for a dive at one point, but PCO caught him and chokeslammed him onto the apron.
When PCO went for the cannonball, Rush pulled Haskins out of the way and missed. He crashed against the apron, vicious looking as always.
Rush punished Haskins and whipped him into the barricades around the ring. There were a couple of enthusiastic Rush fans in the crowd and a few would yell for him while he brawled on the floor.
Haskins rallied back and ran from side to side in and out of the ring, serving up a penalty kick to PCO and a diving double footstep onto Rush, which he didn’t get quite all of.
Rush snapped PCO over with a belly-to-belly into the corner but was up immediately and laid Rush out with a running lariat. Haskins landed the Soldier Shoulder Roll on Rush for two. PCO landed the PCOsault on Haskins and at 2.5 of referee Todd Sinclair’s count, Rush pulled him out of the ring. He claimed he was distracted by a teenage fan in the front row, pulling rSinclair’s attention down to ringside and away from the match.
NWA World Champion Nick Aldis then did a run in and took PCO out with a belt shot to the face.
Rush got back into the ring and blasted PCO in the face with the Bull’s Horns and dragged him from the corner into the center of the ring to pin the champion.
La Faccion celebrated in the ring with Rush after the match. Haskins got into Rush’s face and the two jawed at each other until Dragon Lee threw Haskins to the mat. All three Faccion members stomped away at Haskins as the show ended.
Haskins is scheduled to face Rush, which will now apparently be a title match, on March 13 in Las Vegas at the ROH 18th Anniversary show.
Final thoughts
For the most part, it was another quality show from ROH this weekend. The main event title change was a shock in that a) it kinda came out of nowhere and b) there wasn’t a real explanation as to what and why it happened. It makes it hard to discuss here as we have no idea where the ROH title picture is going into the coming spring season of joint shows with NJPW.
Hotshot booking aside, many of the matches were above average and worth checking out.
Free Enterprise, Ring of Honor’s experimental free show took place this past Sunday afternoon at the UMBC Arena in Baltimore, MD. The lower level of the venue appeared to be more or less full even though there were still pockets of empty seats in the upper bowl of the arena.
Ian Riccaboni and Caprice Coleman were our announcers for this Honor Club show
Mark Haskins submitted Alex Shelley
The two first traded wristlocks and side headlocks with Haskins looking to be in control of the offense early on. A couple ironic fans shouted “WRESTLING!” — the new flavor of the month chant when fans see “serious” pro wrestling. (Imagine if someone went to a play or movie and screamed “ACTING!” during dialogue between characters.)
Shelley used a few llave-style submissions, stretching Haskins into a pretzel. Haskins laid in a number of hard kicks and elbows, which Shelley continued to eat. “Come on Haskins, you stupid son of a b**ch!” he screamed at Haskins midway through. From watching it, the crowd bought into the match as they seemed to realize how hard these two in the ring were working. There were lots of chants for Shelley around this point in the match, too.
The two knocked each other out at one point, the first real peak in the match, but both were up at referee Todd Sinclair’s nine count. Haskins landed the Shoulder Soldier Roll for a close two, leaving Haskins stunned. He then went to the top and missed a diving double foot stomp which allowed Shelley to nail Sliced Bread and then a Blade Runner for another close two.
Haskins countered Shelley’s Sliced Bread #2 attempt and eventually locked him in a sharpshooter and armlock for the win. Shelley immediately rolled to the floor and sold his the submission as he stumbled backstage.
This was a solid match. Haskins needs more guys like Shelley to work with. Riccaboni mentioned afterward that Haskins had a counter for everything Shelley threw at him, the essential takeaway from this match going forward, I’d guess. Haskins called out PCO into the camera as he exited the ring.
Righteous (Vincent and Bateman w/ Vida Von Star & Chuckles) defeated Dalton Castle and Joe Hendry
Castle was cheered upon his entrance, so I guess he’s not a heel anymore. He also has a new pair of Boys that accompany him to the ring now. Hendry received the loudest reaction he has had in ROH since signing. I think fans are finally catching on to his theme song. Riccaboni and Coleman said they couldn’t control their hands while it was playing and they had to clap.
We first saw Vincent’s new stable of spooksters last month at Honor Reigns Supreme. Chuckles was a clown last month, but here, he just looked like a shabby older fellow without any facepaint on. Vincent used put on a late-’60s hippie accent and kept asking if Castle could “dig” what he was saying. It’s the Diet Wyatt Family, which was itself a Diet Manson Family.
Vincent and Bateman didn’t shake hands beforehand. Castle and Hendry are kayfabe buddies now whereas a couple months back, their gimmick was just them arguing over egos in the ring. Hendry has gained some noticeable muscle mass recently. Even Ricaboni later described Hendry as being built “as thick as a soda machine.”
Vincent used a cool schoolboy-into-second turnbuckle move at one point. Castle returned offense with a big delay German suplex and the crowd chanted for him after that. Hendry used a double fallaway slam on both Vincent and Bateman followed by a kip-up, all of which elicited the loudest response of the night so far. The finish saw Vincent hit an Acid Drop on Hendry for the pin after Castle was dragged from the ring.
Quinn McKay came out and announced they’ll be back UMBC Arena on June 19 for Best in the World.
Referee Todd Sinclair would not allow Slex to wear his sunglasses in the ring during the match and the crowd sounded bummed out when he took them off
Slex is about the same height as Gordon but is more muscular. His offense isn’t flashy, but his execution of it is. He used a spinning sitout torture rack bomb for a close two. Gordon rallied back and landed a moonsault to the floor and then a springboard spear into the ring for a two count. He picked up the win after a Curb Stomp.
This was really good and after all the hype, I can say with confidence that Slex is the real deal.
Shane Taylor and the Sons of Savagery came out afterward and attacked Slex. Taylor laid him out with a butterfly package piledriver and then got on the mic and said that everybody should be talking about Taylor’s demands and his return to ROH, not all of the recent debuts people have paid attention to instead.
Alex Zayne defeated Andrew Everett
These two are very creative. There were lots of innovative aerial moves in this one — moves that don’t have official names yet. Everett played light heel here, but with he and Zayne going tit-for-tat on each spot, it seemed hard for the crowd to boo him for too long. He planted Zayne face first into the second turnbuckle with a running bulldog and then landed a GIF-worthy springboard tornillo into the ring for two.
As the match slowed, the volume level in the audience softened, often between its big spots. Everett went for a top rope poisonrana, but Zayne landed on his feet. Everrett then spiked him with standing version of the same move, but missed a shooting star press which gave Zayne the opportunity to land a shooting star double knee strike onto a bent over Everett.
He then put Everett away with a sit out pumphandle slam that resembled Shingo Takagi’s Last of the Dragon. This match would be great on the weekly ROH TV show.
The Briscoes Brothers (Jay & Mark Briscoe) defeated Mexablood (Bandido and Flamita)
This was an awesome match.
Jay and Bandido kicked off the match for their teams. Both Bandido and the Briscoes had the crowd hot from the start. Flamita and Jay almost botched a headscissors spot, but recovered within seconds. When action spilled to the floor, Flamita hit a perfect Asai moonsault from the top, followed by Bandido landing a picture-perfect springboard shooting star press from the top rope to the floor. The crowd started chanting “R-O-H!”
Bandido showcased his freaky strength in the ring with with a one-armed delayed suplex. The crowd started heating up for the Briscoes here and they then took Flamita out with a dragon suplex/single-leg dropkick combo. Mark unfolded a chair in the ring and did a triple jump tope con giro to the floor, which the Baltimore crowd loved. They chanted for Mark to do it again, which he then did on both Mexabloods. He then landed the Cactus Jack elbow off the apron onto floor on Flamita.
The crowd chanted “Let’s go Briscoes!” as the bout returned to the ring, but it didn’t stay inside for too long. Bandido launched Flamita over his head with a back body drop which Flamita turned into a tope con giro to the floor.
Flamita kicked out of the Briscoes’ Redneck Boogie finisher only a few minutes after he stuck a 450 splash. He took both Briscoes out with a frog splash dropkick, literally hanging in the air like gravity stopped being a thing in his life for a split second. Mark used a Froggy ‘bow but again, Flamita kicked out, leading to more chants of “this is awesome!”.
Crowd volume began fading after the Mexabloods landed stereo Spanish Flys. Jay finally took Bandido out of the match with a brutal looking suplex on the apron, and the Briscoes scored the victory after decimating Flamita with a Doomsday Device. All four in this looked excellent.
— There was an intermission next. For those watching along at home, production aired an old match between Mark and Jay Briscoe from 8/24/02 when they were 17 and 18 years old. This was introduced as a way of promoting the March 14th Past vs. Present nostalgia show in Las Vegas. I hope they continue airing these matches on Honor Club broadcasts as it’s a great way of making use of the ROH library while giving their live crowds a break.
Flip Gordon won a 20-person battle royal to earn an ROH world title shot
Participants included Delirious, Danhausen, Dak Draper, Cheeseburger, Eli Isom, Tracy Williams, Crowbar, Rhett Titus, The Bouncers, the Blue Meanie, Maria Manic, Gangrel, Kenny King, Dragon Lee, PJ Black, Silas Young, Josh Woods, and Brian Johnson
Gangrel spit something in Kenny King’s eyes before the match started, and King sold it on the outside. He stayed on the floor once the match got started. Dragon Lee came out separately and King acted like he was miffed at him because of that.
Gangrel was first in and hit a double overhook suplex to Danhausen and then an Impaler on Draper. Draper got back up and eliminated Gangrel when he went for another Impaler. Draper then eliminated LSG and then Crowbar/Eli Isom at the same time. (It’s the same Crowbar/Devon Storm from WCW, for the record.) Cheeseburger eliminated Draper when he pulled the top rope down as Draper ran toward him.
When the Blue Meanie got the Bouncers to start dancing with him in the ring, Brian Johnson threw Meanie out. Johnson then eliminated his recent storyline mentor, PJ Black. As Johnson screamed about how he’s “the mecca,” Maria Manic walked over to him and used what I believe would be termed a scrotal claw in wrestling parlance, then press slamming him to the floor which got a nice reaction.
Rhett Titus and Manic then had a short posedown and Manic used a hip toss to eliminate Titus. She then saved Danhausen from the Bouncers and eliminated both at the same time, so she got the full-on Brock Lesnar Royal Rumble treatment here. Danhausen then thanked Manic for the save and hugged her, but then she shoved him to the mat. Maria’s not a hugger. Silas Young then got in Manic’s face and asked if she wanted to be a “real man.” Manic called him a b*tch which riled the crowd up.
They exchanged chops until Young took her out with a backbreaker and short lariat. When Young went to eliminate her, Bully Ray ran down to help eliminate Manic. Ray then hit her with a chair and powerbombed her through a table. The crowd chanted “a**hole” at Ray until he walked to the back.
Delirious and Danhausen did zany comedy together next. Danhausen gave Delirious some loose teeth in a jar (part of his gimmick) and Delirious swallowed them. Danhausen then did a jump kick so the teeth went flying and Delirious was eliminated. Young later eliminated Cheeseburger and the final four were now Young, his tag partner Josh Woods, Tracy Williams, and Dragon Lee. Kenny King still hadn’t entered the match yet exactly like he did last year during the Honor Rumble last year at MSG.
Woods and Young eliminated Williams, who I forgot was even in the match even though I saw him on camera earlier. Dragon Lee took out Young and Woods, so King tried running in and eliminating Lee from behind. King thought he had the match won when Lee skinned the cat, rolling himself over the top rope and back into the ring. Shocked, King ran at Lee, but Lee pulled the top rope down and eliminated King.
Lee then ripped his mask off to reveal it was Flip Gordon the whole time. He even shaved his beard between this and his earlier bout with Slex, so it took a second for everyone to pick up on who it was. It was a nice twist to wrap up a pretty bad battle royal. Gordon will now receive a shot at the ROH World title, held by Villain Enterprises partner, PCO.
Angelina Love and Mandy Leone of the Allure joined Riccaboni and Coleman on commentary for the next match.
Session Moth Martina defeated Sumie Sakai
This was Martina’s ROH debut. Her gimmick is that of a party girl who likes to booze it up and dance during her matches. She danced with referee Steven Dumeng and offered Sakai a beer before the bell. She used a Bronco Buster on Sakai in the corner and even threw in a few extra Bronco thrusts. She ran the ropes like she was going for a dive but got out of breath. Sakai, now on the floor, offered Martina a beer, but it was a ruse. Sakai turned heel recently, for those who aren’t aware.
Sakai worked Martina over in the ring with submissions and stomps, but Martina got her second wind when she took a swig of mystery liquid and put Sakai down with a few short lariats. The crowd was into mildly into Martina but it was around this point that they started losing steam. Martina drank some beer and used an accidental stinkface on Dumeng, taking him out of the match temporarily.
Sakai then tossed a chair in the ring and hit Martina followed by a DDT on it before helping Dumeng back into the match. Martina recovered quickly and headbutted Sakai before pinning her with her finish, the Jaeger Bomb. It sounded like the Allure might have an angle coming up with Martina in the near future.
Jeff Cobb and Dan Maff defeated ROH Tag Team Champions Jonathan Gresham and Jay Lethal for a future ROH tag team title shot
Gresham and Cobb were in together first. Gresham’s new heel nickname is “The Foundation” and both he and Lethal are wearing what look like matching black tights. Maff and Lethal were next and exchanged hard chops. Maff ploughed Lethal with a pounce. Maff was fired up for the whole match, his gravely voice booming across the arena like he was mic’d up throughout most of this.
Things heated up midway through with a lot of double team action. Cobb knelt down at one point and Maff used Cobb as a launchpad, crashing onto Lethal with a senton in the ring. On the floor, Lethal and Gresham tried taking Maff out with tope suicidas but he wouldn’t go down. Later, when they went for the Cornette Cutter, Cobb caught Gresham in mid-air and planted him with an Oklahoma Stampede.
The last couple minutes of this were good as the finish saw Maff putting Lethal away clean with a Burning Hammer. Maff and Cobb have now earned a title shot at the ROH tag champions, Gresham and Lethal.
Brody King defeated Rey Horus
This was good for a squash match. King, who re-signed with ROH last week, worked Horus over early on. It was deliberately paced as he used a few throws, chops, slams, and splashes. Horus countered with a big dive over the corner ringpost to the floor, but King returned the attacks and slowed the pace. Horus landed a wild looking tornado DDT out of the corner, but not long after that, King spiked Horus with the Gonzo Bomb in this souped-up squash.
Villain Enterprises (ROH World Champion PCO and Marty Scurll) defeated NWA World Champion Nick Aldis and Rush
This was good.
Aldis and the new NWA are doing another crossover angle with Scurll and this played more into their NWA storyline. Rush and PCO are still feuding over the ROH World title even though, at this time last year, they weren’t with the company.
Aldis and Scurll looked great together. They had an unsung singles match last year at the ROH/NWA Crockett Cup special and looked equally impressive together in this tonight.
PCO missed a somersault onto the apron early and it looked nuts like it always does. There were scattered “holy sh*t” chants for that, and later a louder chorus of “P-C-O” chants. Rush basically stayed on PCO while Aldis stayed with Scurll throughout which made the story psychology easy to interpret in the ring. The “heels” double teamed PCO in the corner for a few minutes until he burst through their attacks with a double lariat to tag out to Scurll, who cleaned house.
Scurll then chopped his partner, a spot that “wakes him up” which allowed PCO to power up so Scurll could back body drop him onto Rush and Aldis who stood prone on the floor. Scurll flexed on the top rope and then hit a superplex on Aldis. He did his best Jacques Rougeau impression and assisted PCO doing the old Quebecers somersault senton off the top.
Later, when Aldis landed a diving elbow drop on PCO, he accidentally hit Rush as well who then yelled at Aldis. Rush and Aldis got into an argument which led to Rush walking up the entrance and watching the rest of the match from there. Aldis grabbed his NWA title and went for a belt shot, but Scurll spun him around and snapped his fingers, causing him to drop the belt. PCO then chokeslammed Aldis to put him away clean with the PCOsault for the win. Rush then walked to the back.
Scurll got on the mic and expanded on their upcoming NWA title match. Scurll said he would put his money where his mouth is as long as that if he beats Aldis, he wins the NWA World title and offered to write a check for $500,000 if he were to beat him in that match. Scurll announced that Aldis’ opponent for ROH Supercard of Honor would be PCO.
Riccaboni insinuated this could possibly turn into a champion vs. champion match.
Final thoughts
This was a good but very long show that lost steam after the intermission. The crowd in Baltimore was enthusiastic, but it’s hard for fans to keep their energy up on a four-hour matinee show with ten matches.
The Briscoes vs. Mexabloods was the show stealer. The battle royal was not good but was meant to do a lot of storyline work without having to book more matches, so I get it. Slex looked very good in his debut, and Session Moth Martina’s character got over during hers.
The rest of the show was just there. It wasn’t bad, often good actually, but with such a glut of top-tier wrestling available now, this can’t be considered a must-watch show. If anything, ROH here did more of a service for NWA’s upcoming PPV than for their own with no significant angles introduced for Bound by Honor at the end of this month (PCO vs. Dragon Lee is the main event), nor for their Past vs. Present show in March.
Ring of Honor has announced a number of matches for Bound By Honor, which takes place next month.
PCO will defend the ROH World Championship against Dragon Lee in the main event. Although Lee is the current Television champion, only PCO’s title will be on the line.
Other matches booked for the show include Jeff Cobb & Dan Maff teaming to take on The Briscoes, new signee Slex vs. Marty Scurll and La Faccion Ingobernable (Kenny King & Rush) vs. Villain Enterprises (Brody King & Flip Gordon)
Bound By Honor takes place on February 28 at the Nashville Municipal Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee. Ticket information can be found here.
ROH today also officially announced their return to Las Vegas on March 13 for their 18th Anniversary event. They also announced a Past vs. Present event that will take place the following day. Names announced for that event include Doug Williams, Homicide, Matt Sydal and Necro Butcher.
Marty Scurll and NWA Worlds Heavyweight Champion Nick Aldis will face off in a tag match at ROH’s Free Enterprise event.
ROH has announced that Villain Enterprises (Scurll & ROH World Champion PCO) will face Aldis & Rush in the main event of Free Enterprise. The show is taking place at the UMBC Event Center in Baltimore on the afternoon of Sunday, February 9 and is free to attend.
After he was confronted by Scurll at the NWA’s Into the Fire pay-per-view last month, Aldis appeared at ROH’s Saturday Night at Center Stage and Honor Reigns Supreme shows last weekend and continued his feud with Scurll and Villain Enterprises.
An inter-promotional match between Aldis and Villain Enterprises member Flip Gordon is set for the NWA’s Hard Times PPV on Friday, January 24.
It was announced yesterday that Scurll will appear at the NWA’s television tapings in Atlanta on January 26. The NWA posted a video this morning with Aldis responding to that announcement by revealing that he’ll be at Free Enterprise. He sent a call of action to NWA fans to come to the show and wear their NWA colors.
ROH’s Kevin Eck wrote that — in storyline — “The tag match at Free Enterprise was put together by ROH matchmakers without consulting the participants, and the word is that RUSH isn’t pleased about having to team with anyone other than his teammates in La Faccion Ingobernable — his brother Dragon Lee and Kenny King. RUSH and PCO clearly have unfinished business. After PCO won the ROH World Title from RUSH at Final Battle on Dec. 13, their championship rematch at Saturday Night at Center Stage in Atlanta on Jan. 11 ended in chaos.”
Saturday Night at Center Stage in Atlanta, GA, Ring of Honor’s first Honor Club broadcast of 2020, kicked off with Ian Riccaboni and Caprice Coleman running down the night’s card, with PCO vs. Rush for ROH World Heavyweight championship in the main event.
Dragon Lee defeated Andrew Everett to retain the ROH World TV championship
Good match that might’ve been great with a larger crowd. Lee won the TV title from Shane Taylor last month at Final Battle in Baltimore; tonight was his first title defense. Everrett hasn’t wrestled for ROH since last year, so we are not clear as to why he is challenging for the belt tonight. Caprice Coleman mentioned he knew Everett from North Carolina, and that his father was the promoter for CWF Mid-Atlantic. Center Stage isn’t the largest venue but those in attendance for this show were hot for Dragon Lee. Production caught clusters of Lee fans, cheering him on before the match, most clad in masks, or some holding a Mexican flag.
Riccaboni mentioned Everett had been out of action for five months because of an injury. He looked fine tonight. The two opened their match with a few quick exchanges that finished in a stalemate until Everett took Lee out with a big tope con giro to the floor and followed it up with some showboating into the camera.
Back in the ring, Lee blasted Everett with Dragon’s Breath, his version of his brother Rush’s Bull’s Horns basement dropkick in the corner. Later, Lee went for a jumping hurricanrana over the top rope to the outside but Everett countered by cartwheeling himself across the apron and out of harm’s way. This was very impressive. Everett is very agile for his size and fluid in the ring. He landed an awesome “touch-toe” moonsault, as Coleman called it, which looked more like a reverse gainer you’d see from a diver. He got a two-count. They then went blow for blow for a few moments until Lee spit in Everett’s face. Loud boos for this; an “honorable” crowd, perhaps.
They exchanged a lot of spectacular-looking moves and counters toward the end of this one. Everett caught Lee with a stunner out of Desnucadora. They traded poison ranas. People in the crowd were chanting for Dragon Lee and blasting air horns, but the audience died down while both sold for a minute. Since the crowd wasn’t huge, it was clear when people were reacting and when were sitting on their hands waiting for the next big spot.
They reappeared when the two fought on the top rope, where Lee eventually landed a diving double-stomp to Everett hanging in a Tree of Woe from the turnbuckle, then followed with an Incinerator knee strike, but only for a one-count. Lee sold this well. He really tried getting the crowd to buy into him being in disbelief over the shock kick-out.
Everett whiffed on a Pele Kick and it killed the crowd for a moment. Some guy shouted “you f**ked up!” and another sounded like he yelled at Everett to “get a scrunchy,” presumably for Everett’s long hair. They saved it quickly, and in about a minute they went to the finish. Everett kicked out of Desnucadora, but Lee put him down for three with Incineration, a running knee-strike off the ropes, for his first win as ROH TV champion. Lee stood over Everett after the match and did some trash-talking. Commentary explained he was taking after his brother, Rush, and throughout the match tried building up the brothers’ new stable with Kenny King and Amy Rose, La Facion.
Bully Ray came out next, unannounced. He walked out to this milquetoast instrumental thrash tune that not even Riccaboni or Coleman seemed to have had heard before. Ray walked over to the ringside announce booth and began bullying (get it?) Coleman for shaking his head in Ray’s direction. Ray walked over and put Coleman on blast, claiming he was a bad announcer; Ray shouted, “You suck!” to which Coleman responded, “You swallow!” Before getting into the ring, Ray went to high-five an enthusiastic fan in the front row but faked the kid out and went into the ring. Tons of boos. Well done.
In the ring, Ray ordered ring announcer Bobby Cruise to bring him the microphone. He took it from Cruise and then pushed him to the mat, hard. Ray challenged anyone in the building to get into the ring with him if they had a problem with him or had something they wanted to say to his face. There were a couple of fans shown on camera that looked pretty happy to participate in such an event. Since ROH was in Atlanta tonight, Ray pulled the “I’m better than you because I’m from the North/We won the war” bit out of the closet and it got a lot of heat with this crowd. When they started giving him the “What?!” treatment, Ray leaned into it for a second, then called everyone puppets and explained how he’d just manipulated them to do what he wanted.
This was all a drawn-out setup for Ray to call out Maria Manic, which is what ROH had been pushing before the Atlanta show, that Manic was going to confront Bully Ray in Atlanta. When Ray finally called her out, Center Stage went black for a moment, then Manic entered from the back of the crowd behind the fans. She carries herself like a megastar already.
Bully Ray kept challenging her and threatening her, first to come down to ringside, then to face him on the apron, then to get inside the ring with him. The crowd was loud in their support of Manic, and when she got in the ring she took Ray out with a spear. Bobby Cruise then passed Manic a steel chair and laid in about five or six shots to Ray. Manic went back to the floor and grabbed a table but Ray took her down before she could put him through it. She hulked up a few seconds later and was about to powerbomb Ray through the table in the ring until the Allure came out and took Manic out. Angelina Love smashed her with a high heel shoe, then her and Mandy Leon held Manic on top of the table so Ray could put her through it with a splash from the second turnbuckle.
Before exiting, Ray yelled at Coleman and Riccaboni for being cowards for not doing anything. Some of the crowd were chanting “An-ge-lina!” before production cut to a promo for upcoming ROH events.
The Allure (Angelina Love and Mandy Leon) defeated Sumie Sakai and Nicole Savoy
The teams brawled around the ring at the start. Savoy tied Love up in a few interesting submission holds before Love escaped to tag out to Mandy Leon, who also got caught in a couple of Savoy’s submissions. She mainly worked over both Love and Leon’s neck and shoulders. Later, Leone passed Love a tassel of some sort and Love used it to choke Sakai with it.
When Savoy made her way back into the match she laid both of the Allure out with suplexes, and then both Savoy and Sakai locked on dual submission holds. Sakai landed a nice missile dropkick from the top rope that the crowd enjoyed. The finish saw Savoy accidentally take Sakai out with a big high roundhouse kick, which allowed for Leon to pin Sakai with a modified victory roll for the win.
Savoy got on her knees and apologized for kicking Sakai and took the blame for the loss. Sakai responded with a kick to the gut, then planted Savoy face-first with Smash Mouth. Before leaving, Sakai spit on Savoy.
This worked because for as long as I can remember, no matter what Sakai was doing in ROH in the past few years, I’ll always remember Riccaboni, Coleman and Colt Cabana talking about how nice of a person she is outside the ring, and not in a storyline way either. I’m not sure what this means in the context of ROH’s Women of Honor division, but it looks as though creative has a plan for her.
Next was a short exposition video package that went over a new angle ROH is working on with PJ Black and ROH Dojo wrestler Brian Johnson. The basic story is that, recently, Black got into an argument with Silas Young and Josh Woods, and Young basically challenged Black to a tag match: He and Woods–Young’s student–vs. Black and a student of his. If Black could find a student, they could have a match.
The video then followed Black as he chased Johnson around, offering to train him and help him get on TV. Johnson’s a hyper-intense lone wolf who doesn’t want help from anyone, but by the end of the package, it showed that Black had arranged for a tag team match with Johnson as his partner. They did a good job with this, especially considering that neither had much going on in terms of storylines.
Dak Draper defeated Jason Cade
Draper is another ROH Dojo guy, a big one billed at 6’6″. Cade, a Norman Smiley trainee, has been growing his name on the American indies over the past few years, most recently has wrestling for Impact and GCW, among others.
Early on, Cade slung himself over the top rope to the floor and attempted a frankensteiner, but Draper looked to have lost his balance and they both crashed to the floor in the form of what looked to be a powerbomb. Draper followed with power bombing Cade onto the apron. Cade landed some nice-looking dives and aerial spots, but Draper won with the Magnum KO slam. This was fine. It looks like they’re planning to build Draper up to be more of a player in 2020.
Jonathan Gresham (w/ Jay Lethal) defeated Josh Woods (w/ Silas Young) via countout
For those out of the loop, Gresham and Lethal are heel tag team champions right now, having won the titles from the Briscoes last month at Final Battle. Also, Young and Woods’ official tag team name is now 2 Guys 1 Tag and I’m still nonplussed about it.
These two broke into a great round of grappling at the top of this, though this Atlanta crowd didn’t seem to like it much at first. There were scattered chants about the match being boring early on, which speaks volumes about the type of audiences ROH brings in now compared to, say, ten years ago, where pure pro wrestling was the product’s selling point. I’m not quite sure what it is in 2020. Lethal and Young got into it with each other from across the ring and defused the naysayers’ taunting. When Gresham and Woods went back to the mat, it sounded like people were already more invested in the match from then on.
Gresham might be in the best physical shape of his life right now, and his transition to the heel roll in ROH has felt seamless. He and Woods looked very good in this, and Woods should be working with more guys like Gresham who understand Woods’ martial arts and grappling background and are able to blend it into the match and disguising the fact that he’s still a rookie. Woods landed an inverted TKO type of move on Gresham where he kneed Gresham in the face. Riccaboni called it a “TK-GTS,” which would be accurate.
Gresham worked over Woods knee over the last half of the match, and later on, he locked in the Figure Four leg lock until Woods got a rope break. Woods, still selling his knee, went for a high kick but sold it like he couldn’t fully extend his leg and kneeled to the mat, so Gresham went to lock on the Figure Four again, which Woods countered into a cradle. The two then rolled around the ring reversing each other’s inside cradles until they both broke the hold. Gresham landed a quebrada inside the ring next and the crowd loved that. When Gresham went for some sort of aerial attack, Woods caught him with a big gamengiri knee-strike that was timed perfectly, which led to “this is awesome!” chants from the crowd, the same crowd who jeered the two for being boring a few minutes earlier.
Woods went to suplex Gresham over the ropes to the floor but both crash-landed to the mats. Lethal and Young walked over to them and both illegally interfere by assisting their respective partners back into the ring, which resulted in both being ejected from ringside. As Young bickered with the referee of the decision, Lethal unbuttoned his ROH tag title belt and smashed Woods’ knee with it before rushing to the back. Gresham locked the Figure Four back on, this time on the floor; at the ref’s count of 16, Gresham unlocked the hold and went back into the ring. Woods wasn’t able to make it back into the ring in time and thus his countout loss here. This was really good, and arguably made better considering how they were able to win over tonight’s fickle Atlanta crowd.
They aired a vignette for Australian star Slex for his debut at ROH: Free Enterprise on February 9th. His gimmick is supposed to be cocky rich guy and his catchphrase is “Business is Boomin’,” which is ironic in so many ways. Slex garnered clout with international wrestling fans when he had a well-received match in Australia with NJPW’s Kazuchika Okada.
LifeBlood (Mark Haskins and Tracy Williams) Dan Maff and Jeff Cobb The Briscoes (Jay and Mark Briscoe)
This was all action. The Bouncers joined Coleman and Riccaboni on commentary for this one. All teams shook hands before the bout. Haskins and Cobb started things off but Mark Briscoe tagged Haskins in early on. The Briscoes were very popular with this crowd.
Cobb ragdolled Haskins around a bit, but Haskins and partner Tracy Williams used some quick tandem offense on Cobb to wear him down. Haskins and Jay Briscoe jaw-jacked at each other. Later on, Mark Briscoe chopped Haskins hard on the chest while Haskins was on the apron, so it counted as a tag. The crowd loved that. Haskins then “tagged” Briscoe back, and from here is when things spilled out of the ring and into madness, tons of dives to the floor from the ropes, from the apron, and finally with Maff taking most everyone out with a huge tope suicida. He looked very good in this and seems to have been a nice recent pickup for ROH.
LifeBlood wore Maff out later with more fast double-teaming, with Williams trying to tap Maff out with various foot- and knee locks. Mark Briscoe broke the submission with a Froggy Bow from the top. The Briscoes landed Redneck Boogie on Williams, who kicked out at two to the surprise of most. The crowd hated this. Moments later, Jay took Williams out with a Jaydriller to win the match.
The, uh, enigmatic Danhausen joined Riccaboni and Coleman on commentary afterwards. Riccaboni and then Coleman kept mouthing “Help me!” into the camera as Danhausen did his quirky onomatopoeia schtick.
Shane Taylor came out next with the Sons of Savagery. He talked about how three years ago at Center Stage he put the Briscoes through a table, and now he was in the ring and everyone was waiting to hear what he had to say. Taylor said he didn’t want to settle this on social media or anything like that so he called out Joe Koff, who came to ringside. He thanked Koff and explained how the last year and a half had been the best run of his career.
He said he had read Koff’s emails and offers for a new contract, and that he is the best homegrown ROH talent with the company today (which is arguably true), but if Koff still wanted him there, he would need a guaranteed ROH six-man tag title shot for the Sons of Savagery and himself, as well as a shot at the ROH World Heavyweight title at a time and place of his choosing. Taylor also demanded to be on every poster for every ROH show this year and for the maximum salary he’s allowed on his new contract, all while telling off hecklers in the crowd. Koff listened and walked to the back, to which Taylor responded “That was like your sex life: pretty short.”
Bandido, Flamita & Rey Horus defeated Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, Brody King & Flip Gordon) to win the ROH World Six-Man championship
This was really good. Fans were very loud in their support of the Mexican team beforehand. People were blowing their vuvuzelas and interrupting Scurll, which he relished. Finally, the Villain allowed to function as a villain. He announced that they’d defend their ROH six-man titles with Flip Gordon subbing in for PCO, the other champion member of the team scheduled who’d been planned to face Rush in the main event.
Brody King and Flamita started off. King really stands out when he’s in the ring with good lucha-style wrestlers because of both his size and ability to keep pace with faster guys in the ring. All six of these guys were natural together, but it helped to have such a hot crowd for this match. Bandido landed a perfect tornillo on King when he tagged into the match, and later stuck an Orihara moonsault from the top while Flamita and Horus did stereo tope con hiros to the floor. It almost looked like Bandido was about to lose his footing, but somehow all three timed it perfectly. Pretty amazing.
Flamita used a 450 splash on Gordon for a two-count. Bandido then took Flamita and wheelbarrow suplexed him onto Gordon while Horus used a legdrop on Gordon. Horus landed a flying, swinging DDT on King, then Scurll landed a tornado DDT of his own on Bandido. From here, everyone began trading fast high spots, maybe seven or eight in total, all at what felt to be 100 mph; Horus wrapped the sequence after spiking King on his head with a tilt-a-whirl DDT, and it saw everyone laid out in the mat or outside the ring by the end of it. The crowd peaked to the highest point the highest they’d been all night, and when production cut to the announce table, Riccaboni wore a look of genuine exhaustion on his face, and somehow Coleman had been cloaked in a fan’s Mexican flag.
Towards the end, Gordon and King used stereo topes of their own, and at the end of the match saw Scurll take a long while to set up the Chicken Wing facelock, but Bandio rolled him up before he Scurll lock it in–for three. The crowd erupted when Bandido scored the surprise victory. Your new ROH World six-man champions are Bandido, Flamita and Rey Horus.
Fans threw lots of money into the ring after this and Coleman mentioned on commentary that some “jive turkey” near ringside was trying to some snag loose change for himself. Again, this was very good.
PCO defeated Rush via disqualification to retain the ROH World Heavyweight title
Both Rush and PCO got loud reactions from the relatively small crowd at Center Stage. It sounded to be about 50/50, and both let the crowd chant their hearts out before they even got started. Rush hit a snap German suplex off the ropes early on. PCO landed a pop-up powerbomb and later a tope suicida, taking both Rush and himself into the barricades. Riccaboni mentioned that it was last year at Center Stage when PCO did a dive and got a gash on his head that required 20+ stitches; moments later, PCO missed a somersault senton from the top onto the edge of the apron.
When referee Todd Sinclair was giving Rush a hard time about a rope break, Rush started choking Sinclair. With both men distracted, PCO got back up from and chokeslammed Rush. While climbing to the top to go for the the PCOsault, Rush rolled a prone Sinclair in harm’s way, and PCO ended up moonsaulting Sinclair instead.
This turned into a big schmozz when the rest of La Faccion de Ingernobles (Dragon Lee and Kenny King) came out and attacked PCO. Villain Enterprises, in turn, came out and attacked La Faccion, which led to both teams brawling to the back. In the ring, Rush laid PCO out with a chair shot, then landed a diving senton onto PCO, but since Sinclair was still out, no ref around to count. Joe Mandack, another ROH official, rushed to the ring and was able to count to two before PCO kicked out.
Rush was displeased with this apparently and took this referee out too, even blasting Mandack in the face with the Bull’s Horns. Sinclair was up by this time in the match and called for the bell. PCO wins via DQ.
After the fall, a policeman came into the ring and whipped Gordon into the ringpost. The man then took off his blue police shirt to reveal a t-shirt underneath, one that read NWA POWERRR. This policeman turned out to be current NWA World Heavyweight champion, Nick Aldis. He has a match with Marty Scurll coming up at the next NWA pay-per-view, and based on ROH’s past relationship with Billy Corgan and Dave Lagana’s revamped NWA, it looks like the two companies will cross-promote again in the next few weeks, at least. La Faccion put PCO through a table in the ring, then did the Ingernobles pose, standing over the champion, as the show cut to black.
Final thoughts:
There wasn’t anything worrisome on tonight’s card, so if you’re looking for more ROH schadenfreude content, you’re out of luck here. This was a fine show. It wasn’t great, and at times it felt like a major slog to get through, but there were a few higher-quality matches, and the fans in attendance were hotter than most ROH crowds in 2019. The caveat with tonight’s crowd, though, was that it sounded like it was made up of casual fans, and primarily fans of the six Mexican superstars on the show, and not the hardcore pro wrestling fanatics that Ring of Honor built their company on, ironically enough.
Check back tomorrow for a recap of ROH’s next Honor Club broadcast from Concord, NC.
A rematch of the Final Battle main event will take place on ROH’s first show of 2020.
During last night’s Final Battle Fallout event, it was announced that PCO will defend his newly-won ROH World Championship against Rush at Saturday Night at Center Stage on January 11. The show is taking place at Center Stage in Atlanta, Georgia and will air live on HonorClub.
After PCO defeated Rush to win the ROH World title at Final Battle, Villain Enterprises opened last night’s show. PCO was interrupted by a video from Rush, who announced the formation of his La Faccion Ingobernable stable. It includes Rush, Dragon Lee, Kenny King, and Amy Rose.
PCO teamed with Marty Scurll and defeated Jeff Cobb & Dan Maff in the main event of Final Battle Fallout. Scurll pinned Maff with a cradle after countering a Burning Hammer.
ROH has also announced Nicole Savoy for Saturday Night at Center Stage. She made her ROH debut by defeating Sumie Sakai at Final Battle Fallout.
He defeated Rush in the main event of tonight’s Final Battle event, winning the championship for the first time. The match featured a ton of weapons, including chairs, barricades and even doors. There was also a hearse involved where both men took bumps on the hood. PCO at one point took a belly-to-belly suplex, landing on the windshield of the hearse.
The finish had Rush lay out Destro on the outside while PCO set up a table in the ring. PCO was able to grab Rush, put him on the table and hit the moonsault for the win.
Rush had held the championship for over 77 days, defeating Matt Taven at Death Before Dishonor XVII on September 27.
Two other ROH titles changed hands tonight. Dragon Lee defeated Shane Taylor to win the ROH TV title and Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham defeated The Briscoe Brothers to win the Tag Team titles.
ROH’s traditional biggest show of the year takes place tonight as the UMBC Event Center in Baltimore, Maryland hosts Final Battle 2019.
The pay-per-view will be headlined by Rush defending the ROH World Championship against PCO. Rush won the title from Matt Taven at Death Before Dishonor this September, while PCO was the winner of ROH’s Final Battle number one contender’s tournament. He defeated his Villain Enterprises stablemate Marty Scurll in the tournament finals.
Two other title matches are set for tonight. The Briscoes will defend their Tag Team titles against Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham, while Television Champion Shane Taylor will defend his title against Dragon Lee.
Tonight’s show will also feature Taven vs. Vincent Marseglia, Mark Haskins vs. Bully Ray in a street fight, Jeff Cobb vs. Dan Maff, Maria Manic vs. Angelina Love, Scurll & Flip Gordon vs. Bandido & Flamita, Dalton Castle & Joe Hendry vs. Silas Young & Josh Woods, and Kenny King vs. Rhett Titus.
The PPV will be four hours long. The first hour airs for free and will begin at 7 p.m. Eastern time.
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Pre-show: Josh Woods and Silas Young defeated Dalton Castle and Joe Hendry
ROH’s final major event of the year was called by Ian Riccaboni, Colt Cabana and Caprice Coleman. The crowd was sparse early on but enthusiastic. The production and lighting came across as slick on screen.
Castle came to the ring with new Boys. This was mostly comedy but the crowd was into it. Woods and Castle had a nice Greco-Roman style exchange once the match got more serious. Whenever Woods would goof around in the ring, like when he’d try and mock Castle, Silas Young would tag himself in. You could hear the production team say something about a back-up cable that we could clearly hear on the broadcast, so much so that Cabana even mentioned something about it. At one point, Hendry did a double fall-away slam to both Young and Wood, but in the end it was Woods and Young who picked up the win after Young launched Woods into Castle with a slingshot, then Woods caught Castle with a flying knee. This wasn’t bad.
-Next, Brian Zane interviewed Angelina Love and Mandy Leone in a backstage segment. Zane asked Love if she was afraid of Maria Manic, whom she’d face later on the card. Love said she’d been asked that question 1,001 times recently. She implied she wasn’t afraid and mentioned that she’s been in the business for 20 years. She called Zane sweaty and patted him on the brow and the two then walked away.
-Alex Shelley made an appearance back in the venue. He said Baltimore has been one of the most important cities in ROH history and thanked the fans in attendance. Shelley claimed that Ring of Honor is “pro wrestling’s greatest classroom,” based on the idea that so many great wrestlers in the past have come through the company and learned something important about their craft before becoming bigger stars elsewhere. He insisted on not naming anyone, though he did insist on naming certain wrestlers who left ROH for a time and came back to share knowledge with new generations; he named Jay Lethal and the Briscoe Brothers, specifically. He then went on to challenge Colt Cabana, who Shelley described as one of the greatest technical wrestlers in the world, to a singles match. He said he never had a chance to wrestle him in his career so he wanted a match with Cabana tonight at Final Battle. Cabana, who was on commentary while this was happening, turned around and accepted, and even mentioned his NWA National title and recent tour in NJPW while he was on the mic. Shelley said “see ya later” and both wrestlers went to the back. They’ll have a match later on in the show.
Kenny King (w/ Amy Rose) defeated Rhett Titus
Titus played super-babyface in this one. His wife and baby were even at ringside, Ricky Steamboat-style. Kenny King and Amy Rose walked out to the All Night Express theme song, Titus and King’s old tag entrance, and King and Rose did their old handshake. Midway through the match, when King was down by ringside, he started talking trash with Titus’ wife and even said “I’m the real dad!” about the Titus’ baby. Just seconds later, Titus landed onto King with a tope con giro, then used a nice snap front suplex on King to the floor. Later, King returned with a modified exploder suplex to Titus and planted him into the corner turnbuckles. Titus landed a flying cross-body attack for two. King went for Lethal Injection but Titus blocked it with a dropkick, then landed King’s Royal Flush for two. He took King’s headoff with a huge yakuza kick in the corner, but right before Titus could keep the momentum up, Amy Rose grabbed his ankle, distracting Titus long enough for King to sneak in and land the Royal Flush for the win. I understand this might not be the most exciting match on paper, but these two worked their asses off for a dead crowd and came out with a solid match. Titus’ new babyface roll works so much better than the oily bodybuilder thing he was doing before.
-Brian Zane interviewed the Bouncers who were sitting in the crowd near ringside. Zane throws good questions to talent and allows for everyone he interviews to sound authentic. They had a disagreement about who’d win the heavyweight title match tonight; Brawler Milonas argued Rush would win because he drinks beer with the Bouncers. “Cerveza, baby!”
Jeff Cobb defeated Dan Maff
This was fun. Maff did a tope suicida not even a minute into the match. Cobb launched Maff out of the corner and over his head with a suplex minutes later. This was cool to watch because these two are roughly the same height and weight, and both are highly, highly agile. It was an advanced hoss fight. Cobb clotheslined Maff so hard that he slid under the bottom rope and onto the floor, like he did in his match with Shane Taylor earlier this year. Maff no-sold tons of Cobb’s offense in this, which gave much of this a Japanese “fighting spirit” flavor. Maff is so charismatic. At points he made it look like he was ragdolling Cobb, first with a pounce and later with a huge spear. Riccaboni and Coleman did a nice job on commentary getting over Maff’s Burning Hammer finisher throughout this. Cobb made a killer comeback and used two Tour of the Islands on Maff for the win. It looked crazy and the crowd went nuts for it. The two shook hands and chopped each other before leaving the ring. That match was so butch that every male kid in attendance just went through an expedited version of puberty just now. Maff felt like a serious player immediately after this one.
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Bandido and Flamita defeated Marty Scurll and Flip Gordon (w/ Brody King)
ROH aired a pre-show promo for Final Battle that looked great. It looked more in line with something you’d see on AEW Dynamite than their typical segments. Gordon and Flamita were the first in for their teams. Gordon and Flamita had a really fast exchange. Flamita is ridiculously fast. Brody King joined Riccaboni and Coleman on commentary during this. Flamita stood on Bandido’s shoulders and did a falling splash for two. Later in the match, Flamita tried to jump from Bandido’s shoulders to do some sort of plancha but he lost his balance, he slipped, but he was gripping Bandido’s hands and was able to catch his balance and, somehow, springboard his way onto Gordon and Scurll on the floor. This turned into chaos from around this point, move for crazy move, all of it pretty innovative, and all at 110 MPH. It sounded like the crowd had a hard time even keeping up with them. Brody King couldn’t help but put over Bandido and Flamita during this. Bandido did his moonsault fall-away slam (and looked to almost botch it), and when he stood back up, Scurll was waiting for him and applied the chicken wing submission. From here we got another sequence of wild 5–7 spots in under a minute, and finished with Bandido doing a 42-plex–meaning he suplexed both Scurll and Gordon simultaneously–while Flamita conked Gordon in the face with 619 right beforehand. Everyone looked spectacular here, but the match itself was a sprint, which some fans will love and other fans might not.
Vincent defeated Matt Taven in a grudge match
Taven jumped Vincent, formerly Vinny Marseglia, as he ran down to the ring. He threw Vincent over the barricades and did a big dive onto him into the crowd and got an “R-O-H” chant. The Baltimore crowd was loud behind Taven for all of this. Vincent used a disgusting suplex to Taven where they landed flush against the concrete. It sounded brutal. The crowd would dip in and out of the match when Vincent was on offense. Late in the match Taven spiked Vincent with the Climax for just two and commentary put it over like crazy. Taven tried bringing an axe into the ring but Vincent knocked it out of his hands and landed Sliced Bread for the surprise win. The pro-Taven crowd was bummed.
After the match, the recently signed Bateman attacked Taven from behind and put him down with a tombstone piledriver. Vincent slid a block into the ring and set Taven’s ankle on it, then smashed it with a chair. They sold it like a Pillmanizer spot with security carrying Taven out. It looks like Vincent and Bateman are going to be a new spooky heel tag team going forward.
Mark Haskins (w/ Vicki Haskins) defeated Bully Ray in a streetfight
This was not good. Bully Ray jumped Haskins with a barbed wire board during Haskins’ entrance. He smashed Haskins in the back, then into Vicki Haskins’ face which looked especially violent. The referee shouted “What are you doing?! She’s a woman!” at Bully Ray. Well, then. Ray berated a staff member for touching him. “She don’t belong near a ring!” Ray shouted before the actual bell sounded. In the ring, Bully Ray scolded Haskins for making fun of him on Twitter. Ray grabbed a mic late in the match and screamed “God bless New York City!” and taunted him inside the ring with a kendo stick. He reminded Haskins about how Ray called his family trash. He mentioned “the Twitter machine” again and was angry about being talked trash at via that platform. He called Haskins a “low life, bottom-feeding jobber.” Haskins slapped the mic away and enticed Ray to hit him, then called him a p**sy flipped him the double bird. Ray went to power bomb Haskins onto a chair but Haskins reversed it into a drop toehold onto the chair. In theory, people are supposed to go crazy for Haskins, but they didn’t because it’s Final Battle 2019, not Final Battle 1988, unfortunately. People reacted more to Haskins pulling out a ladder than for Haskins getting his comeuppance, and understanding that is a key to realizing what year you’re booking in. The next big reaction was for when Ray pulled a table from under the apron. He threw that table and the barbed wire board into the ring. They both ended up on the top rope at one point, the barbed wire board set up in one corner, and when Haskins went for a super frankensteiner Ray reversed it into a super power bomb onto the table–not through it. Since the table didn’t break, Ray hopped onto the second rope, then hopped off with a messed up looking flip to quickly put Haskins through the table, then did the Great Muta mist taunt to the delight of the crowd. Who is supposed to be the one getting over tonight? Vicki Haskins came back from her assault earlier on and took a cheesegrater to Ray’s testicles. “My baaaalllllls!” he screamed. You could hear one male voice loudly booing all of this. Vicki Haskins then kissed Mark, then double press-slammed him through a table. After a diving double foot stomp, Haskins picked up the win. If this was supposed to get Haskins over, it didn’t. Bully Ray was the focal point of the match; the Haskins were players in his segment. This was bad, which is depressing because Mark Haskins is one of the top three pure wrestlers in the company right now.
Alex Shelley defeated Colt Cabana
This was very interesting. This match was as Shelley described it would be earlier on the pre-show, an expo of technical pro wrestling. Shelley’s matwork is still evolving and always looks like he’s updating his submission vocabulary. Cabana showcased his clever defense, and whatever whacky lock Shelley threw at him, Cabana had an equally unique response. By the time the two started to speed up, Shelley pinned Cabana out of nowhere with a modified cradle and splay pin for the surprise three-count. This couldn’t have been more than three minutes. Riccaboni mentioned on commentary and wished him good luck if this happens to be the last time we see Cabana in ROH in 2019. It should be noted that Cabana is the sitting NWA National champion and Shelley now has a clean pinfall victory over him.
Maria Manic defeated Angelina Love (w/ Mandy Leone)
Manic decked Love with a lariat before the bell rang. She raggdollded Love around the ring with slams. Mandy Leone tried interfering but Manic took her out, too, press slamming her off the top rope. She looked like she murdered Love with a low dropkick on the apron. She had a total superstar monster vibe, like a Brock Lesnar type. So much charisma. When Leone tried spraying her with a bottle of perfume she jump-kicked the bottle into the crowd. Later, she press slammed Love face-first onto the timekeeper’s table. The crowd started chanting “this is awesome.” Manic took a fan’s MJF-inspired scarf and wore it around her neck while she strutted around the ring as Love recovered. Manic threw Love back into the ring and tapped Love out with a torture rack.
Dragon Lee defeated Shane Taylor (w/ Shane Taylor Promotions) to win the ROH World Television championship
Taylor spit in Lee’s hand when Lee offered a handshake before the match. Lee blasted Taylor with a shotgun dropkick once things got underway. Only moments into the match and Taylor caught Lee and planted him onto the edge of the apron. He chopped Lee so hard it evoked the wonderful “ohhhhhhh my god!” trademark call from Caprice Coleman. He crushed Lee against the barricade with a running knee strike. So much of the first part of this was just Taylor tormenting Lee. Ron Hunt, a part of Shane Taylor promotions, was shown sitting at ringside a few times and was mentioned by commentary, so it’s fair to expect more out of that guy in the future. Lee shifted the tempo of the match with two huge, high-speed dives onto Taylor, first a tope suicida through the ropes, then a Great Sasuke-esque swandive senton over the top. Later, Lee landed on Taylor with a diving double stomp from the top rope to Taylor who was laid atop the apron. He stuck another diving stomp into the ring but only a two-count here. They later got into a chop battle and Lee looked like he had just as much power as Taylor had behind his strikes. The crowd really started to quiet down later on in this, though I think it might just have been show fatigue. Lee kicked out of Greeetings from 215, the Fire-Thunder driver Taylor has been using that has been pretty protected as a finish this year, and the crowd sort of picked up on how far they were going at this point. Lee and Taylor somehow pulled off a Canadian Destroyer, but then Ron Hunt interfered and distracted ref Todd Sinclair. Lee rocked Taylor with a sharp running knee strike with a chain wrapped around his knee, one Hunt tried passing to Taylor for him to use, but since Sinclair was distracted he didn’t immediately make the count. By the time Sinclair was in position to count, Taylor kicked out at one. Lee did a version of Des Duca Dora to Taylor, another impressive feat of strength from Dragon, but again it was only for a two-count. Hunt tried getting involved again but Lee took him out with a dropkick. The crowd sensed something special was about to happen, and after Lee smashed Taylor with another kneestrike, this one exposed, that was it: Dragon Lee is your new Ring of Honor World Television champion.
Jay Lethal and Jonathan Gresham defeated The Briscoes (Mark & Jay Briscoe) to win the ROH World Tag Team championship
Good match. PJ Black joined Riccaboni and Coleman on commentary for this. The Briscoes had family members down near the front row and were on camera before the match. Gresham and Lethal are playing heels now, for those not keeping track lately. Midway through the teams started brawling around the ring. Mark Briscoe used a flying Cactus Jack elbow off the apron. Later on, the Briscoes decapitated Gresham with a Doomsday Device that turned Gresham inside out. He and Lethal came back later on with a Lethal Injection followed by shooting star press from Gresham for a two-count that Jay Briscoe broke. The crowd peaked here and then came down for the next few minutes, then came back up again when Jay Briscoe was finally tagged in. When Lethal and Gresham went for the Cornette Cutter, the slingshot into a cutter double team finish the two have used for a while, but Jay Briscoe caught Gresham mid-air and planted him with a Death Valley Driver. He almost pinned Lethal for three until Gresham, who was outside of the ring, pulled referee Steven Dumeng to the floor to break up that pin. Lethal locked Jay in a figure-four leglock but Briscoe made it to his brother in time and crashed down into Lethal with a top rope Froggy ‘bow. When the Briscoes went for a Doomsday Device on Lethal, Gresham broke it up and Lethal schoolboy’d Jay and pinned him–with a handful of tights–for three. Lethal and Gresham are the new ROH World Tag Team champions.
PCO defeated Rush to become the new ROH World Heavyweight champion
This was something else. Rush got a megastar entrance with a huge pyro show, but PCO was the crowd’s choice for babyface. He got lots of “P-C-O” chants beforehand. They jaw-jacked early on but began smashing into each other with shoulderblocks only a few seconds after the bell. The match spilled to the floor early on. Rush hit PCO over the head with a chair and tossed him into the barricade on the floor. He shouted “They say PCO’s not human, but I’m human!” and continued to thrash PCO. Although there were a few pockets of the crowd were chanting for Rush, this was mostly a pro-PCO crowd tonight. Rush leaned into the role of heel like a natural. He went into the crowd and found a mini ladder that he tried setting up in the corner but it kept falling out of place. PCO finally returned Rush’s offense with an avalanche into the corner followed by a tope con giro through the second rope. He went on to miss the somersault senton onto the corner of the ring when Rush moved out of the way. That man’s poor tailbone. Rush dragged PCO out into the crowd and near the foggy hearse that PCO arrived at the arena in. Oh, right, there was a hearse with fog coming out of it still parked near the entrance. Rush went on to stack a few steel guardrails on top of each other, then curse the crowd in Spanish, and finally through PCO onto the aforementioned pile of steel guardrails. He was willing heel heat from this crowd. As Rush strutted back to the ring, PCO’s guru, Destro, the guy from the Monday Night PCO videos and from PCO’s MSG entrance at G1 Supercard, he arrived on the scene, cracked open the hood of the hearse, took jumper cables and electrocuted PCO back to life. It was like one of the stunts PCO does in his videos. Recharged, he chokeslammed Rush onto the hood of the hearse. A few young men nearby started chanting “shock this bitch!” over and over and I couldn’t help but crack up. PCO legdropped Rush while he was on the hood of the car, but moments later Rush was somehow able to do what looked like a tomoe nage judo throw onto the windshield of the car. Destro kept growling “you’re a monster!” at PCO, who later went after Rush with a crowbar. He missed Rush once and crashed the crowbar through the hearse window. This crowd really wanted PCO to win. Rush unveiled three doors, knobless doors, from under the ring. Doors are the new flavor of the month when it comes to hardcore matches. When Rush landed a diving senton from the top and went for the pin, PCO was up at one. Rush then started ramming one of the doors into PCO’s head, then suplexed him through another one that was set up in one corner of the ring. The crowd chanted “one more door!” before PCO used a spinebuster to put Rush through the last door set up in the ring. He then stuck a PCOsault for a two-and-three-quarters-count. Rush rolled out of the ring and beat up Destro and threw him into the crowd, but in the meantime, PCO had set up a table, then got a hold of Rush and put him through said table with a knees-first PCOsault through a table for three. PCO is the new ROH World Heavyweight champion. Riccaboni made a hell of a call for the win and did his damndest to make it feel huge. It wasn’t the prettiest match of all time, but the crowd wanted three things here: They wanted violence, they wanted PCO to win, and they wanted to boo whomever was in PCO’s way at winning. In terms of that criteria then this match was a total success. Rush worked his ass off for heat and would adjust to the mood and feel of the crowd with no effort, while the nearly 52-year-old PCO once again risked his body on a big ROH show, again going to extreme lengths to impress fans. Give the man a bonus and an icepack, or whatever you’d give Not-Humans.
Final thoughts:
Despite the tornado of bad publicity and reported backstage mishandling over the course of 2019, ROH delivered an above average show tonight. Aside from gratuitous Bully Ray vs. Mark Haskins streetfight, each match tonight was either good or very good. The pre-show didn’t drag, and actually ended with one of the best matches of the night (Jeff Cobb vs. Dan Maff), and matches that on paper you’d think be ill-fated, Kenny King vs. Rhett Titus, for example, turned out to be fine matches at worst, solid modern pro wrestling at best. Maria Manic’s segment got over very well with tonight’s crowd and she came across like a star on televison. Dan Maff also felt like a player after his match with Cobb tonight. The quick match between Alex Shelley and Colt Cabana was great for what it was, a nice surprise that didn’t overstay its welcome and served a purpose, seemingly to send Cabana off ROH television, at least based on what Ian Riccaboni mentioned after the match on the broadcast. Both the TV and tag matches were very good, and I don’t think the crowd seemed to expect those plus the ROH Heavyweight title to all change tonight. What this signified was that ROH is looking to relaunch or rebrand after the post-G1 Supercard spiral into mismanagement and publicity hell they experienced late this year. It sounded to satisfy the fans in attendance, and it wasn’t the most difficult card to watch for the viewer at home. Nothing felt like it dragged much despite this being a four-hour show in an already oversaturated wrestling market landscape. I think that speaks volumes about ROH’s locker room talent. If tonight was anything else, it was a start.
ROH was in Columbus, OH Sunday night for ROH Unauthorized: Hanukah Comes Early, a mostly comedy show hosted by Colt Cabana. He explained that that Unauthorized essentially meant he was going to book the show tonight. He promised the crowd that the wrestling would be great, but weird. One of those statements turned out to be true.
Cabana brought out Joe Hendry to do guest “singing commentary.” He sang everything he said. He and Ian Riccaboni were the first broadcast team of the night.
Ultimo Guerrero defeated Jonathan Gresham
Guerrero is CMLL Heavyweight champion but he didn’t have the belt with him this weekend. Gresham has a crazy new octopus mask and is a heel now but cool things like that get over. It’s hard not to cheer the guy.
The match itself was really good but was absolutely butchered by Hendry’s awful singing commentary which made this hard to watch. It was mostly tight technical wrestling, Guerrero played face, sort of, while Gresham would throw in something sneaky behind the referee’s back. At one point, he landed what I have only known to be called as the “sack tap” behind the ref’s back. Cabana, who was sitting on stage, got on the mic and told on Gresham. Hendry was rhyming all of his singing commentary. Riccaboni started singing midway through, too. Guerrero won after he used the Guerrero Especial, a reverse superplex from the second rope, to pin Gresham in about 12 minutes.
El Villainisto (Marty Scurll) and Jéfe Cobbo (Jeff Cobb) defeated Delirious and Mini-Delirious (Swoggle) in a loser must lose their mask match
Cabana made a facetious claim after the previous match insisting that he booked everything that happened in the ring just now. ROH flashed entrance banners for Delirious and Mini-Delirious on accident while Cabana was talking to the audience.
Cobb came out in a black El Santo mask and Scurll had one that looked like a Masked Superstar mask. Swoggle came out in a Delirious mask but his pants still read SWOGGLE on the sides. This was supposed to be a comedy match but it wasn’t funny at all. Scurll pretended to be one of the Deliriouses and then snapped their fingers. Delirious and Swoggle then bit Scurll and Cobb’s fingers. Swoggle did German suplexes to both Cobb and Scurll. Cobb pinned Swoggle after a standing moonsault. Swoggle unmasked after the match and Cabana said it was Little John Studd. This was bad.
Kenny King, Flip Gordon & Dalton Castle defeated Cheeseburger & The Bouncers in Colt Cabana’s Punderful six-man tag
This was another messy comedy match. The theme was Cabana wanted to give everyone a burger-related name. Kenny King was Kenny “Burger” King and came out with a Burger King crown. Amy Rose came with him to the ring. Rhett Titus was on commentary with Caprice Coleman and Riccaboni for this one.
Dalton “White” Castle and “Double Cheeseburger” Beer City Bruiser were in first but all they did was shake hands. Castle tagged Gordon in next. Cheeseburger was wearing a cheeseburger hat on the apron. King later arm dragged ‘Burger so hard that the cheeseburger hat flew off. Cheeseburger used a drop-down and it actually worked, the one of very few times I have seen it work as a move and not part of a bigger rope-running sequence. There was a spot where Milonas laid on top of Castle and had to have everyone in the match had to peel him off.
King did a big Arabian Press to the floor at one point like a regular Christopher Daniels. He and Cheeseburger were the highlights of this match, if you can believe that and Gordon to an extent too. Gordon teased a dive off the stage towards the end but flipped the crowd off and walked to the back, which got a good heel reaction. “Double Cheese” Bruiser did a cross body off the stage, and later did a somersault senton onto his own partner, Brawler Milonas. Riccaboni said Bruiser may have had too many brews beforehand. King cradled Cheeseburger to win this. Everyone but King and Gordon drank beers and ate cheeseburgers from a cooler afterwards.
The Allure defeated Sumie Sakai and Jenny Rose in a no disqualification match
Sakai and Rose attacked the Allure before they made it to the ring. Sakai brought out her Daryl, Hiromu Takahashi’s stuffed animal mascot. It was over. Rose used a snap suplex to Leone on the stage that looked good, albeit brutal. Sakai missed a moonsault from the top and landed knees first onto a chair. Angelina Love scored the pin after landing the Botox Injection kick on Sakai. Maria Manic came out afterwards and threatened Love, saying “At Final Battle, you’re dead, b****.” Manic has serious potential to be a megastar. Her in-ring debut will be at Final Battle.
Mark Briscoe (w/ Jay Briscoe) defeated Josh Woods (w/ Silas Young) in a partner must drink after kickout match
Jay Briscoe and Silas Young did live commentary during this match, and every time Woods or Mark Briscoe made a pin attempt, the two out at ringside had to take shots of whisky. Cabana announced every time they had to take a shot on his mic. This was the focal point of the match, unfortunately. Briscoe and Woods had a decent match earlier this year in Portland at what’s now known the infamous Bully Ray “Be a Fan” show. Woods powerslammed Briscoe into the barricades. The crowd made some noise here but they were mostly quiet throughout much of this.
Young started complaining about the ref’s count and then Jay Briscoe and he started jaw-jacking until both got into the ring. Young flew out of the ring after missing Jay Briscoe on a tackle, and then Woods tried throwing Jay Briscoe out but the whole thing was botched. Woods dropped Jay, who was flailing in the ropes before rolling under them to the floor. Mark Briscoe landed a Froggy Bow to win the match. I don’t know what this was supposed to accomplish since the Briscoes are already booked against Jonathan Gresham and Jay Lethal for Final Battle. Not good.
Rush and Dragon Lee defeated LifeBlood under Lucha Libre rules
This was the best match of the show so far. It was “lucha libre rules” which just meant there weren’t any tags or too many countouts. Haskins and Lee meshed well together. LifeBlood worked Lee over in their corner until he could tag out to Rush, who wrestled like the place was Madison Square Garden. He did a good job at waking the Columbus crowd up.
The match spilled to the floor early. Back in the ring, Rush and Lee used some impressive tag team combinations on Tracy Williams. They sort of functioned like heels here. Rush shouted “Viva Mexico!” to the crowd midway through. Lifeblood did crisscrossing dives to the floor. Rush pinned Williams after the Bull’s Horns to win this one in a good match.
For some reason, Cabana interviewed ring announcer Bobby Cruise in the ring next.
He asked Cruise what his favorite match to announce was. Cruise said Samoa Joe vs. Kenta Kobashi. That was pretty much the whole interview. Cabana said if he ever did a podcast, Cruise would be his first guest. ROH World Television champion Shane Taylor’s music then hit and he walked out with the Soldiers of Savagery and another unnamed male and talked about how upset he was that his match was changed for tonight in his home state. He challenged Cabana to a TV title match. Cabana agreed to a match, but said it’d be a 4-on-4 match, and since it was his show, Colt would prove that he could pick literally anyone in the building to beat Taylor.
His first choice was Mike Gator, the cameraman. They made an entrance video for him and it just read GATOR with pictures of alligators behind it.
Cabana’s next choice was senior ROH broadcaster Ian Riccaboni. This isn’t a joke. Riccaboni had a cool bobblehead entrance video and his theme sounded like something from The Price is Right. He looked excited to wrestle, unlike most others on this show who seemed like they couldn’t have been bothered to be there in the first place.
ROH promoter Gary Juster was the final team member. For those who aren’t aware, Juster was a promoter for WCW and has been with ROH for years. He was also one of the vital names behind All In last year in Chicago. He got pyro here tonight.
When Cruise went to announce the teams for the match, he stopped early and asked who the one guy was with Taylor who wasn’t one of the Soldiers of Savagery guys. “That’s Ron! Ron Hunt! The CEO of Shane Enterprises!” That’s what Caprice Coleman had to say about it. Riccaboni probably got the biggest pop of the night, and deservedly so. He’s arguably been the best part of ROH this year.
Brian Johnson, a bald, bearded guy from this year’s ROH Top Prospect tournament, came out and cut a promo, a decent one, basically saying he felt slighted, that he should have headlined tonight. He said that he’s the Mecca and people need to know that “it’s everyone vs. Mecca.” He didn’t care which team he had to wrestle on, so Cabana immediately pointed to the opposite corner and insisted he be with the heels. He picked referee Todd Sinclair instead, who also had his own entrance video, a custom one that sounded like U2 but started with a three-count.
Colt Cabana, Mike Gator, Todd Sinclair, Ian Riccaboni and Gary Juster defeated ROH TV Champion Shane Taylor, Brian Johnson, Ron Hunt and the Soldiers of Savagery
Coleman was on commentary with Joe Dombrowski for this. Johnson and Cabana were in first. Taylor’s heel team left the apron and refused to tag Johnson. The biggest pop of the night came next from Cabana tagging out to referee Sinclair, who happened to be quite good. I didn’t expect to type that tonight. He did a leapfrog to Johnson and then did the Ricky Steamboat kung fu pose and the crowd was on their feet and lost it. This is where ROH is at these days.
Juster threw one ginger chop tp Johnson, then tagged out to Cabana and was back on the apron.
Next was Riccaboni, who landed a flying elbow drop onto Johnson, which got an even bigger pop. It looked great. He tagged out to Cabana who pinned Johnson. The ROH All-Stars won. This was insane but fun. I think this crew would draw more most of the regular roster at this point. That’s not a joke, either. Riccaboni, Sinclair and Gary Juster were the highlights. Cameraman Gator was in the match but also filmed the match, so we couldn’t see him.
PCO defeated Dan Maff in an unsanctioned no DQ match
Brian Zane from the Wrestling with Wregret YouTube show joined the Coleman and “Macho Madness” Riccaboni on commentary for this match.
This was a hoss deathmatch battle from the get-go. Maff, who dresses in Hellraiser bondage gear now, took his trenchcoat off and whipped PCO in the face with it before the match. They traded big punches at the top and Maff used a massive tope early on. He hasn’t wrestled in ROH for 14 years. PCO was back in the ring quickly and used a cannonball suicida to the floor onto Maff. They started pulling cinder blocks out from under the ring. A good chunk of this match was either of the guys walking around the ring looking for or preparing weapons while the other guy sold. There were about eight inside the ring by the time they were done.
The two chased each other around the ring and ran into each other with shoulderblocks. PCO started slamming his head into the barricade, then Maff did, and then they both started doing it until PCO poked Maff in the eyes. There were a few young kids down in front going crazy for this, but the rest of the crowd sounded quiet at times. Maff spiked PCO onto the floor with a Burning Hammer. PCO responded in the ring and put Maff through a table with a spear. Maff reciprocated a few minutes later and then put PCO through another table with a Death Valley Driver. Maff threw a number of chairs into the ring next. PCO did a French-Canadian Destroyer onto a pile of chairs in the ring onto Maff. PCO missed another cannonball from the top rope onto the apron and a kid down in front screamed “ARE YOU OK?!”
Maff poured out a bag of thumbtacks but was chokeslammed onto them by PCO. Maff had so many shiny silver tacks in his back after this. Maff returned and back body dropped PCO onto the thumbtacks, then shoved thumbtacks into his mouth, and superkicked him in the head. When Maff set PCO up onto the cinderblocks near the corner of the ring, PCO got back up and blocked whatever flying move Maff was going for. He grabbed him by the groin after Maff started biting his fingers, then press slammed Maff onto the cinderblocks. It was sick. A lady shrieked in the crowd. The crowd started their first “this is awesome” chant of the night.
Maff sat up like the Undertaker and then planted PCO with a Burning Hammer onto the cinderblocks but PCO kicked out. The crowd was loud at this point, and most people were chanting “He’s not human” in support of PCO. After one more chokeslam and a moonsault, PCO won the match. People chanted for PCO after the bout.
After the match, Marty Scurll came out to shake PCO’s hand. He built PCO’s match with Rush for the ROH World Heavyweight title and put him over like crazy, explaining how he’s 51 and has gave everything up for the wrestling business. The crowd started chanting “next world champ.”
Final thoughts:
ROH Unauthorized can be thought of as either a fun, out-of-canon exhibition show meant to lift company morale or as a bright marker pointing out to fans that ROH has entered its late-‘90s AWA/late ‘00s WCW phase. Guerrero vs. Gresham was great but ruined by Hendry’s singing commentary. Dragon Lee and Rush vs. LifeBlood was higher quality and the best pure match of the show. PCO vs. Maff was a textbook example of a “plunder” match with all big weapon spots and general brutality.
I don’t know what to say about the match with Cabana, Gary Juster, Riccaboni and others. Nonplussed is the feeling I’m left with, considering ROH’s bad string of PR in the post-G1 Supercard world. I’m not sure if this was the best time to do a show like this as it will be used as fuel for the narrative that ROH is unraveling before our eyes, because there’s surely an argument to be made for this being one of the worst shows of the year.
ROH’s Glory By Honor event streamed live on Honor Club this Saturday night. Ian Riccaboni, Caprice Coleman and Colt Cabana were tonight’s main announce team. There looked to be a few hundred people in attendance for tonight’s show but there were a lot of empty seats in the bleachers and scattered around ringside.
Silas Young won a battle royal and advanced to challenge ROH World Champion Rush later in the show
Participants: The Bouncers, Kenny King, Joe Hendry, Rhett Titus, Big Daddy Yum Yum (CMLL), Coast 2 Coast, Cheeseburger, Brian Johnston, Josh Woods, Silas Young
Kenny King hid under the ring from the start, like he did at G1 Supercard. Beer City Bruiser did his “I can’t bite — I ain’t got no teeth spot.” Young eliminated Titus, who decided to pull Kenny King from out under the ring and into the match. He was quickly eliminated by Joe Hendry, who was a focal point of this match early on and was one of the only wrestlers who got a full introduction on the Honor Club stream.
Coast 2 Coast (Shaheem Ali & LSG) eliminated Bruiser, Brawler Milonas later threw out Coast 2 Coast at the same time, which got a loud “BEER” chant going in the crowd. Milonas and Big Daddy Yum Yum had a quick exchange together before Milonas dumped him to the floor, too. I enjoyed hearing the distinguished Ian Riccaboni say “Big Daddy Yum Yum” in these short moments.
The final three in this were Josh Woods, Silas Young and Brawler Milonas. The former two teamed up to eliminate Milonas, and a few seconds later, Young, Woods’ storyline mentor, offered Woods a hug, then eliminated his mentee. Silas Young will now face ROH World Heavyweight champion Rush later on in the evening for a shot at the title.
PCO defeated Dalton Castle in a Final Battle number one contender’s tournament semifinal match
Good brawl. A fan in the front row wore a homemade version of Castle’s ring gear and took a selfie with Castle during his entrance. PCO came out to his new Jim Johnston-composed theme music and in more makeup than usual, extra thick black eyeliner under his eyes his black darkwave jacket again. There was lots of smoke around the ring when the lights came back up, and Castle acted like he was afraid of getting in the ring to wrestle the match with PCO.
Early on, PCO demanded Castle hit him in the back. “If you wanna hit me, hit me!” he said, no-selling some forearm strikes. After this, and once the two really started mixing it up, it turned into a good brawl. The crowd was way into PCO but there was a group in house that was loudly pro-Castle.
They fought on the outside for a bit. Castle belly-to-belly suplex PCO on the floor. He threw PCO around a ton, actually, like he literally dumped PCO out onto the floor from a bodyslam, like he was in the battle royal earlier. He hip-tossed PCO onto concrete, the mats had been pulled up, PCO still in his awesome jacket, and when he finally did get up, Castle gave him a spinebuster onto an unfolded chair.
PCO finally stood up at the count of 16, back in the ring at 19. Castle was there waiting for him with a DDT and a running knee, but PCO was back up, “revived,” and then clotheslined Castle and himself to the floor, and followed that up with a tope con giro through the ropes. He’s 52. After some more back and forth, PCO used a big moonsault to put Castle away. The crowd was crazy for PCO throughout this.
Marty Scurll defeated Jay Lethal in a Final Battle number one contender’s tournament semifinal match
Very good match, all action and good drama in the last few minutes. They shook hands before the bell. Scurll dashed at Lethal, who caught Scurll with a dropkick. They started flying from here, back and forth both in and out of the ring. It was all Lethal for a while until Scurll, after two failed tries, finally landed his superkick off the apron to Lethal who was, standing on the floor.
This heated up when Scurll went for the chickenwing and had the crowd erupt for it. Lethal blocked and put Scurll into the figure-four, but the match was over when Scurll finally locked in the chickenwing and got Lethal to tap. Again, really good. You could tell in shots during this match that this was a small, small affair tonight, but both Lethal and Scurll went out and did what they could to tear it up. They shook hands again afterwards. Scurll is now scheduled to wrestle his Villain Enterprises stablemate, PCO, later tonight.
ROH Television Champion Shane Taylor defeated J. Spade to retain his title
They showed a promo of Taylor talking about himself on the radio or on the phone putting himself over. They’re doing the TMT Promotions spin-off angle with Taylor. Spade and Taylor used to wrestle each other on the indies, according to Riccaboni.
They had referee Todd Sinclair do a spoken introduction to the match, like they’d do for a Mayweather Promotions bout. Taylor asked if Spade was ready to get knocked out but Spade came out with a flurry of moves and a dive to the floor. The crowd was at times quite loud behind Spade in this one. Taylor used a nice spinning Greetings From 216 (Fire-Thunder driver) to put Spade away.
Kelly Klein defeated Angelina Love to win the Women of Honor World Championship
Klein stormed at Love at the bell and went on to beat the crap out of love for about a minute straight. Klein used a Northern Lights suplex for the first near-fall of the match. Love countered with a jawbreaker, and later landed a Thesz Press off the apron to the floor.
Klein powered out of Love’s anaconda clutch midway through this and started ragdolling her around the ring with suplexes and K-Power in her comeback. Love kicked out. These two were really working hard here. Love returned with a Botox Injection kick and plancha from the top rope to the floor. Mandy Leon assured Love that she was still pretty. Klein came in at the count of 19. Love missed another Botox Injection, and when Klein went for another K-Power, she accidentally knocked the referee out. People immediately started to boo, even before Mandy Leon entered the ring and started dancing with a chair.
The lights went out and Maria Manic came out and put Leon in a torture rack, then did the same to Love. Klein got back up, delivered K-Power again and pinned Love to regain the Women of Honor championship.
The referee apparently had zero idea that the lights went out, someone’s entrance music blared, then that said someone got into the ring and beat up a bunch of people. Because he was tapped in the head by someone’s foot. This would have been much better without the schmozz finish, but there probably wasn’t another way of introducing Manic unless it was during this match.
ROH Tag Team Champions The Briscoes (Jay & Mark Briscoe) defeated Luke & PJ Hawx to retain their titles
Pretty good. Luke Hawx was Altar Boy Luke in XPW. His son wrestled with him tonight, Riccaboni said he’s 20 years old. They showed a promo Luke Hawx cut before the match and it was good. The crowd was excited for the Hawx family. Luke Hawx wrestled alongside Jay Briscoe in CMLL in the Gran Prix tournament last month in Mexico. He looked good here tonight. I guess PJ Hawx is actually named Perry Hawx, because they started calling him that halfway through this match.
Jay Briscoe beat the hell out of him for much of this. The announce team explained both Hawx have acting experience, and Perry has a new show that’ll be on Hulu soon. Perry came back late in the match with a high angle German suplex, but the Briscoes used Redneck Boogie to Perry out. Jay pinned Perry after a Jaydriller.
Alex Shelley defeated Jonathan Gresham
Excellent match despite the quiet crowd. They were into it when they were supposed to be, but the venue sounded empty at times. It’s negligible, though, because this was one of the best technical matches I’ve seen this year. If mat wrestling is in your wheelhouse, go out of your way to watch this. I don’t think there were more than ten big bumps in this. Maybe a top-rope inverted atomic drop was the highest of spots. That is saying so much considering how long Shelley was away from wrestling, because he looked like he’d never really stopped, especially here.
Shelley pinned Gresham when Gresham went for an octopus hold; Shelley countered it into a clutch pin for the upset victory. Gresham threw a fit afterwards and shoved a staff member out of his chair ringside, grabbed the steel chair and brought it into the ring with the intent of some sort of revenge on Shelley. Jay Lethal came out and took the chair out of Gresham’s hands. He told him that him and Shelley just had one of the greatest matches he’d seen and things looked to be smoothed over in storyline.
They are still teasing a full-on heel turn for Gresham but aren’t pulling the trigger just yet.
Gordon comes to the ring in a gas mask now and grew a long beard. Everyone in the match is great, but Mark Haskins is unique, maybe someone ROH could bet the house on, that’s how good he is with the right people. Him and Gordon looked especially good together. Haskins and Williams did a cool double dive to the floor, Williams from the corner and Haskins through the ropes.
When Gordon tried using a kendo stick, he accidentally hit his partner, King, and Williams hit a piledriver for the pin on Gordon. Really good match. Bully Ray came out and beat LifeBlood up. Gordon came back into the ring and gave his kendo stick to Bully Ray, despite their differences in the past earlier this year. Ray got tons of heat when he screamed “Do you know who I am?!”
ROH World Champion Rush defeated Silas Young to retain his title
Lanny Poffo joined the commentary team for this match. This wasn’t as special as I think they wanted it to be. It felt like any other Rush match in ROH.
This bout started off fast, and Rush went for the Bull’s Horn running dropkick early on. Young blocked it with a spear and the two were quickly on the floor, Young leading the assault on Rush, smashing him into the ring post.
Young kept control of the match back inside the ring, but Rush returned the attack and again, both were on the floor. Rush roughed Young up for a while and threw him into the barricades. Poffo translated “tranquilo” for us, and it means “tranquil” in English, for those not in the know.
Rush missed a diving senton off the second rope, gave Young an opportunity to hit his finisher, the Plunge moonsault, for two. He used a swinging draping DDT for another nearfall, and Rush began to hulk up. Rush landed a superman punch and the Bull’s Horns for the emphatic victory. Rush kissed the the ROH World title, and Lanny Poffo called Rush vs. Young one of the best matches he’d ever seen in his life. I swear.
After cutting to the announce team, production played a video from Death Before Dishonor: Fallout last month. Someone attacked the Kingdom backstage at the show. Matt Taven and Vinny Marseglia came out and Taven then demanded whomever attacked them to come out and face them. The lights went out and they played footage of Taven and Marseglia before today’s show, doing scandalous activities, like unpacking their gear from an SUV, then unpacking inside the venue. It was an angle to imply that someone is stalking Taven for devious reasons. The Kingdom then stormed off.
PCO defeated Marty Scurll to win the Final Battle number one contender’s tournament
Awesome match, and maybe PCO’s best singles match in ROH to date. Scurll got on the mic and faked offering a truce before the bell, then whacked PCO in the face with an umbrella but only got a two-count. What a villain. Scurll did his version of the Iconoclasm and launched PCO from the top rope with it. Scurll flipped a fan off when he and PCO were brawling on the floor. This match would sometimes peak but would flame out quick because the crowd sounded tired. PCO rallied back with a pop-up power bomb.
Scurll made a comeback himself, snapping PCO’s fingers, which I suppose against a Frankenstein-type character like sounds like a silly thing to do. Later, Scurll press slammed PCO off the top through a table on the floor. This is his second match for the night. Scurll put PCO in the chickenwing but ref Todd Sinclair was knocked out. PCO landed the French-Canadian Slam but Sinclair was out. Brody King came out and gave PCO a bossman slam, apparently at the orders of Scurll. Scurll pinned him for a two-count.
Gordon came out later and kicked Scurll off the ropes, then Scurll hit PCO with the ROH Six-Man title for another two-count. The crowd exploded here with a “he’s not human” champ. PCO finally stuck the PCOsault but for only two. The crowd was peaking here and it was the loudest reaction of the night. It was about 60% PCO 40% Scurll. PCO missed that insane senton spot he often does onto the apron, looked like he died. Scurll hit a massive lariat for two. PCO used his own lariat for two, then landed another moonsault for three. Crazy match.
Afterwards, Scurll grabbed the mic and said for three years, he’d been trying to become ROH champion, and tonight, PCO took that chance away from him, and then congratulated him. Scurll said no one deserves more of a shot at the world title than PCO, who’ll now face Rush at Final Battle in Baltimore for the ROH World Heavyweight title.
This was a good show although it looked to be poorly attended. Great main event. PCO is a machine and won’t stop taking crazy bumps, but the truth is that I can’t say I have seen one ROH show in 2019 where PCO wasn’t wildly cheered. He’s a real star. Both he and Scurll were not only awesome once tonight, but twice. Jonathan Gresham vs. Alex Shelley was top-tier technical wrestling, on par with this year’s Virus vs. Metalico in CMLL or most of Zack Sabre’s work throughout the year.
Jay Lethal vs. Marty Scurll was also a match worthy of mention tonight. There were definite misfires, though, like the battle royal, which at least served a purpose and was quick, and the Women of Honor match, which wasn’t bad, but the finish left a sour aftertaste. LifeBlood vs. Villain Enterprises would be of note, as well, but the Bully Ray abusing LifeBlood and then leaving has jumped the shark, and it’s the last thing most fans are left thinking about, unfortunately. Action-wise, though, this was one of ROH’s stronger shows of late.
ROH’s Final Battle number one contender’s tournament wrapped up with two members of Villain Enterprises facing off in the finals at Glory By Honor tonight. PCO defeated Marty Scurll and will challenge for the ROH World Championship at Final Battle in Baltimore, Maryland on Friday, December 13.
The semifinals of the tournament also took place earlier in the night at Glory By Honor. PCO defeated Dalton Castle to advance, while Scurll defeated Jay Lethal.
Rush is the current ROH World Champion. Jeff Cobb is set to challenge for the title at ROH’s Honor United show in Bolton, England on Sunday, October 27.
Brody King and Flip Gordon — the other two members of Villain Enterprises — tried to help Scurll during his match against PCO, but PCO won after hitting his second top rope moonsault of the match.
After initially teasing tension between them, Scurll congratulated PCO in his post-match promo, said Final Battle may be PCO’s last chance to become a World Champion, and said no one deserves it more. Villain Enterprises stood united to close the show.
Villain Enterprises (Scurll, PCO & King) are the ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions.
The semifinals of ROH’s number one contender’s tournament are now set.
PCO vs. Dalton Castle and Marty Scurll vs. Jay Lethal are the two semifinal matches for the tournament. The semifinals and finals will both be held at Glory By Honor in New Orleans, Louisiana on Saturday, October 12.
Castle defeated Mark Haskins and Lethal defeated PJ Black in the remaining first-round matches at Saturday’s post-Death Before Dishonor television tapings. Black was replacing Bandido, who ROH announced was unable to wrestle on Saturday due to a knee injury.
Scurll and PCO advanced by winning first-round matches at Death Before Dishonor. Scurll defeated Colt Cabana, while PCO defeated Kenny King in a no disqualification match.
The winner of the tournament will challenge for the ROH World Championship at Final Battle in Baltimore, Maryland on Friday, December 13. Rush is the current champion. He’s scheduled to defend his title against Jeff Cobb at ROH’s Honor United show in Bolton, England on Sunday, October 27.