Two members of Villain Enterprises have advanced to the semifinals of ROH’s Final Battle number one contender’s tournament.
Marty Scurll defeated Colt Cabana in a first-round match at Friday night’s Death Before Dishonor pay-per-view. PCO also advanced to the semifinals by defeating Kenny King in a no disqualification match at Death Before Dishonor.
Scurll and PCO are on opposite sides of the bracket. The remaining two first-round matches are taking place at ROH’s post-Death Before Dishonor television tapings in Las Vegas tomorrow. In the semifinals, PCO will face the winner of Dalton Castle vs. Mark Haskins. Scurll will take on the winner of Jay Lethal vs. Bandido.
The semifinals and finals of the tournament are being held at Glory By Honor in New Orleans, Louisiana on October 12.
The winner of the tournament will challenge for the ROH World Championship at Final Battle in Baltimore, Maryland on December 13. Matt Taven is defending the ROH World Championship against Rush in the main event of Death Before Dishonor tonight.
Legendary composer Jim Johnston has created his first entrance theme since departing WWE.
ROH announced today that Johnston has composed a new theme for PCO. It will debut at ROH’s Death Before Dishonor pay-per-view tomorrow (Friday, September 27).
“It’s been great fun to work on a new theme for PCO and Ring of Honor,” Johnston told ROH’s website. “The energy there has been all positive, and it’s been my honor to hopefully make a small contribution to their continued success.”
“It really brings the essence of PCO and adds another dimension to the immortality,” PCO said about the theme. “It reinforces that PCO is not human. Adding this piece of the puzzle on top of everything else, the success of The French-Canadian Frankenstein becomes limitless.”
After working for WWE for more than 30 years, Johnston departed the company when his contract wasn’t renewed in 2017.
Death Before Dishonor is taking place at Sam’s Town Live in Las Vegas, Nevada. PCO is facing Kenny King in a Final Battle number one contender’s first-round match at the PPV.
The first round of the number one contender’s tournament is being held at Death Before Dishonor and ROH’s post-Death Before Dishonor television tapings. The semifinals and finals will take place at Glory By Honor on October 12, with the winner challenging for the ROH World Championship at Final Battle in December.
The night after he challenges for the ROH World Championship, Rush will be teaming up with his brother against Villain Enterprises.
ROH has announced Rush & Dragon Lee vs. Villain Enterprises (PCO & Brody King) for their post-Death Before Dishonor television tapings. They’re taking place at Sam’s Town Live in Las Vegas, Nevada on Saturday, September 28.
Sam’s Town Live is also hosting Death Before Dishonor on Friday, September 27. ROH World Champion Matt Taven will defend his title against Rush in the main event of the pay-per-view.
Death Before Dishonor is the same night as CMLL’s 86th Aniversario, where Lee is set to team with Gran Guerrero & Euforia against Mephisto, Angel de Oro & Niebla Roja.
Brody King is facing Jeff Cobb on the Death Before Dishonor PPV pre-show.
The first round of ROH’s number one contender’s tournament will take place at Death Before Dishonor and the post-PPV tapings. PCO vs. Kenny King and Marty Scurll vs. Colt Cabana are the first-round matches for the PPV. Bandido vs. Jay Lethal and Mark Haskins vs. Dalton Castle are the tournament matches for the tapings.
The winner of the tournament will challenge for the ROH World title at Final Battle in December.
A change to ROH’s TV tapings began in July, with the top matches from the tapings also streaming live on HonorClub.
After the participants were confirmed last week, ROH has now revealed the bracket for their number one contender’s tournament.
The left side of the bracket has PCO vs. Kenny King and Dalton Castle vs. Mark Haskins in the first round. The right side has Colt Cabana vs. Marty Scurll and Bandido vs. Jay Lethal.
The winner of the tournament will challenge for the ROH World Championship at Final Battle this December.
PCO vs. King and Cabana vs. Scurll are set for ROH’s Death Before Dishonor pay-per-view on Friday, September 27. Castle vs. Haskins and Bandido vs. Lethal will take place at the post-Death Before Dishonor television tapings on Saturday, September 28. Sam’s Town Live in Las Vegas, Nevada is hosting both shows.
ROH World Champion Matt Taven is defending his title against Volador Jr. at ROH & CMLL’s Global Wars Espectacular night two this Saturday. Rush will challenge for the ROH World title at the Death Before Dishonor PPV.
The semifinals and finals of the number one contender’s tournament are taking place at Glory By Honor at the UNO Lakefront Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana on Saturday, October 12.
The ROH Six-Man Tag Team titles will be on the line at Honor for All later this month.
ROH has announced that Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) will defend their titles against LifeBlood (Bandido, Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams) at Honor for All. The show is taking place at the Nashville Fairgrounds Sports Arena in Nashville, Tennessee on Sunday, August 25 and will air live on HonorClub.
Villain Enterprises were supposed to defend their titles against LifeBlood at Mass Hysteria last month, but Brody King couldn’t wrestle at the show due to an ankle injury. The night before Mass Hysteria, LifeBlood & PJ Black defeated Villain Enterprises (Scurll, PCO, King & Flip Gordon) at Manhattan Mayhem.
Villain Enterprises retained against Haskins, Williams & Black at June’s Best in the World pay-per-view. LifeBlood then defeated Villain Enterprises in a non-title street fight at the post-PPV television tapings.
Scurll vs. Bandido has been confirmed for ROH’s tapings at Center Stage in Atlanta, Georgia on Saturday, August 24. ROH announced last month that the top matches from their TV tapings will be live streamed on HonorClub going forward.
ROH has announced a tag match for Summer Supercard.
Villain Enterprises (PCO & Brody King) will face The Kingdom (Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) at the event. It’s taking place at the Mattamy Athletic Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada this Friday (August 9) and will air live on HonorClub.
PCO & King currently hold the ROH Six-Man Tag Team titles with Marty Scurll. Flip Gordon was revealed as the newest member of their Villain Enterprises group in June.
The Kingdom’s Matt Taven is defending his ROH World Championship against Alex Shelley at Summer Supercard.
Here’s the updated card for the show:
ROH Tag Team Champions The Briscoes defending against Guerrillas of Destiny in a Ladder War
ROH World Champion Matt Taven defending against Alex Shelley
ROH Television Champion Shane Taylor defending against Tracy Williams
Rush vs. Dalton Castle in a no DQ match
Women of Honor World Champion Kelly Klein defending against Tasha Steelz
Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham vs. LifeBlood (Bandido & Mark Haskins)
Villain Enterprises (PCO & Brody King) vs. The Kingdom (Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan)
Caristico, Soberano Jr. & Stuka Jr. vs. Barbaro Cavernario, Hechicero & Templario
ROH has announced that Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) will defend their titles against LifeBlood (Bandido, Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams) at Mass Hysteria. The show is taking place at the Lowell Memorial Auditorium in Lowell, Massachusetts on Sunday, July 21 and will air live on HonorClub.
Villain Enterprises retained their titles against Haskins, Williams & PJ Black at Best in the World in June. After the match, Flip Gordon was revealed as the newest member of Villain Enterprises. A brawl between Villain Enterprises and LifeBlood ended with Gordon hitting a 450 splash through a table on Williams.
Scurll, PCO, King & Gordon will face Bandido, Haskins, Williams & Black at ROH’s Manhattan Mayhem TV tapings on Saturday, July 20.
Here’s the current lineup for Mass Hysteria:
ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) defending against LifeBlood (Bandido, Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams)
Rush vs. Dalton Castle
The Bouncers (Beer City Bruiser & Brawler Milonas) challenging for the ROH Tag Team titles (The Bouncers will challenge the team that wins the Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa vs. The Briscoes NYC street fight from Manhattan Mayhem)
The Kingdom (ROH World Champion Matt Taven, Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) vs. Jay Lethal, Alex Shelley & Jonathan Gresham
ROH Television Champion Shane Taylor defending against Eli Isom
Back at the Odeum in Villa Park, Illinois, Ian Riccaboni and Colt Cabana called the action.
Hirooki Goto defeated Hikuleo
Hikuleo managed to get the control early with his power. However, Goto was not to be outmatched and nailed Hikuleo with a big clothesline, which earned him a two count.
Both men connected with hard strikes. Hikuleo took Goto to the top rope and hit a superplex. Goto then walked into a monster clothesline that turned him inside out. Goto ducked the next clothesline and blasted Hikuleo with a headbutt. Goto picked up Hikuleo, used a fireman’s carry onto his knee, and then hit his GTR finisher for the win.
– Kenny King talked backstage about the upcoming second match of his series with Jay Lethal.
– Kelly Klein and Jenny Rose came to the ring, but during the long video package where each match for the upcoming Best in the World pay-per-view was recapped, Allure jumped them from behind. It was Mandy Leon and Angelina Love that did the deed, setting up Klein & Rose vs. Leon & Love for Best in the World.
PJ Black & LifeBlood (Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams) defeated Shinobi Shadow Squad (Cheeseburger, Ryan Nova & Eli Isom)
Cheeseburger and Williams started off the match for their respective teams. A nice exchange of grappling kicked it off, but it ended in a stalemate. Each man tagged out, and that brought in Black and Isom. Black was knocked down with a big knee from Isom, and that took the show to commercial.
After the break, it was Nova in the ring with Haskins. Nova was mirroring Haskins until Williams got a blind tag and landed a wicked chop. Black tagged in and put Nova in a submission hold and tagged in Williams, who landed a leg drop off the second rope.
Nova fought back and was getting the better of the action until Haskins rolled through and picked him up into a slam. Haskins tagged in Black, who came in and nailed a huge moonsault. The Shinobi Shadow Squad was decimated by LifeBlood, which set up Black connecting with a huge moonsault double stomp onto Nova to pick up the pinfall victory.
Jeff Cobb defeated Jay Lethal, Rush, and PCO in a four corner survival match
ROH World Champion Matt Taven joined the announcers to call the main event.
Rush went after everyone early, but took himself out, and that left Lethal and PCO in the ring alone. Lethal knocked him to the floor but decided against doing his dive.
Cobb came in and shoulder checked Lethal and also decided not to dive on PCO. Rush knocked down Cobb and did his fake dive. Lethal came in and eventually dove on PCO, who caught him in mid-air into a chokeslam. PCO got in the ring and took out Rush with a rolling slam and a PCO bomb, but just got a two count.
Cobb went after PCO, but Rush inserted himself with a huge forearm on PCO. However, Rush ate a Cobb superkick and a delayed vertical suplex. PCO came in and took a belly-to-belly from Cobb. Lethal came in and got caught in a spinning back suplex. Cobb went for the cover on Lethal but only managed a two count.
Cobb went for the Tour of the Islands, but Lethal countered with a headscissors and a DDT on Cobb and Rush respectively. Lethal ascended the turnbuckle, and PCO followed suit. Cobb cut off both men and went for a double superplex. Then Rush came in and put all three men down with a stacked up powerbomb.
PCO was the first man up, and he landed a pop-up powerbomb on Lethal. Cobb broke up the pin. Cobb used a Samoan drop and a standing moonsault for the pin attempt on PCO, but Rush broke it up. Cobb charged into Rush but got tossed into the turnbuckle.
Lethal took a big Rush dropkick, but PCO broke up the pin. PCO leveled Rush with a clothesline and then did his patented flip dive to the apron and Rush moved.
Back in the ring, Lethal connected with the Lethal Injection on Rush. This brought Kenny King down to ringside. Lethal landed the Lethal Combination on Cobb, but King distracted Lethal, and that allowed Cobb to hit the Tour of the Islands on Lethal for the win.
The Allure (Mandy Leon & Angelina Love) w/ Velvet Sky defeated Notorious Nattie & Mazzerati in a dark match
Tracy Williams defeated Bully Ray in a no DQ match
Mazzerati defeated Danika Della Rouge
Mark Briscoe defeated Josh Woods
Jeff Cobb defeated PJ Black
The Bouncers (Beer City Bruiser & Brawler Milonas) defeated The Kingdom (Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan), Rush & Dalton Castle, Coast 2 Coast (LSG & Shaheem Ali), Silas Young & Shane Taylor, and the Voros Twins in a tag team gauntlet match
Jay Lethal defeated Jay Briscoe
ROH World Champion Matt Taven defeated Flip Gordon, Mark Haskins, and PCO in a Defy or Deny match
Ring of Honor’s State of the Art mini-tour came to Portland, Oregon on Sunday night, marking the company’s first-ever appearance in the city. I had the privilege of covering the show in person from PSU’s Viking Pavilion.
I was told by event staff that the approximate gate was 600. Viking Pavilion’s max capacity is 3,000.
The Allure (Mandy Leon & Angelina Love) defeated Mazzerati & Notorious Nattie in a dark match
Fine match before the live stream began. Despite there only being a few hundred people in the building, the crowd was loud and sound carried extremely well in the venue.
The Allure had new ring gear tonight. They scored the win after Angelina Love landed a Botox Injection kick (yakuza kick) on Mazzerati after Velvet Sky sprayed perfume in Mazzerati’s face.
– The live broadcast kicked off after this. Ian Riccaboni and Colt Cabana were on commentary. The crowd was pretty wild for Cabana and chanted his name when he came out. Referee Todd Sinclair also got a surprisingly boisterous reaction. Someone even made a sign of support for him.
– Bully Ray came out before the show could properly kick off. He cut a promo on people in the crowd, said one guy looked homeless and insulted his wife, then explained that he wanted a match now because he wanted to get out of Portland as soon as possible.
Tracy Williams then came out with a trash can filled with wrestling weapons (e.g. a kendo stick, a lid, possibly another kendo stick, etc.). He challenged Ray to a no DQ match to the delight of the crowd. Before he gave Sinclair the go ahead to ring the bell, Ray low blowed Williams.
Tracy Williams defeated Bully Ray in a no DQ match
Ray abused Williams for a few minutes. He bashed Williams with a garbage can, then did a couple of suplexes and screamed “I invented Suplex City, [expletive]!” The crowd loved when Ray said that.
Williams made a comeback and put Bully Ray into a rope-assisted triangle choke/armbar. Ray came back soon, though, and laid into Williams with the kendo stick. Williams turned the tide by locking an iron claw onto Ray’s, uh, crotchal region.
When Ray missed a diving senton from the top rope, Williams slid Ray into a crucifix pin and won. Sinclair counted quickly because earlier on in the match Ray gave Sinclair a hard time for not counting fast enough.
Ray attacked both Williams and Todd Sinclair after the bell. Mark Haskins of Lifeblood came out to make the save but was put through a table for his efforts. The crowd seemed to love Haskins, but also chanted for Bully Ray after he used the table.
There wasn’t much to this. The crowd liked the violence and enjoyed screaming at Bully Ray, and he sure was in full effect. This wasn’t Heatwave ’98 levels of brutality, but the sentiment was harsh and heel-appropriate.
Mazzerati defeated Danika Della Rouge
This was short. Mazzerati was trained by Kenny King and has wrestled in China. Della Rouge has flame-pink hair and has trained at the NJPW Dojo in LA. She also took part in a WWE tryout in Orlando earlier this year and has only been wrestling for a year. Mazzerati won with a hard low roundhouse kick.
The Allure came out after the match and ambushed both wrestlers. They marked Della Rouge’s forehead in lipstick with their Allure logo.
After the match, Mandy Leon and Velvet Sky got into it with a fan in a cutoff shirt in the front row. From my perspective, it looked as though Leon threw a pulled punch or slap to intimidate the fan. A portion of the crowd went “Oooh.” Leon didn’t look happy. Velvet Sky then began pointing in the direction beyond the bleachers while jawjacking with the same fan, challenging him to get in the ring.
The fan went on social media after the show and explained that Leon spit on him. I didn’t see this, though a few other fans who attended have corroborated the aforementioned spitting.
Mark Briscoe defeated Josh Woods
Hard-hitting brawl with lots of stiff strikes. Woods, a BJJ black belt, won ROH’s 2017 Top Prospect Tournament. He was great here. Mark Briscoe was loudly over with the Portland crowd. Instead of shaking hands, Briscoe face-mushed Woods and the match was underway.
Woods used a number of Greco-Roman style suplexes, both in the ring and on the floor. He has a great knack for taking what looks good in real combat — strikes, takedowns, suplexes, functional submissions — and blends it into his in-ring work without it ever feeling forced or unnatural.
Briscoe relished the styles clash and went hard at Woods with equally stiff chops and elbows. The two brawled around the ring for a bit in the middle of this. Briscoe at one point did a diving elbow drop to the floor from the second turnbuckle.
At one point Woods even gave Briscoe a German suplex to the floor from the apron and both landed with a loud thud. The crowd ate that one up.
In the end, Briscoe teased using a chair in the ring. When referee Benjamin Roberts took the chair from Briscoe, he turned his back, which allowed for Briscoe to sneak in a low blow on Woods. Briscoe then landed a Froggy Bow from the top for the win. Good match.
Jeff Cobb defeated PJ Black
Cobb had a solid following in Portland. He’s been wrestling in the Pacific Northwest for a few years now, making appearances for both Seattle’s Defy and Vancouver, Canada’s ECCW.
The match had an even tempo from the bell, lots of chess-wrestling early. Cobb later landed a beautiful dropkick, like almost Okada-level grace without the height, but still, what the hell? It’s amazing to see in person.
At one point when Black sprung off the top rope, Cobb caught him in mid-air, almost fell, then saved the spot, deadlifting Black from a powerslam hold to a vertical suplex hold. Big reaction from the crowd on that one. Black reversed the suplex into an inside cradle for two.
Later, when Cobb went for a standing moonsault, Black switched into a perpendicular position and caught Cobb in a Koji clutch submission. This was a really cool spot. Cobb inched his way to the bottom rope to break the hold.
Black later landed a nice flying double stomp and a springboard quebrada into the ring on Cobb for a count of two. It was here I noticed that the live stream started cutting in and out and it ended up missing good portions of this match. I assure you it was good.
The finish saw Cobb use a super German suplex from the top and followed with a regular German and then the Tour of the Islands swinging powerslam for the win. This was great live, but the streaming issues were disastrous.
The Bouncers won a tag team gauntlet match
The teams involved were: Silas Young & Shane Taylor, the Voros Twins, Rush & Dalton Castle, Coast 2 Coast, and The Kingdom (Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan)
The Voros Twins and Taylor & Young were in first. The Voros Twins are skinny blonde kids from Canada by way of Hungary. The crowd wasn’t familiar with them but were supportive by the end of their time in the match. After Taylor landed his Greetings From 216 fire-thunder driver on one Voros, Young put both of them into an abdominal stretch at the same time and they tapped.
Taylor then brought a cigarette into the ring and lit it for Young, who took a few drags off it while still holding that double-ab stretch. Very nice touch.
There were more issues with the live stream early on in the match.
Next team in was the “wild card” team of Rush and Dalton Castle. Castle was very popular and got a loud reaction when he arrived. Rush’s charisma is somehow even more intense and striking live than it is on television, he and wrestled like there were 10,000 people in the audience.
Rush and Castle argued with each other before they started wrestling. The two worked well together even though I don’t think they’ve ever tagged before. They did quite a bit of smooth double-team work which I don’t think anyone expected. Castle’s suplexes looked great and his new aggressive heel character looks to be working well. The two did a nice knee-strike to German suplex combo at one point. Rush landed a wicked Bull’s Horn basement dropkick to Young to eliminate him and Taylor.
Coast 2 Coast (Shaheem Ali & LSG) were in next and wrestled with a lot of energy. When Rush had another chance to use the Bull’s Horns, Castle tripped Rush. Rush then attacked Castle and they brawled to the floor, then to the stage. Rush choked Castle with some lighting equipment near commentary. The two were then counted out and eliminated.
The Bouncers were in next. Riccaboni referred to Milonas as a “walking strip mall.” Some of the stuff he does, the way he moves, it makes you forget how huge he is. He’s really agile. Bruiser, too. The crowd was pretty into the team and chanted “beer” a lot. The Bouncers hit Closing Time (aka the Sidewinder used by the Smokin’ Guns) on LSG to eliminate C2C.
Before this match, ROH staff carried Vinny Marseglia to the ring covered in what looked to be an old blanket. He waited under the ring and came out when The Kingdom’s music hit when TK O’Ryan walked to the ring. They had a short mini-match together, but the Bouncers won after Milonas hit a second rope superplex and Bruiser did a diving splash.
The Bouncers will get a future shot at the ROH Tag Team titles as a stipulation of winning here.
– Kenny King joined Ian Riccaboni and Colt Cabana on commentary for the next match.
Jay Lethal defeated Jay Briscoe
This was really good. It was a rematch from Final Battle 2015. Both received loud reactions, but Lethal got a superstar pop. Tons of streamers in the ring for him.
The two shook hands before the bell and the opening sequence saw some smooth and seamless counter-wrestling. Nothing at all felt rehearsed. These two have a unique chemistry together, and it now makes me want a best-of-three series between them instead of Lethal and Kenny King.
Briscoe got frustrated and teased using a chair. Lethal stopped the match and got on the mic to explain that Briscoe had changed since their match in 2015. He talked about the “real revolution” in wrestling and how ROH needed to get back on track and that instead of using a chair he needed to “man-up” and wrestle. The crowd was on board and so was Jay Briscoe after a moment.
Briscoe went back in the ring and they started with the fisticuffs, which I didn’t happen to see on the live stream because it kept cutting in and out again. If I didn’t happen to be in attendance I’d be here writing about the spinning ROH tribal logo.
Things heated up in and outside the ring after a few more minutes. Briscoe was bleeding above his eye but looked to be all right. Towards the end, just before Lethal would attempt a flying elbow drop from the top rope, Kenny King came to ringside to watch the match more closely and talk a bit of trash to Lethal, whom he beat on ROH TV this week in the first match of their best-of-three series.
Lethal was distracted and wasn’t able to land the elbow drop; Briscoe got his boot up, then hit a frankensteiner and a Jay Driller for a very close two. King then slid his folding chair in the ring for Briscoe to use. Briscoe considered using it but didn’t, but this cost him as he was caught with the Lethal Injection and then pinned for three.
King talked a lot of trash, but the sound on the stream cut out so I didn’t hear anything he said. Briscoe and Lethal shook hands after the match and it got a gigantic pop that you couldn’t hear on the live stream because the sound kept cutting out at key points.
ROH World Champion Matt Taven defeated Flip Gordon, Mark Haskins, and PCO in a Defy or Deny match
This was an elimination match. If Taven lost, the winner would receive a future shot at the ROH World Championship. If Taven won, the person he eliminated last would be unable to challenge for the World title for as long as Taven is champion.
ROH showed a Matt Taven promo beforehand. Ring announcer Bobby Cruise announced that due to injury Mark Haskins would not be competing because of an injury earlier in the night.
Everyone loved Gordon. People were stomping and banging the barricades for PCO when he came out. Taven got good heel heat.
After all three were in the ring, Haskins made his way out anyway, his arm in a sling, and grabbed the mic to say that he didn’t care that he wasn’t medically cleared because he desperately wanted Taven’s title. Riccaboni explained that Haskins had “signed a waiver” so that he could compete tonight. Riccaboni has been excellent at ad-libbing logical explanations on broadcasts, threading any of the bookers’ loose ends with a quick fix.
Taven was stellar in this match. He took “chickensh*t heel” to another level here, giving referee Todd Sinclair dozens of excuses on why he thought he didn’t have to get in the ring before the match was underway. Taven’s MO early on was to sneak a pin in on someone and roll out of the ring after a two count. He did this with both Gordon and Haskins. He jawjacked with the crowd a ton and even sat on a guy’s lap in the front row at one point.
PCO, Gordon, and Haskins all decided to triple-team Taven when they got him in the ring. They chopped him in the corner for a few minutes. Things then spilled to the floor and got crazy. Gordon powerbombed PCO to the floor from the apron, then Haskins did a tope suicida, followed by a huge Taven tope. The proverbial cherry on top was PCO moonsaulting himself onto the floor from the top, which garnered a massive reaction.
PCO did a double chokeslam and tombstone to all three wrestlers at one point. The Kingdom came out soon after and threw Taven a chair, but PCO grabbed it and used it on Taven instead, thus eliminating PCO from the match.
Before Taven pinned him a few minutes later, Haskins went on a last-minute tear and used a ton of power moves. He got a great reaction from the crowd.
Taven and Gordon had an exciting back and forth before Taven powerbombed Gordon through the announce table, which elicited a “holy sh*t” chant. Taven was later able to spike Gordon on his head with the Climax for the clean win. This was fantastic despite the sometimes convoluted rules of a Defy or Deny match.
After the broadcast finished, Taven got on the mic and called everyone virgins and said the next time he’s in Portland people can boo or cheer but it didn’t matter because he’s still Matt Taven.
Final thoughts —
This was a solid in-ring show with an enthusiastic crowd despite the embarrassing turnout.
Aside from a TV spot the day before, I saw zero advertisement for this card in town or on PSU’s campus. Some people even asked me what was happening at the venue before the show and had no idea it was happening, not even some of the lower echelon staff. This, plus the supposed menacing of a fan backstage by Bully Ray, could turn out to be the beginning of a very bad professional look for ROH in the coming months.
From Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Ian Riccaboni and Caprice Coleman called the action.
ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (PCO, Marty Scurll & Brody King) defeated Jay Lethal, Jeff Cobb & Rush to retain their titles
Lethal and PCO started it off for their respective teams. Lethal nailed PCO with a lot of kicks, but PCO was barely phased. PCO begged Lethal to dive on him, which distracted Lethal long enough for Scurll to cut off Lethal. PCO tagged in Scurll, and Lethal tagged in Rush.
Kenny King and Amy Rose joined the announce team mid-match and Kenny immediately brought up his “eye surgery.” Throughout the match, he kept asking what was happening because he couldn’t see.
In the ring, Rush and Scurll wrestled to a stalemate. Rush tagged in Cobb, and Scurll tagged in King. A quick exchange led to Cobb nailing a dropkick. However, King fired back and landed a running crossbody and then pulled off a hurricanrana on Cobb.
King was sent to the floor by Rush. Lethal dove on him, but King caught him. With a kick assist by Scurll, King suplexed Lethal onto the floor.
After the break, Lethal was in the ring with King attempting to suplex him but instead used a cutter to drop the big man. King tagged in Scurll, and Lethal tagged in Rush. Rush ran wild and decimated his foes until he got arrogant and Scurll cut him off with a superkick to the knee.
Scurll called for the chicken wing, but Rush nailed him with a headbutt and tagged in Cobb, who came in and gave two stalling suplexes to King and PCO. He then launched Scurll and followed it up with a moonsault.
PCO broke up the pin, but Cobb managed to hoist King and Scurll up at the same time for a double suplex. This brought in PCO, who came in and tossed Cobb to the floor. King hit a flipping dive onto Cobb and Lethal, then PCO hit a Scurll-assisted flip dive of his own and took out all three of their opponents.
Back in the ring, Scurll and King combined forces to hit a sunset German suplex on Cobb. They then hit a 619 and cannonball combo on him. Scurll tagged in PCO and grabbed Cobb, but he ate a Cobb superkick. Lethal then came off the top with an elbow, but PCO stood up. Rush then hit him with an overhead belly-to-belly.
Lethal again hit a top rope elbow, but Scurll broke up the pin. In the chaos, Lethal hit a Lethal Injection on Scurll and went for it again on King, but King caught him on his shoulders and landed a crazy spinning powerbomb. PCO followed it up with a moonsault, which got the win for Villain Enterprises.
During the commercial, as Lethal was leaving, Kenny King jumped Lethal from behind and used his cane to choke him out.
ROH World Champion Matt Taven defeated Flip Gordon to retain his title
After an early exchange sent Taven to the floor, Gordon hit a suicide dive. As Gordon was on the ring apron, TK O’Ryan attempted to get involved. That distracted Gordon enough to allow Taven to knock him to the floor. Taven launched Gordon into the ring post and then threw him back into the ring.
Gordon got the advantage and landed a kick and a one-legged moonsault. Taven kicked out at two and bailed to the floor. Taven baited him to the outside and then drilled Gordon in the knee. Taven went to follow that up with a running dropkick to the floor, but Gordon evaded and landed a superkick. Gordon charged after Taven, but Taven hip tossed him into the guardrail.
After the commercial, Taven was attacking Gordon’s injured knee with punches. Gordon fought to his feet and landed a knee to the head of Taven. However, Taven kept going back to the knee with a dragon screw leg whip, which sent Gordon to the floor. As he was out there, Taven distracted the referee. That allowed O’Ryan to attack Gordon.
Taven locked on a half Boston crab back inside the ring, but Gordon got to the ropes. Finally, Gordon managed to hit a springboard spear to buy himself some recovery time. A striking exchange ended with a huge knee by Gordon. He then hit an inverted driver to get a two count.
After the final break, Taven had Gordon perched atop the turnbuckle and landed a superplex, but it was Gordon who hooked the inside cradle. He only got a two count. Gordon fired up and landed a Russian leg sweep from the second rope and a spinning Falcon Arrow, getting a two count.
Taven spit in the face of Gordon and landed a pop-up powerbomb and a Just the Tip knee. He went for a cover, but Gordon kicked out at two.
Gordon fought back up and hit a swinging TKO. He went up top, but as he was on the top rope, the red balloons floated up from ringside, distracting Gordon long enough to allow Taven to hit the Climax DDT off the top to pick up the victory and retain his title.
Three new NWA champions were crowned tonight at the Crockett Cup tournament in Concord, North Carolina.
The ROH team of Brody King and PCO defeated Royce Isaacs and Thomas Latimer (formerly Bram from Impact) to win not only the Crockett Cup tournament, but the NWA Tag Team titles, which have been vacant since 2017. Isaacs and Latimer won the wildcard battle royal and earned a spot in the tournament in the first match of the show, but lost in the finals after PCO hit a moonsault on Latimer following a fireman’s carry Michinoku driver from King.
Earlier in the card, Allysin Kay defeated Santana Garrett to win the vacant NWA Women’s championship. Garrett went to the top rope for a shining star press, but Kay moved out of the way and pinned Garrett with a spear to win the championship for the first time. The match originally was supposed to be Jazz defending the title against Kay, but on 4/22 it was announced that she would be vacating the title after 948 days due to personal and medical reasons.
Colt Cabana later defeated Willie Mack to win the NWA National title after scoring the win with the Superman pin, ending Mack’s 184 day run as champion. James Storm made an appearance after the match, challenging Cabana to a future title match.
ROH has announced several matches for War of the Worlds: Buffalo, including a Six-Man Tag Team title defense by Villain Enterprises.
Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) will defend their titles against Jeff Cobb, Yuji Nagata & Satoshi Kojima in Buffalo. The show is the first stop on the War of the Worlds tour.
Cobb is the ROH Television Champion and NEVER Openweight Champion. He defeated Will Ospreay in a title vs. title match at G1 Supercard to win the NEVER Openweight title.
War of the Worlds: Buffalo is taking place at Buffalo Riverworks on Wednesday, May 8. There are three other shows on the tour, with stops in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on May 9, Grand Rapids, Michigan on May 11, and Villa Park, Illinois on May 12. The Villa Park show is a television taping, while the rest of the tour will stream on HonorClub.
Guerrillas of Destiny defending their ROH Tag Team titles against Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham is the main event of the Buffalo show. Here’s the updated card:
ROH Tag Team Champions Guerrillas of Destiny (Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa) defending against Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham
ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) defending against Jeff Cobb, Yuji Nagata & Satoshi Kojima
Flip Gordon vs. Bandido
Rush vs. Silas Young
Los Ingobernables de Japon (SANADA & EVIL) vs. LifeBlood (Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams)
Hikuleo vs. Shane Taylor
PJ Black vs. Alex Coughlin
The Kingdom (Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) vs. Clark Connors & Karl Fredericks
– PCO is set to challenge for the Ring of Honor World Championship for the first time in his career.
In a video update that ROH posted today, it was announced that Matt Taven will defend his ROH World title against PCO at the promotion’s War of the Worlds tour show in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on Thursday, May 9.
PCO pinned Taven in a six-man tag match at ROH’s Masters of the Craft event on Sunday night. Villain Enterprises (PCO, Marty Scurll & Brody King) retained their Six-Man Tag Team titles against The Kingdom (Taven, Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) in the match.
Taven won the ROH World title at G1 Supercard, defeating Jay Lethal and Scurll in a triple threat ladder match.
– Lethal & Jonathan Gresham will challenge Guerrillas of Destiny (Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa) for the ROH Tag Team titles at the War of the Worlds show in Buffalo, New York on Wednesday, May 8. That was confirmed after Lethal & Gresham defeated Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams in a 30-minute Iron Man number one contender’s match at Masters of the Craft.
Guerrillas of Destiny currently hold both the ROH and IWGP Tag Team titles. They defeated PCO & King, SANADA & EVIL, and The Briscoes in a fatal four-way title vs. title match at G1 Supercard.
– The War of the Worlds tour also has stops in Grand Rapids, Michigan on Saturday, May 11 and Villa Park, Illinois on Sunday, May 12. ROH has announced NJPW’s Guerrillas of Destiny, Satoshi Kojima, and Yuji Nagata for the tour thus far. Hirooki Goto will also be wrestling at the Toronto, Grand Rapids, and Villa Park shows.
A recap aired highlighting the feud between The Kingdom and Villain Enterprises.
Dalton Castle joined Ian Riccaboni and Caprice Coleman on commentary for the first match to scout his upcoming opponent, Rush.
Rush defeated Mark Haskins
Some fast switches led to a standoff. Rush bated Haskins to chop him repeatedly. Rush followed up with a monster chop and the brawl spilled to the floor.
Back in the ring, Rush hit Haskins with kicks to the chest. Haskins fired back with kicks of his own and finally knocked Rush down with a leg lariat. He followed that up with a suicide dive to the floor. He tossed Rush back in and went for a pumphandle driver, but it didn’t land flush. That allowed Rush to connect with a big German suplex.
Rush faked his running stomp in the corner — which was a mistake as his arrogance allowed Haskins to lock on a triangle submission attempt. Rush powerbombed him to escape. Haskins got to his feet and landed a roll-through slam. Haskins hit a tornado DDT, but each man got to their feet and hit a simultaneous big boot to put each other down.
Each wrestler looked worse for wear, but Haskins ran at Rush. He launched Haskins into the corner and followed that up with his running double stomp to pick up the win.
In the ring, Matt Taven and Marty Scurll argued over who should get the World title shot at G1 Supercard. Jay Lethal offered a triple threat — but each man said no, citing that they didn’t want to be in a match where the other man could lose it for them.
Lethal then offered a triple threat ladder match and they all agreed.
Jeff Cobb offered to put his ROH Television title on the line if Will Ospreay would put up his NEVER Openweight Championship in their match at Madison Square Garden.
A recap showing Mayu Iwatani defeating Kelly Klein played. Klein then spoke about how the loss made her question who she really is. Klein said that she needs to change her approach to Iwatani. Klein and Iwatani are tied at two wins each going into the MSG show.
Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) defeated The Kingdom (Matt Taven, Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) to retain their titles
A brawl ensued, but Brody King broke it up with a huge flip dive to give the Villains the advantage. In the ring, Scurll was about to attack the fingers of Taven, but The Kingdom broke it up.
The Kingdom cut off Scurll and went to work. Marseglia started it off with a double underhook backbreaker. Next, Taven came in with some big punches. Finally, Scurll landed an enzuigiri, allowing him to tag in PCO.
PCO came in and cleared house. He landed a pop-up powerbomb on O’Ryan and a package piledriver on Taven. Marseglia hit a tornado cutter but missed with a flipping senton. The Kingdom were forced to retreat to the floor.
Scurll launched PCO over the top rope onto Taven and Marseglia. Chaos reigned on the floor. Eventually, The Kingdom got back in control by swarming King. They used the Rock Star Supernova slam on King, but he wasn’t the legal man. All three members of The Kingdom did dives on PCO, but they didn’t stop him. PCO then hit a flip dive on Taven. That sent us to the final commercial break.
Marseglia powerbombed PCO off the apron onto the steel ramp. That finally neutralized the big man. This left Scurll alone in the ring with O’Ryan, and Scurll managed to catch him in the chicken wing to get the submission win. Villain Enterprises are the new ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions.
A Tag Team title change with G1 Supercard implications took place at Friday’s ROH 17th Anniversary pay-per-view.
Villain Enterprises (PCO & Brody King) defeated The Briscoes in a no disqualification match to win the ROH Tag Team titles. With that, PCO & King are currently set to face IWGP Tag Team Champions Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa in a title vs. title match with both sets of championships on the line at G1 Supercard.
In other developments for G1 Supercard, ROH Television Champion Jeff Cobb challenged NEVER Openweight Champion Will Ospreay to a title vs. title match, Dalton Castle challenged Rush, and Bully Ray said he’ll be having a New York City street fight.
Castle was on commentary for Rush vs. Bandido and then got into the ring after Rush won. Castle challenged Rush to a match at G1 Supercard, with the storyline being that Castle wants to get back on track by facing someone who’s undefeated in singles matches in ROH.
Bully Ray interrupted rapper Mega Ran’s performance at the 17th Anniversary PPV, talked about wrestling at Madison Square Garden, and issued an open challenge to anyone in the professional wrestling business to face him in an NYC street fight at G1 Supercard. Bully Ray said the person he wants to face knows that he’s talking about them.
At one point, the crowd chanted for Flip Gordon. Bully Ray mentioned that he didn’t say “I Quit” in the I Quit match he lost to Gordon at Final Battle.
G1 Supercard is taking place at Madison Square Garden on Saturday, April 6.