Tag Archives: WWE

Northern Lights Bomb Wrestling Review #1

Hey folks!

Welcome to the Northern Lights Bomb Wrestling Review #1!

The DEAN~!!! show I reviewed here was such a great tribute to Dean Rasmussen. Dean was such a huge part of my early getting to know wrestling outside the WWF period that I want to pay homage to him, as well. So, here we are, this new format. In the past, I updated you on what I was watching right now with weekly or monthly posts ranking the matches, and this will be taking its place. Yes, it will update you on what I’m watching, but it will not just cover the great matches in a list form. I feel like that method was getting rather limiting.

The first one is a little slim. It was a rough week watching the Maple Leafs try everything to give me home, only to tear it apart in game 7 overtime. That said, I did get in some good stuff!

*****

My Greatest Wrestler Ever (GWE) Project list for 2026 will not be like my list from 2016. I am trying to go through as many years as possible, put together Wrestler of the Year lists, and then use that to build my overall GWE list. That means I’m watching random 2007 matches at the moment!

Arisa Nakajima & Azumi Hyuga
vs
Meiko Satomura & Tyrannosaurus Okuda
(Sendai Girls Live Vol. 13: Dignity, 2007-10-05)

The great Kadaveri sent this to me as an obscure 2007 match that covers many of the WOTY contenders, and, oh boy, was it a blast! Of course, Nakajima and Satomura are all-time greats, but every time I see Hyuga, I start to think she’s one of the most untalked about greats around. She’s such a great Joshi face! Okuda is someone I forgot existed, but she had the best name and turns out to be a pretty cool Satomura trainee in her mold.

Satomura is a complete beast here, and every time she’s in the match, it gets better and better. That’s not to discount the others who were all good, and the match picked up for the last third. The finishing sequence with Satomura going for it was great, only for her to be taken out with a death knee! Definitely a match to watch! [7.25/10]

Azumi Hyuga vs Kaori Yoneyama
(JWP Climax, 2007-12-09)

Continuing with Hyuga, we have her in a big title defense against the future Fukigen Death, another of the all-time underrated great wrestlers.

It started off as a pretty traditional big title match, with Hyuga getting the chance to play the ace favourite and Yoneyama working completely from underneath. The match started to feel really special about 2/3 of the way when Yoneyama made a great comeback run. Her offense is unreal with the locomotion Germans and senton bombs! From here, all of the counters from both were so quick and unique. She does get cut off, though, on the floor. A superplex is countered, and Yoneyama hits an insane Psicosis senton to the floor! As they continued the struggle was real between them, especially them fighting over a top rope move. The counters continued to be unique and great with such speed and execution. Yoneyama has such amazing babyface fire near the end here. However, there were a few too many kick outs, and the finish felt a little anti-climatic, keeping it from a Greatest Match Ever type match. Great, though, and should be watched. [8.5/10]

*****

Moving on to current wrestling! I skimmed through WWE Backlash France from May 4th. This is the first taped event I can remember seeing from France since 1989. That show had that amazing Rockers vs Fabulous Rougeau Brothers, which you need to watch. The crowd was great then, and it was absolutely electric on this show.

The opener was Kevin Owens and Randy Orton against The Bloodline’s Solo Sikoa and Tama Tonga. It starts with a brawl that security fails to break up, which causes Nick Aldiss, the GM, to come out and make it a Street Fight. This was a fun all over the arena brawl. Owens doing a splash off the barricade, followed by Orton teasing one only to step down and then ram Tonga into the steps was a pretty great moment. This match wasn’t incredibly violent, but the super hot crowd and out of control plunder nature of the match really made it a blast. It’s still jarring to hear Michael Cole mention IWGP Titles and wrestlers like EVIL at WWE events. Another jarring moment was when a heel (Tonga) realized a babyface made a comeback behind him because the crowd went nuts. After Owens Falcon Arrow’s Tonga through four chairs, it looks over, but Tanga Loa debuts breaks up the pin and gives The Bloodline the win. (7.25/10)

Next had Bayley defending her title against Naomi and Tiffany Stratton. It was fun, but a three-way. As others have said, Stratton is going to be a star; she has so much talent. I skipped over Damian Priest defending his title against Jey Uso. Asuka and Kairi Sane defended the tag titles against Bianca Belair and Jade Cargill was next and good! KAIRI, as a stooging heel getting killed by Belair and Cargill, is pretty great pro-wrestling. There was a weird referee moment where he claimed Kairi wasn’t legal and didn’t count a pin but then just let it continue with her in the ring. What kept this match off the spreadsheet was the stretch after the hot tag until the finish, which felt useless. The finish was great, though, with Jade doing an insane power move, followed by Belair doing her move onto Asukla onto Kairi for the win. I skipped over the main of Cody Rhodes and AJ Styles. People seemed to love it, but I can’t bring myself around to watch AJ Styles anymore.

Probably worth a watch, as everything was decent, and the crowd was amazing!

*****

Joshi Night is a great tradition on Discord. Every Sunday at 4 PM EST, we gather to watch Joshi chronologically and text chat here. It’s always a great way to end the week, and this one was no exception. If you miss us live, everything is achieved on that link, so check it out!

We started with two matches from AJW’s August 22, 1997 show. It was entitled “Osaka Queen Holy Night,” which is fun. I love show titles for some reason. We started with LCO (Etsuko Mita & Mima Shimoda) vs Kyoko Inoue & Manami Toyota, and it was a great start. Literally, with LCO bringing in chairs and causing a crowd brawl. It settled into a pretty fun tag match with some big moves and the fun of LCO breaking up pins with chairs. This wasn’t quite the level of the last few LCO matches we watched, but it’s worth watching. [7/10] That was followed up by this weird LLPW vs AJW tag match showcasing Kumiko Maekawada & Yumiko Hotta vs Mizuki Endo & Shinobu Kandori. If you like kicks, submissions, and shitty stuff, this was your jam. The highlight here was Kandori and Hotta both removing their shoes and socks and then doing an old school UFC grappling contest in the later stages of the match. If you like this stuff, it might be worth a watch.

Onto an LLPW show from September 11, 1997, with a trios team of Carol Midori, Mikiko Futagami, & Yasha Kurenai vs Harley Saito, Mizuko Endo, & Noriyo Tateno, and it was a match. Fun stuff mixed in, but too long and too much happening with no purpose.

Next we get three matches from GAEA Double Destiny from September 20, 1997. We start with a fun tag match with KAORU & Sakura Hirota vs Sonoko Kato & Toshiyo Yamada. It’s wild how much better Yamada has been since joining GAEA after years of middling time in AJW. Hirota is a joy to watch with her enthusiasm, and this was just a good old bag of fun tag match! We follow that up with the biggest disappointment of the night. Kyoko Inoue vs Meiko Satomura is joined in progress about halfway through, and it looked freaking great, but there is no full version out there. Satomura worked the arm like a boss, and Inoue’s selling was unreal. This was the first time I can remember Satomura looking like such a big star. The nearfalls were great, and you have to see the back suplex Inoue throws while leaning to the finish!

We then get Aja Kong vs Chigusa Nagayo! I know!!! Weirdly this legendary battle is not the main event, but there is a second title match with Devil Masami facing the winner, so I guess that makes sense. Nagayo had a ridiculously cool mask and cape prematch!

This had one of my new favourite starts to a match ever, as Kong immediately hit an Uraken and then kicked about six of her soy canisters into the crowd. She then grabbed the remaining two and bonked them off Nagayo’s head into the crowd as well! So great! We settled into a dream match between two badass legends that went as well as possible without it being a violent war. Nagayo worked the arm of Kong well here and then hit Hokuto’s top rope flipping dive, which she learned on our last week of watching from teaming with her. Another great nearfall was the top rope Running Three! That starts a great finishing sequence with Nagayo trying her own Uraken, but Kong ducks and hits hers. Kong then goes for the win with a final Uraken, which gets countered into an armbar for a quick tapout! Amazing finish and an amazing match. Go watch it! [8.5/10]

The final match of Joshi Night was Hikari Fukuoka defending her JWP Openweight Title against my favourite Command Bolshoi, also from September 20, 1997. This is a match I had seen before, and I love it. It’s all about Bolshoi trying to prove she is more than just a clown and be a serious title contender. She sneak attacks from the beginning and fights so hard to keep up with the larger Fukuoka. So much so that she unmasks herself to try to hype herself up and prove she is an equal. Some of the dives by Fukuoka were unreal, and the avoidance of each other’s big strikes was great. During the match, Fukuoka worked over Bolshoi’s legs a lot, trying to ground her, too. After some killer nearfalls, it all ends with Fukuoka hitting one of her best moonsault double stomps ever for the win. She CRUSHES her. A great must watch match as well! [8.5/10]

*****

That’s all I could get to this week, but next week, there will be more!

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We also have a lovely Discord community where we can discuss the greatest wrestler ever project and anything else under the sun. It’s an open and welcoming group, and I am very proud of it. Everyone is welcome:

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We also do weekly watch-along parties with chat!

How Can You Help?

Callen-Lorde is the global leader in LGBTQ healthcare. Since the days of Stonewall, we have been transforming lives in LGBTQ communities through excellent comprehensive care, provided free of judgment and regardless of ability to pay. In addition, we are continuously pioneering research, advocacy, and education to drive positive change around the world because we believe healthcare is a human right.

Please donate to Callen Lorde!

The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Month (April 2024)

With WrestleMania weekend, I won’t have too much new to say here, but here is my list. Note every match, even the honourable mentions, are 8/10 rated or higher. It’s been a great month of watching for me!

Honourable Mentions

  • Aja Kong vs Kyoko Inoue, AJW, August 10, 1997
  • Aja Kong vs Manami Toyota, AJW, August 20, 1997
  • Etsuko Mita & Mima Shimoda vs Kumiko Maekawa & Tomoko Watanabe, AJW, August 20, 1997
  • Meiko Satomura vs Shinobu Kandori, LLPW, February 12, 2007
  • Chris Hero vs Eddie Kingston, CZW, April 7, 2007
  • Bryan Danielson vs Nigel McGuinness, ROH, June 9, 2007
  • Cheerleader Melissa vs Wesna, ChickFight, June 17, 2007
  • Chris Hero vs Equinox, Chikara, November 7, 2007
  • Daniel Makabe vs Timothy Thatcher, ACTION DEAN~!!!, April 4, 2024
  • Masha Slamovich vs Syuri, GCW/JCW, April 4
  • Lyra Valkyrie vs Roxanne Perez, NXT, April 6, 2024
  • Mayu Iwatani vs Sareee, Stardom, April 27, 2024

#11
Dr. Wagner Jr. vs Mistico
“Best 2/3 Falls”
CMLL Super Viernes
July 27, 2007

Wagner comes out as the most bad ass rudo in the first fall, just beating down Mistico and then pinning him with a vicious power bomb and ripping off his mask! The second fall, Mistico returns with a new mask and jumps from the balcony onto Wagner, but soon Wagner has ripped his mask and blooded him until a great comeback to even it off. In the final fall, Mistico fights back and rips Wagner’s mask. The crowd is really hot for this, and they work a really dramatic ending with Mitsico so great as the underdog! The speed at which Mistico hits dives is impressive. The real flaw of the match is that after Wagner power bombs Mistico on the floor and the doctors make sure he’s not dead, someone attacks Wagner, laying him out for Mistico to jump back in and win. Regardless, a great match,

#10
John Cena (c) vs Randy Orton
“WWE Heavyweight Championship”
WWE SummerSlam
August 26, 2007

This match is shockingly great, as they go with a simpler structure and work in a more traditional format. Orton goes full work on the neck with headlocks and stomps, while Cena fights completely from underneath with great hope spots. The teases of the big moves were great, especially since this match wasn’t overloaded with those spots like most WWE main event matches of the time. Orton was so focused on the neck it was well paid off. The finish was a shocking surprise FU by Cena for the win; it was kind of a play on Orton’s RKO that was out of nowhere. A great match I had completely forgotten about.

#9
Roman Reigns (c) vs Cody Rhodes
“WWE Undisputed Universal Championship”
WWE WrestleMania XL: Sunday
April 7, 2024

Thoughts here, on my review of the full WrestleMania show.

#8
Chris Hero vs Eddie Kingston
“Last Man Standing”
IWA Mid South Petty Invitational: Night 2
September 29, 2007

You know this is going to be a fight when it starts with them already brawling, appearing through the curtains. It didn’t let up, and the first half of the match is brawling all over the arena. Chris Hero is the best, so logical and smart. Things like being disadvantaged and shoving the table into Kingston to get distance are perfect. Hero’s selling even makes Kingston’s Kawada chops look good. The stuff in the ring is even better, with Hero mostly in control and Kingston fighting from underneath. A lot of the work is on Kingston’s hand, which is great, but sadly, Kingston essentially abandons it later. A real stand-out spot was Hero hooking a Boston Crab and then putting a chair under him so he sat down, and the chair drove into the back of Kingston’s neck. He was so great in this. Kingston bled from under the eye, which added to the gritty feeling of the fight. The back-and-forth shoot head butts were disgusting. After using mostly chairs in the match, Hero got frustrated by Kingston just breaking the ten-count, so he grabbed the guardrail. This led to an amazing finishing sequence that ended with Hero taking a Saito Suplex on the guardrail. Absolute beast of a fight here!

#7
Rhea Ripley (c) vs Becky Lynch
“WWE Women’s World Championship”
WWE WrestleMania XL: Saturday
April 6, 2024

Thoughts here, on my review of the full WrestleMania show.

#6
Claudio Castagnoli vs El Generic
“Race to the Top Tournament Final”
ROH Race to the Top
July 28, 2007

Another amazing underdog performance from Generico, as he tries to play Cinderella in the tournament and upset the bigger, stronger favourite, Claudio. I love that it took its time to build the match up because, by the time we got to the nearfalls, in the end, they all felt very special. Generico had amazing selling and hope spots, and Claudio has a great power offense. A perfect marriage in styles.

#5
Ayako Hamada vs Meiko Satomura
“Battlefield WAR Tournament Final”
Sendai Girls Live Vol. 10
July 22, 2007

Apparently, 2007 was the year of the classic tournament finale matches. These two battled, mostly with some of the most brutal strikes ever. The kicks of both of them were unreal! The real contrast is that Satomura would go for submissions, especially working over Hamada’s shoulder, while Hamada would use flying to try to get the advantage. Everything they did was incredible and vicious, and the hot crowd lost their mind for the great finishing sequence!

#4
The Briscoes vs Kevin Steen & El Generico
“Boston Street Fight”
ROH Death Before Dishonor V
August 10, 2007

This was one of the damnest fights. They were in street clothes and fought all over the arena, beating each other into bloody messes. What I really love is how organic the weapons were, how things were set up, and how they were used because they just happened to be there. Having it as teams meant it was constantly a war flipping between the two pairs. It did get a little too many big moves near the end, keeping it from a GME potential, but it’s pretty damn close and a must-watch.

#3
Gunther (c) vs Sami Zayn
“WWE Intercontinental Championship”
WWE WrestleMania XL: Saturday
April 6, 2024

Thoughts here, on my review of the full WrestleMania show.

#2
Demus vs Mad Dog Connelly
“Dog Collar”
ACTION DEAN~!!!
April 4, 2024

Thoughts here, on my review for the full DEAN show!

#1
IYO SKY (c) vs Bayley
“WWE Women’s Championship”
WWE WrestleMania XL: Sunday
April 7, 2024

Thoughts here, on my review of the full WrestleMania show.

Twitter

You can discuss this on Twitter!

Discord

We also have a lovely discord community to discuss the greatest wrestler ever project and anything else under the sun. It’s an open and welcoming group, and I am very proud of it. Everyone is welcome:

Join:

https://t.co/0pOARzaXHD

We also do weekly watch-along parties with chat!

How Can You Help?

Callen-Lorde is the global leader in LGBTQ healthcare. Since the days of Stonewall, we have been transforming lives in LGBTQ communities through excellent comprehensive care, provided free of judgment and regardless of ability to pay. In addition, we are continuously pioneering research, advocacy, and education to drive positive change around the world because we believe healthcare is a human right.

Please donate to Callen Lorde!

WrestleMania XL Review

I haven’t been this excited about a WrestleMania since 2004. Vince is gone, and they have an SA policy. Kevin Dunne is gone, too. The production is great, and the storylines heading into this one have been amazing. LFG!

WrestleMania XL: Saturday
April 6, 2024
Philadelphia, PA
Lincoln Financial Field

The new button was pretty cool.

After a nice intro video, Michael Cole gives us a weather update and wonders how the cold will affect the wrestlers. That’s a nice touch.

Hey, it’s the proper USA anthem, not the song Vince always wanted. Truly, this is a new era!

Speaking of a new era, Trips is here to tell us it’s a new era.

I will note here the production of WWE has gotten so fucking good. It’s great throughout, and it’s shocking how good it is since it was so shit even 6 months ago.

1. Rhea Ripley (c) vs Becky Lynch
“WWE Women’s World Championship”

Becky gets a cool entrance with her reading from her book, while Rhea gets a band to play her theme song!

Becky has had strep throat all week, so she’s the clear underdog. So much already feels different.

Becky tries to work the arm, but Rhea is just too damn strong, and she takes complete control for most of the early part of the match. When she goes to the top, Becky armbars her down to continue her strategy. Every time Becky gets the advantage with the arm, the power of Rhea is too much. That continues when Becky moves, and Rhea hits the post with the arm. Becky looks to win with the flying leg drop, but that gets countered into Rhea’s “Prison Trap,” but Becky rolls her up for a nice near fall. Both hit their finishers for more awesome nearfalls! A superplex by Becky turns into the Dis-Arm-Her after working the arm all match, but Rhea is too strong; she stands up, taking Becky to the outside with a move, and turns into an electric chair on the floor. Rhea hit a frog splash for a massive two! Becky tries the Manhandle Slam, but Rhea counters with a Riptide into the buckle and then a Riptide for the win! Great opener!

Rating: 8.75/10

Pretty Deadly takes the time to insult every team in the upcoming ladder match.

2. The Judgement Day (Finn Bálor & Damian Priest) (c) vs #DIY (Johnny Gargano & Tommaso Ciampa) vs The Awesome Truth (The Miz & R-Truth) vs The New Day (Kofi Kingston & Xavier Wood) vs Austin Theory & Grayson Waller vs New Catch Republic (Pete Dunne & Tyler Bate)
“Six-Pack Ladder Match for the WWE Undisputed Tag Team Championship”

The gimmick here is both sets of titles are hanging, and they are really pushing that the Championships will be split up here.

I have to admit I laughed at R-Truth getting the hot tag and then going through Cena’s move set and getting a “pin” in the ladder match. #DIY doing DX moves less fun, but R-Truth tells them to go for one belt while he goes for the other. However, Waller graps the SmackDown Tag Team Titles to win those. For his trouble, he gets power bombed through a ladder to the floor.

The Raw Tag Team Titles are still in play, so we continue. We get all the usual ladder match stuff you would expect until it looks like R-Truth has won. JD McDonagh runs out and makes the save for Judgement Day. When it looks like they will retain, New Day makes the save, by the way, dressed as Apolo Creed and Rocky from the first Rocky film. We get more teases, and eventually, R-Truth pulls down the belts for his first win at WrestleMania.

Rating: Some Fun Stuff and Ladders

Michael Cole brings up the weather again, I think he is really cold tonight.

3. Rey Mysterio & Andrade vs Santos Escobar & “Dirty” Dominik Mysterio

Andrade off the top rope with Rey on his shoulders to the floor was a wild dive! We settle down, and Mysterio works face in peril. Andrade gets a hot tag, and he looks so great throughout this match, but he doesn’t get the win. Rey hits 6-1-9 and Andrade hits a moonsault from the top to the floor, but Escobar’s group cheats to go back into control. All of the seconds start doing dives and brawling, leaving Escobar and Rey alone. Two large dudes in Mysterio masks attack, and Rey and Andrade win. LWO hugs the large dudes, and it’s Jason Kelcie and another football from the Eagles.

Rating: Good Match

4. Jey Uso vs Jimmy Uso

The video hype package for this match is really great!

Lil’ Wayne raps Jey to the ring.

Because they are twins and longtime tag partners, it makes sense that this match was mostly mirroring and very even, but that doesn’t make it the most exciting match. Jey finally gets control, Jimmy begs for forgiveness, and everybody in the crowd knows he’s insecure. Sadly, Jey does not, and Jimmy takes advantage. However, a comeback by Jey and a big splash give him the win.

Rating: I’m Sure It Was Fine

5. Damage CTRL (Dakota Kai, Asuka, & Kairi Sane) vs Bianca Belair, Naomi, & Jade Cargill

For a six-person tag on the undercard, this match had a great build, and the video package highlighted that well. The entrances from both teams were amazing, and everyone looked amazing!

The glee Damage CTRL has while they work over Naomi was joyous to watch. After Bianca gets tagged in, she really unleashes some of the best offense. She goes to tag Jade in for the first time but gets cut off, which gives Damage CTRL the chance to work over Bianca now. A Ricky Morton rolling tag brings in Cargill, who KILLS Damage CTRL. We have some fun back and forth until Cargill pins Kai with her finisher.

Rating: 7/10

Sami Zayn is with his wife and kid, and his kid thinks he can do it, but he doesn’t want his kid to see it. He has doubts after losing to Roman Reigns in Montreal last year. Later, on his way to the ring, Chad Gable appears and says he’s not going out with him, and he believes in him. He does the Rocky 2, you owe me a favour gimmick. Further on his way to the ring, Kevin Owens appears, hugs him, and says he can do it! Damn, he better do it now!

6. Gunther (c) vs Sami Zayn
“WWE Intercontinental Championship”

This is an all-time classic. Sami fights really hard, but Gunther is the most dominant Intercontinental Champion ever. Sami gets in some nice hope spots, but every time, Gunther comes back on top. That is until Gunther hits two huge power bombs that don’t put Sami away. Some doubt comes on Gunther’s face. He is able to keep Sami down, and his confidence soars again, so he starts to taunt Sami’s wife at ringside. He hits a few top rope splashes without going for the pin. Sami tries to fire himself up as Gunther goes to the top again, and he does by hitting a Helluva Kick out of nowhere. He then climbs up and hits the Brainbustaaahhhhh! Yes, El Generico’s brainbuster onto the top turnbuckle. Two more Helluva Kicks and Sami ends Gunther’s 666-day reign as Champion in a beautiful moment!

Rating: 9.25/10

The two GMs, Nick Aldiss and Adam Pearce, are here to thank the viewers. They announced the attendance of 72,543 and told the fans to keep the noise for the main event.

7. “Main Event”
The Bloodline (Roman Reigns & The Rock) vs Cody Rhodes & Seth “Freakin'” Rollins
“If The Bloodline wins, then the Universal Championship Match on Sunday will be fought under ‘Bloodline Rules'”

A nice long recap video in case you missed anything in this great build. Watching that build and then seeing Cody Rhodes giving his weight belt to his father-in-law and hugging his mom is foreshadowing. The Rock came out with the People’s Championship given to him at the Hall of Fame show.

The Rock actually looks great, like a wrestler not a statue. Way better than his previous run.

The match is fascinating, though. There were about 10 minutes of boring before a fun all-over-arena Attitude brawl. The Rock, being on the TKO board, tells the referee to let it go. After, it turns into a southern tag with Rollins isolated as they work the knee. Roman bleeds, and Cody gets a hot tag, but the match continues. The Rock gives Cody’s mom the weightlift belt from the angle on Raw. There is brawling at ringside this time, and Cody Rock Bottoms Rock through a table while Roman spears Rollins through the barricade. At one point, Roman hit the spear on The Rock after Seth saved Cody. After all the madness, Cody has the win, but Rock uses the weightlifting belt to stop his pin on Roman. From there, The Rock pins him with the People’s elbow.

45 minutes?

With editing, this could have been a classic, but there was too much that was not classic.

Rating: 7/10

That means Sunday’s match between Cody and Roman will be “Bloodline Rules.” I like the carryover booking here. Which leads us to Sunday.

WrestleMania XL: Sunday
April 7, 2024
Philadelphia, PA
Lincoln Financial Field

This is a very sports intro. Michael Cole talks about matches and shows wrestlers entering the building earlier today. He also brings up the weather again. It’s less cold today!

The opening video was amazing! You have to be hyped from it!

A different American anthem plays; why do Americans have so many damn anthems?

Speaking of sucking, here comes Stephanie McMahon. I so wanted to be done with McMahon BS. She’s excited about the Paul Levesque era and just says how great he is and does the DX intro.

1. Seth “Freakin” Rollins (c) vs Drew McIntyre
“WWE World Heavyweight Championship”

Drew McIntyre has a whole bagpipe band playing Roddy Piper’s theme before they play his song. Punk is on commentary and is already pissed! Michael Cole gives another weather update, haha. Seth Rollins has a whole band of wild, colourful costumes to play him out. This rules! He’s dressed in a very fabulous outfit. The whole band marches him to the ring!

Drew hits the Claymore right away for a nearfall immediately, and then he goes to work on the knee as Seth tries to go outside to recoup. This is perfect playing off last night. Seth is broken but gets in a curb stomp, but his hurt leg from last night means he doesn’t hit all of it, and it’s an easy kick out for Drew. The whole story is that Seth is broken, and Drew is easily in control, but Seth keeps fighting, hurting his knee, and having to gut through it. Drew wastes time and stares at Punk and goes for the GTS, but it gets countered into a rollup for a good nearfall. Another Claymore gets two as well. He gets very frustrated and tries to power bomb Seth through the announce table, but that’s countered. Seth stomps Drew on the table but hurts his knee again. Back inside, a Claymore came out of nowhere for another kickout. Drew is fucking losing it. One more Claymore, and that’s it. I don’t normally like Seth, but this match was good, and the story was easy to enjoy throughout.

Rating: 7/10

Drew won his first World Title in front of a crowd. After a moment with his wife, Drew stares down Punk again. He gets in his face and waves the title, mocking him, and then Punk attacks. He takes his brace off and then hits Drew with it.

That’s when Damian Priest arrives with the Money in the Bank briefcase, and he cashes in.

2. Drew McIntyre (c) vs Damian Priest
“WWE World Heavyweight Championship”

He hits his finish and wins the title immediately. Drew really brought that on himself. Great moment there!

Rating: WTF!

3. Bobby Lashley & The Street Profits (Angelo Dawkins & Montez Ford) vs The Final Testament (Karrion Kross, Akam, & Rezar)
“Philadelphia Street Fight”

Snoop Dogg is the guest commentator for this one. That rules. On the other hand, Bubba Ray Dudley is the guest referee. That sucks.

The weapon shots are vicious and stiff. Kross argues with Bubba, and then Lashley and The Profits go through Dudley spots. The table spots were nice, and they ended the match there pretty easily.

The real highlight was B-Fab and Scarlet getting involved and brawling with weapons. Later, B-Fab did a Russian legsweep through a table off the apron onto Scarlet! The other big highlight was Snoop Dogg having a great time.

Rating: It was a WWE Dudley-inspired street fight.

Logan Paul does pushups, and then a video package about last night’s main event plays.

Kayla Braxton asks Paul Heyman what “Bloodline Rules” means. No DQ. No Countdown. One fall. Whatever The Bloodline wants, really. He name-dropped Brandi Rhodes!

4. LA Knight vs AJ Styles

The video package reminds me of how over the former TNA dude is now. Since I don’t watch regularly, it surprises me every time.

We don’t wait; punches right away from both. From there, it’s pretty back-and-forth until Styles works the leg. Knight almost makes a comeback, but his attempt to slam AJ onto the bare floor fails as AJ counters, leading to a near countout. AJ’s springboard 450 is stopped by Knight’s knees. We get more punching, and then they counter each other’s finishers until Knight hits BFT for the win. The crowd loves it.

Rating: Solid

A video package plays going over the Hall of Fame ceremony, and they each get their moment in front of the crowd. Bull had her nunchucks, so it’s great.

We get many commercials, highlights of their charity events, and a nice little tribute to Bray Wyatt.

5. Logan Paul (c) vs Randy Orton vs Kevin Owens
“WWE United States Championship”

A video package for this match makes sense, but we have spent so much time doing video packages since the last match it’s wearing thin.

Logan Paul comes in on a truck promoting his drink and has a drink mascot with him. Sami appears as Kevin makes his way to the ring to return the favour from last night, saying it’s his turn now. After looking at the truck, he gets a golf cart to come out on. Randy Orton comes out without a vehicle, so Owens offers him a ride to the ring, and he gets on the back. It’s a fun moment.

Orton and Owens just take turns beating up Paul, to begin with. After taking him out, they realize only one of them can win, and they both try to double-cross each other. They decide it’s time to fight each other, which gives Paul an opening. We get a more typical triple-threat match, with each man hitting big moves. Paul is a really hateable heel, which adds a good dynamic. Brass Knuckles by him and get two only on Orton. Owens is taken out by the knucks, too. He goes for a final brass knuckles shot, and Orton hits an RKO instead. Orton then gets the knucks, hands them to the referee, and goes for his classic punk kick, but the Prime bottle saves him. The Prime Bottle is Paul’s buddy and so Orton kills him with an RKO on the table. Of course, that gives Owens and Paul time to recover. Owens Pop Up Power Bomb is turned into an RKO, and then Paul hits a frog splash on Owens for the win after disposing of Orton.

Rating: Almost Spreadsheetable

6. IYO SKY (c) vs Bayley
“WWE Women’s Championship”

This is another great video package. Bayley does an Egyptian goddess entrance being carried by cat men. She is living the dream, basically. She looks amazing. Shirai looks great, too, so let’s go!

This is very intense to start. On a tope by Bayley, she tweaks her leg, and then Shirai goes to work. You almost forget, since she was such an amazing heel, that Bayley is an all-time babyface! The selling of the leg by Bayley, whether on offense or being beaten on, was great! Shirai has such great offense. Moonsault by Io to a fully extended leg of Bayley, but that hurt Bayley, too. Amazing spot! Bayley does a tentative attempt at a flying elbow, but Shirai counters into a submission! She’s frantic and turns it into the STF in the middle, but Bayley pushes her off. Bayley-to-Belly gets a big nearfall. The selling of Bayley is so great! Shirai decks her and laughs, but Bayley decks her, which fires Bayley way up! Moonsault for a HUGE nearfall. Standing moonsault. Second rope Moonsault. But Bayley moves out of the proper one and goes for Rose Plant, but Io flips out of it. Bayley hits the elbow drop and the Rose Plant for the win. This fucking ruled!

Rating: 9.25/10

Snoop Dogg is out with the Philadelphia Eagles cheerleaders and mascot to announce 72,755 attendance.

One final weather update before the main event! Then, a long video package recaps everything.

7. Roman Reigns (c) vs Cody Rhodes
“WWE Undisputed Universal Championship Bloodline Rules”

Wish me luck with this recap.

Cody gets a Triple H entrance for the main event and Brandi Rhodes is there to take his mask for him and wish him luck. Good stuff! His family is at ringside. On the other hand, Roman has a whole orchestra to sing and play his song for him.

Cody takes out a table, but Roman puts it back. After some okay weapon shots and brawling, there is a brawl in the stands, and they get on one of the longest tables ever. Roman tries to suplex him off of it, but Cody reverses, and they head back toward the ring, where Roman takes complete control after a GIANT powerbomb. He has a long control segment until double lariats take both out. Cody makes a big comeback and hits the Disaster Kick, but that’s not enough. Roman counters the Cody Cutter with Cross Rhodes, but that gets two. He misses the Superman’s punch, and Cody punches and bionic elbows him away to a comeback. He sets up the table, but a low blow by Roman stops everything. Roman power bombs Cody through the table, and Superman punch gets a big nearfall. Cody counters the spear and hits a Cody Cutter for two. Roman tries Rock Bottom, counter, then Cody hits the spear. We are spamming each other’s finishers. Cross Rhodes hits, and a second attempt has Jimmy Uso break it up. Superman punch brings out Jey Uso, and he brawls with his twin. Jey spears him off the stage through a table. Roll up by Cody for two, spear by Roman for a massive kickout! They both tumble to the outside, and Cody spears Roman through the barricade. Back inside, Cody hits two Cross Rhodes, but Solo breaks up the third attempt. A two count after the Samoan spike. Solo tries to kill Cody and then holds him up as Roman spears him, and Solo spikes him at the same time. That’s another two. That brings out John Cena for the save. Attitude Adjustment by Cena as he puts Solo through a table. That brings out The Rock. It’s Cena vs The Rock now; everyone else is dead. Huge staredown and Cena gets to Rock Bottom. Rock brings out the Mama Rhodes belt, but the Shield music plays and Roman takes out Seth dressed in Shield gear before he does anything. Rock then destroys everyone with the weight lift belt, but the Undertaker’s music plays, and the music goes off. He’s behind The Rock and they have a staredown now. Choke Slam by Undertaker. Gong. Lights off. Undertaker is gone. Roman is up, and Cody is trying to get up. he grabs a chair and goes to kill Cody, but Seth is getting up, too. He nails Seth from behind, just like Seth did to him when The Shield broke up. He goes for a spear, but it’s countered. Cody hits Cross Rhodes and rolls that into three. He wins.

Rating: How do you rate that? 8/10 I guess?

Big props to Samantha Irvin, who is the best ring announcer ever, it seems. Her announcement of Cody winning was great. He gets the belt and cries, and out comes Brandi. After his moment, more come out and put him on their shoulders to celebrate. More and more folks, including his mom, enter.

A fitting end to WrestleMania XL.

“Damn it, I love professional wrestling!” Michael Cole

Cody gives us a little speech. Cody brings out Bruce Pritchard and Trips because it’s a new era.

Cody hugs everyone, even Michael Cole, who is crying. Cena ducking to stay off camera is funny, but the last image shows Cody alone in the ring with the belt, shaking Seth’s hand. Trips whispers something in his ear, and then the fireworks come. Cole is emotional, and Cody shakes everyone’s hand and hugs the cameramen and anyone he can find.

Finally a good WrestleMania and WWE may be good again.

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AEW Dynamite & Rampage Live Report (March 20, 2024)

Before The Show

AEW is live in Toronto at the old Ricoh Coliseum, now Coca-Cola Coliseum and I am live with my good friend on this snowy Wednesday night! I haven’t been to this arena since last October when I saw Kim Petras. This show will not be that great, but I think it will be a lot of fun.

I am usually lower on AEW, but Mercedes Mone’ is there now, and I am getting a Deonna Purrazo and Mariah May match, as well as a women’s street fight. The one women’s match a show rule SUCKS, but at least these are matches that should get time.

So, let’s get onto the pre-show!

Ring of Honor

  • Anna Jay squashed Nikita
  • Nyla Rose squashed Alexia Nicole
  • Evil Uno beat London Lightning
  • Action Andretti & Top Flight (Dante & Darius Martin) beat Christopher Daniels, Jack Cartwheel, & Matt Sydal

The first two matches were pure quick squashes, but it was nice some locals got a payday.

Evil Uno wrestled a lot in Toronto in the past, so that helped him here. He did some good heel work, I thought, but I guess he’s a babyface, and it got pops, so I don’t know if I understand wrestling anymore. He won.

The trio’s main event was a flippy, divey, fun, energetic match. If you like that stuff, it’s pretty good.

Before The Dynamite

Justin Roberts came out and read signs. Throughout the show, he did that during commercial breaks and got the crowd to cheer for some of the usually nameless staff. That part was nice, although the sign reading was lame.

Tony Khan came out, and he was very popular. I feel very uncomfortable with how popular billionaires are. He talked about loving Toronto and showed how much he loved it by mentioning that his Daddy owns the nicest hotel in town.

Dynamite

We start the show with Mercedes Mone’ doing another intro promo. It’s nice, and she’s popular. She brings up the injury to Willow Nightingale. They had good chemistry in that match before the injury, so Willow should be a good first opponent. Skye Blue and Julie Hart interrupt, but Willow Nightingale and Kris Statlander interrupt to tease the Rampage main event Street Fight. Willow also teases hitting Mone’ with the chair, but she is found out.

The Young Bucks and Okada talk with someone backstage and make some jokes to hype the upcoming Eddie Kingston match. The Bucks say they will be producing the match. Is this a Vince Russo promo?

Let’s note this here because it’s a problem all night. The sound system AEW uses is garbage. It’s really hard to hear anyone on the mic throughout the show, whether they are in the ring or backstage or whatever.

AEW Continental Champion Match
Eddie Kingston (c) vs Kazuchika Okada

The crowd was red hot for this for both folks. It seemed like a solid enough match, and if I cared about either person, I bet I’d be into this, too. Okada wins and ends the Triple Crown. PAC comes out to seemingly challenge for the title, leaving poor Kingston as an afterthought. Looking around online, nobody was super into this, so I don’t have to justify not being that into it, either.

Swerve Strickland is backstage with Prince Nana and he wants a big man to prove he can beat Joe.

Backstage again, Willow and Kris Stat are with Stokley Hathaway, hyping their Street Fight. Mercedes teases the Willow match.

Hook vs Chris Jericho

Seeing Jericho was next, I went to the bathroom and only caught the finish. Jericho looked bad. Hook looked good. Hook won.

Adam Cole was in a fancy chair and seemingly publically had a talk he should have had with Wardlow in private.

Jericho is next with Renee and cuts a shitty promo setting up things nobody wants to see for next week with Hook.

Next, Will Ospreay does a promo with Tony Schiavone, and it’s actually a pretty good one. It sets up the Bryan Danielson match. He rightfully points out that he was way more successful in Japan than Danielson was.

Toni Storm & Mariah May vs Deonna Purrrazzo & Thunder Rosa

I love three of these wrestlers, and Toni Storm is pretty okay with a fun gimmick. They have a pretty fun tag match, with everyone getting to look good. They teased that Thunder Rosa was going to take Purrazzo’s spot as the number one contender by having her do a blind tag toward getting the win. Give everyone here more matches, please.

Swerve Strickland vs The Butcher

The Butcher answers the open challenge. I saw The Butcher in a local Toronto show once come out and do some choke slams and say he was training to start wrestling. He’s done pretty well at it. Strickland should be up there with Mone’ as the stars of the company. He wins in a good little match.

Afterward, he cuts a great promo about his growing hate of Samoa Joe, who comes out. Don Callis interrupted, and I could not hear a single word he said.

Swerve says something after, but the sound system is not good, so I have no idea. Reading reports, I guess a match with Takeshita.

AEW TNT Championship
I Quit
Christian Cage (c) vs Adam Copeland

It must have been pretty cool for these two to do this match in their hometown.

Yes, this match went too long, but it was still a big blast. They really pandered to me personally with all the Leafs and hockey spots. They tried to pander to me by going all TLC with tables, ladders, and chairs, but even though the TLC matches they had hit me at the right age, it didn’t hit my interest.

They did bleed and brawl all over the arena and backstage. One thing I never saw before was a monkey flip from the ramp onto the floor. The match suffered after the original run-in from the heels and the faces running in for the save. That was fine, but the faces put in too much offense and helped Edge handcuff everyone to the ring. They stuck around for the finish, too. Trim about 5 minutes from the match, and the too much faces helping in the end, and it’s an all-time classic. Also, Edge pulled out the spike and got like 8 ball shots with it before Christian submitted. Christian really should have submitted before being hit at all. Small complaints about a great match, though. The crowd really added to it too, we were very into it.

Rating: 8.5/10

Rampage

There was some wacky pool promo with a skeleton going down a slide, followed by The Acclaimed coming out for some promo. I went to the washroom to skip it.

AEW World Tag Team Title Tournament Wild Card Match
Powerhouse Hobbs & Kyle Fletcher vs Orange Cassidy & Trent

This was a solid tag match, especially when Hobbs was in control or Cassidy was in the ring. The other two do a little too much of the showy, jumpy offense I don’t care about. It had a lot of energy and a nice little win by Cassidy in the end.

Katsuyori Shibata vs Kevin Matthews

For a wrestler who had his brain physically removed and then put back into his head, it’s impressive that Shibata is even in the ring now. This was a squash.

Rocky Romero vs Konosuke Takeshita

I’ve been really impressed with Romero’s run in CMLL, so it was nice to see him here. This was essentially a competitive squash but a good one with a good amount of time.

Street Fight
Julia Hart & Skye Blue vs Willow Nightingale & Kris Statlander

This was a hell of a brawl with blood and tables, lots of chairs, and so many tacks. It had to deal with the fact it was the second wild street fight of the night and the inexperience of Hart, who spent so much time searching under the ring. It was incredibly distracting.

Ignoring that, it was a great match, like we’ve grown accustomed to in these women’s street rights matches. Willow took herself out of the finish by making a big move on Blue through two tables, which allowed Hart to get the win.

Rating: 7.5/10

Overall, this was a really fun evening of wrestling, and it didn’t hurt having my good buddy Dave with me. I bet it turned out well on television.

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Please donate to Callen Lorde!

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The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Month (February 2024)

A fun month of watching as I transitioned from 1996 to 1992. The current stuff is weird. Stardom is dying. CMLL brought in Tessa. WWE is hot, but maybe with Mania closer, I’ll watch more. AEW is hinting at pushing women more, so maybe. I don’t know. 1992 has been a lot of fun, though!

#25
Miyuki Takase (c) vs Nagisa Nozaki
“AWG Championship”
AWG Beginning Pro
March 15, 2020

From the 2020 Joshi Yearbook Volume 3 post:

I loved the early brawling in this. After the brawling segment, it became a fun go for the win type title match that was very enjoyable and high energy!

Rating: 7/10

#24
Mr. Hughes & Vader vs Rick Steiner & Scott Steiner
WCW Clash of the Champions XVIII
January 21, 1992

Steiners throwing around huge dudes is always a fun match. This is before the big Vader push, so it feels kind of weird seeing him losing in the opener, although they did keep him looking strong.

Rating: 7/10

#23
Konami & Unagi Sayaka vs Masato Tanaka & Minoru Suzuki
Unagi Sayaka Produce Tono Wa Goranshin: 1-Ban Venus
January 7, 2024

A fun match where Konami and Sayaka work from underneath and do a great job of inserting hope spots throughout. Sayaka is one of my favourite underdog working around, and she shone here. I really want to see a Minoru Suzuki vs Unagai Sayaka singles match now!

Rating: 7.25/10

#22
Devil Masami & Hikari Fukuoka (c) vs Mayumi Ozaki & Reiko Amano
“JWP Tag Team Championship”
JWP on February 9, 1997

The future Carlos Amano stepped it up big time in this match. A really cool moment had Devil on so match of a rampage that she had to be held back. She’s really the master of getting the most out of these JWP tag matches! The finishing segment was absolutely great!

Rating: 7.25/10

#21
Mankind vs The Undertaker
“Buried Alive Match”
In Your House: Buried Alive
October 20, 1996

The WWF was so sanitized at this time, but this had a real fight feel. Maybe the dirt and shovels tricked my brain. The weapons and vicious moves around ringside looked really gritty though. There was even a nice nearfall in this, which was surprising. The finish was a little abrupt, and the post-match stuff was super silly, but this is pretty damn good.

Rating: 7.25/10

#20
Chihiro Hashimoto (c) vs Syuri
“Sendai Girls World Championship”
Sendai Girls Don’t Forget That Day
March 8, 2020

From the 2020 Joshi Yearbook Volume 3 post:

These two are always awesome against each other: the kickboxer vs the wrestler. They didn’t hit the high levels they had in other matches, but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t a good match.

Rating: 7.25/10

#19
Jushin Liger vs Rey Misterio Jr.
WCW Starrcade
December 29, 1996

A real dream match at the time that was both disappointing but really good. The expectations for the two greatest juniors of all time squaring off for the first time were probably too high. Liger plays bully heel, which is fun, and Rey was amazing working underneath. There was a little disconnect between them and definatelwy the crowd that drags this down.

Rating: 7.25/10

#18
Kenta Kobashi (c) vs Stan Hansen
“Triple Crown Championship”
AJPW Summer Action Series II
September 5, 1996

These two have had absolute classics before, but this does not hit that level. There are a lot of fun elements, and it’s absolutely hilarious to see Kobashi win with a lariat.

Rating: 7.5/10

#17
Cactus Jack vs W*ING Kanemura
“Barbed Wire Barricade Spider Net Glass Crash Death Match”
FMW Fighting Creation: 7th Anniversary
May 5, 1996

I am always very hit or miss on deathmatches, and I am still not sure what the key ingredient is to make one great or good or bad. It’s one of those undefinable things. This was violent and brutal and looked like it was a bad time for everyone involved. It did build well, but it’s not a match for someone who dislikes deathmatches.

Rating: 7.75/10

#16
Chigusa Nagayo vs Mayumi Ozaki
GAEA Victory Road
February 23, 1997

The Oz Academy and GAEA feud wages on, this time with the two head bosses having a vicious brawl. They use a pipe, table, a chain and have blood. Both pull out all the stops and work towards their strengths, speed and flying, with Ozaki and Chigusa being more grounded and power-based. It goes a little long, and at some point, Ozaki has problems with her bottoms and throws on some random pants to finish the match. Ozaki going for a top rope splash and Nagayo catching her with a kick to the head was one of the best versions of that I have ever seen. The finish was cool, too. Post-match, the feud continues!

Rating: 7.75/10

#15
Big Van Vader & Crusher Bigelow vs Masa Saito & Scott Norton
NJPW Masters of Wrestling: DRAGON THE REVIVAL
July 8, 1992

This ruled. Both Norton and Saito did the beat up one guy and call in the other because they proved the dude they were facing was nothing! When Vader came in to face Norton, they did a pose off. The first five minutes ruled of just big stiffs beating the shit out of each other with nobody backing down. It remained cool the rest of the way, although the finish was a tad flat. I think Vader-Norton is magic every time they are against each other.

Rating: 7.75/10

#14
Akira Hokuto & Chigusa Nagayo vs KAORU & Maiko Matsumoto
GAEA Winning Road
February 16, 1997

Hokuto and Nagayo vs a youngster and a rookie is the most OP match ever, but that doesn’t matter as it rules! The first half is Matsumoto getting destroyed by the heelish legends until she can finally make a hot tag to KAORU, who does her awesome flying. The rest is hope spots and the young team trying to battle back, but not having enough to overcome.

Rating: 7.75/10

#13
Arn Anderson, Beautiful Bobby, & Larry Zbyszko vs Barry Windham, Dustin Rhodes, & Ron Simmons
WCW Clash of the Champions XVIII
January 21, 1992

This is Windham’s return and revenge match against Zbyszko for injuring his hand. It’s fast-paced, with a lot of heat done in a traditional tag format. Dustin plays face in peril, and he’s one of the best at this ever. The heels bump so well for all the babyface hope spots and comebacks, and the finish is perfect revenge, where Windham uses the cast for the win.

Rating: 7.75/10

#12
Akira Taue & Jumbo Tsuruta vs Kenta Kobashi & Tsuyoshi Kikuchi
AJPW New Year Giant Series
January 26, 1992

The young underdogs fight like dogs from underneath against the badass team of Taue and Tsuruta. The fire shown by Kobashi & Kikuchi was great but not matched by the badassness of Taue & Tsuruta. Great, more southern style tag, and the only flaw was Kikuchi getting a little too many kickouts at the end. Great match, though!

Rating: 8/10

#11
Black Tiger vs Shinjiro Otani
“Best of the Super Junior III: Block B”
NJPW Best of the Super Junior III
June 5, 1996

Eddie Guerrero starts off with fire and destroys Ohtani’s leg so well with amazing selling by Ohtani. The match progressed very well! Ohtani is just on fire during this period, with his mannerisms setting him above everyone else, and the crowd is so into him, making this feel even more special.

Rating: 8/10

#10
Mitsuharu Misawa (c) vs Akira Taue
“Triple Crown Championship”
AJPW Super Power Series
May 24, 1996

It was fun to watch as Taue relentlessly tried to put Misawa down, and it felt like time to end Misawa’s year-long reign. Misawa fights for his life basically just fending off Taue, but never really having control. It’s short and has an absolutely great finish, with Taue catching Misawa, who came off the top into a choke slam. The pop is great for Taue’s win!

Rating: 8/10

#9
Devil Masami vs Sakura Hirota
GAEA War Cry
January 19, 1997

This is the best sub five minute match ever! Hirota throws EVERYTHING at Masami and actually catches her off guard until Masami regains herself and crushes her! Chigusa Nagayo, Hirota’s second, jumps into the ring and hypes her up! Hirota is ready to run through walls and charges, which lasts a few seconds before Masami power bombs her to death!

Rating: 8.5/10

#
Bestia Salvaje vs Negro Casas
“Hair vs Hair 2/3 Falls”
CMLL on Televisa
October 18, 1996

From the opening moments of Salvaje attacking before the bell, this was a whirlwind of a match. A tremendously great selling performance by Casas. He was a great underdog fighting back for his life and to save his hair. Salvaje was relentless, and they kept this shorter and nonstop!

Rating: 8.5/10

#8
Mei Sera (c) vs Hazuki
“High Speed Championship”
Stardom 13th Anniversary Supreme Fight: Osaka Minami Rebellion
February 4, 2024

This was a classic High Speed match, and they work with such intensity and speed it’s a thing of beauty. Hazuki was so great controlling the match, but Sera not only held her own but was amazing in this, too. I loved the segment outside the ring with Hazuki just tossing her like garbage outside before diving on her and the strike exchange, but the submission win nearfalls building to the finish was my favourite.

Rating: 8.5/10

#7
Ilja Dragunov (c) vs Trick Williams
“NXT Championship”
NXT Vengeance Day
February 4, 2024

This was about as good as WWE storytelling can get. Carmelo Hayes at ringside was perfect, supporting his friend but looks shot of envy throughout. Him picking him up to hype him up for the comeback was great too. Dragunov was a beast and Williams is a tremendous babyface who fought so well from underneath.

Rating: 8.75/10

#6
Jushin Liger (c) vs Shinjiro Otani
“IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship”
NJPW Hyper Battle
March 17, 1996

The first segment was Otani working the arm and Liger the leg, which was fine, but the match really picked up after the mat stuff. The nearfalls here were amazing. Liger and Otani were the most Liger and Otani I may have ever seen, as Liger was such a jerk and Otani such a goofball. Any match with a springboard dropkick to the arm is a massive plus for me, too. The selling by Otani of the big moves was unmatched here, especially on the palm strike finish.

Rating: 8.75/10

#5
Sting (c) vs Van Vader
“WCW World Heavyweight Championship”
WCW The Great American Bash
July 12, 1992

Sting starts off hot and takes it to Vader. It’s kind of nice to see Sting as the smaller guy. It allows him to do more of his fun flying. The real bulk and great part of the match is Vader destroying Sting, which was littered with hope spots. All of that is great. The finishing run had one spot I’m not sure I love or hate. Vader is on the top, and Sting puts him on his shoulders and walks him to the middle of the ring, and then just stands there. Forever. Just holds him up, struggling, before finally doing a Samoan drop. It was odd. Anyways, Vader ducked a Stinger Splash, where Sting gets busted open on the post and Vader power bombs him to death. After the post, they did a few moments of Sting having a concussion, which, in retrospect, is not fun to watch. Nitpicks aside, it’s a great star-making title change match!

Rating: 8.75/10

#4
Big Van Vader & Crusher Bigelow (c) vs Hiroshi Hase & Keiji Muto
“IWGP Tag Team Championship”
NJPW Explosion Tour
May 1, 1992

It featured Has had one of the best face-in-peril segments ever, where he bled so much while the monsters destroyed him. A hilarious moment is after Hase makes a comeback; Muto comes in and says, lets so move together and tells Hase to do a bridging suplex on Vader. It’s a few minutes before Muto is actually tagged in! It led to some fun moments, but was funny. It built well from there with nearfalls from both sides. Vader and Hase were the stars here and the finishing choke slam by Vader ruled.

Rating: 8.75/10

#3
Atsushi Onita, El Hijo del Santo, & Tarzan Goto vs Horace Boulder, Negro Casas, & Tim Patterson
“Best 2/3 Falls”
FMW in Los Angeles w/ WWA
May 16, 1992

A famous and insane match. It’s 2/3 Falls with two referees like a lucha match, but this is no lucha match. Well, it kind of is, as Santo and Casas put on a lucha clinic. However, the others do wild and crazy brawling all around them and the arena. It really needs to be seen to be believed.

Rating: 9/10

#2
Big Van Vader vs Sting
“King of Cable Tournament Final”
WCW Starrcade
December 28, 1992

This one takes the blueprint from GAB and ups it! They added a Vader beatdown segment to start the match before Sting unloads! The way Vader gets back on offense, with Sting missing a Stinger splash into the guardrail, is great! Vader’s control segment is even better here, and Sting fights back so well. Although the rope and dope moment was not paid off, the finish of Sting caching Vader off the top into a slam ruled.

Rating: 9/10

“The Best Match I Watched in February 2024”
#1
Masahiro Chono vs Rick Rude
“NWA World Heavyweight Championship G1 Climax Final”
NJPW G1 Climax
August 12, 1992

To me, Rick Rude feels like the most American style wrestler ever. Chono is one of the most NJPW style wrestlers ever. They’ve had a match in WCW that was dogshit, but I knew this was good because I saw it like two decades ago. Watching it now, I was blown away. Rude adjusts to NJPW so well, but doesn’t give up his essence, he just adds more fighting spirit spots and more stiffness. He even still does some of his overselling silliness and his prematch promo! The knack on this match is the middle gets a little routine, before they start hitting their huge moves to bring this home. The crowd was so into Chono which made all the nearfalls hit even harder. Really a tremendous match and an amazing Rude performance.

Rating: 9/10

Twitter

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Discord

We also have a lovely discord community to discuss the greatest wrestler ever project and anything else under the sun. It’s an open and welcoming group, and I am very proud of it. Everyone is welcome:

Join:

https://t.co/0pOARzaXHD

We also do weekly watch-along parties with chat!

How Can You Help?

Callen-Lorde is the global leader in LGBTQ healthcare. Since the days of Stonewall, we have been transforming lives in LGBTQ communities through excellent comprehensive care, provided free of judgment and regardless of ability to pay. In addition, we are continuously pioneering research, advocacy, and education to drive positive change around the world because we believe healthcare is a human right.

Please donate to Callen Lorde!

1996 Match of the Year List

In terms of match of the year lists containing matches that will go on my 100 greatest matches ever list, I think 1996 may be the best. Really, all ten could and probably will make it. What a freaking great year of high-end matches!

Honourable Mentions

  • Antonio Inoki vs Big Van Vader, NJPW, January 4
  • Shinjiro Ohtani vs Ultimo Dragon, NJPW, August 4
  • Mariko Yoshida vs Takako Inoue, AJW, August 30
  • The Great Muta vs Jushin Liger, NJPW, October 20
  • Dick Togo, MEN’S Teioh, Shiryu, Shoichi Funaki, & TAKA Michinoku vs. Gran Hamada, Gran Naniwa, Masato Yakushiji, Super Delfin, & The Great Sasuke, Michinoku Pro, December 16

Now, onto the list!

#10
Akira Taue & Toshiaki Kawada vs Jun Akiyama & Mitsuharu Misawa
“Real World Tag League Final”
AJPW Real World Tag League
December 6
Nippon Budokan

From the Best Matches I Watched This Month blog post:

I have been down on prime AJPW for a few years now, so I was curious to rewatch this match since I rated it so highly the first time I saw it. Watching it, I think my AJPW issue is that the style that is so popular today that I don’t like is a continuation of this wrestling. That said, the last ten minutes were unreal, and there is nothing in wrestling like Taue unleashed, dropping people with choke slams everywhere! Akiyama did good in the Kobashi role of trying to save Misawa’s ass too. A great match, but still, it felt like a lot of too much for me.

#9
Aja Kong vs Kyoko Inoue
“Japan Grand Prix Final”
AJW Japan Grand Prix
August 30
Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium

From the Best Matches I Watched This Month blog post:

Kong is out for death in this match, and Inoue is a perfect underdog with tremendous selling throughout. It’s intense from the start to the tremendous run of nearfalls down the stretch. Every lariat and every throw and hit just look like they hurt; it’s on another level. A great match that seems to be forgotten if you listen to Cagematch.

#8
El Samurai (c) vs Shinjiro Ohtani
“UWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship”
NJPW New Year Special
January 21
Korakuen Hall

From the Best Matches I Watched This Month blog post:

The majority of this match is matwork and limp attacks, which normally would be a match that would kind of bore me, but this match blew me away. Ohtani’s attack on Samurai’s leg was amazing, including the vicious springboard dropkick into it. Near the end, when they hit their bigger moves, the near falls were tremendous, and the armwork by Samurai to get to the finish was perhaps the best moment of the match. A real classic.

#7
Dick Togo (c) vs Jushin Liger
“MPW British Commonwealth Junior Heavyweight Championship”
NJPW Skydiving J
June 17
Nippon Budokan

From the Best Matches I Watched This Month blog post:

This was a match I hadn’t seen in well over a decade, and boy, did it live up to my memories. Togo came in as a total asshole trying to destroy Liger. However, Liger wasn’t up for that shit and was a giant asshole back. It’s vicious, and everything hits so violently. You have the famous catching Togo off a dive and power bombing on the floor spot which was followed by another power bomb! Immediately, Liger enters the ring to strut! More great violent action continues on until we get some great stuff down the finishing stretch, including a flying dropkick into the arm, which Togo was using to pull himself up, and a top rope brainbuster. Great match!

#6
Gran Hamada, Gran Naniwa, Masato Yakushiji, Super Delfin, & Tiger Mask vs Dick Togo, MEN’s Teioh, Shiryu, Shoichi Funaki, & TAKA Michinoku
Michinoku Pro Takewaki: These Days
October 10
Ryogoku Kokugikan

The greatest collection of high spots in a match ever, but that only scraps the surface of this classic. Kaientai DX are the biggest jerks ever, teaming up to take advantage and posing on top of fallen people. It’s great. The spots are insane, too, and so quick. Using the lucha tags makes every nearfall exciting. This match has to be seen to be believed, and it still holds up today!

#5
Psychosis vs Rey Misterio Jr.
WCW Bash at the Beach
July 7
Ocean Center

highlights

The best touring match ever comes to WCW PPV and steals the show. They took everything they learned from working everywhere and put it all together into one match that tops all their others. Outside of the insane flying by both, the build and story of the match is amazing as well. What a great way to let Americans know what lucha libre is.

#4
El Dandy vs Negro Casas vs El Hijo del Santo
“Triangle Cabellera contra Mascara”
CMLL Super Viernes
December 6
Arena Mexico

From the Best Matches I Watched This Month blog post:

I had no recollection of this match, but it’s listed as a classic and, for some reason, an 8/10 on my spreadsheet. I am glad to admit I was really wrong, as this is the classic people say it is.

The first segment, where Casas and Dandy team up to pin Santo, so he has to put up his mask, was really great storytelling. Casas and Dandy then had a mighty fun singles match, leading to Casas winning and taunting everyone. That brings us to the bulk of the match, the Santo vs Dandy match, with everything on the line. It becomes a bloody, violent death match with great dives and huge drama from there, and it becomes the perfect hair vs mask match. The last few moments are as good as wrestling gets. Even if you don’t like the lucha style, this is one you will certainly love

#3
Combat Toyoda (c) vs Megumi Kudo
“FMW Independent Women’s & WWA Women’s Championship No Ropes Barbed Wire Current Blast Death Match”
FMW Fighting Creationg: 7th Anniversary Show
May 5
Kawasaki Stadium

From the Best Matches I Watched This Month blog post:

Not much to say. It’s the best deathmatch and the best FMW match in history. It’s dramatic, it’s emotional, and it’s great.

#2
Genichiro Tenryu vs The Great Muta
WAR Osaka Crush Night!
October 11
Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium

From the Best Matches I Watched This Month blog post:

I had never seen this before, and I feel really stupid because this match is unbelievable. From the beginning, Muta shoots two different mist colours! He gains his advantage by breaking a glass bottle and digging that into Tenryu’s head for a while! Outside the ring, he piledrivers him on a table and then hits him with some kind of tripod or something. That wasn’t even enough, inside the ring he pulls out something and digs that more into the cut! Tenryu’s hope spots after that were great, and the cut-offs by Muta were on that level, too. Also, I’m not much of a chop person, but they looked great here, probably due to the other violence making it fit in. To get back to the outside, Tenryu switches to straight punches that look sick as fuck! Tenryu throws some chairs and a table into the ring to up the madness! However, more mist from Muta stops the attack before Tenryu can get too far ahead and uses chairs and the table to continue the assault, including moonsaulting Tenryu through it! Instead of going for the win, Muta attacks Tenryu’s second to steal his white shirt to use Tenryu’s blood to write on it and then choke him out. Muta thinks he’s all that, so he goes for the moonsault, which Tenryu counters with a massive top rope powerbomb and an enzuigiri, and one more powerbomb, which is countered with Muta misting him! Muta weirdly goes under the ring and emerges to use the mist again, but Tenryu covers his mouth with an unreal counter! That leads to the ultimate finish, and this is up there with Dr. Wagner Jr vs LA Par-K as one of the most amazing, crazy brawls ever! I am blown away!

#1 “Match of the Year”
Bret Hart vs Steve Austin
WWF Survivor Series
November 17
Madison Square Garden

From my Top 100 Bret Hart matches post:

I have talked a lot about this match in the past, and it’s my favourite match of all time. What I love about this is that it feels like a love letter to old school wrestling and the end of an era. Jim Ross tells the story perfectly, Austin knows Bret and uses his moves through out the match. One of my all-time favourite wrestling moments is Bret Hart’s comeback in this match, where he wins a first fight after losing one earlier. The emotion here is priceless.

Coming Soon

The top 25 wrestlers of 1996 list should be ready shortly, plus at the end of every month, I’ll write up the top 25 matches I watched during it.

Twitter

You can discuss this on Twitter!

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Callen-Lorde is the global leader in LGBTQ healthcare. Since the days of Stonewall, we have been transforming lives in LGBTQ communities through excellent comprehensive care, provided free of judgment and regardless of ability to pay. In addition, we are continuously pioneering research, advocacy, and education to drive positive change around the world because we believe healthcare is a human right.

Please donate to Callen Lorde!

The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Month (January 2024)

We are into 2024, and boy, does current news make me not want to watch current wrestling. There is very little of that here as I focussed on 1996 and the GWE project instead.

#25
Hayabusa vs TAKA Michinoku
FMW Scramble Survivor
November 16, 1996

About two thirds through this was a fine junior match, with Michinoku looking amazing, but the last third was spectacular, with Hayabusa coming to the moment. I also enjoyed TAKA being in FMW, so he added using a chair to his legwork section. It reminded me of Rey Jr. working ECW. The dives were spectacular throughout this.

Rating: 7.5/10

#24
TAKA Michinoku (c) vs Minoru Tanaka
“Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship”
Battlarts Let’s enjoy BATTLARTS
October 30, 1996

I am not a big fan of shoot style, but they did a good job of mixing that up with junior style to keep me interested during the first half, which was a bit dull. The finishing and last stretch were really great and exciting, though! I bet most people would be higher on this than me.

Rating: 7.5/10

#23
Savio Vega vs Steve Austin
“Caribbean Strap Match”
WWF In Your House: Beware of Dog 2
May 28, 1996

It’s limited due to the touch the four corners rules of WWF strap matches, but this was vicious and violent with good psychology. It thankfully put the end to Austin with DiBiase as well.

Rating: 7.5/10

#22
Manami Toyota (c) vs Kyoko Inoue
“WWWA World Championship”
AJW Kokugikan Chojoden The Real Earnest
December 8, 1996

The first and final thirds of this match were really great, but the middle third was boring. However, this was the big Inoue title win, so it’s memorable.

Rating: 7.75/10

#21
Billie Starkz vs Maki Itoh
GCW Now and Forever
July 14, 2023

The cute-off that clearly cemented Starkz as a heel and Itoh as the babyface was a great use of fun and comedy; it added to the story. From there, both were great and had the crowd in the palm of their hands.

Rating: 7.75/10

#20
Genichiro Tenryu vs Yoji Anjo
WAR Revolution Anniversary
July 21, 1996

Anjo brings the shoot fight UWF style to Tenryu, who seems unimpressed, and weathers all the kicks, submissions, and comebacks with stiff lariats, straight punches, and power bombs. This low key rules.

Rating: 7.75/10

#19
Chris Jericho (c) vs Pitbull II vs Shane Douglas vs Too Cold Scorpio
“ECW World Television Championship”
ECW Heat Wave
July 13, 1996

Mostly built around the Douglas-Pitbull feud, and that part was wonderful, especially Douglas. However, a significant part of this was Scorpio out wrestling everyone and putting on a great performance.

Rating: 7.75/10

#18
Hayabusa & Masato Tanaka vs Mr. Pogo & Terry Funk
“No Ropes Barbed Wire Current Mine Explosion Double Hell Time Bomb Tornado Death Match”
FMW Fighting Creation: 7th Anniversary
May 5, 1996

Completely chaotic with barbed wire, explosion, fire, and Mr. Pogo. I’m not sure if I like watching Pogo or hate it, but his sickle weapon, which he uses to dig into people’s backs, is something else. I loved all the evasions of the weapons. That is how you work a deathmatch!

Rating: 8/10

#17
Megumi Kudo vs Shinobu Kandori
“Street Fight”
LLPW on January 5, 1997

A really good ECW-like street fight. Kandori wore a suit, so that’s a huge win. She was a badass in this, and Kudo did everything she could to survive as they fought all over the arena. The finish was brutal in the best way possible. I can’t wait for the finale of this trilogy now!

Rating: 8/10

#16
Kazushi Sakuraba vs Shinjiro Ohtani
“UWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship”
NJPW Skydiving J
June 17, 1996

This is a hoot. Sakuraba tries to MMA Ohtani, who fights back with some vicious suplexes and kicks. It’s intense and nonstop action for eight minutes.

Rating: 8/10

#15
Super Delfin (c) vs TAKA Michinoku
“CMLL World Welterweight Championship”
NJPW Skydiving J
June 17, 1996

Young Taka is so fun to watch. He had this unbelievable balance and flying ability, but was so cocky and arrogant, every moment of watching him is a blast. The first third of this match is really good with TAKA hitting some incredible dives, the middle third is solid stuff, and the final third had a great finishing sequence. Although the final move was a little anticlimactic.

Rating: 8/10

#14
Aja Kong vs Kaoru Ito
Zenjo Perfection: Ota Ward Champion Legend
January 20, 1997

At one point, Kong beat up Ito and threw her into the concourse, then grabbed the barricade and stood waiting for her with it over her head to beat her down more with it. One of the best shot things in the history of wrestling. Ito did revenge and beat her up all over the arena, too. For a 30 minute draw, this felt like a wild and quick brawl, so I give this the highest recomendations.

Rating: 8.25/10

#13
The Gladiator & Terry Funk vs Hayabusa & Masato Tanaka
“Street Fight”
FMW Flashover
September 24, 1996

This is exactly what you want from this match. Hayabusa did flying. Tanaka and Awesome did their stuff, but not just against each other. Funk was wild. They brawled all over and used chairs and tables and it was a real blast.

Rating: 8.25/10

#12
Mizuki (c) vs Miya Yamashita
“Princess of Princess Championship”
TJPW Wrestle Princess 4
October 9, 2023

Yamashita is such a badass boss in these big title matches, and Mizuki plays her role of fighting champion really well. It was a great, intense title fight, though, that really shows Yamashita is the best ace wrestler around today.

Rating: 8.5/10

#11
Mistico vs Soberano Jr.
“2/3 Falls”
CMLL Super Viernes
September 1, 2023

A great main event all-tecnico match that saw Soberano Jr. play subtle heel, teasing the greatness that was later to come in the year. Mistico’s comebacks and babyface fire are unmatched in 2023, and the amazing spots the both of them pull off are unmatched as well. I’ve seen few matches with this many amazing spots that didn’t feel like a spotfest.

Rating: 8.75/10

#10
Atlantis y El Dandy y Lizmark y El Hijo del Santo vs Blue Panther y Dr. Wagner Jr. y El Felino y Negro Casas
“Torneo de Alto Rendimiento Torneo Cibernetico Match”
CMLL Homenaje A Salvador Lutteroth
March 22, 1996

All these absolute legends go in there and have a fast paced Survivor Series like match. Great matwork, great flying, great storytellingb and action. It’s like comfort food.

Rating: 8.75/10

#9
Shinjiro Ohtani (c) vs Ultimo Dragon (c)
“UWA World Junior Light Heavyweight & NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship vs IWGP Junior Heavyweight & WWF Light Heavyweight Championship, J-Crown Tournament Semi-Final Match”
NJPW G1 Climax
August 4, 1996

Ohtani is such a beast here, but luckily, Dragon is along for the ride as this hit some high levels. The start was really exciting, the middle was some fun matwork, but the real joy was the finishing stretches. All the hot moves were expertly timed, and the crowd was great. I could watch 1996 Ohtani all day long.

Rating: 9/10

#8
The Great Muta vs Jushin Liger
NJPW Super Grade Tag League VI
October 20, 1996

Another crazy brawl for Muta in 1996 and this one includes Liger missing Muta and stabbing a table with a lead pipe or something! Wild stuff. Bloody and chaotic with a fun Liger facepaint gimmick reveal. It was definitely memorable.

Rating: 9/10

#7
Gran Hamada, Gran Naniwa, Masato Yakushiji, Super Delfin, & The Great Sasuke vs Dick Togo, MEN’S Teioh, Shiryu, Shoichi Funaki, & TAKA Michinoku
Michinoku Pro From Lucha no Kuni: Heartbreak
December 16, 1996

These Days is so ingrained in my head as the greatest Lucharesu match of all time that I was surprised when I saw this match listed as better on Cagematch. Upon watching it, I don’t know if it’s better, but if it’s not, it’s damn close. I’m not sure what words to say about a match like this. 23 minutes of both teams throwing everything at each other to try to win, with no spots that bugged me. The high spots were tremendous, and the Kainetain DX team ups were all great. I’d say maybe it’s below the These Days match just because Kainetain DX didn’t do as much posing and team-up jerk moves. Regardless, a ridiculously great match.

Rating: 9.25/10

#6
Akira Taue & Toshiaki Kawada vs Jun Akiyama & Mitsuharu Misawa
“Real World Tag League Final”
AJPW Real World Tag League
December 6, 1996

I have been down on prime AJPW for a few years now, so I was curious to rewatch this match since I rated it so highly the first time I saw it. Watching it, I think my AJPW issue is that the style that is so popular today that I don’t like is a continuation of this wrestling. That said, the last ten minutes were unreal, and there is nothing in wrestling like Taue unleashed, dropping people with choke slams everywhere! Akiyama did good in the Kobashi role of trying to save Misawa’s ass too. A great match, but still, it felt like a lot of too much for me.

Rating: 9.25/10

#5
El Samurai (c) vs Shinjiro Ohtani
“UWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship”
NJPW New Year Special
January 21, 1996

The majority of this match is matwork and limp attacks, which normally would be a match that would kind of bore me, but this match blew me away. Ohtani’s attack on Samurai’s leg was amazing, including the vicious springboard dropkick into it. Near the end, when they hit their bigger moves and the near falls were tremendous, and the armwork by Samurai to get to the finish was perhaps the best moment of the match. A real classic.

Rating: 9.25/10

#4
Mayu Iwatani (c) vs Syuri
“IWGP Women’s Championship”
Stardome Gate
January 4, 2024

This was one of the most violent non-weapons matches I have ever seen and an instant classic. Fast-paced and incredibly hard-hitting from the beginning, and it only built better throughout toward an incredible finish of Iwatani coming off the top like she was doing a standing moonsault, only to hit a reverse hurracanrana for the win. It was filled with insane moves and some of the most vicious headbutts you’ll ever see, but it never felt like too much, and kick outs for kick outs state. In fact, the big near fall came when Syuri’s leg was on the rope. A must watch match!

Rating: 9.25/10

#3
Dick Togo (c) vs Jushin Liger
“MPW British Commonwealth Junior Heavyweight Championship”
NJPW Skydiving J
June 17, 1996

This was a match I hadn’t seen in well over a decade, and boy, did it live up to my memories. Togo came in as a total asshole trying to destroy Liger. However, Liger wasn’t up for that shit and was a giant asshole back. It’s vicious, and everything hits so violently. You have the famous catching Togo off a dive and power bombing on the floor spot which was followed by another power bomb! Immediately, Liger enters the ring to strut! More great violent action continues on until we get some great stuff down the finishing stretch, including a flying dropkick into the arm, which Togo was using to pull himself up, and a top rope brainbuster. Great match!

Rating: 9.25/10

#2
El Dandy vs Negro Casas vs El Hijo del Santo
“Triangle Cabellera contra Mascara”
CMLL Super Viernes
December 6, 1996

I had no recollection of this match, but it’s listed as a classic and, for some reason, an 8/10 on my spreadsheet. I am glad to admit I was really wrong, as this is the classic people say it is.

The first segment, where Casas and Dandy team up to pin Santo, so he has to put up his mask, was really great storytelling. Casas and Dandy then had a mighty fun singles match, leading to Casas winning and taunting everyone. That brings us to the bulk of the match, the Santo vs Dandy match, with everything on the line. It becomes a bloody, violent death match with great dives and huge drama from there, and it becomes the perfect hair vs mask match. The last few moments are as good as wrestling gets. Even if you don’t like the lucha style, this is one you will certainly love.

Rating: 9.5/10

#1
Genichiro Tenryu vs The Great Muta
WAR Osaka Crush Night!
October 11, 1996

I had never seen this before, and I feel really stupid because this match is unbelievable. From the beginning, Muta shoots two different mist colours! He gains his advantage by breaking a glass bottle and digging that into Tenryu’s head for a while! Outside the ring, he piledrivers him on a table and then hits him with some kind of tripod or something. That wasn’t even enough, inside the ring he pulls out something and digs that more into the cut! Tenryu’s hope spots after that were great, and the cut-offs by Muta were on that level, too. Also, I’m not much of a chop person, but they looked great here, probably due to the other violence making it fit in. To get back to the outside, Tenryu switches to straight punches that look sick as fuck! Tenryu throws some chairs and a table into the ring to up the madness! However, more mist from Muta stops the attack before Tenryu can get too far ahead and uses chairs and the table to continue the assault, including moonsaulting Tenryu through it! Instead of going for the win, Muta attacks Tenryu’s second to steal his white shirt to use Tenryu’s blood to write on it and then choke him out. Muta thinks he’s all that, so he goes for the moonsault, which Tenryu counters with a massive top rope powerbomb and an enzuigiri, and one more powerbomb, which is countered with Muta misting him! Muta weirdly goes under the ring and emerges to use the mist again, but Tenryu covers his mouth with an unreal counter! That leads to the ultimate finish, and this is up there with Dr. Wagner Jr vs LA Par-K as one of the most amazing, crazy brawls ever! I am blown away!

Rating: 9.75/10

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Please donate to Callen Lorde!

The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Month (December 2023)

2023 comes to a close and I could have a top 50 list for this month, because I watched so match backlog for the year. Enough so that my MOTY list is up, the post before this one in fact. My WOTY still needs some watching, so that will stretch into 2024!

#25
Akira Hokuto vs Meiko Satomura
GAEA Big Target
November 16, 1996

Obviously, this is not their 2001 classic, but it’s quite the gem. Satomura is still a rookie, but she gets in some great hope spots and fights so well from underneath. Hokuto resorted to a lot of cheap tactics but makes Satomura look great throughout.

Rating: 7.75/10

#24
Chie Koishikawa & Kaho Kobayashi vs Mei Suruga & Ryo Mizunami
DPW x Gatoh Move Tokyo Crossover
April 25, 2023

One of the most fun times and the most joy I have had watching wrestling all year, mostly thanks to Chie and Mei, but the others played their parts. Outside of the fun, this was an exciting tag match where everyone played up their characters to perfection.

Rating: 7.75/10

#23
Bryan Danielson vs Swerve Strickland
“AEW TNT Championship #1 Contendership Match”
AEW Dynamite “Title Tuesday”
October 10, 2023

After some fun technical exchanges early on, we moved into the match’s heat segment, where Swerve is the best. Danielson played his role perfectly, too. It was intense, and they both worked really hard, although the finish came off flat. The whole interference stops the heel winning, but then the heel almost wins anyways, only for the face to win thing never sits well with me. Regardless of that, it was a great match.

Rating: 8/10

#22
Aja Kong & Sareee vs Mika Iwata & Mio Momono
Hana Kimura Memorial Produce Pinx!
May 23, 2023

A fitting main event for the tribute to Hana Kimura. Kong was used so well, but the others all came to play. I could watch Sareee vs Momno forever! A great tag match.

Rating: 8/10

#21
Diamante & Mercedes Martinez vs Kris Statlander & Willow Nightingale
“Texas Street Fight”
AEW Collision “Winter is Coming”
December 16, 2023

The annual women’s tag brawl always delivers, and I really enjoyed this one. It didn’t go for the giant spots of previous matches but had a more underlining intensity. The violent spots were great, and I enjoyed the ride I was on.

Rating: 8/10

#20
Hikaru Shida (c) vs VENY
“Regina Di WAVE Championship”
WAVE PHASE2 Reboot 4th ~ NAMI 1
October 1, 2023

It was the ideal current big title match. It had an amazing ending that was built up, the action was fast with great athletic moves, the hitting was hard, and the nearfalls were great and logical. I say current style, because it was not built on the babyface overcoming the heel or anything, but more the sporting type contest.

Rating: 8/10

#19
Kevin Owens & Sami Zayn (c) vs Damian Priest & Finn Balor
“WWE Unified Tag Team Championship Steel City Street Fight”
WWE Payback
September 2, 2023

This match makes me want to watch more WWE. On paper, in the past, this would be an unwatchable mess of sanitized pre-setup cartoony weapon spots where people were just going for a pop.

Instead, we got a bloody, wild, chaotic brawl where the weapons made sense, and the heels were real heels. Cheating and interference were so well placed, and the violence actually felt like violence. Add in a Pittsburgh Penguins tribute spot, and it’s a big recommendation from me.

Rating: 8.25/10

#18
Soberano Jr. vs Volador Jr.
“Best 2/3 Falls”
CMLL Super Viernes
November 10, 2023

The first match after Soberano’s rudo turn, and it was awesome. He made this cool entrance with a cool car arriving on the street, and then he excited in a bomber fur coat, woman, on the street and made his way inside. To make it even better, he came in the back and sneak attacked.

He kept all of his awesome flying but added a lot of really badass rudo antics. It was a great brawl all over, mixed in with the flying, and the finish of the low blow by Soberano to cement himself was awesome. Spectacular stuff!

Rating: 8.25/10

#17
Athena (c) vs Mercedes Martinez
“ROH Women’s World Championship”
ROH on HonorClub
October 28, 2023, aired November 2, 2023

It should be a crime that we have only had 21 Mercedes Martinez matches in 2023. One of the greatest ever is not getting to show it. That said, here is a 13-minute main event for a title that absolutely rules. These two blend so well together, as they are kind of similar in their stiffness and smarts.

Rating: 8.25/10

#16
Maika vs Suzu Suzuki
“World of Stardom Championship”
Stardom Dream Queendom
December 29, 2023

To crown the vacant champion, these two did their best to have a great match and delivered, although not to the highs of the last two year-end title matches by Stardom.

Rating: 8.25/10

#15
Chikayo Nagashima (c) vs Mio Momono
“AAAW Championship”
Marvelous 7th Anniversary
May 3, 2023

An absolutely tremendous title match with amazing drama and nearfalls whose main issue is its length. That said, the veteran Nagashima took it to Momono, and her fight back was amazing. The brawling throughout Kourakuen always makes me happy, too. The nearfalls were really some of the best of the year.

Rating: 8.25/10

#14
Athena (c) vs Billie Starkz
“ROH Women’s World Championship”
ROH Final Battle
December 15, 2023

I loved the storyline between these two, and the first 2/3 of the match were perfect and played into it so well. The bloody babyface work by Starkz was great, as well as Athena being such a badass jerk. After the referee bump, title belt moment, and big kickout, it started to go on too long for me, and a lot of that was unnecessary. Based on this, I would assume these two will have a huge grudge match blow-off in 2024, where Starkz wins. I’m all in on that, and hopefully, it can be closer to 20 minutes than the 28 minutes this one went.

Rating: 8.25/10

#13
Mizuki (c) vs Maki Ito
“Princess of Princess Championship”
TJPW Summer Sun Princess
July 8, 2023

This was a great main event with a tremendous story built in. Ito came in with confidence and the crowd on her side, but her manic attitude caused her to make mistakes. Her head was damaged, but she kept trying to use it as her main offense, which led to her demise. Mizuki, however, worked smart and kept to her calculated offense, and made no mistakes, allowing her to overcome.

Rating: 8.5/10

#12
MIRAI (c) vs Momo Watanabe
“Wonder of Stardom Championship”
Stardom Nagoya Golden Fight “Kinshachi Miracle”
October 9, 2023

They had a match earlier this year, which I wrote about here, but this one was a little better not being confined by the tournament format. Watanabe was as vicious as ever, and MIRAI’s selling makes it look so good. The attacks on the arm were well sold by MIRAI, who is becoming an excellent White Belt champion.

Rating: 8.5/10

#11
Athena (c) vs Willow Nightingale
“ROH Women’s World Championship”
ROH on HonorClub
February 25, 2023, aired March 9, 2023

Athena destroyed Willow’s arm throughout the match, which was sold superbly. Willow is a natural great babyface, and working underneath with the injury made this match. Her comeback was awesome, and her big chance near fall was well done. Athena was a beast taking her out.

Rating: 8.5/10

#10
AZM vs Mayu Iwatani
“AZM 10th Anniversary Match”
Stardom on October 1, 2023

The young AZM is already having her 10th anniversary match and that is wild. There could be no better opponent than Mayu Iwatani.

I love the earlier portions where AZM was so thirsty for a win she destroyed Mayu on the outside, which led to a double countdown. Thankfully, it restarted, and that worked here. It was a nice old-school Kouraken Hall feel as they brawled all over and even did the dive over the steps like vintage Stardom. The match was dramatic and intense and built to a great emotional finish. The post-match speeches put it over the top!

Rating: 8.5/10

#9
Giulia (c) vs Megan Bayne
“NJPW STRONG Women’s Championship”
Stardom Dream Queendom
December 29, 2023

An absolutely perfect David vs Goliath match with Bayne adding to her arsenal in this one with some great power moves. Giulia worked so great from an underdog rolling, giving it her all to overcome Goliath!

Rating: 8.5/10

#8
Mio Momono (c) vs Mayumi Ozaki
“AAAW Championship”
Marvelous on August 7, 2023

An amazing match with the veteran using her destructive, violent skills to bloody and beat the underdog champion. Momono fought so hard to overcome Ozaki, but Oz Acadmey has too much tactics and violence and she could not. Great and dramatic match!

Rating: 8.5/10

#7
Rocky Romero (c) vs Mascara Dorada 2.0
“World Historic Welterweight Championship”
CMLL Super Viernes
December 15, 2023

Romero was such a great rudo in this, ripping at the mask and just being a general dick. On the other hand, Dorada was a great babyface hitting crowd pleasing hope spots and great sympathy getting selling. The finishing stretch was one of the best of the year with unreal nearfalls.

Rating: 8.75/10

#6
Arisa Endo, Miu Watanabe, Moka Miyamoto, Suzume, & Yuki Arai vs Miya Yamashita, Mizuki, Rika Tatsumi, Shoko Nakajima, & Yuka Sakazaki
“Best 2/3 Falls”
TJPW 10th Anniversary Show “We are TJPW”
December 1, 2023

This is similar to the Stardom cage match from earlier this year, where it’s a great match on its own, but if you follow the company it’s even greater. The issue for me is I don’t follow TJPW, so I see that it’s filled with huge moments, but without the proper context, it doesn’t hit as hard. That said, it’s a great match filled with amazing moments, great action, and story and character elements.

Rating: 8.75/10

#5
Gunther (c) vs The Miz
“WWE Intercontinental Championship”
WWE Monday Night Raw
December 18, 2023

I thought their Survivor Series match was good, but this one is great. Early Miz was a good babyface, but the match really picked up when Gunther missed a chop and hit his hand on the ringpost. The rest of the match was Gunther trying to overcome that limitation, while Miz was amazing working underneath. They played off the previous match really well. The finish was one of my favourites of the year. Miz hits his finisher off the second rope, but as he goes for the cover, Gunther rolls to the floor. Miz blindly follows, gets caught, and then Gunther kills him for the win!

Rating: 9/10

#4
Takako Inoue (c) vs Mariko Yoshida
“IWA World Championship”
AJW Zenjo Brightest
October 6, 1996

Talk about a hidden gem?

A 23-minute match with 0 drag that flew by. It had some incredible brawling all over the arena, with Inoue being a beast using weapons and making Yoshida bleed. They even took the brawling into the ring as a guardrail was brought in, and Inoue suplexed Yoshida onto it. There was a tremendous comeback by Yoshida that led to a very dramatic finishing sequence. Some of the near falls, especially from Inoue’s flying knee to the back of Yoshida’s head, were nuts. Watch this!

Rating: 9/10

#3
Swerve Strickland (c) vs Nick Wayne
“DEFY World Championship”
DEFY The Realest
April 8, 2023

Read about it on my 2023 Match of the Year list.

Rating: 9/10

#2
Arisa Nakajima (c) vs Sareee
“SEAdLINNNG Beyond The Sea Championship”
SEAdLINNNG 8th Anniversary
August 25, 2023

Read about it on my 2023 Match of the Year list.

Rating: 9/10

#1
Adam Page vs Swerve Strickland
“Texas Death Match”
AEW Full Gear
November 18, 2023

Read about it on my 2023 Match of the Year list.

Rating: 9.25/10

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2023 Match of the Year List

2023 was an odd year, with a lot of great stuff scattered around, but I didn’t feel like there were any obvious picks for me. If I re-wrote this list in 2 months, it would be in a completely different order.

Honourable Mentions

  • Roman Reigns vs Sami Zayn, WWE, February 18
  • Gunther vs Drew McIntyre vs Sheamus, WWE, April 1
  • Mina Shirakawa vs Saya Kamitani, Stardom, April 23
  • Suzu Suzuki vs Syuri, Stardom, July 23
  • Jaguar Yokota, Momoe Nakanishi, & Nanae Takahashi vs Momo Watanabe, Starlight Kid, & Yuu, Stardom, August 19

Now, onto the list!

#10
Swerve Strickland (c) vs Nick Wayne
“DEFY World Championship”
DEFY The Realest
Washington Hall
April 8

Swerve had one of the best heel performances in years, and this is your perfect veteran heel champion putting over a youngster match!

Swerve’s control and build-up of heat was perfection, and Wayne’s hope spots were well placed. Some of the high spots were amazing, especially Wayne diving from the stage into the ring but Swerve timing it to do a dive and meeting him in the air. There was one kick out that I felt took the match out a little, but all the callbacks to previous matches and earlier in the match and the finish were brilliant. It’s a great old school, but with modern moves, match up!

#9
The Usos (c) vs Kevin Owens & Sami Zayn
“WWE Unified Tag Team Championship”
WWE WrestleMania 39: Saturday
April 1, 2023
SoFi Stadium

From The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Month blog post:

Although this match should have been the perfect end to Roman Reigns’ title reign, at least it was the perfect end to the reign of the Usos.

It was one of the best face-in-peril segments ever in WWE history. It led to a great hot tag for Owens. The staredown was great, and the ending was immensely satisfying with a Sami Zayn victory. A rare, perfect ending for the WWE.

#8
Titan (c) vs Mascara Dorada 2.0
“CMLL World Middleweight Championship”
CMLL Noche de Campeones
Arena Mexico
September 29

From The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Month blog post:

I haven’t seen much of the new Mascara Dorada, but he is insanely good for a wrestler who debuted in 2021. He reminds me of Rey Mysterio Jr., who came around and blew everyone away with his flying, but it never looked like he was showing off, but always competing in a match. Dorada is the same way.

Titan is no slouch, as he’s been great for a long time. With all the great flying, the spot that really hit me was Titan doing a double stomp from the top rope to Dorada on the apron. As it built towards the finish, all the submission nearfalls were amazing. It was a great match and probably in my top ten matches of the year.

#7
Becky Lynch vs Trish Stratus
“Cage Match”
WWE Payback
PPG Paints Arena
September 2

From The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Month blog post:

This was a perfect WWE cage match. It was not built around trying to do cool moves; it was built around the feud and legacy. For once, no blood, after being rammed into the cage, was perfectly covered, as Trish had a giant welt on her forehead. The tributes to the first-ever WWE women’s cage match and other cage matches in WWE history were perfectly done. They were even somewhat subtle, like the Bret-Owen superplex and the outside interference door slamming into the face. I loved the finishing sequence so much, where Becky had enough of Trish’s lackey, so she locked her in the cage too and took her out, leading to catching Trish on the top of the cage and hitting a super Manhandle slam.

#6
Arisa Nakajima (c) vs Saree
“SEAdLINNNG Beyond The Sea Championship”
SEAdLINNNG 8th Anniversary
Korakuen Hall
August 25

This felt like a classic stiff Nakajima battle from her prime, and it’s so nice to see her at that level still and Sareee getting back to being at that level. The strikes were, of course, on point, and some of the flying double stomps by Nakajima were just vicious. Actually, everything was vicious, and it had a great pace throughout!

#5
Roman Reigns & Solo Sikoa vs The Usos
“Bloodline Civil War”
WWE Money in The Bank
The O2
July 1

From The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Month blog post:

It was one of the best tag team matches in WWE history and great WWE wrestling. It worked so well playing off storylines and building drama setting up the finish of what the fans wanted, which sets up a huge match down the line.

It started pretty traditionally with a great shine by The Usos, followed by a face in peril by Jey, including an amazing hot tag tease where Jimmy was pulled off the apron by Solo at the last second. After a fun hot tag, the match started building towards the finish with no silly kick-outs, as partner’s made the saves. There was a great near fall where Roman stacked both The Usos, only for them to kick out. I loved Roman not sure what to do, and in shock, Solo just starts kicking ass and is like Roman, what the fuck? After some more great action, we got the big shocking finish. Awesome.

#4
Queen’s Quest (AZM, Hina, Lady C, Miyu Amasaki, Saya Kamitani & Utami Hayashishita) vs Oedo Tai (Momo Watanabe, Natsuko Tora, Rina, Ruaka, Saki Kashima & Starlight Kid)
“Loser Must Leave Unit Steel Cage Match”
Stardom Sunshine
Yoyogi National Gymnasium #2
June 25

From The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Month blog post:

The same rules as the other cage match, but the last person in the ring has to leave their unit this time. This works so much better because escaping saves your ass, even if it puts your team behind. Also, each escape felt like a huge accomplishment, as they were all battles. After people escaped, they still battled the other unit on the floor!

It was tremendous storytelling with great hatred and drama between the teams. Utami establishing herself as Queen’s Quest’s ass was the stand-out story as she helps Kamitani escape putting herself alone two on one. That led to a great finishing sequence with Utami bleeding, the teasing of a split between Utami and Kamitani, and Tora destroying Utami to leave, only to have Kashima be the final loser.

#3
Gunther (c) vs Chad Gable
“WWE Intercontinental Championship”
WWE Monday Night Raw
Spectrum Center
September 4

From The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Month blog post:

This played off the previous match and built upon it. Gable knew he could win, and Gunther had doubts for almost the first time in his reign. Gable again fought from underneath, but here, his hope spots meant more. The comeback and the Gable’s attempts to win were electric. This had the best ankle lock submission nearfalls I have ever seen. When Gunther finally survived and got back on offense, there was no back-and-forth bullshit. He delivered a bunch of vicious offense and just pinned him clean. The camera immediately moved to Gable’s daughter crying in the first row. This might be my match of the year.

#2
Adam Page vs Swerve Strickland
“Texas Death Match”
AEW Full Gear
The Kia Forum
November 18

It’s awesome to see such a violent modern grudge match that doesn’t have the pitfalls that I would expect in a match like this. Swerve is a perfect heel, and maintaining that throughout this match only adds to the story. Of course, people can point to the blood-drinking, cinder blocks, staples, barbed-wire, and piledrivers onto the guardrail for huge moments, but what stood out was the masterful job Swerve did keeping the heat on Page.

#1
Giulia (c) vs Tam Nakano
“World of Stardom Championship”
Stardom All-Star Grand Queendom
Yokohama Arena
April 23

From The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Week post:

This may be my favourite feud of all time now. It’s gone on for years and has had many classics and this one may have been my favourite of the bunch. It did feel the most violent as their hatred had grown and grown over time. I loved that they saw red and didn’t even try to wrestle at the start before they realized they had a title to win. The snapmare from the top to the table looked so vicious, I was dying! By the end, they both tried everything before the Steiner Screwdriver by Tam finished Giulia off.

Years of Stardom booking long reigns really made Tam’s victory feel special.

Coming Soon

The top 25 wrestlers of 2023 list should be ready shortly, plus at the end of every month, I’ll write up the top 25 matches I watched during it.

Twitter

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Discord

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Please donate to Callen Lorde!

The Best Matches I’ve Watched This Month (November 2023)

It was a very light month in November, probably because I spent too much time watching The Traitors. I did get a top-25 match, though!

#25
Chikayo Nagashima & Sugar Sato vs Sonoko Kato & Toshie Uematsu
GAEA Break Out!
September 16, 1996

Intense, quick tags, lots of brawling, and a high-paced tag match. A lot of fun!

Rating: 7/10

#24
Gunther (c) vs The Miz
“WWE Intercontinental Championship”
WWE Survivor Series
November 25, 2023

The story of Miz trying to work the leg to take down the unstoppable Gunther was good and it was sold well by Gunther. The big near-fall off the Eddie Guerrero hijinks was really fun. The knee almost took Gunther out, but he was too good and put The Miz down!

Rating: 7/10

#23
Tito Santana (c) vs Paul Orndorff
“WWF Intercontinental Championship”
WWF at Kiel Auditorium
September 1, 1984

From my review of The Best of The WWF Volume II:

It feels like they wanted to show the St. Louis crowd a more NWA-style match, as WWF just took over the territory. The structure was not typical for a WWF match from the time, and it had lots of cool nearfalls, a non-WWF structure, and a lot of action. Tito is one of the best babyface workers ever, and seeing him work from underneath is great. His hope spots are tremendous. The comeback was intense by Tito, as usual. They fought back and forth down the stretch, leading to a time-limit draw.

Rating: 7/10

#22
Rhea Ripley (c) vs Zoey Stark
“WWE Women’s World Championship”
WWE Survivor Series
November 23, 2023

I kind of loved this. It was intense, hard-hitting, and dramatic. Zoey stepped up and used her power but was overcome as it wasn’t enough. Perfect title defense.

Rating: 7/10

#21
Hiromi Yagi vs Jaguar Yokota
JWP on September 8, 1996

Jaguar continues to look great, no matter what year it is. This has a lot of fun stuff, and I loved the sudden submission finish out of nowhere!

Rating: 7/10

#20
Strike Force, The British Bulldogs, The Killer Bees, The Rougeau Brothers, & The Young Stallions vs The Hart Foundation, Demolition, The Bolsheviks, The New Dream Team, & The Islanders
“Elimination Match”
WWF Survivor Series
November 26, 1987

A match filled with a lot of action, quick tags, and a logical format, and I loved the story of the underdog Stallions surviving with the Bees.

Rating: 7/10

#19
Angel de Oro, Niebla Roja, & Templario vs Atlantis Jr., Mascara Dorada 2.0, & Mistico
“Best 2/3 Falls”
CMLL Grand Prix De Amazonas
October 27, 2023

This had exactly what you wanted, with spectacular moves, a hot crowd, and a good story about the feud between Templario and Mistico. Dorada continues to impress!

Rating: 7/10

#18
Bayley vs Bianca Belair
WWE SmackDown
October 27, 2023

A tremendous match, with Bayley working over the back and Belair selling it well. The highlight was a great segment that started on the apron and continued outside, and the finish was really good as well.

Rating: 7/10

#17
La Catalina vs Zeuxis
“CMLL Universal De Amazones Title Tournament Final Match”
CMLL Blue Panther 45. Aniversario
October 20, 2023

They both fought hard to win this tournament, and it was an exciting match.

Rating: 7/10

#16
The Powers of Pain, The British Bulldogs, The Hart Foundation, The Rockers, & The Young Stallions vs Demolition, The Bolsheviks, The Brain Busters, Los Conquistadores, & The Fabulous Rougeaus
“Elimination Match”
WWF Survivor Series
November 24, 1988

It is similar to the previous year but with more action, more stories, and the really fun Conquistadores surviving against all odds. Plus, a double turn!

Rating: 7/10

#15
Chigusa Nagayo, Sakura Hirota, Sonoko Kato, & Toshie Uematsu vs Chikayo Nagashima, Mayumi Ozaki, Reiko Amano, & Sugar Sato
GAEA Endless Summer
August 18, 1996

Nagayo and Ozaki were awesome in this, controlling everything, but the rookies really came out to shine, and this was a blast!

Rating: 7/10

#14
Bryan Danielson vs Rush
AEW Dynamite
February 8, 2023

The first 2/3 of the match was great, with Rush just destroying an injured and bloody Danielson and being a cocky asshole about it. Danielson’s selling was great, and he was such a massive underdog. The comeback was good, too, but once we got to the longer finishing sequence, it fell apart a bit for me.

Rating: 7/10

#13
Chaparita ASARI vs Kyoko Inoue
“Japan Grand Prix”
AJW Japan Grand Prix
July 28, 1996

This was a blast. To start, they did the I’m taller than you exchange, with each standing on different things to get an advantage in a test of strength until it ended with ASARI hitting a top rope dropkick onto Inoue, who was standing on a steal chair. Immediately, ASARI sat in the chair while Inoue rolled to the floor and sat in a chair at ringside. A perfect start to the match. The rest was fun, too, with Inoue hitting one of the fastest giant swings ever and ASARI having tremendous spots throughout. It ended with Inoue’s death offense for the win.

Rating: 7/10

#12
Dynamite Kansai (c) vs Mayumi Ozaki
“JWP Openweight Championship”
JWP on August 10, 1996

This was dramatic and had a lot of great struggle between the two. The crowd brawling was awesome here, too.

Rating: 7.25/10

#11
The Usos (c) vs Drew McIntyre & Sheamus
“WWE Raw & SmackDown Tag Team Championship”
WWE SmackDown
January 6, 2023

This told a great story of McIntyre and Sheamus outmatching the Usos regarding power and being one-on-one, but the Usos are the superior team. Usos are also the masters of tag nearfalls, and the crowd was insane for them in this one. I love the classic cheating tag finish and Sami and Roman’s reactions while watching in the back while eating popcorn.

Rating: 7.25/10

#10
Rie Tamada & Yumi Fukawa (c) vs Chikayo Nagashima & Sugar Sato
“Japanese Tag Team Championship”
AJW The Rising Generation Queens Carnival
September 1, 1996

Oz Academy (Nagashima and Sato) do some wild Sabu shit, and it’s so much fun as they are the highlight of this really good tag match that comes down to a very exciting finishing sequence.

Rating: 7.5/10

#9
CM Punk vs Ricky Starks
“Owen Hart Foundation 2023 Men’s Tournament Final Match”
AEW Collision
July 15, 2023

Punk is a master of playing the crowd and Starks is very charismatic and has the crowd with him, and the crowd was amazing here in Calgary! Punk really went out of his way to make Starks a superstar in this, and the finish was a perfect payoff.

Rating: 7.5/10

#8
Aja Kong & Dynamite Kansai vs Devil Masami & Kyoko Inoue
JWP The Ryogoku Big Project
October 13, 1996

These two amazing teams have an amazing match, to nobody’s surprise. It started intense, with everyone hitting vicious lariats, but only kept it up all match. It built really well with a lot of great action and the main takeaway is this match looked like it hurt a lot.

Rating: 7.75/10

#7
Becky Lynch, Bianca Belair, Charlotte Flair & Shotzi vs Asuka, Bayley, IYO SKY & Kairi Sane
“War Games”
WWE Survivor Series
November 25, 2023

I was a little apprehensive about the babyfaces winning the advantage as it goes against everything I know about War Games. When each person entering brought a new weapon, my skepticism was super high, but luckily, they salvaged things and turned it into a great match.

Bayley held everything together and worked her ass off. It was so nice to see KAIRI having so much fun upon returning to WWE too! Of course Io Shirai took some nutty bumps, including the jump off the top of the cage in a garbage can. The finish was very satisfying!

Rating: 7.75/10

#6
Gunther (c) vs Chad Gable
“WWE Intercontinental Championship”
WWE Raw
August 21, 2023

I had completely forgotten that Chad Gable existed, but it turns out he is the perfect Gunther opponent. Gunther, in the middle of the best IC Title run ever, faced an unrelenting technical wrestler who had the power to match up with him. He pushed and pushed Gunther and finally got the shock count-out win, setting up a rematch. It’s a perfect way to give Gunther his first loss in the WWE.

Rating: 8/10

#5
Orange Cassidy (c) vs Swerve Strickland
“AEW International Championship”
AEW Dynamite
June 7, 2023

Although Cassidy can do amazing moves, amazing comedy, and garner amazing amounts of sympathy, the real key to his amazingness is the little things. The ability to stay in character in almost any situation. Like sitting on the apron trying to avoid getting hit by slowly scooting out of the way. That said, this match hits on all of his levels of amazing, and Swerve is no slouch and a really good opponent for him as he can keep up on those levels and is a great counterpoint to him. It was an awesome match that got a lot of time and built from a great character-driven match into a match filled with amazing spots and such an awesome finishing sequence where each looked like the winner, and it had a perfect finish.

Rating: 8/10

#4
Bison Kimura vs Li Fua
Jd’ Star on July 30, 1996

I had no idea that Li Fua was Jaguar Yokota until days after I watched this, so that adds to the awesomeness here.

Li Fua is a deranged Chinese masked woman who spent most of the match cheating and stabbing Bison, making her bleed everywhere. It’s a violent brawl that goes all over the ringside area and involved many weapons. It even involved Fua doing a moonsault from the stage to the floor onto Bison. This match is insane.

Afterward, Fua cuts her own head and pours the blood into Bison in some kind of ritual. A must-watch match!

Rating: 8/10

#3
Pedro Morales (c) vs Don Muraco
“WWF Intercontinental Championship”
WWF on MSG Network
January 22, 1983

From my review of The Best of The WWF Volume II:

Muraco attacks before the bell, and Morales fights right back. The really cool being thrown into the corner and turning it into a sunset flip by Morales is awesome. The early goings are just Morales destroying Muraco and Muraco selling his ass off. He’s such a chicken shit that when Morales looks to jump off the top to the floor on him, Muraco hides under the ring. A massive low blow by Muraco brings things even, and that’s when Muraco can finally remove his shirt. Of course, Muraco uses it to choke Pedro, only for Pedro to low-blow him back!

Muraco ducked, and Morales hit the turnbuckle with his knee, which finally evens the tides and led to some good knee work by Muraco. After a pushoff of the figure-four, Morales has a comeback and does a backbreaker onto his hurt knee like an idiot. The Boston Crab he does is too close to the ropes, and his leg is too hurt to keep it on. Muraco still can’t control it, though. Morales keeps fighting, but the cross body by Muraco is caught, only for Morales’s leg to give up, and Muraco wins the belt.

It is a great, short, and intense brawl with amazing transitions that tell a wonderful story. I love these two against each other.

Rating: 8.25/10

#2
Aja Kong vs Kyoko Inoue
“Japan Grand Prix Final”
AJW Japan Grand Prix
August 30, 1996

Kong is out for death in this match, and Inoue is a perfect underdog with tremendous selling throughout. It’s intense from the start to the tremendous run of nearfalls down the stretch. Every lariat and every throw and hit just look like they hurt; it’s on another level. A great match that seems to be forgotten if you listen to Cagematch.

Rating: 9.25/10

#1
Gunther (c) vs Chad Gable
“WWE Intercontinental Championship”
WWE Raw
September 4, 2023

You know a match is special when the WWE uploads it to YouTube immediately.

This played off the previous match and built upon it. Gable knew he could win, and Gunther had doubts for almost the first time in his reign. Gable again fought from underneath, but here, his hope spots meant more. The comeback and the Gable’s attempts to win were electric. This had the best ankle lock submission nearfalls I have ever seen. When Gunther finally survived and got back on offense, there was no back-and-forth bullshit. He delivered a bunch of vicious offense and just pinned him clean. The camera immediately moved to Gable’s daughter crying in the first row. This might be my match of the year.

With this win, Gunther has become the longest-reigning IC Champion ever!

Rating: 9.25/10

Twitter

You can discuss this on Twitter!

Discord

We also have a lovely discord community to discuss the greatest wrestler ever project and anything else under the sun. It’s an open and welcoming group, and I am very proud of it. Everyone is welcome:

Join:

https://t.co/0pOARzaXHD

We also do weekly watch-along parties with chat!

How Can You Help?

Callen-Lorde is the global leader in LGBTQ healthcare. Since the days of Stonewall, we have been transforming lives in LGBTQ communities through excellent comprehensive care, provided free of judgment and regardless of ability to pay. In addition, we are continuously pioneering research, advocacy, and education to drive positive change around the world because we believe healthcare is a human right.

Please donate to Callen Lorde!