Showing posts with label AAA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AAA. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 September 2016

Opinion: Every Minus Five Star Match according to The Wrestling Observer Newsletter or This Is Not The Worst Wrestling Article in the World, This Is Just A Tribute.


What makes a minus five star match, a minus five star match? On Dave Meltzer's scale, we can go all the way from the full five stars, through DUD into a minus five star, taking in quarter and half stars along the way, it's a faintly clumsy, unwieldy system (in that way, you could say it's like the title of this article) but it's one that works. I began thinking about this when recently a match at this year's BOLA between The Young Bucks & Adam Cole vs Ricochet, Will Ospreay & Matt Sydal got the full *****. This marks the first five for these performers to the best of my research but also, the first for PWG. It got me to thinking about the flipside of this match, the legendary Los Villainos vs Psycho Circus from last year's Triplemania, the only trios tag match to receive the menos cinco. Appropriately, there are but five matches to receive the -***** rating, I thought I'd take a look back at them and try to see if I can work out, what makes them truly, the worst.

First up we have Moondog Spot taking on Junkyard Dog in the second round of 1985's WWF Wrestling Classic. Moondog throws punches as soon as Junkdog gets in the ring, Moondog pulls off a jumping fist to the chest, climbs to the second turnbuckle, fall on his face, Junkdog headbutts him twice from his all fours position, stands up, does another headbutt and then falls on Moondog and counts his own pinfall. I thought I'd just write this out because it lasts forty-six seconds. It's not even the shortest match of the PPV (that honour goes to Dynamite Kid who dropkicks Ivan Putski as he sings the National Anthem for a three count) but boy is it somehow the sloppiest even in that short time. In the battle of these two dogs, it would seem, from this writer's POV that being one of having never seen either of these two men compete before, it would appear that in wrestling logic, Junkyard Dog's head is made of pure steel because three light head taps was apparently enough to just about kill Moondog. This is an odd one for the start of the list because yes it's dreadful, it has no story, no heel or face dynamics and no impressive performances and the ending makes no sense because if the ref isn't in the ring, why not wait for him, timekeeper? Just wait for him to get in the ring, I can only deduce that the issue with this is that it's nothing, it is literally a nothing match which does nothing for either men. There's nothing to say about it, so I'm not going to say anything more. Moving on...

...To Mr.T at Wrestlemania, no not the serviceable tag match from WM but Wrestlemania II's boxing match with 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper. Thirteen minutes. Thirteen minutes this match takes before in the fourth round, the ref takes a bump, Pipes goes for a bodyslam and some ground n' pound and gets disqualified. Thirteen minutes this goes on before we don't even get a proper ending. The worst part is, this isn't a boxing match, it's not a wrestling match, frankly, what the fuck is it? At least the battle of the dogs had the decency to be a rubbish forty-six seconds. I don't entirely know what to say here as they try to pretend that this is a real boxing match, which is fine in concept but neither men seem willing to put any conviction behind their punches. We're watching two men fail to act like they give a shit for a crowd who would prefer to just watch King Kong Bundy competitively sweat (ComSweatative?) against Hulk Hogan. It's not even a satisfying end to a story, it ends with the two men being pulled apart, trying to brawl to each other and then just leaving. Pipes is a legend of course, very few men from his era have been more deserving of a WWE World Title run and never had one but this was just filler, toxic celebrity ego stroking that tries to write in a wrestling ending to a boxing match and as a result ends up failing on all accounts. It could have worked but it didn't. Actually, maybe that's being too polite.

So our next stop on this magical train through shitland is WCW/NwO Halloween Havoc 1998 (which if you'd like to read more on, subtle plug here) with The [Ultimate] Warrior taking on Hollywood Hulk Hogan. Now the immediate problem with this match is that you have to compare it to the minor masterpiece that these two men pulled off at Wrestlemania 6. Actually comparing those two is unfair, if Wrestlemania 6 was Elvis Live in Hawaii, this was Pop Idol winner Steve Brookstein down his local pub reliving past glories but failing to remind anyone why they loved them in the first place. Neither Hogan nor Warrior are able to in any way go like they used to (debatably they never even could but that's a debate for another day) and watching wrestling's most infamous porn tape take on sport's entertainment's highest profile homophobic blogger try and relive such famous spots as 'dueling bodyslams', 'running the ropes' and 'punching' at half speed is not a pleasurable experience. And just when you thought the match was getting dull, the over-booking starts: this match features interference from The Giant (Big Show), Stevie Ray, Vincent, Horace Hogan and Eric Bischoff who straight up grabs the ref and chokes him but the ref doesn't consider this a DQ but then he also ignores a blatant lowblow from Hogan and oh yeah, Hogan setting his bloody face on fire (actually a tad inaccurate, his face on,y gets bloody from setting it on fire). The main issue with this match is the bad taste in your mouth from how clear it is that they brought back the melting waxworks of Warrior and Hogan to duke it out, just so Hogan could have the ego trip of being 1-1 with Warrior but here's the thing: their original fight, while to someone of modern wrestling sensibilities is ridiculously slow, is full of simple storytelling and easy symbolism of torch passing, this one is so ridiculous it literally has the torch blow up in Hogan's face. Of the three matches so far, this one is easily the most deserving of its full -***** rating.



If you know anything about bad wrestling, you had to know, we'd eventually get something from 1999's Heroes of Wrestling. The entire PPV is full of bad matches, weird, sloppy finishes and only one man looking like he's having fun and that's Jake Roberts and he's only having fun because he's at peak drunk. So the match that Meltzer Driver deemed the worst on this particular PPV is the Bushwhackers vs Nikolai Volkoff & The Iron Sheik a match in which a Croatian masquerading as a Russian and an Iranian get 'USA' chanted at them for ten minutes as they fight two New Zealanders. In sticking with the -***** tradition, this is a limited offense match. There's forearms, elbows, headbutts and clotheslines. At one point Sheiky baby locks in something approaching a Camel Clutch to add variation. I should give credit to The Iron Sheik actually, he comes the closest to delivering a performance in this match, especially in a stunning sequence where he threatens to leave the match if the crowd don't stop chanting USA, only to decide to come back just before they get counted out. The heels! This match is of interest as time-wise, it's so close to the WWF reunion of the four men at Wrestlemania 17's Gimmick Battle Royal (because the gimmicks and the battle royal rules are 'over the top'. Geddit?) but whereas that was played for laughs, this one isn't even really played. At one point Dutch Mantel on sedated commentary says words to the effect of 'the referee doesn't seem to have seen Volkoff tag in but I don't think he cares'. He's not alone, a dreadful match but one that frankly, if you expected anything other than detritus from this PPV, you really are an unstoppable optimist.

Our final match (luckily) is from Mexican promotion AAA and last year's Triplémania XXIII where Los Villainos (Villaino III, IV and V) took on the Psycho Circus (Murder, Monster and Psycho Clown). The first question I have about this match is what did Hugo Savinovich think about it? We never got to find out because shortly after the match started, his mic cut out and was replaced with a horrendous fucking buzzing noise (the one good piece of commentary Matt Striker provides is suggesting people imagine he's calling a Killer Bees match. A bad joke but y'know, you take what you can get). You know what everyone loves about trios matches: fast paced action, big high-flying spots, technicos in peril from those dastardly rudos cutting off the ring, well instead here we get some half-speed weak slapping, a few sloppy to reckless looking suicide dives and umm, so which team were we meant to cheer for? Was it you, Murder Clown? Were you the hero we dreamt of as a child, Murder Clown? So the crowd are cheering for both the villains and the psycho clowns so I can only deduce that this is like The Undertaker if he took on Sting, they could try and heel it up but no one wouldn't cheer them. Still, this match does have one nearly functioning dungeon of doom spot till you realise that oh yeah, the clowns are actually powerbombing the two villainos holding the third clown, they're trying to murder murder clown (or is it monster? I didn't keep track) so the match eventually ends after one of the clowns goes for the least convincing chair work this side of Horace Hogan (thank you to Matt Striker for pointing out that it was a chair and that we probably knew that. He's a quick one that Matt Striker) but gets distracted by his respect for Villaino III stops him being able to pin him leading to him getting clumsily rolled up. So I do want to use this time to ask everyone - top rope falling headbutts, has anyone apart from Rey Mysterio ever made them look like anything other than them falling and twatting themself on the ring? It looks especially sloppy when you actually miss the other person and the camera angle needs to cover your shit, Mr.Clown. Put simply, this match is a fucking mess but it's almost a beautiful one, of the five matches here, this is the only one I would watch again. If The Final Deletion was the Sharknado of wrestling, all knowing winks to so bad it's good culture (and no, Delete or Decay was not the Sharknado 2: The Second One of wrestling, Sharknado 2 had a cameo from Kurt Angle, Delete or Decay had Joseph Parks) then this match is feasibly the 1959 Santa Claus movie where Mexican Santa and Merlin fight the devil from Santa's spaceship. It's campy, ridiculous, goes on for a bit too long but is occasionally so utterly tone deaf and so bizarre that it becomes oddly fascinating, not necessarily good (definitely not good) but certainly interesting, and for that reason I disagree with Big Dave and give this *****. Just kidding, it's really fucking bad.

So are these the five worst matches I've ever seen (Really with Mr. T vs Pipes, the question is 'was that a match'?)? I mean they are all undeniably awful but it's hard to really see if these are the five worst I've ever seen, I don't know. But is a -***** even a negative thing? On the surface yes, but there are only five -***** matches, at the time of writing there has been eighty-one ***** matches, so really it's in its own way, more prestigious to wrestle a shitsterpiece than a masterpiece. In my exploration of the backside of the wrestling scale, I don't know if I've learnt what makes a -***** worthy of such damnation, what makes it so much worse than a -**** for instance? I still don't know but here's the thing, none of these matches are worthy of anything less than our complete contempt, sure there have probably actually been worse displays of wrestling than these but for what they represent, it makes sense to keep them as the reminders to all bookers - your match could be next. Don't book matches if you don't think they matter, don't try and make people give a shit about fake boxing, don't try to relive past glories if you were possibly approaching past it when you were living them and just don't watch Heroes of Wrestling. So what makes a -***** match? There's a lot of bad wrestling out there but something stood out that made these special. Maybe what we should take away that just because a journalist thinks something, doesn't make it fact (no, that would mean I don't matter and that can't be true) or maybe we should just take it that Dave Meltzer shouldn't have to represent everyone. If he likes a match, that's fine, if he doesn't and you did, it doesn't mean you can't like that, maybe you wanted to watch The New Day drink piss jugs with Jon Stewart, but just be prepared for someone to disagree with you. I want there to be some deeper meaning to this article than 'I dunno maybe some matches are just always going to suck' but really that's all I've got. A really unsatisfying conclusion to an article about matches with weak endings, it's almost like I planned this all along. I didn't.



Words - Jozef Raczka 
Images - James Marston & Jozef Raczka 
Editor - James Marston

Thursday, 18 February 2016

Opinion: Lucha Underground - Wrestling Done Right (Lily Lestrange)


Lucha Underground came around seemingly out of nowhere in October 2014 and it has taken the indy circuit by storm. With it's telenovela filming style, unique storylines and a variety of both established and up and coming wrestlers it continues to grow in popularity, and rightly so. It has brought something new and fresh to the world of televised wrestling and fans have sought it out as an alternative to the monotony of other larger promotions which seem to be producing the same dull storylines week in week out. But how does it work? Why has it gotten so big in such a short space of time, whilst other companies who have been around for so much longer struggle to sell tickets and keep fans invested?

Well, everything. Everything I mentioned earlier and then some.

The style in which it's filmed is very telenovela, which is basically the Spanish version of Eastenders but with ten times more drama and a hundred more mental lassies going about screaming and slapping each other. It's extremely intense and very high drama, which makes for very exciting television (when it comes to wrestling anyway, Eastenders is fucking gash, sorry Phil). This all integrates perfectly with their dramatic story lines; we've got dead wrestlers, a missing owner, a psychotic vampire and a dragon. Aye that's right, a big scaly winged demon bastard of a dragon.


This leads on to one of the best bits about the show - the variety of wrestlers that it showcases. I've seen far too many new companies spring up from nowhere and all they do is book a bunch of ex-WWE or ex-TNA guys, have them involved in complete spot-fests without any logical story line and call it a promotion. Lucha Underground has been different from the very beginning; in the first show they had a variety of "big name" stars from various promotions and they also had a lot of indy talent that wasn't very well known outwith their own circles. They used names like Ricochet (Prince Puma), Johnny Mundo and Matt Cross (Son Of Havoc) to bring in existing fans of WWE, PWG, Dragon Gate etc. whilst at the same time introducing them to wrestlers like Blue Demon Jr. and Sexy Star who - to the common wrestling fan like myself who's never found the time to watch any Mexican promotions - aren't known but are fantastic at what they do.  I've never really seen any females take on the luchadora gimmick properly so Sexy Star has introduced me to a whole new realm of wrestling to explore.  


As the series continued more people started to get introduced, like Pentagon Jr., Fenix and Drago who again are again all big names in promotions like AAA but aren't as well known to a lot of Western fans.  They're names that I'd heard of but had never bothered looking into because let's face it, I struggle to keep up with the promotions that I watch to begin with never mind getting myself invested in new ones, but Lucha Underground has gone far and wide to bring the best of them into the sights of the Western world.  By putting these "unknown" guys on to mainstream television, on a show that airs weekly, they're helping us to broaden our horizons whilst entertaining us and keeping us invested at the same time.  Without it I wouldn't have discovered a lot of the wrestlers that I have; I started watching because I'm a big fan of Ricochet and I wanted to see how he done under his luchador guise of Prince Puma but I didn't keep on watching just because of him, I kept on watching because there wasn't a bad match on that card and I wanted to see more of all of the wrestlers on that first show.  Christ I even enjoyed watching Chavo on it.  Then, a few episodes in, Drago - the aforementioned dragon - appeared and he kept me even more interested; I had seen him on AAA's Triplemania back in 2014 after hearing about it being an absolutely amazing show and I was mesmerised by him.  I'd never seen such a Gwar-esque character in wrestling before and I wanted to see more of him but failed to keep up with the happenings of AAA because as I said before, there's just too much good shit out there to be able to keep up with all of it, then when I realised he was in LU I was overjoyed. 


It's been so refreshing to watch all of the different characters and styles come together on to one show that's so easily accessible.  And the best thing is, there's no daft adverts appearing halfway through a decent match!  For breaks they show video packages and promos that help to build up towards a match or something developing in a story, so you're getting an hour of pure uninterrupted, unadulterated wrestling. How many of you still sit up and watch RAW on a Monday night like it's a chore that you have to do even though you really don't want to and get no enjoyment from it?  Watching half a roster do the same thing week in, week out then moaning about how bad it is on Twitter as if you've no other options to explore.  If you're one of these people then ditch it.  Get it dumped like that psycho lassie ye went out with last year that panned in your window because you never got her a Michael Korrs watch for Christmas.  Get up on a Thursday morning and get Lucha Underground watched.  Or if you're not sick of the sight of Kane interrupting matches and Roman Reigns stuttering through promos, stick to your Monday routine and start up a Wednesday night/Thursday morning one too.  Let's face it, there might not be enough hours in the day to keep up with every good promotion out there but Lucha Underground is more than deserving of an hour of your time every week.  

Lucha Underground airs every Wednesday at 8PM ET/PT (1AM UK time) on the El Rey Network.  


Monday, 10 August 2015

AAA TripleMania XXIII iPPV Review

This is the first time we've covered an AAA show on ATPW, in fact it's the very first time that we've covered Mexican wrestling at all, as we continue to branch out in the content that we offer to you. The show featured Rey Mysterio Jr. battling Myzteziz in the main event, with the bout being billed as a "Dream Match", whilst Pentagon, Jr., Brian Cage, Angelico , El Hijo del Fantasma, Cibernetico and more featured on the card. But was it any good?






Stupidly, I had the opening of the show on with Spanish commentary, so I sat pretty confused through the opening five minutes or so, however there was a nice Mission Impossible themed opening video package.

One Fall Revelos Atomicos de Locura Match
Dinastia, Drago, Goya Kong & Pimpinella Escarlata 
vs.
Daga, Mamba, Mini Psycho Clown & Sexy Star


This match featured a good cross-section of what AAA has to offer, with a member of each side representing the four singles division within the company, Male, Female, Mini-Estrella and Exotico. As an opening match this worked alright from a home viewing perspective, with the action keeping a fast-pace throughout, whilst providing some good contrasts in the collisions between the performers of different divisions. The crowd lapped up the comedy from characters like Pimpinella Escarlata, and although it wasn't really my cup of tea, it's clear that the live audience were big fans of Pimpinella's antics throughout the match.

Sexy Star was one of the stand out's of the bout for me, alongside fellow Lucha Underground competitor Drago, with both providing some of the best action in the contest, with no one else really threatening to break out of the pack. Out of that pack, Goya Kong especially looked sluggish and seemed to be holding back the match from really lifting the pace, although her cannon ball off the apron, during a series of high-flying dives, was impressive. The finish saw Pimpinella manage to get a submission out of Sexy Star, seemingly coming out of nowhere, which left the match feeling a little flat at the end.


Winners - Dinastia, Drago, Goya Kong & Pimpinella Escarlata 


Referee Pepe "Tropi" Casas was honoured, with Matt Striker informing us of his legendary status and that he would be refereeing his last match tonight (In fact the bout had two referees, for reasons). There was also a video package on Los Villanous before their match.

One Fall Six Man Tag Team Match
Los Villanos' Villano III, Villano IV & Villano V
vs.
Los Pyscho Circus


This match was marred with technical issues, both audio and visual, that certainly affected the match from where I was watching it. It's hard to concentrate when there's a constant buzzing, and only Matt Striker's commentary can be heard (including the face-palm inducing line "There's no leg slapping here") in a match that needed Hugo Savinivich to really get over the history of the two families involved in the bout. The visual issues meant that the match was very choppy and therefore difficult to follow. 

From what I did see the match seemed like a little bit of train wreck. Even if I had been completely up to date on Los Villanos and the history they had in the industry, I don't think I would have been into the sluggish action that the trio provided. Having three guys in the ring over fifty years old was always going to create this kind of action. Perhaps the bout could have been saved by having a decent story to follow, but that never really occurred, beyond both trios ripping one of the others masks. The finish was very confusing as Psycho Clown refused to pin Villano III, supposedly out of respect, but Psycho Clown ended up getting pinned by Villano IV after a low blow, like what? 


Winners - Los Villanos' Villano III, Villano IV & Villano V



A celebration of Villano III's career followed, with this PPV beginning to build a theme of honouring the past, more than looking to the future. The funky cage was lowered, complete with billboards around the side, in preparation for what Striker described as the "Aerial Assault" match, whether that is the actual name I have no idea.

Three Way Trios Aerial Assault Match for AAA World Trios Championships.
Los Hell Brothers (C)
vs.
El Hijo del Fantasma, El Texano, Jr. & Pentagon, Jr.
vs.
Angelico, Jack Evans & Fenix


The gimmick was essentially a combination of a steel cage match and TNA's Ultimate X, with the World Trios titles being suspended on a beam across the top of the cage. A big ol' clusterfuck of a match. The spots in this one were big, Fenix's moonsault of the top of the cage, Angelico jumping to the middle beam of one edge of the cage and some big bumps through a tables, here and there. I imagine the match looked much better inside the arena, as the camera work was shoddy throughout, making it difficult to feel like you were catching everything that was going on and making some of the spots look not quite as impressive as they could have. 

Personally, I think having three teams, or nine different wrestlers in the match, hurt the contest, as there was just too many bodies standing around inside the cage, especially at the start of the match. Six performers would have been enough to keep the spot count high, whilst keeping people busy from start to finish. In a comparison to WWE's Money in the Bank concept this match lacked a slickness and the spots seemed to be more for the sake of it, rather than in an attempt to get hold of the title belts. Almost certainly the best match of the show so far, but still didn't deliver on the promise of an intriguing gimmick and the talents involved in the match. 


Winners and still AAA World Trios Champions - Los Hell Brothers


Plenty of replays followed, alongside the celebrating Los Hell Brothers, who managed to retain their titles. We got some good shots of fans dicking about for a bit, which was slightly better than the wide shot of the arena that was the usual go to between matches, with the commentary randomly switching to Spanish for a little while.


One Fall Tag Team Match
Blue Demon, Jr & La Parka
vs.
El Mesias & Electroshock


The highlight of this match for me was realising that Electroshock looked like a gimp Giant Gonzales, in his ridiculous get-up. Things felt rather short here, in what was a basic tag team encounter, set up to celebrate the career of Blue Demon, Jr, as the theme of the PPV continued. There was nothing that stood out as particularly good or bad, but for the biggest PPV of the year, I was expecting a little bit more here than a basic tag team match. The finish saw Demon, Jr. able to get Gimpy Giant Gonzales to tap out with his El Pulpo submission, which made for a decent send off for the former NWA World Heavyweight Champion. 


Winners - Blue Demon, Jr. & La Parka

An emotional celebration followed and it was clear that Blue Demon, Jr. meant a lot to everyone involved in the show.

Hector Garza and El Hijo del Perro Aguayo became the 10th and 11th inductees into the AAA Hall of Fame. An emotional experience for the live crowd and the families of the inductees, due to both having passed away in recent years, with Aguayo's death being particularly recent. Unfortunately, Hugo Savinivich's commentary was missing for the initial induction meaning that most of the speech was lost on me, however, he returned for the second induction, adding to the moment and really helping me to understand the significance of the duo and their group, Perros del Mal, in Mexican wrestling.

One Fall Lucha de Apuestas Hair vs. Hair Match
Alberto el Patron 
with Fenix
vs.
Brian Cage 
with El Hijo del Fantasma


One of two main event calibre matches on the show, this was the first match to genuinely deliver on the show. The Mexico vs. USA storyline is a simple one, but one that is particularly relevant at the moment, with Brian Cage capitalising on this by wearing a "Trump 2016" t-shirt. Because of this, the crowd seemed into everything the two men did in the ring, lifting the action and adding a certain level of importance to it, with the Hair vs. Hair gimmick also adding some weight to the bout, despite El Patron's AAA World Heavyweight Championship not being on the line.

This was an enjoyably, brutal clash between the two, that told a good story and was easy to get involved in, despite the potentially alienating Mexico vs. USA element. El Patron getting busted open early doors provided some strong visuals, with Lucha Underground regular Cage dominated the early goings with the use of a folding chair and baking tray. The deck being stacked against the former WWE Champion throughout the bout after Cage and El Hijo del Fantasma had taken out Fenix on the ramp and the referee had been revealed to be in Cage's pocket, put El Patron in an underdog role that he seemed to revel in. His comeback, following a missed double jump moonsault from Cage, was heated with plenty of spot-on strikes, before he was able to pick up the victory via submission with a Cross Armbreaker. A special shoutout to the Bret's rope powerbomb through a table by Cage that worked a great near fall.


Winner - Alberto el Patron


Following the bout, TAFKA Alberto Del Rio cut a blistering promo, well it sounded blistering anyway, I don't speak Spanish. Personally, I could have done without Cage attempting to attack El Patron after having his head shaved, as with Cage already tapping out in the match, having El Patron quickly get the upper hand with a powerbomb seemed a bit superfluous. Unless perhaps Cage is done with the company.

One Fall Match
Rey Mysterio, Jr.
vs.
Myzteziz


The match that seemed teased to happen at two separate WrestleMania's headlined the show, with Matt Striker taking great glee in pointing that out. The entrances of both men made the match feel very special indeed, with Myzteziz dropping down from the ceiling with the Mission Impossible theme (The upcoming spin-off film was sponsoring the show, with Simon Pegg making an appearance on the screen before the match), in a truly spectacular entrance. This gave the match a bit of glits and glamour, contributing to it's "big match feel", as AAA continued to provide some astounding visuals.

This was certainly the match of the night for me, with the pair creating a sprawling match that took in a variety of different styles. This kept the match interesting and played to the strengths of the two workers, who may have struggled to keep up a balls to wall bout, in the style that they are perhaps best known for. The opening section focused on a more brawling style with Mysterio busting Myzteziz open early with a head-scissors onto the ringpost, before TAFKA Sin Cara hit a powerbomb on the announce table and both tumbled through a table on a clunky suplex spot. Before the middle of the bout turned into both men attempting to get the pinfall with a series of different pinfall combinations, with the slower count used in Mexico playing into this section well.

With the pair running through a series of nice back and forth counters, the conclusion of the bout focused around Mysterio Jr's 619 and Myzteziz's La Mistica. Both men attempted each others' signature moves, with Myzteziz getting a good near fall off a 619 and Frog Splash combination, before Mysterio was able to make Myzteziz tap out with the second time that The Ultimate Underdog was able to utilise La Mistica. An enjoyable close to a bout that picked up it's pace heading into the final stretch of the match. Whilst the holds weren't always as slick as one would hope for in the biggest match of the year for AAA, there was still plenty to enjoy here, with the pair able to put together a match that they wouldn't have been able to if it had been booked for on a WWE show.


Winner - Rey Mysterio, Jr.


Things got interesting post-match with Averno, Joe Litre and Pentagon, Jr. heading to the ring to attack Myzteziz, with Joe Litre carrying a staple gun, because he's extreme according to Hugo Savinivich. Of course, eventually Mysterio, Jr. made the save with the pair hitting a double 619 to clear the ring of their foes. This all seemed good and well until BOTCH CARA returned and Myteziz screwed up a suicide dive onto Averno, with Mysterio having to cover for him. A slightly messy conclusion to the show, but at least it seemed to vaguely make some kind of sense.

But, that wasn't the conclusion. Myzteziz spitting in Mysterio's face and cutting a promo challenging the former WWE Champion to a Mask vs. Mask bout further down the line was, with Myzteziz seemingly siding with Perros del Mal and Konnan. I couldn't get my head around why Myzteziz seemed to be teaming with the people who had just tried to attack him with a staple gun. The mask vs. mask bout is intriguing, but having the show end with our hero, Rey Mysterio, Jr. getting the shit kicked out of him in the ring was a sour finish to the show.

Finally...


ATPW Scale Rating - 5.03

The show picked up with the two main events that both delivered on expectations, perhaps even above with the Mysterio vs. Myzteziz bout, however the earlier matches didn't do much for me at all, and weren't helped out by the audio and visual issues, as well as some shoddy production. The three way trios cage bout was the highlight of the undercard, for the sheer silliness of the gimmick and some good spots.

The show had a strong focus on the past of the company, with many legends being honoured, which felt like it watered down the Hall of Fame ceremony part of the show. It would have been nice to see the company focus on some new faces, with Brian Cage the only name that seemed to be getting a big push up the card for his semi-main with Alberto el Patron. 

For my first proper look at AAA there was perhaps just enough to make me want to check out the companies next PPV in September, but they're going to have provide a little more on that effort to keep me interested in the company for the long run.

Wednesday, 22 April 2015

Match of the Month: March 2015 Nominations

March was a huge month for pro wrestling, with WWE's biggest event of the year, WrestleMania, hitting our screens and providing a number of thrills and spills. IMPACT Wrestling also had a big month with a series of impressive bouts on television capping off a succesful run of episodes taped on the UK Tour. Ring of Honor put forward a number of strong bouts in their 13th Anniversary show. Elsewhere on the Indies, WWNLive continued to go from strength to strength, with EVOLVE in particular stepping up a gear and providing a number of matches to the list below.

Over in Japan, New Japan kept things going with their New Japan Cup tournament, with a number of impressive tournament bouts, as well as star studded multi man contests. Dragon Gate said farewell to Uhaa Nation, his bout with BxB Hulk is included in the nominations. In Mexico, AAA's offer up a number of bouts from their Rey de Reyes PPV, including a tag bout involving the late, Perro Aguayo Jr.

ROH 


13th Anniversary


 Cedric Alexander vs. Matt Sydal 

 ACH vs. AJ Styles 
 reDRagon vs. The Young Bucks
 Alberto El Patron vs. Jay Lethal 

Dragon Gate 


Champion Gate in Osaka - Day 2


 BxB Hulk vs. Uhaa Nation

NJPW 


New Japan Cup - Day 1


Togi Makabe vs. Tomaoki Honma
Katsuyori Shibata vs. Satoshi Kojima 
Doc Gallows vs. Kota Ibushi 
Karl Anderson vs. Tetsuya Naito 
Bad Luck Fale vs. Kazuchika Okada

New Japan Cup - Day 3 


Captain New Japan, Hiroyoshi Tenzan, Jushin Thunder Liger, KUSHIDA & Tomoaki Honma vs. Manabu Nakanishi, Mascara Dorada, Ryusuke Taguchi, Satoshi Kojima & Tiger Mask
Hiroshi Tanahashi & Yohei Komatsu vs. Sho Tanaka & Yuji Nagata
Cody Hall, Doc Gallows, Karl Anderson & Tama Tonga vs. Kazuchika Okada, Kazushi Sakuraba, Shinsuke Nakamura & Tomohiro Ishii
 Bad Luck Fale vs. Tetsuya Naito
 Hirooki Goto vs. Katsuyori Shibata 

New Japan Cup - Day 7


Jay White, Jushin Thunder Liger & KUSHIDA vs. Mascara Dorada, Ryusuke Taguchi & Tiger Mask
 Satoshi Kojima & Yohei Komatsu vs. Sho Tanaka & Yuji Nagata
 Kota Ibushi vs. Tetsuya Naito
 Bad Luck Fale, Doc Gallows, Karl Anderson & Yujiro Takahashi vs. Kazuchika Okada, Shinsuke Nakamura, Tomohiro Ishii & YOSHI-HASHI 
 Hirooki Goto vs. Kota Ibushi 

WWNLive


EVOLVE 38


Chris Hero vs. Drew Gulak

EVOLVE 40


Timothy Thatcher vs. Tommy End 
Biff Busick vs. Chris Hero

Supershow - Mercury Rising


Chris Hero vs. Timothy Thatcher

Lucha Undeground 


#18



 Johnny Mundo vs. King Cuerno, Steel Cage

#19


Fenix vs. Mil Muertes, Grave Consequences

#20


 Alberto El Patron vs. Texano, Bullrope
 Cage vs. Prince Puma, Boyle Heights Street Fight

TNA


IMPACT Wrestling #556



 Bobby Roode vs. Eric Young, Last Man Standing 
 Ethan Carter III vs. Rockstar Spud, Hair vs. Hair

IMPACT Wrestling #557


 DJ Z & Jessie Godderz vs. Manik & The Great Sanada vs. The Wolves, Ultimate X 
 Awesome Kong vs. Gail Kim vs. Taryn Terrell
 Kurt Angle vs. Lashley

AAA


Rey de Reyes


 El Hijo del Fantasma vs. Fenix 
 Blue Demon, Jr. vs. Villano IV
 Aero Star vs. El Mesias vs. El Texano vs. Psycho Clown
 Myzteziz & Rey Mysterio, Jr. vs. Pentagon, Jr. & Perro Aguayo, Jr.

WWE


NXT #140


 Finn Balor vs. Kevin Owens

WrestleMania 31 Kick-Off


 Big E & Kofi Kingston vs. Cesaro & Tyson Kidd vs. Los Matadores vs. The Usos 
 Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal

WrestleMania 31 


Bad News Barrett vs. Daniel Bryan vs. Dean Ambrose vs. Dolph Ziggler vs. Luke Harper vs. R-Truth vs. Stardust, Ladder 
Randy Orton vs. Seth Rollins
John Cena vs. Rusev
Brock Lesnar vs. Roman Reigns *vs. Seth Rollins*

Monday Night RAW #1140


Daniel Bryan vs. Dolph Ziggler
Dean Ambrose vs. John Cena


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