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CM Punk Talks His WWE Exit, When He Started Feeling Burned Out, New Project, WWE Return

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Credit: Sean Ross Sapp

As noted earlier, CM Punk was interviewed on Opie with Jim Norton while making his media rounds. Here are the highlights:

* Punk said that the reason he did the Art of Wrestling podcast was to tell his fans why he split. He didn’t want to be a guy who constantly said negative things about WWE. In response to some people saying he lied about things, he said that he couldn’t have even made that stuff up.

* Punk says that there’s always somebody who will replace someone else on the wheel, and he is no different. He says he doesn’t blame WWE for that. He didn’t intend to bash the company, he was just telling his story.

* On a possible return to WWE, he said. “You asked if I’m going back to WWE, and my answer now is I can’t be sure. I don’t want to be the guy who says ‘never say never,’ I don’t plan [to go back], but I can’t tell the future. Something could happen, but I personally don’t see it.”

* He says that a lot of his media interviewers think he doesn’t know he’s really going to get punched. He said jiu-jitsu is his strongest area, and he’s confident fighting off of his back. He said he loves MMA because there are so many different aspects.

* CM Punk says he’ll likely compete at 185 pounds and will train most of next year. He said UFC will announce the match and he’ll go through a full training camp. He’ll also be at UFC 182 to watch Daniel Cormier and Jon Jones fight. Cormier is a friend of Punk’s and offered to train with him.

* Punk is writing a story in the Thor annual that’s coming out from Marvel, and is also writing for DC Comics. Punk will be writing a new title called “Strange Sports Stories.”

* He says that both he and WWE probably wish that they would have ended things differently, but it was something that had to be done. Punk said that after WrestleMania 29 he’d torn his knee up and had five weeks off and rediscovered life because he’d never had that long off.

* Punk seems like he would have welcomed a WWE return after his initial suspension, but nobody contacted him. He was prepared to sit out his contract after that, and thought the company withholding his royalties. When he found an uncashed royalty check he had to call them.

* Regarding WrestleMania 29, Punk said “Yeah I was [over it by then]. I didn’t care, and that was a big part of the problem, I was wrestling The Undertaker in front of 80,000 people, and I didn’t give a f**k. I was just like ‘ah, whatever.’ I had zero passion, I was just like ‘yeah, whatever.’ And (The Undertaker) might get offended at that, but it’s nothing against him, it’s just where I was at. But I would hope he gets it.”

* The hosts talk about Jason David Frank and Jose Canseco challenging him, and they joke about it saying it was exactly what Punk didn’t want when he signed with UFC.

Brock Lesnar Slimming Down For UFC Return?, Backstage Talk On His WWE Future, More

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Source: Wrestling Observer Newsletter

Regarding Brock Lesnar’s future after his current WWE deal expires the night after WrestleMania 31, it’s said that it is not definite at all that Lesnar will not re-sign with WWE.

However, the thought process is that UFC may have the best shot at signing Lesnar because WWE may not be in a financial position to offer Lesnar a similar deal to what he’s been signed to for the past three years. Lesnar also may use the interest from UFC and Bellator just to get a better offer from WWE.

Lesnar appeared to be considerably smaller on RAW last week than he was when he returned in August and September. Lesnar would want to be around 285 pounds or smaller if he’s going to start training for the Octagon again. If Lesnar does return to MMA, he would be almost 38 years old and away from the sport for four years.

Mick Foley On CM Punk’s Decision To Join UFC

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– Mick Foley wrote the following on his Facebook page about CM Punk signing with UFC:

A BOLD CHOICE FOR PUNK

I’ve been asked quite a bit over the past several days for my opinion on CM Punk’s decision to sign with UFC. I applaud it. While I have no idea how Punk will fare with top level MMA competitors, I do know that no one will out-train him or out-work him, and that, whether he wins or loses, succeeds or fails, he’s likely to be responsible for a few incredible PPV buy-rates – which had been a cause of concern for him since the dawning of the #WWENetwork…which, last time I checked was only $9.99 a month.

Just as importantly, #CMPunk won’t end up sitting on his couch 10 years from now, muttering the two dirtiest words in the English language: “what if”?

Bobby Lashley Torn On CM Punk In UFC, Punk On Power Ranger’s Challenge, More

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– As noted earlier, CM Punk spoke with HuffPost Live during his media blitz yesterday. In the video above, Punk messes with a HuffPost employee.

– Bobby Lashley was interviewed by Ring Rust Radio and was asked about CM Punk joining UFC.

“My jump was after I left pro-wrestling,” Lashley said. “I still had that competitive edge and felt like I was in great physical shape without too many miles on my body. I felt like I could go through training camps and be able to be healthy. So when I got out I jumped right into it. I think the big factor is getting into a good camp. I was in a good camp where they said, ‘Bobby we know you are a pro-wrestler and now you are in our room. We aren’t going to baby you. We’re going to go after you like we would anyone else.’ I think that’s good and it helps keep me honest and humble at the same time.

“As far as the other side, I have been torn about this whole CM Punk thing. I am getting torn hard both ways. I can understand it from the fighter’s point of view but at the same time I can see it from CM Punk’s point of view. As soon as he did it, I went online and told him, “Congratulations and do what you want to do” because that’s what it’s all about. It doesn’t matter if people think he is ready or not, if he says he is going to do it then it’s him that is going to have to step in that cage. That is where I take my hat off to him and respect him for it. It’s going to be harder for him without having that extensive background to be able to do it. So I take my hat off to him and as a friend, a co-worker, I just tell him to make sure to bust your ass before going out there because once that cage door closes it’s real. There’s so many people that sit off on the side, that armchair quarterback and say, ‘I took a jujitsu class I had a couple fights on the street.’ It is completely different. It’s a physical chess match and you have to have all your pieces of the game intact before going in there.

“CM Punk is a very intelligent guy and there is no way he would have made it to the level where he is now unless he was a very intelligent guy. This move was very calculated and he knows what the next step is and the one after that. Or if he doesn’t know he is going to have the right people around him to tell him. Man, I am going to tune into that fight and everyone else is so it’s good for everyone. It’s a win-win situation.”

– TMZ asked Punk about Jason David Frank, better known as the Green Power Ranger, wanting to face Punk in his UFC debut. Punk blew it off, and noted that speculation was “running wild” about who he would face. He once again said that he would have his first UFC fight later in 2015.

Ronda Rousey On Possibly Going To WWE And Living Up To Roddy Piper’s Legacy

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– UFC star and noted pro wrestling fan Ronda Rousey recently spoke with TalkSport.com to promote The Expendables 3 and commented on a possible run with WWE:

“Oh I would be a heel for sure. I can’t take the name of ‘Rowdy’ and not be a heel, that would be an insult to the man I pay tribute to with my name – the great Rowdy Roddy Piper. I would have to try and live up to his legacy as much as possible and I can’t do that being a babyface.”

Fighting Spirit Review: NOAH “GREAT VOYAGE x BIG FIREWORKS” on 9/23/14

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Date:  September 23rd, 2014
Location:  Niigata City Gymnasium
Announced Attendance:  1,800 (No Vacancy)

PuroresuCentral.com

I gotta admit, I am a sucker for big spectacle type matches.  Probably not hard to figure out since I am a big Great Muta fan and jump at any opportunity to review a crazy gimmick match.  As you probably guessed from the title of the event, this one has a crazy gimmick match as Onita invades NOAH!  In fact the bulk of the card is NOAH wrestlers against garbage indy wrestlers or ZERO1 wrestlers (I mean that in the nicest way possible).  Here is the full card:

– Daisuke Harada vs. Hitoshi Kumano vs. Yoshinari Ogawa
– Akitoshi Saito and Mitsuhiro Kitamiya vs. Shinjiro Otani and Tatsuhito Takaiwa
– KAMIKAZE, Demon Ueda, and Takuya Sugawara vs. Takeshi Morishima, Kenou, and Hajime Ohara
– Ikuto Hidaka and Mineo Fujita vs. Taiji Ishimori and Atsushi Kotoge
– Kohei Sato, Hideki Suzuki, and Yoshikazu Yokoyama vs. Shane Haste, Mikey Nicholls, and Quiet Storm
– Masato Tanaka and Yusaku Obata vs. Mohammed Yone and Katsuhiko Nakajima
GHC Heavyweight Championship: Naomichi Marufuji vs. Maybach Taniguchi
No Ropes Barbed Wire Current Blast Death Match: Atsushi Onita, Ichiro Yaguchi, and Hideki Hosaka vs. Takashi Sugiura, Yoshihiro Takayama, and Genba Hirayanagi

This should be something.

Daisuke Harada vs. Hitoshi Kumano vs. Yoshinari Ogawa
Ogawa and Kumano shake hands as the match starts, but Kumano attacks Ogawa from behind.  Double Irish whip to Ogawa and they hit a double elbow strike.  Kumano Irish whips Harada, and Harada hits a shoulderblock.  Harada goes off the ropes but Kumano delivers a dropkick.  Cover, but Ogawa breaks it up.  Ogawa punches Kumano to the mat, Harada rolls up Ogawa but Kumano breaks it up.  Kumano applies an ankle lock to Harada, then Ogawa applies an armbar to Harada.  Ogawa hits an enzigieri on Kumano, Ogawa throws Harada into the corner, Ogawa kicks Harada low but Kumano rolls up Ogawa for a two count.  Ogawa hits a DDT to Kumano, and Ogawa throws Harada into the ring post.  Ogawa then throws Kumano into the ring post as well, and Ogawa hits a backdrop suplex to Harada.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Ogawa applies an armbar to Kumano but Harada breaks it up.  Ogawa and Harada trade elbows, Ogawa throws Harada into the corner but Harada moves and puts Ogawa in the tree of woe.  Harada then puts Kumano into the tree of woe in the same corner, Harada gets a running start and delivers a dropkick.  Harada hits a pescado down onto Kumano, Harada slides back into the ring and he throws Ogawa into the corner, hitting a jumping elbow smash.  Harada hits a vertical suplex to Ogawa, cover, but it gets a two count.  Kumano elbows Harada but Harada elbows him back and they trade blows.  Harada throws Kumano into the corner, Kumano kicks Harada back when he charges in and hits a missile dropkick.  Kumano hits a bridging fallaway slam, but Ogawa breaks it up.  Kumano and Ogawa trade elbows, eye rake by Ogawa but Harada hits him from behind.  Kumano and Harada throw Ogawa into the corner, and both hit running elbow strikes.  Harada slams Ogawa onto Kumano, he covers Kumano but it gets a two count.  Harada goes off the ropes but Kumano rolls him up for a two count.  Henkei Knee Upper by Harada, and he hits Kumano with the Katayama German Suplex Hold for the three count cover.  Your winner:  Daisuke Harada

Match Thoughts:  For an opener this one wasn’t bad.  They kept it short so that it never lagged, and Kumano has improved throughout the year.  Ogawa doesn’t do much for me but in this style of match he doesn’t do any harm, and the match had a few cute spots.  A perfectly acceptable opener for the event.  Score:  5.5

Akitoshi Saito and Mitsuhiro Kitamiya vs. Shinjiro Otani and Tatsuhito Takaiwa
Saito and Kitamiya attack their opponents before the bell rings, and Kitamiya stomps down Otani in the corner.  Kitamiya picks up Otani, chops by Kitamiya but Otani pushes him back.  Otani and Kitamiya trade chops, and Otani punches Kitamiya to the mat.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Otani tags in Takaiwa, Takaiwa picks up Kitamiya, Irish whip, and Takaiwa hits a back elbow.  Cover by Takaiwa but it gets two.  Takaiwa picks up Kitamiya and hits an elbow, but Kitamiya elbows him back.  Elbows by Kitamiya, he throws Takaiwa into the corner and tags in Saito.  Punches by Saito but Takaiwa elbows him off and they trade elbows.  Irish whip by Saito and he hits a shoulderblock.  Saito picks up Takaiwa but Takaiwa drives him back and tags in Otani.  Double Irish whip to Saito and they hit a double shoulderblock.  Otani throws Saito into the corner and chokes him with his boot.  Otani trips Saito and applies a single leg crab hold.  Takaiwa comes in and applies a half camel clutch, wristlock by Takaiwa but Saito reverses it so Kitamiya can come off the top turnbuckle with an ax handle to Takaiwa’s arm.  Saito tags in Kitamiya and Kitamiya hits an armbreaker.  Wristlock by Kitamiya and he yanks on Takaiwa’s arm.  Kitamiya tags in Saito, Irish whip by Saito and he knees Takaiwa in the stomach.  Saito picks up Takaiwa and he hits a delayed vertical suplex.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Saito tags in Kitamiya, Kitamiya picks up Takaiwa and goes for a suplex but Takaiwa blocks it.  Vertical suplex by Takaiwa and he tags in Otani.  Otani kicks Saito off the apron and throws Kitamiya into the corner.  Facewashes by Otani to Kitamiya, he picks him up, Irish whip to the corner and he hits a big boot.  Irish whip again, reversed, but Otani kicks Kitamiya as he charges in.  Kitamiya hits a spear and he tags in Saito.  Saito hits a lariat on Otani in the corner followed by a snap vertical suplex.  Saito goes off the ropes and hits another lariat, cover, but it gets a two count.  Saito applies a waistlock but Otani elbows out of it, Saito goes off the ropes but Otani avoids the scissors kick.  Uranage by Saito, cover, but it only gets two.

Kicks to the chest by Saito but Otani catches one and hits a hard elbow.  Otani tags in Takaiwa, and Takaiwa chops Saito in the corner.  Irish whip by Takaiwa and he hits a lariat.  Scoop slam by Takaiwa, he goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a diving elbow drop.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Takaiwa picks up Saito but Saito hits a back bodydrop.  Saito and Takaiwa trade lariat attempts, Saito hits another lariat and tags in Kitamiya.  Kitamiya picks up Takaiwa, Irish whip to the corner and he hits a running back elbow.  Kitamiya picks up Takaiwa and hits a suplex, cover, but it gets two.  Scoop slam by Kitamiya, he goes up to the top turnbuckle but Takaiwa is up.  Takaiwa joins Kitamiya and headbutts Kitamiya before hitting a superplex.  Takaiwa tags in Otani, Otani picks up Kitamiya and goes for a suplex, but Kitamiya reverses it.  Kitamiya charges Otani in the corner and hits a jumping elbow, another elbow by Kitamiya and a cover, but it gets a two count.  Kitamiya goes off the ropes but Otani knees him in the stomach.  Backdrop suplex by Otani, he picks up Kitamiya but Kitamiya pushes him off.  Kitamiya goes off the ropes but Otani hits a big boot followed by a release German suplex.  Cover, but Saito breaks it up.  Lariat by Saito to Otani, but Takaiwa hits Saito with a lariat.  Takaiwa charges Kitamiya but Kitamiya dropkicks him and hits a shoulderblock.  Otani from the top turnbuckle hits a missile dropkick to Kitamiya, he picks him up and goes off the ropes, but Kitamiya ducks under the lariat and applies an Octopus Hold.  Elbow to the back by Kitamiya and he hits a German suplex hold for a two count.  Kitamiya picks up Otani and goes for another one, reversed by Otani, Kitamiya goes off the ropes but Otani hits a jumping heel kick.  Release dragon suplex by Otani, cover, but Kitamiya barely gets a shoulder up.  Otani picks up Kitamiya and nails another dragon suplex, cover, and this time he gets the three count.  Your winners:  Shinjiro Otani and Tatsuhito Takaiwa

Match Thoughts:  What a fantastically fun match.  I just enjoyed every minute of it, which says a lot since I don’t actually like all the wrestlers in the match.  It had a great blend of the young wrestler trying to stand tall against the veterans, and the veterans just slugging it out against each other.  The match stayed fast paced throughout, had lots of hard hits, and was just flat out entertaining.  A pleasant surprise, I just wish it went longer since I was enjoying it so much.  Score:  8.0

KAMIKAZE, Demon Ueda, and Takuya Sugawara vs. Takeshi Morishima, Kenou, and Hajime Ohara
KAMIKAZE and company attack their opponents as they come down the ramp, and both teams battle around ringside and into the stands.  After a bit, Sugawara throws Ohara into the ring and stomps him in the back.  Ohara elbows him back but Sugawara rakes Ohara in the eyes, he goes off the ropes but Ohara hits a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker.  Ohara throws Sugawara into the corner but Ueda comes in and breaks it up.  Ueda picks up Ohara and puts him across the ropes in the corner before hitting a body avalanche.  Ueda gets a table and sets it up in the ring, he picks up Ohara and puts him on the table.  Sugawara holds the table while Ueda gets an axe, but Sugawara rolls off the table before Ueda can use it.  Morishima runs in to help and he knocks Ueda out of the ring with his giant club.  Sugawara chokes Ohara in the corner, he goes off the ropes but Kenou trips him from ringside.  Ohara tags in Kenou, and Kenou chokes Sugawara in the corner with his boot.  Kenou snapmares Sugawara and kicks him in the back.  Kenou goes out to the apron and hits a slingshot doublestomp, cover by Kenou but it gets a two count.  Kenou picks up Sugawara and kicks him in the chest before tagging in Morishima.  Morishima hits a running butt smash in the corner on Sugawara, and then hits a second one.  Morishima tags in Ohara, and Ohara hits a vertical suplex.  Ohara applies a single leg crab hold but Sugawara gets a hand on the ropes.  Elbows by Ohara to Sugawara, he goes off the ropes but Sugawara hits a step-up enzigieri.  Ueda and Morishima run into the ring and trade elbows, and Morishima throws Ueda out of the ring.  KAMIKAZE comes in the ring with a drill, he Irish whips Ohara but Ohara avoids the drill and goes off the ropes.  KAMIKAZE kicks Ohara to the mat and goes to drill him, but Kenou hits KAMIKAZE from behind with a kendo stick.  Sugawara runs in and throws Kenou out of the ring, Sugawara then throws Ohara out as well.  They battle around ringside and into the crowd area again, with KAMIKAZE and Morishima ending up on the second floor.  KAMIKAZE then gets out on the ledge and hits a moonsault off the balcony down onto everyone down on the first floor.  Everyone slowly makes their way back to ringside, as Morishima and Ueda have a chair duel.  Ueda brings the chair in the ring and knocks the referee down before hitting Morishima with the chair.  The referee tries to stop him but Ueda knocks him down again and keeps working over Morishima.  Morishima gets his giant club and hits Ueda with it, he picks up the club and hits him with it again.  Everyone gets in the ring and faces off with weapons, but at some point the referee has had enough and calls the match a Double DQ.

Match Thoughts:   On paper this was interesting, as it was basically the two major heel factions from each promotion facing off against each other which seems like an odd choice.  The bulk of the match wasn’t very good, just brawling around the ring and the action in the ring wasn’t very exciting.  I did like the end how it just broke down to each team using weapons until the referee had enough, it makes sense that by the end it would just become a crazy brawl.  So the end was good, but up to that point it was pretty lackluster.  Score:  4.0

Ikuto Hidaka and Mineo Fujita vs. Taiji Ishimori and Atsushi Kotoge
Hidaka and Ishimori start things off.  Tie-up, wristlock by Hidaka, Ishimori flips out of it and reverses the hold but Hidaka kicks him off.  Ishimori elbows Hidaka, drop toehold by Hidaka and he applies a hammerlock.  Ishimori reverses it, wristlock by Hidaka and he gets Ishimori to the mat.  Leglock by Ishimori but Hidaka gets out of it and both men return to their feet.  Hidaka tags in Fujita, and Ishimori tags in Kotoge.  Side headlock by Fujita, Kotoge Irish whips out of it and Fujita hits a shoulderblock.  They both run off the ropes and Kotoge hits a dropkick.  Headbutt by Kotoge to Fujita and he hits another headbutt.  Kotoge tags in Ishimori, and Ishimori chops Fujita in the corner.  Snapmare by Ishimori, cover, but it gets a two count.  Ishimori tags in Kotoge, double Irish whip to Fujita and they hit a double elbow strike.  Cover by Kotoge to Fujita but it gets two.  Kotoge stomps Fujita in the back but Fujita elbows him and they trade strikes.  Fujita kicks Kotoge low and both men are hurt on the mat.  Fujita gets to his corner and tags in Hidaka, and Hidaka stomps Kotoge.  Hidaka picks up Kotoge, Irish whip, and Hidaka delivers a dropkick.  Senton by Hidaka, cover, but it gets a two count.  Hidaka kicks Kotoge in the leg and tags in Fujita.  Fujita and Hidaka yank on Kotoge’s legs and Fujita knees Kotoge in the groin.  Cover, but Kotoge gets a shoulder up.  Another cover, but it gets the same result.  Fujita bites Kotoge in the… groin… while the referee tells him to knock it off.  Fujita picks up Kotoge and tags in Hidaka.  Hidaka picks up Kotoge but Kotoge elbows him off.  Back kick by Hidaka, Irish whip by Hidaka to the corner and he hits a cartwheel heel kick.  Hidaka goes off the ropes but Kotoge catches him with a reverse DDT.  Kotoge tags in Ishimori, and Ishimori dropkicks Hidaka.  Fujita knees Ishimori and comes in the ring, double Irish whip to the corner but Ishimori avoids them both and kicks Fujita to the mat.  Double knee strike by Ishimori to Hidaka in the corner and he hits a second one.  Cover by Ishimori but it gets a two count.  Ishimori picks up Hidaka, Irish whip by Ishimori, reversed, Ishimori flips off the ropes and dropkicks Hidaka, but Hidaka kicks him back and tags in Fujita.

Fujita hits an atomic drop to Ishimori and rakes his eyes, Fujita goes off the ropes but Ishimori elbows him.  Handspring cutter by Ishimori to Fujita and he tags in Kotoge.  Kotoge boots Hidaka off the apron, they Irish whip Fujita but Fujita applies The Claw to both of their groins.  Fujita dropkicks the referee by accident, and Hidaka hits a tornado DDT onto Ishimori.  Fujita sets up Kotoge in the corner and Fujita slaps him before putting his foot against Kotoge’s groin.  Fujita gets a running start and dropkicks Kotoge in the groin area, cover by Fujita but Ishimori breaks it up.  Hidaka throws Ishimori out of the ring, Fujita picks up Kotoge, Irish whip to the corner but Kotoge kicks Fujita back and applies a choke over the top rope.  Kotoge gets on the apron but Fujita hits him, Fujita goes off the ropes but Kotoge gets in the ring and hits a cutter.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Ishimori picks up Fujita and hits a kneebuster, and Kotoge hits a swandive body press.  Cover, but it gets two.  Ishimori throws Hidaka out of the ring, while Kotoge picks up Fujita and goes for the Killswitch, but Fujita pushes him off.  Headbutts by Kotoge, he goes off the ropes but Fujita hits Kotoge low.  Dropkick to the back of the head by Fujita, cover, but it gets a two count.  Hidaka hits a reverse DDT onto Kotoge and Fujita hits a Shining Wizard.  Cover, but Kotoge kicks out at two.  Hidaka hits a superkick, and Fujita drops Kotoge with a reverse piledriver.  Cover, but it is broken up.  Fujita picks up Kotoge, scoop slam in front of the corner and Fujita goes up to the top turnbuckle.  Kotoge kicks Hidaka into the ropes, which shakes them, sending Fujita crashing to the mat.  Ishimori comes in the ring, he goes off the ropes and Ishimori swings Hidaka’s leg into Fujita’s groin.  Kotoge gets Fujita in a horizontal cradle, and he picks up the three count.  Your winners:   Taiji Ishimori and Atsushi Kotoge

Match Thoughts:  So much groin-based offense.   That is the thing that stuck out to me, Fujita was just all about it and he dragged the other wrestlers into it as well.  Which isn’t necessarily bad, it just gave the match a more comedic feel.  Kotoge wasn’t able to do his usual thing of bumping and looking awesome since there was so much going on, and in general I think the wrestlers didn’t get much of a chance to shine.  Not a bad match and somewhat memorable, but nothing great.  Score:  6.0

Kohei Sato, Hideki Suzuki, and Yoshikazu Yokoyama vs. Shane Haste, Mikey Nicholls, and Quiet Storm
Suzuki and Haste start things off.  Waistlock by Suzuki, reversed by Haste, wristlock by Suzuki but Haste flips out of it and hits a snapmare.  Suzuki applies a front facelock and he tags in Sato so Haste tags in Nicholls.  Sato ties up with Nicholls, Sato pushes Nicholls into the ropes and he gives a clean break.  Sato trips Nicholls and applies a front facelock, Nicholls reverses it and tags in Storm.  Storm and Sato circle each other, tie-up, Storm pushes Sato into the ropes and he clubs him in the chest.  Storm and Sato trade chops and Sato elbows Storm in the face.  Sato tags in Yokoyama, Yokoyama and Storm trade elbows and Storm hits a shoulderblock.  Storm and Yokoyama trade chops, shoulderblock by Storm and he tags in Haste.  Haste pulls Yokoyama out of the ring and throws him into the guardrail.  Haste poses on Yokoyama on the railing and he slides Yokoyama into the ring.  Cover by Haste but it gets a two count.  Haste tags in Nicholls, double Irish whip by to Yokoyama and Haste hits a moonsault.  Cover by Nicholls but it gets a two count.  Nicholls picks up Yokoyama and throws him into the corner, snapmare by Nicholls and he rakes Yokoyama into the eyes.  Storm is tagged in and he clubs Yokoyama in the back.  Storm hits a neckbreaker onto Yokoyama and he hits an elbow drop.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Storm stomps Yokoyama, and Storm tags in Haste.  Haste rakes Yokoyama in the eyes and he hits a neckbreaker.  Cover by Haste, but it gets a two count.  Haste picks up Yokoyama and hits a few uppercuts, Irish whip by Haste to the corner but Yokoyama moves when Haste charges in.  Uppercut by Haste but Yokoyama hits a powerslam.  Nicholls runs in to help but Yokoyama hits a double spear and makes the tag to Suzuki.  Suzuki uppercuts Haste, Irish whip to the corner and Suzuki hits a running elbow strike.  Exploder by Suzuki, cover, but it gets a two count.  Suzuki picks up Haste, uppercut by Suzuki and he pushes Haste into the corner.  Irish whip by Suzuki but Haste kicks him back.  Another kick by Haste and he hits an uppercut out of the corner.

Haste gets to his corner and makes the tag to Nicholls, Irish whip by Nicholls and he hits a lariat on Suzuki in the corner.  Another lariat by Nicholls and he hits a vertical suplex.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Nicholls picks up Suzuki and they trade elbows, Suzuki goes off the ropes but Haste hits him from the apron.  Haste comes in the ring and they hit a backdrop/neckbreaker combination, cover, but it gets a two count.  Nicholls goes off the ropes and hits a sliding lariat, cover, but Suzuki gets a shoulder up.  Elbows by Nicholls, he goes off the ropes but Suzuki hits a backbreaker.  Suzuki tags in Yokoyama, Irish whip by Yokoyama to the corner and he hits a shoulder tackle.  Reverse splash by Yokoyama, cover, but it gets a two count.  Yokoyama picks up Nicholls but Nicholls pushes him off and hits a spinebuster.  Nicholls tags in Storm while Sato is tagged in, and Sato trades elbows with Storm.  Lariat by Storm as Haste and Nicholls both come in the ring, and they all hit strikes on Sato in the corner.  Reverse STO by Storm, cover, but it gets a two count.  Storm picks up Sato and hits a Fisherman Buster, cover, but it gets another two.  Storm picks up Sato and goes off the ropes, but Sato blocks the lariat.  Sato blocks another one, Yokoyama runs in the ring and hits a spear onto Storm.  Suzuki drops him with a dragon suplex, then Sato picks up Storm and hits a brainbuster.  Cover by Sato, but Nicholls breaks it up.  Sato picks up Storm but Storm hits a back bodydrop.  Storm goes off the ropes and hits an elbow smash.  Storm picks up Sato, he goes off the ropes but Sato knees him in the stomach.  Falcon Arrow by Sato, cover, but Storm gets a shoulder up.  Sato picks up Sato and hits a piledriver, cover, but again it gets a two count.  Sato drags Storm to his feet and hits a German suplex hold, and he picks up the three count.  Your winners:  Kohei Sato, Hideki Suzuki, and Yoshikazu Yokoyama

Match Thoughts:  A solid match but I don’t think having the extra wrestlers really helped, it would have been better as a two vs. two tag match.  They just had issues getting a real flow going, there wasn’t a real structure or story to it to get attached to.  The action itself was solid, but it was just hard to get into a match that was mostly just random offense.  Mid-card filler, but nothing offensive.  Score:  5.5

Masato Tanaka and Yusaku Obata vs. Mohammed Yone and Katsuhiko Nakajima
Obata and Nakajima start things off.  Tie-up, Nakajima pushes Obata into the ropes, Obata switches positions with him and clubbed Nakajima in the chest.  Tie-up, side headlock by Nakajima, Obata Irish whips out of it and boots Nakajima.  Nakajima boots him back and they trade boots and then elbows.  Snapmare by Obata and he kicks Nakajima in the back.  Elbow by Nakajima, snapmare, and he kicks Obata in the back.  Obata returns the favor, but Nakajima gets up and does the same to him.  Nakajima Irish whips Obata, reversed, and Obata delivers a dropkick.  Obata kicks Nakajima in the back and makes the tag to Tanaka.  Tanaka chops Nakajima in the corner, and they trade elbows.  Kick to the chest by Nakajima but Tanaka elbows him to the mat.  Tanaka picks up Nakajima and throws him into the corner.  Irish whip by Tanaka and he hits a jumping elbow smash.  Tanaka tags in Obata, and Obata stands on Nakajima in the corner.  Obata picks up Nakajima and headbutts him before kicking him in the head.  Nakajima headbutts him back but Obata hits a headbutt and throws Nakajima into the corner.  Chops by Obata, Irish whip, reversed, Obata kicks Nakajima back and gets up on the top turnbuckle.  Nakajima joins Obata up top but Obata headbutts Nakajima to the mat.  Nakajima hits a jumping kick to Obata up on the top turnbuckle, he then climbs up top again and hits a superplex.  Nakajima tags in Yone, and Yone hits a scoop slam to Obata.  Yone goes off the ropes and hits a leg drop, cover, but it barely gets a two count.  Neck crank by Yone but Obata gets a foot on the bottom rope.  Back up, chops by Obata but Yone kicks him in the leg.  Yone tags in Nakajima, and Nakajima kicks Obata in the ribs.  Nakajima stomps down Obata and chokes him with his boot.  Nakajima and Obata trade elbows, and Nakajima kicks Obata in the leg.  More leg kicks by Nakajima and he tags in Yone.  Yone and Nakajima take turns kicking Obata in the back, cover by Yone but it gets a two count.  Yone picks up Obata and hits a vertical suplex.  Yone chokes Obata with his boot and he tags in Nakajima.  Nakajima applies a leg submission hold to Obata, but Obata makes it to the ropes to force a break.  Nakajima picks up Obata and goes for a suplex, but Obata reverses it, hitting his own vertical suplex.

Obata tries to make it to Tanaka but Nakajima grabs his leg and slams his knee into the mat.  Nakajima picks up Obata but Obata elbows him and they trade strikes.  Obata goes off the ropes and dropkicks Nakajima, and Obata makes the hot tag to Tanaka.  Tanaka scoop slams Nakajima and Yone back and forth, Tanaka charges Nakajima in the corner and hits a lariat.  Tanaka lariats Yone as well and then lariats Nakajima again.  Tanaka picks up Nakajima and elbows him against the ropes, and Tanaka hits a jumping elbow smash.  Tanaka goes off the ropes but Nakajima catches him with a kick.  Nakajima goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a missile dropkick.  Cover by Nakajima, but it gets a two count.  Nakajima picks up Tanaka and goes for a backdrop suplex, but Tanaka elbows out of it.  Dragon screw leg whip by Nakajima and he makes the tag to Yone.  Yone charges Tanaka in the corner and hits a lariat, Yone throws Tanaka into the corner, kick by Tanaka but Yone hits a lariat.  Scoop slam by Yone, he goes up to the second turnbuckle and hits a diving leg drop.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Yone kicks Tanaka in the chest repeatedly and they trade elbows, and Yone levels Tanaka with a lariat.  Cover, but it gets two.  Yone goes off the ropes but Tanaka hits a lariat and tags in Obata.  Lariat by Obata and he hits a jumping knee on Yone in the corner.  Dropkick by Obata, he picks up Yone and snaps off a DDT.  Obata goes out to the apron and hits a swandive double stomp, cover, but it gets a two count.  Obata picks up Yone and goes for a suplex, but Yone blocks it.  Elbows by Obata, he goes off the ropes but Yone kicks him in the face.  Nakajima comes in the ring, he throws Obata into the corner and connects with a big boot.  Yone follows with a lariat, kick by Nakajima and both wrestlers kick Obata in the chest.  Cover, but Tanaka breaks it up.  Nakajima and Yone picks up Tanaka, Irish whip, but Tanaka lariats them both to the mat.  Obata goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a missile dropkick to Yone, backstabber by Obata and Tanaka comes in to hit Yone with the Sliding D.  Fisherman Buster by Obata, cover, but Yone barely gets a shoulder up.  Cross-armed backstabber by Obata, he goes for a double stomp but Yone rolls out of the way.  Lariat by Yone, cover, but it gets a two.  Lariat to the back of the head by Yone, cover, but again it gets a two count.  Yone picks up Obata, he puts him up on the top turnbuckle and he hits the Muscle Buster.  Cover, and he picks up the three count.  Your winners:  Masato Tanaka and Yusaku Obata

Match Thoughts:   Fundamentally there was nothing wrong with this match. I’m not a fan of Yone, I just find him boring and he didn’t disappoint with his random neck cranks, but the other wrestlers were on point. It just lacked something, the wrestlers were trying to make it good but it didn’t have the same sense of urgency as some of the other matches on the card. I also don’t think the Muscle Buster is the right move to end a match like this, it takes so long to set up that I find it hard to believe that Tanaka couldn’t have found his way back into the ring to at least attempt to break it up. Solid action all the way around, but nothing memorable.Score: 6.5

(c) Naomichi Marufuji vs. Maybach Taniguchi
This match is for the GHC Heavyweight Championship.  Tie-up, Marufuji pushes Taniguchi into the ropes and he gives a clean break.  Tie-up, Taniguchi pushes Marufuji into the ropes and he also gives a clean break.  Waistlock by Taniguchi, reversed by Marufuji and they jockey for position on the mat.  Waistlock by Taniguchi but Marufuji grabs the rope to force a break.  Marufuji chops Taniguchi in the chest but Taniguchi elbows him back.  They trade blows back and forth, side headlock by Marufuji, Taniguchi Irish whips out of it and knocks Marufuji out of the ring.  Marufuji slowly returns to the ring, kick by Marufuji and he applies a side headlock, Marufuji takes Taniguchi to the mat but Taniguchi struggles back up again.  Irish whip by Taniguchi but Marufuji gets the side headlock re-applied.  Taniguchi gets out of the hold but again Marufuji gets it locked back in.  Snapmare by Marufuji and he stomps on Taniguchi’s head.  Neck twist by Marufuji, cover, but it barely gets a two count.  Reverse chinlock by Marufuji, and he throws Taniguchi into the corner.  Chops by Marufuji and he elbows Taniguchi in the back of the head.  Marufuji gets out of the ring and he goes for a dropkick, but Taniguchi moves out of the way.  Taniguchi gets Marufuji by the throat and he chokeslams Marufuji onto the apron.  Taniguchi picks up Marufuji and throws him into the guardrail.  Taniguchi throws Marufuji into the railing again, he takes him up towards the crowd and throws him into a row of chairs.  Scoop slam on the floor by Taniguchi and he gets in the ring, Marufuji gets back in as well and Taniguchi hits a back bodydrop.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Taniguchi picks up Marufuji and he hits a scoop slam.  Elbow drop to the back by Taniguchi, cover, but it gets another two.  Stomp to the back by Taniguchi, he picks up Marufuji and elbows him and the two trade strikes.  Shoulderblock by Taniguchi and he applies a camel clutch.  Back up, elbow by Taniguchi and Marufuji elbows him back.  Marufuji goes off the ropes, and Taniguchi hits a spinebuster.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Irish whip by Taniguchi to the corner, but Marufuji kicks Taniguchi back when he charges in.  Elbow by Taniguchi but Marufuji hits a lariat, Irish whip by Taniguchi but Marufuji dropkicks him to the mat.  Marufuji charges Taniguchi in the corner and hits a jumping elbow but Taniguchi elbows him back.  Elbows by Taniguchi in the corner but Marufuji chops him.  Chops by Marufuji, Irish whip, reversed, and Marufuji kicks Taniguchi back.  Kick to the head by Marufuji, he goes off the ropes and hits a double stomp to Taniguchi’s head.  Superkick by Marufuji, cover, but it gets a two count.

Marufuji goes for the Shiranui but Taniguchi pushes him off and shoves Marufuji out of the ring.  Taniguchi goes out after Marufuji and slides him back into the ring, Taniguchi charges Marufuji in the corner and hits a lariat.  Irish whip by Taniguchi and he hits another lariat.  Taniguchi goes for a chokeslam but Marufuji kicks out of it, but Taniguchi still hits a powerslam for a two count cover.  Taniguchi charges Marufuji and lariats him in the back of the head before hitting a release German suplex, cover, but it gets a two count.  Taniguchi picks up Marufuji and goes for a suplex but Marufuji lands on the apron.  Slingshot backstabber by Marufuji, Taniguchi goes out to the apron, Marufuji goes for a sunset flip powerbomb to the floor but Taniguchi grabs his throat and pulls him up onto the apron.  Marufuji elbows Taniguchi and goes for a Shiranui, Taniguchi blocks it but Marufuji kicks Taniguchi down to the floor.  Marufuji goes for a moonsault but Taniguchi pulls him out of the ring.  Taniguchi throws Marufuji into the guardrail and slides into the ring, Marufuji goes for a swandive move but he misses.  Taniguchi picks up Marufuji by the throat and chokes him in the air before throwing Marufuji to the mat.  Taniguchi charges Marufuji but Marufuji kicks him back, their heads collide and they both fall down.  Back up, Taniguchi hits a lariat and he hits a half nelson suplex.  Taniguchi picks up Marufuji and goes for a second one, but Marufuji elbows out of it.  Front flip snapmare driver by Marufuji, cover, but it gets a two count.  Marufuji hits a superkick to Taniguchi and hits the Shiranui.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Marufuji picks up Taniguchi and goes for a Tiger Driver, but Taniguchi gets out of it and hits a lariat.  Chokeslam by Taniguchi, cover, but Marufuji gets a shoulder up.  Taniguchi picks up Marufuji and goes for a powerbomb, but Marufuji gets out of it.  Taniguchi puts Marufuji up on the top turnbuckle and he hits a powerbomb.  Taniguchi goes up to the top turnbuckle and he hits a diving body press.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Taniguchi picks up Marufuji and hits another powerbomb, he goes up to the top turnbuckle but Marufuji knees him in the stomach when Taniguchi jumps off.  Taniguchi goes for a lariat but Marufuji ducks and knees Taniguchi.  Another knee by Marufuji, cover, but it only gets a two.  Marufuji waits for Taniguchi to get up and knees him in the back of the head, he picks up Taniguchi and hits the Tiger Flowsion.  Cover, and he picks up the three count.  Your winner and still champion:  Naomichi Marufuji

Match Thoughts: This was an interesting match. I had a long gap in my NOAH reviewing, but last I saw him, Taniguchi was a gimmick guy and not much else. Here though it was basically a straight match, there were no big sticks of doom or tables or anything like that. So it was hard for me to suspend belief that Taniguchi had a chance as in the past the only way he was able to hang with the great wrestlers was to cheat. The match was a bit longer than it probably should have been and dragged in parts, but Taniguchi held his own better than I was expecting and Marufuji looked like his usual self. Not a top level title match, which they realized since they put it on a show with a gimmick main attraction, but perfectly solid nonetheless. Score: 6.0

Atsushi Onita, Yaguchi, and Hosaka vs. Sugiura, Yoshihiro Takayama, and Hirayanagi
This match is a No Ropes Barbed Wire Current Blast Death Match.  As you probably guessed they started off brawling since there are no tag rules since there are no ropes.  Onita pairs off with Sugiura while Hosaka and Hirayanagi slug it out.  Takayama and Yaguchi tie-up and do something while everyone tries to push their respective opponent into the barbed wire.  Sugiura comes over to help Takayama as they both club on Yaguchi, and they push him into the barbed wire to give us our first explosion.  Yaguchi rolls out of the ring, and Onita throws Takayama out after him.  Everyone else slides under the barbed wire as they take the fight into the crowd.  Takayama and Onita battle while Yaguchi has already recovered and has control of Sugiura.  Onita throws Takayama into the guard rail and then into a table at ringside.  Onita gets a chair and he hits Takayama in the face with it.  Meanwhile, Yaguchi is handling Sugiura with no issues elsewhere, and who knows what Hosaka and Hirayanagi are doing.  Yaguchi hits Takayama and slides him back into the ring for Onita, Onita picks up Takayama and hits a slow motion vertical suplex.  Sugiura comes in and stomps Onita, and Sugiura hits a vertical suplex onto Onita.  Sugiura picks up Onita while Hirayanagi slides back in the ring, Onita grabs Hirayanagi but Sugiura pushes Onita into the barbed wire, causing an explosion.  Cover by Sugiura, but it gets a two count.  Hosaka comes in the ring with a chair and he hits Takayama with it, then Yaguchi hits Hirayanagi with the chair and slides him out of the ring.  Yaguchi and Hosaka take turns on Takayama but Takayama fights them off.  Onita hits Takayama with a steel chair and all three of them push Takayama into the barbed wire, as we get another explosion.  Hosaka grabs Sugiura and holds him for Onita, Onita gets a barbed wire bat and hits Sugiura repeatedly in the chest with it, until Sugiura backs up into the barbed wire which of course makes it explode.  Onita covers Sugiura, but it gets a two count.  Yaguchi and Hosaka set up a chair in the ring and they put Sugiura onto it.  Onita hits Sugiura in the chest with the barbed wire bat, cover, but Takayama breaks it up.  Onita and Yaguchi club on Takayama but Takayama fights them off until Hirayanagi comes in to help.  Everyone applies headlocks to each other and they slowly inch together into the barbed wire, causing it to explode.  Everyone is back up pretty quickly as Onita throws Hirayanagi into the barbed wire, exploding Hirayanagi in the process.  Cover by Onita, but Hirayanagi gets a shoulder up.  Takayama comes in the ring but Onita spits red stuff in his face again, and Hosaka rolls Takayama out of the ring.  Hosaka and Yaguchi grab Hirayanagi with Onita, and they help Onita hits a Thunder Fire Powerbomb.  Cover by Onita, and he picks up the three count.  Your winners:  Atsushi Onita, Yaguchi, and Hosaka

Match Thoughts:  Well this was awful.  I love barbed wire explosion matches, I really do.  But this was a basic 101 course on how to kill a gimmick.  The barbed wire meant nothing and the explosions meant nothing, we averaged almost an explosion a minute and half the time the person that got exploded was back up on their feet in under ten seconds fighting again liked nothing happened.  There was no blood, which someone should be required to bleed in a NO ROPES BARBED WIRE match.  I don’t expect someone to Sabu themselves but just a little something to show the match is actually dangerous.  The wrestlers were slow and plodding, at times they tied up and did literally nothing to each other except shuffle around the ring.  And then it was suddenly over with very little build.  I know that Onita went on a spree in 2014 having barbed wire explosion matches but at this point he needs to stop as he is raping my fond memories of such matches with sad displays like this one.  No redeeming traits.  Score:  2.0

Final Thoughts:

Best Match: Akitoshi Saito and Mitsuhiro Kitamiya vs. Shinjiro Otani and Tatsuhito Takaiwa. Not the match I expected to be the best coming into the event, but I thought this match was really fun. Everyone delivered well with their roles, this is really the best way to use these veteran wrestlers as it allows them to come in, hit their big moves, and get out before they start lagging. The ZERO1 guys certainly brought it and Saito looked inspired which doesn’t always happen these days. A really fun match and better than it had any right to be.

MVP:  Mitsuhiro Kitamiya.  I picked Kitamiya from the match above because as the token young guy he was tasked with doing a lot of the selling and running around to help make everyone else look good. Which I think he did a commendable job at, the veterans in the match really don’t need help per se but Kitamiya did his part to keep the match going and he really did hang in their effectively with the big boys. A really good effort.

Overall: I am really struggling as to what to say about this event as a whole. The main event was horrible, there is no two ways about it, no one could defend that match. It took away all the good elements in barbed wire explosion matches and only kept the bad ones, leaving it just a sad shell of what these ‘dangerous’ matches should be. On the other hand, the bulk of the rest of the card delivered, as the fresh matchups seemed to energize the wrestlers. If this event had a real main event it would probably be one I could honestly really recommend, but since the main selling point coming in was a colossal letdown I can’t heap too much praise on the event as a whole. There is definitely some good stuff to see here, just stop watching before the main event.

Grade: C

CM Punk Talks Last Real Fight He Won, Partying With Charles Barkley, Dating

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Credit: Sean Ross Sapp

During CM Punk’s run through ESPN headquarters this week he stopped by Highly Questionable to speak to Bomani Jones and Dan Lebtard. The hosts asked him about a variety of topics, including hanging out with NBA stars and dating his co-workers.

Punk told a story about NBA Hall of Famer Charles Barkley requesting to meet him and other WWE Superstars while at a bar in Alabama.

“We’re at a bar in Birmingham and this woman comes up to our table and says ‘Charles Barkley is in the VIP room, he wants to meet you.’ and we were like yeah, piss off, whatever, Charles Barkley isn’t here. She leaves, 15 minutes later came back and said ‘He sent me back out here, he really wants to meet you,’ so we go to this little VIP room and there he was. We all wind up partying with Charles Barkley all night. He’s mad because I won’t drink shots, so he refuses to pay for water or cranberry juice or whatever I’m drinking. Hornswoggle got completely wasted and we had to carry him out. We wind up going to some other bar with Charles Barkley and a fight breaks out and a car accident and everyone goes their separate ways. It was like a John Hughes movie where everything’s getting broken. The next morning I go into an Alabama Gold’s Gym, and Barkley walks in and gets on the treadmill next to me like nothing ever happened,” Punk said.

When asked about his history of dating co-workers, Punk said that he didn’t consider dating so many fellow wrestlers unusual because of their travel schedule, noting he’d be at home for six hours some weeks. Punk has been linked to Maria Kanellis, Lita, Daffney, Mickie James, Allison Danger, Cookie, Traci Brooks and Beth Phoenix in addition to AJ Lee.

On his move to UFC from WWE, Punk said the last real fight he won was against a fan. “Unfortunately in the independent leagues, the fans would run into the ring. Fans think they’re a part of the show and jump in. I won my fair share of those. You have to defend yourself,” Punk said. He jokingly said his goal early on was to get stabbed, but since he’s married it still might happen someday.

Fighting Spirit Review: Mr. Gannosuke Produce “KISHINDO RETURNS 17”

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Date: November 18th, 2014
Location:  Shin-Kiba 1st RING in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 248 

Mr. Gannosuke returns! This event has Gannosuke’s second match since returning from retirement, but his first match hasn’t appeared yet in DVD form so this is the first I have gotten a chance to see him. Mr. Gannosuke retired back in 2008, but like most wrestlers do I guess he got ‘the itch’ so here he is back in the ring again. I am not sure what to expect but he is a legend in his own special way so I am looking forward to it. We have a full event of course, it’s not all about Mr. Gannosuke, as Dragon Gate, DDT, and Union are represented here as well. Here is the card:

– Gosaku vs. Guts Ishijima
– Makoto and Haruka Kato vs. Mika Iida and Aki Shizuku
– Keita Yano vs. Taro Yamada
– Shota vs. Yasu Urano
– Isami Kodaka and Takeshi Minamino vs. Yuko Miyamoto and Atsushi Maruyama
– Buffalo vs. Kenichiro Arai
– GENTARO vs. Mr. Gannosuke

I hope everyone else is as excited as I am.

Gosaku vs. Guts Ishijima
Tie-up to start, Irish whip by Gosaku but Ishijima shoulderblocks him down. Kick to the back by Ishijima, he picks up Gosaku and applies a wristlock. Gosaku reverses it and he kicks Ishijima down to the mat. Gosaku picks up Ishijima and applies a wristlock but Ishijima reverses it. Elbow to the arm by Ishijima while keeping the hold locked in but Gosaku trips Ishijima. Kneelock by Gosaku but Ishijima reverses it into an armlock. Gosaku gets a foot on the ropes and is able to break the hold, Ishijima picks him up and goes for a hiptoss, but Gosaku blocks it and applies a cobra twist. Ishijima gets out of it and applies his own cobra twist but Gosaku hiptosses out of it. Gosaku picks up Ishijima, snapmare, and he hits an elbow drop. Gosaku picks up Ishijima and applies a neck crank, he goes off the ropes but Ishijima catches him with a spinning heel kick. Ishijima picks up Gosaku, Irish whip from the corner and Ishijima hits a lariat. Bulldog by Ishijima, cover, but it gets a two count. Ishijima picks up Gosaku and hits a snap vertical suplex. Cover, but it gets a two count. Ishijima applies a stretch hold, cover, but it gets a two count. Ishijima picks up Gosaku, Irish whip, reversed, kick by Ishijima and he goes for a slam but Gosaku gets out of it and hits a DDT. Cover by Gosaku, but Ishijima reverses it with a crucifix pin and he gets the three count. Your winner: Guts Ishijima

Match Thoughts: When Ishijima is the far superior wrestler in a match, you know you have a problem. Also I am taking up donations so that Gosaku can get some pants that fit so he doesn’t have to pull them up during the match. I understand why Ishijima was on here, he can Gannosuke have a really solid working relationship, but they could have fed him someone a bit better than Gosaku who seems to have given up quite awhile ago. I will say that the flash pin was appropriate, neither wrestler was particularly injured so the ending made sense anyway, plus with Gosaku’s size that type of pin would probably have worked on him five seconds into the match. Nothing much good here, although I do appreciate them keeping it short. Score: 3.0

Makoto and Haruka Kato vs. Mika Iida and Aki Shizuku
Iida and Makoto start things off.  Tie-up, side headlock by Makoto, Iida Irish whips out of it but Makoto hits a shoulderblock.  Makoto goes off the ropes but Iida hits a drop toehold followed by a dropkick.  Cover, but it gets two.  Makoto goes off the ropes but Iida rolls her up, Makoto rolls through it and they trade trips before both wrestlers return to their feet.  Iida tags in Shizuku and Makoto tags in Kato.  Kato goes for a double leg but Shizuku blocks it, Kato goes for a triangle choke but Shizuku blocks it.  Shizuku applies a stretch hold but Kato gets out of it and applies a front facelock.  Back on their feet, Makoto runs in and hits Shizuku.  Double wristlock to Shizuku but Shizuku throws Makoto and Kato to the mat.  Shizuku stomps Kato and clubs her in the back.  Shizuku picks up Kato and she tags in Iida.  Iida stomps Kato in the corner and chokes her with her boot.  Iida picks up Kato, snapmare, and Iida chokes Kato.  Iida applies a stretch hold, she picks up Kato and elbows her in the arm.  Iida tags in Shizuku, and Shizuku clubs Kato in the back.  Shizuku picks up Kato, she puts Kato in the ropes and applies pressure to her back.  Snapmare by Shizuku and she applies a stretch hold, but gets a foot on the ropes.  Shizuku picks up Kato and kicks her back down to the mat.  Shizuku picks up Kato but Kato clubs her back.  A hard shot by Shizuku sends Kato down but Kato quickly gets back up only to get knocked down again.  More elbows by Kato and she rolls up Shizuku for a two count.  Kato tags in Makoto, and Makoto kicks Shizuku in the chest.  Makoto picks up Shizuku, elbow by Shizuku but Makoto elbows her back as they trade blows.  Arm breaker by Makoto, drop toehold, and she kicks Shizuku in the ribs.  Double stomp by Makoto, cover, but it gets a two count.  Makoto picks up Shizuku and applies a double underhook, but Shizuku gets out of it and hits an elbow.  Lariat by Shizuku, she picks up Makoto and hits a chokeslam.  Cover, but it gets a two count.  Shizuku tags in Iida, and Iida stomps Makoto in the back.  Irish whip by Iida, reversed, and Iida slams both Makoto and Kato to the mat.  Iida picks up Makoto, Irish whip to the corner and she hits a running elbow.  Cutter by Iida and she hits a dropkick.  Cover, but Makoto kicks out at two.  Iida picks up Makoto and goes for a Fisherman Suplex but Makoto gets out of it, and Iida applies a stretch hold to Makoto.  Iida stomps Makoto and charges her, but Makoto tosses her onto the top turnbuckle and kicks her in the ribs.  Diving body press by Makoto, cover, but it gets a two count.  Makoto goes off the ropes and hits a cartwheel double knee drop, cover, but that gets a two as well.  Makoto tags in Kato, Kato goes off the ropes and dropkicks Iida.  She goes off the ropes again and hits a second dropkick, followed by a third.  Kato picks up Iida, Irish whip, and Iida avoids Kato’s dropkick.  Iida goes off the ropes and hits a dropkick, she goes off the ropes and hits a second dropkick, cover, but it gets a two count.  Iida goes up to the top turnbuckle but Kato kicks her before she can jump off and throws her off the top turnbuckle.  Kato applies a sleeper to Iida and then applies a cross armbreaker, but Iida gets a foot on the ropes.  Kato goes off the ropes and delivers a dropkick.  She goes off the ropes again but Shizuku hits a lariat.  Dropkick by Iida to Kato, she picks her up and hits the fisherman suplex hold for a two count.  Iida goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a missile dropkick.  Cover, but Makoto breaks it up.  Iida picks up Kato, but Makoto runs in and kicks her.  Spinning headscissors into a roll-up by Kato, and she applies a cross armbreaker.  Shizuku comes in and breaks it up, Makoto and Kato Irish whip Iida but Iida blocks it and hits a leg sweep onto Makoto.  Kato goes off the ropes but Iida applies the Gannosuke Clutch for the three count.  Your winners:  Mika Iida and Aki Shizuku

Match Thoughts:  Whenever I see a Joshi match on a card, I assume that it will blow me away because usually that is what happens.  Unfortunately, it didn’t happen here. Not to say it was a bad match but it wasn’t a great one and wasn’t memorable. Iida and Shizuku came across here as the real deal but Makoto and Kato, while adorable, mostly just stuck to stomps and punches without really trying to mix it up. Business picked up by the end but it couldn’t negate the first part of the match, in which nothing really happened. It just didn’t have the speed and offensive diversity that I have come to expect from Joshi matches and just came across as solid but nothing more than that. Score: 6.0

Keita Yano vs. Taro Yamada
Yano and Yamada circle each other to start, Yamada gets Yano’s arm but Yano hits an armdrag. Yamada gets up, hiptoss by Yano and he applies a wristlock into a grounded hammerlock.  Yamada rolls out of it and reverses the hold, kip-up by Yano and he reverses it back.  Yano twists on Yamada’s arm and pushes him to the mat, but Yamada applies a headscissors.  Yano bridges out of the headscissors and rolls up Yamada but it gets a two count and both wrestlers return to their feet.  Yamada and Yano circle each other again, wristlock by Yano and he hits an armdrag, Yano goes off the ropes and he applies a front facelock to Yamada but Yamada gets out of it and applies a wristlock.  Yano rolls out of it the hold and reverses it, but Yamada returns the favor and hits an armdrag.  Spinning headscissors by Yano and he chops Yamada into the corner.  Yano freezes which confuses Yamada, he goes off the ropes in the corner on both sides before hitting an armdrag.  Dropkick to the leg by Yano and he hits a superkick, sending Yamada out of the ring.  Yano goes off the far ropes and sails out onto Yamada with a tope suicida.  Yano attacks Yamada outside of the ring before sliding him back in, Yano gets on the apron and hits a slingshot leg drop.  Yano applies a leg submission hold but Yamada gets a hand on the ropes.  Yano picks up Yamada and hits an uppercut, Irish whip by Yano but Yamada flips himself out to the apron and snaps Yano’s neck over the top rope.  Springboard corkscrew plancha by Yamada, cover, but it gets a two count.  Yamada throws Yano into the corner and hits a lariat, La Magistral by Yamada but it gets two.  Yamada charges Yano, Yano goes for a backbreaker but Yamada rolls him up for a two count.  Enzigieri by Yamada, cover, but he gets a two count again.  Yamada goes up to the top turnbuckle but Yano is up and armdrags him down to the mat.  Backbreaker by Yano and he hits a second one, he puts Yamada in the Yurikamome and Yamada has no choice but to submit.  Your winner:  Keita Yano

Match Thoughts: I am sure that Yano has fans somewhere that are disappointed in what he has become, an indy garbage wrestler. He clearly has let himself go a bit, but on the flip side he does still occasionally show those flashes of being a skilled wrestler. I mean he is very well trained, has a lot of experience, but just looking at him you just can’t take him seriously now. Yamada I don’t think judging from this match is as skilled, and for the most part this was just pedestrian hold trading without much to get the crowd excited. Yano would occasionally bust out a big move but rarely capitalized on it, although at least he did focus on the back most of the time so I’ll give him some credit for that. Slow and emotionless, but not without its bright moments. Score: 4.0

Shota vs. Yasu Urano
Tie-up to start, Urano pushes Shota into the ropes, Shota switches positions with him and he gives a clean break.  Tie-up, waistlock by Urano, reversed by Shota, Shota applies a wristlock but Urano rolls out of it.  Single leg takedown by Urano and he twists on Shota’s ankle.  Shota rolls out of the hold, hammerlock by Urano but Shota reverses it.  Waistlock by Urano and he hits a drop toehold, front facelock by Urano but Shota reverses it as they trade holds on the mat with neither wrestler getting the advantage.  Wristlock by Urano, reversed by Shota but Urano punches him in the stomach and reverses it back.  Shota gets the hold back on, Urano tries to roll out of it but Shota rolls with him.  Urano goes for an armdrag but Shota blocks it and throws Urano to the mat.  Tie-up, side headlock by Shota, Shota applies a hammerlock but Urano reverses it into a side headlock.  Shota tries to Irish whip out of it but Urano keeps the hold applied, finally Shota reverses it but Urano quickly reverses it back.  Elbows by Shota, Irish whip, but Urano hits a shoulderblock.  Side headlock takedown by Urano and he keeps the hold applied on the mat.  Shota rolls up Urano to get out of it, and both men are back up again.  Shota and Urano lock knuckles, Urano pushes Shota to the mat but Shota bridges and hits a monkey flip.  Urano hits a monkey flip of his own and we are back to where we started.  Shota and Urano both go for kicks and punches, they run off the ropes and Shota hits a hiptoss.  Scoop slam by Urano but Shota kicks him away, Irish whip by Shota and he hits a back bodydrop.  Shota picks up Urano, wristlock by Shota, Irish whip, reversed, but Shota avoids Urano’s dropkick.  Shota monkey flips Urano into the corner, roll-up by Shota using the ropes for leverage, but the referee notices.  Urano charges Shota and hits a Frankensteiner, Urano cover Shota but Shota bridges out of it.  Backslide by Shota but Urano rolls through it and rolls up Shota with the Cazadora for the three count!  Your winner:  Yasu Urano

Match Thoughts:  Maybe I watch too much wrestling (is that a real thing?) but I just don’t see the appeal of matches like this. Literally nothing happened, it was just two veterans slowly trading holds all the way up until the last minute or so of the match. How is this entertaining? This isn’t the first match of Urano’s that I have seen like this, it appears he has reached the ‘coasting’ phase of his career. Neither wrestler is bad, they just put on a really uninspired and dull match here and I don’t know why when I am sure they are capable of more. Just listless mid-card filler. Score: 2.5

Isami Kodaka and Takeshi Minamino vs. Yuko Miyamoto and Atsushi Maruyama
Miyamoto and Minamino start things off. Waistlock by Minamino, Miyamoto reverses it into a wristlock, drop toehold by Minamino and he applies a leglock. Back up, side headlock by Minamino but Miyamoto hits a drop toehold and applies a chinlock. Minamino gets out of it and they lock knuckles, and Miyamoto tags in Maruyama. Minamino tags in Kodaka, and Kodaka applies an armbar to Maruyama. Kodaka goes for a cross armbreaker but Maruyama gets out of it and applies a leglock. Kick to the back by Kodaka, he picks up Maruyama and hits a snapmare. Reverse chinlock by Kodaka but Maruyama gets a foot on the ropes. Kodaka tags in Minamino, Minamino picks up Maruyama, snapmare, and he elbows Maruyama. Minamino applies a chinlock and he rakes Maruyama in the eyes. Irish whip by Minamino and he hits a back elbow. Minamino tags in Kodaka, Kodaka picks up Maruyama and elbows him in the back of the head. Another elbow by Kodaka but Maruyama elbows him back. Kodaka picks up Maruyama and he tags in Minamino. Minamino and Kodaka choke Maruyama in the corner with their boots, Minamino picks up Maruyama and hits a chop. Minamino and Maruyama trade chops and kicks, and Minamino rakes Maruyama in the eyes. Minamino tags in Kodaka, Kodaka picks up Maruyama and goes for a suplex, but Maruyama blocks it and hits a vertical suplex of his own. Maruyama tags in Miyamoto, Miyamoto goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a diving chop to the head. Miyamoto knocks Minamino off the apron, Miyamoto picks up Kodaka, Irish whip, but Kodaka avoids the dropkick. Overhead belly to belly suplex by Miyamoto, Miyamoto knocks Kodaka into the corner and puts him up on the top turnbuckle. Miyamoto goes for a Frankensteiner but Kodaka blocks it and hits a diving attack off the top turnbuckle. Chop by Miyamoto but Kodaka elbows him and they trade blows. Irish whip by Kodaka and he dropkicks Miyamoto.

Kodaka tags in Minamino, Minamino picks up Miyamoto and hits a chickenwing front slam. Cover, but it gets a two count. Minamino picks up Miyamoto, he puts him on his shoulders but Miyamoto slides off. La Magistral by Miyamoto, but it gets a two count. Minamino goes off the ropes but Miyamoto catches him and applies a cobra twist. Minamino gets to the ropes to force a break, and Miyamoto tags in Maruyama. Kodaka runs in but Maruyama superkicks him, Maruyama throws Minamino into the corner before kicking Kodaka again. Roll-up by Maruyama on Minamino but it gets a two count. Maruyama throws Minamino into the corner and hits a jumping kick, he goes off the ropes and hits a lariat followed by a jumping heel kick. Cover, but it gets a two count. Maruyama picks up Minamino but Minamino elbows him and they trade shots. Maruyama goes off the ropes but Minamino hits a jumping kick and tags in Kodaka. Kodaka goes up to the top turnbuckle and goes for a diving doublestomp, but Maruyama moves out of the way. Miyamoto comes in and both he and Maruyama kick Kodaka in the corner. Maruyama dives in to Kodaka but Kodaka moves out of the way, Minamino comes back in and he chokeslams Maruyama. Diving double knee drop by Kodaka, cover, but Miyamoto breaks it up. Irish whip by Miyamoto to Kodaka but Kodaka drops him with a backdrop suplex. Kodaka picks up Maruyama, he goes off the ropes but Maruyama avoids the superkick and rolls up Kodaka for a two count. Leg sweep by Kodaka to Maruyama and he applies the 689 for the submission victory. Your winners: Isami Kodaka and Takeshi Minamino

Match Thoughts: Interesting that Kodaka and Miyamoto were on opposite sides here since they have been a tag team for years, not sure if there was a backstory. Things did pick up a bit for this match compared to the rest of the card up to this point, as they definitely showed some emotion and actually looked like they cared about winning the match. Minamino doesn’t impress me, never has, but when he wasn’t in the ring the action went up a notch and Maruyama did a good job of being the face in peril so to speak. There were some transition issues, as if someone just said the magic word and they switched who was on offense, but for the most part it was well structured and they kept it entertaining from beginning to end. Nothing overly memorable but fun nonetheless. Score: 6.5

Buffalo vs. Kenichiro Arai
Arai chops Buffalo before the match starts and throws him out of the ring. Baseball slide by Arai and he clubs on Buffalo out on the floor. Arai chokes Buffalo and throws him into the chairs at ringside. Arai slides Buffalo back into the ring, Irish whip, and Arai hits an elbow. Irish whip by Arai but Buffalo hits a shoulderblock, Buffalo goes off the ropes but Arai slides out of the ring. Buffalo goes out after him but Arai gets back in the ring, Buffalo returns but Arai kicks him as he goes through the ropes and dumps him back out to the floor. Arai picks up Buffalo and rakes him in the eyes. Wristlock by Arai and he goes for an Irish whip into the post, but Buffalo reverses it. Lariat by Buffalo, he gets a chair and hits Arai in the stomach and back with it. Buffalo picks up Arai and takes him up into the crowd to continue his assault, they end up on the ramp and Buffalo clubs Arai to the mat. Buffalo picks up Arai and clubs him off the ramp to the floor. Arai is bleeding by now as he gets back into the ring, Buffalo picks him up and rams him into the corner. Irish whip by Buffalo and he hits a running elbow. Buffalo picks up Arai and punches him back to the mat. Vertical suplex by Buffalo and he hits a leg drop. Cover, but it gets a two count. Buffalo picks up Arai and punches him against the ropes. Kicks by Buffalo and he goes off the ropes, but Arai drop toeholds him into the second rope and then kicks the rope into his throat. Arai goes out to the apron and goes for a swandive move, but misses the top rope. Buffalo dumps Arai back into the ring, he drapes him over the bottom rope and hits a leg drop. Dropkick from the floor by Buffalo, cover, but it gets a two count.

Buffalo picks up Arai, Buffalo puts Arai up on the top turnbuckle and he hits a superplex. Cover, but Arai kicks out at two. Buffalo picks up Arai and applies a double underhook, but Arai blocks it. Back bodydrop by Arai, punches by Buffalo and he goes off the roes, but Arai hits an atomic drop followed quickly with a DDT. Stomps by Arai in the corner but Buffalo throws him to the mat. Buffalo picks up Arai and hits a headbutt, punches by Buffalo and they trade punches and chops. Buffalo goes off the ropes but Arai moves and Buffalo flies out of the ring. Arai goes off the ropes but Buffalo hits him from the floor with a chair. Buffalo charges Arai and hits a lariat in the corner, he goes off the ropes again but Arai collapses to the mat. Buffalo drags up Arai and hits a backdrop suplex. Cover, but it gets a two count. Buffalo waits for Arai to get up, he goes off the ropes and hits a lariat to the back, but Arai catches the one from the front and goes for an armbar. Buffalo gets out of it and lariats Arai to the mat. Buffalo lariats Arai out of the ring to the floor, he goes out after him and slides Arai into the ring. Buffalo goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a missile dropkick. Buffalo picks up Arai and puts him on the top turnbuckle. Buffalo joins Arai but Arai reverses it into an avalanche atomic drop. Arai spits water into Buffalo’s face and applies the backslide for the three count cover. Your winner: Kenichiro Arai

Match Thoughts: I wish that Buffalo had won…. not just because I am biased (which I am) but he was just so much more interesting than Arai in this match. I will give Arai some credit, he knew that he was overmatched and tried everything he could to level the playing field. But Buffalo was just so dominating, Arai was bleeding everywhere and nothing Arai did looked like it was really hurting Buffalo. The backslide made sense, just as a fan I would have preferred to see Arai get crushed instead. Smartly worked, the ending just didn’t feel right and when Arai was on offense things slowed down quite a bit. Score: 6.0

GENTARO vs. Mr. Gannosuke
Gannosuke shakes GENTARO’s hand before the match starts, tie-up, side headlock by Gannosuke, GENTARO Irish whips out of it but Gannosuke shoulderblocks him down. Side headlock takedown by Gannosuke but GENTARO quickly gets out of it. Tie-up, GENTARO gets an armbar applied on the mat but Gannosuke rolls out of it and applies a side headlock. GENTARO quickly reverses it into a hammerlock and he wrenches back on Gannosuke’s arm. Gannosuke gets into the ropes to force a break as they return to their feet, tie-up, and Gannosuke tosses GENTARO to the mat. Armbar by Gannosuke and he knees GENTARO in the arm. Wristlock by Gannosuke and he applies a hammerlock on the ground, GENTARO struggles back up but Gannosuke brings him back to the mat. GENTARO gets a foot on the ropes to force a break and he rolls out of the ring to re-group. GENTARO returns after a moment, wristlock by Gannosuke butt GENTARO reverses it and suplexes Gannosuke to the mat. Back up, punch by GENTARO and he elbows Gannosuke in the back. Neck crank by GENTARO and he applies a headscissors. Gannosuke gets out of the hold and elbows GENTARO in the back, he picks up GENTARO and hits a scoop slam. Snapmare by Gannosuke and he applies a reverse chinlock, GENTARO struggles back up and elbows out of the hold before hitting a scoop slam. GENTARO picks up Gannosuke and hits another scoop slam, cover, but it gets a one count. Side headlock takedown by GENTARO but Gannosuke rolls him up for a two count. Clubs to the back by Gannosuke but GENTARO hits him back, GENTARO puts Gannosuke into the corner and hits a bulldog. Cover, but it gets a two count. Reverse chinlock by GENTARO into a headlock, he picks up Gannosuke and hits a snap vertical suplex. Cover, but it gets a two.

GENTARO picks up Gannosuke again and elbows him in the back. Another elbow to the back by GENTARO and he applies a stretch hold. Gannosuke gets out of it and applies a headscissors while twisting GENTARO’s arm, but GENTARO wiggles out of it and re-applies the stretch hold. Gannosuke gets away and applies an armbar, but GENTARO gets a foot on the ropes. Gannosuke eventually releases the hold, kicks to the arm by Gannosuke and he applies a wristlock before slamming GENTARO’s arm into the mat. Gannosuke picks up GENTARO and again applies an armbar before slamming down GENTARO’s arm. Elbow to the arm by Gannosuke but GENTARO snaps off a backdrop suplex. GENTARO picks up Gannosuke and hits another backdrop suplex, he picks up Gannosuke and delivers a third. Cover, but Gannosuke gets a shoulder up. GENTARO goes off the ropes but Gannosuke ducks the lariat and applies the Gannosuke Clutch for a two count. GENTARO picks up Gannosuke and applies a neck crank, but it gets a two count. GENTARO puts Gannosuke in the Scorpion Deathlock but Gannosuke gets to the ropes to force a break. GENTARO goes for a backdrop suplex but Gannosuke blocks it and gets a hand in the ropes. Club to the back by GENTARO, he goes for the backdrop suplex but Gannosuke lands on him for a two count cover. GENTARO goes off the ropes but Gannosuke ducks the lariat and hits a release dragon suplex. Gannosuke grabs GENTARO and goes for a powerbomb, but GENTARO back bodydrops out of it. Gannosuke gets back up and hits a lariat to GENTARO, cover, but it gets a two count. Gannosuke picks up GENTARO and plants him with a powerbomb, cover, but it gets a two count. Gannosuke quickly gets GENTARO up and drops him with the Fire Thunder, cover, and he picks up the three count. Your winner: Mr. Gannosuke

Match Thoughts: I am not sure how well it holds up, but my memory of Gannosuke from FMW was that he was one of the wrestlers better at structuring matches. By that I mean he had really good timing and was a lot more than just a garbage wrestler. I can honestly say after watching this match that Gannosuke still ‘has it’ as this was a really good match and there was no evidence from it that it was his first singles match in six years. There were things here and there I didn’t like, such as arm work (which was done very well) being disregarded by both wrestlers, but beyond that I thought it was very solid. The crowd was eating up everything, the Gannosuke Clutch came at the perfect time, and he was still busting out big moves such as the dragon suplex like it was the 90s. Equally important, he was also taking the moves as GENTARO planted him hard with the backdrop suplexes, so no one was taking it easy here. The Fire Thunder is one of the best finishing moves, ever, and it was great to see it being done by the master once again. It started slow as they set the tone and at first I was concerned it was going to be an old person exhibition style match, but then they kicked it up a gear. I admit part of the reason I liked it so much was just the joy of seeing Gannosuke not only wrestling again, but wrestling at a high level, but even without that it was a really fun match. Score: 7.5

Final Thoughts:

Best Match: GENTARO vs. Mr. Gannosuke. This match was not a lock to be good, there was always a chance that Gannosuke physically couldn’t go anymore, or would be too rusty off the bat to put on a fun match. Luckily for all of us that wasn’t the case as Gannosuke was just as good as I remembered him from the old days. GENTARO of course is a solid hand, he can have a good match with anyone but he isn’t able to elevate a match by himself. They worked together very well and aside from shrugging off the limb work there is really nothing bad I can say about the match. Definitely recommended for old school Gannosuke fans.

MVPs:   Mr. Gannosuke.  I probably would have given it to him anyway, but he earned it. To be out of the wrestling ring for so long, he came back in better shape than when he left and was ready to go. At the end he wasn’t struggling or huffing around the ring, he was still hitting his moves and moving around the same he was when the match started. I was hopeful he would be his old self but I knew there was a chance it wouldn’t happen, but he definitely came back ready to go. I still love the Fire Thunder and the fans definitely went home happy.

Overall:  There is only one reason to get this event, and the one reason delivered. The card up to the main event wasn’t bad, the tag match was really solid and the Joshi match wasn’t unwatchable. But besides that, the matches in the undercard were just really uninspired, it felt like the wrestlers were given $20 and put that much effort into their matches, none of them were sore the next day. I thought the main event was great though, as you’ve probably picked up on by now, and anyone that orders this event to see Gannosuke I don’t think will be disappointed. Only a mild recommendation for the event as a whole, but the main event is worth watching.

Grade: C

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