Screen Caps from Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling 1-13-1982
WWE Providing Special Assistance To Warrior’s Family
WWE is providing Warrior’s wife with special assistance in the wake of his death on Tuesday.
TMZ.com reports that immediately after the tragic news broke, WWE sent two senior officials to Arizona to help Dana with everyday tasks like grocery shopping so she can grieve and focus on her daughters.
Warrior died of a “catastrophic medical event” on Tuesday at an Arizona hotel. An autopsy was performed on Thursday. WWE will hold two tribute shows dedicated to Warrior next week, including Monday’s RAW and a special on the WWE Network on Wednesday
SPOILERS: TNA One Night Only “World Cup” Pay-Per-View Results
Spoilers courtesy of TNAInsider.com
TNA One Night Only PPV Results for “World Cup” Event
The format for this year’s world cup deviated from last year. Team captains were selected and the captains had a draft, selecting a roster of TNA Wrestlers. The captains were Eric Young, Kurt Angle, Ethan Carter III, Bobby Roode.
TNA World Cup Draft
• Eric Young selected Bully Ray, Eddie Edwards, ODB and Gunner
• Kurt Angle selected Davey Richards, Mr. Anderson, Sanada and Madison Rayne
• EC3 selected Jessie Godders, Robbie E, Magnus and Gail Kim.
• Bobby Roode selected James Storm, Kenny King, Samuel Shaw and The Beautiful People.
TNA World Cup Qualifying Matches
1.Eddie Edwards defeated James Storm.
2.The Bromans defeated Mr. Anderson & Sanada. Match was mostly a comedy match.
3.Gail Kim defeated Madison Rayne
4.Eric Young defeated Bobby Roode.
5.Kurt Angle defeated Magnus. ECIII was supposed to face Angle but he demanded that Magnus take his place.
6.Angelina Love defeated ODB when Velvet ran a distraction allowing love to win.
7.Ethan Carter III defeated Davey Richards.
8.Gunner and Bully Ray defeated Samuel Shaw and Kenny King.
TNA World Cup Finals
The two finalist teams are Team Eric Young vs. Team Ethan Carter III. They faced off in elimination style matches.
1. ODB eliminated Gail Kim.
2. Robbie E eliminated ODB.
3.The Bromans double teamed and eliminated Eddie Edwards.
4.Bully Ray eliminated Jessie Goddarz.
5.Robbie E eliminated Bully Ray.
6.Gunner eliminated Robbie E.
7.Magnus eliminated Gunner.
8.Ethan Carter was disqualified when he hit a low blow on Eric Young and the referee saw this.
9.Eric Young eliminated Magnus, winning the World Cup for his team.
Team Eric Young celebrated with his team and their new TNA World Cup Trophy.
Fighting Spirit Review: All Japan “EXCITE SERIES 2014” on 2/8/14
Date: February 8th, 2014
Location: Osaka, Japan
Announced Attendance: 791
And we are on to Day 2 of the Jr. Battle of Glory. Day 1 was a bit of a disappointment to me, so here is to hoping that Day 2 brings the goods. This event also has an All Japan World Tag Team Championship match in the main event with some quality wrestlers, so the potential is there for All Japan to bounce back from the show a few days ago. The second match was missing from where I got the event, not sure if it wasn’t taped or just wasn’t put up but it wasn’t a tournament match so I wasn’t worried about it. Here are the matches I will be reviewing:
– Jr. Battle of Glory – Block B: Takao Soma vs. Yoshinobu Kanemaru
– Atsushi Aoki vs. Keisuke Ishii
– KENSO and Mitsuya Nagai vs. Ryuji Hijikata and SUSHI
– Jr. Battle of Glory – Block B: Hikaru Sato vs. Masaaki Mochizuki
– Akebono, Yutaka Yoshie, and Shigehiro Irie vs. Go Shiozaki, Kento Miyahara, and Kaji Tomato
– Jr. Battle of Glory – Block A: Kotaro Suzuki vs. Ultimo Dragon
– All Japan World Tag Team Championship: Suwama and Joe Doering vs. Jun Akiyama and Takao Omori
Let’s get straight to it.
Takao Soma vs. Yoshinobu Kanemaru
This match is part of the Jr. Battle of Glory. Tie-up to start, Soma pushes Kanemaru into the ropes and he gives a clean break. Tie-up again, side headlock by Kanemaru, Soma Irish whips out of it but Kanemaru shoulderblocks him down. Kanemaru goes off the ropes but Soma catches him with a dropkick. Kanemaru returns to his feet, club to the back by Soma and he kicks Kanemaru into the corner. Irish whip, reversed, but Soma kicks Kanemaru when he charges in. Soma goes for a missile dropkick but Kanemaru side steps it and throws Soma out of the ring. Kanemaru goes out after him and throws Soma into the guard rail. He throws Soma into the guard rail again before removing part of the mat at ringside. Kanemaru picks up Soma and scoop slams him on the cement floor. Kanemaru gets back into the ring with Soma slowly following, kicks to the back by Kanemaru and he slams Soma in front of the corner. Kanemaru picks up Soma, Irish whip, and he hits a back bodydrop. Crab hold by Kanemaru but Soma gets a hand in the ropes. Cover by Kanemaru but Soma kicks out. Kanemaru picks up Soma, elbow by Soma but Kanemaru elbows him back. Irish whip by Kanemaru, reversed, and Soma hits an elbow smash. Kanemaru gets up in the corner, Soma charges him but Kanemaru moves.
Kick to the stomach by Soma and he hits a double stomp to Kanemaru’s back followed by a DDT. Cover, but it gets a two count. Soma goes up to the top turnbuckle but Kanemaru punches him while he is up there and throws him off. Running kick by Kanemaru and he hits a lariat in the corner. Scoop slam by Kanemaru in front of the corner and he hits a split-legged moonsault. Cover, but Soma kicks out. Kanemaru picks up Soma and goes for a suplex but Soma lands on his feet and hits a hurricanrana for a two count. Kanemaru goes off the ropes but Soma kicks him twice in the head. Cover, but again it gets two. Soma goes up to the top turnbuckle and hits a missile dropkick. Cover, but Kanemaru gets a shoulder up. Soma gets Kanemaru on his shoulders and hits the Schwein, cover, but it gets another two count. Soma picks up Kanemaru but Kanemaru gets away and the two trade elbows. Uppercut by Kanemaru but Soma hits an enzigieri, he goes for another hurricanrana but Kanemaru powerbombs him. Kanemaru goes up to the second turnbuckle and hits the Touch Out, cover, but Soma kicks out. Kanemaru picks up Soma and drops him with a brainbuster, cover, but it also gets two. Kanemaru goes for a second one but Soma sneaks in an inside cradle for a two count. Lariat by Kanemaru, he picks up Soma and hits the Touch Out. Cover, and he picks up the three count. Your winner: Yoshinobu Kanemaru
Match Thoughts: A decent opener. I liked that Soma just ran through all of his moves at one point, sometimes that doesn’t work as it reeks of having no creativity, but against a ‘better’ foe that could finish him at any time it made sense he would just start throwing bombs instead of going for limb work. Kanemaru gave him a lot and it really was feasible that Kanemaru could lose, these things do happen in tournaments and that last inside cradle would have been a realistic ending as well. Too short to be amazing or anything, but a solid way to start the show. Score: 6.0
Atsushi Aoki vs. Keisuke Ishii
Ishii gets a single leg takedown to start the match and applies a kneelock. Aoki gets out of it and applies a crossface, but Ishii gets to the ropes to force a break. Stomp to the back by Aoki, he picks up Ishii and throws him into the corner. Irish whip by Aoki, he gets a running start and hits a lariat in the corner. Cover, but it gets a two count. Aoki picks up Ishii and goes for a suplex but Ishii lands on his feet and hits a missile dropkick. Ishii picks up Aoki, Irish whip, and Ishii hits an armdrag followed by a senton. Cover, but Aoki kicks out. Ishii picks up Aoki but Aoki hits an uppercut, headscissors takedown by Ishii and he keeps the hold applied on the mat. Aoki gets out of it and applies a crab hold, but Ishii makes it to the ropes. Back up Ishii hits a somersault kick to the back by Aoki followed by a German suplex hold, but it gets a two count. Ishii waits for Aoki to get up and goes for a heel kick but Aoki moves out of the way and hits a lariat. Aoki goes off the ropes but Ishii hits him in the stomach and hits an enzigieri. Ishii goes off the ropes but he is pulled out of the ring by Nagai. KENSO throws Ishii into the guard rail and then Nagai throws him into the ring post. Aoki looks on from inside the ring while the referee calls for the bell, declaring the match a No Contest.
Match Thoughts: Kind of a waste, the point was that Aoki was invited to join KENSO’s Dark KingDom (he declined), but the match really wasn’t bad up to that point. Ishii was getting some good offense in and while Aoki was doing better it was a far more even match-up than I was expecting. Maybe the two will get a chance to have a real match together at some point so we can see what they can do. Score: 5.0
KENSO and Mitsuya Nagai vs. Ryuji Hijikata and SUSHI
KENSO and Nagai naturally attack their opponents before the match starts and throw them out of the ring. They battle on the outside with KENSO slapping people and Nagai throwing them into guard rails, KENSO gets in the ring and sails out onto SUSHI with a pescado. Nagai rolls SUSHI into the ring and he applies a reverse chinlock. Elbow to the head by Nagai, cover, but it gets a two count. Nagai picks up SUSHI and throws him into the corner before tagging in KENSO. KENSO pushes SUSHI into the neutral corner and slaps him in the face. Another slap by KENSO, he puts SUSHI onto the top turnbuckle and tries to take off his mask. KENSO pulls SUSHI back down as SUSHI tries to get his mask back on, KENSO picks up SUSHI, Irish whip to the corner but SUSHI flips himself out to the apron. SUSHI goes for a swandive move but KENSO hits him before he can jump off. Nagai knocks SUSHI back into the ring, KENSO picks up him, Irish whip, and KENSO hits a lariat. Cover, but it gets a two count. Nagai is tagged in, he picks up SUSHI and applies an abdominal stretch. Hijikata comes in and breaks up the hold, Nagai tags in KENSO and KENSO cuts off SUSHI before he can tag Hijikata. Slap by KENSO to SUSHI, he stomps him and gives SUSHI another slap. They trade blows which KENSO gets the better of but SUSHI returns to his feet and they go at it again.
KENSO grabs SUSHI and goes for a suplex but SUSHI blocks it. Slap by KENSO and he goes for another suplex, but SUSHI blocks it and hits a suplex of his own. SUSHI makes the hot tag to Hijikata, Hijikata kicks Nagai off the apron, throws KENSO into the corner and delivers a high kick. Single arm suplex by Hijikata and he kicks KENSO in the back. Cover, but it gets a two count. Hijikata picks up KENSO, snapmare, he goes off the ropes but Nagai knees him from the apron. Nagai then comes in the ring, he picks up Hijikata and hits an elbow strike in the corner. Big boot by KENSO, cover, but SUSHI breaks it up. KENSO goes up to the top turnbuckle but Hijikata recovers and joins KENSO up top. Superplex by Hijikata and SUSHI hits a diving headbutt onto KENSO. Cover by Hijikata, but Nagai breaks it up. SUSHI throws Nagai out of the ring, Hijikata picks up KENSO and hits the Fisherman Buster. Cover, but KENSO kicks out. Hijikata picks up KENSO again but KENSO fights back and they trade kicks. KENSO takes off his belt and chokes Hijikata with it before hitting a brainbuster. Cover, but Hijikata kicks out at two. Hagakure by KENSO, cover, and he picks up the three count. Your winners: KENSO and Mitsuya Nagai
Match Thoughts: This was a Dark KingDom match through and through. Each tag match I have seen with them follows the same basic pattern, with the only difference occasionally being the ending. KENSO is an interesting character as his offense is predictable but he does his character so well that it is hard to hate on him too much. Nagai seems like an odd pairing with him though and the Jr. Heavyweight team just seemed really overmatched. Not what I would consider a bad match as it did its goal in giving KingDom a win, but certainly nothing overly interesting. Score: 5.5
Hikaru Sato vs. Masaaki Mochizuki
This match is part of the Jr. Battle of Glory. Sato slaps Mochizuki to start the match and Mochizuki slaps Sato back, sending him to the mat. Sato gets back up and slaps Mochizuki but again it is Mochizuki’s slap that is the more effective one. Another slap by Sato but Mochizuki returns fire, kick by Sato and a snapmare, and he kicks Mochizuki in the back. Sato then sits down so that Mochizuki can kick him in the back as well. Kicks to the leg by Mochizuki and Sato rolls out of the ring. Sato returns after a moment, kicks to the leg by Mochizuki but Sato catches one and applies a cross kneelock. Mochizuki gets out of the hold and stomps on Sato, he picks him up and hits a kneebreaker before kicking Sato in the leg. Stomp to the leg by Mochizuki, he picks up Sato and goes for an Irish whip, but Sato blocks it. Mochizuki finally gets the Irish whip, reversed, but Mochizuki kicks Sato as he charges in. Mochizuki goes off the ropes and hits a big boot, Sato then goes off the ropes and does a big boot as well. Both wrestlers go off the ropes and kick each other, they trade more kicks until a high kick by Sato sends Mochizuki to the mat. Kicks to the chest by Sato, Irish whip, and Sato connects with a running kick in the corner. Suplex by Sato, cover, but it gets a two count. Sato applies a cross armbreaker but Mochizuki is by the ropes and forces a break. Kick to the arm by Sato but Mochizuki fires back with kicks to the leg and they trade shots. Slap by Mochizuki but Sato ducks the second one and goes for the arm. Mochizuki kicks Sato back but Sato hits a backdrop suplex. Cover by Sato, but it gets two. Sato goes off the ropes and kicks Mochizuki in the chest. He kicks Mochizuki a second time, and a third, but Mochizuki ducks the fourth and hits a leg sweep. Kicks by Mochizuki, cover, but Sato get a shoulder up and applies the cross armbreaker. Mochizuki blocks Sato from fully locking it in and rolls through it, applying an ankle hold. Sato rolls through the ankle hold and goes back to the arm. Mochizuki rolls out of that and re-applies the ankle hold, but Sato gets back and up and elbows out of the hold. Kick combination by Mochizuki ending with the Shin Saikyou High Kick, cover, and he picks up the three count. Your winner: Masaaki Mochizuki
Match Thoughts: Didn’t really like this one. First of all I don’t mind strike battles but sitting down and letting your opponent kick you in the back is stupid. The strategy was also all over the place… Mochizuki targets the leg upper leg while, he stops, Sato stops selling it, Mochizuki out of nowhere starts applying ankle holds and then wins with a kick to the head. It was just really random. Sato definitely got some good offense in but it also lacked focus. Just an odd match and it just never seemed to click. Score: 3.5
Akebono, Yoshie, and Irie vs. Go Shiozaki, Miyahara, and Tomato
Akebono and Shiozaki start things off. They jockey for position to start, slap by Akebono but Shiozaki hits him back. Shiozaki applies a side headlock, Akebono Irish whips out of it and hits a shoulderblock, but Shiozaki responses with a leg sweep. Akebono tags in Yoshie and Shiozaki tags in Miyahara. Miyahara and Yoshie circle each other, tie-up, but Yoshie pushes Miyahara off. Side headlock by Miyahara, Yoshie Irish whips out of it and they collide with neither man going down. Miyahara goes off the ropes and hits a jumping elbow but Yoshie responds with a shoulderblock, sending Miyahara to the mat. Miyahara gets back up, tie-up, Yoshie pushes Miyahara into the corner and he tags in Irie. Tomato is tagged in as well, tie-up, side headlock by Irie, Tomato Irish whips out of it but Irie shoulderblocks him down. Irie goes off the ropes, knee by Tomato and an Irish whip, and Tomato hits a springboard dropkick. Tomato tags in Shiozaki, and Shiozaki elbows Irie in the back of the head. Irie elbows Shiozaki back, chops by Shiozaki and he throws Irie out of the ring. Miyahara greets him out there and he throws Irie into the guard rail before slamming him out on the floor. Akebono lumbers over while Miyahara grabs Irie and throws him to Shiozaki, who chops Irie in the chest. Shiozaki now grabs Irie and slams him into the apron and the ring post. Shiozaki gets back in the ring and Irie follows, and Shiozaki knees Irie in the back of the head. Shiozaki picks up Irie, Irish whip, and Shiozaki delivers a dropkick. Back up, chop to the face by Shiozaki, Irish whip, but Irie headbutts Shiozaki. This gives him time to tag in Yoshie, Yoshie picks up Shiozaki, Irish whip to the corner but Shiozaki falls to the mat. Running splash by Yoshie and he hits the running hip attack. Yoshie picks up Shiozaki, snapmare, and he hits a rolling senton. Cover, but it only gets two.
Yoshie picks up Shiozaki and goes for a scoop slam but Shiozaki gets out of it and hits a backdrop suplex. Lariat by Shiozaki but Yoshie comes back with one of his own and both wrestlers are down. Yoshie rolls to his corner and tags in Irie while Tomato is also tagged in, Irish whip by Tomato, reversed, and Tomato hits a jumping forearm strike. Tomato charges Irie in the corner but Irie catches him as he jumps in and hits a vertical suplex. Cover, but Tomato kicks out. Irie picks up Tomato and hits an elbow, Irish whip from the corner and he hits a running lariat. Irie goes off the ropes but Tomato catches him with an inside cradle for a two count. Enzigieri by Tomato and he tags in Miyahara. Irish whip by Miyahara from the corner but Irie shoulder blocks him as he charges in. Atomic drop by Miyahara followed by a Northern Lights Suplex, but it gets a two count. Miyahara picks up Irie but Irie elbows him off. The two trade elbows, Irish whip by Irie but Miyahara dropkicks him in the knee and then in the head. Tomato and Shiozaki run in the ring to knock Akebono and Yoshie off the apron, while in the ring Miyahara hits a jumping knee in the corner. Sit-down powerbomb by Miyahara to Irie, cover, but Yoshie comes in to break it up. Miyahara picks up Irie and goes for a German suplex but Irie grabs the ropes to block it. Miyahara kicks his arm off but Yoshie comes in the ring and hits a body splash to Miyahara. Irie tags in Akebono, Irish whip by Akebono to the corner and he smashes Miyahara. Elbow drop by Akebono, cover, but it gets two. Akebono goes off the ropes but Miyahara rolls out of the way of the body press and kicks Akebono twice in the head. He goes off the ropes but Akebono catches him with a lariat. Body Press by Akebono, cover, but Shiozaki breaks it up. Yoshie and Shiozaki trade strikes as Shiozaki hits Akebono s well, but Akebono knocks him back. Akebono picks up Miyahara and throws him in the corner with Shiozaki, and he splashes both of them. Akebono picks up Miyahara and hits the Yokozuna Impact, cover, and he picks up the three count. Your winners: Akebono, Yutaka Yoshie, and Shigehiro Irie
Match Thoughts: A perfectly acceptable six man tag match but nothing that will rock your world. The wrestlers played their roles well and I liked that Irie continues to get respect from some of the bigger stars as Shiozaki really sold the headbutt. This is literally the best use for Akebono, he wasn’t in the ring much but he always left an impact when he did. Tomato was an after-thought here and wasn’t needed at all. Definitely had a few fun parts within it so not a bad match overall even if it wasn’t really memorable. Score: 6.0
Kotaro Suzuki vs. Ultimo Dragon
This match is part of the Jr. Battle of Glory. They lock knuckles to start the match, Suzuki pushes Ultimo Dragon to his knees but Ultimo Dragon rolls through it and hits a spinning headscissors. Ultimo Dragon hits a second handstand headscissors but Suzuki gets a foot on the ropes. Both men return to their feet, tie-up, side headlock by Suzuki, Ultimo Dragon Irish whips out of it but Suzuki shoulderblocks him down. Back kick by Ultimo Dragon but Suzuki rolls through the snapmare, he goes for a back bodydrop but Ultimo Dragon lands on his feet and both wrestlers miss dropkicks. Knees by Ultimo Dragon, Irish whip, and Ultimo Dragon hits a back elbow. Cover, but it gets a two count. Elbow drop to the back by Ultimo Dragon and he twists up Suzuki to apply a submission hold. Ultimo Dragon slams Suzuki’s knee into the mat, he grabs his leg and does it a second time. Ultimo Dragon applies an ankle hold but Suzuki gets to the ropes to force a break. Ultimo Dragon picks up Suzuki and applies a hammerlock, rolling Suzuki to the mat and applies a headscissors. Suzuki gets a foot on the ropes to get out of the hold and he rolls out of the ring, Ultimo Dragon goes out to the apron and tries to kick Suzuki back but Suzuki grabs his leg and pulls Ultimo Dragon to the floor. Suzuki grabs Ultimo Dragon and Irish whips him into the guard rail. Elbows to the chest by Suzuki and he slides Ultimo Dragon into the ring. Suzuki picks up Ultimo Dragon and he kicks Ultimo Dragon into the corner. Suzuki picks up Ultimo Dragon, snapmare, and Suzuki hits a senton. Cover, but it gets two.
Suzuki picks up Ultimo Dragon and elbows him against the ropes, Irish whip by Suzuki and he goes for a handspring elbow strike but Ultimo Dragon dropkicks him in the back. Irish whip by Ultimo Dragon but Suzuki kicks him, Suzuki goes for a vertical suplex but Ultimo Dragon blocks it. Vertical suplex by Suzuki and he hits a jumping knee in the corner. Diving knee drop by Suzuki from the corner, cover, but it gets a two count. Waistlock by Suzuki, Ultimo Dragon elbows out of it but Suzuki hits a Tiger Feint Kick. La Magistral by Suzuki but it gets a two count. Suzuki picks up Ultimo Dragon and goes for the Blue Destiny buy Ultimo Dragon hits an armdrag to get out of it. Suzuki goes up to the top turnbuckle but Ultimo Dragon dropkicks Suzuki. Kicks by Ultimo Dragon, Irish whip, and he hits a dropkick followed by a back bodydrop. Ultimo Dragon waits for Suzuki to get up and delivers a kick combination, he goes for the Asai DDT but Suzuki gets in a small package for a two count. Sunset flip by Suzuki but that gets a two count as well. Victory roll by Ultimo Dragon, but Suzuki kicks out. Hurricanrana by Ultimo Dragon, but it gets a two count. Ultimo Dragon goes off the ropes but Suzuki punches him back and hits a series of elbows. Cover, but it gets two. Suzuki goes off the ropes and elbows Ultimo Dragon but Ultimo Dragon dropkicks him in the knee and hits La Magistral for a two count. Roaring elbow by Suzuki, cover, but Ultimo Dragon kicks out at two. Suzuki picks up Ultimo Dragon and hits a Tiger Suplex, cover, and he picks up the three count. Your winner: Kotaro Suzuki
Match Thoughts: A really good match that seemed to end somewhat suddenly. Even though the match had enough time on paper, it felt like it could have used another ten minutes as there didn’t seem to be a lot of real damage done in the match. They went from the opening submissions to mid-level offense straight to quick pins. It was almost like 20% of the match was missing. But what they did was fine, Ultimo Dragon is a veteran and controlled the mat game and Suzuki timed his comebacks well. I am sure these guys have had or will have a longer match that maybe will feel more complete. Score: 6.5
(c) Suwama and Joe Doering vs. Jun Akiyama and Takao Omori
This match is for the All Japan World Tag Team Championship. Omori and Suwama start things off, Omori pushes Omori into the ropes and he gives a clean break. Waistlock by Suwama but Omori reverses it into an armbar, Suwama pushes Omori into the ropes and chops him in the chest. Omori chops him back and they trade blows back and forth, Suwama pushes Omori into the ropes and he tags in Doering. Doering punches Omori in the corner and applies a front facelock, but Omori pushes back to his corner and tags in Akiyama. Akiyama and Doering trade elbows, drop toehold by Akiyama and he applies a facelock but Doering gets to the ropes. Akiyama and Doering tie-up, Doering pushes Akiyama into the corner and knees him in the midsection. Doering tags in Suwama, Akiyama fights them off but they Irish whip Akiyama and hit a double shoulderblock. Suwama picks up Akiyama and kicks him in the stomach before hitting a belly to belly suplex. Suwama goes out to the floor and pulls Akiyama out with him, throwing Akiyama into the railing. Suwama charges Akiyama but Akiyama hits a drop toehold, sending Suwama into the guard rail. Omori and Doering come over and start fighting as well, and Akiyama throws Suwama into the guard rail before sliding him back into the ring. Akiyama then gets on the apron and hits a knee drop onto the back of Suwama’ s head. Akiyama picks up Suwama and knees him in the back of the head before throwing him back into the ring. Cover by Akiyama, but it gets a two count. Akiyama tags in Omori, and Omori chop Suwama in the chest. More strikes by Omori and he hits a piledriver. Cover, but Doering breaks it up. Omori picks up Suwama and punches him into the corner, Akiyama comes in the ring too, double Irish whip by Suwama avoids Omori’s kick and hits a shoulderblock to Akiyama.
Capture suplex by Suwama to Omori and he tags in Doering, Doering punches Omori in the corner, Irish whip, and he hits a lariat. Another lariat by Doering and he hits an elbow drop for a two count cover. Doering picks up Omori and hits a delayed suplex, cover, but again it gets two. Doering grabs Suwama and goes for a powerbomb but Omori reverses it with a back bodydrop. They both go off the ropes and lariat each other twice, but Omori then hits a backdrop suplex. Omori tags in Akiyama, Akiyama Irish whips Doering into the corner and hits a jumping knee. Running knee strike by Akiyama, cover, but it gets a two count. Akiyama goes for an exploder but Doering elbows him off. Irish whip by Akiyama, reversed, but Akiyama kicks Doering back and hits a knee off the second turnbuckle. Akiyama goes up to the top turnbuckle but Doering has recovered and joins him. Superplex by Doering and he tags in Suwama. Suwama kicks Akiyama in the corner, Irish whip, and he hits a lariat. Running shoulder powerslam by Suwama, cover, but it gets a two count. Suwama goes for the Last Ride but Akiyama blocks it, they trade elbows and chops, Irish whip by Suwama, reversed, Suwama goes for a shoulderblock but Akiyama hits a knee. Exploder by Akiyama but Suwama is up and hits a German suplex. Akiyama comes back with another exploder and a sliding knee strike. Akiyama tags in Omori, Omori goes off the ropes but Suwama kicks him in the face. Full nelson slam by Omori, cover, but it only gets a two count. Omori picks up Suwama and hits him into the corner, Irish whip, reversed, but Omori kicks Suwama back. Omori goes off the ropes but Suwama boots him in the face, Suwama goes off the ropes but Omori returns the favor. Omori chops Suwama, Irish whip, reversed, but Doering lariats Omori from the apron. Doering pulls Omori out of the ring with him and stomps him in the chest, until Akiyama comes around and stops him.
Doering throws Akiyama into the guard rail and then Suwama drops Akiyama with a DDT. Doering throws Omori back into the ring and goes in as well, double Irish whip to Omori and they hit a double dropkick. Cover by Suwama but it gets two. Suwama picks up Omori and hits a backdrop suplex, cover, but it also gets two as Akiyama breaks it up. Doering comes in and picks up Akiyama while Suwama picks up Omori, they go for stereo powerbombs but both are reversed as Omori hits the Axe Guillotine Driver and Akiyama applies a front facelock followed by a knee strike. Akiyama hits a jumping knee onto Suwama in the corner and Omori follows with a lariat. Omori puts Suwama onto the top turnbuckle and joins him, and Omori hits an avalanche backdrop suplex. Cover, but Doering breaks it up. Omori and Akiyama grab Doering, double Irish whip and they hit a double shoulderblock. Elbow by Omori onto Suwama in the corner and Akiyama hits a running knee strike. Axe Bomber by Omori, cover, but Suwama barely gets a shoulder up. Omori goes off the ropes but Suwama blocks the lariat, Irish whip by Omori but Suwama hits a lariat of his own. Doering comes in the ring, he puts Omori on his shoulders and hits the Death Valley Bomb. Omori gets up in the corner and Doering hits a running lariat. Doering helps up Suwama and Suwama hits a lariat in the corner as well. Doering picks up Omori and with Suwama they hit a double fallaway slam. Suwama drags Omori to the middle of the ring and hits an elbow drop. Cover, but Akiyama breaks it up. Suwama waits for Omori to get up and hits a lariat, but Omori absorbs the blow. Roaring lariat by Suwama, he goes off the ropes and hits one more. Backdrop suplex by Suwama, cover, but Omori kicks out. Suwama picks up Omori and drops him with the Last Ride, cover, and he picks up the three count. Your winners and still champions: Suwama and Jun Akiyama
Match Thoughts: A good heavyweight slugfest that kept the action coming (although to be fair they clipped out stuff somewhere since the match I saw didn’t match the overall match time). I like that the referee gives wrestlers some leeway in Japan, it is a title match after all… I don’t want to see tons of weapons used or something but the tag rules were definitely lax which I think is fine. Suwama and Doering work together really well but Akiyama always seemed to be around to help Omori, even if ultimately Omori did get pinned. Suwama did a good job at appearing to be out and done until Doering came in to clear the ring/help him up which really helped put over the damage that Omori was doing. Quality clubbin’, it stopped well short of being a classic but was an entertaining match overall. Score: 7.5
Final Thoughts:
Best Match: Suwama and Joe Doering vs. Jun Akiyama and Takao Omori. The title match delivered about as well as it could and over-shadowed the Jr. Heavyweight matches. While the Jr. Heavyweights seem to be holding back, these four did not as they were hitting each other with everything that they had. They are all pretty familiar with each other at this point and it was a smooth and well-structured match from start to finish. A recommendation to check it out.
MVP: Suwama. Between his general selling and convincing offense, Suwama came out of the main event looking the best. Suwama is still the ace of All Japan, I just seem to be the only one that remembers. Hopefully All Japan will remember at some point as well.
Overall: While I continue to be a bit disappointed with the tournament matches, they were better than the last event and the main event helped elevate the card as well. The Jr. Heavyweights in the tournament just seem to be holding back and I don’t know why, this is their chance to shine and they simply aren’t taking it. But almost all the matches on this card were above average and the main event was quality, so this wouldn’t be the worse event to pick up.
Grade: B-
MMA News: Dan Henderson vs Daniel Cormier Rumored For UFC 173, Change For Overeem, UFN 39
– Roy Nelson cemented his status as one of the premier knockout artists in the heavyweight division on Friday when he finished Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira in the main event of UFC Fight Night 39 from Abu Dhabi. Nelson landed a right hand that floored “Minotauro”.
For “Big Country,” the win was the 14th knockout of his career. In fact, each of Nelson’s (20-9) last 11 wins have come in that fashion, including victories over Brendan Schaub, Stefan Struve, Mirko CroCop and Cheick Kongo.
On the opposite end of the spectrum, Nogueira (34-9-1) has been finished in each of his last five losses, including knockouts vs. Nelson, current UFC heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez and Frank Mir.
– A rumored light heavyweight scrap could be added to UFC 173 in the coming days, as officials are trying to secure Dan Henderson vs. Daniel Cormier. The card takes place May 24 from Las Vegas and features UFC bantamweight champion Renan Barao vs. T.J. Dillashaw in the main event.
The UFC has been forced to re-work several planned bouts and move them, all the while the Henderson-Cormier contest has been rumored. It was reported on “UFC Tonight” recently that medical clearance for Henderson is currently the hold up.
Henderson (30-11) snapped a three-fight losing skid this past March when he knocked out Mauricio “Shogun” Rua in Brazil. Cormier (14-0) had a perfect 205-pound debut in February, finishing Patrick Cummins in the first round.
– Ex-Strikeforce heavyweight champion Alistair Overeem could be joining forces with the man who once defeated him. “UFC Tonight” noted that Overeem is interested in joining the Jackson-Winkeljohn gym in New Mexico, which is home to current contender Travis Browne.
The 33-year-old Overeem (37-13) was finished by Browne last August in the first round. He rebounded this past February with a decision victory over former UFC champion Frank Mir.
Overeem left Florida’s Blackzilians team recently and also underwent surgery on his elbow to correct a pinched nerve. No timetable has been set for his return to action. The report also stated that the gym’s head coach, Greg Jackson, is planning on bringing “The Reem” in for a tryout.
Possible Brock Lesnar Opponents For WrestleMania 31, Big Match Planned For SummerSlam
Credit the source to: F4WOnline
We noted before that The Rock is expected to work WrestleMania 31 next year and is the leading candidate for the 2015 Hall of Fame class. Word this week is that WWE is considering Brock Lesnar vs. The Rock or Brock Lesnar vs. Cesaro for WrestleMania 31.
Another huge match that WWE has penciled into their plans is for this year’s SummerSlam – Triple H vs. Roman Reigns.
The “OH MY GOD!” Review: ECW TV 5/14/96 (The Franchise vs. Scorpio)
The “OH MY GOD!” Review: ECW TV 1996-05-14 (matches taped Matter of Respect 1996-05-11 from The ECW Arena in Philadelphia, PA)
Champions
World: Raven
TV: Shane Douglas
Tag Team: The Eliminators
These matches were from the Matter of Respect show so much of this review will be a copy and paste from my review of that show.
El Puerto Ricano vs. Damien 666 ref John Finnegan
Match is joined in progress with the men fighting by a table outside the ring. Joey tells us this match has been like a tribute to Sabu. Sabu shows up and puts both men through a table. About 1 minute of the match was shown.
Opening video
Joey Styles welcomes us to todays show and promotes the tape for Matter of Respect. The main event for todays show is “The Franchise” Shane Douglas vs. TV Champion 2 Cold Scorpio.
Lance Wright with Hype Central. Coming up on May 18th it’s the ECW All Star Game. For the first time ever Tag Team Champions The Eliminators vs. the Gangstas in the match we have all been waiting for, 2 Cold Scorpio vs. Taz, Sabu takes on Mikey Whipwreck and The Bruise Brothers have their first match in over a month against the Pitbulls. Look for that in a future edition of “Oh My God”
“The Franchise” Shane Douglas vs. TV Champion 2 Cold Scorpio, ref John Finnegan
Shane Douglas wrestling for a belt he claims he doesn’t even want. The ref brings the title over to Shane to show it to him and Shane grabs it and throws it out of the ring. Scorpio gets a “WWF” shirt from the crowd and taunts Shane with it. The two men lock up and Scorpio takes the back of Shane. Douglas throws him off and the same thing happens again. Scorpio gets Shane to the mat and ties up the leg of Douglas. Shane gets to the ropes to break the hold. They each sweep the leg and get a 2 count. Scorpio with an arm bar brings Shane to his knees. Douglas reverses but Scorpio cartwheels out of it and is back in control of the arm. Douglas now rolls through and has a top wristlock. Scorpio back flips out of it and hits an arm drag. Shane reverses a hip toss and hits one of his own. Scorpio bails to the floor. Back in and Scorpio back to the arm. Douglas shows his power and pulls Scorpio into a clothesline. Scorpio bridges out of a pin and goes for a back slide. Shane blocks it but Scorpio backflips out of hit. Douglas goes for the belly to belly but its blocked, double arm suplex by Shane and Scorpio goes outside again and throws a chair into the ring. Shane sits down on it and throws it at Scorpio as he gets in the ring. Douglas stomping the champ. Irish whip reversed by Scorpio and he kicks Shane in the stomach. Shane leaning against the ropes back drops Scorpio to the floor as he charges. Baseball slide followed by a plancha by Shane. Shane picks up Scorpio for a suplex and bounces him off the ropes and just throws him onto the guardrail. A very nasty looking move. Dougals gets back in the ring and tells the ref to count out Scorpio. Scorpio pulls Shane out of the ring and sends him into the guardrail and follows its up with a splash. Scorpio charges and Shane sends him flying into the crowd. Shane follows and they fight through the crowd. Scorpio gets a crutch and chair giving him the upper hand back at ringside. Douglas fights back and hits a power bomb on the concrete floor which gets a soft “Oh my god” from Joey and an “E-C-W” chant from the crowd. Scorpio gets in before the count out and Shane goes back to work. Scorpio kicks Shane low and uses a chair. Shane rolls to the apron Scorpio gives him a Pele kick that sends Shane to the floor. Moonsault off the apron to the floor. Scorpio sets Shane on a table and goes back into the ring. Scorpio charges but Shane disappears and ends up behind Scorpio and attacks. Scorpio with a roll up gets 2 and he hits a superkick as they get up. Scorpio goes up top but Douglas drop kicks his feet. Shane jumps off the chair and drop kicks Scorpio off the ropes to the floor. Back in the ring Shane hits a hanging vertical suplex but Scorpio is able to kick out. Shane goes up top but misses a knee drop. Scorpio ducks a clothesline and hits another superkick. Scorpio hits a beautiful moonsault but he gets off before getting the three count. Back up top he hits a perfect 450 but doesn’t go for the cover. Twisting leg drop but again no cover. Scorpio getting cocky now but Shane is getting up. Shane leaps over Scorpio and hits a belly to back for 2. Fishermen suplex for 2. Shane throws Scorpio to the ropes and goes for the belly to belly but it’s blocked. Scorpio hits a urinagi slam. Scorpio puts Shane up top and goes for a frankensteiner but Shane blocks it and hits a superbomb. Corner whip and Shane charges but gets hit with a superkick. Scorpio goes up top but gets down and then goes back up. Shane cuts him off and hits a super belly to belly. Shane gets the pin at 26.14, announced as 26.31 to end Scoprio’s 4th TV title reign at 127 days.
We get a replay of some of the action that took place. Shane gets the mic and says that he has wrestled all the greats and worked for a great promoter in Paul Heyman and that he has wrestled in the greatest building in the world. He shakes Scorpios hand and tells him that he is the greatest wrestler in the world. Shane asks Scorpio to put the belt on him as a sign of respect. They shake hands again but Scorpio hits Shane with the belt and hits him with a pile driver. Scorpio lays a chair over Shane’s face and hits a top rope leg drop.
May 17th Saturn vs. New Jack, Kronus vs. Mustafa, Tommy Dreamer and Brian Lee in a falls count anywhere match, 2 Cold Scorpio vs. Chris Jericho. Catch that next time here at “OH My God”.
A “3 Way Dance” TV Title match has been added to the May 18th card. Champion Douglas will take on Tommy Dreamer and The Sandman. Shane Douglas made deals with both Dreamer and Sandman months ago that whomever one a singles title first would give the other the first title match. Missy Hyatt tells us that Sandman once one the World Title in a three way against Mikey Whipwreck and Steve Austin. Sandman is looking forward to a fight.
We go to Joey and he explains tells us about the deal that Shane made with Dreamer and Sandman.
Joey is with “Lionheart” Chris Jericho who coming up this Friday will be facing 2 Cold Scorpio. Jericho respects Scorpio and is going into the match as the underdog with nothing to lose. Jericho will no be upset if he doesn’t win but he’s going to look for any mistake he can take advantage of to the win.
Sandman drinks a beer for Ray “The Crippler” Stevens who passed away on May 3rd.
“Misurlou” time! Tag Team Champions the Eliminators tell us the belts are theirs and not the Gangstas, Bill Alfonso blows his whistle, DW Dudley cries about being in his wheel chair and says he can’t even stand up, Buh Buh drops something and DW gets out of his chair and picks it up, Beulah tells Tommy Dreamer she loves him Dreamer says he should be mad at her for cheating and Kimona Wanalaya shows up to make out with him before he can go any further, Shane Douglas is a man of his word and gives Sandman and Dreamer their title shot, Taz tells us that his matches with Scorpio will not be entertaining but a shoot, Shane says he’s going after Scorpio next, DJ Ran is in the hood he introduces the Gangstas New Jack tells the Eliminators their still standing and this Saturday they are going to “tear that ass up” he wants the Eliminators to clean the spray paint off the belts so they are nice and clean for them when they win them.
My thoughts on the show
Well when you have a 30-minute match on a 44-minute show there’s not much else you can air. They hyped the two up coming house shows hard and as usual they did it well. The match was real good but if you have seen Matter of Respect you can skip this show.



























































































































































































