It’s 2010 and Pro Wrestling Guerrilla has settled into putting on regular shows at the American Legion in Reseda in Los Angeles. They’ve cooled it with the edge lord bullshit and started focusing more on being the spot for Hollywood hipsters to watch super indie wrestling to small but always sold out crowds.
February 27, 2010 – Los Angeles, California
Davey Richards def. Kenny Omega {PWG World Championship Match}
From As the Worm Turns. What I thought was going to be a match between a guy who was too goofy for his own good at the time vs. a guy who has always taken himself too seriously turned out to be a match between two guys willing to take on the characteristics of the other. In the first half, Omega cosplayed as Hiroyoshi Tenzan, and Richards showed he doesn’t always have a stick up his ass by putting on the horns as well. In the second half it was all business. Richards blocked almost all of Omega’s dumber offense before he had a chance to hit it and tried to focus on Omega’s bandaged arm. That paid off when he made Omega tap to a cross armbreaker at 25:13. The two half of the match didn’t flow together well at all, but the second half was a hell of a good time. Richards was stripped of the title later in the year after getting booked for a bunch of dates in New Japan and taking them over PWG dates. ***¾
October 9, 2010 – Los Angeles, California
Claudio Castagnoli def. Joey Ryan, Brandon Gatson, and Chris Hero {PWG World Championship Four Way Match}
From the Curse of Guerrilla Island. These four were the semifinalists in the Battle of Los Angeles tournament. They probably would have just had the title decided in the tournament, but it wasn’t vacated until a week later. Ryan won that tournament, but clearly Castagnoli won this one. And it’s good that Castagnoli won, because he looked incredible compared to everyone else in this. Gatson in particular looked like the guy from a regional NWA indie who could do a few flips but never went anywhere because there was nothing else to him. Castagnoli and Hero pulling out some Kings of Wrestling tandem offense was fun. It was good to have Ryan in there so that fans had something to be worried about. Castagnoli put him down in the end with the pop up European Uppercut at 11:10. Short, sweet, and to the point, but nothing special. ***
July 23, 2011 – Los Angeles, California
Kevin Steen def. Claudio Castagnoli {PWG World Championship Match}
From EIGHT. Castagnoli had just defeated Hero in a 30+ minute match. Steen had been on commentary for that match. He had also fought twice already in the show, beating PAC in the opener and then teaming with CIMA to bea the Young Bucks. He’d been told by PWG officials that he was the de facto number one contender. He asked for the match right now. Castagnoli said no, but then sneak attacked Steen and demanded the match start. The Bucks tried to help Castagnoli win, but Ryan and Scorpio Sky came out to stop them. Steen hit the Package Piledriver for the win at 1:32. This was a fun little bit of chaos. **
October 22, 2011 – Los Angeles, California
El Generico def. Kevin Steen {PWG World Championship Ladder Match}
From Steen Wolf. This was the fifth and final singles match between the two in PWG. It takes a lot to get me to like a ladder match, and this match did a lot. I loved that Generico was constantly trying to win the match, hitting sudden, big moves on Steen before rushing up the ladder. Speaking of big moves, some of the spots in this match defied belief, and were somehow set up in surprising and natural ways. And just when I felt that these guys weren’t selling those spots enough to believably stop each other from grabbing the belt, the Bucks ran out to attack Steen and give Generico a chance to sell his injuries. Generico sunset bombed Steen’s head onto a ladder and the climbed to grab the belt (and the part of the ceiling it was attached to) at 26:57. Insane match here. Is there a better one between them, because I’d like to see that? ****½
March 17, 2012 – Los Angeles, California
Kevin Steen def. El Generico and Eddie Edwards {PWG World Championship Triple Threat Match}
From World’s Finest. Generico wrestled against Dick Togo in a non-title match and in a six man tag on the two shows before this rather than make a title defense. Quite a bit different than his first reign. This was meant to be Generico vs. Edwards, but Steen asked for his rematch and both guys were okay with it. Aside from Generico forcing a rope break, which makes no sense in a triple threat match where disqualifications are illogical, this was a dope slice of action. This was nonstop. It was more like the WWE Vengeance 2003 main event three way than it was the inaugural ROH main event three way in that you can check your brain and watch the fun three way movez rather than spend the match trying to figure out how they came up with really intricate sequences. I went into this expecting very little, and while the truth is that Edwards could have been replaced with any skilled wrestler for all his personality mattered here, I came out of this having quite enjoyed myself. ****
December 1, 2012 – Los Angeles, California
Adam Cole def. Kevin Steen {PWG World Championship Guerrilla Warfare Match}
From Mystery Vortex. Cole won the Battle of Los Angeles tournament and subsequently attacked Steen and stole his belt for two months. Steen retaliated by getting this match turned into a Guerrilla Warfare match. This was one of those matches that I admired more than I enjoyed. They pretty much just spent the entire match setting up bigger and bigger piles of plunder to slam each other through in more and more elaborate ways. It never felt fake, but it also never came down from its peak to create more drama. At one point, Steen hits an avalanche 2K1 Bomb on Cole through a very pointy looking chair structure, and the fact that Cole kicked out didn’t garner a louder gasp from the crowd than any other kick out did. I suspect it’s because the match fit a big move → kick out → rinse → repeat structure. One the one hand, I’m happy that there were so many near falls because both guys were constantly trying to win, but on the other, I would have liked to see at least one moment where Cole sadistically and slowly beat up Steen to make me hate him more. Steen introduced thumbtacks to the match (and spit some at Cole in a cool moment), but got German suplexed onto them. A superkick and a Shutdown Suplex later and Cole was champ at 20:55. ****
May 23, 2014 – Los Angeles, California
Kyle O’Reilly def. Adam Cole {PWG World Championship Knockout or Tapout Match}
From Sold Our Souls For Rock ‘n Roll. In an attempt to make a Rockers analogy before the match, Cole admits that he’s Shawn Michaels. Now I presume some sort of trans-dimensional travel is involved given the ever so slight difference in appearance, but I’m glad that’s on the record. I liked this even more than their excellent No Disqualification Match in Ring of Honor. The ferocity with which O’Reilly went after Cole was incredible. Cole’s heeling was dope too. I especially loved when he kicked the referee so that he could tap out to get O’Reilly to release the Triangle Choke, knowing it wouldn’t cost him the match. I probably would have gone even higher with my rating, but the Young Bucks and Steen running in for Cole (and getting taken out by the usual PWG cast of good guys) disrupted the flow for me. It played off of their previous match, where Steen helped Cole win, but I didn’t love it here. What I did love was that immediately after, O’Reilly no-sold a superkick, threw his mouthguard at Cole, and then picked him apart before knocking his face into the turnbuckle that Cole earlier exposed. O’Reilly locked in a Triangle Choke for the win seconds later at 22:59. To this day, Cole remains the longest reigning PWG Champion. So there was precedent for his NXT reign. ****½
December 12, 2014 – Los Angeles, California
Roderick Strong def. Kyle O’Reilly {PWG World Championship Guerrilla Warfare Match}
From Black Cole Sun. O’Reilly had just defeated Ricochet in a scheduled match when Strong attacked him. Strong, who had “missed his flight,” demanded a title shot. O’Reilly granted him one on the condition that it be Guerrilla Warfare. Sounds familiar. I love when something happens in a match to help me believe the fight is real. In this case it was Strong unscrewing the top turnbuckle, realizing it was taking a long time and stopping to hit another move on O’Reilly so that he wouldn’t have to sell too long for the previous move. The rest of this match was wild too. They beat the crap out of each other with plunder, stiffed each other with kicks, used weapons to try to weaken the other’s strikes, all while calling back to their previous matches. On top of that, O’Reilly had wrestled a (reportedly, I haven’t seen it) great match for twenty minutes before this. That’s insane to me. Strong was often in control here, which worked given the overall story and made this match in particular very dramatic. He hit the End of Heartache, hit it again on a chair bridge, and then put on the Stronghold to make O’Reilly pass out at 22:21. ****¼
March 5, 2016 – Los Angeles, California
Zack Sabre Jr. def. Roderick Strong {PWG World Championship Match}
From All Star Weekend 12, Night 2. Strong didn’t want PWG senior referee Rick Knox reffing this match, so he called out another guy. But then Knox superkicked that guy and I actually laughed out loud. This was peak indie wrestling, in my opinion. They were having a ton of fun interacting with the crowd, taking off their boots and comparing the size of their socks because that was a bit that Strong had in PWG. And beyond that they were having an insane match in which Sabre had an answer to all of Strong’s big moves with reversals into submission holds. In the end, Sabre pulled Strong off of the top with an armbar and then collected each one of his limbs in another submission until Strong had nowhere to go and quit at 33:36. Terrific stuff. ****¼
July 7, 2017 – Los Angeles, California
Chuck Taylor def. Zack Sabre Jr. {PWG World Championship Match}
From Pushin Forward Back. Excalibur gives this some weight by listing Sabre’s successful title defenses over the past year and change, and reminding us that Taylor has been undefeated for two years in PWG except for a loss in a title match to Sabre. About halfway into this match I was thinking, “hey, this is the best Taylor match I’ve ever seen.” Then it got better. Zabre got frustrated with his inability to put Taylor away and essentially turned heel. He forced a member of the ring crew to dismantle the bottom rope, with the idea being that it’d make it harder for Taylor to break Sabre’s submissions. That doesn’t really make sense because you don’t have to actually grab the bottom rope in wrestling, you just have to break the plane of the ropes. Regardless, Taylor undauntedly began putting his foot on the middle rope to break anway. So credit for the match following its own internal logic at least. So then Sabre just decided to get himself disqualified by hitting Taylor with the title belt. But ref Knox not only wouldn’t disqualify Sabre, he wouldn’t make the count after Sabre cheated. With disqualifications off the table, Taylor baited Sabre into dumping thumbtacks on the mat. Taylor kicked out of the slams onto the tacks, and then we found out why he put himself in the position to take them. With tacks all over the mat, Sabre couldn’t lock in his armbars without getting poked. Taylor hit the Awful Waffle moments later at 29:22 and won the title. I love a good heel-gets-outsmarted story, and this was exactly that. ****¼
October 21, 2017 – Los Angeles, California
Ricochet def. Chuck Taylor {PWG World Championship Match}
From All Star Weekend 13, Night 2. This match was an example of good intentions that don’t execute well, and of too many ideas clashing with each other. Right off the bat, Ricochet as a heel doesn’t really work for me. The guy on his own just doesn’t seem evil. I can buy him as a guy misguidedly looking up to a dickhead CIMA in Dragon Gate, but on his own it just doesn’t play. As the match wore on, Taylor did a lot of heelish stuff too, like taking down the top rope so Ricochet couldn’t fly and then choking him with it. That made the end, where Taylor throws away a hammer, feel kind of empty. While the ref got the hammer out of the ring, Ricochet hit a low blow and then hit a Flatliner to win the title at 31:00. Which brings up another issue: the match was too long and it wasn’t paced very well. About 20 minutes in, Ricochet pinned Taylor after a belt shot thanks to a second referee, but the match was restarted and went another ten minutes. It felt like the match ended quite suddenly when that happened, which makes me believe that they could have cut ten full minutes out of the pre-false finish portion and this whole thing would have felt more natural. They tried hard, but the pieces didn’t come together the way they wanted them to I think. Having said that, it’s a testament to PWG that a disappointing main event at this point clocked in where it does. ***½
January 12, 2018 – Los Angeles, California
Chuck Taylor def. Ricochet {PWG World Championship Guerrilla Warfare Match}
From Mystery Vortex V. This didn’t have the identity issues for Taylor that the last match had. He wrestled this whole match as a disgruntled babyface rather than a confused heel. But I still couldn’t get invested in Evil Ricochet, even as he tried to pour thumbtacks into Taylor’s mouth. What’s with PWG and thumbtacks in so many of their title changes? Much like the Steen vs. Cole match, I appreciated the effort here more than I enjoyed what they were doing. At some point it does start to feel like all the Guerrilla Warfare spots have been done and they’re just being trotted out again with different guys. I did like the finish a lot though. Taylor had taken some punishment on the tacks, but he avoided the 630 Senton which drove those tacks deep into Ricochet. Taylor then hit the Awful Waffle for the win at 23:56. ***½
March 23, 2018 – Los Angeles, California
Keith Lee def. Chuck Taylor {PWG World Championship Match}
From Time is a Flat Circle. It is VERY weird to see PWG in a different venue, but this new setting does make the product feel bigger and more professional. This didn’t do much for me. The first chunk of the match was Taylor complaining about being booed on the microphone and then brawling in the crowd that was hard to see. From there they had what you could call a standard Wednesday night TV main event. Solid, but nothing special. It was hard to buy Lee being on defense so much. He hit the Supernova for the win at 17:28. I wonder if they knew in March that Lee was about to sign with WWE, and if they were annoyed in hindsight about putting the title on him. ***
April 21, 2018 – Los Angeles, California
WALTER def. Keith Lee and Jonah Rock {PWG World Championship Triple Threat Match}
From All Star Weekend 14, Night 2. Back at the American Legion for this one. Seven guys on this show were signed to WWE not long after this, and two to AEW. This was fun, though nothing more than what you’d expect. Just a group of big boys doing big boy things, tossing each other around, having a good time. Rock added a dimension with his dickish low blows to both opponents. He didn’t really heel it up outside of that though. In the end, WALTER booted Rock to the floor and then pinned Lee with a lariat at 13:24. ***½
October 19, 2018 – Los Angeles, California
Jeff Cobb def. WALTER {PWG World Championship Match}
From Smokey and the Bandido. And now back to the Globe Theater. This took a good long while to get going, and just when it started hitting on all cylinders it ended. That said, there was a nice build to Cobb hitting the Tour of the Islands that kept me engaged. Excalibur misremembered how WALTER won the title, saying it was with the Superfly Splash when in fact it was with a lariat. Cobb kicked out of the splash and countered a sleeper hold to a roll up for 2. He immediately caught WALTER with a clutch for the win at 18:45. ***½
December 20, 2019 – Los Angeles, California
Bandido def. Jeff Cobb {PWG World Championship Match}
From the Makings of a Varsity Athlete. Wow, Cobb basically got rolled here. He never came close to winning, had his main finisher countered over and over again, got smacked with an avalanche fall away suplex, and then pinned with the 21 Plex at 16:51. Beyond being kind of one-sided, the match was rough at times. They didn’t always seem to know where they were going to land in the ring, which led to a couple awkward moments. ***¼
Because of the pandemic, and because PWG was seemingly running fewer shows each year, the company has not run a show since Bandido’s title win. Since so much of PWG’s charm is the tightly packed crowd (sporting event spectators are still banned in California) and the international wrestlers flying in for indie booking dream matches (international travel is very restricted right now), it seems it could be a long time until we get another PWG show. But if they do return, I hope they can replicate on top the wild run they had from 2011-2017.