The Mania Weekend 6-Man Tag: Creating Traditions

It’s WrestleMania season at what is hopefully the home stretch of a global pandemic, so that has me wanting to watch WrestleMania season related wrestling. A tradition that certainly wasn’t intended to be a tradition began 15 years ago in Ring of Honor, when a loose partnership between that company and Dragon Gate gave the world a match the likes of which had never really been seen in the United States before. It had been seen, almost move for move, in Japan, but American independent wrestling fans were so taken with it that ROH (specifically, its booker Gabe Sapolsky) spent over a decade running the concept into the ground. It took a world-stopping virus to stop him!

March 31, 2006 – Chicago Ridge, Illinois

Dragon Kid, Genki Horiguchi & Ryo Saito def. Naruki Doi, Masato Yoshino & CIMA
From the inaugural ROH Supercard of Honor. I watched this live in Chicago in 2006 and then reviewed it three months later on DVD. I’m surprised at how much of my fourteen-year-old opinion of the match holds up. Not entirely though; at the time I said there was no more smooth or innovative match than this, not yet having seen the match it was based on from Dragon Gate’s Kobe World Hall show the previous year. And while this match spawned a tradition that lasts to this day (assuming wrestling gets back to some sense of normal after this pandemic in 2020), other high-flying six-man tags (and the like) have also gone on to spawn important things in the industry. AEW comes to mind. I still think it was a tad overrated by many, as Do Fixer insisting on traditional tags when they weren’t necessary made them look dumb, the match had an exhibition feel, and as I said it was mostly copy and pasted from a match they had months earlier in Japan. Kid pinned Doi with the Dragon Rana at 20:34. ****½ 

March 31, 2007 – Detroit, Michigan

Susumu Yokosuka, CIMA & SHINGO def. Dragon Kid, Ryo Saito & Masaaki Mochizuki
From ROH Supercard of Honor II. I was there live for this one too, in my hometown of Detroit. In hindsight, I think this would have been a good place for CIMA to make a one-night defection from Typhoon to team with Mochizuki and Shingo against the all-Typhoon team of Yokosuka, Saito & Kid. As it is it feels like a random hodgepodge of Typhoon and Friends teams. It also would have made sense for Saito and Shingo to swap, as CIMA was a Triangle Gate champion around this time with Saito & Yokosuka. At this point, the fans knew how to pronounce CIMA’s name, so it was annoying to hear the commentators botch it. A good chunk of this felt even more exhibitiony than the year before, with the exception of Shingo and Mochizuki fighting as if they were trying to survive a battle. The last few minutes were really breathtaking, and while I find Dave Prazak’s “this action speaks for itself” line leadin into commentator silence too cute by half, it was nice to just hear the crowd lose their minds for the spots. Yokosuka pinned Kid with the World Liner at 27:19. ****¼ 

March 29, 2008 – Orlando, Florida

Naruki Doi, Genki Horiguchi & Masato Yoshino def. CIMA, Dragon Kid & Ryo Saito
From ROH Supercard of Honor III. Funny that this one is a rematch from two years earlier, with CIMA and Genki having swapped places. This was all super fast-paced action for twenty-five minutes, but it didn’t hit the same peaks that the previous two years hit. The fact that it was mainly a rehash of the original match with less interesting teams aligned this way didn’t help. Don’t get me wrong, on its own it’s a doozy, but while it might have been top ten in a given month, it wouldn’t make the top ten of the year. Doi pinned Kid in 25:48 with the Muscular Bomb. ****

April 3, 2009 – Houston, Texas

Incognito, Chris Hero & Eddie Edwards def Jay Briscoe, Kevin Steen & Magno
From ROH Supercard of Honor IV. Despite being beloved by hardcore ROH fans, Sapolsky’s tenure as booker saw declining DVD sales and an inability to bring in casual fans. His relationship with Dragon Gate continued when DGUSA launched the following year, but in the meantime ROH continued the WrestleMania weekend tradition without Dragon Gate or Sapolsky. The concept suffered as a result, as two AAA wrestlers were brought in to goose an otherwise unremarkable six man tag match. Eddie Edwards has got to be considered one of the most bland wrestlers to keep being given a large platform. While it was nice to have a change of pace (there was an intense feud going on between Edwards and Steen, something the Dragon Gate versions lacked), this suffered immediately thanks to a broken top rope. They made the most of a bad situation, but there’s no getting around the bad situation. Dave Prazak, who I assume was aligned with the heels in this match, buries the match as well. Magno saved this from being a disaster by doing wild lucha stuff off the middle rope and posts, but lost to Hero at 14:22 when Hero hit the rolling elbow with a presumably loaded elbow pad. It looked like a beer coozy, so that ain’t great. All points to Magno for his effort. ***

When we come back, we check out how Sapolsky revived the tradition in DGUSA.