And now back to our regularly scheduled program. I was enthralled by DGUSA when it began. I was already deeply invested in Dragon Gate, and Ring of Honor stopped being interesting to me around the time Gabe Sapolsky was on his way out. I figured the merging of the booker responsible for ROH’s creative peak and my favorite promotion would lead to gold. DGUSA certainly served up its share of nuggets, but that bastard Robert Frost wasn’t wrong when he said that nothing gold can stay.
March 27, 2010 – Phoenix, Arizona
BxB Hulk, Masato Yoshino & Naruki Doi def. CIMA, Dragon Kid & Gamma
From the inaugural DGUSA Mercury Rising. DGUSA brings back the Japanese wrestlers, swapping in Hulk and Gamma for Horiguchi and Saito. Gamma and a kendo stick added a nice dirtbag element and a bit of comedy to the match, which was sorely needed so that the gimmick didn’t become totally rote. But like in ’07 and ’08, this was too long. The commentary was awful too, as Lenny Leonard just listed the moves as they came and didn’t give any context to the match. He was silent between moves too. Who is that kind of commentary for, blind people? Yoshino made Gamma tap to the Sol Naciente at 27:23. I massively overrated this when I watched it back in 2010 at ****½. There are certainly things to like about this match, like Gamma’s heelish ways and the WARRIORS’ triple-teaming. But the pacing is slow and there just wasn’t a good enough story to bring you through the nearly thirty-minute match. ***¾
April 2, 2011 – Atlanta, Georgia
CIMA, Naruki Doi & Ricochet def. Chuck Taylor, Johnny Gargano & Rich Swann
From the second DGUSA Mercury Rising. Larry Legend was the ring announcer for this and for Urban Wrestling Federation in the same year. Wrestling is wild. Leonard does a 180 on his commentating, giving context to the six-man tradition and a bit of history as well. It helps that he has another commentator to play off of (he was solo the year before). It shows a lot of forsight on Gabe Sapolsky’s part that all four Americans in this match went on to wrestle on national television. Speaking of the Americans, they were clearly very motivated to impress here and gave the concept a nice refresh. This had a better story than any six-man since the first one; the Blood Warriors were more willing to cheat and get help from Lee at ringside so they were able to control the match more. But Ronin would come back with bursts of energy thanks to their fantastic triple-teaming ability. This match also made me sad that we never got a high profile Ricochet vs. Gargano match in NXT. Ricochet goofed his final spot, and had he not done that this would have been close to as good as the inaugural six-man. Doi pinned Swann with the Muscular Bomb at 25:53. ****¼
March 31, 2012 – Miami Beach, Florida
Low Ki, Akira Tozawa & BxB Hulk def. Masaaki Mochizuki, PAC & Ricochet
From the third DGUSA Mercury Rising. Mochizuki and Low Ki certainly should be fighting each other, but why they’re teaming with their partners is never explained as they’re not a part of Mad Blankey or World-1. Arik Cannon joined Leonard on commentary and basically buried everything he saw because his gimmick was snarky. It was awful. Speaking of awful, what the hell was Ki doing here, standing in a neutral corner for a huge portion of the match? Aside from that, Ki’s weirdness didn’t do too much to distract from the action. Mad Blankey kept things grounded by keeping Ricochet from escaping the ring, Mochizuki kicked his way into our hearts, and PAC had the crowd in the palm of his hands. Tozawa got revenge for a loss the night before by hitting the arm-trap German suplex on Mochizuki at 21:25. To this day I’m surprised that Tozawa didn’t stick it out in Dragon Gate and become a main eventer there. I wouldn’t be shocked if he makes more money as a jobber in Florida though. ****
April 7, 2013 – Secaucus, New Jersey
Ricochet, Johnny Gargano & Rich Swann def, CIMA, Eita & Tomahawk TT
From the fourth DGUSA Mercury Rising. This was the final match that could truly be called the Dragon Gate WrestleMania weekend six-man, as shortly after this DGUSA stopped bringing in Japanese talent. They clearly knew that the shine was wearing off the exhibition-style of the contest because they added a stipulation that the winner of the fall could have a title shot of their choosing. Gargano wasn’t getting along with his partners here, having turned heel the night before by hitting a low blow on Shingo in a title match. He was immediately going into snarky heel mode here, which felt like a big jump since aside from the low blow he didn’t do anything heelish to this point. On commentary, Lenny Leonard tried to push a storyline between CIMA and Gargano fighting for the supremacy of their respective Dream Gate and Freedom Gate titles, but they only interacted with each other for a brief moment near the end of the match and didn’t factor into the finish at all. In fact, the crowd didn’t really get into this until very close to the end, and that’s because the match just didn’t click until then. This was pretty damn disappointing given the matches that had come before it in this slot. It probably should have been ten minutes shorter given what they put into it. Ricochet hit Eita with a 630 Senton for the win at 22:34. **¾
April 5, 2014 – New Orleans, Louisiana
AR Fox, Rich Swann & Ricochet vs. Chris Hero, Masato Tanaka & Roderick Strong {Semifinal Match}
From the fifth DGUSA Mercury Rising. If when you lose a champion you hold a tournament to crown a new one, it stands to reason that when you lose the roster from the namesake of your promotion you should hold a tournament to fill the void left by them as well. So instead of one six-man tag match, in 2014 they held three of them and had the winning teams from each meet in a three-way match to determine the best of the best. Sure, fine, lets see how it went. Hero and Tanaka wrestled each other the night before, though I have no idea why Strong was on their team. Swann and Ricochet had been a tag team before, though I’m not sure why Fox was on their team. Swann and Strong were a tag team in FIP at the time, which was mentioned but not played up at all in the match. This was insanely long. It also totally missed what made the first few Dragon Gate WM weekend six man tags so much fun. It wasn’t just fast moves happening in quick successions, it was that the wrestlers knew their partners so well that they could do insane cooperative move chains. Those chains would be countered by their opponents, who were also familiar enough as a team to string together tandem moves, and so on and so on until the crowd was exhilarated and exhausted. This was just a bunch of random guys doing moves (sort of slowly given the style) until Swann rolled up Hero out of nowhere for the win at 28:36. What exactly was the crowd supposed to be drawn to for nearly thirty minutes in this match? There was no story running through it, no issues among any of the wrestlers, just a bunch of random spots that didn’t even really lead from one to the next. This match really pissed me off. **¼
Anthony Nese, Caleb Konley & Trent Barreta def. Biff Busick, Chuck Taylor & Teddy Hart {Semifinal Match}
This match has a story coming into it. Taylor’s stable the Gentleman’s Club had disbanded so he was at risk of having to fight the Premier Athlete Brand alone here. He started the match doing just that and did an alright job of it. In part that was because he and Barreta were friends and Barreta was conflicted about fighting Taylor 3-on-1. Busick jumped into Taylor’s corner after about four minutes. A couple minutes after that, Hart came out with his entourage (including a living cat) and cleaned house. Then the match stopped dead so Hart’s cat could become the focal point of the show. And then Hart attacked his partners which allowed Nese to pin Taylor at 10:09. The crowd chanted, “This is stupid.” and they were totally right. This tournament is a disaster. The commentators don’t know how to explain what just happened either. ½*
Lince Dorado, Fire Ant & Green Ant def. Moose, Harlem Bravado & Lancelot Bravado {Semifinal Match}
After the last two matches I don’t think I’m coming into this with a level head because I was so happy to watch a match between two actual, familiar teams that wanted to work in cooperation with their teammates against their opponents. It was short and it wasn’t mind-expanding, but it was absolutely in the spirit of the original six man tag matches from the mid aughts. Green Ant spent the latter half of the match looking to lock in the CHIKARA Special on someone, and he successfully did so on Lancelot at 11:54. ***
Anthony Nese, Caleb Konley & Trent Barreta def. AR Fox, Rich Swann & Ricochet and Fire Ant, Green Ant & Lince Dorado {Tournament Finals Elimination Match}
Was this worth the hour’s worth of matches I endured to get to this? No, not at all, but this was still a ton of fun. This was an insane spotfest that almost never went completely off the rails. It felt mostly like everyone was trying to win as often as was feasible while at the same time working with their partners to perform breathtaking stunts. About halfway through the match, Konley hit Dorado with an avalanche Death Valley Bomb to eliminate him and the Colony. There was a bit of a lull after that, but then Ricochet’s crew took over and sped things up again. I think if DGUSA had known that this would be the last match they’d ever broadcast as a company, they’d have put the babyfaces over. As is, Barreta snuck in a high knee to the back of Fox’s head for the win at 16:43, ending the company with a disappointing heel win. ***½
It’s a shame that the final Mercury Rising wound up being DGUSA’s final show, because the Ultimate Gate card they put on the night before was leagues and leagues better. When we come back, the six man migrates once more as every drop gets squeezed out of this stone.