DGUSA was no more, and EVOLVE was too dinky of a promotion to draw on WrestleMania weekend. So WWN figured they’d hype this as a supershow under their parent banner. The problem of course is that even though EVOLVE never drew, it was still the biggest brand they had and WWN on its own meant nothing.
March 28, 2015 – San Jose, California
Mia Yim, Cherry Bomb & Kimber Lee def. Andrea, Nicole Matthews & Portia Perez
From the sixth Mercury Rising, now presented by WWNLive. After rubbing dirt in the face of the six man tag tradition the year before, they figured they’d let the women fill the spot this year as a soft and small reboot. Bit since NXT hadn’t normalized women in the main event yet, this match was the second on the show. A big ol’ yikes in hindsight, as it’s the only time this match wasn’t either the main event, second from the top, or the opener. Even the first one was the “main event” of the first half of its show before intermission. This is just a random spot. Nikki Storm was supposed to be in this match, but she was attacked and replaced by Andrea during a cheesy pre-match promo. Why? It’s not adequately explained and surely made the match worse. Anyway, given the spot on the card these ladies put on a decent show. It wasn’t remarkable in any way, and I’m sure I’ll forget about it as soon as I watch the very next match, but it was second on the show so what would you have them do? Yim got a roll up on Matthews for the win at 11:53. Storm attacks Andrea after the match. **½
April 2, 2016 – Dallas, Texas
Johnny Gargano, Kota Ibushi & TJP def. Marty Scurll, Tommy End & Will Ospreay
From the seventh Mercury Rising, now presented by WWNLive. Heckuva lineup here. This match has two subtitles: The Six-Man Tradition Continues as well as Days of Future Past. It’s also Team Europe vs. Team EVOLVE 1. Just pick one goddamn gimmick and stick with it. Jesus, it’s no wonder EVOLVE never caught on. I didn’t mention it in the last match’s rundown, but here as well as there the turnbuckle pads are branded for EVOLVE. So bush league. Ibushi was a surprise participant here and the crowd just ate that right up. This match had two flaws. I’ll get to them in a second, but first I need to praise the return to form we got here. This match was all about the Europeans working in concert to bewilder the less-cohesive opponent team. And because of who the Europeans were, that cooperative work was mind expanding. Once the US/Japan team got it together and worked together, they won rather quickly. The two problems were that WWN wasn’t equipped to film the portion of the match that spilled into the crowd, so it was almost impossible to see what was happening. And second, I wish they’d just have called this a tornado match, because it didn’t utilize lucha/Dragon Gate tag rules. It was just a free for all. This was most apparent during the finish, which saw Gargano hold End in the GargaNo Escape while Ibushi hit Ospreay with the Golden Bomb for the win at 22:48. If they’d tightened those two things up a bit, this would have been about as good as any six-person WrestleMania weekend tag. As it is, it’s just a ton of fun. I have a feeling the matches that come after won’t be able to touch this. ****¼
April 1, 2017 – Orlando, Florida
Matt Riddle def. Fred Yehi, Jon Davis, Parrow, Timothy Thatcher, and Tracy Williams {WWN Championship Elimination Match}
From the eighth Mercury Rising, now presented by WWNLive. Rather than a six-man tag, the 2017 version of the match was an elimination match with six guys in it. The WWN Championship was meant to be like the NWA Championship, a governing body’s belt to be defended across all the promotions it oversaw. Each guy in this match was meant to represent a different promotion associated with WWN as a current or former champion there. That’s pretty dumb, since Pete Dunne, Zach Sabre Jr, and LuFisto (bear with me) were all actual champions who defended their titles on this show. Thatcher was EVOLVE (former champ), Davis (former champ) and Yehi (current champ) were Full Impact Pro, Parrow was American Combat Wrestling (current champ), Riddle was Style Battle (tournament winner), and Williams was EVOLVE (tag champ, oy). The first few minutes of the match were an awkward, clunky mess, capped off by Thatcher choking out and eliminating Parrow. Makes sense, nobody knows what ACW is. Thatcher aggravated everybody by choking each opponent, so they all stood by and let Williams eliminate him with a crossface. Williams, Riddle, and Yehi (all members of Catch Point) decide to gang up on Davis, and while he spends a few minutes fighting them off he does eventually succumb to a triple submission. I liked that chunk a lot. Yehi & Williams, the current tag champs, then ganged up on Riddle. The structure of this match is working so well for me. They suplex the crap out of him until Williams decides that Riddle is hurt enough to fight alone and sneaks in a pin to eliminate Yehi. The rest of the match is Yehi destroying Riddle’s neck to stop every comeback. That is until his offense became too redundant and Riddle was able to predict a crossface attempt and counter it to the Bromission for the win at 28:07. This is kind of a hidden gem. The first few minutes are a bit shaky, but even when the action wasn’t top notch the story told was. From start to finish, everyone was in survival mode, letting folks get double, triple, and quadruple teamed to best facilitate eliminations. It was kind of like if Survivor was a wrestling match. I really liked the way Williams tried to game his teammates at the end of the match, but Riddle was just too good for him. ****¼
April 8, 2018 – New Orleans, Louisiana
AR Fox, DJ Z & Trey Miguel defeated Austin Theory, Travis Banks & Zachary Wentz
From the ninth Mercury Rising, now presented by WWNLive. The match was back to its standard format, but it’s the opener rather than the main event. This was a totally random assortment of guys because they wanted to keep the tradition alive but didn’t think to put any effort into it that year. It took me half the match to get a handle on who was on whose team, but it didn’t matter at all to the match. That’s because the match was short and fast and just a bunch of guys doing a ton of moves at each other. That said, there was only one moment of indie nonsense early on, and the rest of the match was without error and moved quickly enough that I never had a chance to think about anything too deeply. Z hit Wentz with a 450 Splash out of nowhere for the win at 8:18. If the Young Bucks or Fenix had been in this exact match, Dave Meltzer would give it four and a half stars. ***
April 5, 2019 – Queens, New York
Eddie Kingston, Joe Gacy & Shane Strickland def. Alexander James, Jurn Simmons & Marius Al-Ani
From the tenth (and presumably final) Mercury Rising, now presented by WWNLive. They seemed to have decided that two six-man tags were necessary to sell tickets to this show. I do remember that every single promotion on Earth came to town that weekend, but I don’t think doubling down on the much-forgotten six-man tradition was the way to get butts in seats. I do appreciate that in both matches we saw established teams (or at least sensical ones) on both sides. This was more hard hitting than high flying, but I appreciate the change of pace. The wXw strongmen were very good at doing the big guy thing. There were two little annoying quirks near the end; the referee broke up a submission on Gacy from Simmons because Strickland was legal, which is so stupid given how the legal man has never ever mattered in these matches. The other thing is that Al-Ani fed Strickland his arm for the JML Driver quite blatantly, and since that finished the match at 13:16, it’s the final impression the match made. But I liked everything else so that’s a plus. ***¼
Daisuke Sasaki, Soma Takao & Tetsuya Endo def. Adrian Alanis, AR Fox & Leon Ruff
Okay, I guess the thing connecting the main events was EVOLVE stables vs. outsiders. In this case (and in the case of the WWN Championship match, it was DDT invading. I love Endo, so I have high hopes here. This was very much in line with the first wave of six-man tag matches in this series. Things moved fast, teams did tandem moves, and people took flight. Endo threw in a few moves I’d never seen before. Fox is a madman for being on the receiving end of an avalanche Death Valley Driver onto the top rope. It didn’t reach the heights of the earliest matches (or even the Europe vs. EVOLVE match), but it was a blast of a watch with a couple of memorable moments. Endo pinned Alanis after a Shooting Star Press at 24:23. ***¾
I honestly can’t remember if WWN had a six-man tag match scheduled for Mercury Rising 2020 before everything got shut down due to the pandemic. But a few months later, WWE purchased EVOLVE and signed a good chunk of what was the EVOLVE roster, and they hired Gabe Sapolsky, so I’d be surprised if this six-man tradition continues. I suppose it could live on in NXT EVOLVE, or whatever they’re going to call that, but I wouldn’t hold my breath for it. Hell, NXT Halftime Heat blew almost all of these matches out of the water anyway, so it’s beating a dead horse at this point. That said, WWE loves equine abuse, so who knows?