History of the AAW Championship | Part 2 | Too Much Spit

I didn’t have a particularly strong reason for breaking things up where I did in AAW’s title history except that the matches from here on are on Highspots Wrestling Network. So for those of you who want to subscribe to a service that’s a little less narrow, here’s where to begin.

September 12, 2014 – Berwyn, Illinois

Eddie Kingston def. Shane Hollister {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the seventh Defining Moment. The first three-fourths of this match were as bland as it gets in a Kingston match. It felt like they were going through the motions because they had 20 minutes to fill. The bright side is that it was punchy kicky rather than chinlocky, but it was still pretty boring. Things picked up near the end, especially after  Bordeaux got involved. And while her interference didn’t amount to much, Hollister hitting her with friendly fire in the same match where he lost the title is thematically consistent. Kingston won the belt with a pair of spinning backfists at 19:57. **¾ 

May 1, 2015 – Merrionette Park, Illinois

Josh Alexander def. Eddie Kingston and Samoa Joe {AAW Heavyweight Championship Elimination Match}
From the third Take No Prisoners. I’m pretty sure this is the first Alexander match I’ve ever seen, and given that six years after this people are pretty stoked on this dude I’m definitely curious. It was fun watching Kingston suplex Joe, but that didn’t last long because Joe hit him with a Muscle Buster and eliminated him rather early in the match. Beating Joe was a bigger deal than beating Kingston, so this was booked in the best way possible. It also left the door open for Kingston to challenge Alexander as he was never pinned by the new champ. That never happened, though Kingston did eventually get another shot at the title after Alexander had lost the belt. I really liked the last couple of minutes between Alexander and Joe, in part because the commentary didn’t give Alexander a chance but in a professional and respectful way. The unassuming commentary was pretty great overall. ***¼ 

June 20, 2015 – Berwyn, Illinois

Ethan Page def. Josh Alexander {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Vanguard Uprising. AAW had purchased Vanguard Wrestling All-Star Alliance the year before and ran it as AAW Vanguard for a year. This was the final show under that banner. Alexander was gearing up for a long break due to an upcoming neck surgery (I think at the time he announced he’d be retiring), so he was dropping all of the indie titles he’d amassed. They did a nice job planting the seed of doubt that he’d lose though, as he promised to vacate the title and force a tournament if he won here. The crowd cared about this almost not at all, which is surprising because there was a solid angle going into it and Alexander was on his way out. But it was mostly average until they picked up the pace in the last couple of minutes. Page hit a uranage for the win at 21:03. **¾ 

November 28, 2015 – Chicago, Illinois

Eddie Kingston def. Ethan Page and Trevor Lee {AAW Heavyweight Championship Elimination Match}
From Windy City Classic XI. The first chunk of the match leading up to Lee’s elimination was pretty fun. Page’s Donshoku Dino-lite shtick worked for me, and the payoff of Kingston hitting him with machine gun spankings was funny. Lee tried to roll up Kingston but Page tipped them over and helped Kingston pin Lee to eliminate him.  The chunk after Lee’s elimination was less fun. It wasn’t bad, but it was slower and less eventful. The crowd was invested at least, mosty chanting for Kingston with a smattering of Ego chants. Kingston caught Page with a pair of desperate spinning backfists for the win at 18:36. ***

February 19, 2016 – Merrionette Park, Illinois

Sami Callihan def. Eddie Kingston {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the second Art of War. This had its pros and cons. Callihan threw a bunch of chairs at Kingston’s legs and then kept attacking those legs throughout the match. Kingston sold well enough too. Then, Dave Crist ran in and interfered, sometimes in front of the referee. That took me all the way out of this thing. Callihan hit Kingston with the Implant Piledriver for the win at 13:38. That finish was all kinds of kaka and I can’t stand when indie companies just let things like foreign objects and outside interference fly when it’s not stipulated in the match. AAW matches have no count outs or disqualifications, but then why have rope breaks? Why would anyone abstain from using weapons in a match if it wasn’t expressly part of their storyline that they win without foreign objects? Taking away all the rules in every match breaks wrestling logic. **½ 

July 23, 2016 – Merrionette Park, Illinois

Pentagon Jr def. Sami Callihan {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the third United We Stand. DIY had a farewell to AAW match on this show, but I’m stuck with Callihan. I’ve read a couple of glowing reviews for this match, but I just don’t see it. I’m not saying it was bad, but I am wondering where, aside from the loud crowd, people found so much value in what went down in the ring. Maybe Pentagon was just a bigger novelty back in 2016. This was just the usual from both guys, though I suppose I enjoyed the moments when Callihan got shook by Pentagon’s offense. The Crist brothers and JT Davidson all interfered on Callihan’s behalf, so I guess Pentagon fighting them off was fun for folks? But it wasn’t dramatic. Pentagon hit Callihan with the armbreaker and two package piledrivers for the win at 22:56. It certainly didn’t need to be over twenty minutes long. ***

October 8, 2016 – Berwyn, Illinois

Sami Callihan & Jake Crist def. Pentagon Jr & Fenix {AAW Heavyweight Championship Tornado Tag Team Match}
From the Jim Lynam Memorial Tournament. Callihan’s hair, Fenix’s mask, and Crist’s career were all on the line too. Based on the fact that Fenix still has his mask, I’m guessing only the loser of the fall lost his ante. I don’t watch much AEW, but this is what I imagine all of the Lucha Brothers and Young Bucks matches are like. It worked here because of the tornado stip, and because the crowd ate up every single thing everyone did. Though AEW crowds are rather rabid too, so maybe I should start watching the big tag matches on Dynamite. Anyway, this was all sizzle and no steak, but they got in and out before that had a chance to get tiresome. Callihan hit two low blows and a package piledriver on Pentagon for the win at 11:48. ***¼ 

August 31, 2017 – Berwyn, Illinois

Rey Fenix def. Sami Callihan {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the 10th Defining Moment. During this nearly 10-month reign, Callihan got the shiny new belt pictured above. I wonder what determines whether Fenix will use his first name or not. This was one of the better Callihan matches I’ve seen, and a regular Fenix singles main event. This dude is just very good. They did a very cute subversion of the heel going after the mask trope here. Callihan snatched Fenix’s mask, leaving the challenger vulnerable. But Davidson had been taunting Fenix the entire match by holding another mask that they’d stolen from him at a previous show. So Fenix grabbed that and put it on and from there it was hopeless for the champion. Fenix locked him in an armbar for the win at 16:56. ***¾ 

February 3, 2018 – LaSalle, Illinois

ACH def. Rey Fenix {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the 10th Chaos Theory. Shock of shocks, this match ruled. ACH and Fenix had very complimentary styles. ACH tried to match Fenix’s flashy rope dancing, but that went poorly for him every time. He had much more luck when wrestling defensively, letting Fenix start running up the turnbuckle before attacking from the mat rather than trying to meet him in the air. Wrestling that way also won him the match, as he countered a flash pin attempt to a double stomp and then hit the brainbuster for the win at 16:47. ****

August 31, 2018 – Chicago, Illinois

Brody King def. ACH {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the 11th Defining Moment. Mike “the Rock” Davis in the house! ACH must not have given to calicocutpants.com. What an asshole; the site is down because ungrateful jerks like him didn’t give! If you use the site you have to give! I liked the general deal they were going for here, though there were quirks here that kept me from getting lost in this match. They were telling a great big man vs. little man story, but as the little man it felt like ACH wasn’t trying to press the action when he’d get the advantage. It doesn’t make sense for the man with the massive size disadvantage to sit around and pontificate or just vibe when he’s knocked his bigger opponent onto his back. The interference from Jacobs was also useless, too far from the finish to feel like it made a difference but too close to it to be forgotten. King hit the All Seeing Eye for the win at 22:45. ***½ 

December 29. 2018 – Merrionette Park, Illinois

Sami Callihan def. Brody King {AAW Heavyweight Championship Steel Cage Match}
From Windy City Classic XIV. King fills the ring with tables and chairs before the match begins. Those weapons lead to Callihan struggling to get any blood out of his forehead and repeatedly pulling a blade from his wrist tape and slicing himself in view of the camera. Flippin’ yikes dude, just move on. On the brighter side, this match had the best use of a spot being repeated (sort of) that I’ve ever seen. While doing so typically makes a match look choreographed, here it just made King look determined. He powerbombed Callihan onto a table that didn’t break, then lifted Callihan back up and slammed in through it. But it worked because he couldn’t pin Callihan on the table and needed his shoulders on the mat. Thus the second try. Callihan responded to that by bashing Lee’s leg with a chair and putting on the Stretch Muffler for the win at 19:23. Bad blading aside, this was a gnarly brawl and a perfectly reasonable way to spend twenty minutes. After the match, Lee, Kingston, Curt Stallion, and David Starr ran in and attacked both guys. None of them became the champion. ***½ 

September 28, 2019 – Chicago, Illinois

Josh Alexander def. Sami Callihan {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the 12th Defining Moment. There was too much spit in this match. Callihan could have what would otherwise be considered a five-star match and I’d never acknowledge it as such because of all the spit. I just hate it and I hate him for making me see it. Luckily, while it featured heavily in the first minutes of the match they got away from that and had a hell of a strong style bout. And a rare thing happened; an indie match went home before it peaked. They were in a terrific groove when Alexander caught Callihan in an anklelock and got the win at 17:10. I could have used a few more minutes of the things they were doing. Jacob Fatu and Ace Romero came out separately after the match to make their intentions known. Neither of them became champion. ***¾ 

December 28, 2019 – Merrionette Park, Illinois

Mance Warner def. Josh Alexander {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Windy City Classic XV. This was meant to be Fatu going for the title, but he no-showed and Warner answered an open challenge. I suppose MLW might have pulled Fatu and said Warner could fight instead since he’s not MLW Champion, which makes me wonder if Fatu was going to lose and Warner won to stick it to him? That doesn’t make sense. It’s not that important. I didn’t buy anything Warner did in this match. He moved around like he’d just thrown out his back and bumped the same way an old man would. Is this just generally how he moves these days? Because I don’t remember that being the case in his older IWA MS matches. That informed how I felt about this match as a whole. Warner hit a clothesline out of nowhere for the surprising win at 19:10. **½ 

AAW held only two more shows before they took a pandemic hiatus. They returned eight months later with a series of shows called Alive. Thus, Warner ended up as one of these artificially long-reigning champions, though he tried to make up for it with seven successful title defenses after AAW’s return.