I was going to wait to do this one until the title changed hands in 2021, but the company had its return shows last week and Jake Something successfully defended the belt twice. So now I’ve lost my patience and here’s Black Label Pro’s title lineage. BLP is an Indiana-based indie company that caught my attention because they hosted an IWTV title change and many of its defenses.
December 1, 2017 – Crown Point, Indiana
Tom Lawlor def. AJ Gray {BLP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From First of the Month, the finals of a tournament to crown the first champion. I did not like this, not one bit. Well, that’s not true. There was exactly one bit that I liked and it was one Lawlor, after successfully hitting a Spider Suplex, went for a second one but Gray was able to land on his feet (really his knees but whatever). The rest of this was boring and heatless. Dominic Garrini got involved in the end, distracting Gray and then knocking him off the top rope. That allowed Lawlor to put on one of the ugliest Figure 4 Leglocks I’ve ever seen for the win at 17:57. **
April 4, 2018 – Crown Point, Indiana
Jordynne Grace def. Tom Lawlor {BLP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Slamilton. Lawlor had just defeated Nick Gage in defense of the title. General Manager Kirby Alexander came out after that match announced that this match would be happening immediately. Grace had won a Rumble to earn the title shot. Lawlor attacks before the bell so that he’s not totally at a disadvantage, but after some chicanery involving the referee and Lawlor’s manager, Grace hits a Vader Bomb for the win at 2:14. *
November 3, 2018 – Crown Point, Indiana
Ethan Page def. Jordynne Grace {BLP Heavyweight Championship Falls Count Anywhere Match}
From Big Trouble in Little Crown Point. This had a very long and very boring brawl-around-the-building bit. You’d think they’d want to build a little drama in the ring before moving to the floor and exploiting the stipulation. That is what eventually happened, but the initial stretch on the floor did nothing for the match. Once back inside the ring they had some fun with plunder, and that worked pretty well. They fought to the ramp, where Grace tried to dive off of a bit of scaffolding onto Page through a makeshift table. Instead, Page grabbed her and powerslammed her through it for the win at 16:40. Mixed bag, this. **½
April 5, 2019 – Jersey City, New Jersey
Kobe Durst def. Ethan Page {BLP Heavyweight Championship No Holds Barred Match}
From Adventures in Wrestling. BLP was capitalizing on WrestleMania weekend in a venue that I now live a five minute walk away from. This was the opener, I assume because Page had to get to another show right after his match. He wrestled seven matches in two days that weekend. This match was pretty good. The weapons were used effectively, Page got to look like a conquering hero by fighting off Durst’s cronies in the middle of the match, and Durst got the tainted win when his Cronies came back and provided enough of a distraction for him to hit a chair-assisted Codebreaker at 15:07. I usually don’t like interference in a title change, but the way that these guys came back over and over again deliberately until it was eventually too much for Page worked for me. ***
November 16, 2019 – Crown Point, Indiana
Erick Stevens def. Kobe Durst {BLP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Slamilton 2. Durst had attacked an injured Josh Alexander before the match, which drew out Stevens for this impromptu match. Stevens hit a lariat and a scoop brainbuster for the win in 21 seconds. It was very nice of him to look surprised when the brainbuster got the win so quickly. N/A
August 22, 2020 – Crown Point, Indiana
Calvin Tankman def. Erick Stevens {BLP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Erick Stevens Presents Professional Wrestling. Stevens was wrapping up his career at this point. He’d only meant to come out of retirement for a year, but his final string of dates were delayed because of the pandemic. This is the first BLP match for Tankman and the first Tankman match for me. And I’m impressed. He worked hard at a pace that a guy who’s built like Umaga shouldn’t be able to handle. Stevens did a lot to help make Tankman look like a million bucks here, but Tankman’s effort is impossible to deny. By the end of the match, Tankman just peppered Stevens with gnarly shots and finished him off with the GFD, a cross-armed, sit-out Dominator, at 18:17. That move is insane. ***¾
Jake Something def. Calvin Tankman {BLP Heavyweight Championship Match}
After Tankman’s win, Something came out and cashed in a title shot. On commentary, Sarah Shockey says this is spiritually like a briefcase cash-in. Percy Davis tries to distance BLP from briefcases by saying that Something won the BLP Greatest Rumble, but Shockey insists it gives him briefcase powers. This is the worst trope in all of wrestling and it even infects companies that don’t use briefcases. It took Something 31 seconds to win with the Sidewalk Slam. N/A