History of the Crown of Glory Championship

I’ve been wanting to get a look at Jake Something (mostly because he looks totally different than what I assumed based on his name, and also he’s a Michigan guy) for a while, so when he lost the Crown of Glory Championship in August of ‘21 I jumped on the chance to review a lineage that has a few of his matches. Glory Pro is a midwest based indie that was started in 2017 by Michael Elgin, but is now owned by Dan the Dad.

February 19, 2017 – Alton, Illinois              

Jason Kincaid def. Ethan Page, Shigehiro Irie, and Paco Gonzalez {Crown of Glory Championship Elimination  Match}
From Crowning Achievement. Each man won a match earlier in the night to qualify for this. Page and Irie, as you may know, are stocky boys, while Kincaid and Gonzalez both look like indie lifers. Kincaid seems to be going for a Rob Zombie thing (a more modern comparison might be to an unvaccinated white dude with dreadlocks at a crystal healing convention) while Gonzalez is very small. This is tag rules, which I think I personally don’t like in a four way. One reason I don’t like it is because so often the tag rules go out the window halfway through the match, which is sort of what happened here. I say sort of because the rules came and went. The match got much better after the tag rules weren’t enforced, but the inconsistency is annoying. There were spots in this I’ve never seen before, like stereo superplexes off of the same turnbuckle. Page hit an avalanche powerslam on Gonzalez, but Gonzalez wasn’t legal. The distraction allowed Kincaid, who I guess was legal given it was impossible to keep track, to hit Page with a neckbreaker for the first elimination. And now that it’s a three way, how do tag rules work? See, it’s dumb. Irie comes in without tagging and starts getting pin attempts counted by the referee. Ugh. Gonzalez rolled Irie up and eliminated him, despite Irie’s shoulders never being even close to the mat. The final run between Kincaid and Gonzalez let them show off their moves in quick succession, which got the crowd fired up if nothing else. Kincaid put on a weird, contorted Million Dollar Dream for the win at 19:47. Everyone worked out, but the layout of the match was dumn. Split the difference and you’ve got my rating. ***

May 7, 2017 – Alton, Illinois       

Myron Reed def. Jason Kincaid {Crown of Glory Championship Match}
From Long May We Reign. Reed won a six way match on the last show to earn this shot. This match was pretty dumb. Most of it was just indie bouncing without much in the way of reason or rhyme. Jason Saint was at ringside the whole time. He tried to attack Reed but Kincaid stopped him. Then, Barackus came in and attacked both guys and helped Saint to the back. Oh good, the guys who aren’t in the match have more of a storyline than the guys who are in it. Then, as if nothing happened, Kincaid and Reed went back to the match for a couple minutes until Reed hit a standing Spanish Fly for the win at 17:23. The sound cut out for the last minute of the match and the final count was obscured because it was shown from the hard cam while the fans were standing. Rather big production mess there. **¼ 

October 15, 2017 – Alton, Illinois

Jake Something def. Myron Reed {Crown of Glory Championship Match}
From Something Wicked. This was all around pretty good. The only thing holding it back was that the ring wasn’t very far off the ground, so the various apron spots they did were awkward. But beyond that, this was an entertaining indie style main event, which is to say they did a lot of neat moves to each other and also did a decent amount of neat countering of those neat moves, but there wasn’t much of a story to speak of. Despite the size difference, Something was portrayed as just as fast as Reed, and Reed about as strong as Something. Hard to complain too much though, they busted their asses out there. Something hit an Island Driver for the win at 16:48. ***¼ 

July 21, 2018 – Collinsville, Illinois

Curt Stallion def Jake Something {Crown of Glory Championship Match}
From Strike First. Unlike the previous match, this gave me the clear roles I was looking for. Something would stop Stallion’s offense dead in its tracks to hit a power move, while Stallion would have to use momentum to counter Something’s big moves in order to get him off of his feet. That’s good yaqui right there. But all that glittered was not gold, as the match also had a silly ref bump and garbage, meaningless interference. The match then added abruptly with Stallion headbutting a chair into Something for the win at 14:41. You almost had me, fellas, but only almost. ***¼ 

June 2, 2019 – Collinsville, Illinois

Eddie Kingston def. Curt Stallion {Crown of Glory Championship Match}
From Special Champions Edition. I’m one of those guys you may have heard of who has never been able to lock in on Kingston. I don’t actively dislike his work, but I don’t find myself ever getting invested in his matches. This was no different. It didn’t help that Stallion tried to match strikes with Kingston the entire match, couldn’t, and yet stayed competitive regardless. How does that make sense? Late in the match, Gonzalez interfered and attacked the referee, but that wound up going nowhere. After that, Stallion started laying in his headbutts, which makes me wonder why he wasn’t doing that the whole time since it was the only thing he did that got him on Kingston’s level. Even still, a few Kingston spinning backfists were enough to put Stallion down at 18:22. **¾ 

September 22, 2019 – Collinsville, Indiana

AJ Gray def. Curt Stallion and Paco Gonzalez {Crown of Glory Triple Threat Match}
From Thunderstruck. Kingston got injured at an EVOLVE show the night before (maybe, as he was back to work the following weekend) so Gray took his place in this match for the now vacant title. This started out strong as they went for a rapid-fire, spot-chaining pace a la the early days of the X Division. But the match was short so when things fell apart and got messy for the final two minutes, that made up too large a chunk of match proportionate to the total time bell to bell. Gray hit Stallion with a sort of Emerald Frosion for the win at 8:30. **½ 

Gray held the title through GPW’s Third Anniversary Show the following March. Then, the company went on hiatus because of the pandemic. Gray remained champion through all of that, earning himself an artificially long title reign. But he got injured in April of ‘21 and vacated the title. Check out my monthly 2021 reviews to see how GPW handled the situation.