History of the EVOLVE Championhip

EVOLVE was Gabe Sapolski’s answer to Ring of Honor after he was let go by the company. Well, he launched Dragon Gate USA first, but EVOLVE was always the safer bet because it didn’t rely on a company in another country to fly in their talent. It was founded with a focus on win/loss records, something wrestling fans always say they want but something that seems very difficult to book around given the dramatic nature of wrestling. I mean, even MMA and boxing don’t book strictly around win/loss records. After a dozen and a half shows, EVOLVE crowned their first champion. 

April 5, 2013 – Secaucus, New Jersey

AR Fox def. Sami Callihan {EVOLVE Championship Match}
From EVOLVE 19. This was the finals of a one-night tournament to crown the champion and both guys had wrestled twice before this. They played up a head injury to Fox early on, but quickly dropped it. Weirdly, Lenny Leonard didn’t attribute Fox’s botched super jump to the head injury. It was right there and he let it whiz on by. There wasn’t much to this, as Callihan is more miss than hit and Fox wasn’t going to be the guy to dig something great out of him on this night. I recently saw a headline for an interview with Callihan teasing that he was going to talk about all the freedom he has in Impact that he never had in NXT. But what aside from drooling all over himself did he ever do before or after his NXT run that he couldn’t do in Full Sail? Fox hit the Lo Mein Pain for the win at 19:11. **¾ 

February 23, 2014 – Brooklyn, New York

Chris Hero def. AR Fox {EVOLVE Championship Match}
From DGUSA Way of the Ronin. Fox grew his hair and a personality during his title reign. This match was great. It was fast paced and hard hitting. Hero’s win felt more and more inevitable as the match wore on. Fox’s look of desperation as he began to realize that he was losing, badly, was terrific. Not for nothing, I really liked the venue. It had a Lucha Underground fight club vibe. It was definitely lit poorly, but I’d love to see a wrestling show there one day. Hero dropped Fox from an electric chair position and hit a Roaring Elbow to the back for the win at 21:11. ****

August 8, 2014 – Tampa, Florida

Drew Galloway def. Chris Hero {EVOLVE Championship Match}
From EVOLVE 31. This was Galloway’s first match after being released by WWE. It wasn’t originally for the title, but Hero (who had been let go by WWE almost a year earlier) made it a title match just before it started. Hero had put on some weight and grown a beard between his title win and this match. Galloway won the match and the beard (but didn’t bother with the excess weight) at 17:21 with the Future Shock DDT. The match was alright as it’s always fun to watch two big fellas throw bombs at each other, but for what they gave us here it could have gone ten minutes and been just as good. ***

July 10, 2015 – Tampa, Florida

Timothy Thatcher def. Drew Galloway {EVOLVE Championship & Open the Freedom Gate Championship Match}
From EVOLVE 45. Galloway cut a long promo before the match about how he won the two titles, kind of telegraphing that he’d be losing them. You could suspend disbelief because only the EVOLVE title was originally on the line and the promo was used to add the Freedom Gate, but come on. The Claymore Kick was still being called the Sick Kick here. Did you know I coined that name? This was surprisingly subdued, especially after Galloway started the match by promising, “Two big motherfuckers beating the shit out of each other.” It was good, but felt like a midcard match in both length and depth. Thatcher locked in an armbar and made Galloway tap out at 15:32. That’s a definitive way to crown the new top guy. ***¼

February 25, 2017 – Queens, New York

Zack Sabre Jr. def. Timothy Thatcher {EVOLVE Championship Match}
From EVOLVE 79. The finish of this match felt like EVOLVE’s peak. Thatcher and Sabre each had a win over the other, and the reaction to Sabre’s win in this threematch (thank you Kevin Ford) seemed like a moment that I feel hasn’t been met in this company. If there are bigger ones, please tell me so. Both guys work a chain wrestling style so there were no hiccups in this. Thatcher was a nasty sonofabitch and Thatcher did his best to give as well as he got. In the end, Thatcher was able to capitalize from more angles and caught Thatcher on the ground with the double armbar head stomp deal at 18:49. ****

April 5, 2018 – Kenner, Louisiana

Matt Riddle def. Zack Sabre Jr. {EVOLVE Championship Match}
From EVOLVE 102. This is also a threematch. It was very similar to the last match, but without Thatcher’s dope heel persona and without the intense crowd heat that match had. This had a more intense presence from Riddle than anyone in the previous match brought, but even still this just wasn’t as good as Sabre’s title win. You can find much better matches from both guys. Riddle picked up the title with the Bromission at 20:56. ***½ 

August 4, 2018 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Shane Strickland def. Matt Riddle {EVOLVE Championship Hardcore Match}
From EVOLVE 108. This is ALSO a threematch, though in this case the first two matches had crap finishes. Relatively early on, Riddle’s hand got cut open (during a spot on the ramp right in front of Riddle’s twin daughters), so Strickland went to town on it. That’s just good wrestling is what that is. This was a good match, but for me it suffered a bit because I’d seen two Strickland matches before that were similar but better in my opinion. One was his Lucha Underground match against Marty Martinez, from which he reused the finish as a near-fall here. I also liked the MLW match between these two better than this, as it had the same fire but was better paced. What this had going for it was Riddle’s hand injury and Strickland’s strong heel work. But the match was really long, and Strickland just cutting off Riddle’s comeback to hit the JML Driver for the win at 28:37 really bummed me out. It was meant to bum me out, I’ll give it that, and had it been Riddle’s final match in EVOLVE then I’d say well done. But Riddle had three more matches with the company before going to NXT, so having him so thoroughly destroyed here was odd. Especially odd given that Strickland didn’t end up holding the title very long. Anyway, I won’t fault the incredibly hard work of both guys, I just couldn’t help but point out a few things that got to me. ***¾ 

October 28, 2018 – Ybor City, California

Fabian Aichner def. Shane Strickland {EVOLVE Championship Match}
From EVOLVE 114. I could be wrong but I don’t think there was really any build to Aichner winning the title here, so it must have been jarring to EVOLVE fans for this dude to show up and win the top prize (haha, right, EVOLVE fans) on his first night in. It’s fitting that EVOLVE came from Gabe Sapolsky not long after he gave the world Dragon Gate USA, because this match had me thinking a lot of Dragon Gate PPV main events. Like Dragon Gate PPV main events, this started with Strickland working over Aichner’s arm for quite a while. Then that was ignored for the bulk of the match while the wrestlers whipped the crowd into a frenzy with exciting big move exchanges. Then Strickland went back to the arm down the stretch, but because it had been so long since it was a focal point the crowd never really bought that Aichner was in Danger. Then Aichner won with his flashy finishing moves at 21:33. Also it was about five minutes too long. That said, the attempts to excite certainly worked, it just didn’t come together as well as I think a match between these two could. And as an aside, Aichner is better as a heel and from what I’ve seen I like Strickland better as a babyface but they worked opposite here. ***½

December 15, 2018 – Queens, New York

Austin Theory def. Fabian Aichner and Roderick Strong {EVOLVE Championship Triple Threat Match}
From EVOLVE 117. I like Strong a great deal, but I have no idea why he was in this match. He didn’t factor into the finish even though Theory’s lady friend did (though he fires her after the fact), and while his presence in the match was fun I’m not sure a singles match wouldn’t have been better. There were only a couple really interesting spots involving all three guys, and the rest of the match felt kind of unmoored (if very fast-paced). ***¼

November 9, 2019 – Queens, New York

Josh Briggs def. Austin Theory {EVOLVE Championship Match}
From EVOLVE 139. If anyone interfered they’d be banned from EVOLVE, which I suppose was meant to keep Kassius Ohno (who wasn’t booked for these shows) out. Harlem Bravado & Anthony Greene attacked Briggs before the match started (loophole), I suppose to give him people to feud with after winning the title. After a bad beating, Briggs demanded they ring the bell, so Theory ran in and hit Ataxia. It only got 2 and the match began with Briggs fighting at a bad deficit. Then this became a finisher spam match. Theory hit Ataxia multiple times but Briggs always kicked out. Briggs hit his chokebomb a bunch, and eventually that did the trick and won him the title at 5:57. I kinda hated it, but the crowd dug it so clearly they know their audience. **

And then WWE bought EVOLVE (and DGUSA, though nobody is talking about that). There have been rumors that they’ll bring back the concept as a way of giving exposure to the Performance Center wrestlers that don’t get TV time. In a way that tracks because they signed most of the top EVOLVE wrestlers to WWE contracts. So I guess we’ll see if that happens and if the EVOLVE Championship comes back from the dead.