History of the Limitless Wrestling Championship

Written July 23, 2021

The nightmare disaster makeup Olympics in Japan have moved NXT for the next two weeks for Syfy from USA. But that means that the internet got the results of those episodes early, and in those results we saw that Carmelo Hayes got by Josh Briggs in the quarterfinal round of the Breakout Tournament. Thank god. I’ve liked Hayes’ appearances in NXT, so let’s take a look at the Limitless Championship to get an eye on some of his indie work as Christian Casanova. The Limitless title hasn’t been around long, so this will be a quickie. I don’t know much about the New England wrestling scene except that it gave us Tommaso Ciampa, Sasha Banks, Kofi Kingston, the WarRaiders, Oney Lorcan, and Dominik Dijakovic. 

March 9, 2019 – Westbrook, Maine

MJF def. Ace Romero, Anthony Greene, and JT Dunn {Limitless Wrestling Championship Fatal Four Way Match}
From Welcome to the Dance. This was a VERY well laid out four way match. It functioned as a de facto tornado tag pitting Greene and Romaro against Dunn and MJF for the first chunk. It didn’t take long for the good guys to attack each other because they wanted to win on their own merits. It wasn’t until close to 20 minutes into the match that MJF finally turned on Dunn, and because they waited the crowd went crazy when Dunn returned fire. Without knowing anything about the storylines going into this, the crowd had clearly been long hoping that Dunn would turn on MJF. But Romero attacked them both before anything serious could happen. They made up later in the match, only for a chair to present itself. But before Dunn could crack MJF with it, Greene attacked. The finish was Dunn start to knock everyone out with rolling elbows, last hitting MJF. But before he could pin his buddy, Romero pulled him to the floor and MJF fell on top of Greene for the win at 25:44. That was incredible. I was nerding out so hard for that finish. I think it’s the only time I’ve ever liked seeing someone accidentally pin someone else (aside from coming to love as the finish of Steve Austin vs. Triple H at No Way Out). Also, not that Romero is a slouch for a guy his size, but everyone else did a great job making him look like a semi truck. A true hidden gem. ****¼ 

September 6, 2019 – Portland Maine

Anthony Greene def. MJF {Limitless Wrestling World Championship No Disqualification Match}
From Know Your Enemy. This company is drawing almost 1,000 people to their shows. That’s pretty wild. It also exposes a funny quirk of indie wrestling around that time. The storyline here was that MJF was off to AEW (and was willing to take the title with him) while Greene had just earned an EVOLVE contract and would heroically stay in Limitless if he won the championship to come back to defend the belt. But EVOLVE drew crowds a small fraction of the size of this one and was only valuable because of its proximity to WWE. MJF got disqualified two minutes into the match for hitting a low blow. Owner Randy Carver restarted the match without disqualifications for that sweet sweet babyface pop. The commentators talk about the “world” in the title’s name and how the title earned it on the same technicality that most indie titles that use it have. They played into the storyline by hitting the finishers made famous by their respective future employers (the Pedigree and the Crossroads). But where I think the match faltered was going so long and not capitalizing quickly on the juice from Carver’s match restart. Also, some of the decisions the referee made were baffling. At one point he pulled Greene off of MJF so he could make a ten count, but this wasn’t a Last Man Standing or Texas Death match, so pulling Greene off should have ended the match immediately. Also, MJF pulled out a barbed wire chair at the end, which seemed like crazy overkill, and then Greene just kicked it out of his hands and it wasn’t seen again. Shortly thereafter, Greene hit a low blow and finished MJF with the So Much Prettier at 23:25. ***

That was MJF’s last match with Limitless. Greene held the title for 13 months before getting signed to WWE. He made his final successful defense against Ashley Vox and then appeared on 205 Live one week later. Sadly, though Greene made his successful defenses throughout the 2020 pandemic on Limitless’s empty arena shows, he couldn’t return to tape a match dropping the title. Also sadly, Greene’s tenure in WWE would only last about seven months. Anyway, they did a one-night tournament to crown a new champ. 

December 19, 2020 – Orono, Maine

Christian Casanova def. Alec Price, Daniel Garcia, and JD Drake {Limitless Wrestling World Championship Elimination Match}
From Vacationland Cup. I can’t call this an empty arena match because there are like twenty people masked and spread out in the room. But you’d be hard pressed to call this a super spreader event. Drake ran roughshod over everyone for the first few minutes of the match, so if you’ve watched an elimination match before you knew that someone was going to pin him quickly. That was Price and it was with a handful of tights and a roll up. Earlier in the night, Lee Moriarty had injured Garcia’s arm. Garcia’s selling throughout this match was phenomenal. I’m not surprised he’s rising fast to the top of the east coast indies. He put Price in a heel hook but then decided to just beat him unconscious to eliminate him. The rest of the match between Casanova and Garcia was so dope. Garcia got close to winning even though he only had one arm (that one-armed piledriver was nuts), but Casanova caught him with a Torbellino (why don’t more American steal that move?) and then hit a diving axe kick for the win at 15:38. Those few fans made a lot of noise for these boys. Good on everyone involved. ***¾ 

Casanova got signed to WWE soon after this and only returned to drop the title to Garcia. I am very excited to watch them have a straight up singles match. I was going to watch some of Casanova’s Chaotic Wrestling title changes too, but it seems like only their post-2017 footage is available to stream (a LOT of it is on their YouTube channel) and most of it seems goofier than what he’ll be doing in NXT.