History of the MLW Championship

Major League Wrestling has always seemed like a small, odd wrestling diversion to me. Former WWF writer Court Bauer figured he could find success doing ECW under a different name back in 2002. That failed in two years, which is quick even for an ECW clone. But then 13 years later, Bauer slowly but surely brought back the company. It was no longer an ECW clone, but from what I could gather was just another run of the mill indie with an hourly TV program. Time to see if that’s right through the lens of it’s championship. 

So literally right out of the gate, MLW was a mess. Shane Douglas won a tournament on the inaugural show to become the inaugural champion. The finals lasted just over one minute, and afterwards Douglas threw the title down the same way he did the NWA title eight years earlier. MLW ignored that, pretended Douglas never won the title, and held a new tournament on their second show. Yikes. AJPW’s Taiyo Kea made it to the finals of the first tournament, and AJPW’s Satoshi Kojima made it to the finals of the second one against Jerry Lynn.

September 26, 2002 – New York, New York

Satoshi Kojima def. Jerry Lynn {MLW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Reload. Masato Takana vs. Mike Awesome this was not. Lynn never came close to winning, and in a sense he got obliterated here. Kojima looked like he was having a lot of fun working in front of an American crowd at first, but as the match wore on both guys seemed to decide to take it easy. The extent to which Kojima controlled this match is kind of wild to think back on. Why would you have your tournament finals be so one-sided and void of drama? The crowd was pretty damn quiet for the whole thing. Kojima hit a lariat for the win at 13:14. After this, the whole operation moved to Florida for the remainder of its first run. **½ 

June 20, 2003 – Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Mike Awesome def. Satoshi Kojima {MLW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Hybrid Hell. MLW only ran two shows between Reload and this, and Kojima only defended the title on one of them. Awesome won and then defended the number one contendership on the two shows. Oops, this was pretty bad. Awesome looked like he was wrestling in slow motion, and couldn’t sell any of Kojima’s moves for shit. Kojima seemed to be in his American wrestling mode, which is to say mugging for the crowd but not putting a lot behind his work. Awesome hit a powerbomb through a table for the win at 13:58. Steve Corino came out and said that he’d been promised a title match anywhere at any time. **

Steve Corino def. Mike Awesome {MLW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
Even Joey Styles on commentary didn’t seem to know how to make sense of this match happening now, since we didn’t see the backstage agreement that Corino seemed to be referring to. This could have been alright actually. Awesome had just wrestled Kojima, so there would at least have been a reason for him to be working slow. But the whole thing only lasted five minutes, only existed so that Corino could go through a table, and ended when CW Anderson distracted Awesome so that Corino could hit a superkick for the win at 5:00. Meh. *½ 

The company chugged on for another seven months. As that year went on, they started shifting away from the zombie ECW feuds (also Jerry Lawler? Why?) and more towards guys like Low Ki and Samoa Joe. The problem with that was guys like that were putting on better matches in Ring of Honor at the same time, without the need to sit through nostalgia acts. So MLW closed up shop. Then in 2017, the company came back and in 2018 they held a tournament to crown a new champion. 

April 12, 2018 – Orlando, Florida

Shane Strickland def. Matt Riddle {MLW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the World Championship Finals. The crowd chants the word bro to the tune of Olé Olé Olé, but wouldn’t it be more clever to chant Brolé? And wowowow wow, this was amazing. At first it seemed like the at work at the beginning of this match would lead to nothing, and while it was engaging and entertaining it would ultimately be time filler. But then Strickland started getting his ass absolutely handed to him by Riddle’s non stop onslaught and the only thing that could stop Riddle was to go back to the arm. Strickland stomped on the arm in a sickening way (similar to but slightly different from Pentagon Black’s Lucha Underground armbreaker), and then countered the Bro 2 Sleep to a double stomp. Then he hit the JML Driver for the win at 21:45. Fantastic stuff. ****¼ 

July 20, 2018 – Orlando, Florida

Low Ki def. Shane Strickland {MLW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Fusion 14. Barf, this is Hitman-era Ki. This was a flat match in front of a quiet crowd. I don’t think anyone was expecting the title to change here because there was no heat for any of the near falls. And the finish sucked, as Ki just hit a kick to the head very casually and picked up the win at 13:18. How is it that the version of Ki that’s dressed up like a videogame character is somehow more self serious than the regular version of him? On the bright side, Tony Schiovone is so much easier to listen to on commentary than Joey Styles was. I’m so glad Styles didn’t carry over from the old MLW like Ki did. **¾ 

February 2, 2019 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Tom Lawlor def. Low Ki {MLW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Superfight. AEW exists now so Schiovone is gone and… Matt Striker is on commentary now. Yeesh. I don’t understand what they were trying to do with this match. Lawlor won in 4:47 with a rear naked choke. Okay, that’s cool that he went over Ki so quickly. But at one point Ki brought a big wooden plank into the ring only to have Lawlor bait him into punching through it with his hand and seemingly break it. Why didn’t the finish incorporate Ki’s hand at all? Why not have Lawlor counter the dragon sleeper by going to the hand? As it is, we just get a short match full of random moments that ends with Lawlor winning in under five minutes. I don’t get it. **

July 6, 2019 – Cicero, Illinois

Jacob Fatu def. Tom Lawlor {MLW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From King of Colosseum. The parade of bizarre commentators continues as Striker is out and now Jim Cornette is in. I guess Fatu is Tonga Kid’s son, Rikishi’s nephew, and the Usos’ first cousin. This was a perfectly fine match, though a rather basic one. Lawlor wound up looking like kind of a shnook, as he cheated (low blow) and had the crowd on his side and still got beat by Fatu. And Fatu didn’t have to break much of a sweat to do it. He missed a double jump moonsault once, which the commentators played like it was a big deal, but it’s not like he hit it and Lawlor kicked out. That’s some low stakes you’re trying to sell, boys. Fatu hit it on the second try for the win at 7:57. ***

I’m not sure what MLW offers that other American companies don’t. It doesn’t have the nostalgia that NWA has. It doesn’t have the irreverence that AEW has. It doesn’t have the legacy that WWE has. It doesn’t have the entrenched hardcore fandom that ROH has. It doesn’t put out the glut of content that Impact does, which seems to be an issue as these major (no pun intended) MLW matches are really short. I guess they were selling themselves on having these second and third generation wrestlers, but other companies have those too so who cares? I’m not saying any of this is bad, I’m just saying I don’t see it ever leveling up because it doesn’t fill a niche that other wrestling companies don’t. They didn’t run empty arena shows during the pandemic, so I guess we’ll see what they come back with for the rest of 2020.