History of the ROH Championship | Part 2 | Book It, Adam… and Jim

Gabe Sapolsky was out as head booker of ROH and Adam Pearce was in. This was pretty much exactly where I tuned out of ROH, as the company started going in a direction I didn’t care for (Jerry Lynn? Austin Aries?) and I was distracted by life in New York City. ROH also got themselves a weekly show on HDNet. 

April 3, 2009 – Houston, Texas

Jerry Lynn def. Nigel McGuinness {ROH World Championship Match}
From Supercard of Honor IV. This match is a serious testament to McGuinness’s charisma, because Lynn has none and McGuinness got me engaged in the action. Lynn, who has the expressiveness of a mannequin, is certainly athletically gifted but the cheers he gets are completely nostalgia fueled. His post-match promo is a perfect example of this, as he presents like an embarrassing dad who really didn’t want to give a speech at his daughter’s wedding. The first half of the match was nothing doing, and the amount of finishers that came up so early actually took me out of it. However, the second half picked up in a big way thanks to McGuinness selling an arm injury that he got in a match (which was likely a lot better than this one) against KENTA. I wouldn’t have bought Lynn’s win for a moment had that injury not been a factor. But it was and it made this match a lot more enjoyable to watch. What also made it enjoyable was that McGuinness didn’t tap to the cross armbreaker, even though the match built well to Lynn sinking it in. The way McGuinness was portrayed here was as a guy who’d rather lose his arm than tap, so I was happy that Lynn’s second Cradle Piledriver was what put McGuinness away at 19:03. ***½ 

June 13, 2009 – New York, New York

Austin Aries def. Jerry Lynn and Tyler Black {ROH World Championship Elimination Match}
From Manhattan Mayhem. ROH was running a crazy amount of shows at this time. Lynn was only champion for two months but he defended the title seven times after winning it. McGuinness was a special enforcer on the floor, replacing Ric Flair. Not exactly a reasonable replacement there, ROH. One thing that makes it hard to watch modern WWE and AEW matches is that dives to the floor always look really contrived. This match hammers that home even more, as Lynn and Aries brawled on the floor and never prepared themselves for Black’s dive in a way that I could spot. That helps me suspend my disbelief so much and makes me wish the wrestling on TV would just stop doing dives to the floor altogether. That’s the only really positive thing I have to say about this match. Yeah it moved fast, but so much stuff happened and was immediately forgotten that even at a quick pace it felt like it went on forever. Black’s leg goIIIt destroyed early on? Black’s selling is so weird that even when it comes back it feels stapled on. Lynn hangs back to let the other two fight? Black pins him with God’s Last Gift in the first elimination with no relation to Lynn’s strategy. Special guest enforcer? Does nothing that matters. I could probably twist myself into a tight enough knot to convince myself that the leg work made for a cohesive story (it did factor into the finish), but it was impossible to get drawn in by it when Aries doesn’t stop for half a second to let any of the spots around the leg sink in. I’ll give them that the Figure 4 Leglock deal had some good heeling in it. Aries hit a brainbuster for the win at 20:03. Aries is a very athletic guy, but he works so selfishly it makes everything feel more fake. ***

February 13, 2010 – New York, New York

Tyler Black def. Austin Aries {ROH World Championship Match}
From the Eighth Anniversary Show. Okay, this at least won’t have Lynn being useless and just taking up space, so it has that going for it. Two months earlier, Black unsuccessfully challenged Aries for the title (also in this building in New York City) when they fought to a 60-minute draw. Jim Cornette, Roderick Strong, and Kenny King were ringside judges in the event that it happened again. The sound mixing on this match was terrible, with super loud commentary and very quiet sound from inside the ring and from the fans. By and large this was what many call, “just a match.” They got the crowd whipped up down the stretch with their big bombs, but there was nothing to invest in until then. What I did like was the way the old NWA judge trope was subverted, as King (who was loyal to Aries) tried to get involved until Strong took him out but in doing so crotched Black on the top. Black attacked Strong and Cornette, so I’m not sure what kind of babyface he was supposed to be, but it gave him good momentum toward putting Aries away with the Phoenix Splash at 22:24. ***¼ 

September 11, 2010 – New York, New York

Roderick Strong def. Tyler Black {ROH World Championship No Disqualification Match}
From Glory by Honor IX. Pearce was let go and Cornette was made head booker (he was already on the creative team) about a month before this. I get that it’s significant to have a title change in NYC on 9/11, but Roderick Strong is from Florida so that kind of takes some of the shine off of it. Terry Funk is a ringside enforcer. Strong has Truth Martini in his corner. Now the sound mixing is bad in the other direction, as I can’t hear the commentators over the crowd. Black reinforced that he was the heel by doing John Cena moves. Was Cena not awesome yet? I feel like he already was. 2010 was a pretty bad year for wrestling in general and this wasn’t terribly long after the bore-fest that was Cena vs. Orton on top for a year, so maybe this was a peak of Cena hatred because of that. After a ref bump, Funk dumped the weak ref and revealed his own ref shirt. That’s fun. The rest of the match kind of wasn’t. I really like both of these guys but it felt like they didn’t have a strong game plan here. Like, it’s a no disqualification match so why did Black bump the referee? If you want Funk in there, have the referee get bumped in an accident, don’t have Black cause it deliberately when doing so gains him nothing. Also, Funk was REALLY limited in his mobility, so it took him forever to get into position to count pins. And why was Strong, the babyface, aligned with a heel who tried to have his stable interfere (and be unconvincingly dispatched by Funk)? There might have been a storyline reason for it but in terms of the match it basically caused the whole thing to collapse under its own weight. I want to give points to the match because Strong won with the Sick Kick at 15:02 and I named that move. But alas, the match is not great. **¾ 

March 19, 2011 – New York, New York

Eddie Edwards def. Roderick Strong {ROH World Championship Match}
From Manhattan Mayhem IV. I wonder if the fans were wise to the fact that the title only changed hands in New York anymore. This made me think of Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels’ Survivor Series 1992 match against each other. Both guys were great, but they just didn’t look like main eventers yet. Maybe it was Strong’s bad haircut or his baby-face. Maybe it was that Eddie Edwards has always been void of personality. But you have to hadn’t it to them, they took a crowd that was too burned out to really care about what was going to happen in the main event and busted their asses to get them on board. They spent the match trying to out-gut each other, through chops and elbows and other stiff strikes. The fight only went to the corner or the top rope or the floor when the striking brought them to those places. I love that. Martini tried to interfere in the end, which led to Strong getting a ton of offense in. Just as Edwards’s kickouts were starting to become unbelievable, he countered the Strong Hold to a roll up for the win at 25:36. ****

In May, Sinclair Broadcast Group purchased ROH. Their TV was moved to Sinclair’s stations. 

June 26, 2011 – New York, New York

Davey Richards def. Eddie Edwards {ROH World Championship Match}
From the second Best in the World. Oh my god, thirty minutes of these two guys. This has a built in story because these two were a tag team, so if I end up hating it it’s because they squandered that and forced me to. And hey, they didn’t force me to, as the match is excellent. This is the kind of match I think of when I think of classic ROH. Richards had a clear gameplan to target Edwards’s arm, and the underdog champion Edwards had to spend a half an hour fighting from behind because of it. They fought like two guys who knew each other inside and out, and like two guys who would do plenty to win without going too far or getting too violent because of their friendship. Edwards sustaining a (worked) leg injury during the match and Richards not targeting it until 1) it made sense for him to notice that it had happened (Edwards only sold when Richards was dazed) and 2) Edwards’ pride got the best of him and he told Richards to do it was brilliant. For me, this was the opposite of Strong vs. Black, as I don’t care for either of these guys but this match blew me away in spite of that. I think they went five minutes too long and missed their opportunity for a really dramatic finish, because I stopped being as sucked in at the end and Richards’ final kick to win at 35:59 didn’t stir my insides all around. Otherwise this was absolutely tremendous. ****¾ 

May 12, 2012 – Toronto, Ontario

Kevin Steen def. Davey Richards {ROH World Championship Match}
From Border Wars. Jimmy Jacobs is in Steen’s corner. This partisan crowd was VERY pro-Steen. Only Steen gets to win a title outside of New York. ONLY STEEN! The first half of this match saw Steen roll over Richards, so much so that I was worried that the whole match would look like that and they were missing an opportunity to let Steen overcome some actual adversity to win the title. But then he made mistake after mistake and Richards capitalized. I loved that every time Steen went for a submission Richards was super quick to reverse it. Why should Steen be in Richards’ league when it came to a ground game? And then Richards got too worked up when Steen tried to embarrass him with a Sharpshooter and lost his focus. That allowed Steen to expose a turnbuckle, ram Richards into it, and hit the Package Piledriver for the win at 24:27. That build into a really nice match. ****¼ 

A few months after this, Cornette was let go and replaced by Hunter “Delirious” Johnson as head booker. I only mention all these booker changes because it’s important to the titles of these posts. I don’t have much to say about how it influenced the product as a whole since all I’m watching are the title changes. 

April 5, 2013 – New York, New York

Jay Briscoe def. Kevin Steen {ROH World Championship Match}
From Supercard of Honor VII. Back to New York City, of course. After winning the title, Steen formed a stable with Jacobs and Steve Corino (and later Rhett Titus, Cliff Compton, and Matt Hardy) called S.C.U.M. that was supposed to destroy ROH. Jay Briscoe was representing ROH’s last bulwark here. Against what? Like, how exactly was the stable going to destroy ROH? In typical wrestling form it wasn’t clear. Most of this match was fine, but nothing more than fine. A few minutes before the end they threw out a bunch of smoke and mirrors, with S.C.U.M. interfering before the entire ROH roster came out to be lumberjacks. Matt Hardy snuck in the ring to attack Briscoe but I guess the angle was that Steen was starting to go straight because he sent Hardy to the floor and then lost to the Jay Driller at 18:27. The gaga was fun, but the rest of the match was standard fare. ***

Meanwhile in the real world, Briscoe had never been completely shy about homophobia. But after becoming champion, Briscoe tweeted that he would shoot anyone who taught his kids that gay marriage wasn’t wrong. ROH, owned by a right wing media company, dragged its feet but eventually suspended Briscoe and stripped him of the title. Next time I’ll check in on the fallout of that.