We’re in the home stretch! I love getting to the end of a title history. The only thing that really separates this era from the last one is that it exists in the time of the Honor Club, ROH’s streaming service. It’s also the time when a lot of the top talent gets picked off by WWE and then AEW. Let’s see how ROH adjusted.
June 23, 2017 – Lowell, Massachusetts
Cody def. Christopher Daniels {ROH World Championship Match}
From the eighth Best in the World. The story here was that Cody thought he had the match won when he was in a three way for the title against Daniels and Jay Lethal, but the referee didn’t count Lethal’s shoulder’s down when he was in a Figure 4 Leglock. Daniels won that match in the end and Cody said he was screwed because ROH brass didn’t want a freelancer holding the title. Speaking of stories, why does Daniels where fascist leader ring entrance gear half the time? That whole thing feels really out of place for a babyface in Trumpworld. I hate it. I didn’t love this match either. There was no flow to it; it started and stopped over and over again. The interference from Marty Scurll provided nothing except some mugging for Scurll. The table spot felt totally impotent because basically every ROH title change has a table spot. When it’s rote, it’s lame. Also it did nothing except reset the match again. Rhodes hit the Cross Rhodes for the win at 19:18 in a relatively heatless moment because there was basically no build for the finish. Ol’ Cody Three Stars at it again. ***
December 15, 2017 – New York, New York
Dalton Castle def. Cody {ROH World Championship Match}
From the 16th Final Battle. Aside from seeing him get squashed live at G1 Climax, this is the first Castle match I’ve ever seen. The build to this seemed pretty half-assed (basically a midcard angle), unlike Castle’s entrance which was more than whole-assed. I mean, it’s a total Magnum TOKYO ripoff, but I’m not mad at it. The current ROH Championship belt debuts here. On commentary, Colt Cabana assumes that referee Todd Sinclair is okay with a table spot because it was incidental, but as I mentioned above he lets table spots go in every title change. The crowd barely reacted to it here. They barely react to anything in this match, actually. The action isn’t bad, but it’s very punchy kicky and just doesn’t feel like a main event. The crowd liked that Castle won, but they were dead silent right until the ref counted three. Castle hit the Bangarang (been waiting for someone to name a move that for a long time) for the win at 12:55. I guess I liked it a little better than the Daniels match thanks to Castle’s little flourishes, but not especially so. ***
July 20, 2018 – Fairfax, Virginia
Jay Lethal def. Dalton Castle, Matt Taven, and Cody {ROH World Championship Four Way Match}
From Ring of Honor Wrestling TV 357. Having the title change hands at a TV taping is a smart move, and I’m surprised it took ROH this long to do it. This was well booked, though the logic of Cody working the ref in a match that can’t logically have disqualifications is pretty weird. Taven kicking out of the Cross Rhodes also felt like a mistake, though I guess the two had been feuding. Okay, forgiven. The table spot in this match absolutely could have been done without a table, and the whole table thing is just a joke to me now. That aside, this match ruled. The action was non-stop, almost everything felt like a logical extension of the issues among the four wrestlers, and the finish was super hot. Lethal looked like a beast. He pinned Castle at 15:18 with the Lethal Injection. ****
April 6, 2019 – New York, New York
Matt Taven def. Jay Lethal and Marty Scurll {ROH World Championship Triple Threat Ladder Match}
From G1 Supercard. I saw this match live but was pretty tired by the time it came on and only really remember that Taven won and that a ladder went into the crowd. It’s neat to see a ROH title match in front of this many people and not be a total midcard match a la Wrestle Kingdom. The ladder into the crowd incident looks a lot less nasty on video than it did in person. Most of the match up to that point had a solid energy, even if some of the spots were completely nonsensical. Some other spots were pretty wild. But after the ladder crowd thing it felt like all the life went out of Scurll and Lethal. Taven isn’t that engaging to begin with, though he certainly seems like he’d make for a good midcard heel, but there was just no energy in the final ten minutes of this match. That’s not the third of the match you can afford to slow down in. Taven knocked Lethal off the ladder and grabbed the title at 29:35. ***¼
September 27, 2019 – Sunrise Manor, Nevada
Rush def. Matt Taven {ROH World Championship Match}
From Death Before Dishonor XVII. They protected Taven here a lot more than I figured they would. I remember that Rush absolutely squashed Castle at G1 Supercard, and it made sense to me that they’d do a Warrior vs. Honky Tonk situation here to follow up on that. I guess Taven is a long term project for them. Rush didn’t have any sustained offense aside from a few minutes on the floor and his final push for the win. Caprice Coleman was terrible on commentary, calmly stating during the frantic home stretch that Rush was going to win a full fifteen seconds before he hit his finisher. What does that serve? The match was alright, but the venue, and Taven, and the weird structure all made it feel like a TV main event rather than the headliner of one of their big shows. Rush hit the Bull’s Horn for the win at 16:05. ***¼
December 13, 2019 – Catonsville, Maryland
PCO def. Rush {ROH World Championship No Disqualification Match}
From night one of the 18th Final Battle. Rush was undefeated going into the match and PCO was only slightly defeated, so that’s cool. The hype video for the match was maybe too pro wrestling, as PCO calmly talked about dying and being brought back to life while Rush screamed about not caring if PCO was a zombie. What started out as a good brawl got downright bad by the middle of the match. There was a bit where PCO’s friend Destro came out to use the battery of a hearse that PCO had driven to the show to charge PCO back to life. But he couldn’t get the hood open so he tore off the grill and shocked him from there. It was all dumb anyway. Then, Rush pulled a bunch of doors from under the ring and they did bumps onto them. Why would there be doors under the ring? PCO hit a moonsault through a table to the sound of silence for the win at 22:23. This was the worst ROH title change in the company’s history with very little competition. **½
February 29, 2020 – St. Charles
Rush def. PCO and Mark Haskins {ROH World Championship Triple Threat Match}
From the second Gateway to Honor. Marty Scurll was named the new booker of ROH a month earlier, and it didn’t take them long to undo the PCO as champ problem. This was frenetic and fun, though the finish was odd and the crowd didn’t seem that interested in any of it. Nick Aldis ran in and attacked PCO, then Rush followed up with the Bull’s Horn to regain the title at 10:22. Haskins had very little to do here, but he did contribute to a spot where Rush pulled him out of the way of PCO’s senton just to be a jerk to PCO. I dug that. This probably would have led to Aldis and PCO fighting on an NWA PPV for that title, but COVID hit and both companies completely shut down their operations right after this. ***
And that’s a wrap for now. ROH completely shut down their operation because of the 2020 pandemic. In August they said that they’d be producing new episodes of their weekly TV show. They’d previously taken the NXT UK route and shown old matches and the like every week. Meanwhile, Scurll was replaced by Delirious as booker after he was named in the massive 2020 sexual abuse exposure movement, and it’s unclear if (and seems unlikely that) he will get that job back when the show comes back. So I guess we’ll see what they put out, as they’ve made some very big claims about how excited their fans should be about their return.