History of the SHIMMER Championship

A new SHIMMER Champion was recently crowned and Kimber Lee’s title reign came to an end just shy of the two-year mark. SHIMMER is comically slow when it comes to releasing footage of their shows. You think PWG is bad? SHIMMER has shows in the can from five years ago. So this retrospective will only go from the beginning of the company until 2016, because there’s no way to watch more recent shows and I’m tired of sitting on this review. 

June 2, 2007 – Berwyn, Illinois 

Sara Del Rey def. Lacey {SHIMMER Championship Match}
From Volume 12. This was the finals of a tournament to crown the first champion. Del Rey hit a piledriver for the win and the title at 19:35. Hearing the crowd erupt the second Del Rey grabbed the Royal Butterfly was great. This was pretty much the only time it made sense for Del Rey to be dominated by Lacey, as her match against Sarah Stock earlier in the night was much more punishing than Lacey’s against Daizee Haze. I could have done without the interference but it logically leads into a Dangerous Angels vs. Minnesota Home-Wrecking Crew feud (I wrote this in like 2008 and am using it in this post in 2021. I have no memory of whether or not said tag team feud happened). ***½

April 26, 2008 – Berwyn, Illinois 

MsChif def. Sara Del Rey {SHIMMER Championship Match}
From Volume 18. I’m almost positive I reviewed this show over a decade ago and really liked this match. But I can’t find my review so I’ll just redo it. It wasn’t as good as I remembered, but I think back then I may have been kind to it because it was a well-performed in a sea of mediocre SHIMMER wrestling. MsChif is flexible, so most of the match was SDR stretching her out. That’s fine, but then it turned into bomb throwing without much reason or rhyme, and I wondered how they figured that was a natural extension of what they’d done for the first ten minutes. MsChif hit the Desecrator for the win at 16:21. ***¼ 

April 11, 2010 – Berwyn, Illinois 

Madison Eagles def. MsChif {SHIMMER Championship Match}
From Volume 31. Eagles’ entrance had me thinking she’d be very flat in the ring, as she had a rather emotionless, generic heel thing going that didn’t scream top-of-the-card to me. This turned out to be kind of a squash. MsChif got a bit of token offense near the end, but then Eagles turned that around quickly and hit the Hellbound for the win at 11:59, after spending most of the match stretching the champ on the mat. Pretty lackluster, though well-worked I guess. **½ 

October 2, 2011 – Berwyn, Illinois 

Cheerleader Melissa def. Madison Eagles {SHIMMER Championship Match}
From Volume 44. Melissa built up a win streak going into this match, culminating in a win over Kana (Asuka) to earn the title shot. The first half of the match was Eagles stalling and then an irritating brawl throughout the building. There were one or two decent moments, but not enough to justify the long walk-n-punch. The second half of the match was a lot better. Eagles mostly beat Melissa up, and also did a good job of avoiding Melissa’s signature moves for as long as she could. But eventually, that was the champ’s undoing, as she countered the Kudo Driver to a Hellbound attempt, but Melissa countered that to a sunset flip for the win at 18:26. Only tangentially related: Prazak played babyface on commentary here. Why, as a babyface, does he soft shout every syllable in with the exact same intonation, while as a heel he just smarms. Dude was not great on commentary. ***½ 

March 18, 2012 – Berwyn, Illinois 

Sweet Saraya def. Cheerleader Melissa {SHIMMER Championship Match}
From Volume 48. It wasn’t clear in Fighting with My Family that Paige’s mom was also wrestling in the United States at the same time. Melissa came into this match with a bum leg. This might have been good if it were the first 14 minutes of a thirty minute match, but what we wound up getting was a boring, drawn out squash. Melissa never took control and Saraya is not exciting enough a heel to make 15 minutes of her attacking a leg interesting. Yuck. She locked Melissa in a half crab to end this at 14:56. **¼ 

April 6, 2013 – Secaucus, New Jersey 

Cheerleader Melissa def. Saraya Knight {SHIMMER Championship Steel Cage Match}
From Volume 53. There was a viewer discretion advisory before this match. What could possibly be so bad? If it was Knight’s pre-match promo, it was inaudible on video. Maybe it’s all the S-bombs Knight dropped during the match, causing the crowd to chant the same. This was boring. I’ve seen people cite Knight as a great wrestler of her generation, but these two SHIMMER matches didn’t paint that picture for me. The cage was comically high but only very rarely used in this match. Melissa finished Knight off with a big hurricanrana off of the top, followed by a diving dropkick and the Air Raid Crash for the win at 14:47. **½ 

October 18, 2014 – Berwyn, Illinois 

Nicole Matthews def. Cheerleader Melissa, Athena, and Madison Eagles {SHIMMER Championship Elimination Match}
From Volume 68. This is tag rules, which begs the question of why you’d ever tag in. Tag rules elimination matches are dumb. Athena pins Melissa first, hitting a pretty contrived-looking Eclipse, or whatever she was calling it back then. The way they got to that moment was irritating, as it was hard to follow who was legal and again no-sold the referee’s authority. Screw this match right off the bat. I guess Melissa had turned heel at some point because the crowd was stoked that she lost the title. And from there, everyone is just legal. Why? I want to turn this off in the middle. This kind of shit is so insulting to the fans. I’m not saying that this is why SHIMMER never really took off; it’s an uphill battle to make an all-women’s wrestling company popular. But crap like gives people subconscious cues that you’re up for indie nonsense. Oh my god, Athena was calling the Eclipse the O-Face. Nothing like having your finisher be named after a 15-year-old joke. If you’re not a comedy act, why do you have a comedy finisher? I’ve criticized this move for years as it almost always made her opponent look awful in NXT. And it makes Eagles look like trash when she hits it here. Then, Athena gets to look awful too, getting distracted by Melissa waving a flag and rolled up by Matthews for the elimination. Moments after that, Matthews accidentally bumps the ref. Then, she makes a face like she doesn’t care. I guess winning the title isn’t a big deal to her. Fuck this match forever. A second ref gets bumped in the most unconvincing way ever. A third ref gets bumped and Matthews makes the same “whatever” face. That wouldn’t bother me so much if Mathews was nonchalant after winning the belt, but she celebrates excitedly. So that’s stupid. To get there, Portia Perez interfered and attacked Eagles and then Matthews threw a fireball in Eagles’ face for the win at 18:01. The icing on the cake is that Eagles’ writhing from the fireball meant her shoulders were never on the mat during the final count. Never watch this. Despite the talent of some of the women in the ring, this was one of the worst thought out matches I’ve ever seen. ¼*

October 10, 2015 – Berwyn, Illinois 

Madison Eagles def. Nicole Matthews {SHIMMER Championship No Disqualification Match}
From Volume 77. This is a rematch from a bout from SHIMMER 74 that had a crap finish. There’s a funny moment early in this match when Eagles dragged Kay Lee Ray from the back and threw her at Matthews. It was VERY jarring to see KLR without her long hair. This match was pretty dope. They kept the plunder to just a few weapons, all of which were used well. They set up a chair in the corner that was clearly going to be used before the match ended, so I was glad that it came as a surprise when Eagles tripped Matthews into it. That’s not easy to pull off. Eagles finished of Matthews with the Hellbound onto the title and an upright chair at 15:39. ***¾ 

June 26, 2016 – Berwyn, Illinois 

Mercedes Martinez def. Madison Eagles {SHIMMER Championship Match}
From Volume 85. This was originally supposed to be Eagles defending against Kellie Skater, but Tessa Blanchard and Vanessa Kraven attacked Skater and Blanchard took her place. So Eagles beat her in a few seconds, but then Eagles put out an open challenge. Shayna Baszler and Nichole Savoy attacked Eagles, paving the way for Martinez to answer the challenge. The commentators suggest that the fact that Martinez has wrestling gear on means that all five heels must be in cahoots. They probably shouldn’t have brought it up, because there was no way to know that Eagles would put out the open challenge after beating Blanchard. This was hardly a match, it was just Martinez beating up Eagles briefly and then putting on a half crab for the win at 2:11. *

November 12, 2016 – Chicago, Illinois 

Kellie Skater def. Mercedes Martinez {SHIMMER Championship Match}
From Volume 87. This was totally fine, though nothing in it justified it going twenty minutes. Skater didn’t really fight from behind or find herself in a better position later in the match than earlier in it, so I’m not sure why it couldn’t have been shorter. Baszler tried to interfere at the end but was chased off by Shazza McKenzie. Martinez tried to get a cheap win off of the distraction, but failed. Then, they fought over a roll up and Skater came out on top for the win at 19:17. SHIMMER held four shows on this weekend, starting with this one. Skater defended the title on all four, losing the final one back to Martinez and then retiring from wrestling. ***

And that’s it for SHIMMER title changes for now because they haven’t released anymore. There are four remaining, including the one that just happened (in October of 2021). So they’re five years behind and haven’t released anything new in eight months.