History of the Warrior Wrestling Championship

I had some time to kill before an order of AJW title matches gets to me, so I’m reviewing this title lineage because look at that belt! I just finished reviewing the TCW title, which is clearly a Big Gold Belt knockoff. The Warrior Wrestling Championship isn’t the most beautiful, but they get a trillion points for doing something different. The company puts on their shows in Chicago Heights, a that is unrelated to ROH’s former home base in Chicago Ridge. The shows are held in a basketball court, so in that way they’re similar to the Chicago Ridge ROH shows. 

September 2, 2018 – Chicago Heights, Illinois

Brian Cage def. Rey Fenix, Penta el 0M, Sammy Guevara, Rey Mysterio Jr., Austin Aries, Jeff Cobb, Rich Swann {Warrior Wrestling Championship War of Attrition Match}
From Warrior Wrestling 2. This is a rather cool match concept. The match starts out as an eight man tag. The winning team splits in half and fights a second fall in a tag team match. And then the winning team of that fall fights in a singles match  to determine the winner. So it’s basically a rapid fire funky tournament. Aries came into this with the Impact and WSW titles, and also some other belt that’s too obscure for me to know. Fenix has the Lucha Underground Championship. Guevara has the AAA World Cruiserweight belt. And Cage has the X-Division Championship. I like seeing all these belts in one place. It’s Cage, Guevara, and the Lucha Bros vs. everyone else to start. Seeing Cobb and 0M square up and be the same height makes me realize how amazing the Monster Matanza Cueto costume was. The mask and bloody shirt actually made Cobb look bigger. This is lucha tag rules, which I think makes sense since the point isn’t to determine who the best tag team is so there’s no point in enforcing traditional tag rules. The first fall was fun and breezy, though definitely lacking in the gravitas department. Things fell apart when Aries decided his glory was more important than winning. He forced Mysterio out of the match and then got blasted going for a suicide dive. Mysterio turned on him, but then got caught by Cage going for a 619. Cage and Guevara hit Mysterio and Swann with a Tower of Doom situation out of the corner, and then Guevara hit Swann with a Shooting Star Press to win the first fall. By winning the pin, Guevara got to pick his partner for the next fall and chose 0M. The second fall was pretty short and action-packed, but I didn’t lock in emotionally. Fenix took out 0M with a Canadian Destroyer to make the final fall himself vs. Cage. That fall was the same style as the previous was in style, frenetic but kind of mindless. Cage won with the Drill Claw at 27:51. I think there’s potential in this stipulation, but a couple of things need to be tweaked. Most importantly, there can’t be so much dead time between falls. Between the first and second, Guevara deliberated on the microphone over who he’d pick to be his partner for way too long. It breaks the continuity of the match. Between the second and third fall, the referee brought the title belt back into the ring and held it up again. Why? He’d already done that before the first fall. Second, while it’s clear they were going for a Lucha Underground vibe to this, the match would be a lot more memorable if there was more of a story running throughout it than your typical highspot → highspot one upmanship tale. Everyone worked hard, I just think there’s more to be done with the stip. ***½ 

February 15, 2020 – Chicago Heights, Illinois

Brian Pillman Jr. def. Andrew Everett, Michael Elgin, Sam Adonis, Taurus, Lance Archer, Frank the Clown, and Aramis {Warrior Wrestling Championship War of Attrition Match}
From Warrior Wrestling 8. Cage had defeated a bunch of dudes in title defenses during his year and a half as champion. He said he’d beaten everyone, so he was calling for another War of Attrition so he could beat them again at the same time. But then he got injured and selected Pillman to be his replacement in the match. That kind of telegraphed who’d win. Everett’s gimmick is that he’s a high flyer who thinks he’s Andre the Giant’s son so he tries to chokeslam much bigger guys. But Andre didn’t use the chokeslam. Because of the lucha rules in the first fall, nobody was ever on the apron so I never got a sense for who was on what team until the second fall. Because Elgin hit a powerbomb on Taurus to win the first fall, he chose Everett to be his partner against Pillman and Adonis. That made no sense, as Everett was chokeslammed out of his skin by Archer just seconds earlier. Elgin picks him over Pillman because Pillman lost earlier in the night? Whatever, everyone knows Elgin is a dumbass so I guess this played into that. Once again, the deliberation took too long. The commentators don’t get either and bury the decision. They could have saved it by saying that Elgin wanted a cake walk in the final fall and figured he could outlast a handicap match to get there, but they didn’t. The second fall is pretty terrible, with Elgin looking like he was on another planet and everyone else having to work around his dopey ass. The commentators also misstate the length of Cage’s title reign, congratulating him for holding it over two years despite the company not having existed two years yet at that point. The crowd is completely dead by this point. Adonis puts the second fall out of its misery with a 450 splash on Everett. Pillman and Adonis almost kill each other on a botched superplex. Things don’t really recover from there, so when Pillman hits the Dire Promise for the win at 34:33, the crowd barely reacts. This was a disaster from the end of the first fall onward. **

June 5, 2021 – Chicago Heights, Illinois

Trey Miguel def. Brian Pillman Jr. and Brian Cage {Warrior Wrestling Championship Triple Threat Match}
From the Stadium Series. The show has moved from the high school gym outside to the high school football field. In light of the pandemic, that was clearly a good move. The fans are socially distanced as there is plenty of room on the field. But calling this a stadium is very silly and feels like they’re trying to ride AEW’s coattails. The way Pillman’s hair blows in the blustery weather gives this a white trash Highlander vibe. This was fun. They didn’t have a lot of time, but they spent the time they did have doing crazy things to each other. Everything was done pristinely and quickly, and that led appropriately to the finish. Pillman, frustrated that his Jackhammer only got two on Cage, tried the same move on Miguel only to have it countered to a roll up. That won Miguel the title at 9:50. A very refreshing match after the Pillman win. ***½ 

I have no idea what this company has planned for the future, but I hope that if the title changes hands in another War of Attrition Match that they figure out how to streamline it.