It’s WrestleMania season and Golden Week, so there are a ton of title changes to get through this quarter.
April 4, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan
Will Ospreay def. Kota Ibushi {IWGP World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From NJPW Sakura Genesis. For over a year, the IWGP Heavyweight and Intercontinental championships had been defended together. A few weeks before this match, it was announced that the titles would be merged to create the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship. That’s all well and good, but in doing so the new belt started a new lineage rather than continuing either of the previous ones. That’s asinine, and makes this the third (or 4th if you think the IWGP 3rd Belt is worthwhile) distinct lineage for NJPW’s top title. Ospreay won the New Japan Cup to earn this title shot. He also beat up his own girlfriend to show that he’s focused on the title in one of the dumber angles I’ve seen in a while. I haven’t seen the other matches these two have had, so I have no idea if this was a beefed up version of those. I don’t think it was though, because despite its length it actually felt pretty slim. No doubt there was some cool work going on here, but more of the match than I’d expect was one guy or the other lying around on the floor. There was also a very awkward spot near the end, though that didn’t hurt the flow of the match too much once they got beyond it. It might even have been planned, but it looked bad regardless. Ospreay unloaded with a ton of offense at the thirty minute mark and hit the Storm Breaker for the win and the title at 30:13. ***¾
Sonoko Kato def. Mayumi Ozaki {Oz Academy Openweight Championship Match}
From Oz Academy Silver Bullet. Damn this title belt is so dope. Kato tied Ozaki’s title reign record (Aja Kong is also tied with three reigns) with her win here. Ozaki is the top heel wrestler and founder of the company. So, you know, a wrestling booker. Her stable was allowed to interfere with impunity here. So, you know, puro rules. Also the ref is crooked, and some of her antics are pretty hilarious. Once they got passed the early-stage heel interference (which was very boring) they built to an exciting crescendo. Kato didn’t change the face of wrestling with her performance here, but she knew when to do what and how to react when things were done to her. A 25-year career will instill that in you, I suppose. The finish was cute, as Ozaki accidentally took out the evil ref with her whip and Kato got the win counted by a replacement ref with la magistral at 19:29. ***¼
April 7, 2021 – Orlando, Florida
Raquel Gonzalez def. Io Shirai {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From NXT Takeover: Stand & Deliver, Part 1. This was precisely what it needed to be. Gonzalez bullied Shirai, so Shirai came back with wild (more accurately described as reckless) dives. But when a dive off of the massive entrance skull and her moonsault couldn’t put Gonzalez away, Shirai was mentally done. Gonzalez hit her with the powerbomb on the floor, turned her upside down in the ring with a lariat, and then finished things off with another powerbomb at 12:59. I would have watched a few more minutes of this dynamic, but Gonzalez needed the emphatic title win and that’s exactly what she got. ****
April 8, 2021 – Tampa, Florida
John Wayne Murdoch def. Jake Crist {IWA Mid-South World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From IWTV Family Reunion, Part 1. At this point, I’m just hedging my bets about long-standing title lineages I might want to torture myself with down the road. This is Old School IWA Mid-South rules, which means it’s a hardcore match. This was solid from the perspective that they packed a decent amount of crazy stuff into a short amount of time and executed it all pretty well. But it was awful from the perspective that neither guy sold a single thing until the three count. Murdoch popping right up after taking an avalanche cutter through a closet door (I assume; it as in lieu of a table) is just stupid. Murdoch hit an avalanche Canadian Destroyer for the win at 8:46. Apparently, Murdoch lost the right to use that move in a match stipulation against Crist a few months earlier, so he was stripped of the title. A couple weeks later they determined the new champion, Tyler Matrix, in their rescheduled 2020 Ted Petty Invitational tournament. Not sure why but that show isn’t on IWTV (and I’m not paying $12 to see a match on Smart Mark when I subscribe to their streaming partner) so I can’t review the match. Life goes on. **¼
April 8, 2021 – Orlando, Florida
Karrion Kross def. Finn Balor {NXT Championship Match}
From NXT Takeover: Stand & Deliver, Part 2. Kross is doing a Berzerker cosplay. They played this very smartly. Kross is super limited, so they told us ahead of time what they story of the match would be and then leaned HEAVILY into it. Balor laughed at Kross and acted like a cocky jerk to get the challenger to lose his temper and make mistakes. And when Kross did make mistakes, Balor targeted the big man’s previously injured shoulder. I was starting to feel pretty damn invested every time Balor escaped one of Kross’s big moves or submissions. But when Kross escaped the abdominal stretch and more or less dismantled Balor for the rest of the match I felt myself deflating. Balor controlled a ton of this match, so it stood to reason that Kross would win, but I just so adamantly feel that Kross as champion is a dead end that the finish negatively colored an otherwise surprisingly good match. Kross hit the elbow to the back of the head for the win at 17:02. ***½
April 9, 2021 – Oberhausen, North Rhine – Westphalia
Marius Al-Ani def. Bobby Gunns {wXw Unified World Championship}
From wXw Dead End XX. Al-Ani won the Catch Grand Prix and had an 18-match win streak. They’ve taken to clocking all of the matches on-screen now. Sure, why not? Al-Ani looks like the kind of guy that WWE is going to want for NXT UK, so I expect that will happen in the next couple of years. There wasn’t much of a story to this one, but they hit each other hard and made the most of the environment. While there were no fans, there was either a small contingent of wrestlers and crew clapping along from off-screen or a noise machine. Either way it didn’t add much. Al-Ani hit the Diamond Driver for the win at 13:39. ***
April 9, 2021 – Ybor City, Florida
Nick Gage def. Ricky Shane Page {GCW World Championship Death Match}
From GCW rSpring Break. I’ll get the negatives out of the way first. They didn’t have the crowd for most of the match, despite seemingly every person there being totally in the bag for Gage before the match. I think it’s because they spent the first half focused solely on putting each other through the glass/barbed wire structures at ringside without building any tension before doing so. The match got more interesting once they got that out of their system and started telling an actual story. Page blinded Gage by throwing a handful of broken glass in his face. That mostly just upset Gage and made him come back more sadistic. Page retreated to the scaffolding, which is a better excuse to go up there than most matches featuring scaffolding have, Things kind of devolved again as a million people interfered so they could set up another pile of glass in the ring that Gage could throw Page through. The finish saw Gage hit a sloppy avalanche piledriver through glass and then hit the backbreaker for the win at 24:38, counted by company owner Brett Lauderdale. I guess this was better than Gage’s last title win in that it was half as long and they actually used all the weapons they teased. But it was still pretty damn long and it never got the crowd back. **
April 10, 2021 – Tampa, Florida
Bianca Belair def. Sasha Banks {WWE Smackdown Women’s Championship}
From WWE WrestleMania 37, Night 1. The main event, even. Two black women in the main event of WrestleMania seems a pretty big deal, and the commentators make sure we know about it. Good move, honestly. And the referee is Vietnamese-American, so that’s neat. Where Drew McIntyre won the Royal Rumble in front of a crowd but then had to win his WWE Championship in an empty arena, Belair won the Royal Rumble in an empty arena but got to win her title at a WrestleMania with a crowd. This match totally worked on me. The cheesy WWE storyline going in was that Belair was ready to “show up and show off.” That wound up leading to some amazing spots, like Belair rolling through a super jump to lift Banks above her head and walk her from the ramp to the ring for a slam. It also led to her relying too much on 450 Splash attempts and paying for it each time. Banks was at the top of her game here too, basically looking at the crowd to let them know she’d about given up after Belair showed she had answers to the Bank Statement. So Banks started going after Belair’s braid. Wrong move, as Belair whipped her with it and hit the KOD for the win at 17:16. This Royal Rumble/WrestleMania combo should make Belair a WWE main event mainstay. ****¼
April 11, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan
Rydeen Hagane def. Kaori Yoneyama {PURE-J Openweight Championship Match}
From PURE-J Fight Together. Yoneyama spent her month as champion defending the title in YMZ, Gatoh Move, Oz Academy and WAVE, but failed here in her first defense in PURE-J. This is probably reductive but Hagane has an Aja Kong meets Shigehiro Irie thing going on. This was a hoot. They got in there, did their big vs. little thing, and got out before it got tiresome. I especially loved the way that Yoneyama tried to replicate the success of her corner powerbomb spot from her title win only to find herself flattened under the weight of a Hagane Banzai Drop. Hagane finished the champ off with the Shouten Kai at 11:06. Yoneyama went on to win the Oz Academy title a couple months later, but that title reign was about the same length as this one. ***½
April 11, 2021 – Tampa, Florida
Rhea Ripley def. Asuka {WWE Raw Women’s Championship Match}
From WWE WrestleMania 37, Night 2. Roman Reigns was set to have the most dominant heel WrestleMania main event performance of all time, so this went second from the top. The year before this, Ripley lost the NXT Championship to Charlotte Flair at WrestleMania 36 in front of no fans. While it would have been nice (and made more sense) for it to be Flair that Ripley beat here, it’s still neat that Ripley got to have her first crowd-viewed Mania match with a title win. The match itself was fine, just fine. It started out interesting, with Ripley controlling only when she was able to slow the pace. But then it turned into your standard back and forth, with Ripley winning by ducking a kick and hitting the Riptide at 13:27. ***¼
April 23, 2021 – Port Hueneme, California
Tom Lawlor def. Brody King {NJPW Strong Championship Match}
From NJPW STRONG 37. The last five minutes of this match were sicker than hell, though not much leading up to that made much of an impression. This match works really well within the context of Lawlor’s other matches in the tournament. He oddly went for a strategy more akin to his match against Narita than the match against Hikuleo even though the latter was more similar in size to King than the former. And so he had a very hard time putting King down as his holds kept getting overpowered. In the end, the strategy did work, though King’s final scream before passing out at 20:05 is the thing I’ll remember most from this match. ***½
April 25, 2021 – Nashville, Tennessee
Kenny Omega def. Rich Swann {Impact World Championship vs. AEW World Championship Match}
From Impact Rebellion 3. Swann had recently defeated Moose to “unify” the Impact World Championship and Moose’s vanity TNA World Championship belt, and thus entered with both belts here. If the Impact vs. AEW angle was more compelling on the screen, I’d guess that it happened with the goal of getting a lot of belts on Omega. He came into this match as the AEW champ and the AAA Mega Champ (though wasn’t carrying the AAA title), and now he could show up on the following dynamite carrying four titles. Many belts is always an interesting visual. But AEW seems largely uninterested in the Impact angle so it’s probably just a coincidence that Swann had two belts to donate. Speaking of belts, calling the AEW title a world title is pretty funny considering they haven’t left the United States for a show yet. That said you can probably cut them a break because their show is broadcast in many places around the world.
As for this match, Impact did a smart thing and advertised two upcoming PPVs just ahead of this match, as it’s likely to be a match that gets pirated and sent around on its own where the rest of this show won’t. The pre-match video focused on Impact heels telling Swann that he’d better not lose to an outsider. I dig that. AEW had Impact each have a referee in the match because Tony Khan doesn’t trust Brian Hebner’s family name. Hebner is starting to look like a third Hebner twin as he ages, so there might be something to that. Either way it’s cute. Mauro Ranallo joined D’Lo Brown and Matt Striker on commentary and while he sucked up a lot of the energy he mostly didn’t say anything ridiculous. One thing he did say that I’m sure he was told to say was that no one has kicked out of the One Winged Angel, but it’s just blatantly untrue. Regardless of that ahistorical quirk, I liked this quite a bit. Omega was positioned as an unstoppable force that was little concerned with Swann, but the Impact Champion spent the match frustrating his opponent with guts and flight. They had a couple of sloppy moments on the turnbuckles, but aside form that the action was executed really nicely. In the end, Swann’s spirit wasn’t enough and Omega brutalized him with V-Triggers before hitting the One Winged Angel for the win at 23:01. ****