History of the World Championships | 2021-May

There was a bit of stability in May after a ton of title changes came through in April, so it’s a short post this time around.

May 1, 2021 – Hartselle, Alabama 

Cabana Man Dan def. Derek Neal and Baron Black {New South Championship Triple Threat Match}
From New South Win City Homecoming. This was kind of crappy. A lot of it was dominated by Neal slowly controlling both opponents in the most uninteresting way possible. I love a domineering, larger champion, but how the hell are you gonna bully two dudes, one of whom (Black) is pretty big himself, by slowly walking back and forth between them and doing nothing impressive along the way. Yikes. Steven Michaels got involved and that went nowhere, and then Dan caught Neal with a roll up for the win at 9:37. Blah. *¾

May 4, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan

Miyu Yamashita def. Rika Tatsumi {Princess of Princess Championship Match}
TJPW Yes! Wonderland 2021 – We are Still In The Middle Of Our Dreams! That title is no joke. Despite having fans at their show in January, Japan is currently suffering through a major COVID surge so this is an empty arena show. This had a really simple story told by two women completely devoted to it. Yamashita is straight up dangerous, and her kicks almost lost Tatsumi the title in a matter of minutes. Tatsumi regrouped on the floor and then came back with what brought her to the game: submissions. She worked over Yamashita’s leg and then went for the figure 4 that gave her the title in the first place. It didn’t put Yamashita away, but it did make her kicks less deadly. As Yamashita had a hard time gaining her composure, Tatsumi rabidly went after her with submissions, screaming as she did so. That helped a lot to distract from the lack of crowd noise. But then Tatsumi changed her game plan and went for a diving butt bump, which was a huge mistake that got countered midair into a German suplex. What a breathtaking counter. Yamashita was persistent, kicking away with less than perfect but still harmful kicks until a Crash Rabbit Heat put Tatsumi down at 15:06. ****

May 6, 2021, Worcester, Massachusetts

Wheeler YUTA def. Lee Moriarty {IWTV Independent Wrestling Championship Match}
From Beyond Project Reality. The feeling out portion of this match lasted over ten minutes, but it was quick and entertaining, and I guess it’s fine for it to be that long when they’re not going to abruptly end the match after ten minutes of hold→escape→hold→escape. They really only even began going for pins nineteen minutes into the match, but it felt like much less time had passed. The long match was actually paced really well, and I only have a couple of small complaints. One was the strange way the referee allowed fighting to happen on the floor (the building was well-lit and the action was solid, so no complaints there) but then randomly decided to start counting both guys out for a very artificial feeling near-finish. It temporarily killed the crowd, and was the only point in the match where the wrestling happened in silence. The other issue was that as much as YUTA shined in the first thirty minutes of the match, he wrestled the final twenty in a manner more deliberate than the circumstance warranted. The commentators rightly pointed out that YUTA was up against the clock, something the challenger would know because the ring announcer kept making time-remaining announcements. But he spent much more time grimacing and wandering around the ring in the latter portion of the match than he did going for the win. On the bright side, that gave Moriarty a chance to shine in a way that he couldn’t early on when YUTA was delightfully heeling it up. In any regard, this was pretty great, and could have been even greater with a couple tweaks. I don’t know if they’ll do an Iron Man rematch but that’s the next step I would take if I were them. YUTA hit a Tombstone Piledriver out of a YUTAP attempt for the win at 52:15. ****

May 22, 2021 – St. Louis, Missouri

Jake Something def. Myron Reed and Rohit Raju {Crown of Glory Championship Triple Threat Match}
From GPW Wild Ambition. Champion AJ Gray got injured a month earlier, so they held up the title here. Something came to the ring with the belt around his waist as he already considered himself champion by forfeit since he was going to challenge Gray for the title. Raju came into this with the Midwest Territory Championship, the company’s midcard title. I liked this match a whole hell of a lot. Something bulldozed through both guys in a way that was missing from his first run with the title. Raju and Reed were only able to slow things down when they worked together. Anytime the two cruiserweights were at odds with each other, Something dominated again. Even at times when Reed and Raju weren’t physically fighting both were just both trying to pin something, when their attention wasn’t on hurting the big guy he was seconds away from making a comeback. Great stuff. Something tossed Raju to the floor, hit Reed with a crazy low blow, and then hit a Sidewalk Slam for the win at 15:52. ***½

May, 22, 2021 – Kalkaska, Michigan

Tommy Vendetta def. Jumal Kyng {MCPW Championship Match}
From MCPW Battleground. So yes, I’m padding this review a bit because I decided to switch from quarterly title change posts to monthly ones. My boy Jake Ziegler is a ref, commentator, and booker with the company so I want to see what’s happening there. Only the most recent title change is up on IWTV, but maybe one day Mikey Zeroe will get off his ass and upload the rest of the catalogue so I can flesh this sucker out. Kyng has a wonderful connection with the fans in attendance. I do wish someone would tell him about the potential antisemitic origins of the “hip hip hooray” call and response. I’ll let you look into it yourselves, but the phrase is potentially very murky. Can’t hold it against Kyng here who almost certainly doesn’t know that, but I bring it up to point out that some like me feel uncomfortable when it’s shouted. More importantly as far as wrestling is concerned, he does it too much and it’s not customized to his character at all. The rest of the match was solid, though felt very much like an indie main event by the end. It didn’t so much feel like the complete murdering of Kyng’s finisher was earned, and the action ratcheting up for the finish came out of nowhere. Vendetta pulled Kyng onto his back and hit a cannonball into the corner for the win at 16:31. I wish there was a more natural looking way for Vendetta to get Kyng onto his back, because that’s a cool finisher otherwise. **¾