November 10, 2018 – Oak Lawn, Illinois
Oak Lawn is Chicago about as much as Livonia is Detroit, which is to say not at all, Lenny Leonard. Well, at least it borders Chicago, which Livonia does not. More annoying than that is that the microphones aren’t connected to the cameras, so it’s almost impossible to make out what anyone’s saying in their promos thanks to the warehouse echoes of these venues.
Fabian Aichner def. Anthony Henry
Aichner wanted to put his title on the line but the officials didn’t want the match to overshadow a WWN title match later in the evening. This match actually had a touch of build (unlike Aichner’s title win and first defense), and the WWN title match wasn’t even close to the main event, so that’s kind of a dumb reason. Aichner won by disqualification when Henry got frustrated and shoved the referee. This was a good showcase for both guys, accented by a few inspired moments (like Aichner’s desperate expression when Henry rolls out of the ring after getting hit by the spinning Last Ride). Nobody really sold anything significant, but that seems to be a pattern in EVOLVE. After the match, Austin Theory comes out and shoots a goofy look at Aichner before things transition into the next match. ***
Kassius Ohno def. Shane Strickland
After watching so many EVOLVE matches that didn’t have much of a story to see Ohno and Strickland guide the crowd through a more traditional wrestling tale of adaptive tactics and strong defense. The fans didn’t invest in some of the leg work Strickland was doing in the middle portion, but I give these guys credit regardless for committing to something with a little more depth than what I’ve seen on these shows lately. This was the most entertained I’ve been by Ohno in forever, but Strickland probably should have won. Henry comes out after the match to basically do the EVOLVE version of Ohno’s NXT “I hate all these new guys” gimmick. But then he apologizes, which I guess will lead to a match between the two the following month. ***½
Angelo Dawkins & Montez Ford def. Leon Ruff & AR Fox {EVOLVE Tag Team Championship Match}
Dawkins and Ruff did a lot of cute stuff in the opening stretch, but then this fell into just-a-match territory. I appreciate that the Profits are getting experience wrestling longer matches in EVOLVE, but they spent a lot of their control segment holding armbars that didn’t go anywhere. The interesting stories here were the difference in styles between Ruff and Dawkins and the similarity in styles between Fox and Ford, but they didn’t focus on them enough for my liking. That said I have to give them credit for a wild home stretch and a really fun finish involving the rest of the Skulk on the floor. After the match, everyone parties together and then Ford hugs all his hometown buddies in the crowd. ***¼
Mustafa Ali def. Darby Allin
This is the first Allin match I’ve seen, and I need to say right off the bat that I really like the Coffin Drop. It seems dangerous as hell but it looks very cool and is a reason I’d check out his upcoming stuff in AEW. Beyond that, this match was about on the level of Ali’s match the night before against DJZ. They did a bunch of cool stuff but it was kind of shallow and didn’t necessarily feel like a main event. After the match, Ali hypes Survivor Series, says he’s winning the Cruiserweight Championship and that he’ll then give Allin a shot. Why though? You already beat him. ***
Seems like the thing in EVOLVE is that everything is good but nothing is great. Maybe that’ll turn around in December on the east coast.