History of the World Championships | 2021-October

It’s spooky season, which is the same as every other season in that during it, wrestling companies crown new champions and I watch as those things happen.

October 2, 2021 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Alex Hammerstone def. Jacob Fatu {MLW World Heavyweight Championship vs. MLW National Openweight Championship Match}
From MLW Fightland. Hammerstone won the Battle Riot to earn this title shot. I don’t watch MLW regularly, so I have no idea why he had to put his title on the line as well. I want to thank my father for giving me his cable log in so that I could watch this on the Vice TV app. If there’s one good thing about boomers, it’s that they all have cable. MLW aping the legacy of ECW was alive and well here, as in front of a Philly crowd, the main event saw two guys do big moves without much in the way of pacing. Also, the cinematography was straight out of ECW, which in turn means they’re really lifting the style from ‘90s Oliver Stone films. Mostly Natural Born Killers. Lots of Dutch angles. Follow me on Letterboxd. So yeah, most of the match was big bruising stuff without much selling, but for this crowd the strikes seemed more important than the story. At first blush, I hated the finish. But I watched the last couple minutes again and it grew on me. Fatu hit a moonsault through a table and draped Hammerstone in the Contra Unit flag before pinning him. Hammerstone emphatically kicked out and Hulked up. He hit a couple strikes, but then Fatu kipped up. Then, Hammerstone hit a TKO for the win at 16:21. It made for an exciting final couple of moments. Now that Fatu joins Nick Aldis, Ultimo Guerrero, and WALTER on the list of long-reigning champs that have been dethroned, things get closer to Roman Reigns becoming the most longstanding major champion. ***½

October 2, 2021 – Akron, Ohio 

Matt Cardona def. Joshua Bishop {AIW Absolute Championship & AIW Intense Championship Intense Rules Match}
From One Step Ahead. I enjoyed this when it was focused on Bishop tossing Cardona around the ring. But that didn’t make up nearly enough of the match for this to work. For one thing, it was way too long. It was especially too long given that everything that happened in the match was rendered moot when Marino Tenaglia & Philly Collins interfered. They brought the match to a screeching halt when they tried over and over again to hit Bishop with a complicated chair shot, looking like morons and making Bishop look like a goof. Then, Cardona hit a diving Rough Ryder and pinned Bishop with the help of Tenaglia & Collins for the win at 22:42. Meh. **¼

October 2, 2021 – Commerce, California 

Chris Dickinson def. Mike Bennett {UWN World Championship Match}
From UWN Prime Time Live. This is the finals of a tournament to crown the first champion. I know UWN has been around for a few years, but I’m only aware of it because NWA used it to air a few title defenses for Nick Aldis and Thunder Rosa. Actually, Rosa lost her title to Serena Deeb on the same UWN show that saw Dickinson win his first match in the tournament that eventually led to this. And that was a year ago! When UWN announced that they’d finally be putting on the finals, they glossed over the fact that the rest of the tournament happened forever ago. COVID restrictions in California caused the match to be postponed the first time, and then Hurricane Ida delayed it a second time. Maybe it’s just not meant to be. For those who aren’t aware, UWN is a governing body a lot like NWA was in the post-TNA, pre-Billy Corgan era, when they had a bunch of small affiliates all over the country. UWN has a few affiliates. As far as so called governing bodies go, I prefer IWTV. As for this match, I was feeling like kind of a dick because as I watched the match I was thinking primarily of which way I’d joke about these two looking too similar for there to be an interesting contrast between them. But then Bennett hit a DVD and the commentators just assumed that it was Dickinson who hit the move and it was clear that someone needed to at least put on a singlet or wear a nametag. Seriously though, whichever commentator saw Bennett hit the DVD and then call the rest of the match as though it was Dickinson should be embarrassed. Luckily for them, I don’t know the difference between the voices of James Kincaid and Todd Kenely so I can’t call out the offending party. This started out as two muscled bald dudes hitting suplexes and chops, but by the end they were able to cultivate a bit of drama. The same commentator who flubbed before ended the match by saying “Bennett will not give up. You will have to make him pass out. I don’t believe he will tap,” as Bennett tapped out to the STF at 14:31. Yikes, bro. ***¼

October 8, 2021 – Williamstown, New Jersey 

Alex Shelley def. Wheeler YUTA {IWTV Independent Wrestling World Championship Match}
From IWTV Untitled. This was advertised as the 101st defense of the title, but the night before, YUTA snuck in a title defense so it wound up being 102. I can’t imagine anyone cares, but it activates an anxiety in me. This match went by in a flash, feeling like half the length of what it really was. The positive there is it was clearly a lot of fun and structured very well. The drawback is that it also felt like there should have been five more minutes of it. Both the slower-paced (though not slow-paced) mat wrestling and the big stuff that led to the finish were great, but it felt like the latter came up out of nowhere. Shelley locked in the Border City Stretch for the win at 17:59. Maybe they would have gone a bit longer had their been more than 30 fans in the building. ***¾

October 10, 2021 – Osaka, Osaka 

Katsuhiko Nakajima def. Naomichi Marufuji {GHC Heavyweight Championship Match}
From NOAH Grand Square. Nakajima won the N1 Victory tournament to earn this shot. Marufuji has Masaaki Mochizuki and Masato Tanaka in his corner because he has great taste in surrogate dads. Seriously though, I think their stable is completely based on their names all starting with the letter M and I am not joking. This match ripped. I absolutely love the way Nakajima sold for Marufuji’s big knee kicks. That would have been enough for me to geek out, but then he used that sell to bait Marufuji into a DVD. Holy crap. I wasn’t even bothered by the length, though I do think that the match should have ended with Nakajima’s final high kick rather than the brainbuster. The crowd it seems had spent their last gasp on the kick. But the brainbuster finish Marufuji’s rather short title reign at 37:18. Actually, I’m surprised to see that Marufuji held the belt longer than Keiji Muto. I guess Muto’s just felt longer. ****¼

October 15, 2021 – Sellersburg, Indiana 

Suge D def. Myron Reed {Paradigm Championship Match}
From Paradigm Dey Know: Fourth Anniversary. D had confronted Reed a year earlier right after Reed won the title, so there’s a nice arc coming into this. Reed comes out carrying both the new Paradigm Championship belt and the not-so-old one and throws the original in a garbage can. This started out fine and then turned into a total mess. A bunch of Reed’s cronies ran out and interfered, garnering no reaction from the referee. Freddie Hudson and some other dude made the save. Reed hit D with his loaded vest, and then Hudson broke the count as D was kicking out. Someone goofed there, and my guess is it was Hudson because that made D look weak. Moments later, D countered Reed’s finisher to a roll up for the win at 10:14. Not good, guys. *¾

On October 22 in Wichita, Kansas, as a result of Becky Lynch and Charlotte Flair being traded from one WWE brand to another, they traded Raw and Smackdown Women’s title belts with each other. This was inarguably dumb and if you try to argue in its favor then you are also dumb. 

October 23, 2021 – Dresden, Sachsen 

Axel Tischer def. Marius Al-Ani {wXw Unified World Championship Match}
From wXw True Colors. This was in Tischer’s home town, but Al-Ani came into the match on a 30-match win streak stretching back to March 2020. The crowd loves Tischer and hates Al-Ani. I’ve gotten Karrion Kross vibes from Al-Ani to this point, but his performance here pretty much wiped that away. He and Tischer went a mile a minute in this match. It made for an entertaining watch, but it also made it difficult to zero in on anything emotionally. It wasn’t a spotfest, but it didn’t take any time to breathe and let me feel invested in Tischer’s struggle. That is, until near the end when Al-Ani caught Tischer in an anklelock and the challenger did everything he could to escape. Eventually, he got to the ropes. Al-Ani charged at him and got rolled up. Upon kicking out, Al-Ani’s leg got caught on the bottom rope and he tripped right into Tischer’s knee kick, giving the hometown hero the win and the title at 17:46. I loved that finish. At first blush, it looked like a goof, but upon a rewind it was clear that that was the plan all along. Totally unique and really great. ***¼

October 23, 2021 – Sunrise Manor, Nevada

Josh Alexander def. Christian Cage {Impact World Championship Match}
From Bound for Glory XVII. First things first, Chritsian’s spear is terrible and he should stop doing it. Next, the thing that happens immediately after this match is terrible and wrestling companies should stop doing it. This match was solid, though the tepid crowd kept it from ever feeling epic. The work didn’t exactly feel epic either, as this would have been appropriate in a midcard spot between two relatively motivated guys. One is tempted to wonder if Alexander might have gone a little harder were it not for the booking decision that would follow. Alexander put on an anklelock and pinned one of Cage’s hands down with his foot until Cage tapped at 18:53. I liked the finish, but felt medium about the match. After the match, Moose came out with a Money in the Bank trophy and speared Alexander while his wife and son were still in the ring to win the title in a matter of seconds. I hate that I hate that I hate that and I’m done reviewing matches like that as their own thing. I’m not factoring it into my rating of the Cage vs. Alexander match, but I’m also not giving it its own space because I’m pouty like that. ***

October 24, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan 

Ryota Nakatsu def. Takumi Tsukamoto {Union Pro MAX Championship Match}
From BASARA 173: Futo Fukutsu. Nakatsu is the guy who’d previously beaten Naoki Tanizaki for this title, so I hate him. This was long for the sake of it. It felt like they barely touched each other for the first five minutes. Once things started heating up, which was unfortunately ten minutes into the match, Nakatsu’s sumo background (I assume) started to pay off. He controlled every time they got into a sumo style exchange. Plus he threw in a few mat-based maneuvers, which would have had me quite pleased if it was half its length. Nakatsu got a roll up for 2 and then held on to hit a funky brainbuster for the win at 19:47. **¾

October 26, 2021 – Orlando, Florida

Mandy Rose def. Raquel Gonzalez {NXT Women’s Championship Street Fight}
Why does WWE think entrances that feature the wrestler in a car or on a motorcycle are better if they start outside? That always makes the entrance more boring. The wheel landed on Chucky’s Choice, so he chose this stip. There was a bit in this match where Rose trapped Gonzalez in an office chair by putting a kendo stick in her lap and under the arm rests. Are we to believe that Gonzalez is really so dumb she couldn’t figure out how to slide the kendo stick out with her fully mobile hands? Other than that, this was fine, just fine. That is, until the gravedigger from last week shows up and hits Gonzalez with a shovel. Rose hits a running knee for the win at 8:38 (shown of 11:55). The gravedigger unmasks, revealing Dakota Kai. Not great for Kai’s career trajectory, but at least it makes sense. I have a hunch that this title isn’t going to see the main event of a prominent NXT show for a long time. **1/4