We start off this month with a title’s return that I can’t imagine anyone sane asked for, and followed that up with a couple of real bangers and a bunch of middling matches. Check it out!
November 7, 2021 – Rochester, New York
Brian Cage def. Willie Mack {XPW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From XPW Rebirth. Of all the wrestling companies that could be rebooted, this one appeals to me the least. I’d rather have Wrestling Society X back, for real. The rest of the wrestling world appears to be in agreement because there are very few people in the crowd. This is the finals of a tournament to crown a new champion after an 18 year hiatus. Mack started the match beat up all to hell because sore loser MASADA jammed a bunch of skewers into his head and suplexed him onto a chair after their semifinal match. Cage is limping a little too. This was bad. They brawled through the crowd for a while, but because they turned down the house lights so you wouldn’t see how few fans were in attendance it was impossible to see the action. When they got back in the ring they did a fighting spirit bit that came off really lame because there was no one there to cheer. Then, they bumped three refs over and over and over. Finally, Mack hit a Frog Splash to end this nonsense at 12:11 when Rob Black came out as a fourth referee to count the pin. Immediately after, Black got into a fight with one of the other refs, and Cage used that distraction to hit Mack with the belt. Then, Cage pinned Mack and Black did a fast count to give Cage the belt. I think XPW is counting this as two separate matches, but none of it makes any sense (why have Black count the first pin for Mack at all?) and there was no second opening bell. So I’m counting it all as one stupid thing. At times,
this felt like an homage to a couple of the early XPW title changes
(the ref bumps from Shane Douglas’s win, the general structure from Chris Candido’s win), but I can’t understand why you’d ever want to remind people of the original XPW. *½
November 13, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan
Tsukushi Haruka def. Tsukasa Fujimoto {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From New Ice Ribbon 1157. Haruka’s IW19 title was not on the line here, which is kind of funny as these two have had a unification match with that title and the (then) ICEx60 Championship before. This was at least as good as that match back in 2013, if not better. That was back when Ice Ribbon had twenty-minute time limits on their matches. This got to breathe a little bit, and it made the most of that space. The first half of the match saw Haruka acting just plain mean to Fujimoto. She wasn’t just beating up the champion, she was rubbing in how dominant she was being. My biggest complaint isn’t about the match as much as it is about a production choice, as the footage clips from Haruka being dominant to Fujimoto having taken over without showing the transition. I don’t mind a bit of clipping for TV time, but I do hate it when it disrupts the flow of a match. The transition back to Haruka being in control was simply the IW19 Champion freaking out after kicking out following Fuijmoto’s running kick and spamming her with slaps and elbows. So I’ll just imagine that Fujimoto did the same earlier in the match to take the lead. The closing moments were filled with the Ice Ribbon style counters that I’ve come to love. Fujimoto got very close to winning with the Venus Shoot and Japanese Ocean Cyclone Suplex, but Haruka kicked out of both. Haruka went back to what worked for her earlier, nasty strikes to the face. Then, she hit the Snail three times and followed it up with the Japanese Ocean Suplex Hold for the win at 20:18 (shown of 27:13). Fantastic violence mixed with beautiful counter moves here. I wish more American wrestlers, especially the smaller ones, would watch Ice Ribbon to see how they can make their moves look more realistic. Specifically, these women do an incredible job of moving each other from one part of the ring to another so that their counters make sense and so that it doesn’t look silly that a 100-pound woman is physically moving another human being. ****¼
November 13, 2021 – Yarmouth, Maine
Alec Price def. Anthony Greene {Limitless World Championship Match}
From Limitless Prized Possession. I was distracted by how low and close-up the ringside camera shots were. Back up, guys! It gives Limitless a unique look, but it’s a unique look that makes it so that I can’t concentrate on what’s happening. These angles work well for ringside photographs, but when the image is moving it captures less of what’s happening. I yearned for the hard cam shots. On the bright side, this match rips. It was built like a classic, mid-’90s Japanese juniors match. It started a little more slowly, but built to a very exciting crescendo and ended exactly when it needed to. Price had the edge through a bit more of the match, which worked really well as his ability to block Greene’s major offensive maneuvers was key to stringing together enough offense to grab the win. There’s no reason that 205 Live couldn’t have been putting on main events like this on a semi-regular basis, and the fact that for years they’ve chosen not to is absurd. Price found a second Surprise Kick was what he needed to keep Greene down and win the title at 16:12. ****
November 13, 2021 – Kalkaska, Michigan
Jumal Kyng def. Tommy Vendetta {MCPW Heavyweight Championship Street Fight}
From MCPW Trout Town Underground 2. That new title belt is looking mighty nice! This was a pretty solid hardcore match. The crowd was very invested in Vendetta’s success. I didn’t know that Kyng had turned heel, but he took to it very well. Mostly in that Vendetta brought out a set of Legos to pop the crowd, and Kyng had no interest in using them. Kyng hit a Last Ride powerbomb through a table for the win at 16:16. ***¼
November 13, 2021 – Minneapolis, Minnesota
Adam Page def. Kenny Omega {AEW World Championship Match}
From the third AEW Full Gear. I geared up for this by watching Page’s loss to Jericho in the first AEW World Championship match and Page’s
first two losses
to Omega in NJPW and on this event last year. We’ve gone from Page as the heel to both guys as babyfaces to Omega as the heel. I love changes throughout a trilogy. This was excellent. Page got to show that at every turn, he’d become just as good as Omega. He toughed it out through every drop and strike, stopped Don Callis from interfering before it could be consequential, and fully had Omega’s number by the end. The bit at the end where the Young Bucks came out, saw that Page had the match won, and showed him that they weren’t going to block his way was well done by all of the wrestlers involved. Whoever was producing the show could have done a better job of showing all of Page hitting his final two Buckshot Lariats and not missing the start of them because they wanted to show the Jacksons’ faces for so long, but such is life. Those lairats got Page the win at 25:11. ****¼
November 14, 2021 – Clearwater, Florida
Karam def. Jon Davis {FIP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From WWN Supershow: Battle of the Belts. Davis was attacked with a baseball bat before the match by a guy in a demon mask. As far as three-minute matches that start with one guy at a disadvantage go, this one wasn’t bad. The champ sold his leg well and had a couple of fun little comeback moments. But his distant cousin Sean Davis grabbed his leg, which was enough of an opening for Karam to catch him with a spinebuster for the win at 2:48. This was not how I expected this feud to end. **
Natalia Markova def. Ivelisse {SHINE Championship Match}
From the main event of the same show. The first 17 minutes and 25 seconds of this match were pretty great. It was probably the best Ivelisse performance I’ve seen, and it gave me a great first impression of Markova. They gave this thing a real fight feel, with gritty exchanges on the mat and stiff strikes throughout. And then Ivelisse once again proved she’s the female version of Austin Aries, just not as obnoxious. Here, Markova hit her with the Futureshock DDT for the win at 17:35, though Ivelisse kicked out at two. Ivelisse also jumped up to her feet before Markova, just so we knew for sure she wasn’t beaten. But rather than storm off, she grabbed the title and respectfully handed it to the new champion. I think that might actually be worse than having a temper tantrum and leaving, because here she’s trying to have her cake and eat it too. She’s being a bad sport by kicking out at two and damaging Markova’s new reign, but then wants to get the fans back on her side with the show of respect. No thanks. ***¼
November 20, 2021 – Glasgow, Scotland
JAXN def. Kez Evans {ICW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From ICW Fear & Loathing XIII, Night 1. Both of these guys picked up wins in four way matches to qualify to fight for the title after Noam Dar vacated it. I didn’t have any real expectations going into this as I’m not familiar with either guy, but this match didn’t inspire me to seek out more of their work. Though as you’ll see, I’ll be seeing more of them momentarily. This was mostly kicking, punching, and stalling from Evans. After the stalling ended, Evans faked an injury, but he did so for so long that I started wondering if they were going for a double turn situation. They were not, it was just bad pacing. JAXN finished things off with a few submission attempts before catching Evans with the Emerald Frosion for the win at 21:22. **¾
November 21, 2021 – Glasgow, Scotland
Kez Evans def. JAXN {ICW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From ICW Fear & Loathing XIII, Night 2. JAXN came out to the ring and suggested that he be added to the match between Big Damo and Andy Wild with his title on the line. But then the lights went out and DCT attacked him with a polo mallet. Evans stormed out with a MITB briefcase, which I guess he never won but was just a symbolic way of flexing a clause in the previous night’s match’s contract that said he could have a rematch at any time. JAXN put up a bit of a fight, but Evans hit the Kez Dispenser in 48 seconds to win the title. N/A
November 23, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan
Tatsuhito Takaiwa def. Yumehito Imanari {Spirit of Ganbare World Openweight Championship Match}
From Ganbare Climax 2021 Final Round. As the name of the show indicates, this is the finals of a tournament to crown the first champion. As I mentioned here, the Independent Junior Heavyweight Championship was the top title of the Ganbare brand since 2017, but it recently left Ganbare and is now in Taka Michinoku’s new company. So this is its replacement. Imanari came into this match all beat up, and Takaiwa came into it very old. I guess given that the other men’s CyberFight companies had Jun Akiyama and Keiji Mutoh as champs this year, Ganbare might as well get in on the middle aged action. Takaiwa looked good for his age, throwing blows convincingly. Some of Imanari’s no-selling was irritating, but it did make for a satisfying moment when Takaiwa put an end to it with a particularly devastating Michinoku Driver. Moments later, Takaiwa hit an avalanche DVD for the win at 12:37. ***½
November 26, 2021 – Merrionette Park, Illinois
Mat Fitchett def. Fred Yehi {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From AIW Windy City Classic XVI. Fitchett won the Jim Lynam Memorial Tournament to earn this shot. I suppose the first half of this match was needed in that it established that Yehi was in Fitchett’s head, or at least had a better grasp on how to win this thing than Fitchett did. But it felt like it went on forever and not a lot of interesting things happened during that time. Things picked up a lot in the second half. Fitchett’s narrow escapes from Yehi’s submissions and his desperation power moves and strikes were pretty dope. He hit the Busaiku Knee for 2 near the end, then absorbed a backfist and got a roll up for the win at 20:54. ***¼