The new year usually brings surprises, or at least a little excitement, as the road to Wrestle Kingdom ends and the Road to WrestleMania begins. This January has been pretty dull, frankly.
January 1, 2022 – Atlanta, Georgia
Brock Lesnar def. Big E, Bobby Lashley, Seth Rollins, and Kevin Owens {WWE Championship Five Way Match}
From WWE Day 1. Lashley was inserted into a scheduled four way match among the other fellas here when his scheduled opponent, Roman Reigns, was pulled off the show after testing positive for COVID-19 (or being exposed to someone who had it, I’m not sure and I don’t want to lie). This was one of the best matches under ten minutes, if not the best, that I’ve seen in years. First off, what’s not to love about big dudes tossing each other around. Big E, Lashley, and Lesnar provided that. But what made this even more fun was Rollins and Owens causing mischief as a team. I wish so much that this was like five minutes longer so that there could have been a few more teases before they pulled the trigger on Lesnar beating Big E. I know coming out of this everyone wants to see Lesnar vs. Lashley, and I get it, but Lesnar vs. Big E would be a lot of fun too. Unfortunately it wouldn’t end with Big E winning so maybe it’s best to just skip it. Lesnar blocked the Big Ending and hit the F5 on the champ to win the title at 8:20. ***¾
January 2, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Yuji Okabayashi def. Takuya Nomura {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From BJW New Year. Cool to see Okabayashi win back the title on the anniversary of the day he lost it. The first five minutes and last five minutes of this match are why you’d want to watch this. Nomura worked over Okabayashi’s arm enough in the beginning that it was believable that the champ would be able to keep the big man from getting too much of an advantage throughout the fight. And in the last five minutes, it looked like that arm work would pay off in keeping the former champion from regaining his title. But then the finish, which took the wind out of my sails, saw Okabayashi more or less just say screw it, I’m done humoring you, and hit a huge powerbomb and the Golem Splash for the win at 22:55. I’m not sure why there couldn’t have been another minute of him working over Nomura with non-arm specific moves (he’d powered out of an armbar with another powerbomb moments earlier) before hitting the splash. But here we are. Good stuff, but not great. ***½
January 3, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Genkai def. Kengo Mashimo & GAINA {Kyushu Pro Championship Match}
From Kyushu Pro Launch Battle. I think this is the first time I’ve seen a title change hands two times in a row in triple threat matches featuring the same three wrestlers. I could be wrong, though. This match did a much better job than the first in making GAINA feel like a principal character. Having a big, meaty guy doing strong style things to disrupt the flow of the actual rivals is a lot of fun. I think Genkai is more interesting than Mashimo, so seeing him outwit both opponents to get the win made me like this more as well. He hit Genkai with the Superman Punch to win back the title at 19:24. ***¼
January 4, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Kazuchika Okada def. Shingo Takagi {IWGP World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 16. For me, this match (and the following night’s main event match) and a case of me fantasy booking a more interesting storyline in my head and being disappointed by the real life execution. The whole gimmick of the weekend is that Okada and Will Ospreay are pretender champions. Okada, who vocally hated that the IWGP Heavyweight title lineage was reset when Kota Ibushi defeated Tetsuya Naito, requested that he be awarded the previous title belt when he won the G1 Climax. Ospreay, who was never pinned for his title but had to vacate it due to injury, was running around the world carrying his own version of Takagi’s title and calling himself the true champion. For me, a satisfying story would have been the two pretenders fighting each other first with the winner getting the title shot against Takagi. But that’s not how NJPW works and now we get the G1 winner and the champion fighting to see who would face the pretender on night two. Meh. This was quite good, but the expressiveness that Takagi showed in his title win was only available in small spurts here. It pulled me back into the match when I felt the call of my ADD around the 20-minute mark, but then we didn’t see much of that in the final stretch. What we did see was Takagi doing anything and everything to avoid the Rainmaker, which was dope. But we also saw Okada basically be impervious to all of Takagi’s offense. That stole a bit of the drama from the match for me. All in all I was left feeling that this was technically great without much of an emotional draw. Okada landed the Rainmaker for the win at 35:44. ****
January 4, 2022 – Orlando, Florida
Bron Breakker def. Tommaso Ciampa {NXT Championship Match}
From NXT New Year’s Evil. I was feeling like the year was particularly front-loaded with title changes, but then I went back and looked at last year’s January switches and found that the first few days of the year had a lot then too. I wonder if things will cool down considerably for the rest of the month like they did last year. I absolutely love that they incorporated Breakker’s bitch from Halloween Havoc into the angle, suggesting that he would have won had he not made the mistake. It would have been a drag if it happened again in this match. But not only did it not happen, Breakker successfully hit the diving bulldog that that goofed last time and followed it up with the Steiner Recliner for the win at 15:28. I’m not going to apologize for liking the juice these two produce by rubbing up against each other. Ciampa is a total pro who knew exactly how to make Breakker look like an inexperienced wrestler AND a dangerous monster. He controlled by knowing where to be in the ring at all times, but none of his offense, even spammed, was enough to put Breakker down. That’s just good shit! I think it’s worth pointing out that though this and the last match got the same star rating, this overperformed as a TV main event featuring a guy with fewer than 10 matches on TV, while the Wrestle Kingdom main event really should have been better. ****
January 8, 2022 – Hartselle, Alabama
Rolando Perez def. Adam Priest {New South Championship Match}
From New South Level Up, airing on Action Clash 67. Perez is giving me young Jimmy Jacobs vibes. I was pretty drawn in by the story they were telling early on. Priest thought he’d put Perez away early with his powerbomb, but Perez countered it by dumping Priest to the floor and then by hitting a head scissor takedown on the floor. Later, Priest hit the powerbomb but Perez kicked out. They could have done a cool bit showing Priest losing his confidence after that, but instead they went with an overbooked finish. Chris Crunk interfered on Priest’s behalf, though that wasn’t enough to put Perez away. Then, Perez finished Priest off with a brass knuckles shot for the win at 15:25. The last couple of minutes sure did make everything that came before it feel pointless. **½
January 21, 2022 – Tyrone, Georgia
AC Mack def. Alex Shelley {IWTV Independent Wrestling World Championship Match}
From ACTION/IWTV Southeast First. I don’t know why I didn’t clock it back in October, but starting with Wheeler YUTA’s loss to Shelley, IWTV went back to using the black and blue version of the belt. No idea why. This was dope. Shelley spent a lot of the match working over Mack’s arm, making it difficult for Mack to hit the Mack 10. And just as I was thinking that it’s a shame that the match was probably going to end with Mack gutting it out and hitting his finisher for the win, he countered the Border City Stretch to a roll up and won the title at 19:21. Shelley is so good that he made Mack (who is also quite good) look amateurish by comparison. It’s not really fair to say, as Shelley put Mack over like a pro, but the way Shelley moves around the ring is in a class with very few other wrestlers. I have no doubt that Mack’s reign will be full of impressive matches, but Shelley showed a lot of why people love him at the end of his reign here. ***¾
January 23, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Kento Miyahara def. Ryuki Honda {Triple Crown Championship Match}
From AJPW New Year Wars. Jake Lee got injured and vacated the title. This was the finals of a tournament to crown a new champ. I appreciate what they were trying to do, giving the main event slot opposite Miyahara to Honda. He’s very young and clearly motivated to impress. But the guy has the physique of a middle aged gym teacher and the hair/face combo of what I assume NOSAWA Rongai would look like if he debuted today. I’m giving myself old man shouting at clouds vibes, but the kid needs work in my opinion. But they definitely made him look as good as they could have shy of putting the title on him. And I’m glad they went with Miyahara instead. Yes, it’s funny that at 32 he’s already a five-time champion, but Honda isn’t there yet. So they let the husky fella beat up Miyahara for most of the match, only to get caught with the Shutdown Suplex at 23:03. Miyahara and Katsuhiko Nakajima used to be a tag team in Kensuke Office/Diamond Ring, and this is the second time they’ve been the champion of their respective companies at the same time, the first being at the end of 2016 through the middle of 2017. I know NOAH just worked with New Japan, but I’d really like to see a Miyahara vs. Nakajima match while they’re both champions in 2022. Instead, it looks like AJPW will be working with BJW and having Miyahara defend against Abdullah Kobayashi of all people. Barf. ***½
January 29, 2022 – St. Louis, Missouri
Bobby Lashley def. Brock Lesnar {WWE Championship Match}
From the 35th Royal Rumble. Look, I’m not invested in who is WWE Champion anymore. Vince McMahon can’t seem to focus on making both titles important at the same time (and frankly, the idea of doing so is dumb to begin with), and right now he clearly only cares about the Universal belt because it’s on Roman Reigns. So this being a dope little match with a crummy, but narratively significant finish isn’t the end of the world. But it doesn’t get me excited for Raw or make me think Lashley is a dominant champion worthy of a win over Lesnar. A small thing, like letting Lashley make Lesnar pass out to the Hurt Lock after Reigns laid him out with the belt, or even just letting Lashley hit Lesnar with a spear on top of Reigns’ attack would have made this feel like less of a BS win for the new champ. But what they did was have Reigns attack (with a bit of help from a wishy washy Paul Heyman) and have Lashley cover right after for the win at 10:14. Up until that point, I was quite enjoying the two most athletically legitimate athletes in the main event scene having a pissing contest over who was stronger for almost ten minutes. Shame it’s WWE and we can’t just have nice things. ***