February was a real bummer in the title change department, so let’s see what March has in store for us.
March 5, 2022 – Oberhausen, North Rhine-Westphalia
Tristan Archer def. Axel Tischler, Jurn Simmons and Levaniel {wXw Unified World Championship Four Way Match}
From wXw 16 Carat Gold. I didn’t know what to expect out of this match because my only previous exposure to Archer was a pair of jobs he did in NXT UK, and I’d never seen Levaniel before. Simmons was part of another four way for this title that I loved, and seemed to be a solid champion in 2016/’17. So I was very pleased that this match was dope as hell. Simmons and Tischler spent the match trying to out brawn each other, while Levaniel (an ally of Simmons) played the irritating shit disturber. There were no dull moments, and everyone (including and almost especially Tischler) kept the action moving in a really compelling way. Archer took out Tischler with a wild avalanche Olympic Slam, which Simmons followed up with a Superfly Splash. Levaniel and Simmons started arguing, so Archer used the distraction to hit a low blow on Simmons and send him to the floor. Then he finished Levaniel off with the Coup D’état at 17:01. What a sneaky great match! ****
March 4, 2022 – Tyrone, Georgia
Kevin Ku def. Arik Royal {ACTION Championship Match}
From ACTION The Movement Begins. Ku came into this match with a bunch of tag title belts, which he holds in various promotions (including this one) with Dominic Garrini. I don’t know why it’s bothering me now where it hasn’t before, but the grimy lighting and middling-quality cameras make the production of this promotion look quite low rent. It’s a shame, because the in-ring quality is quite good. Royal had the size advantage, which he used quite a bit here, but Ku persevered and showed that he could surprise Royal with a suplex or a strike at pretty much any time. The finish saw Ku put on a half crab and pound Royal’s leg into the mat repeatedly until the champ tapped out at 16:58. ***½
March 8, 2022 – Orlando, Florida
Dolph Ziggler def. Bron Breakker & Tommaso Ciampa {NXT Championship Triple Threat Match}
From NXT Roadblock. Remember back at Halloween Havoc when Breakker screwed up that bulldog spot, and it wasn’t that big of a deal because it was woven into the story of the match by virtue of Breakker being inexperienced? Well he has a botch in this match worthy of his Uncle Scott, where he falls to the mat because he realized too late that he jumped the gun on his cue to hit a spear. It looked really silly. Some in the crowd chanted, “You fucked up,” while others shushed them and the production team tried to pipe in enough noise to cover it up. Woof. Aside from that, this was a mad dash of a triple threat, fun all the way through but not amounting to much outside of the shocking finale. Truth is, this is the most surprising title change at least since Ciampa won it the first time on NXT TV, and probably ever. We’ll see where they go with this, though I imagine the only satisfying move is to have Gunter obliterate ZIggler at Stand & Deliver. Bobby Roode interfered a bunch near the end, eventually getting Breakker out of the way so Ziggler could hit Ciampa with a superkick for the win and the title at 9:56 (shown of 12:24). ***¼
March 11, 2022 – San Francisco, California
Jacob Fatu def. AJ Gray {WCPW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Prestige/WCPW Savage Mode. The only stipulation is that there must be a winner. The crowd favors Fatu by a good margin. This was a fun little sprint. Gray got the upper hand first by sending Fatu into a bunch of chairs from the ring to the floor. That kept Fatu from gaining momentum for quite a while. But a well-timed super jump put Fatu in control, and he kept that up until he won the title. He hit a Spanish Fly, a thrust kick, and two moonsaults for the win, delighting the crowd at 14:05. ***½
March 19, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Shoko Nakajima def. Miyu Yamashita {Princess of Princess Championship Match}
From TJPW Grand Princess. This is the third match between these two resulting in a title change. Well, I guess the first wasn’t technically a title change, but rather they fought in the finals of a tournament to crown the first champion. This was definitely better than their second match, which was kind of a disaster, but I don’t think it was quite as good as the first. It was at a major disadvantage, as Japanese crowds are still socially distanced and only allowed to clap. So even when the action toward the end got exciting, the atmosphere in the building didn’t match what was happening in the ring. There were also a couple of funky moments early on where Nakajima’s dives fell short and they had to do some funky rolling around on the floor to compensate. But she had a solid come-from-behind performance and caught Yamashita with a hurricanrana, a double arm DDT, and a diving senton for the win at 19:06. ***½
March 20, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Tetsuya Endo def. Konosuke Takeshita {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Judgement: DDT 25th Anniversary Show. Takeshita had announced he was about to go to the States to work with AEW, so the writing was kind of on the wall. I’ll never not get a kick out of seeing Kenta Kobashi present the title at the start of these matches. I’ve been a huge fan of almost all of Endo’s previous matches in this series, so I have no issues with this decision. Of course, those matches didn’t happen in front of clap-only crowds. This is at the end of a six-hour show too. But even with a crowd that’s pretty tired, they put in major effort for the entire three-quarter hour match. My only problem with this match is that the story it told could easily have played out in half the time. There wasn’t a lot of nuance to what was happening, and the believable near falls didn’t start coming until quite late, so it felt repetitive at times. I could have really used an extended chunk during which Takeshita was in a lot of trouble. But they exchanged control back and forth without much in the way of differentiating the chunks. The match was never slow, so where this hurt the drama the most was near the end, where they threw a ton at each other without much reaction from the crowd on the near falls. Endo hit two German suplexes, three exploders, the spinning rack bomb, and two shooting star presses for the win at 46:30. Good, but I prefer their Peter Pan match. ****
March 20, 2022 – Camden, London
Jonathan Gresham def. Cara Noir {ROH World Championship vs. PROGRESS World Championship Match}
From PROGRESS Chapter 130: Dodge, Dip, Duck, Dive, Dodge. Funny thing about wrestlers who hold their titles for over two years like Noir did here is that I don’t see any of their matches for two years. Maybe I’ll go out of my way to check out more of his stuff because this was terrific. They were completely committed to getting mat work over, and they were completely successful. This started to remind me of the better bits of the Nigel McGuiness vs. Colt Cabana stuff from ROH, but without any of the silliness. Gresham controlled a LOT of the match, but Noir was in the driver’s seat toward the end, which made the finish a lot more dramatic and just a bit tragic. I was worried when Spike Trivet started interfering that we’d get a cheap, lazy ending, but instead we got a fun (but yeah, still kind of cheap) swerve. First, Gresham helped a distracted Noir by taking out Trivet with a super jump. Then, Trivet got ejected by the referee, and that distraction didn’t lead to a quick Gresham win either. But Trivet eventually interfered a third time and hit Noir with a chair. Okay, I appreciate the perseverance even if the chair shot is lame, but Gresham committed to a heel turn before rolling Noir up for the win and the PROGRESS title at 19:02. ****¼
Great month for title changes! There was also a FREEDOMS title change that happened at the very end of the month, but as of the time I’m writing this I can only watch it for a price I’m not willing to pay. So I’ll wait for it to come out on the cheaper Niconico section and fill this in later.
March 29, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Daisuke Masaoka def. Jun Kasai {King of FREEDOM Championship Match}
From FREEDOMS The Gekokujo. I’m not loving Masaoka’s rainbow hair in the context of a deathmatch, where it’s hard to see the blood on the darker colors and there’s already so much red to start. This was another in a string of disappointing KoF title changes. Kasai, who used to be a sure thing when it came to adding a bit of nuance to these gorefests, hasn’t provided that in the last couple of matches I’ve seen of his. This was just a string of weapon spots until the mat was littered with broken glass, and then a string of highspots onto that glass, followed by highspots done from the top rope. I wonder if performing in front of clap-only crowds makes these guys less inclined to put on memorable matches, figuring that FREEDOMS fans pay for blood, so that’s all they’ll get while the energy is capped. Masaoka finished off Kasai with a light tube-assisted Moonsault Double Kneedrop at 23:41. That move is dangerous (and stupid) enough without the light tubes. **¾