History of the World Championships | 2022 – April

It’s WrestleMania month, so I expect there will be several title changes early on and then not much toward the end of the month.

April 2, 2022 – Frankfurt, Hessen

Jurn Simmons def. Tristan Archer and Alex Tischer {wXw Unified World Wrestling Championship Match}
From wXw 16 Carat Gold Revenge. This match featured Tischer hitting Archer with one of the craziest Death Valley Drivers I’ve ever seen. There was just no release at all, he totally stuffed Archer into the mat. But the crowd didn’t go nuts for it, nor did they go nuts for anything in the first two-thirds of the match. They woke up a bit for the suplex fest down the stretch, but by and large this was lacking the energy that the previous month’s four way had. I didn’t watch the Simmons/Levaniel tag match from We Love Wrestling between then and now, so I’m not sure what’s become of Levaniel. But he was missed here. Simmons hit Archer with a piledriver for the win at 18:57. ***¼

April 2, 2022 – Arlington, Texas

Bianca Belair def. Becky Lynch {WWE Raw Women’s Championship Match}
From WWE WrestleMania 38 Saturday. To say Belair’s entrance is better than Lynch’s would be a major understatement. They get off to a great start, with Lynch hitting her finisher right away, looking to repeat her quick win from SummerSlam. And it mostly kept up that quality throughout. There were two weird moments, but neither sidetracked the action and one mistake actually made the match more brutal, as Lynch kicked Belair right in the face when she likely didn’t mean to. I enjoyed Lynch’s unconfident, desperate vibe here, while Belair stayed cool and calm and used her remarkable athleticism to stay in control for most of the match. An amazing backflip startled Lynch and gave Belair an opening to hit the KOD for the win at 19:20. So here’s my pitch now that Belair has had amazing WrestleMania matches against Horsewomen in consecutive years. She should hold the title through WrestleMania 39, where she successfully defeats Bayley. At some point during 2023, Charlotte Flair should beat her for the title in a cheap way (it can be the exact same thing Lynch did to Belair at SummerSlam ‘21 for all I care) and then Belair wins the Royal Rumble again and beats Charlotte for the title at WrestleMania XL. For me, that’s a strong enough story to main event the big show. ****

April 3, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan

AKINO def. Maya Yukihi {Oz Academy Openweight Championship Match}
From Oz Academy Battle Big Bonus. I found this show on archive.org, weirdly. The version I watched was filmed in part from a ringside camera that was way too close to the action, making me wish they’d just stuck with the hard cam angle. The first ten minutes were house show silliness, seeing Yukihi find playful opportunities to use her whip against AKINO, AKINO getting the whip and getting revenge, and then Yukihi’s crew all whipping AKINO. The interference portion in the middle of the match felt like it went on forever, and it left AKINO bleeding. It seemed like there might be an actual match at that point, but the solo action only lasted a minute before the clown show resumed. AKINA then hit a hurricanrana to end this… whatever it was at 27:39. The Oz Academy version of Yukihi is such a waste of her talent. Her matches for the IcexInfinity title put her matches in this company to shame. So much distracting nonsense here. I’d chalk it up to not wanting to go balls out in front of small, clap-only crowds, but then why bother with blade jobs? Half the match was overbooked crap. Why book this to go so long? *½

April 3, 2022 – Arlington, Texas

Roman Reigns def. Brock Lesnar {WWE Championship vs. WWE Universal Championship Match}
From WWE WrestleMania 38 Sunday. I worry that the general wrestling fan’s expectations of WWE main events are way too low. While there was nothing wrong with this match, it was incredibly limited and frankly way below the standards that we should expect from either guy. Both have done way better, even against each other, even in this exact spot at WrestleMania. That they wrestled their Goldberg Special, which is to say mostly only hitting their finishers over and over, was confusing to me. The match only went 12:17 and ended with Reigns blocking the F5 and hitting a spear. I wonder if the match time got cut from what was originally intended, or if both guys just decided that this was sufficient given the slavish fandom they both get from corners of the viewership. If the latter is the case, that’s a real bummer because this was the supposed biggest match of all time on the biggest show of the year. This is a long way of saying I was pretty underwhelmed. In a startling moment, I saw that Cagematch now lists the WWE Championship as inactive because Reigns was announced as the Undisputed WWE Universal Champion after the match. WWE.com has him listed as a double champion, so as of my writing this the morning after, neither lineage has been capped. ***

April 4, 2022 – Dallas Texas 

Bron Breakker def. Dolph Zigger {NXT Championship Match}
From WWE Raw 1,506. I initially defended the decision to have Bron win the title back here rather than at Stand & Deliver because it’s very likely a lot more people watched this show than that (the ratings have pretty much proved that to be the case). But then, Toxic Attraction won back the women’s tag titles from Raquel Gonzalez & Dakota Kai the following night on NXT TV, so I feel like the Stand & Deliver crowd got a bum deal. You have to imagine fewer people in the Raw crowd care what happens to this title. This was the nothing TV version of their match the night before, with pretty much no drama. Both guys rushed through some of their stuff and then Breakker blocked a superkick with a spear and hit the press powerslam for the win at 7:03 (shown of 10:45). Breakker got a clean win over Gunther the following night, which would be insane if I didn’t assume that WWE is ready to make Gunther not special at all. **¾

April 9, 2022 – Hartselle, Alabama

Kenzie Page def. Rolando Perez {New South Heavyweight Championship Match}
From New South Southern Hostility. I recently learned that New South calls their title Humungold. That’s sick. Right up until the last three minutes, this was a perfectly fine main event. Perez, who won the title using brass knuckles, is the right stature of person to be losing to a woman the stature of Page. He’s small, you see. But the end of this match was dog shit. Perez used the brass knuckles, but Dillon McQueen ran out to keep things chaotic so she couldn’t be pinned. McQueen and the foreign objects eventually were cleared from the ring, and Perez won with a Vertebreaker. A lot of illegal stuff had happened, but Perez’s win didn’t stem directly from any of it. So when Dump Saunders comes out to force the match to be restarted, the whole thing appears rigged for Page. And then she wins a few seconds later with the package piledriver at 15:53. Welp, at least the crowd was into the restarted match. I was not. **½

April 23, 2022 – Poughkeepsie, New York

Josh Alexander def. Moose {Impact World Championship Match}
From Impact Rebellion. Alexander came down to the ring with his kid, and also the entire pre-match video was focused on Alexander going as hard as anyone ever has to get back the title that was stolen from him. So the result wasn’t really in doubt, but also it shouldn’t have been so that’s fine. I really only have one major complaint with this match, and it’s that at the end when Moose exposed a turnbuckle, the referee actually moved the pad that had been removed farther away from the turnbuckle rather than trying to put it back on. I know that it needed to be off the buckle for the match to progress the way it did, but the referee could have at least ignored the pad, rather than adding to Moose’s cheating. I suppose I also don’t love how dead-faced Moose is. It made it a little hard to get invested in Alexander’s perseverance when the guy he was starting to beat up didn’t facially react to it at all. Even still, the match was very satisfying. Alexander took everything Moose had, including a couple of dastardly moves against exposed turnbuckles, and came back for more. They paced this exceptionally well. Alexander blocked a spear with a kick to the face and then hit the C4 Spike for the win at 23:56. This was great, but could have been MOTY caliber if Moose was better and if the referee wasn’t annoying. ****

April 30, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan

Go Shiozaki def. Kaito Kiyomiya {GHC Heavyweight Championship Match}
From NOAH Majestic. Fujita was stripped of the title because he got COVID and couldn’t defend it. Makes me assume that Shiozaki was going to win the title from Fujita here anyway. This match lasted as long as Shiozaki’s staredown did vs. Fujita early in the pandemic. This didn’t do a lot for me. As much as I like Shiozaki, the clap only fans can’t get behind him enough for me to feel jazzed by his offense. Kiyomiya fought with solid fire, but not enough to carry me through a thirty minute match. Hard work was there, but the structure of this kind of match makes my mind wander. Shiozaki hit a few lariats for the win at 30:02. ***¼

April 30, 2022 – Weyhe, Lower Saxony

Tristan Archer def. Jurn Simmons {wXw Unified World Championship Match}
From wXw We Love Wrestling 31: Slam in Den Mai. Hopefully now that we’ve gotten a singles match for the title after a month of multi-man matches, they’ll stop playing hot potato with this thing. Simmons as a smiling babyface out to have a good time and embarrass the heel for the love of the fans is a good look for him. He has very clearly decided to ape most of Batista’s gimmick, and the truth is there are way worse big man archetypes you could copy. This match had terrific heat, but it wasn’t much more than a typical heavyweight main event. It also had a typical, and very predictable finish. Simmons pulled the referee in the way of Archer’s offense. With the ref down, Simmons was attacked by Archer’s crew. Levaniel came in and tried to attack Archer with the belt, but hit Simmons by mistake in a tired way that you’ve seen 100 times. Archer dumped Levaniel and hit Simmons with the Coup D’état for the win at 16:53. The referee rushing back into the ring just after Archer hit his finisher was the stale icing on the stale cake that was this stale finish. ***