Not a lot of title changes this month, but the few that occurred were pretty solid. Let’s take a gander.
May 1, 2022 – Crown Point, Indiana
PCO def. Joshua Bishop, Kobe Durst, and Levi Everett {BLP Heavyweight Championship Four Way Match}
From BLP Fancy Wrestling. This was supposed to be champion Jake Something defending against PCO, but Something decided to take an AEW Dark taping booking instead. So he was stripped of the title and we got this match with a foregone conclusion result for the vacant championship. This is a very similar booking scenario that NOAH executed after their champion came down with COVID. This is my first time seeing Everett, who is Amish and comes to the ring with a butter churn. And fuck can he run. We’re all over PCO, right? The other three have to scramble to get into position so PCO can hit his dangerous dives. Giving him the title was a bummer when Bishop was right there. The match was totally chaotic, but at least it was action packed and nothing looked particularly stupid outside of PCO’s dive to the outside. He hit Durst with a chokeslam and a moonsault for the win at 8:05. ***
May 1 2022, Los Angeles, California
Daniel Garcia def. Bandido {PWG World Championship Match}
From PWG Delivering the Goods. Ew, the Jericho Appreciation Society was already a thing, and because Excalibur is also the PWG commentator we hear a lot about that early on here. The crowd also chants “entertainer,” so I guess I just have to sit in this. Bandido is probably better than I give him credit for. He does a lot of logical things that other indie wrestlers don’t do, though to be fair Bandido probably has better fundamentals than most because of his training and family history. For example. Garcia hit him with a superplex and then held on to try for another suplex. Bandido blocked it even though Garcia had all the momentum and hit a facebuster. And then, Bandido had the good sense to sell for a while, because not only had he just been hit with a superplex but he’d used all of his strength to stop Garcia’s forward momentum. Everything from that moment on was crazy well-executed. They countered each other’s holds and moves in surprising and exciting ways. Garcia picked up the win with a low blow, two Judas Effects, some Bryan Danielson-style stomps to the face, and a Sharpshooter at 24:45. I didn’t need all the odes to AEW at the very end, and the first half of the match wasn’t all that notable. But for 12 minutes they blew my mind a bit, and that’s worth a lot. ***¾
May 3, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Yumehito Imanari def. Tatsuhito Takaiwa {Spirit of Ganbare World Openweight Championship Match}
From Ganbare Pro Love Phantom. The English language commentators geek out because Aja Kong is in Imanari’s corner. Who do I have to talk to in order to get Takaiwa to stop using the Michinoku Driver? On the one hand, this match turned way up when he hit it the first time. But on the other hand, someone is going to die. He really just drops dudes on their head with that thing. There was some well-done if somewhat boring arm work in the early going that went nowhere, and then in the end they just traded heavyweight slams and drops. So it was kind of disjointed, but I did enjoy Takaiwa’s screaming path to defeat. Shame the guy looks so much more his age than guys like Takahi Sugiura, Masaaki Mochizuki, Masato Tanaka, and even Chris Jericho. Imanari hit an Axe Bomber for the win at 17:20. ***¼
May 5, 2022 – Yokohama, Kanagawa
Drew Parker def. Yuko Miyamoto {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From BJW Welcome Back. Did I need this rematch? No. But Miyamoto drags good performances out of guys I don’t love, and that’s included Parker in the past. Parker speaking (seemingly) fluent Japanese was surprising. There’s a scaffold held up by ladders in the ring, and both guys start the match on top of it. They do a few cool spots around the scaffold, like Miyamoto putting on a Tarantula from beneath and then throwing Parker’s head up into the bottom of the plant. Parker returns the favor by throwing darts at Miyamoto’s back. Why does Miyamoto just sit there waiting for it to happen? Looked dumb. Parker gets ripped to shreds thanks to a baseball bat with tacks on it. With that out of the way, they start wrestling. The scaffold gets used as a defensive weapon when Parker tries to grab it to avoid a powerbomb. That’s neat. They eventually make their way back up the scaffold, where they correct the mistake of their last match and end this one with a big spot off of it. Parker bodyslams Miyamoto ten feet to the mat and then hits a Swanton Bomb for the win at 17:35. A nice, streamlined, not-over-the-top death match. ***½
May 8, 2022 – Providence, Rhode Island
Ronda Rousey def. Charlotte Flair {WWE Smackdown Women’s Championship I Quit Match}
From WWE WrestleMania Backlash. They’ve photoshopped Flair’s face in their graphics so much that I wasn’t sure what to expect when she came out. Why not just use an actual photo of her face? What kind of message does that send? I never thought I’d be the guy to say this, but this match could have used a little bit of blood. The amount of times they sent each other face-first into the post was neutered by the lack of consequence. Aside from that, and the fact that I Quit matches invite more talking than I care for, this was a blast. There was a lot of plunder, and most of it was used very well. After sarcastically wishing Rousey a happy Mother’s Day, Flair’s arm gets caught by Rousey, who pulls it through a chair with an armbar. Flair quits at 16:32. ***¾
May 15, 2022 – Camden, London
Gene Munny def. Jonathan Gresham {PROGRESS World Championship Match}
From PROGRESS 134: No Mountain High Enough. Kid Lykos & Lykos II came to the ring with Gresham and caused trouble, so it was stipulated that if they interfered, Gresham would be stripped of the title. Gresham sent them to the back to play it safe. They didn’t stay in the back long, only about five minutes. Gresham didn’t seem that concerned, risking low blows while the referee’s back was turned. One of them was met by a protective cup that Munny was wearing, but another got Gresham a roll up for a near fall. The Lykoses got in the ring to attack Munny with the title belt behind the referee’s back, but then they got his attention and did it in front of him to get Gresham disqualified at 10:45. The storyline was that Kid Lykos didn’t think he could get the belt off of Gresham straight up, but did think he could win it off of someone else. So he orchestrated this situation. That doesn’t make sense, as there was no way Lykos could have known that this stipulation would have been added to this match in the first place. In reality, it was a way for AEW wrestler/ROH Champion Gresham to lose the title without losing. The match was kind of cute, but ultimately pretty annoying. **¾
May 17, 2022 – Irvine, California
Jordan Clearwater def. Chris Dickinson {UWN World Championship Match}
From UWN Championship Wrestling #567. Dickinson had just defended his title against Willie Mack in a hard-fought match that he won kind of flukeishly. Clearwater had a Money in the Bank style title match owed to him thanks to a battle royal he’d won a few months earlier. He surprise attacked Dickinson before the match started. Dickinson tried to fight back, but his leg gave out and Clearwater hit him with a big boot for the win and the title in 46 seconds. I hate Money in the Bank. N/A
May 29, 2022 – Paradise, Nevada
CM Punk def. Adam Page {AEW World Championship Match}
From AEW Double or Nothing. This was a tale of two matches. The first half was quite good, seeing both guys laying in their strikes with a ton of conviction. The crowd was almost entirely, and passionately behind Punk, while Page drew boos. That’s where the second half of the match could have stayed interesting, had Page leaned into his de facto heel status. Instead, they had a match focused on stealing each other’s finishers. They almost made it work, as Page had trouble hitting the Buckshot Lariat because he tweaked his knee hitting a moonsault to the floor. That piqued my interest. The problem was that Punk also had trouble hitting the Buckshot Lariat because he’s a botch machine. The crowd didn’t like that, and frankly it put a big ol pause in the match where one didn’t belong. On the bright side, they pulled together all the interesting elements for the final couple of minutes. Page hit the Go2Sleep, but (you could assume) his knee was still hurt so Punk was able to kick out. Page’s selling was quite good all around. The referee got bumped after Page stumbled going for the Buckshot and Punk got him up for the Go2Sleep, but swung him into the official. Page hit the remains of the lariat but there was no ref. He went for the title belt but decided not to hit Punk with it. Another stumbly Buckshot attempt put him on Punk’s shoulders for the Go2Sleep, giving Punk the title at 25:53. Punk held this one back a bit, while Page was on top of his game. Even still, putting the belt on Punk was the right move here, as Page’s reign had been aggressively medium. ***¾