We’ve got a LOT of Japanese title changes this month, and a couple from my side of the Pacific as well.
July 2, 2022 – Paradise, Nevada
Liv Morgan def. Ronda Rousey {WWE Smackdown Women’s Championship Match}
From WWE Money in the Bank 2022. Morgan won the Money in the Bank ladder match earlier in the night. Rousey had just defended the title against Natalya. Natalya had significantly damaged Rousey’s leg. Rousey wrestled this match on one foot. She caught Morgan in an anklelock early, but Morgan kicked her leg to escape and then rolled her up for the win in 35 seconds. N/A
July 3, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Kazusada Higuchi def. Naomi Yoshimura {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From DDT King of DDT Final. Endo got a concussion in the tag match he was in at CyberFestival, which is insane because why even was he in a tag match at CyberFestival and not defending this title? I’m just now realizing they changed the title belt design after sticking with the last one for 17 years. I’m not sure I understand the appeal of Yoshimura, but this clap crowd was clapping for him a ton. Higuchi spent the match slowly but surely trying to get in position for and hit the Brainclaw Slam. And that was pretty compelling. He eventually hit the move after a wild lariat didn’t do the job, and won the match at 18:55. I didn’t like some of the no-selling and the chop exchange was weird because Yoshimura’s contribution didn’t seem legit. But the bright side there is that Higuchi visibly won that little battle, and then later, the war. ***¾
July 14, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Suwama def. Jake Lee {AJPW Triple Crown Championship Match}
From AJPW Summer Action Series. Whereas I can sort of understand the quick title change I’m about to review in NOAH, this one is a mystery to me. Though to be fair, I have no idea what’s going on in AJPW at any given time. But did Suwama need an eighth title reign more than Lee needed a solid first run? These two were 4-4 against each other going into this, including a recent disqualification win for Lee. In that vein, the referee stops Suwama from using a chair early on here. His cornermen interfere and he smacks Lee in the face with a table. Things went on like that for the rest of the match. The work was fine, but it was one-dimensional. Near the end, Lee seemingly sacrificed his leg to block a chair shot after knocking Suwama’s goons off the apron. But then he didn’t sell that injury after the fact so the match didn’t get any deeper. I’m not sure why, right before the finish, Suwama wasn’t disqualified when his boys pulled the referee to the floor. Lee didn’t have any cornermen, so it’s not like there was any mystery as to who it benefited. Moments later, Suwama hit a pair of backdrop drivers for the win at 22:26. This didn’t hold a candle to Lee’s title win. ***
July 16, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Kenoh def. Satoshi Kojima {GHC Heavyweight Championship Match}
From NOAH Destination. This is a symptom of having one of your marquee shows just a few weeks after your interpromotional supershow. It certainly makes Kojima’s title win feel like a weird stunt. I looked at the match time before watching this and was feeling kind of blue about the endeavor, but it didn’t take long for this to get fun. Kojima would absorb some of Kenoh’s offense, only to be bowled over by the power of a stocky man fueled by bread. Kenoh would bounce back from time to time, but it was really Kojima’s hubris and desire to win like a hero that cost him the match. At one point he had Kenoh out cold on the floor after a lariat over the turnbuckle, but he stopped the referee’s count and decided to drag the challenger back in the ring. Kenoh still had trouble getting momentum going, getting caught with lariats whenever he strung a few moves together. But he did eventually learn to dodge the lariat, then hit a high kick, a diving double stomp, and the moonsault kneedrop for the win at 28:17. This was quite a bit more entertaining than I expected, even if Kenoh’s goofy selling sometimes took me out of it. ***½
July 23, 2022 – Lowell, Massachusetts
Claudio Castagnoli def. Jonathan Gresham {ROH World Championship Match}
From ROH Death Before Dishonor. Why is Castagnoli’s theme a remixed 1812 Overture? What does that have to do with Castagnoli? Gresham has no Tully Blanchard in his corner, making his recent heel turn even more baffling. And now he has Prince Nana in his corner, which I think is an upgrade from Blanchard but the commentators don’t explain it at all. William Regal is on commentary, and he wrongly states that ROH was started by his students Bryan Danielson and Brian Kendrick. They were certainly there in the beginning, but the company was started by outed scumbag Rob Feinstein. Regal does correctly remember that it was Castagnoli that he wrestled in his retirement match. This was the opener of the show, and I knew it’d be sort of short before I started watching. That was a bit of a bummer, but I was pleasantly surprised to see that it was less of a squash than I expected. Gresham was looking for a German suplex the whole match though the size difference seemed too great to overcome. But some very interesting attacks on the leg got Castagnoli kneeling and made it easier for Gresham to hit the move. I definitely could have used another five minutes before Castangoli shrugged off Gresham’s offense and hit the Ricola Bomb for the win (at 11:34), but for what we got it was entertaining. ***¼
July 23, 2022 – Akron, Ohio
Joshua Bishop def. Derek Dillinger {AIW Absolute Championship & AIW Intense Championship No Ropes Barbed Wire Match}
From AIW Absolution XV. This was originally meant to be Matt Cardona vs. Bishop for the titles, but Cardona was forced to vacate both titles before the match because of his injury. I think this was the last of many titles he had accumulated that got vacated because of this injury. But he got to pick the stipulation for this match and cut a long promo doing it to kill time while the ropes were replaced. Bishop won Gauntlet for the Gold to earn this shot, and Dillinger was the GftG runner up with a good win/loss record going into this show. Dillinger’s entrance music is truly atrocious. Bishop’s is Sabotage, which is good but not exactly compelling. They go into the wire ropes immediately, so right off the bat I’m not sure what they’re going to build towards. It’s pretty nasty, especially considering that Bishop is very exposed having dressed as if this was a regular match. Things get gross right away. Both guys hit hard and generally kept the match moving well enough, but a lot of Dillinger’s stuff near the end got sloppy. Bishop finished things off with a chair shot to the head, a tiger suplex, and a barbed wire 2×4 to the back of the head for the win at 26:08. I’ve seen much worse versions of this stipulation, but this was missing the creativity needed to make it memorable. In particular, the transitions in control were totally banal, happening for no compelling reason other than it was the other guy’s turn to be on offense. That is, except for Bishop using a barbed wire 2×4 as a cheese grater on Dillinger’s leg to escape a Figure 4 Leglock. I also liked the way that Dillinger used Ziggy Haim as a projectile. So there were a few moments to enjoy here, but not enough to justify the match’s length. **¾
July 29, 2022 – Nashville, Tennessee
Calvin Tankman def. PCO, Joshua Bishop, and Levi Everett {BLP Heavyweight Championship Monster’s Ball Match}
From BLP The Gang Crosses the Line. So now SummerSlam weekend gets the same WrestleMania weekend indie overflow shows, of which this was a part. No one benefits from this phenomenon more than FITE. So if I remember correctly, this stipulation means that all of these competitors were deprived of food and sleep for the previous 24 hours. Everett carried a butter churn to the ring, which might be cheating. That said, the commentators mentioned that he hasn’t had the churn the previous 24 hours. Bishop started bleeding very early on and it wasn’t at all clear what caused that as the weapons didn’t come out until after the injury. PCO no-sold a bunch of big weapon shots, as is his stupid way. If he’s going to do that, why do it at a random moment in the middle of the match and not toward the end when it might mean something? Jake Something and another guy (the the commentators totally ignore and who I don’t recognize, run in and take PCO to the back. Then, Tankman hits Everett with a spinebuster, the Hidden Blade, and an Island Driver for the win at 13:46. This was a boring, directionless plunder brawl in front of a dead crowd with a finish that might as well have come from a completely different match. Terrible. *½
July 30, 2022 – Kobe, Hyogo
Yuki Yoshioka def. KAI {Open the Dream Gate Championship Match}
From Dragon Gate Kobe World 2022: Ultimo Dragon 35th Anniversary. This is the second year that Dragon Gate has done back-to-back shows in Kobe World Hall to celebrate their marquee event (a la WrestleMania and Wrestle Kingdom), but for this year for some reason the first night has this non-Pro Wrestling Festival title. Last year, it was named traditionally but the second night had a subtitle about Masato Yoshino’s retirement. I’m not sure why they couldn’t do the same thing here to give a nod to Ultimo Dragon. I have never seen a Yoshioka match before. He’s part of the same Dragon Gate class as Ben-K and Shun Skywalker, and so with this win becomes the third person from that class to win this title. What I have seen is images of his time as Dia Inferno, and I want that mask badly. There was a lot about this to like. It wasn’t insanely long, as many Kobe World main events have been in the past. In fact, it’s the second shortest in Dragon Gate’s history (not counting the earlier Toryumon days). I liked that KAI was dominant for the majority of the match, and that all of Yoshioka’s comebacks had a desperate vibe to them. What I didn’t care for was the way that KAI gets into position for moves too early, leaving him standing around like a goof for longer than looks natural. This happened more than once during this match. I also didn’t love the finisher spam at the end from KAI. I assume this means his run in DG is coming to an end or he’s going to be shuffled pretty far down the card, but either way it went from being exciting to implausible. Yoshioka hit the Bottle Hook, the Darkness Buster (good to see K-ness’ legacy live on), and a Frog Splash for the win at 23:23. ***¼
There were also PURE-J title change later on in the month of July, but I have no idea where to watch PURE-J anymore.