Some Elite Wrestling: Just FTR

After burning out on AEW during the stretch between Revolution and Double or Nothing, I figured I’d quit reviewing AEW entirely for a while. Given the injuries to CM Punk and Bryan Danielson, that seemed like an especially good idea. Given that AEW decided to introduce a new title belt that seems to do nothing but water down the already crowded singles championship field in the company (and the mystifyingly stupid name for the title), I felt very affirmed in my decision. 

But I really love FTR, and I’ll be watching all of their matches anyway. So I’m going back to how I started this series and just reviewing FTR’s matches. Now that I’ve got a lot of extra room, their non-AEW matches will be included directly the post and not a pop-up review.

June 1, 2022 – Los Angeles, California

Dax Harwood, Cash Wheeler & CM Punk def. Max Caster, Austin Gunn & Colten Gunn 
From Dynamite 139. This was set up because FTR and Punk both really like Bret Hart and AEW made an ugly shirt about it. Rick Knox was not the referee and FTR was involved in this match, so the tag rules were enforced. Because of that and everyone working hard, this was a lot of fun! Those Ass Kids aren’t bad. Billy Gunn got involved a couple of times, but what do you expect from a guy who would demand to be let into gyms for free while on the road? You can tell exactly where Punk broke his foot here, going for a springboard clothesline. Dude always trying to do things he can’t do. Maybe this will teach him to focus on what he’s good at. He countered a Famouser to a powerbomb (into Billy) and then hit the Go2Sleep on Austin. FTR followed that with the Big Rig for the win at 9:10 (shown of) 11:50. ***

June 10, 2022 – Independence, Missouri

Dax Harwood, Cash Wheeler & Trent Beretta def. Will Ospreay, Kyle Fletcher & Mark Davis
From Rampage 45. Jesus, United Empire has a lot of members. This was set up by Ospreay leading more of his goons in a second attack on FTR on the previous Dynamite. This was a little chaotic and sloppy, but it was entertaining to watch FTR and Beretta repel the New Japan invaders. Is it a weird move to have Ospreay’s team lose right off the bat? Yes. So far, all the New Japan guys have done successfully is show up and sneak attack. But now it feels like they can’t win. So that’s a goof. Ospreay didn’t look that much more impressive than his partners. In fact, Davis was the standout in my opinion. Weird way to go, but then I agree with very little of AEW’s booking lately. An injured Beretta was left alone in the ring with Fletcher, but he got himself into position to hit the Strong Zero for the win at 10:22 (shown of 13:58). ***¼

June 11, 2022 – Beckley, West Virginia

Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler def. Davey Richards & Eddie Edwards
The night before, FTR wrestled in Big Time Wrestling in a match that was billed as the New Hart Foundation vs. the New Horsemen. BTW has yet to air it, but FTR (Americans) cosplaying as the Harts while Brian Pillman and Arn Anderson’s unsuccessful kids do the same for the Horsement isn’t something I’m all that interested in. Anyway, this is from ASW Bash in Beckley. Pretty sure this is the first wrestling match I’ve ever reviewed from the state of West Virginia. FTR has Dennis Condrey in their corner. I didn’t think the Condrey version of the Midnight Express was their inspiration and assumed they were more Stan Lane guys. Shows what I know. Right out of the gate, it appears that Richards has decided to go into SummerSlam ‘04 Shawn Michaels mode, selling a shoulder tackle like a clown. The crowd thinks it’s funny at first but then starts getting annoyed by it. In a nice turn of events, the Wolves do quite a bit of classic tag team heeling, something you don’t see done against FTR very often. In general, this was a rather stupendous tag match. The Wolves kept up the pressure on Wheeler the whole time, Harwood’s temper would save Wheeler temporarily but make it impossible for him to legally tag out, and Wheeler did a great job playing the sympathetic babyface. The Wolves started to dominate toward the end, and almost had me buying that the AEW-contracted tag team would lose. Richards had Wheeler in an anklelock. Harwood tried to make the save but got caught in a half crab. But Wheeler turned over and shoved Richards into Edwards and then rolled Richards up for the win at 19:51. West Virginia indies no one has heard of getting a great tag team match. Who knew it was possible? ****

June 15, 2022 – St. Louis, Missouri

Will Ospreay def. Dax Harwood
From Dynamite: Road Rager. Ospreay wears his RevPro title rather than the IWGP United States Championship belt, which is a curious choice. Harwood has the good sense to wear both of his title belts to the ring. I was rooting for Harwood here, though I knew he had no shot. It’s a shame that Harwood is only allowed singles wins over his tag team partner. I’m not hoping for a Cash Wheeler injury because FTR is the best act in AEW, but if he ever does get injured again and Harwood isn’t given a solid singles run then this outfit is stupid. The crowd was just as loud for Harwood as they were for the shiny new Ospreay, which should tell you something. This was a great back-and-forth situation that was only hampered by so much of Ospreay’s offense requiring Harwood to have to nonsensically look in the wrong direction for too long. To that end, Ospreay hit the Hidden Blade for the win at 11:13 (shown of 13:43). After the match, a brawl broke out between the United Empire and FTR/CHAOS. That led to Orange Cassidy challenging Ospreay for the US title at the PPV. I assume AEW fans will be into that but it doesn’t interest me at all. Later that night, Harwood posted to Twitter that FTR’s run as number one contenders has lasted almost as long as their AEW tag title reign did. Woof. ***¾

June 24, 2022 – Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Jeff Cobb def. Cash Wheeler
From Rampage 47. Save for his match against Harwood, this is Wheeler’s first singles match since a 2020 bout against Shorty G on Smackdown. This was terrific. They exchanged strikes in a totally believable way, with neither guy just standing around waiting for the other guy to hit him, but rather striking while they could and dodging where they were able. Terrific. Wheeler had to get creative to match Cobb’s strength, but it didn’t take long for the big man to catch Wheeler with the Tour of the Islands for the win at 7:21 shown of (10:55). I could (and would very much like to) just watch matches like this all day. It makes me upset that Roppongi Vice is in the Forbidden Door tag title match, not because I don’t like them, but because a technique vs. power match between United Empire and FTR would clearly be fantastic. ***½

June 26, 2022 – Chicago, Illinois

Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler def. Jeff Cobb & Great-O-Khan and Trent Barreta & Rocky Romero {ROH World Tag Team Championship vs. IWGP Heavyweight Tag Team Championship Match}
From AEWxNJPW Forbidden Door. I’ll never understand AEW’s obsession with three-way tag matches. FTR had one near-perfect one years ago in NXT, so at least they have that element going for this one. Hopefully it won’t turn into a spot-fest like the others. Bright side is this is only two guys in at a time and the referee is Paul Turner. Harwood hurts himself very early on, hitting an elbowdrop on Romero and then wincing in pain. They did a good job of covering up his absence after he left ringside, though after finishing the match I’m not convinced that the injury was real. Harwood comes back to a huge ovation, though at that point the legal man rules get tossed ou the window for a bit. But more or less things stay exciting and engaging. At one point, Harwood doesn’t kick out when he’s supposed to and it appears Romero should have won the match. The crowd boos Harwood and the referee. The match continues a minute longer until FTR hits the Big Rig on Romero for the win at 16:19. Romero complaints about the count after the match, so it would behoove them to do a Roppongi Vice vs. FTR rematch for either, both, or even all three of FTR’s titles. ***½

June 29, 2022 – Detroit, Michigan

Dax Harwood, Cash Wheeler & Danhausen def. Max Caster, Austin Gunn & Colten Gunn
From Dynamite: Blood & Guts. Danhausen recruited FTR as surprise partners to help him fight the Gunn Club because they’re pretty good at wrestling or something. That’s cute. The bad guys are very upset at the talent gap. I am very not upset at pairing the hometown babyface up with two of the biggest babyfaces in the company. There wasn’t much to this, but the finish was clever. After Austin caught Harwood with a wonky neckbreaker, Danhausen made the hot tag. He looked poised to hit the Go2Sleep, but Anthony Bowens ran in to hit him with his crutch. Danhausen caught him and cursed him, which (presumably) caused Bowens to errantly hit Austin with the crutch. That gave Danhausen the win at 8:42 (shown). **¾

July 23, 2022 – Lowell, Massachusetts

Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler def. Jay Briscoe & Mark Briscoe {ROH World Tag Team Championship 2/3 Falls Match}
From ROH Death Before Dishonor. Why not have the Briscoes come out with their HOG title belts? The first fall was really good. They built somewhat slowly, but by the end of the fall they were trading very believable near-falls. I was surprised a lot of them didn’t end the fall, as teases generally don’t get featured in 2/3 falls matches until the final fall. But these guys love wrestling. Harwood uncharacteristically got cocky and tried to hit Jay with the Jay Driller. Jay countered it to a catapult into the corner, and the Briscoes hit the Doomsday Device to win the first fall about 15 minutes in. The second fall saw Harwood get his ass kicked for a while before making one of the best hot tags I’ve ever seen, exhaustedly falling backwards into his corner with his hand raised. Jay busted Wheeler open with the bell to stop FTR’s momentum. Harwood saves the day, dumping Mark on the ring steps and busting him open, and FTR hits Jay with the Big Rig to win the second fall at the 30-minute mark. The third fall lost some of the momentum had, and then started to run off the rails a bit when an “errant” punch from Harwood to the referee looked deliberate as hell because of weird positioning. And then it’s the heel Briscoes who get screwed by the ref bump after Jay hits the Jay Driller and gets 10 count on a pin. Jay then kicks out of the Big Rig because the referee was slow to get back in the ring. That’s the first time anyone has kicked out of that move. Things pick up a lot in the last few minutes, as Wheeler hits a back suplex from the turnbuckle through a table on the floor. Harwood kicks out of the Jay Driller and then eventually gets his wits back enough to hit a second rope piledriver for the win at 43:26. This couldn’t keep up the energy of their first match, but that’s not much of a slight as that match is one of the best tag team matches in the last 10 years. This was still excellent. The first two falls were spectacular, and the third fall ended in exciting fashion despite a few hiccups along the way. The Blackpool Combat Club B-Team (Claudio Castagnoli & Wheeler YUTA) come out to the ramp to stare at FTR after the match. ****¼

July 30, 2022 – Nashville, Tennessee

Kyle Fletcher, Mark Davis & TJP def. Cash Wheeler, Dax Harwood & Alex Zayne
From NJPW Music City Mayhem. Good on NJPW’s commitment to continuity, not having the Aussie Open show up with a set of titles they’d won recently because the episode of TV it was set to happen on hadn’t aired yet. I don’t watch STRONG regularly, (though I’m starting to feel like I should) so I don’t know what brings FTR and Zayne together. We got ourselves a good match sandwich on awkward wrestling bread here, folks. This took a while to get going. Zayne’s early stuff against Fletcher didn’t work well, and then Harwood’s contribution to the match didn’t amount to much. Then, Wheeler tagged in and started tearing things up. His stuff against Davis was particularly terrific. As much success as Aussie Open is having, I do hope Davis breaks away from it in a couple years and has a great singles run. Dude has it. And Wheeler shining more than Harwood in this match was interesting as well. Things fell apart a bit at the end when Zayne came back in. Maybe he was nervous or just not as sure-footed as usual, but his stuff against the Aussie Open always looked a half a step off. TJP’s contributions were solid, but didn’t amount to much either. The finish saw the Aussie Open hit Zayne with the Corealis for the win at 14:30. I’m happy that the Aussie Open got their win back over FTR (both matches were six-man tags), as I’m hoping it means we’ll get two-on-two matches between the teams for any of the various belts that they hold. ***½

August 21, 2022 – Charlotte, North Carolina

Dax Harwood def. Rocky Romero
From NJPW STRONG 103. Harwood comes out with just the IWGP title belt, and no Wheeler. The crowd is loud for Harwood. This was not structured how I would have expected it to be structured. Romero was in the driver’s seat for most of the match, working Harwood’s arm and confounding him with quick attacks. And then, kind of out of nowhere, Harwood locked in the Sharpshooter for the win at 10:26. I guess it wasn’t out of nowhere in that he’d tried to put on the move earlier in the match, but he’d had so little luck that Romero tapping out when he did was surprising. Fun, fast match that showed off just enough of both guys’ personalities. ***¼

August 24, 2022 – Cleveland, Ohio

Jay Lethal def. Dax Harwood
From Dynamite 151. It’s been almost two full months since FTR was last wrestling in an AEW ring, and by the time they have a two-on-two tag match again it will have been well over two months. As an homage to both Ric Flair and Bret Hart, this totally worked. I was thankful that Sonjay Dutt’s interference didn’t lead to the end of the match. These two have very good chemistry, but the truth is, they tend to have good chemistry with everyone. After a hard fight over a roll up, Lethal grabbed a handful of tights and got hte win at 10:14 (shown of 12:47). After the match, Dutt announces that FTR and Wardlow will face Lethal and the Motor City Machine Guns. Bringing in the Guns as heels is very weird. ***½

September 4, 2022 – Hoffman Estates, Illinois 

Cash Wheeler, Dax Harwood & Wardlow def. Alex Shelley, Chris Sabin & Jay Lethal
From All Out. A few days earlier, FTR & Wardlow beat a jobber team on Dynamite in a squash. I’m not reviewing it. No real explanation was given as to why the Motor City Machine Guns came to AEW for this match, except for that they were once in a stable with Lethal and Sonjay Dutt in TNA. Who cares? What does that have to do with FTR and Wardlow? Nothing. But Dutt and Satnam Singh don’t work, so they pasted this match together. What’s even the point? Nothing was on the line, and the MCMG aren’t the kind of guys who are at risk of actually hurting the babyfaces. Because of that it should come as no surprise that the crowd became totally silent when the heels took control. It makes absolutely no difference if they win. In fact, you could argue that the way the match is set up you’d want to root for Shelley or Sabin to pin Harwood or Wheeler so that we could get an actual tag titles match between those two teams. Some of the most interesting action happened between Lethal and Wardlow, making me wonder why this wasn’t a TNT title match with a stipulation tacked on to favor Lethal. Harwood’s daughter came out to the ramp to wish her dad good luck before the match. Wardlow hit Lethal with a headhbutt, a lariat, and four powerbombs for the win at 16:26. After the match, Harwood’s daughter came out to break Dutt’s pencil and join in a beating on the heels. Okay. That’s cute but this is a clown show. The match was good, it couldn’t not be given the talent, but the booking around it makes me so frustrated. The way FTR is handled in this company is enough to make a person believe Jim Cornette conspiracy theories. ***¼

I’m feeling pretty down on this series because of how FTR has been in limbo despite all the consolation tag titles they’ve won. But what good is being tag champions three times over if the belts are rarely defended, and if the concept of them never getting a shot at their home promotion titles has become a weird running joke. In the nine months of 2022, they have defended the AAA tag titles twice, had five televised ROH tag title matches, and haven’t defended the IWGP tag titles since winning them in June. As a matter of fact, they haven’t had a two-on-two tag team match on TV since winning said tag titles. This plus my plan to review their indie output hasn’t worked out because BTW and AML Wrestling don’t care to stream their shows. I’m over it. I’ll be taking a break from this series until things heat up with them again. But I don’t want to go out on a totally sour note, so I’ll leave you with Harwood’s match against Claudio Castagnoli for the ROH World Championship.

September 9, 2022 – Buffalo, New York

Claudio Castagnoli def. Dax Harwood {ROH World Championship Match}
From Rampage 58. Retconning the end of Death Before Dishonor ending to be hyping this match rather than Castagnoli & Wheeler YUTA vs. FTR is a decision I don’t totally understand. Saying that Castagnoli has never held singles gold before the ROH Championship is also a weird decision as that isn’t true at all. Early on, Harwood suplexes Castagnoli from the ring to the floor, hitting an accidental brainbuster on the apron on the way. Yikes. There was one solid near fall for Harwood, countering a crossbody to a roll up. But aside from that it never felt like he had a shot here and the crowd was pretty quiet as a result. The Sharpshooter exchange at the end of the match was fun, though. Castagnoli elbowed the crap out of Harwood and then reapplied the Sharpshooter for the win at 13:11 (shown of 20:12). Jericho on commentary threatens to challenge for the title. That’s terrifying. I expected a little more out of such a long match between these two, especially given all the time it was given. It was just too one-sided. That said, long matches are a very good use of a 10:00pm time slot on Friday nights. ***½ 

I suppose any AEW content from me going forward will be in the form of one of my Rivalries posts. Eyeballing Wheeler YUTA vs. Daniel Garcia and the Acclaimed vs. Keith Lee & Swerve Strickland right now, if you’re curious.