In case you didn’t catch this when I posted it as a pop up review, here’s a more permanent home for my opinions on this rivalry.
May 20, 2018 – Livonia, Michigan
Shane Strickland def. Darby Allin
From EVOLVE 105. Strickland cut a promo before the match, reminding folks that he broke Matt Riddle’s arm the night before and that he intended to do the same to Allin here. This was awesome. Both guys looked great. Strickland was myopically focused on injuring Allin’s arm, so Allin tried to get in Strickland’s head by returning the favor. In the end, Allin’s daredevil penchant bit him, as the Coffin Drop was sidestepped and Strickland was able to lock in a cross armbreaker (which I later learned he called the Key to Swerve City) for the win at 15:05. Strickland also did the Pentagon Dark armbreaker, which is a nice nod to his Killshot days. It’s very easy to see why other companies started booking this matchup immediately. ***¾
May 26, 2018 – Portland, Oregon
Shane Strickland def. Darby Allin
From DEFY New Legacy. Allin attacked before the bell. The commentators don’t make it clear whether that’s because of the EVOLVE match or because they have a beef in DEFY as well. They fight on the floor a lot. It’s pretty much all in the dark because DEFY’s production isn’t up to getting it on camera. A first shot doesn’t catch Allin hitting the Coffin Drop from the balcony, but a replay sees it. Strickland basically no-sells it by hitting a dropkick the second they get back to the ring. Then, the match turned into Allin becoming convinced that the Coffin Drop would win the day for him. That bit him in the ass when he missed one on the apron. The story then became Allin kicking out of all of Strickland’s finishers. Why doesn’t anyone protect their finisher anymore? Allin knew he couldn’t win, even though he was surviving, so he told Strickland to finish him off. Strickland hit a running knee and a few stomps before putting on the Key to Swerve City for the win at 12:30. This was a very indie version of the EVOLVE match, but their charisma carried it through. ***
August 31, 2018 – Chicago, Illinois
Shane Strickland def. Darby Allin
From AAW Defining Moment. This was absolutely batshit crazy. They took everything great about their EVOLVE match and fine tuned it here. The match pretty much never left the ring, so there was zero indie bullshit. It reminded me a lot of the mid ’90s cruiserweight matches on Nitro that people would lose their minds over. It was totally lucha-inspired and executed beautifully. Nothing was no-sold egregiously, and only the Coffin Drop was buried (which I suppose is fine as Allin seems to have never used it as a world-ender). Strickland countered a Coffin Drop on the apron to a German suplex on the apron and then hit a NASTY Swerve Stomp for the win at 13:31. ****¼
October 26, 2018 – Wilmington, California
Shane Strickland def. Darby Allin {PCW Ultra Light Heavyweight Championship Match}
From PCW Ultra Possessed. I’ve never heard of this company until today. This match was all about how familiar Strickland and Allin have become with each other. Unfortunately, PCW Ultra’s commentators either haven’t done research or the company is one that pretends other company’s don’t exist, as they chalk up the familiarity to studying footage. Weirdly, they make a comment about Allin metaphorically coming back from an 0-3 World Series deficit, but they’re not referring to the three matches he’s lost to Strickland already. These two are so great against each other. This was excellent and yet completely different from their AAW match. Here, Strickland dominated for the first half of the match, but then missed an attempted stomp to the floor and hurt his leg. Allin zeroed in on the injury, and Strickland was left without the ability to quickly hit the Swerve Stomp and go for a pin. Allin and Strickland also made it very clear which of Strickland’s legs was hurt, so that when he pulled down his opposite kneepad to hit a running knee it didn’t hurt my suspension of disbelief. That led to Strickland hitting the JML Driver for the win at 16:01. ***¾
March 8, 2019 – Seattle, Washington
Darby Allin def. Shane Strickland
From DEFY Dragon Spirit. This was part of Strickland’s farewell to the indies tour as he readied for his NXT debut. So it made sense for him to return the favor to Allin here. This isn’t explicitly a no disqualification match, but the instructions from on high are that this match must end in a pin fall. That meant that Strickland, heeling it up, spent a lot of time abusing Allin’s back on the floor and hit him with a chair in the ring. And hit a brainbuster onto a chair. And taped Allin to the chair and hit him with the Swerve Stomp. None of that got the win for Strickland. The idiot fans argue among themselves over whether or not they want tables. That’s rude, frankly. Just watch the match and judge it based on what they do, not what you wish they’d do. Pacific Northwestern jerks. Tables never come into play and the match is better for it. Allin uses the chair to block a couple of strikes and then hits a chair-assisted Coffin Drop. While it doesn’t make sense in the context of the match, as a human being I appreciate that Allin pointed the more mangled part of the chair toward himself so as to better protect Strickland. Stand up move. Allin brings thumbtacks into the ring (sigh) and stomps Strickland’s hand into it. Strickland responds by dropping Allin’s chest on the tacks. But Allin comes back with the Last Supper for the win at 20:01. I could have done without the tacks, as the chair being the focal point of the cranked up violence was reeling me in. And if they were gonna use tacks, I wish that they’d have led directly to the finish, either by Strickland falling on them or Allin using the tack-riddled hand to win somehow. Neither of those things happened, but they only kept the match away from being mind-blowing. It was just shy of that, still very, very good and violent. ****
April 29, 2022 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Darby Allin def. Swerve Strickland
From AEW Rampage 39. This is another Owen Hart Foundation Tournament qualifier. Strickland was 4-1 over Allin coming into this, having beaten him in all four of their 2018 matches, and then losing to Allin in early 2019. As much as I criticize Strickland losing so much this early in his run, I’m not surprised they wanted to reheat Allin a bit after him losing a high-profile main event to Andrade El Idolo. Their indie rivalry had some fantastic matches in it, so I was expecting a lot here. Especially so as they referenced their indie series in a promo on the previous Dynamite. This was very much a reader’s digest version of their previous matches, right up until Strickland hit Allin with a suplex from the bottom rope to the floor. That was gnarly as hell. Starks came out to attack Strickland, but Sting stood in the way. The distraction let Allin get the Last Supper for the win at 8:54 (shown of 10:24). That finish was spicy, toxic doodie, but the rest of the match was fun. These two deserve to do their thing for real on TV, though. ***¼