Sorry this one is so late, but there was some drama in the Japanese death match world at the end of the month, and the matches involved didn’t air until the middle of September. So here we are.
August 11, 2022 – Fukuoka, Fukuoka
Kodai Nozaki def. Genkai {Kyushu Pro Championship Match}
From Kyushu Pro 14th Anniversary Show. The end of this match was so strange that I have to assume that Gengaki got injured during a bit spot. With Nozaki standing on the apron, Genkai hit a spear through the ropes to the floor. Both guys got checked out by a bunch of folks at ringside and were down for a while. Back in the ring, Nozaki suddenly and inexplicably had the advantage, and hit a knee to the gut and a spear for the abrupt win at 19:59. If Genkai wasn’t injured then this was a very weird booking decision. The beginning of the match had a cool Vader vs. Sting vibe, but then Genkai controlled most of the middle with boring holds. It’s not exactly compelling to keep your big monster locked up in boring holds. **½
August 12, 2022 – Tyrone, Georgia
Adam Priest def. Kevin Ku {ACTION Championship Match}
From ACTION In America. Priest basically wrestling this match with one arm was pretty cool. Ku tried to get in on the good selling action by favoring his neck. While he was still able to do bridging pins, I appreciate that he was forced to lay around for quite a while afterwards because of the pain and exhaustion. The drama of Priest kicking out of Ku’s signature move after a one-count was cool, but the moment was weakened for me by Ku doing it after Priest’s signature move a moment later. You’ve just had an 18-minute match, you can let the spots at the end breathe a bit too. Priest followed that with a diving legdrop for the win at 18:53. ***½
August 13, 2022 – Sheffield, South Yorkshire
Big Damo def. Chris Ridgeway {PROGRESS World Championship Match}
From PROGRESS Chapter 137: Deadly Viper Tour. From an action standpoint, this was very engaging. But from a storytelling perspective, I found it somewhat baffling. Ridgeway worked the first half of the match like he typically would, as a dirtbag heel who can back it up. But as the match wore on, he started wrestling like an injured (midsection) babyface who was fighting through the adversity that comes with being attacked by a much bigger opponent. By the end of the match, he was screaming in pain while kicking out of Damo’s Vader Bomb. Damo attacked the midsection some more and hit another Vader Bomb to the back for the win and the title at 22:17. If Ridgeway isn’t on the way to turning babyface then this match will have been very, very strange. If he does turn babyface, this was a good way to have done it. Two weeks later (on August 28), after defending the title against Dan Moloney, Damo was defeated in a Money in the Bank ripoff situation by Spike Trivet in four seconds. I’m guessing he dropped the title because he’s going back to WWE, but only time will tell. ***½
August 21, 2022 – Tower Hamlets, London
Ricky Knight Jr. def. Will Ospreay {RevPro Undisputed British Heavyweight Championship Match}
From RevPro Ten Year Anniversary. Last time around, Knight renamed his (defunct) SWE Southside Heavyweight Championship the RevPro British Heavyweight Championship. He was able to do so because real champ Ospreay was off in Japan for a long time. So Ospreay came back and beat Knight up for thirty minutes to put down the pretender, and then attacked Knight after the match was over. This was built up as a huge deal of a match, and Knight’s promo in the pre-match hype video was great. He’s dressed as a Mad Max villain. Ospreay comes out with the IWGP US title belt as well as the RevPro belt. I was very impressed by Knight here. There was never a moment during Ospreay’s control segments that Knight wasn’t actively on defense. If he wasn’t kicking at Ospreay from his back, he was scratching at Ospreay’s skin to get out of a choke hold. It was Bryan Danielson levels of activity to never let it seem as though he was just letting things happen to him. Overall, this was much more a cohesive match than their last. Knight was the obvious babyface from the beginning, fighting from behind the entire way. A couple of annoying ref bumps led to a very funny moment when Knight hit Ospreay with a title belt, then had to dive onto the belt like a grenade so the revived referee wouldn’t see it in the ring. The look of relief on Knight’s face when the ref turned to tend to Ospreay and he could dispose of the evidence was worth the lame, trite ref bumps. That and the amount of time it took them to set up a subsequent table spot on the floor were the only things I didn’t like in this match. Knight got back into the ring and got hit with all of Ospreay’s finishers, as well as a Rainmaker (Ospreay had called out Kazuchika Okada for an upcoming match the previous night), but kicked out of everything. Ospreay teased Kenny Omega’s finishers (Ospreay has an upcoming trios match against Omega in AEW), but the One Winged Angel was blocked. Knight hit Ospreay with the One Winged Angel and the for the win at 32:46. ****¼
August 24, 2022 – Cleveland, Ohio
Jon Moxley def. CM Punk {AEW World Championship Match}
From AEW Dynamite 151. It’s cute that they started this at the top of the second hour and emphasized that there was a sixty-minute time limit. The crowd was split while the wrestlers circled each other for thirty seconds (one-sixth of the match). They trade shots and the crowd turns on Punk. Punk re-injured his foot going for a spin kick, and it’s immediately clear it’s a work as the commentators play into it. I appreciate that, actually. Moxley lays in the unprotected elbows, works the foot, and then hits two Death Riders for the win at 3:10. Not bad for a surprising squash, though I don’t see how it makes sense for Punk to get a rematch now. **½
August 28, 2022 – Nagoya, Aichi
Hideyoshi Kamitani def. Abdullah Kobayashi {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From BJW Death Mania X. Drew Parker had been the reigning champion, but he vacated the title when his contract ended. They had the opportunity to simply move the title from him to his protege Yuki Ishikawa, but they had him beat Ishikawa and then leave the company without doing a job. The craziest thing about that to me is they put the title on him one week before he was set to leave. What is that about? Anyway, As you’ll see in the match reviewed after this one, things are still going well for him. Meanwhile, this is the finals of the Bloody Musou Tournament as well as a championship match. And given that we’re back to Kobayashi competing for the title, I’m still on the FREEDOMS is doing this better than BJW tip. Kobayashi spends the first five minutes of the match letting Kamitani do whatever he wants, because how else would Kobayashi get all bloody and gross? But he’s so passive that it looks absurd. Then, Kamitani lets Kobayashi do whatever he wants, but for a shorter period of time. The first ten minutes of the match are filled with nothing more than light tube shots until Kamitani mercifully hits a missile dropkick to remind me that this is meant to be wrestling. There’s a cute moment where Kamitani demands that Kobayashi throw light tubes at his back so he can no-sell it, but Kobayashi just casually walks to his front and hits him with the tubes. I’m surprised something in a Kobayashi match made me smile. They start throwing some of the dumbest looking lariats at each other that I’ve ever seen. Kamitani dumps lemon juice on Kobayashi’s bloody back and hits a vertical suplex for two. That should have been the finish. Instead, he hits an enziguri and a lariat right afterward for the anticlimactic win at 17:14. I’ve absolutely seen worse BJW death matches, but Parker’s recent stints with the title had raised my expectations of the BJW scene a bit. This did nothing to continue that. **
August 29, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan
Drew Parker def. Daisuke Masaoka {King of FREEDOM Championship Match}
From FREEDOMS/June Kasai’s Tokyo Death Match Carnival Vol. 2. There’s Drew! Both guys actually sell the light tube shots early in the match. Is that legal?! I’ve never seen that done in a death match before. I was very much enjoying the first ten minutes or so of dumb fun these guys were having, doing actual wrestling moves in between the bulb shots, until they spent a full minute setting up a spot where Parker hit a diving Swanton through a pane of glass onto Masaoka on the floor. The final spot looked cool, but the whole setup was done in slow motion and it totally took me out of the match. And I’m not sure I understand the logic of it, as it was Parker’s body that broke through the glass, not Masaoka. So wouldn’t Parker get the worst of it? I have similar critiques of the next highspot, which required a bunch of the folks at ringside to physically hold a ladder on top of a table so that Parker could hit another Swanton off of it without the ladder falling off. Then, Parker spends another eternity putting a pane of glass on some chairs. They fight up top to set up Masaoka hitting a Spanish Fly through the glass, but they slip off and have to repeat the spot. This match is cratering. They trade disgusting head shots with chairs, making this more of a real life death match than anything else I’ve seen in a long time. Parker hit a Styles Clash onto some tubes and then a Swanton Bomb with tubes on Masaoka’s chest for the win at 19:50. A few minutes of fun doesn’t change the fact that this totally fell off of a cliff halfway through. I had such high hopes, and I probably should not have. Better luck next time. **¼
From Diamond Ring Kensuke Office Changes. They emphasize that Nakajima beat Dragon Gate wrestler Kenichiro Arai
From Dynamite 131. This is a qualifying match for the Owen Hart Foundation tournament. Joe debuted at ROH Supercard of Honor, saving Jonathan Gresham from Jay Lethal (whose soul searching apparently led him to turn heel) & Sonjay Dutt after the main event. And now that ROH and AEW are the same thing, that seems worth mentioning. Caster’s pre-match rap was cute. This was real squashy, with Joe needing only two minutes to put Caster down with the Muscle Buster at 2:52. Lethal & Dutt pop up on the big screens and Lethal says he’d been trying to get a hold of Joe during his difficult soul searching time, and Joe never picked up. They have a present for Joe next week. N/A
From Dynamite 132. Jay Lethal & Sonjay Dutt were in the front row cheering on Joe. Sarcastically, probably, as they brawled with Joe at ROH Supercard of Honor XV.
From Rampage 39.
From Dynamite 137.
From Dynamite 138. This is a
From Double or Nothing.
From PWF York Cougar Football Fundraiser. I didn't know that this match happened until over a month after the fact. This started out as a non-title match, but we'll get to why I've listed it as a title match in a moment. FTR have Mick Foley in their corner while their opponents have Bill Behrens. I’ve never actually seen Behrens do an on-camera gig before. He's holding a tennis racket, presumably as an Umaga to Jim Cornette. But it's confusing because there was actually a tennis player named Bill Behrens. They announce this match as having a 20-minute time limit. Only 11 minutes in, they say there are three minutes remaining. Until then, this was as run-of-the-mill as a modern FTR match gets. But the announcement snapped everyone out of their heat-on-Wheeler funk and forced them to go for desperate pins. They announce ten seconds remaining a couple of times, but no one can get the roll up pin they're looking for. The 20-minute time limit expires at 1
From NXT UK 183. McGuinness started by essentially saying that Fraser is going to pee or poo himself during the match. Unnecessary. Had Shawn Michaels been game to have a good match against Vader, this is what it would have looked like. Actually, a more appropriate and modern analogue is Brock Lesnar vs. Seth Rollins from SummerSlam. Much like that match, Frazer used quick strikes and avoided his larger opponent’s signature big move to stay alive. Here it was the powerbomb whereas there it was suplexes. Here, Frazer also successfully damaged WALTER’s knee, which slowed the big man down and made it hard for WALTER to hit the powerbomb. Unfortunately for Frazer, WALTER was able to bide his time and clothesline Frazer’s legs out from under him. An inevitable powerbomb followed and won the match for WALTER at 14:02. I hate to say this because I’m happy that he’s healthier, but the way WALTER has slimmed down has taken some of the magic away from his aura. At least for me it has. That said, dude can clearly still go as well as ever in the ring. ****
From NXT 659. Strong was feeling it here, which is thanks in large part to the crowd being maniacally loud from the get go I’m sure. His whole game was fast and devastating stick and move attacks. That worked pretty well, as WALTER was dazed from time to time. But as with all good WALTER matches (which is pretty much all WALTER matches), everything WALTER does is devastating here so it takes very little for him to take back control. And eventually he did just that and hit the powerbomb for the win at 9:46 (shown of 12:18). After the match, WALTER gets on the microphone and says that his name is Gunther now. I did not think WALTER would be a victim of the renaming curse this far into his run. What will they rename Strong?! ***¾
From NXT UK 185. Andy Shepherd helpfully announces from inside the ring that the reason for the stipulation is that the feud has gotten so violent that it wouldn’t be safe to have fans around. Devlin says during the match that it’s because he thinks Dragunov could only muster the energy to win if he had the crowd behind him. I like that explanation a lot more. The only real reason I could think of to do this without fans is that there was a scheduling conflict with one of the wrestlers for the regular TV taping date and they needed to get this thing filmed. We just had such a long stretch of empty arena NXT UK episodes that I can’t imagine anyone was dying to get another taste of it. This aired the day after Adam Cole vs. Orange Cassidy in a match that was also no disqualification and falls count anywhere, and this served up everything I felt was missing from that match. Now you might say, “Brad, Cassidy is not the same kind of character as Devlin or Dragunov, how could you expect the same level of violence or intensity?” To that I say, when Cassidy started his match by breaking his own sunglasses and rapidly punching Cole, he was indicating that level of violence and/or intensity. And instead the match was mostly wacky. Anyway, this was not wacky. It was stiff and intense and featured weapons that made sense and spots the didn’t take forever to set up. Dragunov got in trouble when his eye injury acted up. Devlin took control and beat the crap out of him. I wasn’t wild about how meek Dragunov was when Devlin was zip tying his hands, but I did like that in the end it turned out to be an error on Devlin’s part anyway because Dragunov’s finisher requires no hands. And indeed, a bound Dragunov jumped off the steel steps (which had been brought into the ring) and hit the Torpedo Moskau on Devlin for the win at 21:43. NXT UK is still sneaking in these dope matches that no one is watching. Y’all should watch them. ****¼
From AAA Triplemania Regia. FTR come out with Vickie Guerrero. This was supposed to be explained at an earlier AAA taping but FTR and Guerrero all missed them. AAA is notorious for having this kind of luck/being incompetent lately. FTR is also wearing Eddie Guerrero tribute tights, with American flags on one side and flames on the other, I suppose to pay homage to his Gringos Locos and Latino Heat gimmicks. This match mostly sucked, but one cool spot saw FTR tie Pentagon’s mask to the ropes and force him to unmask with his hands over his face to stop them from climbing the ladder. That would have been a very meaningful moment to lead up to the Lucha Brothers winning the titles back, but unfortunately instead it led into nothing. He just got his mask back and the match continued on in its lame, derivative way. At one point, Pentagon was the only man standing, but instead of climbing the ladder he grabbed a table from the floor. So the titles mean enough to him that he’d unmask to stop his opponents from winning, but not enough for him to get the titles when he had a clear path to do it? Vickie powered Pentagon, causing him to voluntarily jump through the table and Harwood grabbed the belts at 12:12. This was abysmal. *
From AEW Full Gear. Silver was hamming it up a lot more here than he was the year before in New York. That said, this had stronger just-a-match vibes than the aforementioned match. After Silver ripped out Cassidy’s pockets, Cassidy turned up the heat and these guys put on a middle of the row undercard match. Not bad by any means, but nothing memorable either. Cassidy hit the Beach Break rather out of nowhere for the win at 9:42. **¾
From the second Honor Reigns Supreme. The commentators sold this as Gresham getting a big shot against a top ROH guy after being an also-ran in the Television Championship division for a while. This was terrific. Both guys did a fantastic job selling their respective targeted limbs, and Gresham in particular played the role of the tenacious underdog perfectly. He didn’t just watch to see where Lethal would have trouble executing his finisher because of the damage he’d done to the former ROH Champion’s arm, he pressed the assault whenever he could, taking out the arm to make sure the Lethal Injection would never come. But what he couldn’t do was stop Lethal from battering his knee and ultimately winning with a Figure 4 Leglock at 17:54. ****¼
From the second Masters of the Craft. Columbus has way more Gresham fans than Concord did. That’s a neat little advancement to the plot, innit? They both went after the same limbs that earned them dividends in their previous match. And then they went ahead and built an incredible match out of that story. At first it seemed as though Lethal wasn’t going to be able to get Gresham’s leg to give out. But about halfway through the match, Gresham’s knee was in trouble. Gresham was able to escape the leglock this time by using the momentum of Lethal pulling him away from the ropes to shift to an armbar. But Gresham’s focus on the arm bit him in the ass. Lethal went for the Lethal Injection and collapsed again, but when Gresham went for a roll up after that Lethal cut back on it for the win at 18:27. This is one of the best American examples that I've seen of a match building on the match that came before. Rather than try to outdo the maneuvers from their first meeting for the sake of a big crowd reaction, they adjust their game plans in logical ways that, to me, were just as exciting. I think this match is slept on, by virtue of the fact that I’ve never heard anything about it before watching it. ****½
From ROH Wrestling 364. In real life,
From Death Before Dishonor XVII. Gresham and Lethal had been teaming, but Gresham grew frustrated and started heeling. Ultimately, he turned on Lethal. It took them a little while to get there, but once they got into a groove this was exactly what I wanted from this match. It was back to their old tricks, with Lethal targeting the leg to set up for the Figure 4 Leglock and Gresham targeting the arm to block the Lethal Injection and set up for his Octopus. In the end, Lethal tried the cutback trick that worked for him in Columbus, but Gresham countered to a pin and then put on the gnarliest Octopus for his first win over Lethal at 17:20. This is the best kind of wrestling series. And none of it felt stale because it was a year after they’d wrestled last and because they found ways to energize the old tropes. And that’s not to mention Gresham busting out what I can only describe as a sumo-style assault. Gresham and Lethal make up after the match. ****
From ROH Wrestling 500. During the pandemic, ROH made the most of their empty arena shows by kicking them off with a tournament to crown a champion for the revived Pure Championship. Gresham won the tournament, and this was his fourth defense of the title. Lethal and Gresham were still allies here. In an interesting move, the other match on this milestone episode was two other partners fighting in Jay and Mark Briscoe. They cut to a commercial break about six minutes in, though the action didn’t get beyond (admittedly fast-moving) mat wrestling until the 10-minute mark. That had me thinking this was going to go long, but things took a different turn. Both guys had abused the other’s shoulders, and Lethal used that to his advantage best. He forced Gresham to use his first rope break to stop a pin, and his second to escape a crab. Then, he used the failed Lethal Injection to bait Gresham into a crossface, forcing the champ to use his final rope break. But he made the mistake of giving Gresham a breather and was quickly caught in a head scissor takedown giving Gresham the winning pin at 14:06 (shown of 16:40). For an empty arena match, this held my attention. It was totally different than their previous matches while still using a couple elements from the rivalry to elevate it just a bit. Not essential viewing, but if you’re working your way through their series you shouldn’t skip it. ***¼ 


