History of the World Championships | 2022 – December

This is going to be my last title change post. It’s been getting less fun each month to track these down, in large part because some of the more obscure championships I decided to follow are getting harder to find. Specifically, I’ve had to give up on Tenryu Project, PURE-J, and BASARA, and those are just off the top of my head. There are others that happened completely under the radar like OTT and FIP, and I just couldn’t be bothered to go back and review the ones I found out about months after the fact. Except PWG, that I made a point of reviewing. So we’ll wrap things up and hope that 2022 ends with some dope title changes.

December 2, 2022 – Tyrone, Georgia 

Anthony Henry def. Adam Priest {ACTION Championship Match}
From ACTION Bangers Only 3. I was surprised to read that this match was so short, but it all made sense when I fired this up and saw that there was a decently long pre-match brawl around the ring. It didn’t do the match any favors, as the first few minutes of the match proper saw them reverse each other’s holds and fight over a backslide. Then they got back to the nastiness as Henry tied Priest in the ropes and hit him with a bunch of superkicks before finishing him off with a DDT at 7:48. I like that the commentators pointed out that those superkicks were technically illegal and the referee was making a very odd choice by not disqualifying Henry. The disjointed action was all fun, and Henry came out of the match looking like a jerk. Not the best match I’ve seen but good from a character perspective. **¾

December 10, 2022 – Arlington, Texas

Claudio Castangoli def. Chris Jericho {ROH World Championship Match}
From ROH Final Battle. So right off of the bat, I loved the finish. Castagnoli got Jericho in the Giant Swing and kept it going for so long that Jericho tapped to it at 17:05. The rest of the match was a spirited heavyweight style match. I wish it had been more one-sided for Castagnoli given the way Jericho never fit the mold of ROH Champion, and his current gimmick is sort of an anti-ROH gimmick. But that was never going to happen because Jericho is the most influential person in Tony Khan land. I’m not sure what the point of just getting the belt back on Castagnoli is when returning to the status quo means that Jericho’s title reign didn’t get anyone over except his own old ass. On top of that, the reign was so forgettable that I already can barely remember what their Grand Slam match was like. But I know in my heart I liked this better than that. ***½

December 13, 2022 – Orlando, Florida 

Roxanne Perez def. Mandy Rose {NXT Women’s Championship Match}
From NXT 710. Save for a bit early on when they were blatantly pausing the match to call spots, this was a perfect little ditty to finally get the title off of Rose. Perez fought from behind the whole match but looked strong while doing it. She kicked out of Rose’s finisher and then quickly recovered to hit the Pop Rocks for the win at 7:10 (shown of 9:38). Rose got fired either that night or the day after for posting racy (but I believe not-nude) photos to an OnlyFans knockoff site. I dunno, seems like a dumb reason to fire someone who wrestles in very little clothes. So that’s why this happened earlier than it was presumably going to. ***

December 17, 2022 – Tower Hamlets, London 

Great-O-Khan def. Zak Knight {RevPro Undisputed British Heavyweight Championship Match}
From RevPro Uprising. The heel authority figure Gideon Gray forced Zak Knight to represent injured champion Ricky Knight Jr in this match. Ricky Knight seems to have gotten injured in a match against Zak Knight, who is also his brother and the guy Jack Lowden played in Fighting with My Family. The commentators bring that up a lot during the introductions. This went on third from last, which I guess is fine given that it’s a title change with a heel win over not-the-champion. Speaking of which, they didn’t pay up Zak’s unique position for most of the match. They just worked a normal match during which GOK dominated. When Ricky did get involved, it was to cheat to keep Zak in the match one time, and then to watch without emotion as GOK hit the Eliminator for the win at 15:42. That’s a cool move, but this was way more anemic than any title change should be. I wonder if this will usher in another stint of this title being defended in New Japan. **½

December 23, 2022 – Irvine, California

Danny Limelight def. Jordan Clearwater {UWN World Championship Match}
From UWN Championship Wrestling 593. This was a good, ‘80s WWF main event style match, and it did a good job of getting the small crowd sounding like a much larger ‘80s WWF crowd. Limelight got his ass kicked for a good long time thanks to Talos at ringside and thanks to Limelight’s size and strength. He made a great comeback beginning with a bodyslam of all things, which was a delight. On offense, he picked up the pace and brought the match into a more modern place with some high flying. Limelight’s Bodega allies came out to drag Talos to the back and keep the crowd screaming. Clearwater took over again, probably for a bit too long, but that’s the only criticism I have of this match. Two more attempts at a rear naked choke led to Limelight winning the title at 26:03. This was incredibly well-worked, and a total surprise as I was all but completely unfamiliar with both guys. Worth checking out as it’s streaming free on YouTube, if you can handle all the ads that UWN/Memphis Wrestling slapped on top of it. ****

December 27, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan 

Mizuki Watase def. Hartley Jackson {Spirit of Ganbare World Openweight Championship Match}
From Ganbare Pro Giri Giri Chop! Jackson did a lot of weird crowd work before the match. This started out alright, but lost steam within the first ten minutes. The desire to see Jackson channel real Vader energy is strong, but he doesn’t really have the goods. When he does eventually sell (which he did too early in the match) he looks like a goof. Watase also looked out of his element a few times during the match. I did dig his missile dropkick to the floor though. I don’t see enough missile dropkicks these days. My main problem with this match was that I didn’t buy the finish. With the exception of a couple of missile dropkicks mid-match, Watase got his ass beat the entire time. Then, all of a sudden at the end he arbitrarily no-sold a piledriver (which had worked on him just fine earlier on), and then hit a bunch of weak elbows for the win at 17:20. Jackson got to his feet right after the bell, but he didn’t look like he was realistically being pinned regardless. This was meant to be a big triumphant finish, but it fell flat for me. **¾

December 28, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan

Arisa Nakajima def. Hiroyo Matsumoto {SEAdLINNNG Beyond the Sea Championship Match}
From SEAdLINNNG Of The Year 2022! This was Matsumoto’s first defense against the woman who had to vacate the title previously due to injury. The funniest thing about a clap-only crowd is when something happens that makes it so they can’t help but audibly gasp. In this case it was Nakajima almost wiping out while climbing the turnbuckle. It’s nice to know they care about her well being. I loved the energy both of these women brought to the match, with one glaring exception. Every once in a while they’d stop whatever they were doing so they could stare at each other and then trade elbows to the face. Why halt the momentum of the match like that? I don’t even mean that the action naturally flowed into an exchange of strikes. They literally just stopped to stare and then elbow. I don’t like arbitrary strike exchanges to begin with because it’s almost never advantageous to let your opponent hit you in the face, but this was particularly egregious. The rest of the match was quite good though, with Matsumoto refusing to let Nakajima see her in any pain in an attempt to psych out the challenger. But Nakajima fought through it, as she fights through all things, and hit a series of diving double stomps to finally make the champion wince and wail. Nakajima put Matsumoto away with the DxD at 22:05. ***½

December 29, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan 

Giulia def. Syuri {World of Stardom Championship Match}
From Stardom Dream Queendom. Syuri has held the title since winning it at this event a year ago in a match that was my second favorite title change of 2021. Giulia’s Toni Storm cosplay is neat. Things started out intense and fast, and not long into the match Giulia hit a northern lights suplex off of the ramp onto a row of chairs. Who needs a long career? Not these two, I guess. Syuri responds with a piledriver through a table. That gets us through the first ten minutes of the match, and now things get focused. The match never got boring, but it did kind of turn into a New Japan main event style situation for me after a while. There didn’t feel like there was a ton of rhyme or reason to the shifts in power, which was made less annoying because when the shifts did occur because of a great counter, it was a really great counter. So while this was certainly epic and worthy of its spot, I preferred last year’s main event. Giulia won the title with a Glorious Northern Light Bomb at 29:51. ****

Charlotte Flair also beat Ronda Rousey for the WWE Smackdown Women’s Championship in a 40-second impromptu match after Rousey had defended her title against Raquel Rodriguez. Why did Rousey, who could barely get through a 10-second promo without slurring her words, agree to a match? No idea. Whole thing was pretty dumb, and a terrible way to end the reign of a supposedly unstoppable champion. 

December 31, 2022 – Worcester, Massachusetts 

Matt Tremont def. AC Mack, Adam Priest, Alex Shelley, Hoodfoot, Tracy Williams, Trish Adora, and WARHORSE {IWTV Independent Wrestling World Championship Gauntlet Match}
From IWTV Class of ’22. Krule was injured in a match against Tremont and vacated the title. So now this. The four former champs will wrestle first, then the four people who have not held the title before. Should be the other way around. Shelley and Williams start things off. They have an above-average match that is paced very well as an opener to a gauntlet. The problem is that the crowd isn’t invested yet because there are so many more guys that will be involved. The other problem is that while a roll up with both guys’ shoulders being pinned is a logical way to end a shortish opening segment, Williams was clearly just as pinned as Shelley and his advancement to the next segment doesn’t make sense. Mack attacks from behind to start his participation. That would have worked a lot better if Williams had won in a less inadvertently heelish way. Mack hits the Mack 10 after a couple of minutes to eliminate Williams. If the finish to the Williams/Shelley bit was a mistake, and given how quickly Williams went out after it, they should have called an audible and just started with Mack and WARHORSE next. So WARHORSE comes out and takes Mack around the building for a brawl. Why didn’t they get counted out? The referee has been counting people out on the floor aside from in this moment. Garbage. Mack tapped out to a Sharpshooter after a few minutes. Mack hit WARHORSE with the Mack 10 on his way out, making things easy for his friend Priest. Priest quickly hit a DDT to eliminate WARHORSE. Adora came out next. Her vs. Priest winds up being the longest segment of the match at just under 17 minutes. It feels much longer because the crowd never gets behind Adora. You would think there were Japanese no-cheering restrictions in place given how muted these fans were. And then after all that, Priest just gets a roll up with a rope-assist to cheaply eliminate Adora. Snooze. Hoodfoot is out next. He drags Priest to the outside of the building, but again there is no double count out. In fact, the referee checks on Priest on the outdoor steps. Hoodfoot has the same reaction as me, apparently, because he demands the referee get in the ring and count Priest out. Thank god. How is this not a heel ref angle? Priest is bloody, but attacks Hoodfoot from behind and Hoodfoot gets eliminated by count out. This match is lame. I get that they were trying to make Priest as big of a heel as possible, but having the referee not be implicit makes the whole thing just feel inconsistent. Priest attacks Tremont during his entrance. They bleed and brawl on the floor and magically the count outs are no longer happening. A couple of chairs are used because this is now no-disqualification apparently? It’s never stated. Tremont hits a powerbomb for the win at 51:55. I hated a lot of this. **

There was a wXw title change that won’t air for a few weeks and a Sendai Girls title change that I haven’t been able to track down yet too. I might come back and add them in later. But that’s all for now, folks. Well, so as to not go out on a sour note, here’s my top 10 title changes of the year: 

1. March 20, 2022 – Camden, London Jonathan Gresham vs. Cara Noir {ROH World Championship vs. PROGRESS World Championship Match}
2. August 21, 2022 – Tower Hamlets, London Ricky Knight Jr. vs. Will Ospreay {RevPro Undisputed British Heavyweight Championship Match}
3. September 4, 2022 – Hoffman Estates, Illinois CM Punk vs. Jon Moxley {AEW World Championship Match}
4. June 26, 2022 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Fred Rosser vs. Tom Lawlor {NJPW STRONG Openweight Championship Match}
5. March 5, 2022 – Oberhausen, North Rhine-Westphalia Tristan Archer vs. Axel Tischler vs. Jurn Simmons vs. Levaniel {wXw Unified World Championship Four Way Match}
6. September 4, 2022 – Orlando, Florida Bron Breakker vs. Tyler Bate {NXT Championship vs. NXT UK Championship Match}
7. December 23, 2022 – Irvine, California Danny Limelight vs. Jordan Clearwater {UWN World Championship Match}
8. November 19, 2022 – Newark, New Jersey MJF vs. Jon Moxley {AEW World Championship Match}
9. January 4, 2022 – Orlando, Florida Bron Breakker vs. Tommaso Ciampa
10. September 18, 2022 – Tokyo Japan Kento Miayahara vs. Suwama {AJPW Triple Crown Championship Match}

And here’s 7 more I liked a lot because why not?

April 2, 2022 – Arlington, Texas Bianca Belair vs. Becky Lynch {WWE Raw Women’s Championship Match}
September 21, 2022 – Queens, New York Jon Moxley vs. Bryan Danielson {AEW World Championship Match}
June 19, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan Jake Lee vs. Kento Miyahara {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
January 4, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan Kazuchika Okada vs. Shingo Takagi {IWGP World Heavyweight Championship Match}
March 20, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan Tetsuya Endo vs. Konosuke Takeshita {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
April 23, 2022 – Poughkeepsie, New York Josh Alexander vs. Moose {Impact World Championship Match}
September 1, 2022 – Newham London Tyler Bate vs. Trent Seven {NXT UK Championship Match}