Seven years after Dave Prazak and Allison Corino started the women’s wrestling promotion SHIMMER, Sal Hamouie (who I was familiar with as the owner of Full Impact Pro, which was like a mini-Ring of Honor based in Florida that is now just another local indie) decided to get in on the game with SHINE. Hamouie and Prazak were presumably buds, as Prazak had worked extensively in FIP. The two companies didn’t compete (SHINE was based in Florida, SHIMMER in Illinois), and sometimes worked together. To be honest, both were a combination of GLOW (though not much more than in their names paying homage to GLOW) and Japanese women’s wrestling companies (or joshi, for the nerds). Plus they really couldn’t compete, because they used the same talent.
One place where the talent didn’t overlap was in the champion department. Only one woman to date has held both the SHIMMER and SHINE Championships. Let’s look at SHINE now (I know it’s weird to do this out of order but I just finished Dragon Gate, which led me to Dragon Gate USA, which led me to this through the WWN connection) and SHIMMER in a few weeks.
July 12, 2013 – Ybor City, Florida
Rain def. Mia Yim {SHINE Championship Match}
From SHINE 11, the finals of a tournament to crown the first champ. Rain had April Hunter and Ivelisse (part of her Valkyrie stable) in her corner, but authority figure Lexie Fyfe banned them from ringside. Yim as a plucky babyface is so weird. I’ve always felt that Rain looks bored during her matches, but she didn’t look bored here. I heard that this tournament was kind of a drag, but both these women put in a lot of effort in the main event. Almost to the point that I think Yim may have regressed since debuting in WWE, a few good performances aside. The finish came sort of out of nowhere, but I liked everything else. Rain hit the Raindrop DDT for the win at 14:38. ***¼
January 24, 2014 – Ybor City, Florida
Ivelisse def. Rain {SHINE Championship Match}
From SHINE 16. Ivelisse and Rain were both still in Valkyrie here, and this match was booked as a punishment to the group for Rain pretending to retire and then deciding not to. I’m all for hyping up your main event as much as possible, so Lenny Leonard on commentary comparing Valkyrie to the Four Horsemen doesn’t bother me. And while it’s not like Sting and Ric Flair had a ton of amazing matches against each other (the first Clash of the Champions was good and then it was all downhill), it still seems like a high bar for Rain and Ivelisse to clear. They tease a fingerpoke finish, but they’re just trolling the fans. Then Rain tried to get a quick win, which pissed off Ivelisse enough for them to start having a real match. The match started a little sloppy, but once it turned from a heel vs. heel thing to an Ivelisse is turning babyface thing while Valkyrie looks on worried it picked up a lot. Ivelisse hit the Code Red for the win at 15:41. After the match, Rain says that she’s happy as long as the title is in Valkyrie… but then she kicks Ivelisse out of Valkyrie and they beat her up. That was cleverly done. Serena Deeb leads a group of babyfaces out to make the save, but then Deeb attacks ivelisse and joins Valkyrie. Ooh, how layered and well-paced. ***¼
November 16, 2014 – Haidian, Beijing
Mia Yim def. Ivelisse {SHINE Championship Match}
From WWNLive Supershow in Beijing. It seems like they drew a decent sized crowd for this show (unlike the other shows on the China tour), but the building is so big that it feels like an empty arena match regardless. This felt like an error of judgement on a couple of levels. There was certainly plenty of effort from both women in the match, but by the end that effort looked forced. Ivelisse feeding herself from the second turnbuckle into Yim’s package piledriver finish was particularly cooperative-looking. Yim won the title at 10:05 to zero fanfare. The crowd reacted as if it were just any match ending, and not the company’s top babyface winning the title for the first time. They had a whole tour to do this change like it was a big deal, but decided to put it in the middle of the show where the main event would also see a (more important) title change. Didn’t work. I wish they’d done anything to play up that this was Ivelisse’s third title defense in four shows, but it was Yim who had the exhaustion spots. **¾
April 3, 2015 – Ybor City, Florida
Santana Garrett def. Mia Yim {SHINE Championship vs.
NWA World Women’s Championship Match
}
From SHINE 26. The NWA women’s title starts revolving around the SHINE title here, and continues to whenever someone named Jazz isn’t champion. There’s a weird exchange between the commentators here about how, “girls don’t like to be called heavyweights.” Like, I don’t know maybe that’s generally true, but is that something you want said by your commentator on a women’s wrestling show. I guess male wrestlers are often called the boys, so everyone is infantilized in this business at least. This was good fun, but nothing mind blowing. They did a lot of stuff but nothing really connected to anything else. They also did a spot where Garrett hit a superplex on Yim, but Yim went for a pin right after and in order for that to work Garrett had to feed Yim her leg for no (kayfabe) reason. Usually I’m able to move past that kind of thing without noticing but it was very obvious here. Garrett, unphased, got the win moments later with the Shining Star Press at 17:42. ***
December 11, 2015 – Ybor City, Florida
Taylor Made def. Santana Garrett {SHINE Championship Match}
From Shine 31. This sucked. I don’t understand why Made, who by most accounts was never great, was crowned champion. This match did nothing to make her coronation seem deserved. She was basic and boring in control, and not much better during Garrett’s one spirited comeback. She won after So Cal Val pulled the ref to stop the count after the Shining Star Press followed by a brass knuckle shot for the pin at 10:35. What a bummer of a main event. I guess the gimmick was that Valkyrie, much larger and led by Val, had all the gold. But why not have the recently heel turned Yim join the group and win back the title? I dunno. Blah. **
June 17, 2016 – Ybor City, Florida
Ivelisse def. Taylor Made, Allysin Kay, and Madison Eagles {Shine Championship vs. TNA Knockouts Championship Match}
From SHINE 35. Eagles was the SHIMMER champ and Kay was the TNA champ. This was set to be a triple threat match among the three champions, but Ivelisse came out shortly after the match began and cashed in a Money in the Bank rip off briefcase to join in. She won the briefcase earlier in the show. I’d find that annoying, but if there’s ever a time to use this gimmick to enter a match, it’s when three titles are up for grabs. This is one-fall to a finish, where the loser of the fall loses her title. I was trying to think of any reason why anyone would try to pin Ivelisse, and in a longer match it would have been cool to see someone get desperate just to get out of the match with her title in hand and pin the non-champ. This wasn’t that nuanced. What this did have was mindless brawling in the beginning which I didn’t like, but then a very choreographed second half which I did like. In the end, Ivelisse put Made in an armbar/cloverleaf combo for the win at 12:36. The finish was lame for a couple of reasons. The first was that Ivelisse mugged for a while after hitting an exploder before putting on the submission. It’s a title match with two women who could come in at any time to break up the hold, so why waste time? Second, Kay stopped Eagles from making the save. Why would she do that? Kay hadn’t been in any serious trouble that would suggest she was desperate for the match to end even if she couldn’t win. Eh, points for the stuff they did well. ***
January 13, 2017 – Ybor City, Florida
LuFisto def. Allysin Kay and Mercedes Martinez {SHINE Championship Triple Threat Match}
From SHINE 40. Ivelisse was too injured to defend the title (I’m very used to that from her Lucha Underground run), so she was stripped of the belt earlier in the evening. LuFisto was supposed to challenge, and the other two got a shot I’d presume because they were set to fight each other in the semi main event. I was really enjoying this until they killed it with a finish that made no sense. Martinez had Kay pinned, but LuFisto put her hands on the pin (after the ref had already started counting mind you) and somehow that made her the winner at 17:53. Never mind that in any other match and also at many points in this match, touching someone pinning someone else means the count is stopped because it’s a broken pin. I hate it. As for the rest of the match, it was pretty cool. Kay and Martinez kept one-upping each other in their abuse of LuFisto before turning their attention to each other. There were plenty of ways for them to have the two rivals tire each other out and have LuFisto take advantage to win that didn’t make zero sense, but they went with this. ***¼
September 8, 2018 – Queens, California
Allysin Kay def. Mercedes Martinez {SHINE Championship Match}
From SHINE 53, the finals of a tournament to crown a new champion. LuFisto had dominated with the title for a year and a half, but got injured in a tag match in a different company (burst eardrum apparently) and wasn’t allowed to fly. This was pretty good; it was a lot better than their match the following year would be. That’s saying something, because they’d both wrestled earlier on this show and would be fresh in the 2019 match. Kay won with a rather weak looking toehold at 14:36. ***
April 5, 2019 – Queens, New York
Miyu Yamashita def. Allysin Kay {SHINE Championship vs. Princess of Princess Championship Match}
From WWNLive Supershow Mercury Rising. Mercedes Martinez threatened Kay before the match. This was a good time. They treated it like a big deal and kicked the crap out of each other. Kay did a good job looking like someone who was taken by surprise by a woman better than she expected. Yamashita caught her with a series of kicks and then finished her off with the TRF at 13:24. Kay freaks out after the match, so Yamashita tells her to come to Japan to get her title back. ***½
May 6, 2019 – Sapporo, Hokkaido
Allysin Kay def. Miyu Yamashita {SHINE Championship Match}
From TJP Girls Shining, I Will Fly to Sapporo! Yamashita had lost the Princess of Princess Championship three days before this. On the plus side, Kay playing up her heel shtick here gave this a bit of flavor. But on the minus, they spent a lot of time on the floor doing stuff that the hard cam didn’t pick up. Also it ended very abruptly when Kay hit a lariat for the win at 13:17. Kind of weirdly paced, but not bad. ***
December 13, 2019 – Livonia, Michigan
Mercedes Martinez def. Allysin Kay {SHINE Championship vs. Career Match}
From SHINE 63. This didn’t do it for me. It started out strong, with a lot of brawling around the ring in a way that let you feel the hatred between the two. But then it devolved into outright silliness when Marti Belle and Jayme Jameson interfered on Kay’s behalf. They bumped the ref and beat on Mercedes for what felt like a long time but was probably under a minute. Then a couple babyfaces chased the heels off and Martinez got a Dragon Sleeper for the win and the title at 13:47. But just like when she lost the title to Yamashita, Kay didn’t appear to actually quit. I wonder if that’s an NWA saving face thing. **½
December 14, 2019 – Chicago, Illinois
Ivelisse def. Mercedes Martinez {SHINE Championship Match}
From SHINE 64. Even with the prolonged finish, this was the best Ivelisse singles match I’ve seen. I didn’t know she had it in her. Throughout her entire Lucha Underground run, I found her to be boring at best and embarrassing at worst. But here she put on a match worthy of the main event. But then Martinez got her bell run against the post and the match came to a screeching halt. I’m not clear on whether she was legit knocked out, but if she wasn’t she sold a head injury better than anyone I’ve ever seen. After taking a lifetime to get back into the ring, Ivelisse hit her with a knee to the head (why?) and rolled her up (with a lame attempt at getting her feet on the ropes) for the win at 17:03. A very good match marred by a bad finish that was probably caused by a real injury. Or maybe not, as Ivelisse reported to NXT a few weeks after this, so maybe it was just a way of writing her out of the company. Either way it didn’t come off right. ***
WWN could have been what CyberFight is, and they certainly tried to be. By having SHINE be an extension of EVOLVE, Dragon Gate USA, FIP, and whatever else was under their banner they probably could have put on some fun supercards. But WWN has always been a very low rent operation, at least in appearance. And now WWE has bought out their most recognizable brands. Not to say that those brands were tearing things up before, but now all they have is Eddie Kingston-produced indie cards. Anyway, SHINE was good without being memorable, and I’ll be curious to see how it compares to SHIMMER.