For weeks, it looked like this would be a very quiet month for title changes. And then Japan decided that all titles must move in the last week of the year. I mean damn.
December 4, 2021 – Monterrey, Nuevo Leon
El Hijo del Vikingo def. Bandido, Bobby Fish, Jay Lethal, and Samuray del Sol {AAA Mega Championship Five Way Match}
From AAA TripleMania Regia. This was originally going to be Vikingo winning the title from Kenny Omega. But Omega took time off to deal with injuries and vacated the title, which is pretty lame in hindsight as they could have had him drop the title to Andrade el Idolo at TripleMania. Whatever, AAA is apparently not good in general. Vikingo came into this with his
recently won Crash Heavyweight Championship
belt. Like the match that saw Vikingo win his other title, the best parts of this were between him and Bandido. In fact, there was a portion featuring just the other three guys that was sloppy and rather embarrassing. Why couldn’t this just have been Bandido vs. Vikingo for the title? This was Fish and Lethal’s first time ever in AAA, and SdS hadn’t worked in AAA for almost ten years (and had only worked a handful of matches there in the first place). I don’t know why I’m all worked up over the booking, but I will say I the pared down version surely would have made for a better match. The match was all over the place, with spots that didn’t build on each other, and many that weren’t executed well. Some of it was alright, Vikingo in particular seemed to have trouble pulling off the finish, which was a complicated triple jump moonsault followed by an inverted 450 splash on SdS at 15:11. Bandido kept Lethal from breaking up that final pin and then celebrated Vikingo’s win. I don’t understand AAA. ***
December 11, 2021 – Baltimore, Maryland
Jonathan Gresham def. Jay Lethal {ROH World Championship Match}
From ROH Final Battle: End of an Era. This is potentially the final ROH match ever. I want to say I’m surprised at being moved by the love I’ve seen all over the place for ROH as it might be reaching its end, but why should I be surprised? ROH is a huge factor in the formation of some of my closest friendships, and has provided me with many of the most memorable live wrestling experiences I’ve had. Bandido tested positive for COVID-19. He was set to defend the title against Gresham, but had to cancel off of the show. They handled that in a rather interesting way, bringing Lethal back from AEW for this match, determining that it was for the ROH Championship and putting the classic (in my opinion, iconic) title design on the line, but (I believe) never explicitly stating that Bandido had been stripped of the title. So if ROH does come back, you’ve got a potential unification match right out of the gate. And if not, the company ended by rewarding one of its top loyal guys.
Lethal came into this match leading his lifetime series against Gresham 3-2
, though Gresham’s wins had come more recently. This played to me like more of a greatest hits from their previous matches than it did an epic main event to close out 20 years of Ring of Honor. That said, it ended on a nice emotional note, with Gresham celebrating in a way that should make anyone get emotional. Also, they threw in a new chicken wing spot that was pretty damn dope. But this felt like it had at least five more minutes of gas left in it and it would have been cool for them to play that out. Gresham locked Lethal in his Octopus to finally win the title at 15:11. It’s pretty neat that Impact and AEW had/allowed Eddie Edwards, Adam Page, Jimmy Jacobs, CM Punk, Adam Cole, the Young Bucks, and Bryan Danielson to send in video messages talking about what ROH meant to them. It’s also pretty neat that they set up feuds for the Women’s Champion (in Impact), the Tag Team Champions (in AEW), and potentially the World Champion that can carry the name of the company through the potential four-month hiatus if the company ever comes back. I have to imagine Gresham will be defending the title in Terminus, or at least I hope he will. ***¾
December 12, 2021 – Clearwater, Florida
Ivelisse def. Natalia Markova {SHINE Championship Match}
From SHINE 70. These two have good chemistry, though now that I’ve seen two matches between them it’s becoming clear that Markova is bringing more of what makes these matches fun to the table. After last month’s crappy finish, it’s no surprise that Ivelisse got a rematch. But I’d love to know the thought process behind putting the belt back on her so soon. Markova is just a lot more interesting in the ring. Anyway, they put on an equally entertaining match here, perhaps a half step below, but had another crummy finish. In fact, this finish was worse. Whereas last month it just looked like Ivelisse was being unprofessional in the way she handled the clean, losing pin, here the WOAD came out to distract the referee while Ivelisse wrapped her hand in a foreign object and whacked Markova with it for the win at 14:22. I’m kind of surprised AEW didn’t sign her after getting a look at her over the summer, though it seems that she might be working NWA shows more often now. She’s good, someone sign her up. ***
December 12, 2021 – Tinsley Park, Illinois
Will Ospreay def. Trey Miguel and Blake Christian {Warrior Wrestling Championship Triple Threat Match}
From Warrior Wrestling 17. Ospreay and Miguel had a belt-off, with Ospreay entering the match holding his fake IWGP title and both PROGRESS titles, while Miguel had the WW belt and Impact X DIvision belt. Christian has no belts and is clearly here to move the title without the New Japan guy pinning the Impact guy. This match is chock full of lame posing. You know the kind, the goofy anime/superhero wannabe crap that Ospreay gets made fun of for a lot. But all three guys do it a ton here. It looks so stupid, and always makes me think that the guys doing it are just this dweeb with muscles. There as also a ton of guys standing around waiting for their opponent to do something to them. At one point, Miguel disappeared for a long stretch with no real explanation. At another point, Christian got the better of the much larger Ospreay in an elbow exchange. How does that make sense? Moments later, Ospreay magically recovered from a 450 Splash to hit Christian (who’d just been hit by Miguel’s Meteora) with the Hidden Blade for the win at 19:00. As you can probably guess, I found this to be pretty bad despite the athletic ability of all involved. **
December 25, 2021 – Osaka, Osaka
TORU def. Akira Jo {VKF King Of Wrestle Naniwa Championship Match}
From VKF Over the Limit. Shigehiro Irie and Daisuke Sekimoto both appeared in VKF for the first time in many years on this show. That’s a couple of good gets. Jo continued to be unimpressive to me, so I’m glad he’s no longer champ. Imagine someone cosplaying Mad Blankey but not being good enough to be in the group. I’ll say this for the match though, Jo did enough in the closing stretch that I bought some of the near falls despite knowing full well that TORU was going to win this match. After all, why else would I be reviewing it? TORU came back with a Shining Wizard and two brainbusters to win the title at 19:39. **½
December 25, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan
Jun Kasai def. Violento Jack {King of FREEDOM World Championship Match}
From FREEDOMS Blood X’Mas. Both of these guys have had matches for the title that I’ve liked a lot. They are some of the best deathmatches I’ve ever seen. But as a pair, their worst impulses are realized. Thankfully those impulses don’t include Abdullah Kobayashi style light-tube silliness, though light tubes did come into play here. But they don’t make the meaningless breaking of tubes the centerpiece of the match. Rather, escalating spots off of the turnbuckle onto various objects was the centerpiece of this match, much like it was for their 2016 title change. And while some of those stunts are breathtaking, and it’s commendable that they make these stunts gory while keeping the action moving (and thus not making my stomach turn), I find my mind drifting because there’s no compelling story around who is going to win the match. A lot of that is because after a big move off of the top through an object, both guys generally recover at the same pace every time. That’s dumb, quite frankly. Kasai won with the Cross-Arm-Style Stimulation, which is probably more dangerous than any of the deathmatch weapons used throughout the match, at 22:56. ***
December 26, 2021 – Fukuoka, Fukuoka
KAI def. YAMATO {Open the Dream Gate Championship Match}
From Dragon Gate Final Gate. YAMATO is in High End, KAI is in RED. KAI becomes only the third Dragon Gate Champion to not be part of the Dragon System after Magnitude Kishiwada and Jushin Liger. I guess he’s the fourth if you count Masaaki Mochizuki, but I don’t because that’s like saying Bron Breakker isn’t part of the WWE system because he wrestled a little bit before getting signed. Anyway, this was notable to me because a non-Toryumon/DG trained wrestler hasn’t been champion in over 14 years. I found this match kind of frustrating. Since the story was that KAI completely had YAMATO’s number, it felt very long at thirty minutes. They got the point across pretty much right away, and I didn’t need to see a dozen different ways in which KAI cut off YAMATO’s momentum almost immediately. Some of it was cool, but after a while it felt repetitive. It didn’t help that the crowd could only clap. When big things happened like KAI hitting YAMATO with a brainbuster on the floor, the crowd could only be silent and couldn’t boo. I did like the finish, which saw YAMATO getting a little traction with successive Gallerias, but KAI countering one to his own finisher and then spamming it to the point that YAMATO might counter, only to change things a bit and hit the Meteor Impact for the win at 27:16. This probably could have been a lot better if they’d cut up to ten minutes. ***½
December 29, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan
Arisa Nakajima def. Ryo Mizunami {Beyond the Sea Championship Match}
From SEAdLINNNG Final Battle. This match did that annoying thing where the time keeper announced that twenty minutes had passed and the wrestlers very obviously took that as their cue to wind the match down. It irks me when it’s obvious. The story of the second half of this match was that Mizunami made it very difficult for Nakajima to hit the DxD, but the challenger eventually found a way to hit it for the win at 21:01. I liked watching Mizunami bully Nakajima, and could have used a bit more of a dominant performance from her. But Nakajima is the legacy star so that’s not quite what we got. Either way, it was a fun, though not a blockbuster, main event. ***½
December 29, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan
Syuri def. Utami Hayashita {World of Stardom Championship vs. SWA World Championship Match}
From Stardom Ryogoku Dream Queendom. The balls on Stardom for using My Way by Limp Bizkit in the match hype video and suggesting that this is as big of a deal as Rock vs. Steve Austin from WrestleMania XVII. And what a testament to the power of nostalgia that such a terrible song gets such a strong reaction from my guts. The SWA title is basically an intercontinental title that Stardom established during a European tour in conjunction with a few European companies and a women’s lucha company in Mexico. Syuri came into this with that title. These two wrestled for 45 minutes to a double KO a few months back, and then a 20-minute draw after that. I would like the wrestling world to watch this as a great example of how to work a headlock. Do I, a person with no combat experience, know if these two used proper technique? No, but what I do know is that it looked like they were trying to hurt each other with headlocks. I liked it. Judging by the response I’ve seen to this match, I’d probably like it more if I was more familiar with their previous matches. That said, it was pretty dope even taken out of context. There wasn’t a single boring minute in this match, or anything particularly silly. They just beat the hell out of each other for the length of one-and-a-half episodes of New Girl. Nothing to complain about there. Syuri caught Hayashishita with two spinning backfists and the Red World for the win at 36:33. ****½
So in the end we got what will perhaps wind up being a historic match from ROH and a great match from Stardom. Not much else. It’s the end of the year, so here are my top 10 title changes of 2021.
- WALTER vs. Ilja Dragunov – NXT UK Championship
- Utami Hayashishita vs. Syuri – World of Stardom Championship
- Masato Tanaka vs. Takashi Sugiura – ZERO1 World Heavyweight Championship
- Shun Skywalker vs. YAMATO – Open the Dream Gate Championship
- Sasha Banks vs. Bianca Belair – WWE Smackdown Women’s Championship
- Adam Page vs. Kenny Omega – AEW World Championship
- Tsukushi Haruka vs.Tsukasa Fujimoto – ICExInfinity Championship
- Shingo Takagi vs. Kazuchika Okada – IWGP World Heavyweight Championship
- Naomichi Marufuji vs. Katsuhiko Nakajima – GHC Heavyweight Championship
Okay it’s actually a top nine with a 10-way tie for 10th. Let’s just call these all honorable mentions in chronological order.
- Tetsuya Naito vs. Kota Ibushi – IWGP Heavyweight Championship
- Yuka Sakazaki vs. Rika Tatsumi – Princess of Princess Championship
- Suzu Suzuki vs. Tsukasa Fujimoto – ICExInfinity Championship
- Io Shirai vs. Raquel Gonzalez – NXT Women’s Championship
- Rich Swann vs. Kenny Omega – Impact World Championship
- Rika Tatsumi vs. Miyu Yamashita – Princess of Princess Championship
- Wheeler YUTA vs. Lee Moriarty – IWTV Independent Wrestling Championship
- Ricky Knight Jr. vs. Will Ospreay – RevPro Undisputed British Heavyweight Championship
- Daniel Garcia vs. Anthony Greene – Limitless Wrestling World Championship Match
- Anthony Greene vs. Alec Price – Limitless Wrestling World Championship Match