For the first half of the year I was impressed with what
I saw. Technical issues aside the promotion's iPPV output from the Eleventh
Anniversary to Border Wars was excellent. It was almost certainly the best
string of major shows that ROH had mustered in years. The match quality was
dependable at every level of the card, there was logical show to show
development, and an interesting (if utterly unoriginal) central plot (Aces and
Eights... sorry, I mean SCUM!).
That hot streak ended, ironically enough, at Best in the
World. The main event didn't help. Mark Briscoe versus Jay Briscoe has never
struck me (and likely never will) as a worthwhile big show main event. It's a B
show-slash-Friday night show-slash-DVD taping-slash-TV taping level central
attraction at best. Yet it was the match that went on last at BITW.
That Jay had won the championship had disappointed me. Steen
had a good few months left in his reign and it felt like his natural successor
was Michael Elgin (although current champion Adam Cole would have worked well
as the man to replace him too). Not only did 'Mr Wrestling's' reign reach a
premature end but it came at the hands of a man I didn't feel was a logical
choice for the role.
The post-Best in the World TV tapings saw Jay and Mark
written off TV, with the championship being declared vacant a week or two
later. I've written about the title vacation to a fairly great extent.
Basically it shouldn't have happened. Jay should have been dropped the title at
the June 23rd TV taping or agreed to come back to lose it in a one
off appearance (sometime in July, realistically). The title's lineage is meant
to be an important part of Ring of Honor and should have been protected. The
company and Jay Briscoe should know that.
The title tournament that followed was a blown
opportunity. Instead of making it something to attract new viewers, introduce
new regular talent, experiment with a new creative direction or promote genuine
dream matches it was a rushed affair that didn't achieve half of what it could
have. The eventual victor, Adam Cole, was a good choice to become champion
nineteen. His reign and the tag work of reDRagon, The American Wolves, and the
Forever Hooligans are some of the sparse highlights of the promotion.
Highlights of Ring of Honor
As things stand at the moment there's little about Ring
of Honor I find appealing. I’m not as uninterested as I am in TNA (ROH would
have a long way to go before they sunk to those levels), nor do I think the
company's in the bad shape it was this time last year, but I do feel it's
become stagnant.
The lead plot of ‘The Panama City Playboy’ going bad and
feuding with Jay Briscoe and-or Michael Elgin is fine, but alone it's not
enough to hold interest in ROH. Cole is a fine champion and an enjoyable
antagonist while 'Unbreakable' is a very good powerhouse babyface but neither
man has the charisma of Kevin Steen. As long as he's around he's always going
to be one of the promotion's biggest stars and needs to be treated as such. I
appreciate his current work opposite Michael Bennett is designed to elevate
Bennett (and protect Steen from overexposure) but it can only go on for so long
before he loses steam and the amount of good he can do decreases.
I want ROH to succeed. I've liked what the company has
stood for in the past and believe it presents a better alternative to WWE's
approach than does TNA. But if the people running the company want it to be as
good as it can be changes are needed. They can probably muddle through to the
end of the year with the current approach but they should really be working on
having something solid for 2014. To get back onto the streak they had early
this year they need focus on crafting a riveting new lead storyline supported
by engaging secondary ones and new talent. It's a challenge I feel Delirious
and the roster are more than capable of meeting.
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