For the last few years Ring of Honor has produced a June show called Best in the World. While no event produced under the name has ever been the best card of the year they have generally been very enjoyable affairs with worthwhile main events and compelling undercards. This show was amongst the best BITW instalments. The main event was a satisfying exchange that paid off over two years of build-up (although that build-up should ideally have paid off last year). It was supported by one of the better undercards of an ROH show this year, and they’ve been doing a pretty good job in that area.
Here’s how things went down.
The opening video was designed to put over the
significance and history of ROH, as well as the fact that it produces the world
of wrestling's superior names. It included old footage of Punk, Danielson, Joe
and the like before switching to current roster members, all of whom said the
words "the best", except for last man shown Adam Cole, who got to say
"...in the world." It was vaguely embarrassing.
Kevin Kelly welcomed us to the show from ringside. The
first shot of the arena in Nashville showed that ROH had pushed the boat out on
production. The picture quality was better than both ROH's TV show and the
internet broadcasts they'd been doing. The setup featured a big screen which
switched between showing the Best in the World logo and match graphics. These
things are ultimately kind of pointless but it added to overall look of the
thing.
Kelly said he felt the stars were aligned (he actually
used that phrase) for Michael Elgin to win the ROH championship. Steve Corino,
decked out in a snazzy yellow jacket, disagreed. He felt that Elgin had had
enough chances to win the title and was destined to be a perennial runner-up.
After the top bouts had been sufficiently talked it the
opener got underway. ACH, Watanabe, Caprice Coleman, BJ Whitmer, Tadarius
Thomas and Tommaso Ciampa faced one another in a six man mayhem match, the
winner of which would get an ROH television title shot. For those wondering a mayhem
match is ROH's way of denoting lucha rules: when someone's thrown out of the
ring they are no longer legal and another participant waiting on the apron can
take their place in the ring.
Watanabe played heel. He really gave it some wellie and
obviously had a watch of some standard US heel tactics on YouTube, but there
was something about it that didn't quite work. But then that's why he's
spending time in Ring of Honor: to gone his craft. The match saw Caprice do his
jumping northern lights, including an impressive double northern lights, ACH
pump kick Tadarius over the top rope, and a spot on Project Ciampas to Caprice
and ACH (broken up by The Decade). ACH won after a dive onto everyone at
ringside and a 450 splash on Thomas back in the ring. Ciampa and ACH shook
hands after the match but Ciampa spat in his hand first. Then Corino and
Whitmer had a heated row outside the ring, just because.
That was followed by a recap video of the feud between
Jay Lethal and Matt Taven. Or, more accurately, Taven and Truth Martini. This
included recaps of MTV posing as The Romantic Touch to beat Lethal in a
non-title match to earn a championship shot and the fire burning incident at
Supercard of Honor VIII. That Taven was competing just a couple of months after
that incident is probably one of the most ridiculous instances of no-selling in
ROH this year. If you're going to introduce fire into a wrestling storyline it
should be done to write someone off TV or explain the need for a mask or other
clothing change. I've no idea why the fireball was included as there was
clearly no long-term intention to pay it off.
The bout would see Truth handcuffed to a ring post.
Because, y'know, he interferes in matches and nobody wanted him to here.
Banning him from ringside was apparently not an option. Taven didn't get much a
reaction then he entered. Nothing new there. Lethal was met mostly with
indifference. He had Seleziya with him in addition to Martini. That was fine
with me: I'm a fan of her work. Truth did some tiresome stalling before getting
cuffed to the post.
The match was wrestled well and at a brisk pace. They
avoided any major missteps, took impressive bumps and ensured their offence was
crisp. But despite this the match never really seemed to get going. I think it was
hurt by the audience taking a while to get invested. It's disappointing but
understandable. I think the problem is that Taven as a good guy is hard to warm
to. Beyond his issue with established heel Martini there's no real reason to
cheer the guy.
The finish saw Truth pay off the head of security to keep
Taven at bay, giving Seleziya the chance to break Truth's cuffs (apparently she
tore them apart) and flee with her boss. Taven gave up on chasing them almost
immediately, even though he definitely would've caught them with ease and we'd
been told he wanted to get his hands on Martini more than regain the title.
Instead he went back to the ring and attempted a frog splash on a downed
Lethal. He was met with knees and a Lethal Injection for the loss.
Roderick Strong was accompanied to the ring by Adam Page
and Tadarius Thomas for his submissions match against Cedric Alexander. If
you're new then Strong is a member of The Decade, a group who feel they should
be given respect based on their length of time with the company, and he's taken
particular issue with Cedric Alexander because he's feels Cedric is
disrespectful to the business.
The story of the match was that Strong had the experience
advantage and was a far better submission artist than Cedric, who was presented
as a high-flyer who's not known for submission proficiency. It was a logical
story effectively told, both by the wrestlers and the commentary team.
Cedric tried gaining the win with various holds. He first
used a guillotine choke, then a dragon sleeper, then a butterfly lock. None got
him the submission but it was noticeable that he was going for more submissions
than Strong. In fact Strong didn't go for any throughout the match, and ended
up being forced to submit to his own Stronghold, after a back breaker onto the
top rope and a lumbar check.
It was the right decision and it had the right finish.
Cedric using Strong's own hold to defeat him will allow the rivalry to stay
alive as part of Roddy's problem has been Cedric "stealing" moves. As
well done as the finish was it was strange that Strong went the entire match
without applying a single hold. Had he worked over Cedric's back and gone for
the submission a few times Cedric's victory would have seemed like a bigger
achievement: he'd have weathered the storm in addition to getting Strong to
tap.
After the match Cedric offered a handshake. The fans
chanted for Strong to shake but he walked out. The poor sport gimmick
continues. The feud pretty much has to end with a handshake at this point.
That was followed by the tag team grudge match pitting
the Briscoe brothers against Michael Bennett and Matt Hardy. The pre-match
video saw the Briscoes talking about being dangerous men, showed Matt Hardy
being awarded the "real" world title and turning it into the Iconic
championship, and covered the trio of Hardy, Cole and Bennett forming The
Kingdom. An actor called Nick Searcy accompanied Hardy. I've never heard of him
before this show and I probably won't after. When it comes to outside guest stars
ROH never quite manages to fully impress.
The match went for about five minutes before the heels
got disqualified for smacking Jay with the Iconic championship. Jay took a mic
and called the decision into question and asked Nigel McGuinness to make things
right. Nigel did so, walking out into the arena to announce the match would
continue under no DQ rules. Then he joined commentary because why not?
What followed was a brawl featuring chairs, tables,
ladders and Maria interference. There was also some amusing pro-Hardy Corino
commentary, the highlight of which was "Turner just Hebnered him!"
after Jay kicked out after a Twist of Fate. Jay got the win after suplexing
Matt off a ladder and through a table, following up with a Jay Driller for good
measure. It was a fulfilling brawl. Which is what should be expected of the
Briscoes at this point.
Footage of Elgin's mullet being cut off by Cole at a
"live event" was shown. Elgin's wife MsChif ran out and begged Cole
and Bennett to stop. She got slapped in the devastating figure four for daring
to question the mighty ROH champ.
In the aisle Larry Mercer and Mandy Leon were with new
ROH signee Moose. Sadly, the Bravado brothers weren't around. I still think ROH
made a mistake not keeping them around. Moose cut an awkward babyface promo
about wanting to earn his way to the top and not be handed anything based on
his NFL accomplishments. He exhibited very little personality. Gabe knew what
he was doing when he cast him as a minder. The Moose-centric festivities were
interrupted by Veda Scott. She offered him her managerial services, citing the
success of RD Evans as a reason to join her. Moose said he'd discuss it later
and just wanted to enjoy the show. Veda and Ramone stormed to the back. It
could hint at an Evans versus Moose feud but I doubt it. It looks as though
they want to use Moose as a face and that won't happen if he's pitted against
the über-popular 'Papa Bear'.
Kevin Steen and Silas Young were up after that. Both men
got heavy streamer treatment, which was surprising in the case of Young. Steen
was as popular as ever. Young showed a great deal of aptitude and skill
interacting with the crowd and drawing them into the match. They were always
going to react to Steen's offence because he's so popular, but it was a
pleasant surprise from 'The Last Real Man'. Steen won after a top rope
fisherman suplex and a package piledriver.
After the match ‘Mr Wrestling’ cut a promo about
respecting Silas for trying to make a name for himself on the top guy (making a
point of saying that he is the top
guy) and getting to wrestle him on a big show before his contract expires. He
offered a handshake and had it accepted. Steen acknowledged some signs thanking
him before Silas gave him a sly chop block. So it looks as though Steen’s final
ROH match will take place opposite Silas Young. Based on their match here I
think that’ll provide a good way for the most popular ROH star of the last four
years to bow out.
The tag team title match was preceded by a Fish Tank
skit. Basically it was Fish and O'Reilly sitting in armchairs talking about redefining
tag team wrestling (and possibly the laws of physics, that bit was a little
unclear) and having things in common with Bad Influence (the metrosexual
gimmick, specifically). The returning Daniels got a loud reaction and a
predictable "Welcome back!" chant. Plus streamers. Lots and lots of
streamers.
reDRagon isolated Kazarian early on, working over his arm
with kicks and submission holds. Kaz made a comeback, wiping out the champs and
escaping a guillotine choke before tagging in Daniels, who immediately tore
through Fish and O’Reilly. ‘The Ring General’ tried a BME but O'Reilly avoided
it. ReDRagon took turns charging Daniels in the corner then hit a back breaker and
knee drop combo on him. Bad Influence managed to fight back, Kazarian downing Fish
with an ace crusher and Daniels again going for the BME. It was Fish’s turn to
avoid it, rolling out of the way and catching CD with a Samoan drop. He tried a
moonsault of his own but that was also avoided. A pin attempt after Angels
Wings was broken by O'Reilly. Daniels missed a sitdown moonsault to the outside
and got run into the apron by Fish. Yeah, there were a lot of missed moonsaults
in this match.
Back in the ring Kazarian gave O'Reilly a Flux Capacitor
but landed on his own elbow, causing him to pause for a few valuable seconds
before making the cover. When he did go for it Fish pulled the referee out of
the ring. O'Reilly tried a schoolboy with a handful of tights but only got two.
Kazarian got tripped by Fish, allowing O’Reilly to knee him in the head and
reDRagon to connect with Chasing the Dragon. Kazarian stunned the crowd by
kicking out. Undaunted O'Reilly slipped smoothly into an armbar as Fish leapt
on Daniels to stop him making the save. Kaz tapped to end a satisfying tag
title match.
These are two of the best teams in wrestling and this
match demonstrated why. TNA’s stupid decision to release Bad Influence is
definitely ROH’s gain. I’m looking forward to more meetings between the teams.
Bad Influence interacting with the rest of the roster should be fun too.
The pre-match video for the main event focused on the
importance of the ROH championship and Cole and Elgin both being spoken of for
years as the future of the promotion. Both spoke about their history and what
the title means to them. Elgin said he doesn't want to just be a guy who's wrestled
for ROH, he wants to join the list of ROH champions. Cole did a more generic
heel bit about being the best in the world. It was a strong verbal performance
from the usually limited Elgin.
The early going worked in ringside brawling, featuring an
Oklahoma stampede on the entrance ramp. The story was that Elgin was focused
and not letting Cole get into his head, ignoring his mind games and powering
him around like a boss. Elgin debuted a new move: a stomach blower from a
concrete slam position. It's the sort of thing that I can imagine him using
frequently. He’s good at slotting his repertoire into interesting sequences.
Cole kneed his way out of Elgin’s stalling suplex and hit a brain buster onto his knee. Elgin came back with a Crippler crossface and then drop kicked Cole as he tried a springboard to the top rope (having escaped the crossface, natch). That led to the deadlift second rope suplex, but he modified it into a falcon arrow. Cole gave Elgin a top rope hurricanrana, a reverse-rana and a Florida Key. All for a delicious two count.
Cole leapt off the second rope and was met with a pump
kick from Elgin. The champ struggled back up to his feet and missed a super
kick, belting the ref and knocking him out. Elgin did a buckle bomb and an
Elgin bomb but there was no one to count. This kicked off a sequence that
played on the history of so many Elgin title challenges and Cole title defences
featuring outside interference and ref bumps.
Cole’s Kingdom buddies Bennett and Hardy ran in and kicked away at Elgin. He shrugged it off, escaping a Twist of Fate and dropping both interfering heels with the fall away slam-Samoan drop combo. Next he elbowed Cole in the back of the head and then Awesome bombed him on to Bennett and Hardy. Maria slapped Elgin, causing him to chase her around ringside. That led to him getting walloped with the title belt and dropped with a Florida Key.
At that point Hanson and Rowe arrived to even the odd,
brawling backstage with Bennett and Hardy. Maria tossed the title belt to Cole
and distracted the ref. MsChif ran out and gave her a green mist as Elgin
ducked the title shot and blasted Cole with a buckle bomb and an Elgin bomb.
Cole stunned the crowd, who had started throwing streamers, so convinced were
they that the match was over, by kicking out. The audience chastised themselves
with a chant of “We fucked up!”
Cole gave Elgin a drop kick to the knee and then smacked
his knee into a ring post. He even applied the Bret Hart hanging figure four
for good measure. He went to apply the figure four in the ring but got rolled
into a pinning position. That only got two, but Elgin immediately applied a
crossface. Cole refused to quit and then Elgin’s knee gave out as he ran
towards Cole for a clothesline. Cole capitalised on the situation by giving him
a super kick and a Canadian destroyer.
Naturally Elgin kicked out. The champ went for a sunset
flip but Elgin powered out and pounded Cole with a trio of power bombs to earn
himself the three count, the victory and the championship. The final couple of
minutes of the broadcast were given over to Carey Silkin presenting Elgin with
the title and Elgin celebrating. Kelly and Corino talked Elgin up as 'The Best
in the World' and a worthy champion.
It was a year too late but hey, at least he finally got
it.
No comments:
Post a Comment