EVOLVE's second WrestleMania weekend offering of 2015 started off strong with the non-title match between EVOLVE champion Drew Galloway and the allegedly departing Uhaa Nation. This was a far better choice for the opening slot than the technical mat exchange between Gulak and Thatcher at EVOLVE 39. It's not that that match was bad, it just wasn't the exciting hook an opener tends to be.
Galloway and Nation spent the early minutes slugging away
at one another (because big lads) before leaving the ring. There we got an
early highlight as Galloway sidestepped an Uhaa moonsault from the apron and
gave him a tilt-a-whirl back onto the ring's edge. Back in the ring Galloway went
all Randy Orton and worked over Nation with stomps and a sleeper before 'The
One Man Nation' managed to fire back with some clotheslines, rolling German
suplexes and a splash from the top rope.
Galloway kicked out of the cover that followed and scored
with a power bomb, a German suplex into a turnbuckle and Roderick Strong's sick
kick. Uhaa kicked out of all that and the two exchanged a few right hands
before Galloway got dropped with a power bomb.
Like the previous evening's Galloway match this one ended
with a surprise double arm DDT. Galloway went for it and got it seemingly at
random and got the win with it. Clearly this was done to get the move over for
Galloway's unification match against Johnny Gargano at Mercury Rising, a match
he addressed after his victory. He waffled on a lot but basically his message
was that he and Gargano would have a great match at Mercury Rising, which I'm
sure they will. He's a passionate, shouty promo is Galloway. That helps when
he's repeating the same message two nights in a row.
Match two saw Tommy End, with Chris Hero in his corner,
take on Timothy Thatcher. Both men were popular with the crowd but they were
easily more into Thatcher. The crowd went wild for him, presumably because he's
announced as being from Sacramento, California. We're also assured he's
English.
The match was all about Thatcher's mat wrestling being
deployed against End's striking. Thatcher's had success early on but End's
striking came into play in the match's second half. He smacked Thatcher with a
kick to the temple, flooring him until the count of eight. From there a dazed
Thatcher was dominated by End's strikes, although End found himself in the
frustrating position of being unable to finish Thatcher off. He unleashed his
impressive bicycle knee strike but it wasn't enough: Thatcher caught him in a
Fujiwara armbar for the tap out victory.
After the match Hero entered the ring and bad mouthed
Thatcher. Thatcher ignored him and walked backstage. Hero kicked the bottom
rope in frustration then left to allow End to soak up some well-deserved cheers.
This was another good showing from End.
Drew Gulak (with five unnamed seconds) versus TJ Perkins
followed that. The mat-based 'Legal Eagle' against the nippy flyer could have
been a disaster but it wasn't. They went out of their way to keep things fast
and avoided sticking with submission holds for too long. TJP's submission
abilities helped too, he clearly knows how to blend his flashier moves with
hold into counter hold exchanges. Gulak won with the ankle lock after a series
of reversals. Nothing occurred with the five nameless lads Gulak brought to
ringside. They were just there to get over Gulak's new serious competitor
gimmick.
Ethan Page v AR Fox was an exhilarating affair. It was
the usual flash and sizzle from Fox (a stark contrast to his maddeningly bland
character) and Page kept up fine, which was the most that could be asked of him
in this situation. Fox survived a spinebuster onto the apron, a back breaker on
the floor, a lifting reverse DDT, and a Tower of London onto the apron before
coming back with a springboard Codebreaker, a Lo Mein Pain and a 450 splash to
win.
After the match Page talked about how he'd let Johnny
Gargano (the man who'd endorsed him) down by losing, which brought Gargano out
to the ring. The Open the Freedom Gate champ gave Page a pep talk before
bringing up the EVOLVE title v DG USA title match. Again he promised that he'd
win that match and leave a double champion, though this time there was a
greater emphasis on his history in the company and his contributions getting it
to its current state. He offered more reasons as to why we should believe he
needs to win the match with this promo than he had at EVOLVE 39.
The Chris Hero v Biff Busick grudge match followed that.
Their issues first surfaced at EVOLVE 33, where Biff Busick had talked about
his efforts in the 2014 style battle tournament and mentioned Chris Hero as
someone the current generation of wrestlers wish to surpass. It was intended as
a compliment, an acknowledgement of Hero's accomplishments within wrestling.
But Hero took offense and an argument erupted. A few more followed with the
final one coming the night before this at EVOLVE 39 where Busick vowed to choke
Hero out with the stranglehold.
They had the stiff battle that was to be expected. Busick
stayed true to his promise and spent most of the match attempting to apply his
stranglehold finisher for long enough to choke Hero into unconsciousness. He
applied the hold several times but never managed to submit or blackout Hero.
That brought about a shift in approach and he started blasting the former King
of Wrestling with suplexes. Hero weathered the storm and then smashed Busick
with half a dozen elbows and a Tombstone piledriver for the victory. This match
just outdid the main event to nab
match of the night honours for me.
The card's lone tag match followed that. It saw the
recently (and fairly half-heartedly) reunited Ronin team of Johnny Gargano and
Rich Swann take on the new look Premier Athlete Brand of Brian Cage and Caleb
Konley. I was again impressed by how good Cage is and felt that it was another
strong showing from Konley, who has improved a great deal over the last year.
Gargano was good but not at his best, quite possibly
because he was saving himself for his showdown with Scotland's own Drew
Galloway the following evening. Considering how much that match has been built
up it was an understandable move by the Open the Freedom Gate champ. That left
Swann to deliver the thrills and spills. He accomplished this but injured
himself in the process, necessitating the match being called to a finish early.
Confusingly Konley tapped to the Gargano Escape before the referee announced
that he'd ruled the match in the PAB's favour due to Swann's injury.
Had this run its intended course I imagine it would have
ended up an inoffensive and fun, though ultimately forgettable, tag bout. But
instead it will be most remembered for the peculiar ending. Though, on the
bright side, that could be used as part of a Ronin v Premier Athletes story in
the future.
The main event saw former WWE Superstar™ PJ Black take on
Ricochet in a battle of the high-flyers. They set a breakdown speed and stuffed
the match with spots and kept the psychology and lining sequences light (which
was to be expected). The story of the early going was basically that Ricochet
was a little better than Black, countering or immediately recovering from whatever
Black threw at him. This included a great mid-air recovery off a monkey flip, a
kip up immediately after a shoulder block, and a drop kick counter to a cross
body.
This forced Black to up his game and he started getting
an increasing amount of offence in on 'The Future of Flight'. It wasn't enough
to get him a victory though. Following a surprisingly vicious exchange of
strikes Ricochet got a two count off a top rope reverse hurricanrana then
finally put Black down with a nasty power bomb and the 630 splash.
Unfortunate and unavoidable incident in the tag match
aside this was another very good offering from the EVOLVE crew. Of the two
cards presented this weekend I think this was the stronger. 39 took a little
longer to get going with the three more technical matches kicking things off.
40 started with a rowdy bout that drew you in and kept improving right up until
the tag match hit (and, again, at least part of the reason that match
disappointed was beyond anyone's control). Ricochet versus Black was a superior
main event. Black showed he could have been an asset to WWE and Ricochet again
proved he deserves all the success he's had.
***
Results summary:
Drew Galloway defeated Uhaa NationTimothy Thatcher defeated Tommy End
Drew Gulak defeated TJ Perkins
AR Fox defeated Ethan Page
Chris Hero defeated Biff Busick
The Premier Athlete Brand defeated Johnny Gargano and Rich Swann via referee stoppage
Ricochet defeated PJ Black
No comments:
Post a Comment