Month: July 2020

Home / Month: July 2020

Katsuya Kitamura is out of New Japan.

The company posted an article on their website this morning saying that Kitamura has left New Japan Pro Wrestling. He hasn’t wrestled since last March, teaming with Manabu Nakanishi in a losing effort against Tomohiro Ishii and Toru Yano.

There has been speculation regarding why Kitamura has been out of action for so long. According to Chris Charlton, he sustained an injury while training and has spent the last year taking medical treatment and rehabbing. After discussions with the company, however, he decided to leave.

It was reported recently in the Wrestling Observer Newsletter that Kitamura had been given a new contract to sign for 2019, but hadn’t signed it yet. It’s also been reported in the past that the injury is a crushed leg following a scooter accident.

Kitamura, who had an accomplished amateur wrestling background was that marred by a steroid ban started to wrestle regularly for NJPW in March of 2017. At 6’0 and 265 pounds, he dwarfed the other young lions and stood out due to his look and natural charisma.

He had been given somewhat of a push as a young lion, winning the 2017 Young Lion’s Cup just a few months prior to the injury.

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PWTorch editor Wade Keller presents a special Thursday Flagship edition of the Wade Keller Pro Wrestling Podcast featuring a WrestleMania 36 Preview with ex-WWE Creative Team member and professional stand-up comedian Matt McCarthy.

(Search “wade keller” to subscribe in podcast app or CLICK HERE to subscribe in Apple Podcasts.)


Following the UFC 200 PPV, Randy Orton has checked in with opening comments on facing Brock Lesnar at Summerslam on August 21.

“Congrats to @BrockLesnar on the #UFC200 win. See you at #SummerSlam. #VipervsBeast,” Orton tweeted Saturday night.

Orton vs. Lesnar matches up two of the Big Five students from the post-Attitude Era OVW recruiting class in the early 2000s.

WWE announced the match two days earlier on Smackdown to set up a promotional video package during the UFC 200 PPV broadcast.

Congrats to @BrockLesnar on the #UFC200 win. See you at #SummerSlam. #VipervsBeast

— Randy Orton (@RandyOrton) July 10, 2016

brock lesnarrandy ortonsummerslamsummerslam 2016ufcufc 200

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PWTorch editor Wade Keller presents a special Thursday Flagship edition of the Wade Keller Pro Wrestling Podcast featuring a WrestleMania 36 Preview with ex-WWE Creative Team member and professional stand-up comedian Matt McCarthy.

(Search “wade keller” to subscribe in podcast app or CLICK HERE to subscribe in Apple Podcasts.)


By James Caldwell, PWTorch assistant editor

The Battleground PPV line-up was unchanged Monday night on Raw and Tuesday night on Smackdown.

No matches were added to the line-up and WWE did not reveal Sasha Banks’s mystery tag partner.

Any additions, including the PPV pre-show match(es), will come during the week when WWE finalizes the line-up internally.

There is some intrigue with the matches already announced, though, following the Draft…

– WWE champion Dean Ambrose is on Smackdown defending against Roman Reigns and Seth Rollins, who are both on Raw.

– U.S. champion Rusev is on Raw defending against Smackdown wrestler Zack Ryder.

– IC champion The Miz is on Smackdown defending against Raw wrestler Darren Young.

Updated Battleground PPV Line-up

WWE World Hvt. Title match: Dean Ambrose (Raw) vs. Seth Rollins (SD) vs. Roman Reigns (SD)
Randy Orton returns to WWE TV on Chris Jericho’s Highlight Reel
Sami Zayn (Raw) vs. Kevin Owens (Raw)
The Club (A.J. Styles (SD) & Karl Anderson & Luke Gallows (Raw)) vs. John Cena (SD) & Enzo Amore & Big Cass (Raw) in a six-man tag match
IC Title match: The Miz (SD) vs. Darren Young (Raw)
U.S. Title match: Rusev (w/Lana) (Raw) vs. Zack Ryder (SD)
WWE tag champions New Day (Big E. & Kofi Kingston & Xavier Woods) (Raw) vs. The Wyatts (Bray Wyatt (SD) & Erick Rowan (SD) & Braun Strowman (Raw)) in a six-man tag match
Becky Lynch (SD) vs. Natalya (SD)
Women’s champion Charlotte (Raw) & Dana Brooke (Raw) vs. Sasha Banks (Raw) & ???

battleground 2016battleground ppvprovidence rawrawwwewwe raw

By Matt Dagnall

Josh Bodom defeated Angelico 

A rather short affair that probably should have been more intense for its length. Angelico kicked Bodom in every place possible, whole Bodom equaled Angelico with strikes and throws. Eventually Sha Samuels came out to distract the referee which allowed Bodom to get Angelico in position for the Bliss Buster which got him the pin.

This was fine, but really nothing special.

Team White Wolf defeated Besties in the World

Both teams received a moderate reaction and it was clear that the crowd was maybe unfamiliar to the teams. However, by the end of the match the crowd was certainly won over. A-Kid was worked over for the first portion of the match, while Carlos Romo grew frustrated on the apron. Eventually A-Kid made a comeback and tagged in Romo who made a comeback on the Besties.

After some back and forth action, Vega tagged in Matt Fitchet who was the highlight of the match, with his hot tag wowing the audience and the building came unglued. At this point, the match reached insanity and both teams got near falls. Eventually after a splash from the top rope, and a roll-up, Romo got the pin, only to be viciously beaten up by Bodom and Samuels after the match. This was very good.

Zoe Lucas defeated Bea Priestley to retain the Undisputed British Women’s Championship

This was meant to be Zoe Lucas defending against Sammii Jayne, the winner of Queen of the Ring 2019. However, due to injury, Priestley replaced Jayne. It felt like Lucas is coming into her element as champion, having somewhat of a presence in her entrance. She is playing up her relationship with the title, almost treating it like she’s in a relationship with it.

This was shaping up to be a decent match but ended abruptly after a finish in which the referee counted despite them being in the ropes.

CCK defeated Aussie Open

For me, and many others this was the biggest disappointment of the night. These teams had the best York Hall match of 2018 at Summer Sizzler but failed the recreate the magic here.

Five minutes into the match the teams hadn’t even touched, with CCK choosing whether Brookes or Gresham would start the match. It wasn’t remotely funny it was mind numbingly dull. They then left the ring for no reason and came back. It turned into a brawl outside the ring in which CCK took Davis out, and let loose with a staple gun on Fletcher. There was a lot of ‘nothing’ here and eventually, 22 minutes into the match they started actually fighting.

For a brief five minute spell they had a great sequence of near falls before the referee was distracted while Gresham got a visual pin on Fletcher. Then the referee came in and counted the same pin to three giving. CCK the win. Even this ending made no sense; essentially Fletcher was pinned by a roll-up for nearly 10 seconds.

The number one contenders to Minoru Suzuki and Zack Sabre Jr. looked like idiots and the crowd who were expecting a 30 minute barnstormer were let down severely. 

El Phantasmo defeated MJF

The show needed to get back on track after the intermission and MJF was the man to do it. He came out and trashed the crowd, saying they were all losers, couldn’t satisfy their wives and that he was rich. He was booed out the building, with heat reminiscent of Zack Gibson before he had to leave RevPro. El Phantasmo came out and was a worthy opponent for him.

These two matched up very well, with similar builds and styles. They matched each other with counters early on with an extremely clear heel/face dynamic that allowed the crowd to be extremely invested. MJF tried to cheat around by holding the ropes for his submissions, but the referee kicked his hands away. Phantasmo hit his usual spots and was incredibly over here.

This reached the next level when both guys stepped it up a gear in ring. They traded Canadian destroyers but eventually ELP won with a huge splash. He motioned to the camera that there was going to be an upcoming ladder match with David Starr for the cruiserweight title, something Starr has referred to also on the Cockpit. This was excellent.

MK McKinnan defeated Kip Sabian

This match never stood a chance on the card. Initially this was MK versus the Great-O-Kharn but his absence was replaced by Chris Ridgeway. But Ridgeway’s travel issues meant he was replaced an hour before the show by Sabian. The crowd weren’t into this one bit due to the placement on the card and the lack of build or story.

Both guys kicked hard and hit a few big moves but MK submitted Sabian with a choke fairly easily. Being right after ELP Vs MJF and before the main event was going to be hard for anyone. MK continues to build great momentum and many, myself included think he’ll be the one to end The Great-O-Kharn’s undefeated streak.

Will Ospreay vs. PAC ended in a time limit draw

There is so much to say about this. The atmosphere was as good as York Hall gets, which is really saying something. Both men entered with their respective titles and received huge reactions as expected. Pac received a very split response, with him obviously trying to be the bad guy but receiving a fair amount of cheers too.

Early on, both men stared eachother down before finally locking up. Pac used his strength advantage to dominate Ospreay early on but Ospreay would flip out of anything Pac hit him with. The crowd was genuinely electric throughout all of this with duelling chants the whole match. Then they started to run the ropes, hitting dropkicks, hurricanranas and lariats on each other, with every move carrying weight.

Pac took it outside and threw Ospreay around a bit, and Ospreay just about got back into the ring before the count, but had been cut on the outside and was bleeding from what looked like the nose. It added to the match for sure, seeing Ospreay visibly scarred from the match at this early point. Ospreay hit a Sasuke special to the outside, and Pac moonsaulted onto Ospreay out the ring.

At this point in the match, the storytelling really came into the forefront, with Ospreay taking moves from his great York Hall opponents. He used Scurll’s finger break, Sydal’s shooting star press, Ricochet’s benadryller, and a Style’s clash too – Pac sucked up all the punishment, and came back with a huge superplex. With both guys down in the ring, CCK came down to attack Ospreay, but Brookes was about to use Pac’s title to hit Ospreay leading to Pac and Ospreay to team up on CCK, and even Aussie Open came down to get them out of there.

At this point, there was five minutes of time remaining and both guys were pulling out all the stops to pin the other, with suplexes, spanish flys and flips galore. With around a minute left, Pac gave Ospreay a low blow but for whatever reason, he wasn’t disqualified. He then went to hit the black arrow as the clock counted down but he chose to let the clock run down instead and it was a draw.

On one hand, it was an incredible dream match from two legendary British talents that was the best York Hall match since 2017 without a doubt. On the other hand, it was overbooked with CCK coming down, tarnished by the fact there was no winner, and undermined by the lack of logic in the finish. The crowd and Ospreay requested another five minutes but just like that, the show was over. Ospreay said this was not over. 

Final Thoughts

The main event did leave a sour taste in the mouth, and many in the crowd booed at the end. There was always the issue that this would end this way, after ZSJ vs. PAC had a non-finish due to both guys being champions. Clearly as Dragon Gate champion, Pac can’t lose, and Ospreay can’t either as the NEVER Openweight champion.

As for the rest of the card, it was very weak. The absence of David Starr, and anyone from New Japan was more than noticeable, with a lot of the matches just lacking star power and therefore being lost on the crowd. There is still a lack of focus on workrate clearly, with only three of the matches actually being ‘good’, and a handful actually being noticably bad.

However the main issue was the lack of stakes. For a show called High Stakes, there was only one match with any stakes (Women’s title), and the stakes weren’t high and that match only lasted eight minutes. The fact that all the other champions were absent, and all the other matches had no repercussions was awful. 

Hope this gives some insight into the show. It was an odd one and certainly not the start RevPro should have been looking for in 2019. PAC vs. Ospreay is definately worth the watch though. 

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PWTorch editor Wade Keller presents a special Thursday Flagship edition of the Wade Keller Pro Wrestling Podcast featuring a WrestleMania 36 Preview with ex-WWE Creative Team member and professional stand-up comedian Matt McCarthy.

(Search “wade keller” to subscribe in podcast app or CLICK HERE to subscribe in Apple Podcasts.)


APP/MOBILE Users: Press HERE for full WWE Second Quarter 2016 financial results.

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1939 

– Jim Londos is awarded the Maryland version of the World Heavyweight Title by the Maryland State Commission

1944 

Tampa, Florida:
– Ed “Strangler” Lewis defeated Rollend Kirchmeyer to win the Florida Heavyweight Title 

1951 

Edmonton, Alberta, Canada:
– Sky Hi Lee defeated Al Mills to win the Calgary NWA Canadian Heavyweight Title 

1952 

Dallas, Texas:
– Duke Keomuka and Mr. Moto defeated Ray Gunkel and Miguel Guzman for the NWA Texas Tag Team Titles 

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1957 

Minneapolis, Minnesota:
– Guy and Joe Brunetti defeated Ivan and Karol Kalmikoff for the Minneapolis NWA World Tag Team Titles

1958 

Mobile, Alabama:
– Don and Jackie Fargo defeated Lee Fields and Lester Welch to win the Mid-America NWA World Tag Team Titles 

1959

Kansas City, Kansas:
– Edouard Carpentier beat Bob Geigel 
– Dino Bravo and Bob Ellis beat Lee Henning and The Mighty Atlas 
– Sonny Myers beat Rip Hawk 

1963

Minneapolis, Minnesota:
– Crusher beat Hercules Cortez by DQ
– AWA Tag Team Champions Ivan Kalmikoff & Karol Kalmikoff beat Moose Evans & Dick Steinborn in 2 out of 3 falls
– Rocky Hamilton beat Duke Hoffman
– Jack Pesek beat Stan Kowalski

1966

Chicago, Illinois:
– AWA Champion Mad Dog Vachon beat WWA Champion Dick the Bruiser by countout
– Verne Gagne & Wilbur Snyder beat AWA Tag Team Champions Larry Hennig & Harley Race by DQ
– Chris Markoff beat Guy Mitchell
– Moose Cholak beat Huey Long
– The Assassin beat Jose Betancourt
– Santiago Acosta drew Angelo Poffo

1967 

St. Paul, Minnesota:
– Verne Gagne won the AWA World Heavyweight Title (on his birthday) by defeating Mad Dog Vachon
– Ernie Ladd & Earl Maynard beat AWA Tag Team Champions Larry Hennig & Harley Race by DQ
– Killer Kowalski beat The Crusher by DQ
– Doug Gilbert drew The Alaskan
– Eddie Sharkey beat George Gadaski
– Bob Boyer beat Jose Quintero

1969 

Mobile, Alabama:
– Bob Kelly and Ramon Perez defeated Mitsu and Sugi Sito to win the  NWA Gulf Coast Tag Team Titles

1971

Los Angeles, California:
– Vivian Vachon defeated Betty Nicoli for the NWA California Women’s Title 

1973

Madison Square Garden:
– AWA World Heavyweight Champion Verne Gagne defeated Eddie Graham (subbing for Ray Stevens)
– WWWF World Heavyweight Champion Pedro Morales defeated King Curtis Iaukea

1975

Miami, Florida:
– Bob Roop & Mongolian Stomper defeated Dick Slater & Johnny Weaver (sub for Bill Watts) 
– Harley Race defeated Bob Armstrong 
– Tony Parisi & Dominic DeNucci & “Irish” Pat Barrett defeated The Patriots & The Red Menace 
– Mike Graham defeated Jim Dillon by DQ
– Johnny Weaver defeated Randy Tyler by DQ
– Baron Mikel Scicluna defeated Jay Clay 

1976

Fort Myers, Florida:
– Florida Tag Titles: Bob Roop & Bob Orton, Jr. defeated Steve Keirn & Mike Graham 
– Andre The Giant defeated King Curtis 
– Ft. Myers Championship: Tom Jones (sub for Cyclon Negro) defeated Roger Kirby 
– Mike Graham & Steve Keirn defeated George McCreary & Rock Hunter 
– Jerry Brisco defeated Karl Von Steiger 

1978

St. Louis, Missouri:
– Dick Murdoch defeated Ted DiBiase for the NWA Missouri Heavyweight Title 

1979

Memphis, Tennessee:
– Robert Gibson beat The Destroyer
– Mike Stallings pinned Danny Davis
– Jimmy Golden pinned Gorgeous George Jr.
– Tommy Gilbert & Buzz Sawyer beat The Assassins via DQ
– Bill Dundee & Robert Fuller beat Dennis Condrey & Don Carson to win the Southern Tag Team Titles
– The Mongolian Stomper beat Bob Armstrong
– Jerry Lawler beat Southern Champ Toru Tanaka via DQ

Wichita, Kansas:
– Bryan St. John and Randy Alls (Randy Rose) win a tournament for the NWA Central States Tag Team Titles

1980

Tampa, Florida:
– Florida Title: Super Destroyer defeated Manny Fernandez by DQ
– Special Challenge Match: Jack Brisco & Jim Garvin defeated Nikolai Volkoff & Bugsy McGraw 
– Leroy Brown defeated Jerry Brisco 
– Twin Devils defeated Hector Guerrero & Terry Taylor 
– Bryan St. John defeated Bubba Douglas 
– Geoff Portz & Frank Monte drew Gordon Nelson & Barry Windham

1981

Kingston, Ontario, Canada:
– Angelo (King Kong) Mosca pinned Hossien Arab
– Mad Dog Vachon and Dewey Robertson beat Bob Duncum and Kurt Von Hess
– Sweet Ebony Diamond over Swede Hanson on a count out
– Frankie Maine and Billy Red Lyons went to a draw
– Tony Parisi pinned Ron Ritchie

1985

Tampa, Florida:
– The PYT Express (Norvell Austin and Koko Ware) defeated Jay and Mark Youngblood for the Florida NWA United States Tag Team Titles

1988

Dallas, Texas:
– Terry Taylor defeated Matt Borne for the World Class Texas Heavyweight Title

St. Joseph, Missouri:
– Masahiro Chono defeated Mike George to win the World Wrestling Alliance World Heavyweight Title 

1990

Memphis, Tennessee:
– King Cobra beat The Soultaker via DQ
– Dutch Mantel beat Rockin’ Randy
– Tony Anthony & Robert Fuller beat Steve Doll & Rex King via DQ
– Jeff Jarrett & Bill Dundee drew Terrance Garvin & Billy Joe Travis
– Jimmy Valiant beat Jerry Lawler to win the USWA Unified World Title

1993

Mexico City, Mexico:
– Heavy Metal defeated Rey Misterio, Jr. for the Mexican National Welterweight Title

Dallas, Texas:
– The Ebony Experience (Stevie Ray and Booker T) defeated The Bad Breed (Axl and Ian Rotten) to win the Global Wrestling Federation Tag Team Titles
– Calvin Knapp defeated Alex Porteau for the GWF Light Heavyweight Title

Williamsborg, Kentucky:
– Tim Horner defeated the Nightstalker 
– Jimmy Golden defeated Bobby Eaton via disqualification 
– Brian Lee defeated Kevin Sullivan 
– Tracy Smothers defeated SMW Heavyweight Champion the Dirty White Boy 
– Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson defeated SMW Tag Team Champions Stan Lane & Tom Prichard

1994

Johnson City, Tennessee:
– Bobby Blaze defeated the Hornet
– The Moondogs fought the Bruise Brothers to a double disqualification
– SMW US Jr. Heavyweight Champion Chris Candido pinned Tracy Smothers after hitting him with a weigh scale (following the entrances, Candido demanded that Smothers be weighed to see if he was within the 230lb weight limit)
– SMW Tag Team Champions Tom Prichard & Jimmy Del Ray defeated Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson (Jim Cornette was hung in a cage above the ring for the duration of the bout)
– SMW Heavyweight Champion the Dirty White Boy defeated Brian Lee in a chain match

Columbia, South Carolina:
– Jim Steele pinned the Gambler 
– Craig Pittman pinned Brian Anderson 
– 2 Cold Scorpio & Marcus Alexander Bagwell defeated Tex Slazenger & Shanghai Pierce
– Arn Anderson pinned Paul Orndorff 
– WCW TV Champion Lord Steven Regal pinned Dustin Rhodes
– Sting pinned WCW US Champion Steve Austin in a non-title match
– WCW World Champion Ric Flair pinned Vader

Portland, Oregon:
– Colonel DeBeers defeated Bruiser Brian for the Championship Wrestling USA Television Title

Morristown, Tennessee:
– Mike Samson defeated Wayne Rogers for the Southern States Wrestling Heavyweight Title 

1995 

SMW Sunday Bloody Sunday II: Knoxville, Tennessee:
– Bobby Blaze defeated Brian Logan
– New Jack & Mustafa defeated Scott Armstrong & Tracy Smothers
– SMW Tag Team Champions Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson defeated Al Snow & Unabomb via disqualification
– Boo Bradley defeated Chris Candido in a loser leaves town dog collar chain match
– Bobby Blaze defeated SMW Heavyweight Champion Jerry Lawler to win the title
– SMW Heavyweight Champion Bobby Blaze defeated Buddy Landel
– Jim Cornette, Tom Prichard & Jimmy Del Ray defeated New Jack, Mustafa, & D-Lo Brown (Bob Armstrong was the guest referee for the bout)

1997

Berlin, Germany:
– Davey Boy Smith pinned Owen Hart to become the first WWF European Champion in a tournament final
– WWF Intercontinental Champion Rocky Maivia defeated Vader (with Paul Bearer) by disqualification 
– Hunter Hearst Helmsley defeated Bret Hart by disqualification
– WWF Champion Sycho Sid pinned Mankind (with Paul Bearer)

1999

Mexico City, Mexico:
– Bestia Salvaje and Scorpio, Jr. defeated Negro Casas and El Hijo del Santo to win the CMLL World Tag Team Titles

2000

Cincinnati, Ohio:
– Tommy Dreamer and Masato Tanaka defeated ECW World Tag Team Champions The Impact Players (Justin Credible and Lance Storm) to win the titles
– Sabu defeated Scott D’Amore
– ECW World Heavyweight Champion Mike Awesome defeated Rhino to retain the title

Newark, Delaware:
– Christopher Daniels defeated Scoot Andrews to win the Super 8 Tournament 

Los Angeles, California:
– Chris Candido defeated XPW World Heavyweight Champion Damien Steele in a Falls Count Anywhere match to win the title 

2002

Boston, Massachusetts:
– Goldust defeated Maven for the WWF Hardcore Title 

2005

Throwback Night: Memphis, Tennessee:
– In a 14-man tag team match, Bill Dundee, King Mabel, Cory Macklin, Chris Michaels, MW Southern Tag Team Champions Too Cool II (Tim Grind and Flex) and Kevin White defeated Masked Doom, Nicholas Doom, Jamie Dundee, Reggie B. Fine, Jimmy Hart, Jerry Lawler and Mordecai
– Too Cool II (Tim Grind and Flex) defeated Team Canada (Johnny Devine and Eric Young), when Grind pinned Devine, to win the MW Southern Tag Team Titles
– Brian Christopher and Shock defeated Kid Kash and Koko B. Ware
– Kevin White defeated Jamie Dundee by disqualification
– Bill Dundee pinned Simon Dean
– Derrick King pinned Johnny Dotson in a loser-leaves-town match
– Jimmy Hart and Jerry Lawler fought Memphis Wrestling promoter Cory Macklin and King Mabel to a no contest

2006 

Dundalk, Maryland:
– The James Gang (B.G. James & Kip James) defeated MCW Tag Team Champions The Slackers (Chad Austin & Dino Divine) and The Holy Rollers (Earl The Pearl & Rich Myers) in a three-way match to win the titles

2011

ROH 9th Anniversary Show: Chicago, Illinois:
– El Generico defeated Michael Elgin
– ROH World Title Match/Barrio Streetfight: Roderick Strong defeated Homicide to retain the title
– ROH World Tag Team Title Match: Kings Of Wrestling defeated All Night Express to retain the titles
– World TV Title Match, 2/3 Falls with a 30 Minute Time Limit: Christopher Daniels and Eddie Edwards wrestled to a draw
– Charlie Haas & Shelton Benjamin defeated Jay & Mark Briscoe

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It is hard to overstate Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s record as an election winner.

Since he emerged from prison in 1998 after being jailed for reading an Islamist poem, Mr Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) has come first in every single national election. 

They won a constitutional referendum to give Mr Erdogan sweeping new presidential powers and have controlled the city governments of Istanbul and Ankara for a quarter century.   

The easy explanation – and one that Western critics sometimes comfort themselves with – is that anyone can win elections when they jail their opponents and control the media. 

A harder one is that Mr Erdogan’s political brand – a blend of Islamism, Turkish nationalism,…

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Day one of the 2019 16 Carat Gold tournament is in the books — and it was a very strong show with very good to great matches.

Fenix vs. Rey Horus, Timothy Thatcher vs. Lucky Kid, Ilja Dragunov vs. Daisuke Sekimoto, and WALTER vs. David Starr all were tremendous in their own ways, while the rest of the matches were not too far behind. The show was a really strong opener on what promises to be a great tournament and a fun weekend of wrestling.

wXw had about 1,300 fans in the main arena of the Turbinenhalle complex, featuring a number of freshly opened balcony areas. For Saturday, there are 1,500 tickets sold and Sunday should have another 1,300+.

The crowd, a mix of German casual and hardcore fans and a rowdy contingent of hardcore fans from the United Kingdom and Ireland, were lively and loud all night and will probably continue to be for the days to come.

Alternate four-way match: Veit Müller defeated Julian Pace, Kyle Fletcher, and Leon van Gasteren after hitting Pace with a DDT

Fun opener with three young and one experienced (van Gasteren) wrestlers. Pace at first overwhelmed everyone with his speed, but he was then quickly ganged up on.

Müller, who is aligned with RINGKAMPF, was the most over guy and was cheered wildly. They did a tower of doom spot and Müller at one point took a Flair bump but got dropkicked to the floor. Pace hit a Code Red on Fletcher for a near fall, then tried to follow up with a BME-style moonsault but got thwarted.

Müller eventually hit the DDT on Pace for the win.

Karsten Beck was brought out as the director of sports with the 16 Carat trophy and everyone paraded into the ring for a picture.

16 Carat Gold tournament first round match: Axel Dieter Jr. defeated Marius al-Ani with a release Landungsbrücken suplex

It was surprising to see Axel Dieter Jr. (Marcel Barthel in NXT/NXT UK) so early in the card. The crowd was into him a lot, but he didn’t get quite the hero’s welcome he got back in December and the pops were still a bit low in the beginning.

They worked a very good match with Dieter hitting a lot of his spots, like a number of variations on a European uppercut, the Landungsbrücken suplex, and the headstand to escape from a headlock.

They did a sick-looking spot where Dieter dove through the ropes into the ring from the apron with a spear, while al-Ani did a scissors kick right into his neck with Dieter taking a brutal-looking bump on his head. Dieter went for the Axel Dieter (senior) special submission. al-Ani rolled out of it, only to be caught in the move right again.

al-Ani tried for a frog splash, but Dieter got his knees up. They traded yay/boo punches and Dieter finally hit a release Landungsbrücken suplex to pick up the victory.

16 Carat Gold tournament first round match: Rey Fenix pinned Rey Horus after a sit-out Muscle Buster

This was a crazy lucha match with lots of insane flips, counters, and flying action. Fenix got to show off his incredible sense of balance pretty much right away, as he jumped from the middle to the top rope and back with ridiculous ease to avoid and counter arm drags.

Horus, not to be outdone, then hit a tornillo arm drag. Seconds later, Horus did a tope con giro over the turnbuckle to the outside. This had the crowd going crazy just minutes into the match.

As Horus missed a move and was sitting on the middle of the rope, Fenix jumped on the top turnbuckle and virtually ran along the top rope with a soccer kick to Horus’ head. Wow. Fenix ate a DDT and a Spanish Fly for a near fall.

Fenix cleared the ropes 619-style on a whip-in and grazed a fan’s head in the process. The fan thankfully took it in stride. Fenix then got the win with a sit-out Muscle Buster.

Amazing match, with some money being thrown into the ring after. BattlArts founder Yuki Ishikawa sat with us in the press section and seemed to have the time of his life watching this.

16 Carat Gold tournament first round match: Shigehiro Irie pinned Chris Brookes after a Beast Bomber

They one-upped one another with playfully adjusting each other’s knee pads early on. Brookes offered a handshake, which Irie accepted, then bowed, which Irie also mirrored, only to be slapped into the back of the head. Irie answered by pouncing Brookes halfway across the ring. Brookes avoided a sit-down splash and came back with a senton on a doubled-over Irie.

Irie escaped a brainbuster attempt, felled the bigger man with a headbutt, and hit the sit-down splash for a near fall. Irie removed his elbow pads and went for a Beast Bomber but got rolled up.

Brookes followed with a slingshot cutter and Praying Mantis Bomb for a near fall, then locked in an Octopus hold, countered into a Death Valley Driver, and followed with a cannonball senton into the corner. Irie then hit a Beast Bomber and picked up the win.

16 Carat Gold tournament first round match: Lucky Kid pinned Timothy Thatcher with a roll-up

An excellent video package on Thatcher aired before the match, where he talked about his upcoming AMBITION match against his mentor (Yuki Ishikawa) and also how much wXw and RINGKAMPF had meant to him over the past few years.

Thatcher said that RINGKAMPF being his family wasn’t just something he said but something he 100 percent meant. Thatcher said he made two very close friends in WALTER and Axel Dieter Jr., something he usually doesn’t do in the wrestling business.

Thatcher said that they made decisions for themselves, as screenshots from Twitter of WALTER joining NXT UK were shown, while he had made decisions for RINGKAMPF. He said that if he met either of his two former RINGKAMPF brethren in the tournament, he wouldn’t hold back.

To accentuate Thatcher’s emancipation from RINGKAMPF, he also no longer came out to Antonín Dvorák’s New World Symphony but rather Lonesome Boatsman by the Dropkick Murphys.

This was a rematch from last year’s tournament — and Thatcher right away showed he was serious about winning as he started to beat the ever-living hell out of Lucky, seemingly also wanting to declare independence from Fight Club: Pro’s Schadenfreude stable in addition to RINGKAMPF.

The crowd adored Thatcher, and while they loved themselves some Lucky, they were firmly behind Thatcher on this one. Lucky early on did his leg-hugging spot, but he got slapped and gut-wrenched halfway across the ring for his trouble. Thatcher manhandled Lucky Kid with a chicken wing, butterfly suplex, and cross armbreaker.

Lucky briefly managed to get some offense in, but missed on a missile dropkick and Thatcher locked in a single-leg Boston crab. Lucky made it out and connected on a second missile dropkick, but he got caught in a Fujiwara armbar. Lucky managed a roll-up out of that position but quickly got beaten down again. Thatcher hit a top rope belly-to-belly and got a cross armbreaker — but Lucky made the ropes.

They traded palm strikes and Lucky managed a small package off a German suplex attempt, then followed up with a roll-up for the upset win.

The crowd briefly was shocked, as was Thatcher, who looked pissed and upset and quickly left the ring, just as Lucky looked shocked at his own victory in the ring. Interesting result, with Thatcher being pushed with that tremendous video package and being considered one of the favorites to win the tournament this year.

16 Carat Gold tournament first round falls count anywhere match: Avalanche defeated Jurn Simmons after a Dreissker Bomb off a balcony barrier onto the ramp

A crazy, brutal brawl that also seemingly served as the blow-off to their feud.

These two had problems starting as far back as last October after Avalanche’s partner Julian Nero got hurt and Simmons and partner in crime, Alexander James, mocked Avalanche. They traded wins in tag matches, as Avalanche tried out a number of partners, then segued into singles matches that left no clear winner, once going to a double countout, then a no contest as Simmons sped away in a car in their latest no countout match.

Simmons hit his massive Boot right out of the bat, but Avalanche no sold it and went for a Boulder Dash for a near fall, all in the opening minute. They brawled right to ringside and Avalanche got suplexed into a row of chairs.

They kept brawling and Simmons suplexed Avalanche into a raised metal stand, which left an Avalanche-sized dent in the metal. They brawled towards the stage and then out of the arena, as footage of the continuing brawl in the bowels of the Turbinenhalle aired on the big screen.

They brawled around a storage area, hitting each other with everything under the sun and trading a number of pinfall attempts on various stacks of stuff. Simmons hit Avalanche with a sheet of metal, then went to choke him out, but Avalanche wouldn’t quit.

Avalanche found some metal steps backstage and leapt off them, but Simmons moved and he crashed into a pile of stuff. Simmons found a kendo stick, as those just lie around backstage at arenas everywhere. They brawled back into the beginning, with Simmons beating down Avalanche with his stick and even snapping it off Avalanche’s back.

They ended up back in the ring, where Simmons had Avalanche down and actually cut a promo on him, telling him he was superior in every way. Simmons said he was about to slay the Monster of a Man, then went for the decapitation-style hit on the back of the neck with the kendo stick, just to have Avalanche come back and wrestle the kendo stick out of Simmons’ hands

They brawled back into the crowd and up the stairs, where Simmons tried to climb over the barrier of a flight of stairs, around ten feet off the ground and the metal ramp they brawled on earlier. Avalanche knocked him off, then climbed the barrier himself and hit a Dreissker Bomb off the barrier onto Simmons on the steel ramp for the pin and the victory.

16 Carat Gold tournament first round match: Pentagon Jr. defeated Mark Davis after a leaping Destroyer

Penta offered a hand shake, but just put the Cero Miedo hand gesture in Davis’ face. On the second attempt, Davis slapped Pentagon’s hand so hard his glove flew off.

A number of punches and leg kicks were ended as Davis hit a sit-down splash on Penta. Davis tried for a superplex but got thrown off and hit with a double foot stomp. Penta went for a piledriver, but it got countered into a Gold Coast Waterslide for a near fall.

Penta hit a springboard backcracker, but the leaping Destroyer got blocked. Davis hit a sliding punch, but Penta then rolled out of a pull-up piledriver and caught Davis’ arm. Penta snapped it, then hit the leaping Destroyer for the win. 

16 Carat Gold tournament first round match: Ilja Dragunov pinned Daisuke Sekimoto after Torpedo Moscow

Holy crap. This was an all-out, hard-hitting war between these two, as was to be expected and they did not disappoint for even a second. Dragunov, at one point, probably tried to set the record for most strikes thrown in a wXw match, as he just blasted Sekimoto with slaps and palm strikes for probably at least 30 seconds straight.

They locked up and Sekimoto went for a cross armbreaker, but it was countered as they fought on the mat. Sekimoto hit the first chop of the match. Dragunov retaliated with a lariat that missed, then ate a uranage backbreaker as he bounced off the ropes and into the ring.

Another chop dropped the mad Russian, followed by a vertical suplex and a Boston crab, which he eventually escaped. They traded brutal chops and forearms, which Dragunov seemed to revel in, asking for more.

Dragunov hit some clotheslines and lariats that sounded as brutal as they looked. He hit a Saito suplex and went for a back senton off the middle of the ropes but missed. Sekimoto then hit a gutwrench and locked in the Sharpshooter, but Dragunov made the ropes.

Sekimoto hit a big splash for another near fall. Dragunov came back with a swiveling lariat, but Sekimoto avoided it and hit a German suplex and a lariat of his own. Sekimoto followed with an enzuigiri that had Dragunov on his knees, but Dragunov got back up and hit a Death Valley Driver into the corner, followed by another back senton for a two count.

Dragunov then finally hit Torpedo Moscow for the win to advance into the next round.

16 Carat Gold tournament first round match: WALTER beat David Starr by referee stoppage with Gojira clutch

This match was preceded by another great video package, chronicling the history of WALTER and Starr and focusing on Starr never being able to beat WALTER before, no matter where in the world they wrestled.

Starr talked about all the things he had accomplished before — but the one thing he failed at every time was beating WALTER. He said he was obsessed with beating him, while clips of WALTER aired where he said Starr was an egomaniac who only thought about himself. Starr picked WALTER to be his first round opponent. Words can hardly do this justice, just watch it yourself if you have around four minutes to spare. Starr was a tremendous promo with great emotional range here.

Starr went to attack WALTER right away before any introductions, but the big Austrian clobbered him with a forearm across the face. Starr was not impressed and kept attacking.

They ended up at ringside and Starr drove WALTER into the post. He then badly crashed and burned on a tope as WALTER sidestepped and Starr flew full speed into the first few rows of chairs in a crash that looked horrifying.

Starr was okay to continue and quickly found himself locked in a Boston crab back in the ring. As Starr escaped that, he was hit with a uranage slam for a near fall. WALTER went to the top, but Starr was right there with him and hit a belly-to-belly off the top.

They traded more strikes, then Starr leapt on WALTER’s back and tried to apply the big man’s own sleeper hold. As WALTER went to reach for the ropes, Starr slapped his hands away and hit a German suplex, which is a sequence WALTER usually does in many of his matches.

They went back and forth for a few minutes and WALTER had Starr down on is knees in the corner, when Starr, whose mouth was bloodied up by that point, defiantly spat a gob of blood on WALTER’s chest in a great and disturbing visual. WALTER rubbed the blood off, then proceeded to slap Starr and lock in a sleeper of his own.

Starr got out but was immediately hit with a shotgun dropkick. Starr used a rana to get out of a powerbomb attempt and followed with Han Stansen for near fall. Starr tried lariat after lariat but got chopped down with hard blows to the chest. He managed to hit a Blackheart Buster for a near fall.

Starr hit a superkick, then hit the Product Placement for another close near fall that had the fans at the edges of their seats. Starr hit a number of forearms and WALTER actually begged off, but it was a con as he quickly hit a quick powerbomb and got the Gojira clutch as the crowd started booing.

Starr escaped and tried his own sleeper, but WALTER scaled the turnbuckles and fell back, breaking the hold. Starr, like a terrier, quickly locked in his own Gojira clutch again, then as WALTER escaped, hit a lariat to the back of the head, a German suplex, and another sleeper.

WALTER was down and the hold was locked in tight as the crowd roared for him to tap and Starr to finally beat him. WALTER eventually tapped, getting Starr to release the hold, but before that he had smartly positioned his foot under the rope — which he quickly pointed out to the referee, so the match continued.

As Starr argued with the referee, WALTER snuck in and locked in another tight Gojira clutch, trapped Starr’s arm, sank in the hooks with a bodyscissor, and finally sent Starr to sleep as the referee checked his arm and Starr could not keep it up.

The crowd booed as WALTER celebrated, even snatching a RINGKAMPF scarf from a fan, posing with it on the ramp, then throwing it back into the crowd. Starr looked devastated as he slowly slunk down the ramp and to the back.

Interesting booking here, with both Thatcher and Starr not being able to fulfill their quests or even make it out of round one. As wXw usually are very good at telling stories, it will be intriguing to see where things go from here for those two for the rest of the weekend and the upcoming weeks and months.

Other events — 

wXw Inner Circle 8 at the wXw Academy (March 7, 2019) — Attendance: 170 (sold out)

– David Starr defeated Jay Skillet in 7:27 after a powerbreaker

– Chris Brookes defeated Francis Kaspin, Julian Pace, and Avalanche in 5:45 after an underhook piledriver on Kaspin

Avalanche wore a plain black singlet as a tribute to King Kong Bundy here.

– Jurn Simmons defeated Kyle Fletcher in 9:05 after a low blow and a piledriver

– Ilja Dragunov defeated Mark Davis in 12:06 after Torpedo Moscow

Super hard-hitting match.

– Killer Kelly defeated Yuu in 7:55 after Carnation Revolution

– RINGKAMPF (WALTER & Timothy Thatcher) defeated Yuki Ishikawa & Shigehiro Irie in 24:43 when Thatcher submitted Irie in a Fujiwara armbar

This was an amazing match, especially if you enjoy submission-based strong-style matches. Thatcher and Ishikawa meet again on Saturday in the AMBITION super fight, in a UWF-style match.

16 Carat Bowled — Oberhausen Open II (March 8, 2019)

This was a fun bowling tournament taking place after the action of day one, featuring fans and a big number of current and former wrestlers and wXw officials, officially endorsed by wXw and organized by the two Sarahs of the similarly named podcast.

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The storyline between Daniel Bryan and Drew Gulak continued on social media after Gulak had Bryan practice a “Duck Walk” earlier this week, which we noted at this link.

Gulak then had Bryan perform a “Headlock Squeeze” and as you can see in the video below, Bryan performed the task in his backyard.

Bryan wrote, “Here’s my best attempt at the #HeadlockSqueeze. In earlier attempts, my ball popped out… twice! I always thought I had a great headlock, but now I’m not so sure. #CoachGulak #BryanGulakConnection #BallPoppedOut”

Gulak responded with his own video and wrote, “Nice #HeadlockSqueeze! If your ball is popping out it could be a problem with your support. Use better compression! I like a smaller ball personally. This one is tiny, blue, bumpy, and vibrates! Also inhale big and get LOUD! #PracticeHowYouPlay #Ballin #GulakAndBryanConnection”

Bryan wrote back, “Wow… I really admire how you squeeze your tiny blue ball. There’s a lot learn in that short video. We each use a different grip to squeeze our balls… why do you use that grip? And is there anything else I should squeeze? #CoachDrew #HeadlockSqueeze #PracticeHowYouPlay”

Gulak agreed that they do squeeze their balls differently. He responded, “We really do squeeze our balls differently! I use the S-Grip for headlocks when I’m not trapping an arm. I use more of my own arm as a fulcrum around my opponent’s neck and jaw. If you can’t find a ball, use any head-like substitutes… like this one here! #GulakBryanConnection”

You can see their latest exchange below:

Australia’s hardline immigration minister was swept up in the deepening saga over Chinese meddling in domestic politics Tuesday, delivering another blow to a government facing defeat in next month’s election.

An investigation by national broadcaster ABC revealed that Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton met privately in 2016 with Chinese billionaire Huang Xiangmo to discuss obtaining Australian citizenship.

Huang has been at the centre of a series of scandals including accusations he bought influence in Canberra with millions in donations to major political parties. He has long denied any wrongdoing.

The ABC alleged Huang paid a lobbyist thousands of dollars for private access to Dutton, throwing Australia’s governing coalition into the foreign interference saga even as it trails in polls ahead of an expected May 18 election.

Huang was eventually denied citizenship on the advice of Australian spy agencies and barred last month from the country on suspicions he is part of a Communist Party influence campaign.

Dutton Tuesday dismissed allegations of interference as "nonsense".

"I have never received a dollar from this individual. I had one meeting with him over lunch. I have never seen him since," he told reporters.

Former opposition Labor party senator Sam Dastyari, who was forced to quit politics because of his ties to Huang, told the ABC Dutton in 2015 fast-tracked a request for the billionaire’s family to hold a citizenship ceremony.

Dastyari said it "blew him away" when Dutton took a few weeks to approve a fast-track request that would typically take months to rubber stamp.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison defended his government Tuesday, labelling Dastyari a "disgrace" for "betraying" his country.

But former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull, who last year introduced sweeping reforms to Australia’s espionage and foreign interference laws, said the ABC report was "very concerning".

Turnbull, who was ousted in a party coup late last year by a hard-right faction led by Dutton, likened the latest revelations to the Dastyari case.

"Peter Dutton has a lot to explain about this," he told reporters Tuesday.

"He is supposed to be the minister responsible for the domestic security of Australia," said Turnbull, calling on Morrison to do more.

Canberra banned foreign donations as part of its reforms, with China called out as its primary concern.

Beijing has dismissed the claims of meddling as hysteria and paranoia.

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