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MLW War Games Announced For 9/6 (Ft. Lauderdale)

MLW War Games is coming to Ft Lauderdale, FL on Thursday, September 6th. MLW CEO Court Bauer confirmed the 2-ring steel cage match will headline MLW’s return to the War Memorial Auditorium for the first time in 15 years.

https://twitter.com/courtbauer/status/1016496414120177664

Tickets for MLW #WarGames go on sale Monday, July 23rd at MLWgo.com and  AXS.com. Talent scheduled to appear includes World Tag Team Champions Pentagon Jr. & Rey Fenix,
Barrington Hughes, MJF, Sami Callihan and Salina de la Renta.

The original MLW War Games event took place from the same venue on 9/19/2003. The War Games match saw The Funkin’ Army (Bill Alfonso, Sabu, Steve Williams, Terry Funk & The Sandman) defeat The Extreme Horsemen (Barry Windham, CW Anderson, PJ Walker, Simon Diamond & Steve Corino).

MLW has two big upcoming events ahead of War Games in September. This Thursday, MLW returns to GILT nightclub in Orlando, FL the next round of MLW Fusion TV tapings.

Next Thursday, MLW will bring Battle Riot to New York City. That show will air as a 2-hour special on Friday, July 27th on beIN Sports.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ScXkWejH2jo

Starrcast To Stream Live On FITE TV

Starrcast, the official podcast convention of ALL IN, will stream live on the FITE TV mobile app. Starrcast will be held from Thursday, August 30th through Sunday, September 2nd from the Hyatt Regency in Schaumburg, IL.

Visit Starrcast.com for a full listing of events taking place during the convention, including meet and greets, live podcasts and much more.

As of this writing, there have been no official announcements about how fans will be able to watch the All In live event on Saturday night, September 1st.

Here’s the official press release sent in by FITE TV regarding Starrcast streaming live:

Starrcast announces distribution plans with FITE TV

CHICAGO – Starrcast creator Conrad Thompson announced on Monday his plans for making the highly anticipated Starrcast event available live on FITE, the premium digital combat sports network. The already sold-out Starrcast is slated to take place Aug. 30-Sept. 2 at the Hyatt Regency Schaumburg outside Chicago. Starrcast is providing the stage for fans to experience in person the very best of the many pro wrestling-themed podcasts that have taken the world of wrestling by storm.

Starrcast is the convention that has developed in connection with the “All In” wrestling event set for Saturday, Sept.1 at the Sears Centre. “All In” sold out the 10,000-seat Sears Centre in 30 minutes in mid-May.

The Starrcast telecast on FITE will feature as many as 20 live podcasts scheduled for the weekend, including ones hosted by Bruce Prichard, Eric Bischoff, Tony Schiavone, Madusa and Colt Cabana. All of the podcasts on FITE will feature special guests from the wrestling world during each 1½ to 2-hour program. A complete schedule for each of the podcasts will be released shortly.

FITE, is available worldwide and its programming content features pro wrestling, boxing, MMA and kickboxing. FITE is available as a free mobile app on iOs and Android mobile devices, on the web at www.FITE.tv and on the Roku, Apple TV and Android TV boxes.

“The demand for access to Starrcast is unprecedented. Never before has an event like this sold out over three months in advance in the wrestling industry or for that fact in the fan convention business. Combined with All In, Chicago has become the place to be in the wrestling world during Labor Day weekend,” Thompson said. “Because of the demand we have been able to work with FITE TV and make each of these podcasts available live throughout the four-day weekend. Now wrestling fans from around the world can join in on the party and hear first-hand from the stars from over the last five decades who have helped build pro wrestling into the wildly popular sensation that it is today.”

“FITE is excited to kick off this partnership with GFE’s production of Starrcast,” FITE COO Michael Weber said. “With our ability to offer the programming in different pricing scenarios, the viewer will have the opportunity to customize the viewing experience of this must-see, wrestling-centric programming.”

RAW Preview: Final Hype For Extreme Rules

Tonight’s edition of WWE Raw takes place from Boston, MA at the TD Garden arena. This is the final episode of Raw ahead of Sunday’s Extreme Rules pay-per-view.

WWE.com is advertising the following items for tonight:

  • Follow-up on Braun Strowman locking Kevin Owens in a porta potty last week and pushing him off the stage.
  • The latest from Bobby Lashley’s rivalry with Roman Reigns ahead of their single match at Extreme Rules.
  • Dr. Shelby tries to get Sasha Banks and Bayley back on the same page.
  • Can Finn Balor get his hands on Baron Corbin before Extreme Rules, or will Corbin use his political clout to avoid Balor until then?

As always, join us here tonight for our weekly Live Coverage of WWE RAW.

Ahead of tonight’s Raw, catch up on our feature looking at the main storyline points coming out of last week’s broadcast:

MLW Fusion Report: June 29, 2018

Hello, wrestling fans! Let’s dive right into this week’s Fusion Report.

We open with a recap of Barrington Hughes’ fight with Sami Callihan’s Death Machines last week in the backstage area (he was protecting Shane Strickland). After that, we cut to Casey Lennox, who’s with Hughes. Hughes reports that during the melee, he was hit in the back of the head with a foreign object. He tells the Death Machines that he’s pissed and they “ain’t done rumbling.”

After the opening video package, Rich Bocchini and Tony Schiavone welcome us and run down the night’s card.

They replay Kotto Brazil’s victory against Vandal Ortagun from last week before going to Vanessa Craft, who’s standing by with Brazil. She asks about his victory and in the middle of his answer, the Death Machines attack him. Sami Callihan appears on screen and sings “Hot Crossed Buns.”

I hate this man.

Sorry. I seem to have a compulsion to express my dislike for Callihan whenever I have to mention him.

Anyway, he says that he and his Death Machines are paid to be entertaining but they don’t have to be. Well, they’re not, so I guess they’re stealing money from MLW. They kidnap Brazil hostage and Callihan challenges MVP to find him.

 

Ariel Dominquez vs. Jaye Skye in a Prospect Match

This is not a match. It’s a segment to introduce Su Yung and Zeda. The two men lock up before the house lights go dark. Red lights start to flash and the image of a Chinese woman holding a heart appears on the video screen. The two women walk down to the ring and beat the life out of the poor men. Imagine the outrage on the Internet if Stephanie McMahon did this to the male wrestlers on Raw instead of just slapping them in the face. The two ladies finish up and creep back up the aisle.

A video package plays of Shane “Swerve” Strickland. Low Ki does a voice over in which he says that Strickland has a lot of accomplishments, including becoming the Heavyweight Champion, beating Havoc, Pentagon, and King, and red racing Salina de la Renta. He asks if Swerve is confident that he can out run and outlast him. Then, we see de la Renta announce that the bounty on Swerve’s head is now $60,000 and it’s all Low Ki’s for the taking. Low Ki concludes by saying that he now has 60,000 reasons to burn down Swerve’s house. Geez, burn down his house? Why not just beat him in the ring and call it a day?

The Battle Riot report is next. This week’s entrants in the Battle Riot Match are Tom Lawlor, Jimmy Havoc, Low Ki, Leon Scott, Brody King, and Headshrinker Samu! Well, that just made my ticket worth it. The other matches announced include The Hart Foundation (Davey Boy Smith, Jr. and Teddy Hart) with Brian Pillman vs. ACH and Rich Swann, John Hennigan vs. Low Ki, and Maxwell J. Friedman vs. Joey Ryan for the MLW World Middleweight Championship.

Next, we see MVP searching for Brazil. He enters a boiler room and sees Brazil tied up. There’s a phone in the room. MVP picks it up and listens to the message recorded on it. It’s Callihan challenging him to a Boiler Room Brawl.

 

Sammy Guevara vs. Fred Yehi

Sammy Guevara is accompanied to the ring by his manager Salina de la Renta and her new bodyguard. In an inset promo, de la Renta says that Guevara has wrestle all over the world and trained with the best.

Backstage Yehi makes his way to the ring when he’s stopped by Team Filthy. They’re sorry about what happened in the Yehi/Lawlor match from a few weeks back and thank him for the match. They shake his hand before Yehi continues his walk to the ring.

The match starts with dueling slaps to the face. Yehi gets the early advantage before Guevara does a backflip over Yehi’s head and hits a dropkick. Guevara does a lot of showboating throughout the match, which is to his detriment. Yehi takes back control, stomps on Guevara’s hand, and executes his bike pedal kicks to Guevara’s chest and face. He hits a release German suplex and a basement dropkick. He charges Guevara in the corner but Guevara throws Yehi into the corner with a release belly to belly suplex.

Guevara showboats some more as he squats Yehi. Yehi escapes, slaps Guevara, double stomps him, and hits a powerbomb for two. Guevara is able to get Yehi up in an electric chair. Yehi escapes it and goes for a pin. Guevara kicks out but Yehi locks on a Koji Clutch. He punches Guevara while he’s got him locked in the hold and Guevara taps out.

De la Renta is not happy with the loss. Guevara whines that punches are illegal as he chases after his manager.

 

We see Lawlor and Simon Gotch walking backstage. They’re stopped by Low Ki. He mocks Lawlor for not getting his shot at the Heavyweight Title yet despite being the number one contender. In fact, Low Ki is getting his shot first. Lawlor grimaces at the news and walks away.

They show a recap of the events that have unfolded between Brazil and MVP and Callihan and his Death Machines. Callihan cuts a promo saying that what happened to Brazil was a warning for MVP and if MVP has balls, he should meet Callihan in the Boiler Room Brawl.

We are reminded of the beatdown that Team Filthy gave Jimmy Havoc outside the Gilt Nightclub and the gloating that Team Filthy did in the aftermath. Then, we see Jimmy Havoc for the first time in weeks. He’s sitting next to the hot tub that Team Filthy was in when they gloated over the beating. Havoc says he’s watching and following Lawlor. He declares that the nighttime is when he plays. He says blood looks black in the moonlight and the next time he sees Tom Lawlor, he’ll show him what he means. I really want to see Havoc beat Lawlor badly.

Casey Lennox attempts to interview Team TBD, but they’re having a fight in their dressing room and Jason Cade storms out.

 

Rich Swann vs. ACH

Lawlor is on commentary with Bocchini and Schiavone for this one.

Swann and ACH have complete some chain wrestling to start. Swann dropkicks ACH and goes for a handspring, but ACH catches him and chops him. ACH gets a side headlock. Swann escapes and they trade waistlocks. ACH hits a backbreaker and a release Germany suplex, stomps Swann’s hand, chops him, covers for two, and straps on a chinlock. Swann tries to get out of it, but ACH is able to lock it back on every time.

Eventually, Swann frees himself. He hits a headscissor, a step up back leg kick, a step up enziguiri, and a standing hurricanrana. ACH answers back with a leg sweep, a double stomp, a basement single leg dropkick, a discus lariat into the corner, a frogsplash, and a one-armed dead lift German suplex into bridging pin (he has to use one arm because his left shoulder is injured).

ACH tries three times for a vertical suplex but fails. Swann hits a handspring cutter. He tries to lock in a double underhook, but ACH back drops him. They execute dueling forearms before Swann hits a roundhouse kick. ACH blocks a standing 450 attempt. He misses a frogsplash and goes for a crucifix pin, which gets two. He tries a la magistral cradle, but ACH halts the pinning attempt midway through it, gets Swann’s shoulders on the mat, and covers for the win.

 

Next week, Swerve will address de la Renta and Low Ki and we will see Callihan vs. MVP in the first Boiler Room Brawl in 20 years.

 

Another good show this week. A lot of time was spent on recapping past issues and setting up future programs, including Callihan and MVP’s match next week. I’m excited to see what happens down in the boiler room. Until then, have a great week, wrestling fans!

 

 

Vince McMahon’s Financial Commitment in XFL Expected to Reach $500 Million

Vince McMahon is going all in for the relaunch of he XFL.

The revamped league that is expected to return in February 2020 already received $100 million in funding from McMahon, who sold a swath of his stock in World Wrestling Entertainment to initially fund the XFL under his new brand Alpha Entertainment.

Now it appears that number was just a pittance compared to what McMahon expects to spend over the first three seasons of the XFL — assuming the league sticks around that long.

The first iteration of the XFL only went one season.

According to ESPN, McMahon told insiders that his investment in the XFL would likely be around $500 million over three seasons.

New XFL CEO and commissioner Oliver Luck explained that the $100 million that McMahon helped to relaunch the league wouldn’t be nearly enough to actually sustain the kind of financial commitment needed to fuel a new professional football endeavor.

“People were focused on the $100 million, but the truth is that doesn’t even get us to the 20-yard line,” Luck said in the interview.

The biggest chunk of the cost to run the league will go to the players’ salaries, which are expected to average around $75,000 per athlete on a 40-man roster. Some of the higher end players may end up with bigger contracts.

Add to that, McMahon and the XFL are also expected to pay out more than $10 million in the first season just for insurance premiums to cover the players’ injuries.

Luck added that finding an insurance carrier for the league was a top priority for McMahon after announcing that the XFL was coming back. That cost alone could continue to add cost with so few insurance companies willing to cover a sports league like the XFL.

By all accounts, McMahon is not only financially invested in the XFL but he seems committed to make the league work the second time around after the organization originally folded in 2001.

Noelle Foley’s Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Tryout Video

Noelle Foley, WWE daughter of WWE legend Mick Foley, is hoping to land a spot in Sports Illustrated’s coveted ‘Swimsuit’ issue.

SI is running a contest on Instagram where women can use the hashtag #SISwimSearch and submit their ‘audition’ video in hopes of appearing in the magazine.

Noelle Foley’s audition video can be seen below. She posted an inspiring message with her submission talking about her struggle with attempting to break into the modeling industry.

“I’ve always wondered if I had what it takes to be in the pages of Sports Illustrated Swimsuit magazines so I’m shooting my shot,” Foley wrote.

“Over the years I’ve been denied hundreds of times by agencies across the US because I’m too big to be a typical model and too small to be a plus sized model. I want to help break that barrier in between that size gap and and show that every body type is beautiful. I would LOVE to be apart of the movement and continue to spread this amazing message around the world!!!”

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bkk1jWdgWhP/?utm_source=ig_share_sheet&igshid=3d8ag049fe6m

Chris Jericho On His Future With New Japan, Vince Threatening To Fire Him & More

Chris Jericho was Sean Waltman’s guest on the latest episode of the X-Pac 1-2-360 podcast, which you can listen to at iTunes and Omny.fm.

Here are some highlights of what Chris Jericho said about:

The time Vince McMahon said he’d fire him if he didn’t have a good match with Sean Waltman:

“So when I got to WWE, I’d been working for 9 years and I’d been over in every company that I ever worked for so you know there’s certain guys like when Daniel Bryan came into the WWE I knew he’d get over no matter what. He’s been over everywhere he’s ever worked, he’ll figure it out and that’s what I did. I figured it out and it didn’t take long but there was a huge bullseye on my back and I smartened up to it very quickly.

And the other part of the story…what Vince told me was ‘you’re working with X-Pac tonight, if you don’t have a good match you’re fired.’ Which was a guillotine over my head… and then afterwards Vince was super cool, he pat me on the back, ‘hey pal, give me a call tomorrow and oh by the way every match that you have from now on run it past Sean Waltman first and make sure that it makes sense…In retrospect there’s a reason Vince did that. As we know Vince is a f***ing genius and we were peers but Sean you knew how to work that [WWE] style so he put me with you to figure out how to do it. I’m really happy he did that because I learned right away…That’s why Vince did it and it worked.

His match with Naito at NJPW Dominion:

“We went to the Dojo the day before and I had some ideas…but once again I was thinking more along the lines of what’s the story I want to tell? And here’s what I always go with, if I ever do a promo or match. What’s the vibe of this promo? What’s the vibe of this match? What’s the mood that I wanna set? Once I circled in on that then the rest just came together very quickly.

I wanted something that’s a little uncomfortable, a little bit stiff. Cause Naito’s style is tranquilo as his catchphrase, very laid back…I wanted a different Naito, I wanted a Naito that did give a shit and wanted to fight…That whole start of the match was his [Gedo] idea; attack him before the bell, attack him before he takes his suit off, put him through a table. Like I didn’t think of it that way… It sets the tone of being this super intense brawl.”

Working a Brock Lesnar-type schedule with New Japan and his future with the company:

“A lot more tales to tell with Chris Jericho in New Japan. And almost doing a Brock Lesnar type of schedule to where I am not there for every show but the ones that I am there for are now special cause Jericho is there. I didn’t expect to be doing more matches with New Japan as of January of this year and now that I’ve done another one and there’s a couple more in the pipeline I might decide to stay a little longer.”

Wanting to make his Rock ‘n Wrestling Rager Cruise an annual event:

“My schedule is ridiculous I’m not gonna have any fun at all, I am working the whole damn time but I have to sell this cruise, I have to make it a success. So you know wrestling fans are gonna have a great time, it might be a little bit crazy for the boys but it’s gonna be a fun experience for everybody because it’s people from all of the same mind set of really loving this certain art form of wrestling and rock n’ roll as well as love live comedy and love live podcasts all that sort of thing. It’s never been done before, I am taking a big chance but I had to do it and so far so good. My goal is for it to be an annual destination vacation. In year two, I’ve already got X-Pac 12360 on the docket for a live podcast if you could put up with it [laughs].”

The “WWE Style” of Wrestling:

“It’s all part of the learning process. Anytime you come into a new company it takes a while to figure it out. Now I always laugh when people say ‘WWE style? There’s no WWE style.’ Yes there is a WWE style, it’s a main event style, it’s how you really work. And anybody that comes through the system, it makes me laugh when you see guys from NXT that came from the indies that were super great and critically acclaimed…there’s always an adjustment period when you come into the WWE, I don’t care who you are – AJ Styles it was an adjustment, Bobby Roode or Samoa Joe or any of those guys … There is a way we work in WWE and once you can work that way you can take that style and work it anywhere on the planet and always have the best match on the show.”

How the wrestling business was different in the 1990’s:

“It was such a different business in the 90s. Even if it was only twenty years ago it might as well have been fifty years ago with the way the boys thought, the way the business was…it doesn’t even matter who the main event is anymore, whereas back in the 90s, if you were going to make the big money you had to be in the main event. And as a result, to stay in the main event there was a lot of political imagination going on behind the scenes to keep guys down or help guys out whatever it was. And those sorts of politics don’t really exist anymore.”

Backstage politics in WCW compared to WWE:

“When I came into WWE; it’s hard for people to actually believe this but at that time frame the wrestling war was real… there was a little bit of underlying heat amongst the boys if you came from WCW or vice versa. It’s just the way that it was. And so when I came into WWE… the first night I interrupted The Rock, I’m sure I had nuclear heat just by the fact that I was doing it. I was completely oblivious to that, knew really nothing of the politics that were going on. I was just doing my thing…”

Chyna having the stiffest forearm strikes:

“I remember the first real feud that I had was with Chyna. And [Vince McMahon] said to me, ‘Do you mind working with a woman?’ and I said ‘No I don’t mind, I’ll be happy too.’ And he goes ‘ I don’t want you to treat her with kid gloves, I want you to work with her like you would work with a guy. I don’t want you to pull any punches, I don’t want you to stiff her but do what you do.’ So I did that and I remember as a result she did get a little bit of a black eye once. By the way her forearm strikes were stiff as f***.”

You can listen to the full episode of X-Pac 1-2-360 with Chris Jericho below:

MLW To Crown World Middleweight Champion At Battle Riot

The first-ever MLW Middleweight Champion will be crowned at next month’s Battle Riot event from New York City.

MLW announced on Thursday that the July 19th TV taping from the Melrose Ballroom in Queens, NY will feature Maxwell J. Friedman and Joey Ryan squaring off to crown the inaugural champion.

The new MLW Middleweight division will feature competitors weighing 205 pounds and under.

In addition to the Battle Riot main event and this Middleweight Championship bout, the card will also feature The Hart Foundation (Teddy Hart and Davey Boy Smith Jr) w/Brian Pillman II vs. ACH & Rich Swann and John Hennigan vs. Low Ki.

As announced earlier this week, MLW Battle Riot will be broadcast on beIN SPORTS (the home of MLW FUSION) as a 2-hour special on Friday night, July 27th.

Tickets for MLW Battle Riot are now on sale at Eventbrite.com.

MLW Battle Riot Will Be A 2-Hour Network Special

Major League Wrestling’s upcoming Battle Riot show (7/19) from New York City has been announced as the promotion’s first-ever 2-hour network special.

MLW: Battle Riot will air on BeIN Sports on Friday night, July 27th at 8pm ET.

The news was first reported by Sports Illustrated.

MLW CEO Court Bauer told SI that he strongly considered offering MLW Battle Riot as a traditional pay-per-view event, but ultimately it was decided that a 2-hour broadcast on beIN SPORTS was the best way to reach (and reward) MLW’s growing audience.

“I heavily considered pay per view, but I want to give the fans something special and do it for free,” said Bauer. “Some promoters put a price tag on everything and I could see the temptation here, but I want to reward fans that have been supporting us. Disruption is key for MLW, and a free two-hour special is the ultimate disruption. BeIN is a great partner and I’m glad they agree.”

The card for MLW Battle Riot is stacked (more on that below) and will be headlined by the first-ever Battle Riot match. 40 wrestlers will compete in this unconventional battle royal, with eliminations taking place when someone is pinned, submits or is thrown over the top rope. The match will start with two participants, with a new entrant every 60 seconds.

The winner of MLW Battle Riot gets a shot at the MLW World Heavyweight Championship (currently held by Shane Strickland) “anytime, anywhere.”

If you’re in the NYC area, it’s going to be a wild show – and we’ll be in attendance. Visit Eventbrite.com for ticket information.

Updated Card for MLW: Battle Riot

Here’s the current card for MLW Battle Riot, which takes place on Thursday night, July 19th from Melrose Ballroom in Long Island City:

Battle Riot Battle Royal 

Participants include John Morrison, Pentagon, Teddy, Davey Boy Smith Jr., “PCO” Pierre Carl Ouellet, “Filthy” Tom Lawlor, Hornswoggle and many more.

– The Hart Foundation (Teddy Hart and Davey Boy Smith Jr. with Brian Pillman II) vs. ACH & Rich Swann

– John Hennigan vs. Low Ki

Also signed to appear on July 19th:

  • World Heavyweight Champion Shane Strickland
  • MLW Tag Team Champions Pentagon Jr. & Rey Fenix
  • Salina de la Renta
  • Barrington Hughes
  • Maxwell J. Friedman
  • Sami Callihan

For more, check out the MLW Battle Riot Control Center, hosted by Tony Schiavone:

https://youtu.be/ScXkWejH2jo

RAW Preview: Rollins’ Rematch, Road To Extreme Rules

Tonight’s edition of WWE Raw takes place from San Diego, California at the Valley View Casino Center. We’re less than 3 weeks out from Extreme Rules, which takes place Sunday, July 15th.

WWE.com is advertising the following items for Raw:

– Seth Rollins gets a rematch against Dolph Ziggler, who captured the Intercontinental championship last week.

– Brock Lesnar’s next challenger will be decided in a multi-man match at Extreme Rules. Last week, Bobby Lashley and Roman Reigns were named as participants in the match. Who else will battle to become #1 contender?

– What does Nia Jax have planned for Alexa Bliss?

– KO and Baron Corbin forge powerful alliance.

– Where do Sasha Banks and Bayley go from here after failing to function as a team and later brawling backstage last week?

As always, join us here tonight for our WWE RAW Live Results & Discussion. 

Chris Jericho: New Japan “Breathing Down The Neck” Of WWE

Following New Japan Pro Wrestling’s recent Dominion event, Chris Jericho spoke with Taylor Allen of the Winnipeg Free Press about two ‘Winnipeggers’ (he and Kenny Omega) leaving that show with NJPW’s two top championships.

Jericho is proud to be at the forefront of NJPW’s global expansion and feels the company is starting to gain ground on WWE.

“[New Japan] is a company that’s slowly but surely increasing its worldwide popularity and basically breathing down the neck of the WWE. It’s a Japanese wrestling company, the top stars are Japanese, but there we were, two foreigners, headlining and main eventing the Tokyo Dome. It would be like two Japanese football teams in the Super Bowl. The fact it’s two guys from Winnipeg is a really huge deal.”

WWE is such a well-oiled machine that it would be nearly impossible to knock them off the pedestal as the top wrestling promotion in the world. Several promotions have made the mistake of trying to compete with WWE by emulating them, but history shows that companies must take a different approach to compete. As successful as WWE is, their distinct product is not the only way to present pro wrestling. Jericho sees opportunity there and believes New Japan can continue growing by accentuating strengths that WWE does not have.

“Obviously, you’ll never beat WWE, but to carve out a niche for yourself within the market, you have to do something different, and New Japan is a completely different animal. Yes, it’s still pro wrestling, but it’s a completely different style and much more reformed, more hard-hitting and, in a lot of ways, more fun, depending on what you’re looking for.”

27 years into his wrestling career, Jericho, now 47, is still at the top of his game. He continues to reinvent himself and captivate fans around the world with his can’t-miss performances. He plans to return to WWE at some point, but for now, he’s invested in New Japan’s success.

Visit Winnipeg Free Press to read the full interview, which also includes quotes from IWGP Heavyweight Champion Kenny Omega.

Spoilers: NXT TV Tapings Results, Top Matches For Takeover

On Thursday night, NXT returned to Full Sail University in Winter Park, Florida. The following are results from the tapings, which will air over the next several weeks and take us through mid-July.

– Fabian Aichner def. Raul Mendoza in a dark match.

Week 1 (Airing June 27th):

– NXT Champion Aleister Black came out for a promo. He spoke about battling Lars Sullivan at Takeover, but was interrupted by Tomasso Ciampa, who referred to himself as the devil. Now that Johnny Gargano is out of the picture, he’s focused on the title and will make Black’s reign fade to Black.

– Kona Reeves def. Max Humberto.

– Candice LeRae def. Lacey Evans.

– Moustache Mountain vs. Dave Dixon and Carl Axelrod never began, as the Undisputed Era came out and attacked Dixon and Axelrod before the match. They called Moustache Mountain’s title win in the UK a fluke. Undisputed Era surrounded the ring, but Ricochet ran out to even the odds, setting up a 6-man tag match.

– Undisputed Era def. Ricochet and Moustache Mountain

Week 2 (Airing July 4th):

– Dakota Kai def. Santana Garret

– NXT Women’s Champion Shayna Baszler kicks off the show, saying she proved herself at Takeover and is the most dominant champion in NXT.

– The Mighty def. Otis Dozovic of Heavy Machinery in a handicap match. It was explained that Tucker Knight was out due to an “accident” which was actually the birth of his daughter.

– Kairi Sane def. Vanessa Borne. After the match, Kairi says she beat Shayna Baszler before and will do it again to become the next NXT Women’s Championship.

– Velveteen Dream def. Chris Dijak. EC3 came out for his entrance while Dream was still in the ring after his match.

– Johnny Gargano def. EC3 in what was described as one of the best matches of the night.

Week 3 (Airing July 11th)

– NXT North American Champion Adam Cole def. Danny Burch

– Lacey Evans def. Dakota Kai

– Kassius Ohno squashed an enhancement talent.

– Kairi Sane def. Candice LeRae and Nikki Cross in a triple threat match to become the #1 contender to NXT Women’s Champion Shayna Baszler.

– Undisputed Era def. Moustache Mountain to win back the NXT Tag Team Championships. The finish came when Bate threw in the towel when Seven wouldn’t tap to O’Reilly.

NXT Takeover: Brooklyn

Based on the matches that will air on NXT television through mid-July, the following appear to be the top two matches for NXT Takeover: Brooklyn during SummerSlam weekend:

  • NXT Champion Aleister Black vs. Tomasso Ciampa
  • NXT Women’s Champion Shayna Bazsler vs. Kairi Sane

Kenny Omega Surprised At WWE’s Support Of New Day E3 Battle

IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Kenny Omega was Sean Waltman’s guest this week on the X-Pac 1-2-360 podcast. Omega spoke about a wide variety of topics, including:

  • His “7-Star” match with Kazuchika Okada at NJPW Dominion
  • If he feels pressure to fill Okada’s Shoes
  • His reaction to WWE promoting The Elite’s video game battle against New Day
  • His upcoming match against Kota Ibushi at NJPW G1 Climax
  • Wanting to defend the IWGP title against Tetsuya Naito and Hiroshi Tanahashi

Here are some highlights of what Kenny Omega said about:

WWE Supporting The E3 Gaming Battle Between New Day & The Elite

“The amount of support I had from their side [WWE] was certainly surprising. And I’m thankful for it, we really went out and tried to do something new…I really think that we need to get out and explore other options as to how to make wrestling fun and cool again. How to kinda introduce what we do to a brand new audience and gaming was a way to do that. And The New Day… well especially Austin Creed/Xavier Woods himself, he has that really popular Youtube gaming channel and he’s always involved in anything gaming and we sort of have the video gaming rivalry because we can’t have an in-ring rivalry being part of two different companies.

To have the blessing of both companies, and the overwhelming support by WWE was really cool. It’s a possible big game changer, we broke a lot of records with just that event alone and I think it goes to show that all the companies and these wrestlers, we can play nice with each other and it is entertaining and that’s the type of involvement as champion that I want to have.”

His “7-Star” Match with Kazuchika Okada at NJPW Dominion

“A lot of thought and care went into all of that stuff [match layout].What moves are we gonna do? What are the finishes going to be? Of course that’s all part of it. It’s what story do we tell that compliments the other three matches that we’ve done? What story do we tell that leaves something open for a possible fifth match because even though we were never told there was gonna be a fifth match. I have a feeling there’s gonna be a fifth match. So I didn’t want to blow everything in that match.

I wanted to leave it so that there is gonna be another one. And I also still wanted to make it sort of based in reality where this is sort of the be-all-end-all and the match decides which one of us is superior for at least this point in time but I didn’t feel like we had to overkill anything. And there’s so many factors that go into it and I really tried to carefully consider them all. The story surrounding the match, the story within the match, the story that happens before, the story that happens after…

There’s so much to go over and I wanted each fall to look different enough from one another so that it did really look like three different matches. And I wanted all the matches to make both of us look good, I wanted them to highlight our strengths as performers.”

If He Feels Pressure To Fill Okada’s Shoes and His Goals As IWGP Champion

“No, I would feel pressure if there was the pressure to be a textbook wrestler, to be a textbook wrestler and have a textbook wrestler-ish run. Okada had that covered completely and he had done things that no one else could really ever do, he was one of the greatest title runs of all time.

Luckily, I’m kind of not the conventional wrestler and a lot of my matches visually appear similar to one another so my hope is to kind of have a very original looking run, where I am digging deeper into everyone’s character and kind of adding layers to the people I work with, so that way all of the defenses look different from one another. The matches themselves may even be different or original or whatever, so I don’t feel like I have to fill Okada’s shoes… Even though people may not prefer my run over Okada’s, I want them to kind of recognize it as something original and unique and hopefully enjoyable.”

His Upcoming Match With Golden Lovers Partner Kota Ibushi at NJPW G1 Climax

“I mean both of us think it’s too soon, both of us really had it in our minds that we don’t want to re-visit it unless it’s the Tokyo Dome because we get sort of too crazy with one another. And we push each others limits too far and it’s scary,  especially Ibushi and I always feel like I can’t be in this guy’s shadow so I have to meet his craziness and that just creates an endless circle of one-upmanship.”

Wanting To Defend The IWGP Title Against Tetsuya Naito and Hiroshi Tanahashi

“I would love to wrestle Naito in an actual championship capacity rather than just the G1. I’d love to wrestle Tanahashi because I feel that he was always the protected ace of the company and now he’s getting run down and beaten down and he knows that he’s sort of on his way out of being a top four guy. And I really want to have sort of a special moment with him if it’s possible. And I know he kinda hates me in real life… it’s like a professional jealousy thing that’s all it is {laughs}. Not actually hates me hates me, you know I love him but we love to hate each other because we have very different views on wrestling.”

Remembering Vader and How He Helped Kenny Legally Wrestle In Japan

“Terrible news. I was absolutely shocked when it happened. Especially since he just had just gone through that crazy surgery where it was just miraculous that he got through it all. You can never be prepared for news like that and luckily all the memories I have of Vader when I’ve met him in person were really really pleasant. He was always a very pleasant individual.

He was actually the reason I was able to get my first work visa in Japan. Because he had a promotion in Japan for a moment in time where he was running shows every three or four months. And if it wasn’t for him I wouldn’t have been able to legally work in Japan until actually signing with New Japan. Mostly because of Vader I was able to legally wrestle and make money in Japan.”

Celebrating His IWGP Title Win With The Young Bucks

“It’s funny we’d created this storyline where we would all kind of go splitsville. And we really pushed it to the extreme where we wouldn’t be seen in public we’d only talk to each other in private. In the Being The Elite storyline, we weren’t in any scenes together and the only actual physical altercation we ended up having was the match in Long Beach. So we sort of worked ourselves into a shoot brother. Where we were sort of actually forced to live out this lie where we were at odds with each other. So for us to finally kinda come together and in Japan too.

Another thing to mention is, it’s really Kayfabed out there. You can’t just go out to a restaurant after a show cause ‘hey it’s not the show anymore’. You have to continue, you have to keep faith and stay true to the angles. So we couldn’t hang out before shows, after shows, nothing like that unless it was in private. And usually, I’m always tied up with whatever after the shows… We never saw each other so for us to finally come together and have that as our first moment. Where it’s like ‘yes it’s okay to be friends again’ it was really emotional.”

Visit AfterbuzzTV for more information on Sean Waltman’s show.

Vader Has Passed Away

We are saddened to report that wrestling legend Leon White, better known to fans across the world as Vader, passed away on Monday night. He was 63 years old.

A message posted on Vader’s official Twitter account states that he was diagnosed with a severe case of pneumonia last month. He fought hard and was making progress in his recovery, but ultimately his heart gave out.

Vader is widely considered one of the greatest ‘super heavyweight’ atheltes to ever lace up a pair of boots. The former NFL center had a long wrestling career, having made his debut in 1985 and competing as recently as last year.

He had memorable runs in All Japan Pro Wrestling, New Japan Pro Wrestling, WCW, WWE and worked for various independent promotions across the world. He was a 3-time IWGP Heavyweight Champion, 2-time All Japan Triple Crown Champion and 3-time WCW World Heavyweight Champion.

In November 2016, Vader announced that he was diagnosed with congestive heart failure. He underwent heart surgery back in March.

Sadly, has yet to be inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame, despite campaigning for it on social media throughout the years. As Vader would say, it’s time.

SEScoops wishes sincere condolences to the family and friends of Leon White. RIP

Reactions to Vader’s Passing

https://twitter.com/RealMickFoley/status/1009460259772096517

https://twitter.com/RealPaigeWWE/status/1009450980818243585

Charlotte Confirmed For ESPN’s “Body Issue”

ESPN has confirmed that Charlotte Flair will be appearing in this year’s edition of the sports organization’s annual The Body Issue magazine. The Body Issue features athletes posing nude and semi-nude.

In addition to Charlotte, other athletes who will be featured include:

  • New York Giants rookie Saquon Barkley
  • Minnesota Timberwolves center Karl-Anthony Towns
  • Seattle Storm’s Breanna Stewart
  • Stewart’s teammate Sue Bird
  • Seattle Reign legend Megan Rapinoe
  • Los Angeles Dodgers OF Yasiel Puig
  • Houston Astros pitcher Dallas Keuchel
  • Softball player Lauren Chamberlain
  • USWNT player Crystal Dunn
  • LA Galaxy legend Zlatan Ibrahimovic
  • Figure skater Adam Rippon
  • Golf legend Greg Norman
  • Pro Football Hall of Famer Jerry Rice
  • Track and field star Tori Bowie
  • Cross-country gold medalist Jessie Diggins

ESPN’s The Body Issue hits newsstands next Monday, June 25th.

The MLW Fusion Report: June 15, 2018

The Midnight Express. The Rock and Roll Express. The Road Warriors. Deuce and Domino. At one time or another, these were tag team champions, and on this week’s episode of MLW Fusion, one duo will join the ranks of championship teams that tag each other in.

One of the teams competing for such a distinction is The Dirty Blondes, who open the show with the rest of Stud Stable. Colonel Rob Parker is having a strategy meeting for the Tag Team Championship match. There’s a picture behind him of a ring with north, south, east, and west marked on each side of it. I love the Stud Stable. Those were five words I never thought I would say back in 1995 watching WCW Saturday Night.

After the title sequence, Rich Bocchini and Tony Schiavone welcome us. They run down the night’s card and announce MLW Battle Riot, which will take place in New York City on July 19 (yours truly will be there).

They play a video from MLW.com of Heavyweight Champion Shane “Swerve” Strickland talking about how he’s not worried about the $20,000 bounty that Salina de la Renta has placed on his head. Out from behind him comes Brody King, who beats Swerve down in his attempt to earn the bounty.

After that, we go to Casey Lennox, who’s backstage with MVP. He says his opponent for the first match, Maxwell J. Friedman, is going to “reform school.” He moves on to Sami Callihan and states that whenever he and Callihan meet, it’s bloody and painful. I know where he’s coming from. It’s always painful when I have to see Sami Callihan on my TV.

MVP vs. Maxwell J. Friedman

Ring announcer Tim Barr informs us that Friedman has a “summer residence” in Southampton, NY, kind of like the Million Dollar Man back in his heyday. Unfortunately, the chyron lists Friedman as being from “South Hamptons.” Seriously, production team, double check that you spell the towns right.

Friedman cuts a promo where he runs down MVP. Apparently, one of MVP’s nicknames is the “Ronin” (which according to Wikipedia is a samurai without lord or master during the feudal period of Japan). Friedman calls MVP a “jabronin’ ronin.” Um…okay.

MVP comes out next. The match isn’t anything special. Towards the end, Friedman mocks the Ballin’ Elbow, but MVP gets his knees up and blocks the move. He throws Friedman with a release overhead belly to belly suplex followed by his own Ballin’ Elbow. He hits the Playmaker before Callihan and his army try to interfere. MVP takes each man out and then planchas to the outside on Callihan and Leon Scott. When he tries to get back in the ring, Friedman kicks the second rope into his balls, stacks him up (with feet on the ropes for leverage) and gets the 1-2-3.

Schiavone hypes Battle Riot and explains the rules. There are 40 men. A new man enters every minute. Eliminations occur by pinfall, submission, or by throwing an opponent over the top rope and to the floor. There are no disqualifications. Some of the men announced are Jake Hager, Barrington Hughes, Jimmy Yuta, and Pentagon, Jr. MLW has announced some other participants on Twitter, including John Morrison and the freakin’ “Taskmaster” Kevin Sullivan! I am very much looking forward to this.

Casey Lennox is backstage with Barrington Hughes. She asks for his thoughts on de la Renta’s bounty and Brody King’s attack on Swerve. Hughes asks Lennox how she’d feel if she saw one of her own friends going through what Swerve’s going through and proclaims that de la Renta is a terrible human.

TBD, another team in the Tag Team Championship match, cut a promo. Jimmy Yuta speaks but is interrupted by Jason Cade, who says he’s the captain of the team. Furthermore, he’s going to lead them to victory because they’re the best duo.

Simon Gotch Prize Fight Challenge

Team Filthy come out in their usual conga line, which I find pretty funny. Gotch lays down the challenge for someone to get his “filthy money.” He says “filthy money” like an evil villain, which makes sense because he was a Vaudevillain.

This week, Mike Parrow of Stud Stable answers Gotch’s $250 challenge. Parrow dominates in the beginning, shoulder tackling Gotch to the outside. After some scuffling on the floor, the match heads back into the ring. Parrow goes for a chokeslam but Gotch reverses it into a leg submission. Parrow makes it to the ropes, but while he tries to pull himself up to his feet, Tom Lawlor hits Parrow with a foreign object (Gotch was distracting the ref). Gotch gets the pin and keeps his $250. The Dirty Blondes come out and chase Team Filthy off.

Brody King cuts a promo where he tells Swerve that he left him laid out in the parking lot and challenges him to a match next week.

They show the footage of King’s attack again while Schiavone interviews MLW CEO Court Bauer, who is calling from Swerve’s home. He doesn’t want to sanction a match between King and Swerve, but Swerve wants the match, so he’s going to give it to him.

Anything Goes Elimination Match for the MLW Tag Team Championship: The Dirty Blondes (Michael Patrick and Leo Brien) vs. Team TBD (Jimmy Yuta and Jason Cade) vs. Lucha Brothers (Pentagon, Jr. and Rey Fenix)

All three teams enter the ring before the classic ring introductions. I like when wrestling promotions do this. It makes the match feel bigger.

It’s clear by the response that each team gets from the crowd that Lucha Brothers are the favorites, and who could blame them? These guys are awesome.

Everybody is fighting at the same time. THANK YOU. If this were WWE, we might be subject to people having to tag in and out- in an anything goes match. Or we might have two guys in the ring at a time and have the possibility of two partners having to face each other. In a match like this, having all the guys fight at one time makes the most sense and makes for a better match anyway.

The match started with Yuta getting superkicked by Fenix while Yuta was distracted by Pentagon’s “Cero Miedo” taunt. From there, the action never lets up. There’s all sorts of dives in the beginning, even a senton off the apron by Michael Patrick.

The Blondes are the first team eliminated after a flying elbow drop from Yuta and a top rope splash by Cade.

The match kicks in to an even higher gear. At one point, Team TBD are both trapped in the corner (Cade on his butt, Yuta in the tree of woe) and Fenix monkey flips Pentagon into both of them.

TBD comes back and looks like they are on the verge of victory when Yuta German suplexes Fenix. However, Cade is showboating and not paying attention to Pentagon, who breaks up the pin.

Fenix makes a big save late in the match as Yuta hits a Samoan driver on Pentagon and goes for the pin, only two be broken up by a springboard dropkick that earns a “this is awesome” chant.

Cade and Pentagon fight in the center of the ring. Cade goes for a handspring codebreaker but Pentagon dropkicks him mid-spring. What a spot!

A funny verbal botch takes place when Cade has Pentagon in a fireman’s carry and yells “Cero Mero, huh?” Good for Marc Mero. Finally, he’s getting some respect.

Cade finally gets the handspring codebreaker on Pentagon and then sends him to the outside, where he executes a suicide dive.

The Brothers get the upper hand and go for a superkick/Fear Factor combination, which I thought was the end but only garners a two count.

Cade and Yuta come back. They try to finish the match with the flying elbow/splash combination on Fenix, but he kicks out. Then, the seeds of dissension in TBD are sown even further. Yuta holds Fenix in a full nelson. Cade goes to hit Fenix, but Fenix escapes Yuta’s clutches and Cade ends up hitting his partner, calling him “stupid” after the mishap.

The Brothers take advantage and send Cade to the outside. Yuta is impaled on the mat by a double stomp spike Pentagon Driver. Pentagon gets the three count, and Lucha Brothers are the first MLW Tag Team Champions.

The celebration begins as the Brothers’ manager, Salina de la Renta, brings in a bottle of Patrón for each man. They start pouring it into their mouths before Pentagon graciously gives fans in the front row a sip. I love this team and everything about them.

The match between Strickland and King is announced for next week and we’re done.

Final Thoughts:

  • I still can’t believe I thought MVP was going to be a world champion ten years ago. What a shame. I wonder why he fell out of favor with WWE. Regardless, I’m still glad to see him doing his thing.
  • I was shocked by how easily Parrow was beaten by Gotch. I mean, it did take interference to do it, but I just thought Parrow was going to dominate and collect the $250. I wonder where this is all leading to. Havoc and Lawlor are in the middle of a feud right now. Are we also going to start seeing faction warfare between Team Filthy and Stud Stable?
  • For a guy who calls himself the Caramel Colossus, Hughes talks like a normal guy. I thought he would be some kind of character like Mark Henry back in the “Sexual Chocolate” days. Right now, I don’t see him anything more than Swerve’s obese friend.
  • What can I say about the tag match? You just have to watch it. Nothing I write can do it justice. I remember thinking a while back that The Blondes would be the first champs, but once Lucha Brothers were announced, I should have just gone with my gut. Fenix and Pentagon are the two best wrestlers in MLW right now.
  • Rich Bocchini was really good on commentary during the main event. He sounded invested in who would become the first champs and brought even more drama to the match.

That’s it for this week. Follow me on Twitter (@CliffofDoom). I have to go mow my lawn now. Have a good one!

WWE 2K19 Cover Star & Pre-Order Bonus Character Revealed

This coming Monday, 2K will formally announce the cover star for this year’s WWE 2K19 video game. A “Virtual Press Conference” will be streamed online at 11:00am EST / 8am PST via WWE.2K.com and the WWE 2K social media channels.

Fans have been buzzing about who will get the honor this year, with guesses ranging from Roman Reigns to Jinder Mahal. Ahead of the big announcement, Pro Wrestling Sheet reports that a 2K19 commercial was filmed this week in Memphis and reigning WWE Champion AJ Styles will be the cover star of WWE 2K19.

Each year, there is also a big name featured as a special downloadable character for players who pre-order the game. With recent pre-order bonus stars including Kurt Angle and Goldberg, this year’s bonus character will be Ronda Rousey.

Both Styles and Rousey were on hand this week when 2K filmed, along with several other Superstars, including Jeff Hardy and Rey Mysterio Jr. Mysterio is not currently under contract with WWE, but made several one-off appearances for the company this year – including the Royal Rumble and the Greatest Royal Rumble event from Saudi Arabia.

Although the release date has not been announced yet beyond ‘Fall 2018’, last year’s installment dropped on October 17th, so expect a similar time frame for WWE 2K19.

Hart Foundation (w/Brian Pillman II) vs. Rich Swann & ACH Announced For MLW Battle Riot (7/19)

Major League Wrestling’s upcoming FUSION taping from New York City is shaping up to be one of their biggest events to date.

In addition to the 40-man Battle Riot battle royal main event, Davey Boy Smith Jr. and Teddy Hart (with Brian Pillman II) have signed on to face the team of Rich Swann and ACH.

With Pentagon Jr and Rey Fenix recently capturing the MLW Tag Team Championships, you can be sure Salina de la Renta will be scouting this match to see which team could be next to challenge Promociones Dorado’s top talent.

Tickets for MLW’s July 19th show from the Melrose Ballroom in Long Island City are now on sale at MLWTickets.com.

https://twitter.com/courtbauer/status/1007295793567498241

https://twitter.com/courtbauer/status/1007293816833966082

https://twitter.com/courtbauer/status/1007294299095158784

WWE 2K19 Cover Superstar To Be Revealed On Monday

This coming Monday (June 18th), 2K will hold a ‘virtual press conference’ to announce the Cover Superstar for this year’s WWE 2K19 video game. The press conference will stream online via 2K’s website and social media channels at 11am ET.

Recent Cover Superstars have included Seth Rollins, Brock Lesnar, The Rock, Steve Austin and John Cena.

  • Discussion: Who do you think will be this year’s Cover Superstar(s)?

Here’s the official press release sent in by 2K:

2K to Announce WWE 2K19 Cover Superstar During Virtual Press Conference on June 18th

2K today announced that it will host a virtual press conference on Monday, June 18 to unveil the cover Superstar for WWE 2K19, the forthcoming release in the flagship WWE video game franchise. In addition to delivering remarks, the WWE 2K19 cover Superstar will reveal groundbreaking news about the new video game before hosting a Q&A session.

Cover selection for the WWE 2K franchise is a highly coveted honor, with past cover Superstars including Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, John Cena, Stone Cold Steve Austin, current WWE Universal Champion Brock Lesnar and, most recently, current WWE Intercontinental Champion Seth Rollins.

Details surrounding the WWE 2K19 Press Conference are as follows:

· WHEN: Monday, June 18, 2018 at 11:00 a.m. EDT / 8:00 a.m. PDT;

· WHERE: WWE.2K.com and WWE 2K Channels on Twitch, YouTube and Facebook.

Developed collaboratively by Yuke’s and Visual Concepts, a 2K studio, WWE 2K19 is not yet rated by the ESRB. WWE 2K19is currently scheduled for worldwide release in Fall 2018. For more information on WWE 2K19 and 2K, visit wwe.2k.com, become a fan on Facebook, follow the game on Twitter and Instagram using the hashtag #WWE2K19 or subscribe onYouTube.

MLW Tapings Results (6/7/18): New Tag Team Champions, Boiler Room Brawl

Major League Wrestling held another round of MLW Fusion television tapings on Friday night from Orlando, Florida at Gilt Nightclub. These matches will run through July.

If you haven’t been following MLW yet, we strongly encourage you do so. Since it’s relaunch last October, MLW has quickly emerged as one of the fastest growing promotions in the world. The weekly national television series, MLW Fusion, has been stellar in its first 7 weeks. The show airs Friday nights 8pm ET on beIN SPORTS, with each episode being uploaded to MLW’s official Youtube channel.

MLW Results: June 7, 2018 (Orlando, FL)

– Kotto Brazil defeats Vandal Ortagun

– ACH defeats Rich Swann

– Teddy Hart defeats Trey Miguel

– Low Ki defeats Ricky Martinez

– Simon Gotch (w/Tom Lawlor) defeats Parrow

– Barrington Hughes defeated a local competitor.

– Tom Lawlor (w/Simon Gotch) defeats Jake Hager (w/Col. Robert Parker)

– Joey Janela (w/Aria Blake) defeats Maxwell Jacob Friedman

– Fred Yehi defeats Sammy Guevara (w/Salina de la Renta)

– Ariel Rodriguez defeats Jaye Skye

– ACH & Rich Swann defeat Team Filthy (Simon Gotch & Tom Lawlor)

– Boiler Room Brawl: Sami Callihan defeats MVP

The Lucha Brothers (Penta El Zero M & Rey Fenix) w/Salina de la Renta are the new MLW Tag Team Champions after defeating Jason Cade & Jimmy Yuta and The Dirty Blondes  w/Col. Robert Parker.

– $20,000 Bounty Match: Shane Strickland defeats Brody King

Here is an exclusive post-match interview with MLW’s New Tag Team Champions:

https://twitter.com/MLW/status/1004903728762310657

CM Punk Wins Civil Trial in Defamation Lawsuit Filed by WWE Doctor

CM Punk is off the hook in a civil lawsuit that was filed against him by a WWE doctor for defamation following his exit from the company in 2014.

A jury in Chicago ruled in Punk’s favor after Dr. Chris Amann filed the lawsuit after the former WWE superstar spoke about the treatment he received while under contract and the misdiagnosis that could have resulted in a serious medical condition.

Dr. Amann filed a lawsuit in excess of $1 million against Punk and fellow wrestler Colt Cabana, who hosted the podcast back in 2014.

After testimony that started last week, the jury deliberated for only a couple of hours before handing down a judgment siding with Punk and Cabana in the defamation lawsuit.

Punk had been appearing in court during the trial with his upcoming fight at UFC 225 set to take place this weekend in Chicago.

Punk was reportedly very emotional after the verdict was read while hugging his wife and fellow former WWE superstar A.J. Lee, who was also in attendance for the trial.

With the trial behind him, Punk will now turn his attention to his fight on Saturday night against Mike Jackson on the UFC 225 main card.

Punk will be making his second appearance in the UFC after suffering a first round submission loss in his debut back in 2016.

While the trial undoubtedly took at least some of his focus away from the fight, Punk can now rest easy knowing that he won’t be on the hook for any kind of financial penalty as a result of the civil lawsuit filed against him.

RAW Preview: Tag Team Battle Royal, Balor vs. Owens, Strowman-Roode

Tonight’s edition of Monday Night Raw takes place from Houston, Texas at the Toyota Center.

With less than two weeks to go until Money in the Bank, WWE is advertising several matches for tonight’s program, including:

Two matches featuring competitors from the upcoming Men’s Money in the Bank Ladder Match:

  • Braun Strowman vs. Bobby Roode
  • Finn Balor vs. Kevin Owens in a battle of former Universal Champions

A Tag Team Battle Royal will be held. The winners will be the #1 contenders to the Deleter of Worlds – Raw Tag Team Champions “Woken” Matt Hardy and Bray Wyatt.

Ahead of her upcoming Raw Women’s Championship defense against Ronda Rousey, Nia Jax squares off against Natalya.

As always, join us here for our weekly WWE RAW Live Coverage.

Ahead of tonight’s Raw, check out our 8 takeaways from last week’s show.

MLW Fusion Report: June 1, 2018

When I was a kid, I looked forward to Saturday because I could watch WWF Superstars. When I was a teenager, Monday night became my designated night of wrestling with Raw is War. I used to miss those days when I would anticipate a day of the week because of wrestling. Well, those days are back because MLW Fusion has made me look forward to Friday nights. This week’s episode rewarded my patience as I trudged through my work week (albeit a shortened work week).

The show opens up ANOTHER new interviewer. This time, her name is Vanessa Craft.

Let me just pause for a moment and congratulate (or maybe “thank” is a better word) Court Bauer for hiring these beautiful women to hold the microphones backstage. A job well done, Court, a job well done.

Anyway, Craft is outside Jeff Cobb’s dressing room when Stud Stable shows up with a stretcher. Colonel Robert Parker hypes the debut of Jake Hager (Jack Swagger) and pretty much says Cobb is going out on the stretcher.

The opening title sequence rolls. Schiavone, in a voice over, welcomes us and runs down the night’s card (we never actually see Schiavone and Bocchini tonight).

Jake Hager vs. Jeff Cobb

We head to the ring where Col. Parker introduces “the man that rules the world,” Jake Hager. I know Parker managed Sid Vicious for a long time, but that doesn’t give him the right to steal Sycho Sid’s tag line. From where I stand, Sid still rules the world. Hager just lives in it.

Watching Hager, I can’t believe it’s been ten years since he was the rookie with the irritating smile calling himself the “All-American American” and beating Matt Hardy for the ECW Championship. That was really the best he was ever portrayed. I hope he can have a return to greatness in MLW.

Cobb comes out next. I’m excited to watch Cobb without the Matanza get up.

This is a match of two big boys and it moves at a pace that I’d expect from two former heavyweight wrestlers. It’s slow, but it’s not boring.

Hager controls much of the match, which I guess makes sense because it’s his debut. The match should be his showcase. I would have figured that if he was going to get this much offense, he should be in there with a jobber.

Cobb impresses me with his strength and agility. At one point, he executes a powerslam and quickly follows it up with a picture-perfect standing suplex. He also goes for a sweet looking standing shooting star press, but he misses.

In the end, Cobb goes for a move that looks like Wade Barrett’s Wasteland, but Hager seamlessly reverses it into an ankle lock submission. Cobb taps out.

Cobb really sells an ankle injury. I just recently found out that a shoot ankle lock can break your ankle in seconds, so I appreciate what MLW is doing here.

We go to a commercial and when we return, we got a shot of an ambulance that Schiavone tells us is going to bring Cobb to the hospital. Wow. What a way to make the ankle lock and Hager look dangerous. The one criticism I have is that Schiavone tells us that MLW is going to look into Hager’s conduct. What conduct? Winning the match? Did I miss something? Did something get lost in the editing of this episode?

We get a series of segments and promos. First, MLW World Heavyweight Champion Shane “Swerve” Strickland is interviewed about his title match with Pentagon from last week. He calls the encounter one of his most painful matches. He doesn’t want to got through that type of match again but he’s still the champion. When he’s finished, he walks outside and spots Salina de la Renta, who approaches him and blames him for getting hit in the eyes with Pentagon’s red mist. Swerve tells her that she brought it on herself. She threatens the introduction of a mystery person. He basically tells her to bring it on, which prompts her to warn the champ to be careful what he wishes for. I’m sensing some tension between these two. Maybe she has the hots for him.

After a graphic announces that Fred Yehi will face Tom Lawlor next week, we get our next segment. Lawlor and Simon Gotch (Team Filthy) walk into the arena and are approached by an unseen interviewer. The interviewer asks about Lawlor’s match next week and Team Filthy starts making fun of the name “Yehi.” Lawlor even calls him Yeti. Hey, that’s what I said a few weeks ago! Lawlor follows the comedy up with saying that Yehi’s been out in the wild. Um, let’s just move on from that. They keep ragging on his name and say it sounds French, leading Gotch to ponder if Yehi was part of the Louisiana Purchase. You know, because we bought Louisiana from France. If MLW was going for two d—heads who thought they were funny but weren’t, they succeeded.

And then…sigh…Sami F’n Callihan. This promo did not make me hate him less. Let’s just get this over with.

Callihan says he’s a sociopath that doesn’t care about offending people. That’s true. He offends me every time I see him and he still shows up on my TV. Next, he says that what he did to MVP he’ll do to the whole roster. His army of…sigh… “like-minded individuals” will make people listening. I wish I could stop listening at this point. He proclaims that the like-minded army is pro wrestling, they are what this world needs, and they’re taking over everything. The promo ends when he makes the thumbs up/thumbs down gesture, which he feels the need to say “thumbs up, thumbs down” while he does it. I guess he’s doing that for the blind. I wish I was also deaf right about now.

Schiavone runs down the top ten contender’s list for June. It goes as follows.

  1. Tom Lawlor
  2. Pentagon
  3. Rey Fenix
  4. Sami Callihan
  5. MVP
  6. Jimmy Havoc
  7. Barrington Hughes
  8. Joey Janela
  9. Jake Hager (already?)
  10. ACH

Swerve, of course, is still the champ.

Kotto Brazil vs. Rich Swann

Swann is also making his debut in MLW tonight. His song isn’t asking if you can handle this, but his trunks are.

Swann cuts an inset promo in which he says he is a bunch of adjectives, but oddly none of those adjectives include “spousal abusing.”

The crowd chants “Can you handle this?” Swann gets on the ropes and encourages the chant. Schiavone is stunned that Swann has personality. I guess Tony hasn’t watched much wrestling in the past two years.

Watching Brazil and Swann move in the ring makes me realize that one needs a lot of core strength in order to be a wrestler. I’m 40 pounds overweight, so…yeah, a career in wrestling is not in the works for me.

I have to say, this is a really great match between these two. The story being told is that Brazil is a scrappy young fighter who’s looking for that breakout performance while Swann is the cocky veteran that showboats too much to the crowd.

There are a lot of submissions from this match. One of them is a variation of the Stretch Muffler, which Swann locks on to Brazil. I love Stretch Mufflers. I could watch an entire hour of Stretch Mufflers.

Brazil doesn’t go down easy. There are a lot of close two counts, including one after a handspring stunner by Swann. I’m starting to think that Brazil might actually get the upset.

Never mind. The match ends with a second rope Phoenix Splash by Brazil for the three. They fist bump after the match. The announcers say that it was a “defining match” for Brazil and I agree. He looked awesome tonight. Between this match and the match Brazil had with Trey Miguel two weeks ago, I think middleweight division (which I believe MLW is going to start calling their light heavyweight guys) is really going to be something special.

Sami Callihan vs. Joey Janela

They tease a commercial but quickly cut back to the show, where we find Brazil being blindsided by a bat attack from Sami Callihan as he’s trying to head backstage. I guess we’re going right to the main event.

Callihan walks down to the ring with his two goons. Wait, two? There was only one last time. Who is this second guy and when did he join the fray? Sometimes MLW doesn’t explain these things. Another example would be the announcement of Fenix joining Promociones Dorado right before his match with Pentagon a few weeks ago. When did this happen and why? Please explain this stuff! This is like when people turn heel or face in WWE for no reason. Don’t be like WWE.

Anyway, the new guy’s name is Fulton. This army of “like-minded individuals” looks like a poor man’s Sanity.

Martin J. Friedman has been at ringside at a private table with a lady friend since the Swann/Brazil match. Janela comes out and…oh, I see what’s happening here. If you don’t remember, Janela trashed MJF’s dressing room last week, leaving behind cigarette ashes, domestic beer, and a “prophylactic.” Something’s gonna go down, and I think Mr. Janela should have eyes in the back of his head.

Aria Blake looks like one of those 12-year-olds whose parents put her on the Maury show because she’s a terror at home and in school and they want Maury to send her to boot camp where she’ll be reformed and turned into a nice little girl again.

Back in the wrestling ring, Janela and Callihan have a hard-hitting brawl. Late in the match, Janela covers Callihan and gets a three count, but the ref takes it back when he sees Callihan’s foot on the rope. I don’t know if they ref botched the count or what, but the match continues.

Callihan hits a piledriver, but Janela pops right up and hits a superkick. That looked pretty sweet. I like when one guy gets hit with a devastating move but still musters up enough energy to knock his opponent out before collapsing.

The match goes outside, where Janela collides with Friedman and his date. The couple, their table, and their champagne crash to the floor. Before Janela can get back into the ring, Friedman bangs Janela’s head multiple times into the ring post and one of the arena’s support posts. Callihan takes advantage of the interference by hitting the Cranial Contusion in the middle of the ring, which garners him the victory.

Callihan’s army leaves the ring. Friedman stands over Janela and pours champagne over him.

As the show ends, the MLW medical staff check on Janela, who was busted open when Friedman smacked his head into the posts.

Final Thoughts

  • The audio on this show was a little weird. The ring sounded really loud. Sometimes the announcers were too low. The exchange between Swerve and de la Renta had muffled at times.
  • For some reason, I really like Stud Stable. Maybe it’s just the fact I like factions, but then again, I dread seeing Sami Callihan and his army on my screen. In Stud Stable, you have the tag team in the Dirty Blondes, the powerhouse in Mike Parrow, and the technical master in Jake Hager. It’s a great mix, but at the same time, they all have a communality- they’re a bunch of big red state s— kickers. Well, Parrow is from New York, but he looks like he belongs in a red state and he will still kick the s— out of you. With the talker in Col. Parker, this faction gets a big “thumbs up” from me (Oh, I’m sorry, do you need Callihan to show you what a “thumbs up” is?).
  • The Brazil/Swann match may be one of the best examples of story telling that MLW has produced on Fusion so far. It was clear, it was laid out well, and it was relatable. I could watch a rematch between these two…or three or four.
  • Did I mention that I hate Sami Callihan?

That’s it for this week. Follow me on Twitter (@CliffofDoom). I’m going to stop being a hermit that watches too much wrestling and get some sunshine. Bye now!

40-Participant Battle Riot Announced For MLW NYC Taping (7/19)

Major League Wrestling has announced that a 40-participant Battle Riot match will headline the July 19th MLW FUSION taping from New York City. According to a press release sent in by MLW, the Battle Riot match is described as:

“A mash-up of a battle royal, royal rumble and anything goes street fight, this super-sized main event will feature 40 wrestlers with new participants entering the ring every 60 seconds.”

MLW is teasing surprises, legends and “WTF” entrants. Eliminations occur via pinfall, submission or by throwing an individual over the top rope.

The winner receives a shot at the MLW World Heavyweight Championship any place, any time – similar to WWE’s Money in the Bank contracts.

Participants for the first-ever Battle Riot match will be announced starting next week.

MLW CEO Court Bauer says, “We’re going to stack the undercard.  You got to when you come to NYC.  This is going to be our biggest show ever in sheer numbers, matches and star power.”

If you’re in the New York City area, this is a can’t miss event. Visit MLWTickets.com for more information.

Arena Website Advertising First 2 Matches For Extreme Rules

Money in the Bank is WWE’s next pay-per-view offering (and still several weeks away), but the official website for Pittsburgh’s PPG Paints Arena is advertising two matches for July’s Extreme Rules event.

Plans could certainly change by the time Extreme Rules takes place on July 15th, but the PPG Paints Arena site lists the following matches for the event:

  • Roman Reigns, Braun Strowman & Bobby Lashley vs. Kevin Owens, Sami Zayn Jinder Mahal.
  • Daniel Bryan vs. Big Cass

Extreme Rules was first introduced back in 2009, making this year the 10th installment. As the name implies, the events typically feature multiple stipulations matches involving weapons and no disqualifications.

The main event of last year’s show saw Samoa Joe defeat Seth Rollins, Finn Balor, Roman Reigns and Bray Wyatt in a Fatal 5-Way Extreme Rules match to determine the #1 contender for the WWE Universal Championship. Joe would go on to face Brock Lesnar at Great Balls of Fire, with Lesnar retaining in a hard fought match.