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APRIL 22, 2019 OBSERVER NEWSLETTER: WWE SUPERSTAR SHAKE UP R

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  1. Wrestling Observer Newsletter
  2.  
  3. PO Box 1228, Campbell, CA 95009-1228 ISSN10839593 April 22, 2019
  4.  
  5.  
  6.  
  7. UFC 236 PPV POLL RESULTS
  8.  
  9. Thumbs up 134 (100.0%)
  10.  
  11. Thumbs down 0 (00.0%)
  12.  
  13. In the middle 0 (00.0%)
  14.  
  15.  
  16.  
  17. BEST MATCH POLL
  18.  
  19. Israel Adesanya vs. Kelvin Gastelum 87
  20.  
  21. Dustin Poirier vs. Max Holloway 46
  22.  
  23.  
  24.  
  25. WORST MATCH POLL
  26.  
  27. Dwight Grant vs. Alan Jouban 94
  28.  
  29. Based on e-mails and phone calls to the Observer as of Tuesday, 4/16.
  30.  
  31.  
  32.  
  33. The WWE Superstar Shakeup came across flat this year, likely because much of the roster is considered by fans as interchangeable midcarders.
  34.  
  35. There was some major movement, the biggest being Roman Reigns being moved to Smackdown and A.J. Styles to Raw. There was also a switch of secondary titles with Finn Balor and the IC title going to Smackdown and Samoa Joe and the U.S. title going to Raw, for a planned feud with Braun Strowman to get Strowman back up and running.
  36.  
  37. The latter hasn’t been announced yet. It was scheduled for Raw, but Joe was in Montreal for Raw and got so sick that he was taken off the show and the announcement of his moving brands was delayed for a week.
  38.  
  39. Right now, the idea is that the women’s champions, double champion Becky Lynch and tag team champions Billie Kay & Peyton Royce will be working both brands and have different challengers on each brand. It was indicated Kay & Royce would also defend their titles on NXT.
  40.  
  41. They made clear that the Raw and Smackdown titles are different and Raw brand wrestlers like Natalya and Lacey Evans made it clear they were after the Raw belt. It appears that when Lynch loses one of those titles, she’ll be exclusive to the other brand.
  42.  
  43. With people leaving, wanting to leave, coming up and changing brands, most of the new programs will start becoming evident next week.
  44.  
  45. The next PPV is Money in the Bank from 5/19 in Hartford, CT. The key will be two Money in the Bank matches, one men, one women, with wrestlers from both brands involved. The only programs really pushed were to be Joe vs. Strowman and Lynch vs,. Evans for the Raw title. Seth Rollins, a Universal champion, looks to be facing Drew McIntyre off McIntyre beating him on television.
  46.  
  47. This weekend will be the last for The Shield together, as Dean Ambrose finishes up at the house shows, and Reigns moves to Smackdown. So after all the work and teases of putting The Shield back together, it never came together.
  48.  
  49. Ambrose’s future is in question. Obviously AEW would like him, but we’ve heard nothing in that direction.
  50.  
  51. Only a few wrestlers were brought up. The two top stars of the last year on 205 Live, Buddy Murphy and Cedric Alexander, were moved off the brand, with Murphy going to Smackdown and Alexander to Raw. While it’s long been established that 205 Live is somewhere between developmental and purgatory, this establishes that the original goal of it being the home for the best under-205 pound guys in the company is over and it’s just an hour of filling time and waiting for the top guys to make it to the main roster. Even though Murphy was cruiserweight champion and on many PPV shows (granted, often on the pre-show), when he arrived on Smackdown he did an introduction interview with the premise most people didn’t know him and would be hearing about him for the first time.
  52.  
  53. From NXT, the only newcomers were the former War Raiders, now called the Viking Experience, as a tag team on Raw, and Kairi Sane, who will be paired with Asuka, as a tag team on Smackdown.
  54.  
  55. All the newcomers are quality wrestler but with so many quality wrestlers going on the treadmill to nowhere on the main roster, it makes it difficult to get excited about anyone at this point.
  56.  
  57. The War Raiders is notable because they are still NXT tag team champions. One would think that if it was decided they were coming up, they would have dropped the titles at the last tapings. Now it’s more awkward, as if they do a title match in a few weeks, everyone will expect the outcome. I suppose they could swerve the outcome once, but they may as well get it done. Sane was clearly known about since they did the match where she couldn’t challenge for the NXT women’s title ever again. We had bene told about Sane coming up months back.
  58.  
  59. There was lots of talk about the name change, with the idea WWE had already changed their names from War Machine to War Raiders, so they had a WWE name. This was a Vince McMahon call. It was literally a last day thing, where at one point they were to be called The Berzerkers, but McMahon didn’t like that, and Viking Experience is the name he went with. Todd Smith (Hanson) is now called Ivar and Ray Rowe is now called Erik. In many ways that was apropos, because so much of the changes made were not to benefit anyone, but simply change for the sake of change.
  60.  
  61. Names not brought up were Shayna Baszler, Pete Dunne and Tyler Bate. Baszler has already been two-time NXT women’s champion, and her character work is some of the best in the company. She’s also 38, so she’s got a limited window . Baszler doesn’t have the type of look normally associated with a WWE woman wrestler, but the fact is, her look is actually perfect for her gimmick, and her gimmick is more realistic then almost anyone. Even with her doing so well in NXT, picking it up so quick, there was always the question, with her age and look, if she’d ever get the shot to really make money at this.
  62.  
  63. Dunne and Bate are much younger, and are two of the best in the ring in the company. It appears with them not coming up that the decision is that they are more valuable in establishing the U.K. brand. Plus, with their size and promo ability, as good as they are, they aren’t the type of guys that Vince would traditionally push.
  64.  
  65. The additions to Smackdown were Heavy Machinery, Mickie James, Apollo Crews, Chad Gable, Liv Morgan, Lars Sullivan, Bayley, Finn Balor, Ember Moon, ane, Murphy, Reigns and Elias.
  66.  
  67. The additions to Raw were Styles, The Miz, The Viking Experience, Andrade, Zelina Vega, Alexander, Rey Mysterio, The Usos, Naomi, Eric Young and Lacey Evans.
  68.  
  69. On television Michael Cole got all excited about Ricochet & Aleister Black joining Raw, although they had been on Raw regularly for some time.
  70.  
  71. Virtually all the company’s known couples were put together or kept together with one exception, Andrade moving over to Raw while Charlotte Flair stayed on Smackdown. Keeping the Andrade & Zelina Vega act together, which had not been used well on Smackdown, gives them another shot at getting it right. Vega is married to Black so they remain together on the same brand as do Rusev & Lana, Erik and Sarah Logan and Jimmy Uso & Naomi. The splitting of a couple by the office is usually the sign of wanting to break them up, but in the Andrade/Flair situation, it does put Vega and Black together on the same brand. I have no idea what the status of Buddy Murphy and Alexa Bliss is right now, although they were a couple in the past.
  72.  
  73. The Mysterio move is interesting because FOX has been airing previews for Smackdown on baseball and the shots were of John Cena, Reigns, Mysterio and Flair as the four stars focused on the brand.
  74.  
  75. Right now the plan for house show main events once these changes go into effect and Reigns vs. Elias on Smackdown and Rollins & Strowman & Styles vs. Bobby Lashley & McIntyre & Baron Corbin.’
  76.  
  77. The key aspect of the shakeup should have been to fortify Smackdown, because unlike Raw, which can drop viewership and remain a cable powerhouse for some time, Smackdown’s numbers now on Tuesday would be weak by FOX and network standards, let alone with the loss of a high percentage of Tuesday regular viewers with the move to Friday.
  78.  
  79. They did get Reigns, who the company pushes as its biggest full-time star. But he was the only main eventer and difference-maker added.
  80.  
  81. Also notable is they broke up the Bobby Roode & Gable tag team. They had spent months teasing Roode turning heel on Gable, and instead ended the team with them going nowhere. Bayley & Sasha Banks were also broken up, as were The Riott Squad, with Morgan to Smackdown, and Sanity.
  82.  
  83. Regarding Sanity, Eric Young will be on Raw. Nobody knows what’s going on with Killian Dain, or his wife, Nikki Cross. Alexander Wolfe wrote a farewell message on social media to WWE, but those in WWE have told us that Wolfe isn’t leaving the company. There is talk he may go back to NXT as a single, or he could be used as a flagship guy on the European brand.
  84.  
  85. The draft shows did disappointing ratings. The shows are traditionally among the highest rated of the year, but Raw was down 26 percent in viewers from last year and Smackdown was down 21 percent. The nature of how the switches were made, which was simply music playing and guys coming out with no storylines as far as drafts, trades or anything, made it feel unimportant. The other aspect, which is probably why it didn’t help ratings like in the past, is just how interchangeable they’ve made the talent. Even Reigns and Styles moving over didn’t feel like a big thing.
  86.  
  87. A look at the current depth chart:
  88.  
  89. RAW
  90.  
  91. Top faces: A.J. Styles, Braun Strowman, Seth Rollins
  92.  
  93. Top heels: Baron Corbin, Bobby Lashley, Brock Lesnar, Drew McIntyre, Samoa Joe
  94.  
  95. Mid level faces: The Miz, Rey Mysterio
  96.  
  97. Mid level heels: Andrade, Sami Zayn
  98.  
  99. Face tag teams: Ricochet & Aleister Black, Bo Dallas & Curtis Axel, Curt Hawkins & Zack Ryder, Lucha House Party, Usos
  100.  
  101. Heel tag teams: AOP, The Revival, Viking Experience, The Ascension
  102.  
  103. Women’s singles faces: Becky Lynch, Dana Brooke, Naomi, Natalya, Sasha Banks
  104.  
  105. Women’s face tag teams:
  106.  
  107. Women’s single heels: Alexa Bliss, Alicia Fox, Lacey Evans, Nia Jax, Tamina, Zelina Vega
  108.  
  109. Women’s heel tag teams: Billie Kay & Peyton Royce, Ruby Riott & Sarah Logan
  110.  
  111. Prelim faces: Bobby Roode, Cedric Alexander, Rhyno, Heath Slater, No Way Jose, Titus O’Neil
  112.  
  113. Prelim heels: EC 3, Eric Young, Jinder Mahal, Mojo Rawley, Tyler Breeze
  114.  
  115. The first thing you note here is the lack of women’s face tag teams, which makes the Bayley & Banks split-up lack logic.
  116.  
  117.  
  118.  
  119. SMACKDOWN
  120.  
  121. Top faces: Kofi Kingston, Kevin Owens, Roman Reigns
  122.  
  123. Top heels: Daniel Bryan, Rowan, Elias, Lars Sullivan, Randy Orton
  124.  
  125. Mid level faces: Ali, Finn Balor
  126.  
  127. Mid level heels:
  128.  
  129. Face tag teams: New Day, Matt & Jeff Hardy, Heavy Machinery
  130.  
  131. Heel tag teams: Sheamus & Cesaro, Colons, Luke Gallows & Karl Anderson, Rusev & Shinsuke Nakamura
  132.  
  133. Women’s single faces: Becky Lynch, Bayley, Carmella, Ember Moon
  134.  
  135. Women’s single heels: Charlotte Flair, Lana, Liv Morgan, Mickie James
  136.  
  137. Women’s face tag teams: Asuka & Kairi Sane
  138.  
  139. Women’s heel tag teams: Billie Kay & Peyton Royce, Mandy Rose & Sonya Deville
  140.  
  141. Prelim faces: Apollo Crews, Chad Gable, R-Truth, Sin Cara
  142.  
  143. Prelim heels: Buddy Murphy, Shelton Benjamin
  144.  
  145. Unknown: Bray Wyatt, Killian Dain, Nikki Cross, Fandango, Goldust (expected to leave)
  146.  
  147. UFC 236 report
  148.  
  149. By Ryan Frederick
  150.  
  151. Notes by Dave Meltzer
  152.  
  153.  
  154.  
  155. Saturday night’s UFC 236 card was, on paper, a two-fight card with just fights filling in an undercard. However, those two fights delivered in a huge way, leaving the company with arguably the best co-main and main event fight combination in UFC history.
  156.  
  157. Dustin Poirier defeated Max Holloway for the Interim UFC Lightweight Championship in the main event, while Israel Adesanya defeated Kelvin Gastelum for the Interim UFC Middleweight Championship at the State Farm Arena in Atlanta, GA.
  158.  
  159. Adesanya and Gastelum had one of the best fights in UFC history. It almost assuredly will win 2019's Fight Of The Year, filled with lots of action and very dramatic.
  160.  
  161. Gastelum won the first round. Adesanya seemed to have him figured out about seven minutes into the fight, as from midway thru the second round until a good portion of the fourth round, Adesanya was beating him everywhere. However, the momentum swung Gastelum’s way after a hard left hand rocked Adesanya and had him in trouble like he hasn’t seen before.
  162.  
  163. With Adesanya on the ropes and seemingly just a few more punches away from potentially being finished, Gastelum did what many fighters do sometimes- he went for an ill-fated takedown. Not only did he not complete it, the round ended and it gave Adesanya time to recover while Gastelum looked exhausted after the fourth round ended.
  164.  
  165. Tied up at 38-38 on the scorecards, the fifth round would decide the winner. Adesanya took over in the fifth, rocking Gastelum early and dropping him three times during the round. He almost finished him several times, and many referees should have and would have stopped the fight, but it went until the end. It was a clear 10-8 round for Adesanya, and it gave him the fight 48-46 on all three scorecards.
  166.  
  167. I was at the show in Atlanta and the fight, especially once it concluded, had one of the biggest reactions I can remember, at least in recent times. The crowd treated Adesanya like a complete superstar, and this is a fight that could shoot him into that territory.
  168.  
  169. After that instant classic, up next came Poirier and Holloway. On any other night, they would have easily had the best fight and one that would be talked about following the show.
  170.  
  171. Poirier won the fight 49-46 on all three scorecards. The fight was closer than it appears by reading those scores, but it was clear that Poirier won at least three rounds. The third round was the only Holloway round. All media members except for one scored the fight for Poirier. While Holloway did outstrike Poirier 181-178 over the entire fight, Poirier had much more power in his shots and was hurting Holloway a bunch, even getting close to being able to find a stoppage. Holloway never had Poirier in significant trouble at any point.
  172.  
  173. It was Holloway’s first time fighting at 155 pounds. He has talked about moving up full time, but he gave up a lot of size to Poirier, who looked at least 175 pounds inside the cage. Holloway’s game is perfect for 145 pounds. He isn’t a one-punch finisher. He strings together punches that finish opponents. But that doesn’t have the same effect on larger opponents. For him to make the full move up a weight class, he will have to gain some size. In addition, Poirier’s punches hurt Holloway considerably more than featherweight punches had.
  174.  
  175. Poirier’s win ended Holloway’s 13 fight winning streak, which was tied with Demetrious Johnson and Georges St-Pierre for third place of all-time in UFC, behind Anderson Silva at 16 and Jon Jones at 15 (still in tact).
  176.  
  177. It was a long-awaited breakthrough for Poirier in his first title fight. He has been one of the most exciting fighters for the company for quite some time, but always seemed to come up short right when he was going to break into the title picture. After a no contest with Eddie Alvarez in May 2017, he flipped a switch, finishing Anthony Pettis, Justin Gaethje and over Alvarez in a rematch, all in main events.
  178.  
  179. He was scheduled to fight Nate Diaz in November, but pulled out due to injury. He was frustrated that he was going to get passed over for this shot in favor of both Holloway and Tony Ferguson, but when Ferguson didn’t take this fight due to personal issues, the company made the right call in giving Poirier the fight, his 22nd UFC fight.
  180.  
  181. Adesanya and Poirier are now set for unification bouts in their next fights.
  182.  
  183. Adesanya will be taking on middleweight champion Robert Whittaker. There is no set date for the fight yet, as Whittaker is still recovering from emergency hernia surgery in February, and Adesanya wants some time off after his 6th fight in 14 months. A potential August or September date was thrown out there. Dana White said the fight will be held in a stadium in Australia, which is absolutely the way to go, as it has a real good shot of selling at least 50,000 tickets.
  184.  
  185. Adesanya's biggest potential fight, and one that has been talked about on social media as of late, is with Jon Jones. Adesanya had some words for Jones prior to Saturday's fight, and Jones didn't take them lightly. Adesanya was asked about Jones during his post-fight press conference, and refused to talk about him. He did talk about him during media appearances on Monday, and they have been tweeting back-and-forth at each other. If it were to happen, and we are at least a year away as is, and Adesanya and Jones come through their next fights without losing, it has potential to be a big money fight.
  186.  
  187. Poirier will get lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov, barring a situation where they give Conor McGregor an undeserving rematch with Khabib. A September date was brought up by White post-fight, and there has been talks of an event in Abu Dhabi in September and that they want Nurmagomedov’s next fight there. Another potential date could be in November at Madison Square Garden.
  188.  
  189. As was evident to most watching, Holloway, at least as things stand, even though it’s a far more unhealthy weight cut, will have his best success as featherweight. Dana White talked about him moving back down and defending the title. There is no top contender who stands out, but if Alexander Volkanovsky beats Jose Aldo on 5/11 in Rio de Janeiro, he’d be the frontrunner. If Aldo wins, then Zabit Magomedsharipov would be the likely contender, or Frankie Edgar, depending on the time from of healing from his torn biceps suffered late last year.
  190.  
  191. UFC 236 was the first pay-per-view event to be held under the new pay-per-view distribution deal with ESPN, airing on ESPN+ with a purchase. There were a lot of issues when it came to this, but that was to be expected.
  192.  
  193. First of all, to order the event, you had to go to a website that ESPN had set up. Ordering for the event began on Monday and ran up all the way to after the show began. Where many had issues was they were wanting to purchase the event through whatever device they were streaming the event through, and were unable to do so. It was said the potential reason for this was to avoid ESPN having to pay a percentage of sales to outside companies, while going through the website they set up gives them all of the sales. It's an issue for purchasers, though, as previously a click of a button ordered the event for you, while this was another step to go through in ordering the event, and could be a turn-off for some.
  194.  
  195. Many pay-per-view purchasers tend to wait until the last minute, whether by habit, and there tends to be many last minute impulse buys. There was an influx of people wanting to purchase the event on Saturday night before it started, but with being unable to do so through their devices, and having to go to the special website, the website ended up crashing. It took many a long time to get through to ordering, and many missed the first fight or two before getting access. Many kept getting logged out of their ESPN+ accounts and having to log back in, and even having to do so several times while watching the event.
  196.  
  197. While I was at the event, I did order it for family back at home that like to watch the fights and were interested in this one. I ordered in on Thursday, and those back at home had no issues with viewing the event, being logged out at any time or any buffering issues. From talking to others I know, those who ordered it during the week and up through Saturday afternoon had no issues, while others who waited until the last hour up until the start of the show had issues.
  198.  
  199. White did claim that ESPN would be changing the ordering process for the next event and future events to where potential buyers could buy through their devices. While I'm sure ESPN would rather not pay Apple or whomever up to their typical 30% cut, that could easily be made up by not turning off potential buyers and opening it up to maximize their potential viewership. They need to make it easier for fans and viewers to be able to buy their events.
  200.  
  201. A positive for those who did buy the show was they get unlimited access to the event. If you ordered but were unable to watch it live for any reason, you'd still be able to view the show whenever you'd like. From what I was told, purchasers have unlimited replay viewing, and after 15 days, any other ESPN+ subscriber who didn't purchase the event would then be able to watch replays of the show, and that after 22 days, the event is then put onto UFC Fight Pass for those subscribers who don't have ESPN+.
  202.  
  203. Outside of the main two fights, there wasn't much else of note. Khalil Rountree turned in a career best performance in a decision win over Eryk Anders on the main show. Rountree was chopping away at the legs of Anders early, softening him up, and dropped Anders four times in the second round. He never finished Anders, but there were many times where the fight probably should have been stopped, especially after the third and fourth time he was dropped. Anders' corner should have stopped the fight after the second round as he didn't need to take any more damage in the third. They didn't because in this sport there's always that chance of the right punch or kick landing, but they did more way more harm than good by sending him back out there.
  204.  
  205. The event at the State Farm Arena in Atlanta, the fourth UFC event held there, drew 14,297 fans with a gate of $1,908,721. Both of those were well up of the UFC's last visit to the city in July 2016, but down from the first two shows.
  206.  
  207. There are no PPV estimates at the present time. The show did 1 million Google searches, which is a solid number. But a lot of that may have been people looking up how to order because of the changes, and perhaps looking for results and reaction because they were curious but either couldn’t or didn’t take the steps to watch.
  208.  
  209. The prelims airing on ESPN from 8 to 10 eastern time did 893,000 viewers. It went head-to-head with the Golden State Warriors vs. Los Angeles Clippers NBA playoff game on ABC, which did 4,826,000 viewers, the Toronto Maple Leafs vs. Boston Bruins NHL playoff game on NBC that did 1,706,000 viewers and a NASCAR race on FOX which did 2,787,000 viewers. It is virtually identical to last April's UFC 223 prelims, which did 892,000 viewers on FS1.
  210.  
  211. The number was down from the 1,480,000 for the prelims for UFC 234 (Adesanya vs. Anderson Silva) and the 1,339,000 for the prelims before UFC 235 (Jon Jones vs. Anthony Smith). The drop to FS 1 levels is notable because ESPN numbers had been so much higher. UFC didn’t have a direct major sports lead-in, but had a strong rated SportsCenter lead-in that followed NBA playoffs. UFC did win its time slot in cable in 18-49 and all key male demos and placed second in its time slot on cable to a Hallmark movie.
  212.  
  213. The show did well in major markets like Houston, Atlanta, Dallas and San Francisco, the latter a surprise since it aired out of prime time (5-7 p.m.), and against a Warriors playoff game, beating an 0.9 rating in those markets. But it was hurt by doing an 0.4 in Los Angeles in the bad time slot and against the Clippers, and 0.5 ratings in both New York and Chicago.
  214.  
  215. They awarded two $50,000 Fight Of The Night bonuses, with them going to Adesanya, Gastelum, Poirier and Holloway. That was definitely the right call as they all deserved big bonuses for those fights.
  216.  
  217. 1. Brandon Davis (10-6) beat Randy Costa (4-1) in 1:12 in the second round in a bantamweight fight. Davis was making the move down from 145 pounds and looked in great shape here. Costa was making his UFC debut in just his fifth career fight, and hadn't gone past the 71-second mark in any fight, until this one. They had a fun first round which went back-and-forth with a lot of punches being traded. Davis got rocked real early but was firing back. Costa won the first round. Davis got rocked again to start the second round but then hurt Costa with a knee. Costa went for a takedown but Davis got his back and sunk in a rear-naked choke and got Costa to tap. Davis noted he was drinking a six-pack of beer every night after training and only running ten miles a week, but cut out the beer and started running 20 miles a day to get down to bantamweight, and that he walked into the cage at 160 pounds, and was certain he would get cut if he lost here. Davis got $36,000 for the win and Costa got $12,000 for the loss.
  218.  
  219. 2. Poliana Botelho (8-2) beat Lauren Mueller (5-2) via unanimous decision on scores of 29-28, 29-28 and 29-28 in a women's flyweight fight. Botelho was moving up to 125 pounds after losing to Cynthia Calvillo in her last fight, and looked much bigger at this weight. This wasn't the most exciting fight, but not the worst on the show either. Botelho was throwing all sorts of spin kicks in the first and outlanded Mueller, and got a takedown and the mount. Second round was a little closer but Botelho again outlanded her more and got a takedown. She was up two rounds and Mueller had to go for broke in the third. Mueller took over in the third and was landing more and tripped Botelho up with a leg kick. Instead of looking for the finish she needed she just went into the guard and rode it out on the ground. I had it 29-28 for Botelho as did every other media member. Botelho got $50,000 for the win and Mueller got $12,000 for the loss.
  220.  
  221. 3. Montel Jackson (8-1) beat Andre Soukhamthath (13-7) via unanimous decision on scores of 30-26, 30-27 and 29-27 in a bantamweight fight. The first round was the closest of the fight as they were pretty even in the striking but Jackson did get two takedowns but didn't do much with them. One judge gave that round to Soukhamthath. Jackson did better in the second round as he started landing big punches, and Soukhamthath has one good chin on him. Jackson got a takedown late to seal the round for sure. Third round was all Jackson has he had complete control outlanding Soukhamthath 78-8 overall in the third (20-2 in significant strikes), getting full mount and landing big punches and elbows. Overall, Jackson outstruck him 160-41, and 64-30 in significant strikes. All media members had all three rounds for Jackson, and I had it 30-27 for him. Jackson got $24,000 for the win and Soukhamthath got $22,000 for the loss.
  222.  
  223. 4. Belal Muhammad (15-3) beat Curtis Millender (17-5) via unanimous decision on scores of 29-27, 29-27 and 30-26 in a welterweight fight. Millender was back in action just five weeks after a submission loss to Elizeu Zaleski dos Santos. He looked good in the first as he was landing better on Muhammad and cut him open with the jab, and rocked Muhammad late in the round. Muhammad came on in the second round as he started to land more and took Millender down, and Millender was unable to get up as he ate strikes on the bottom from Muhammad. It was 1-1 heading into the third. Millender looked tired in the third and slowed down big time and Muhammad got a takedown and was landing more big punches. It was a dominant round for Muhammad but he didn't get close to finishing Millender. I had it 29-28 for Muhammad though every judge gave Muhammad a 10-8 third. Every media member had it for Muhammad. Muhammad got $70,000 for the win and Millender got $31,000 for the loss.
  224.  
  225. 5. Khalid Taha (13-2) beat Boston Salmon (6-2) in :25 in a bantamweight fight. Salmon has the most unique name in the UFC. He was making his long-awaited UFC debut after being one of the signees from the very first episode of Dana White's Contender Series in July 2017. Taha landed a right hand followed by a left hand that put Salmon on the mat and he finished it off with a few more punches in just 25 seconds. Salmon was upset at the stoppage, thinking it was early, but then was stumbling around as he was getting to his feet, so he was very much done. Taha got $20,000 for the win and Salmon got $10,000 for the loss.
  226.  
  227. 6. Max Griffin (15-6) beat Zelim Imadaev (8-1) via majority decision on scores of 29-27, 29-27 and 28-28 in a welterweight fight. Imadaev was making his UFC debut, and he has garnered a bad reputation in Las Vegas, having been kicked out of gyms for purposely hurting training partners. Griffin and Imadaev were actually training in the same gym when this fight was booked. Griffin got a takedown in the first. Imadaev grabbed the fence multiple times, even grabbing it to help get up. The referee docked a point for the repeated fence grabs, but then didn't restart them on the mat. Griffin took him down again, but Imadaev kept grabbing the fence again. I would have disqualified him. Griffin got the first round 10-8. Imadaev started to comeback in the second round as Griffin was getting tired. Griffin did take him down but Imadaev was controlling the striking. Round two belonged to Imadaev. Imadaev continued to land more in the third, but Griffin did land a couple of big punches and got another takedown. It was close enough to go either way. I had it a 28-28 draw. Media scores were 19% for Griffin and 81% for a draw. Griffin got $40,000 for the win and Imadaev got $10,000 for the loss.
  228.  
  229. 7. Alexandre Pantoja (21-3) beat Wilson Reis (23-10) in 2:58 in a flyweight fight. Reis got a brief takedown early on but they got back up. Pantoja then dropped Reis with a big right hand and then started pouncing on with more punches until the referee stopped the fight. Another case that the division should continue and a big win for Pantoja over a former title challenger. Pantoja got $36,000 for the win and Reis got $34,000 for the loss.
  230.  
  231. 8. Matt Frevola (7-1-1) beat Jalin Turner (8-5) via unanimous decision on scores of 30-27, 30-27 and 30-27 in a lightweight fight. Turner is very tall and lanky for 155 pounds. Frevola got an early takedown and had back control. Turner cracked him with a right hand. Both went for chokes but Turner had dominant position towards the end of the first. It was close but I gave the first to Turner. Second round had Frevola going back for more takedowns and he got one and spent most of the round on top and had a tight guillotine in but Turner escaped. Frevola got the second. Third round started out with Turner landing a couple of big punches but Frevola got a takedown and had dominant position. Turner was able to scramble up and they traded at the end. Frevola got the third but fight was a lot closer than the scores showed. I had it 29-28 for Frevola. Media scores had it 88% for Frevola and 12% for Turner. Frevola got $20,000 for the win and Turner got $12,000 for the loss.
  232.  
  233. 9. Nikita Krylov (25-6) beat Ovince Saint Preux (23-13) in 2:30 in the second round in a light heavyweight fight. This was a rematch from a March 2015 fight won by Saint Preux. Krylov outlanded Saint Preux 33-6 in the first round but none of it was connecting hard. Saint Preux got three takedowns and had control though he didn't come close to finishing Krylov. Boring opening round but I had it for OSP. Krylov was hurting OSP early in the second and got a takedown and was working for a choke on the back. He landed punches to help find an opening, got a rear-naked choke locked in deep and OSP tapped. So we are now 1-1 in this series, so there has to be a third fight down the line. Maybe. This wasn't one that would have people clamoring to complete the trilogy. Krylov got $160,000 for the win and Saint Preux got $86,000 for the loss.
  234.  
  235. 10. Dwight Grant (10-2) beat Alan Jouban (16-7) via split decision on scores of 29-28, 27-30 and 29-28 in a welterweight fight. This was the worst fight on the show. First round saw a lot of Grant landing more but there wasn't much action going from either man. Grant's round just on sheer volume landed. Second round was worse than the first with not a lot of action and the crowd booing. Grant had more action going but was backpedaling most of the round. It could have gone either way but I had the second for Grant. Third round was more of Grant landing more but backpedaling and Jouban advancing forward and got a takedown and the back as the fight ended. I had it 29-28 for Grant. Jouban was really upset at the decision even staying inside the Octagon several minutes after the fight ended. I could see his frustration as Grant didn't engage much and was backpedaling most of the fight and Jouban was the one coming forward, but he also didn't exactly put a stamp on anything to solidly win any rounds. They all could have gone either way though. Media scores were an even 50/50. Grant got $24,000 for the win and Jouban got $43,000 for the loss.
  236.  
  237. 11. Khalil Rountree (8-3 1 NC) beat Eryk Anders (11-4) via unanimous decision on scores of 30-26, 30-26 and 30-26 in a light heavyweight fight. Rountree has moved from Las Vegas to Thailand and his muay Thai was way improved. Rountree was chopping away at the legs of Anders from the onset. Anders' lead leg was beaten up pretty good early on. Rountree was in complete control from the first round. The second round was one of the biggest beatdowns in recent memory. Rountree dropped Anders four times in the round, all with punches. He would land a couple on the ground then let Anders up. It should have been stopped probably after the third knockdown, but definitely after the fourth, but Anders was too tough for his own good. Myself and almost everyone had that as a 10-7 round. Anders' corner should have stopped it after the second but sent him back out for the third. He looked better in the third than he did in the first two but was still getting tagged by Rountree, though he never got dropped. Complete domination by Rountree in this fight, and his most complete performance in the UFC. Rountree got $70,000 for the win and Anders got $50,000 for the loss.
  238.  
  239. 12. Israel Adesanya (17-0) beat Kelvin Gastelum (15-4 1 NC) via unanimous decision on scores of 48-46, 48-46 and 48-46 to win the interim UFC middleweight title. As noted above, an absolute instant classic fight. The first round was both men trying to figure each other out, especially Adesanya. Gastelum landed slightly more, but he did land hard left hands. I had the first for Gastelum. Adesanya had Gastelum figured out in the second. He was landing kicks and punches and dropped Gastelum for the first time with a hard right hand. Second round for Adesanya. Third round was more Adesanya landing his strikes. Gastelum did get a takedown but Adesanya got right back up. Much closer but still the third for Adesanya. Fourth round started off with Adesanya landing but then Gastelum started landing hard left hands and then a head kick wobbled Adesanya. It was the most trouble Adesanya had been in during his UFC career. Gastelum had Adesanya on the ropes but decided to go for a takedown against the fence, which Adesanya defended and the round ended. It was 2-2 after four. Adesanya recovered between rounds and was landing at the start of the fifth. He got a standing guillotine and they went to the mat and Adesanya was looking for a triangle but Gastelum was able to scramble to his feet. That seemed to drain Gastelum of all his energy as Adesanya took complete control from there. Adesanya dropped him with a big combo ending with a right hand. Gastelum got up and went for a takedown but ate hard elbows and then got dropped again. They were on the mat but got up and Adesanya dropped him a third time in the round and finished the fight on the mat. A clear 10-8 round for Adesanya with the three knockdowns. An insane fight. With their best fight bonuses, Adesanya got $400,000 for the win and Gastelum got $200,000 for the loss.
  240.  
  241. 13. Dustin Poirier (25-5 1 NC) beat Max Holloway (20-4) via unanimous decision on scores of 49-46, 49-46 and 49-46 to win the interim UFC lightweight title. Poirier looked huge standing next to Holloway during the staredown. This was very intense. Poirier had a huge power edge but Holloway was eating those punches well. Poirier took the first round outlanding Holloway throughout and scoring with some big punches. Second round was closer but it was really telling to how the rest of the fight would go. Holloway landed with more volume, but Poirier was hurting him with harder punches. Poirier rocking Holloway at the right moments was enough to get him the second round. Third round was Holloway's. He outlanded Poirier 61-33 overall in the third and had Poirier in some trouble, not serious, up against the fence. It was starting to look the same in the fourth with Holloway having the striking edge 55-36 and Poirier looked like he was starting to fade, but a huge knee that cut Holloway open shifted the momentum. After four, I had it 2-2 but the judges did have it 3-1 Poirier. Fifth round seemed close but Holloway's cut seemed to play a factor that he was hurt more than he really was. Poirier won the fifth on sheer will and back to landing harder shots. A really fantastic fight. With also getting best fight bonuses, Poirier got $300,000 for the win and Holloway got $400,000 for the loss.
  242.  
  243. The Viceland documentary on the Montreal screw job aired on 4/17, with the big thing promoted as the promise of revealing who was the architect of the most talked about ending of a pro wrestling match in history.
  244.  
  245. The situation has been discussed to death over 21 plus years. In 1996, Bret Hart had lost the WWF championship to Shawn Michaels in an Iron Man match at WrestleMania in what is now the Honda Center in Anaheim, CA.
  246.  
  247. The match, where they went one hour without a fall, seemingly ended with Hart holding the sharpshooter on Michaels, only for the time to run out, to apparently retain the title with a draw. But he was ordered to return to the ring, and Michaels hit a superkick for the pin and won the title. The idea was to build for a rematch the next year at WrestleMania.
  248.  
  249. Hart was taking time off after WrestleMania. He was looking to break into acting and had a recurring role in the television show “Lonesome Dove.” His WWF contract expired while he was gone. This was during the middle of a suddenly heated wrestling war, as WCW overtook WWF in the Monday Night ratings with the expanding of the show from one hour to two hours live. The gap grew with the creation of the NWO, a heel group that featured Hulk Hogan, Scott Hall and Kevin Nash, the latter two of whom had left WWF earlier in the year for both significantly more money and less dates.
  250.  
  251. With Hart a free agent, Eric Bischoff put on a full court press to add him to the WCW roster. Many considered Hart as WWF’s biggest star and with the momentum, the thought was his leaving would be a crippling blow.
  252.  
  253. Bischoff offered Hart a three-year contract at $2.8 million per year, of which $2 million would be on the books to Turner Home Entertainment and not the wrestling company, as a way to make the WCW balance sheets look better, and $800,000 would be his annual wrestling salary. The way the contract was written, Hart would do two movies per year for Turner at $1 million per year, although in reality there would probably be no movies and the money would be paid for wrestling.
  254.  
  255. McMahon came to Hart and offered him $1.5 million per year, the most money he had ever guaranteed anyone but Hulk Hogan, and Ultimate Warrior (which he agreed to in 1991 when Warrior demanded equal money to Hogan, only to fire Warrior after making the agreement, because he had advertised Warrior for that year’s SummerSlam and fired him the moment the match ended). While the figure was barely half of that of WCW, McMahon offered Hart an unprecedented 20-year deal, although the $1.5 million was only for the first three years. The next 17 years would be a lesser amount for a non-wrestling role in the office.
  256.  
  257. Out of loyalty to WWF, Hart took the offer. WWF was losing money at the time and McMahon had to take out loans to keep things afloat. In trying to work with the people he was borrowing from, McMahon tried to cut costs everywhere. He asked Hart, his highest paid wrestler, if he would take a lower guarantee now, and McMahon promised to make it up to him later. Hart refused.
  258.  
  259. McMahon then suggested to Hart that he couldn’t afford the deal, and if Hart could get the same offer from Bischoff, he should take it, and gave him permission to negotiate with the rival company.
  260.  
  261. Bischoff offered $2.5 million over three years, with a two-year option. Before signing the deal, McMahon upped the price of his PPV shows. To his surprise, the theory about ticket prices espoused by Zane Bresloff from his days in the concert business held true. Within reason, the higher you charge for tickets, the more people want them. PPV number increased with the price raise and WWF was back profitable. McMahon could afford Hart’s salary, but by this time his telling him to leave and a slew of creative differences had taken place. As late as the end of October, Hart talked with McMahon, more about creative than money, and McMahon made it clear he was going with Steve Austin as his top star. Hart signed with WCW.
  262.  
  263. The only problem was, Hart was WWF champion. McMahon’s idea was for Hart to lose the title to Michaels at the 1997 Survivor Series, and Michaels would then lose to Austin at WrestleMania.
  264.  
  265. The second problem was that Hart’s contract signed in 1996 gave him reasonable creative control over the last 60 days of his tenure if he was to leave.
  266.  
  267. Neither would have been a problem except for Michaels. When Hart was told by McMahon he wanted him losing to Michaels, Hart went to Michaels and told him he’d be happy to lose the title to him. Michaels responded that was nice, because he was never going to put Hart over. Keep in mind this discussion took place several weeks before Hart had agreed to terms with Bischoff.
  268.  
  269. At this point, Hart decided that he wouldn’t put Michaels over, and would be fine losing the title to anyone but him.
  270.  
  271. A number of reporters who saw the piece hated it, largely feeling there were too many con men involved and key elements of the story weren’t presented, plus Scott Hall added nothing and his idea that it was all a work that everyone including Hart were in on is preposterous based on depositions taken later.
  272.  
  273. Really, it wasn’t that bad to me. Then again, maybe if I hadn’t been told what wasn’t in it, I’d have a different view.
  274.  
  275. The key was that it was presented as if Montreal was Hart’s last match with the company, that he was champion, and that he refused to do the job and drop the championship in the ring.
  276.  
  277. And in the end, while that is what happened, and “Wrestling with Shadows” was based on that, a number of key parts of the story were left out.
  278.  
  279. It’s funny because probably the second person in WWF management who called me after the show was Bruce Prichard, who just said that Bret had refused to do business, the situation sucked, but Vince had no other choice.
  280.  
  281. Quite frankly, given how the business was in 1997, which is very different today, and the value of the championship to fans, and talent for that matter, plus the wrestling war, if it was that simple, I would have sided with Vince McMahon.
  282.  
  283. But Hart never refused to drop the belt in the ring. And Montreal was not scheduled to be Hart’s last match with the company. He had three weeks left on his contract, and Bischoff had actually given his approval for Hart to stay in WWF an extra week and drop the title on the next PPV show in Springfield, MA.
  284.  
  285. I had seen the letters from Hart’s attorney to McMahon, specifying what he would and wouldn’t do. It was not only clear Hart was willing to drop the title, but he went so far as to specify he’d love it in Madison Square Garden a week later, or anywhere else, just not in Canada. He suggested losing to Austin. A scenario was set up for a four-way elimination match in Springfield involving Hart, Michaels, Ken Shamrock and Undertaker. In that scenario, Hart would be eliminated by either Undertaker or Shamrock, and in the end Michaels would win the match, get the title and then lose it to Austin.
  286.  
  287. The other key point is that the story of McMahon coming up with idea after idea to get Hart to lose to Michaels and he wouldn’t agree on anything was not exactly true.
  288.  
  289. Hart did turn down several scenarios regarding Michaels and losing the title in Canada. Keep in mind that WWF was well behind in the U.S. at the time, but was doing far better in Canada, partially if not largely due to Hart, who was something of a Canadian sports hero at the time.
  290.  
  291. I can tell you from conversations I had with people in WWF at the time, that with Hart leaving, they wanted Owen Hart to be that Canadian sports hero. Doing so meant they had to take that mantle from Bret Hart. One can only speculate why McMahon felt it imperative that this happened before or in Montreal. Nobody has ever suggested to me they needed Bret to no longer be that Canadian hero. While this all sounds silly with modern standards, the idea that losing a fake wrestling match would make a difference or take the edge off a star, in those days wins and losses at key times meant a lot more.
  292.  
  293. More likely it was simply the stress of the wrestling war and McMahon feeling the need to get the belt off Hart as soon as possible, in any way possible.
  294.  
  295. Still, McMahon had the scenario to make it work. He suggested to Hart that he win the match in Montreal, and then lose the title to Michaels in a rematch. There was bitterness since Hart was supposed to beat Michaels at the 1997 WrestleMania, but Michaels claimed a career ending knee injury and missed the show. Ironically, the replacement match, Hart vs. Steve Austin, was, with hindsight, one of the best and most important matches in company history.
  296.  
  297. Michaels and HHH were approached by McMahon. HHH told Michaels that Hart was leaving the company, and under no circumstances should he lose to a guy leaving the company. McMahon had to go back to Hart and tell him Michaels once again refused to lose to him. At that point, it would have been almost impossible for Hart, who had creative control, something Michaels didn’t have, to agree to lose to him.
  298.  
  299. Those were the key elements left out. I personally don’t believe for a second that under those circumstances that Lou Thesz, Bruno Sammartino, Harley Race, Hulk Hogan or most of the champions of that era would have ever agreed to put someone over for the title.
  300.  
  301. When they came to the standoff, neither Hart nor Michaels would put the other over, the reality is, Hart was leaving and Michaels was staying. McMahon did have to get the title off Hart.
  302.  
  303. A key is when Prichard talked about how they all thought that on the day of the show, McMahon would be able to talk Hart into losing, the reality is that he never asked. McMahon always told people he asked and Hart wouldn’t do business. And if Hart wasn’t wired, which McMahon never knew about until later, it would be one person’s word against another. Having heard the unedited conversation (December 21, 1998 Observer has the transcription), McMahon never once asked Hart to lose. And McMahon had already set his plan in place days earlier. Hart did suggest, noting that everyone knew he was leaving, that he would come to TV the next night and vacate the title. Given the circumstances of that era, McMahon should have never agreed to that. But he did. McMahon agreed to that, probably because he was agreeing to everything Hart suggested, simply because he wanted to make sure Hart got in the ring that night.
  304.  
  305. The keys really to the documentary to me was Earl Hebner talking about how he just didn’t know what to do. Hart was on the same flight to Montreal a Hebner, and upgraded him to first class to sit with him. Hebner swore to God he’d never screw him, not thinking for a second such a thing would happen. Then, as he was going to the ring, Gerald Brisco told Hebner to call for the bell in the spot where Michaels had the sharpshooter on, and told him that if he didn’t, he wouldn’t have a job. Hart was furious at Hebner, but years later, the two made up.
  306.  
  307. The key part of the story was who came up with the finish. And when watching, you don’t know. Both Jim Cornette and Vince Russo both claimed they came up with the idea of the double-cross off the sharpshoter. They were the only two people at Vince McMahon’s house that night when the exasperated Vince said, after telling Hart that Michaels wouldn’t lose to him first, told both of them that Hart wouldn’t lose to Michaels. Michaels has also claimed in the past that he was the onie wh came up with the finish.
  308.  
  309. The way the story was told to me shortly after it happened, was McMahon suggested the Moolah-Richter finish. On November 25, 1985, when women’s champion Wendi Richter wouldn’t sign a new contract, she was double-crossed on the finish. The Fabulous Moolah, under a mask and all covered up, wrestling as Spider Lady, got Richter in a small package. The ref fast counted and Richter kicked out but the ref counted anyway. Richter had no idea what happened, and never wrestled another match for the company.
  310.  
  311. The problem with that finish was that Hart would immediately know Michaels was in on it.
  312.  
  313. Cornette brought that up. Hart and Michaels had gotten into a legitimate fight in the dressing room in Hartford months earlier, which didn’t go well for Michaels. Cornette noted that the absolute worst thing possible was for Hart to get screwed, and have him think Michaels was involved and attack him for real, and beat him up, and then go to WCW. It would kill the title and hurt Michaels as a headliner, and make Hart the hottest wrestler in the country and be viewed as the real WWF champion while in WCW. In 1991, when Ric Flair never lost the WCW title and went to WWF, WCW business plummeted with the idea WWF had the real champion.
  314.  
  315. So a scenario had to be done where it would give Michaels an out to convince Hart that he wasn’t in on it. Cornette claimed that was when McMahon challenged him to come up with a better finish than the Moolah-Richter finish, and that’s what he came up with. Russo claimed he did it.
  316.  
  317. Cornette actually suggested to just put Shamrock in with Hart and have Shamrock win the title. The idea may have been that Shamrock could take it whenever he wanted. But that wasn’t Vince’s idea. Shamrock and Hart were friends. Hart is actually the person who got Shamrock into the WWF and helped train him. I recall being at a house show in Stockton in early 1997, and seeing Ken and Bob Shamrock (who adopted Ken) and they told me they were there to see Bret Hart. The idea was that Bret was going to win the WWF title, and Bret wanted to work a program with Shamrock feeling WWF champion vs. former UFC champion would give the title more credibility and increase interest. At the same time, if Vince would have asked Hart to lose the title to Shamrock, he’d have almost surely done it with no qualms. Hart suggested losing to Austin, and actually agreed to even lose it to the Brooklyn Brawler if asked.
  318.  
  319. Then the documentary turned into the Russo vs. Cornette feud.
  320.  
  321. Neither Cornette nor Russo had any idea McMahon was actually going to do it. Everyone believed that the Hart-Michaels match would end in a DQ win for Hart, including Hart, Cornette, Russo, and everyone at the production meeting, and that Hart would drop the title later.
  322.  
  323. The number of people who did know were small. Gerald Brisco was in Shawn Michaels’ hotel room the night before trying to give him a crash course in self defense with the fear of Bret beating Michaels up in the ring after losing. Sgt. Slaughter came out to ringside with McMahon during the finish of the match. It’s not clear if and what Slaughter knew, but Slaughter was a big, tough guy with a reputation who was clearly there to jump in if there was a problem.
  324.  
  325. Both Hebner brothers knew, but not until the last possible second, so that neither would have time to warn Bret, since Bret and Earl were friends. Perhaps Earl could have warned Bret in the ring, but it would have been obvious and he would have been fired.
  326.  
  327. The UFC announced Rich Franklin as this year’s member of the Pioneer Class for the UFC Hall of Fame.
  328.  
  329. Franklin, 44, a former middleweight champion, was among the key faces of the company in 2005, when it debuted on Spike TV, which changed the sport forever.
  330.  
  331. Franklin joins the previously announced Michael Bisping on the dias for the ceremony that takes place on 7/5 at the Pearl at the Palms Hotel in Las Vegas as part of International Fight Week.
  332.  
  333. There will be three or four more names announced between now and fight time, two of which will be from a noteworthy fight.
  334.  
  335. Nicknamed “Ace” because he looked like Jim Carrey, Franklin was a math teacher at Oak Hills High School in Cincinnati while moonlighting as a fighter. His math teacher job was the subject of a national television ad where he played himself as a math teacher during the period UFC first garnered mainstream popularity.
  336.  
  337. During the period when Dana White and Lorenzo Fertitta were trying to make UFC into a significant sports franchise, the impression people had were that the fighters were thuggish barbarians, which made Franklin, a clean-cut school teacher with a Master’s Degree someone promoted hard.
  338.  
  339. On UFC’s first live television show on Spike on April 9, 2005, Franklin was put in the main event against Ken Shamrock. While most remember that show for the Forrest Griffin vs. Stephan Bonnar fight, which can be argued was the most important UFC fight in history, Franklin won the main event with punches on the ground in 2:42.
  340.  
  341. The booking was far from happenstance. It was known that Shamrock, who was 41 at the time, was past his prime, but he still had a big name from the early days of UFC as well as WWF. Still, Sports Illustrated, having no idea at the time, made fun of the match-up saying UFC was booking “The World’s Most Dangerous Man” against a math teacher.
  342.  
  343. After the win, Franklin got a shot at middleweight champion Evan Tanner on June 4, 2005, in Atlantic City, stopping him at 3:25 of the fifth round. Franklin had previously beat Tanner in the first round two years earlier before Tanner was champion.
  344.  
  345. Franklin was then made coach of the second season of The Ultimate Fighter in 2005, along with Matt Hughes, the season that launched the careers of Rashad Evans, Joe Stevenson, Keith Jardine and Melvin Guillard. He was also a key in getting Matt Hamill, a college wrestler who has his training partner in learning wrestling at one point, into MMA.
  346.  
  347. He also had a television special produced built around his ridiculous cardio and training routine during his heyday of non-stop hell going from machine to machine for 40 minutes or more without a rest.
  348.  
  349. Franklin had successful title defenses against Nate Quarry and David Loiseau before losing the title to Anderson Silva on October 14, 2006, in Las Vegas. He lost a rematch to Silva in 2007. He continued fighting, usually as a main eventer and against top names, until a loss to Cung Le in 2012. After his second loss to Silva, he never got another title shot.
  350.  
  351. He was considered by many second best in the middleweight division for a few years, but Silva beat him decisively both times.
  352.  
  353. He continued to fight, usually in main events, and almost always against name opponents. He had wins over the likes of Hamill, Wanderlei Silva and Chuck Liddell, and losses to Dan Henderson, Vitor Belfort and Forrest Griffin. He ended his career with a 29-7 record with one no contest.
  354.  
  355. He was 22-1 going into the title loss to Silva, with his only defeat coming at the December 31, 2003, Inoki Bom Ba Ye show in Kobe, Japan to Lyoto Machida. The fight was at 214 pounds, nearly 30 pounds over Franklin’s usual 185 pound division.
  356.  
  357. There were teases of a retirement fight, but after three years in late 2015, he said that he recognized his body had slowed down and after talking things over with his mother, aid he would retire.
  358.  
  359. For the last four years Franklin has been working as a Vice President for the ONE organization out of Singapore.
  360.  
  361. WWE last week also announced Legacy Hall of Fame inductees. This is the category they use to honor people who, for whatever reason, they don’t feel are marketable names to the modern audience to put in their actual Hall of Fame.
  362.  
  363. It’s basically the answer of how can you have a Hall of Fame without Lou Thesz and Strangler Lewis, with the answer that they are quietly in it, just not listed in the main Hall of Fame. It’s basically a situation based on two factors, the nature of the WWE Hall of Fame being what it is, which as those in the company have always stressed, is nothing more than a marketing idea and not meant to be taken seriously, and an industry that has reshaped its history to where much of it is ignored and the modern fan knows little of it.
  364.  
  365. The usual rules apply, one woman, one African-American, which can be tricky since that isn’t the easiest. They used Luna Vachon as the woman, which is fine since there are no real standards for a WWE Hall of Fame, past the point that Vachon shouldn’t even be in the legacy category since she was part of the company’s modern era. The African-American was S.D. Jones, the perennial prelim wrestler, joining Johnny Rodz as guys who were essentially television jobbers being in the Hall of Fame.
  366.  
  367. They also named Bruiser Brody, an interesting character and this also means that they never have to put him in the real Hall of Fame. This got so little attention that nobody that I know who was close to Brody has commented on it that I can find.
  368.  
  369. Brody was actually given his name by Vince McMahon Sr. He started wrestling, after being a college football player at the University of Iowa and West Texas State, and a taxi squad member of the Washington Redskins under Vince Lombardi. He did well due to his size and athletic ability, and while working in Florida as Frank “The Hammer” Goodish, got high recommendations from Killer Kowalski, and was brought in for a run with Bruno Sammartino. McMahon Sr. gave him the name Bruiser Frank Brody. He was the first contender after the landmark Stan Hansen program.
  370.  
  371. He was very controversial, a guy who looked out for himself first, second and third and a true independent contractor. It would have been very difficult for a guy with his mentality today, although he was also smart enough that he’d have adapted. And he probably would have been a major Japan and independent star either way. Brody was murdered in 1988 in the dressing room at Juan Loubriel Stadium in Bayamon, PR, after being stabbed by Jose Gonzalez, better known as Invader I.
  372.  
  373. Brody was one of the biggest stars in the world during the 80s, particularly in Japan. In 1986, he signed his second deal with New Japan Pro Wrestling for $17,000 per week, which was the highest guaranteed contract in pro wrestling history for a regular performer up to that point in time. Brody was more synonymous with All Japan Pro Wrestling, where he, Stan Hansen and The Funk Brothers were the big foreign stars in the early 80s. He had two contracts with New Japan, both of which fell apart quickly. He had a rough period where he was out of Japan before world champion Ric Flair canceled an All Japan tour in 1987 at the last minute and Brody, who was scheduled for an Israel tour, was contacted by All Japan and brought back. At the time of his death in 1988, he had actually surpassed Hansen in the popularity polls as far as being Japan’s most popular foreign star.
  374.  
  375. Also listed was another modern wrestler, Buddy Rose, who was a hell of a worker in his day and carried pro wrestling in Oregon during one of the biggest periods in its history in the late 70s until the early-80s. Rose also had WWF runs, the first being used on top as a challenger for Bob Backlund as WWF champion and Pedro Morales as IC champion, and the second, after his weight became an issue, was a job guy who could be counted on because he was a great worker.
  376.  
  377. Neither Brody nor Rose’s wife were aware of the legacy Hall of Fame inductions until the news broke.
  378.  
  379. Wahoo McDaniel, a former NFL star with the New York Jets and one of the first name players on the Miami Dolphins, was a major star everywhere he went and one of the highest paid wrestlers for much of his career. Even though his biggest sports fame came in New York, when, in one game he got so many tackles that the p.a. announcer said, “Tackle by who,” and the crowd would chant, “Wahoo, Wahoo,” his wrestling fame came outside WWF.
  380.  
  381. He had an issue with a payoff with Phil Zacko, the Philadelphia promoter and was gone. During McDaniel’s career, the WWF used Chief Jay Strongbow as their native American star and thus there was no spot for McDaniel. But he thrived everywhere else, and would be viewed as a legend in particular in South Texas and the Carolinas. He may have been the biggest draw in South Texas during the 70s, and he not only recommended Ric Flair, who was an AWA prelim guy, to Crockett Promotions but his feud with Flair is what put Flair on the map as a main eventer and a big draw. McDaniel also had a legendary run with Johnny Valentine which many consider the key in not only changing Crockett Promotions from a tag team territory to a major singles territory, but also from being viewed as just another of many regional companies to a real powerhouse that ended up having the best talent of any company in North America.
  382.  
  383. Brody and McDaniel in particular would have been far bigger stars than most of the regular inductees in the modern version of the WWE Hall of Fame, but neither appeared in the post-1984 WWE world.
  384.  
  385. Professor Toru Tanaka, a thick Hawaiian born Charlie Kalani, was one of the WWWF’s go-to heels of the 60s and 70s. Tanaka was serving in the Army in California when Roy Shire broke him into pro wrestling. He was a major late 60s opponent for Bruno Sammartino because he looked like such a powerhouse, which were the type of guys Sammartino was booked with. In the 70s, he became a tag team guy, as his team with Mr. Fuji held the WWWF tag team titles three times in their different tenures with the company. He was a star everywhere he went until injuries slowed him down.
  386.  
  387. Jim Barnett was a controversial but landmark promoter. While he would claim he was from a wealthy family and worth millions, for years he conned almost everyone in the business. He had a friend from college, Jim Oates, who was wealthy and became his financial backer. Barnett started as a publicist for Chicago promoter Fred Kohler in 1949, and was in charge of “Wrestling As You Like It,” a major newsstand magazine that Kohler also ran. He ended up being No. 2 in the promotion, and then broke from Kohler and started running on his own. With the television connections he made with Kohler, and being one of the first (often credited as the first) promoter to do local studio wrestling television shows and pay stations to get on the air, he was able to put together a strong territory that included Detroit, Indianapolis, Lexington, Denver and cities in between during the late 50s and early 60s. His television connections helped get Roy Shire started in San Francisco in 1961.
  388.  
  389. His major claim to fame was his 1964-73 run with World Championship Wrestling out of Australia. WCW was the highest paying and most first-class organization in the world at the time, with the stars being legitimate celebrities, being put up at the nicest hotels, and flying every night around the country to weekly shows in the big markets.
  390.  
  391. Changes in tax laws as well as seeing the handwriting on the wall, as profits were falling, led him to sell Australia, which never came close to its level of success again, and he landed in Georgia.
  392.  
  393. He came to Georgia Championship Wrestling during the heated wrestling war with Ann Gunkel. His side won the war and he ran GCW through 1982. Georgia Championship Wrestling became a powerhouse under Barnett, with his big show at the Omni in Atlanta bringing in top stars from around the world and being the deepest talent shows in the country. All was good for years as Georgia was doing 800,000 to 1 million paying customers per year just in one state. But economics changed and profits declined.
  394.  
  395. When Sam Muchnick stepped down as NWA President after what he felt was a professional insult at the Alliance meetings in 1975, Barnett took over as the booker of the world champion. Some would say that Barnett was the most powerful promoter because of this, but he was certainly by this point a key power broker.
  396.  
  397. Another key aspect is that Barnett was gay, which carried a stigma. At first, the NWA would not allow him into their group due to his sexual orientation. His U.S. shows were billed under the name the American Wrestling Alliance (not to be confused with Verne Gagne’s American Wrestling Association). World Championship Wrestling was not an NWA member until 1971. Muchnick was able to finally get the alliance to accept Barnett after pushing to do so for years.
  398.  
  399. Within a few years, he had replaced Muchnick in booking the champion, meaning all the promoters had to be nice to him to get the best dates. It was also a major change for the championship.
  400.  
  401. The two issues with Muchnick is that he would personally get three percent of the gates that the champion worked on, and the champion would get ten percent. While promoters certainly found their way around those exact percentages, that was considered a heavy price to pay. Still, it must have worked. Many promoters would charge $1 more for tickets to make up for that cost. But it must have worked, because the demand for world title matches for most of the NWA’s tenure as the lead group from 1949 to 1983 was far greater than the number of days in the year.
  402.  
  403. Muchnick, as champion booker and with a sports background, had rules regarding the booking of the champion. Promoters had to get their bookings approved by Muchnick, who would permit some screw jobs and non-title losses, and DQ and 60 minute matches as well. But ultimately, the champion had to get decisive wins and be protected.
  404.  
  405. When Barnett took over as booker, he let the promoters do what they wanted. The champion’s role was less about keeping the championship strong and more about putting over the local stars who challenged. Screw-job finishes became more plentiful and the champion having to win blow-off matches in the programs was no longer being pushed. But the real reason for the change is that Barnett offered to book the champion without asking for the three percent booking fee. The idea was Barnett was so rich, the role he played, and thus as booking the champion, it gave him power and knowledge of the business like few others.
  406.  
  407. When things changed in Georgia, expenses got higher, and the closing of the Atlanta City Auditorium meaning all shows had to be at the more expensive Omni, the business started losing money. Ole Anderson, who Barnett hired as booker, investigated and saw Barnett’s lavish lifestyle was being funded by the company, as he had huge phone bills, a personal driver, a personal chef and lived extravagantly. Nobody cared or looked when the shareholders were making good profits, but when the company was losing money, it became a different story. Anderson threatened to turn Barnett it for embezzlement unless he resigned from the company. Barnett tried to negotiate a face-saving deal where he’s retain at least a figurehead title in the company, but Anderson wouldn’t make that deal. Barnett was gone and Anderson was in control.
  408.  
  409. Barnett went to work for Vince McMahon as his Director of Operations during the expansion years of the company. While Barnett was not party to this, McMahon bought Georgia Championship Wrestling from under Anderson, getting the rights to put wrestling on TBS in 1984. But Ted Turner wanted McMahon off the station because ratings dropped under McMahon and he wasn’t taping in Atlanta, but sending in arena tapes. Barnett was a key player in negotiating McMahon’s selling his rights to the Georgia wrestling contract in 1985 to Jim Crockett Jr., for $1 million.
  410.  
  411. McMahon fired Barnett in 1987 for reasons that have never been made clear. Barnett attempted suicide right after. Some say he was pretending the suicide for sympathy or attention, noting he made sure he was found. Crockett hired him, and Barnett worked for Crockett, and WCW, until its demise in 2001. McMahon hired him back in 2002, and he remained with the company until his death. Perhaps his most notable act in that later period, which few know, but had a lot to do with our friendship at the time, was his constant pushing of the idea that John Cena would be the company’s next trademark star. I’d told him about Cena’s talking ability and live event charisma, and Barnett loved his look. Paul Heyman, when he booked Smackdown, brought Cena up with his match with Kurt Angle and early push.
  412.  
  413. Perhaps Cena was brought up too early, but for whatever reason, after a good start, he was languishing so badly that they were planning on cutting him. Barnett kept pushing the idea he could be the trademark star. Cena was never cut, and one day, when Stephanie McMahon heard him rap, she wanted him to do that as his gimmick, which is where the Doctor of Thuganomics thing came from, and started his rise to the top star in the company.
  414.  
  415. Primo Carnera wasn’t much of a wrestler. He wasn’t much of a boxer either. But he was a 6-foot-6, 275 pound Italian who had a great physique in the pre-steroid world, and Italian boxing fans loved. Carnera was in reality not a skilled boxer but his size and physique made the public think he was a living Hercules. Most heavyweights in that era were less than six feet tall and around 190 pounds. In one of his title defenses, with Tommy Loughran, he had an 86 pound weight advantage.
  416.  
  417. It was generally believed, through fight fixing, that 26-year-old Carnera became world champion, knocking out Jack Sharkey on June 29, 1933, in Madison Square Garden. A year later, when the powers that be felt Max Baer (whose son became a TV star as Jethro on the Beverly Hillbillies in the 60s, one of the most popular shows in television history), was the next great star in the sport, they had a very real championship fight that exposed Carnera, who was knocked down either 11 or 12 times before the fight was stopped.
  418.  
  419. The idea Carnera’s boxing fights weren’t all real came as early as the October 5, 1931 cover story in Time Magazine, even before he won the championship.
  420.  
  421. The story noted Carnera’s shady backers, noting early opponents Big Boy Peterson, Elzear Rioux and Cowboy Owens were all known to be incompetent boxers but said that in those fights they looked so badly that it appeared they had been bribed to lose. It’s telling because in those days, it would take a mountain of evidence for a magazine of the caliber to make statements that strong. Another boxer who lost to Carnera, Bombo Chevalier, was quoted as saying that one of his cornermen told him he would kill him if he didn’t lose the fight.
  422.  
  423. Carnera remained a boxing attraction because he had a big name and in those days, when titles mattered, just holding the world heavyweight title meant you were a huge star as long as you could lace up gloves, particularly with his size. Carnera suffered from diabetes and had his kidney removed in 1938.
  424.  
  425. He still boxed on occasion through 1945, when he turned to pro wrestling. From all accounts, he was a terrible wrestler, but his name was such from boxing that he became one of the biggest drawing cards in the business.
  426.  
  427. He started pro wrestling three days before his 40th birthday. While in the sports world, he was considered a joke, with the idea he had been a manipulated world champion, he was still a giant Italian with a huge name and the public flocked to see him as a wrestler. He got the Goldberg push, going undefeated in his first 120 matches before losing in Montreal to local legend Yvon Robert.
  428.  
  429. Carnera worked as a touring attraction, a guy you’d bring in once because he was Primo Carnera, and he was getting regular work throughout North America through 1956. With his drawing power waning, he did little wrestling for several years. After a generation of fans hadn’t seen him, he came back for a nostalgia run of sorts in 1961 and 1962 with the big thing being he was a former world heavyweight boxing champion and had the big name from real sports. He held the International TV tag titles in Los Angeles with Bobo Brazil as his partner briefly in 1956 and the West Coast version of the NWA world tag tiles with Sandor Szabo briefly in 1951.
  430.  
  431. The movie “Requiem for a Heavyweight” in 1956 was thought to be largely based on his career, with the idea that a washed up boxer with nowhere else to turn became a pro wrestler. The movie “The Harder They Fall,” which starred Humphrey Bogart, about a giant boxer whose fights were all fixed until he fought Max Baer (who played himself in the movie), who destroyed the giant in his first real fight, was also generally considered based on Carnera.
  432.  
  433. Hisashi Shinma, the one-time New Japan booker who was the figurehead president of the WWF from 1978 to 1984, was also named.
  434.  
  435. What’s notable about this is, unlike the others, Shinma, 83, is still alive and the legacy inductees have usually passed away.
  436.  
  437. Shinma was the business manager for Antonio Inoki and booker for New Japan. He also ran the business side of the company during the 70s and early 80s.
  438.  
  439. After the death of Willie Gilzenberg, Shinma was the figurehead president of the WWWF/WWF. His name was almost never mentioned except in programs. Gilzenberg’s name was mentioned a lot, and Shinma’s replacement, Jack Tunney, became a regular television character on-screen making rulings.
  440.  
  441. In that era, there was an alliance with WWF, New Japan and the UWA in Mexico, to a degree similar to the New Japan/CMLL/ROH alliance now.
  442.  
  443. In New Japan, Shinma’s booking led to tremendous television ratings and great live arena business in the early 80s. At its peak, New Japan sold out 70 percent of its live events and averaged 20 ratings in prime time. Shinma’s major roles were the creation of Inoki as a larger-than-life figure though fighting outsiders, the non-pro wrestlers who came from boxing (including Muhammad Ali and Chuck Wepner), karate, judo, kickboxing and other disciplines; the bringing in of stars from other promotions to create famous dream matches (which in many ways created a fan appetite in Japan for the later UWF-style promotions and MMA); focusing on Japanese vs. Japanese main event feuds like Tatsumi Fujinami vs. Riki Choshu and Inoki vs. Rusher Kimura, and the creation and push of a unique high-flying junior heavyweight division. The latter gave Fujinami his first stardom and got even bigger with Satoru Sayama as Tiger Mask and his bouts with Dynamite Kid, Black Tiger (Rollerball Rocco) and even a young Bret Hart.
  444.  
  445. There was an embezzlement scandal in New Japan in 1983 which led to Shinma being ousted from the company. Shinma formed the original UWF at that time, and Inoki was going to leave New Japan to join him. But Inoki stayed with New Japan. Shinma went with Akira Maeda as his top star, He was still the figurehead WWF President even after leaving New Japan, even though WWF had its business dealings with New Japan. They just didn’t bother to change the name. Shinma also got Maeda booked on an ill-fated WWF tour as International champion.
  446.  
  447. But the UWF wrestlers wanted to change from a New Japan style to a new Karl Gotch-inspired style based kicks, suplexes and submissions, trying to essentially say that their pro wrestling was real while the other companies weren’t. Shinma was against it, and after a showdown when Satoru Sayama, the first Tiger Mask, agreed to return to pro wrestling with UWF only if Shinma was ousted, Sayama’s popularity was such and UWF was struggling (the first version went out of business a year or so later) that Shinma was out of the company he formed.
  448.  
  449. He’s been around wrestling little since then, although his son created the Universal Pro Wrestling group in 1990, which was Japan’s first Lucha oriented promotion and made stars out of Yoshihiro Asai (Ultimo Dragon) and helped start the careers of Great Sasuke, Gedo, Jado and others.
  450.  
  451. The final name was Joseph Cohen, who is also still alive. Cohen was one of the key people who started the USA Network.
  452.  
  453. Cohen was Vice President of MSG Cable and Vice President of Development for Madison Square Garden in 1975, when the first deal with WWWF was made.
  454.  
  455. At a time when television wrestling was mostly squash matches that were done to build stars for arena shows, Cohen’s negotiated the deal where MSG cable paid WWF a significant monthly fee to air its Madison Square Garden shows live.
  456.  
  457. The deal started during the Bruno Sammartino run in the mid-70s and continued into the early 90s. The USA Network was actually spawned from MSG cable, and that’s where the WWF’s original connection with USA came from.
  458.  
  459. At the time it was considered a risk, as the idea you could watch the show live on television was thought to be something that would kill the box office in a business that was all about live ticket sales. But WWF was paid enough each month to take the risk, and the reality was, they were selling out regularly with Sammartino and later Bob Backlund as champion, even with the bouts airing. The success of WWF on MSG led to Prism in Philadelphia to do a similar deal for Spectrum shows, NESN in Boston for the Boston Garden shows and for a short period of time, the Z channel in Los Angeles broadcasted the shows from the Sports Arena. As part of the deal, WWE had rights to the footage after it aired, so they would air many of the matches from all these locations on Prime Time Wrestling on USA Network, the Monday night predecessor to Raw, with Gorilla Monsoon and Bobby Heenan doing wrap-arounds.
  460.  
  461. Cohen later became President of the MSG Network, while, along with Bob Rosencrans, founded the spinoff USA Network, which was at the time of its inception owned 50 percent by Madison Square Garden. The WWF’s MSG shows would air live on MSG cable and air on a day or two delay for the rest of the country on USA. He left both networks in 1985 to help purchase and run Hughes Television Network. He left there in 1987 and helped purchase the Z Channel, and made a deal with WWF for its Los Angeles shows.
  462.  
  463. He later was part-owner of the Los Angeles Kings NHL team from 1993-95, and then returned in 1995 as Executive Vice President of MSG, running MSG Network and MSG Radio. The station won multiple Emmys for pioneering HDTV for sports. He later built and ran Sports Time Ohio and has remained a major player in sports ever since.
  464.  
  465. Smackdown on 4/16 did a 1.62 rating and 2,219,000 viewers (1.54 viewers per home) for the draft show. The number was very slightly up for the Smackdown after WrestleMania that did a 1.60 rating and 2,199,000 viewers (also 1.54 viewers per home).
  466.  
  467. It was up 1.3 percent in ratings from the post-Mania show and 0.9 percent in viewers.
  468.  
  469. Last year’s Smackdown draft show did a 1.82 rating and 2,796,000 viewers, so it’s a 11 percent ratings drop (which is at least a lot better than Raw) and 20.6 percent drop in total viewers. The reason for the big difference is because last year had more viewers per home, and the rating is based on the number of homes that get USA Network (thus if you look at ratings, it factors out cord cutting), and that number dropped in the last year.
  470.  
  471. Smackdown was in ninth place on cable, trailing Curse of Oak Island on The History Channel, NBA games on TNT (the game against Smackdown did 2,239,000 viewers so they were very close; a 10:38 p.m. late night game did 2,594,000 viewers) and news shows.
  472.  
  473. The show did a 0.47 in 12-17 (up 2.2 percent from last week, down 30.9 percent from the Superstar shakeup show last year), 0.53 in 18-34 (down 11.7 percent from last week and down 28.4 percent from last year), 0.95 in 35-49 (down 1.0 percent from last week; down 22.1 percent from last year) and 0.90 in 50+ (up 2.3 percent from last week, down 11.8 percent from last year).
  474.  
  475. The audience was 63.8 percent male in 18-49 and 55.0 percent male in 12-17.
  476.  
  477. Miz & Mrs. on 4/16, even against the NBA playoffs was up 10.5 percent from last week to 1,102,000 viewers. It was the best of this season, but third worst since the show’s inception. As far as retention from Smackdown, it kept 70.4 percent of women 18-49, 46.3 percent of men 18-49, 50.6 percent of girls 12-17, 40.3 percent of boys 12-17 and 43.3 percent of those over 50.
  478.  
  479. Miz & Mrs. was fourth in its time slot on cable, losing to the NBA and two other shows.
  480.  
  481. Raw on 4/15 did another disappointing number for the draft show, with a 1.88 rating and 2,665,000 viewers (1.59 viewers per home).
  482.  
  483. The numbers are down from a 2.47 rating and 3,616,000 viewers, 24 and 26 percent respectively, for the first night of the Superstar Shakeup last year.
  484.  
  485. It was down 8.9 percent from the Raw after WrestleMania, which is an expected level drop. Similar to last year’s draft show, the good news is the audience that was there stayed with the show for all three hours.
  486.  
  487. Raw was seventh for the night on cable. NBA playoffs did 2,846,000 viewers head-to-head with most of Raw and 2,771,000 viewers for the game that started at 10:43 p.m. NHL playoffs on NBC Sports network did 629,000 viewers for the Boston vs. Toronto series and 521,000 viewers for Nashville vs. Dallas.
  488.  
  489. The huge drop from last year isn’t good because usually it is after the draft show and through the end of the NBA playoffs that Raw does its worst ratings of the year until football season. If these 25 percent year-to-year drops continue, the numbers are going to look really bad in a month.
  490.  
  491. It should also be noted that as long as cable television is scrambling and still has money, and unless streaming services start going out of business, which isn’t likely soon, that WWE, even with its lower numbers, is still in good shape in five years because it’s still a guaranteed audience even if dwindling on a weekly basis.
  492.  
  493. When it comes to first vs. third hours, not only did women stay as a higher level than men, but teenage girls, usually the quickest to tune out, stayed at a higher level than anyone. When it comes to hour one drop to hour three, it was a 1.5 percent drop in women 18-49, a 9.2 percent drop in men 18-49, a 9.7 percent gain in teenage girls and a 9.2 percent gain in teenage boys, while over 50 was an 8.3 percent drop.
  494.  
  495. You can attribute that to which demos were most interested in staying for the roster changes, or for the main event with Roman Reigns & Seth Rollins and finding out the mystery partner. or for Becky Lynch, who also wrestled in hour three which was promoted throughout the show.
  496.  
  497. The first hour did 2,760,000 viewers. The second hour did 2,690,000 viewers. The third hour did 2,546,000 viewers.
  498.  
  499. The show did a 0.62 in 12-17 (down 13.9 percent from the Raw after Mania, down 29.5 percent from last year’s draft show), 0.70 in 18-34 (down 23.1 percent from last week, down 37.5 percent from last year’s draft show),. 1.12 in 35-49 (down 10.4 percent from last week, down 27.3 percent from last year) and 1.04 in 50+ (down 5.5 percent from last week, down 19.4 percent from last year).
  500.  
  501. The audience was 64.1 percent male in 18-49 and 59.5 percent male in 12-17.
  502.  
  503. The Viceland documentary on Randy Savage & Elizabeth on 4/10 did 154,000 viewers. We’re told that they were very pleased with the numbers.
  504.  
  505. This is the second issue of the current set. If you’ve got a (1) on your address label, with last week being a double issue, it means your subscription expires with this issue.
  506.  
  507. Renewal rates for the printed Observer in the United States are $13.50 for four issues (which includes $4 for postage and handling), $25 for eight, $35.50 for 12, $46 for 16, $69 for 24, $92 for 32, $115 for 40, $149.50 for 52 up through $184 for 64 issues.
  508.  
  509. For Canada and Mexico, the rates are $15 for four issues (which includes $6 for postage and handling), $27 for eight, $38.50 for 12, $50 for 16, $75 or 24, $100 for 32, $125 for 40 issues, $162.50 for 52 and $200 for 64.
  510.  
  511. For the rest of the world, the rates are $17 for four issues (which includes $9 for postage and handling), $33 for eight, $47.50 for 12, $62 for 16, $77.50 for 20, $93 for 24, $108.50 for 28, $155 for 40 issues and $201.50 for 52 issues.
  512.  
  513. You can also get the Observer on the web at www.wrestlingobserver.com for $10.99 per month for a premium membership that includes daily audio updates, Figure Four Weekly, special articles and a message board. If you are a premium member and still want hard copies of the Observer, you can get them for $8 per set in the U.S., $9 per set in Canada and $11.50 per set for the rest of the world.
  514.  
  515. All subscription renewals should be sent to the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, P.O. Box 1228, Campbell, CA 95009-1228. You can also renew via Visa or MasterCard by sending your name, address, phone number, Visa or MasterCard number (and include the three or four digit security code on the card) and expiration date to Dave@wrestlingobserver.com or by fax to (408)244-3402. You can also renew at www.paypal.com using dave@wrestlingobserver.com as the pay to address. For all credit card or paypal orders, please add a $1 processing fee. If there are any subscription problems, you can contact us and we will attempt to rectify them immediately, but please include with your name a full address as well a phone number you can be contacted at.
  516.  
  517. All letters to the editor, reports from live shows and any other correspondence pertaining to this publication should also be sent to the above address.
  518.  
  519. This publication is copyright material and no portion of the Observer may be reprinted without the expressed consent of publisher/writer Dave Meltzer. The Observer is also produced by Derek Sabato.
  520.  
  521. Fax messages can be sent to the Observer 24 hours a day at (408) 244-3402. Phone messages can be left 24 hours a day at (408) 244-2455. E-mails can be sent to Dave@wrestlingobserver.com
  522.  
  523. CMLL: The 4/12 show at Arena Mexico drew 7,000 fans for the first week of the Parejas Increibles tournament, which was a tag team tournament of partners who usually feud with each other. Cavernario & Titan were the stars and winners of the A block. They dressed similar and first beat Blue Panther & Mascara Ano 2000, who has been around for so long that when he got the name Mask from the Year 2000, it was meant as a futuristic gimmick. They next beat Sanson & Soberano Jr., featuring cool stuff with Soberano. The finals were a very good match with Caristico & Mephisto, ending when Cavernario made Caristico submit to his own La Mistica. The highlight was Cavernario and Titan both doing splashes off the top rope simultaneously. Caristico & Mephisto reached the finals beating Flyer & Forastero in the first round and Guerrero Maya Jr. & Euforia in the semis. The main event on the show had Volador Jr. vs. Gilbert el Boricua. This was surprisingly good as Volador has his working shoes on. Gilbert is really jacked up but he’s been around for so long that he at least is in the right spot at all times and Volador took care of the movement needed
  524.  
  525. Dragon Lee’s 4/12 match in Arena Mexico was his last match at CMLL’s home arena for a few months. He’s going full-time to New Japan through the Dominion show in early June as the IWGP jr. champion.
  526.  
  527. The 4/19 show is the B block of the tournament with teams of Mistico & Cuatrero, Volador Jr. & Ultimo Guerrero, Vangellys & Rush, Niebla Roja & El Terrible, Atlantis & Negro Casas, Valiente & Gran Guerrero and Stuka Jr. & Hechicero. Whatever team that wins this faces Cavernario & Titan on 4/26 in what is likely to be a great match. Volador & Guerrero have to be favored to win this. The other top matches are Caristico & Angel de Oro & Atlantis Jr. facing Sanson & Forastero & El Hijo de Villano III and a Kawato San vs. Rey Cometa singles match
  528.  
  529. Diamante Azul will be out for an indefinite period due to an injury
  530.  
  531. Mistico just returned from a two week vacation. Misterioso returned after taking three weeks off due to the death of his daughter, who died giving birth
  532.  
  533. Sofia Alonso, the daughter of Paco Alonso, who is very much the Stephanie McMahon of Mexico to the point of being pushed ahead of her father as the new public face of the company, is a couple with Cuatrero of the New Dinamitas. Forastero, another member of the team, married the daughter of Ultimo Guerrero, so that team is very well connected politically to be a headline trio for decades. The joke is that it’s really good that they are already a really good trio and given their level of experience, will probably improve greatly to being a trio that legitimately should be on top, because even if they weren’t good, they’d probably end up on top
  534.  
  535. El Terrible beat Valiente to retain the Mexican national heavyweight title on 4/14 at Arena Mexico. , , Shocker has said that he needs surgery on his jaw. He has opened up a food truck business called Taco Shock. He’ll park his food truck in front of Arena Mexico every Friday, Sunday and Tuesday night. He started this past weekend.
  536.  
  537. AAA: For the TV ratings this past week, the AAA show on 4/5 did a 2.1 rating and 9.0 share, with 4.4 million viewers. CMLL on 4/6 did a 1.2 rating and 2.6 share, for 1.3 million viewers
  538.  
  539. TV Azteca announced a series of tournaments for a weekly Saturday night show that starts on 5/4. It will be a ten-week series, with two one hour shows taped every other Thursday in Mexico City at either the Pepsi Center or the Jai Alai Fronton (where Impact taped). There will be tournaments in a number of weight divisions as well as tag teams. The number of people in the tournament varies by division. We don’t have names yet but they announced there would be competitors from Elite (the Mexican promotion, not AEW), Arolucha in the U.S., Impact, MLW and AAA in all divisions. The idea is that the winner of each weight class will be recognized as champion in all five promotions and defend the title in all of them. It will be a new weekly TV show short-term on TV Azteca for the summer. The name of the show looks to be “Gladiatores: Liga de Campeone de Lucha Libre,” or Champions League of Wrestling
  540.  
  541. The next tapings will be 4/26 in Mexicali and 4/28 in Nogales. Mexicali has Pagano & La Parka & Puma King vs,. Rey Escorpion & El Texano Jr. & Chessman, Brian Cage & Laredo Kid vs. Daga & Taurus and Mocho Cota Jr. & Carta Brava Jr. & Tito Santana vs. Australian Suicide & Jack Evans & Sammy Guevara
  542.  
  543. Konnan, on his podcast, said that he would be interested in working with Tirantes. Tirantes, who started as a heel ref for AAA in 1992, had been of late working as a heel ref, although not as overt a heel ref, for CMLL until saying that he had left the company a few weeks ago. The son of Tirantes, El Hijo de Tirantes has been AAA’s heel ref
  544.  
  545. The original Psicosis (as Nicho), Douglas James (who Crash has been using) and Willie Mack are all working for EMW, the AAA affiliate in Tijuana starting on 5/31, which takes them out of Crash, where all had been regulars. LAX, Taya, Mack, Blanchard and Daga along with Nicho are all on that show.
  546.  
  547. THE CRASH: The Crash ran on 4/13 in Tijuana before 2,700 fans, which is well down from their usual 3,800 to 4,500. They brought in fewer outside stars and it was a less appealing show as far as big names went. The show was only three big matches deep. It also featured the debut of El Hijo del Fantasma, who used that name after leaving AAA. Many expected Fantasma to surface in CMLL but that hasn’t happened and there are still some grudges against him there from the past. WWE had a lot of interest in him from Lucha Underground a few years ago but he couldn’t go then because of his contract. Fantasma teamed with Bestia 666 & Mecha Wolf 450 to win the main event over CMLL’s Mexican national trios champions, Cuatrero & Forastero & Sanson. In theory, national titles which date back to the old days of wrestling being treated as a sport and titles being everything, are not owned by any promotion and can be defended anywhere. But this was a non-title match. Fantasma was announced as the newest member of Rebelion Amarilla, the lead CMLL heel group. After winning, they challenged to a rematch at Arena Mexico. There was also a tease of Rey Horus joining Rebelion Amarilla. Horus won a five-way over Titan, Adam Brooks, Flamita and Black Danger, which sounds fun. Horus then issued a challenge to Crash champion Austin Theory. Carlito of the Colon family teamed with Mesias (Gilbert el Boricua in CMLL) to win a three-way over Los Traumas, the sons of Negro Navarro, and CMLL’s Angel de Oro & Niebla Roja when Carlito pinned Trauma I. Post-match challenges were for Traumas vs. Angel de Oro & Niebla Roja. The next show was announced for 5/4 with Ultimo Guerrero, Gran Guerrero, Flamita, Bandido, Rey Fenix and Penta 0M. That means AAA hasn’t signed Penta & Fenix up exclusively in Mexico yet, which they want to do. But there has been talk this may be their last match in Crash. They’ve already lost Daga, Tessa Blanchard, Taya, Johnny Mundo and Jack Evans who are back affiliated with AAA with Konnan booking, and much of the great underneath Tijuana flyers which could be stars of the future are expected to be headed to AAA and starting as regulars over the summer.
  548.  
  549. ALL JAPAN: To a big extent this tournament has flown under the radar since it started during Mania week where everything was focused on that. There are people who felt that the 4/4 opening night show of the tournament was the second or third best show of the week and comparable to one of the stronger nights of G-1
  550.  
  551. The standings as of 4/18 (all wrestlers will end up with eight matches) were: A block–1. Zeus 4-2; 2. Yuji Okabayashi 2-1; 3. Kento Miyahara and Dylan James 3-2; 5. Shuji Ishikawa 3-2-1; 6. Ryoji Sai 2-2-1;7. Atsushi Aoki 2-2; 8. Yuma Aoyagi and Gianni Valletta 2-5
  552.  
  553. B block has: 1. Naoya Nomura 4-2; 2. Suwama 3-2 and Jake Lee 3-2, 4. Joel Redman, Yoshitatsu and Daichi Hashimoto 2-2; 7. Takashi Yoshida 3-4; 8. Sam Adonis and Joe Doering 2-3
  554.  
  555. In this week’s matches, 4/11 in Fukuoka before 452 fans, A block matches saw Aoyagi beat Valletta in 11:28 and Miyahara beat James in 20:39 with a shutdown German suplex. The B block saw Lee beat Yoshitatsu in 13:04 with a back suplex and Adonis beat Suwama in 12:20 with a Northern Lights bomb
  556.  
  557. 4/13 in Osaka drew 516 fans. A block bouts saw Ishikawa over Aoyagi in 13:38 with the Bad Luck fall; Sai beat Valletta in 11:46 with a bridge and Zeus pinned James in 16:56 with a jackhammer slam. The B Block bouts saw Redman over Nomura in 10:18 with a Fujiwara armbar and Suwama pinned Yoshida in 15:14 after a back suplex
  558.  
  559. 4/14 in Osaka before a sellout 614 fans included Triple Crown champion Miyahara losing his second time in the tournament, to Ishikawa in 19:16 with a giant slam in an A block match. The other A block match saw Sai over Zeus in 22:30. The B block bouts saw Adonis upset Doering in 4:41 and Yoshida over Redman with the Cyber bomb in 8:36
  560.  
  561. 4/15 in Kanazawa drew 330 fans. The A block bouts were James over Aoyagi 4:58 with a choke slam and Zeus pinned Aoki in 10:46 with a jackhammer slam. The B block bouts saw Yoshida over Adonis in 9:23 with the pineapple bomber and Nomura scored a big win over Yoshitatsu in 19:46
  562.  
  563. 4/16 drew 402 in Hamamatsu. In A block bouts, Valletta scored a big win over Okabayashi in 9:04 and Aoki beat Aoyagi in 10:00 with a Samoan clutch. The B block saw Doering pin Yoshida in 9:20 with a flying crossbody off the top and Suwama pinned Hashimoto in 22:01 with a Greco-Roman back suplex
  564.  
  565. 4/17 in Tokyo at Shin-kiba before a sellout 302 fans saw A block bouts with Aoki over Sai in 8:33 with a Samoan clutch, Valletta getting another big win over Ishikawa in 6:07 and Miyahara over Aoyagi in 17:56 with the shutdown German suplex. The B block result was Lee over Yoshida in 14:06 with the Perfect Stretch.
  566.  
  567. PRO WRESTLING NOAH: Global tournament standings as of 4/18: 1. Maybach Taniguchi & Yuji Hino 2-0; 2. Takashi Sugiura & Kazma Sakamoto 3-1; 3. Katsuhiko Nakajima & Go Shiozaki and Kaito Kiyomiya & Kenou 2-1-1; 5. Atsushi Kotoge & Mitsuya Nagai, Akitoshi Saito & Masao Inoue and Masa Kitamiya & Yoshiki Inamura 1-2; 8. Mohammed Yone & Quiet Storm 1-3. Storm was injured on 4/13 when the team was 1-1, and their next two bouts were forfeit losses. So it’s likely the tournament is having to be rebooked due to Yone & Storm having to be credited with losses as long as Storm isn’t wrestling
  568.  
  569. Tournament results for the week started on 4/13 in Sapporo before 349 fans saw Sugiura & Sakamoto over Kitamiya & Inamura in 16:30 with Sugiura pinning Inamura with an Olympic slam and Kiyomiya & Kenou over Yone & Storm in 14:42 when Kiyomiya pinned Storm with a Tiger suplex
  570.  
  571. 4/14 in Sapporo before a sellout 431 fans saw Kitamiya & Inamura get two points with a forfeit win over Yone & Storm. Sugiura & Sakamoto beat Kotoge & Nagai in 13:22 with Sakamoto pinning Nagai. Nakajima & Shiozaki went to a 30:00 draw with Kiyomiya & Kenou. In addition on that show, Minoru Tanaka retained his GHC jr. title over Kotaro Suzuki in 12:29 with the Minoru special
  572.  
  573. 4/17 at Korakuen Hall before 819 fans saw Taniguchi & Hino win via forfeit over Yone & Storm. Saito & Inoue scored the biggest upset of the year in NOAH beating Nakajima & Shiozaki in 19:54 when Inoue pinned Nakajima with a schoolboy. This would be like Curt Hawkins pinning A.J. Styles. Sugiura & Sakamoto upset Kiyomiya & Kenou in 26:27 when Sugiura used a guillotine on GHC champion Kiyomiya, so that could set up a future title match.
  574.  
  575. NEW JAPAN: They officially announced a 6/29 show in Melbourne at Festival Hall, the home of pro wrestling in the city during the Jim Barnett era. It will be a two-show tour with a date in Sydney as well. Melbourne will be the major show and will air live on New Japan World. Sydney will be promoted as a house show. If the shows do well, that will make a difference in New Japan’s plans for the Australian market for 2020
  576.  
  577. This really doesn’t mean much but they announced Kazuchika Okada, Tetsuya Naito, Jay White and Kota Ibushi for the G-1 Climax tournament. It’s a given they would all be there. I guess it was a way to try and kick-start ticket sales in Dallas. They discounted tickets last week which ended up being a hell of a lesson. The lesson is the people who want to see New Japan for the most part will pay the ticket price, but right now there is a number that, in this incarnation, without the former American top draws, they simply can’t run an NBA arena. As of several days after the tickets were discounted only 62 more tickets were sold. That led to the announcing of the names. Originally the way New Japan works is that they don’t announce who is in G-1 until after Dominion in June, but because they felt they needed something for Dallas, they announced the top four guys this week. Dallas also had no local advertising. When they did Long Beach and to a degree San Francisco, just the idea that New Japan is coming and Twitter/Internet was enough that the first shows sold out instantly. The latter two shows, while not selling out and the last Long Beach was a disappointment (in both cases because no card was released until the end and they did do well at the end once bouts were announced), they were at least okay. But without the key American stars, that wasn’t enough for Dallas. New Japan has never done any significant local market advertising, relying all on Twitter marketing and Internet. That wasn’t enough for Dallas. The problem is, and this isn’t known, is will local market advertising sell tickets to a niche product like New Japan. But I think next time they try and run a major building, if they do, they will test out local market advertising
  578.  
  579. London is expected to sellout
  580.  
  581. The next major show, called Sengoku Lord, takes place on 4/20 from the Aiichi Gym in Nagoya at 5 a.m. Eastern with Shota Umino & Ren Narita vs. Yota Tsuji & Yuya Uemura, Yuji Nagata & Satoshi Kojima & Tomoaki Honma & Toa Henare & Jushin Liger vs. Minoru Suzuki & Taichi & Yoshinobu Kanemaru & Desperado & Taka Michinoku, Togi Makabe & Toru Yano & Dragon Lee vs. Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa & Taiji Ishimori, Mikey Nicholls vs. Chase Owens, Hirooki Goto & Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Jay White & Hikuleo, Kazuchika Okada & Tomohiro Ishii & Yoshi-Hashi & Sho & Yoh vs. Tetsuya Naito & Evil & Sanada & Bushi & Shingo Takagi, Juice Robinson vs. Bad Luck Fale for the U.S. title and Kota Ibushi vs. Zack Sabre Jr. for the IC title
  582.  
  583. The new tour opened on 4/13 in Tsukuba which drew a sellout of 2,020 with a basic show with LIJ of Naito & Sanada & Evil & Bushi & Takagi over Okada & Ishii & Sho & Yoh & Rocky Romero when Naito pinned Romero after a destino. Every show this week had the same main event. A match ending with Evil using the scorpion deathlock on Sho in 16:21 headlined the 4/14 show in Takasaki, which sold out with 1,684 fans. The match ending with Takagi pinning Romero, headlined 4/15 in Kofu before a sellout of 1,516 fans. 4/17 in Fukui was the only non-sellout of the week, with 952 fans. That ending was Naito over Romero with destino in 15:18
  584.  
  585. They are trying to push Uemura vs. Tsuji as an opening match rivalry. Both are very good. The two had 24 straight ten minute draws and the idea is they are not graduating to longer time limits and trading wins.
  586.  
  587. OTHER JAPAN NOTES: Command Bolshoi, the small (4-foot-10, 100 pounds) masked woman wrestler who has been around for 27 ½ years, has her retirement match on 4/21 at Korakuen Hall. She will do two matches on the show, one with Kaori Yoneyama and the other with Mayumi Ozaki. She’s retiring due to problems with her spine. She spent most of her career with the JWP promotion until moving to Pure J in 2017. She also competed in some bodybuilding and figures contests in 2015, winning and finishing third in the other, which is impressive since four years ago she was in her early 40s. Bolshoi looks to retire as the junior heavyweight champion of the Sendai Girls promotion, as on their 4/17 show, she beat Millie McKenzie with a triangle choke to win the title
  588.  
  589. One of Big Japan’s biggest shows of the year will be 5/5 in Yokohama at Bunka Gym with the Death match title at stake with Masaya Takahashi defending against Kodaka and Daisuke Sekimoto defending the Strong World title against Yuji Okabayashi. Tajiri is coming in to challenge Kazuki Hashimoto for the jr. title. All Japan’s All Asia tag title is also at stake with Jake Lee & Koji Iwamoto of All Japan defending against Big Japan’s Ryuichi Kawakami & Kazumi Kikuta. Okabayashi got the title shot with a win over Daichi Hashimoto on 4/14 in Sapporo
  590.  
  591. Stardom had its draft show on 4/14 at Shinkiba before an overflow crowd of 401 fans. This was done like WWE where nobody except the captains were told anything since they had to pick. Some office staff knew but wrestlers were to find out when they were drafted. Mayu Iwatani, the captain of Stars, picked Starlight Kid, Arisa Hoshiki, Tam Nakano, Saki Kashima, Hunan, Xia Brookside and Saya Iida. Queen’s Quest, with Momo Watanabe as captain, picked AZM, Utami Hayashishita, Bea Priestley, Viper, Chardonnay, Leo Onozaki and Hina. Oedo Tai headed by Kagetsu, picked Hazuki, Andras Miyagi, Natsuko Tora, Jamie Hayter, Session Moth Martina and Sumire Natsu. And Multinational Force, headed by Hana Kimura, picked Jungle Kyona, Konami, Mari Apache, Natsumi, Rebel Kel, Bobbi Tyler, Ruaka and Rina
  592.  
  593. Mayu Iwatani will continue to work through the 4/19 show but then she will be taking time off due to knee issues. Iwatani came back really fast from her knee injury late last year. In her case it’s the mentality regarding being the top star and after Stardom had lost its two biggest stars, Kairi Hojo (Sane) and Io Shirai, and Iwatani likely put pressure on herself to come back early, which backfired
  594.  
  595. They also did a match on 4/13 in Yokohama with Queen’s Quest (Watanabe & Konami & AZM) vs. Oedo Tai (Kagetsu & Hazuki & Sumire), a 2 of 3 fall match where if Queen’s Quest lost they could no longer wear their masks going to the ring. If Oedo Tai lost, they could no longer do their dance routine at the start of their matches. Watanabe used a crossface submission on Kagetsu to win the third fall. The actual reason is that Kagetsu wants to reinvent Oedo Tai and one of the changes behind the scenes she asked for was to no longer do the dance routine, so they ditched it by turning it into a stip for a match
  596.  
  597. Sendai Girls drew 998 fans to Korakuen Hall on 4/16. Kenta Kobashi was at the show and announced that Meiko Satomura would face Nanae Takahashi on Kobashi’s 6/10 show at Korakuen Hall. The main event of the 4/16 show saw champion Chihiro Hashimoto retain over Jordynne Grace
  598.  
  599. Tatsumi Fujinami’s Dradition group announced a 4/21 show at Korakuen Hall where the main event is an interview segment with Fujinami and his original mentor Antonio Inoki. Inoki is so rarely at pro wrestling shows and Korakuen Hall that he should be a big draw. The actual main event is Fujinami & Shiro Koshinaka & Jushin Liger vs. Yoshiaki Fujiwara & Hiro Saito & Black Tiger. Not sure who is this Black Tiger, but aside from who it ends up being, Liger will be the second youngest guy in the match. Also Mitsuya Nagai & Masato Tanaka & Kazma Sakamoto vs. Kenso & Daisuke Sekimoto & Yamato (from Dragon Gate)
  600.  
  601. He’s also running 4/26 in Osaka with Fujinami& Hiro Saito & Sekimoto vs. Riki Choshu & Koshinaka & Yukio Sakaguchi of DDT, Nagai & Tanaka vs. Jinsei Shinzaki (Hakushi) & Super Tiger, Koji Kanemoto & Masaaki Mochizuki vs. Tatsuhito Takaiwa & Takaku Fuke and Super Delfin & Shisa vs. K-Ness of Dragon Gate & Billy Ken Kid of Osaka Pro
  602.  
  603. There will be another Yoshihiro Takayama benefit show on 8/26 at Korakuen Hall
  604.  
  605. Oz Academy had a big show on 4/14 at Korakuen Hall before 883 fans. Mayumi Ozaki kept her title in the main event over Hikaru Shida, who is leaving Japan to be part of AEW.
  606.  
  607. HERE AND THERE: Dave Bautista will be starring in a movie called “Killer’s Game” for STXfilms. The movie is based on the book “the Killer’s Game” by Jay Bonansinga. The book is about a hitman who gets told by his doctor that he’s only got a few months left to live. So he puts out a contract his own live. Then he finds out that the lab made a mistake and he’s in perfect health. So he ends up having to fend off people attempting to kill him
  608.  
  609. Rey Fenix has a visa issue which caused him to miss his 4/12 AAW date in Chicago. The only thing we’ve been told is that the issue is expected to be taken care of shortly
  610.  
  611. wXw will return to North America with a show on 8/9 in Toronto, which is the week of SummerSlam
  612.  
  613. Logan Steiber, one of the best American wrestlers of this generation, announced his retirement this past week at the age of 28. Steiber is one of only four wrestlers in history to win four NCAA Division I championships and one of only two to have won both the Junior Hodge trophy for best high school wrestler and the Hodge trophy for best college wrestler. Steiber went 184-1 in high school. His only loss was as a freshman, to David Taylor. He won the Junior Hodge trophy in 2010. He went 119-3 at Ohio State with four NCAA titles, winning the Hodge trophy in 2015. What is notable is that when he was in the off-season while being a multi-time NCAA champion, Bellator’s Aaron Pico, who was only 17, beat him. He also won the 2016 world championship at 134 pounds
  614.  
  615. ECW Press will be releasing an autobiography of Rocky Johnson, the father of Dwayne Johnson, who was a major star in pro wrestling. The book: “Soulman: The Rocky Johnson story,” is being co-authored by Scott Teal, which to me guarantees historical accuracy as far as the career goes because there are few people in the world more knowledgeable about pro wrestling during Johnson’s era than Teal, who was co-written tons of books and done newsletters dating back to the 70s. Johnson, born Wayde Bowles in Nova Scotia in 1944. A descendant of slaves, Rocky Johnson wrestled full-time from 1965 to 1988, and was the first man of color to win the Southern title, the Georgia title and the Florida title. He was also part of the first WWF tag team where both members were African-American, with Tony Atlas, in 1984. While working in San Francisco in the 70s, Rocky Johnson married Ata Maivia, Peter’s daughter, and Dwayne was their only son, born in 1972. Dwayne wrote the foreword. Rocky Johnson is in the WWE Hall of Fame, which does have to do with Dwayne inducting his father and grandfather, but he is absolutely not undeserving and has been on our Hall of Fame ballot and is a genuine Hall of Fame candidate. He held championships consistently from 1967 to 1987 in almost every territory. He was one of the most dynamic in-ring performers of his era and was one of the best athletes in the business. He was an agile and muscular 255-pounder who threw the best series of dropkicks I’ve ever seen to this day. It wasn’t a one shot high dropkick like a Doug Furnas or Kazuchika Okada or Bob Holly or Brian Pillman or Jack Brisco or Jim Brunzell or any of your classic dropkick specialists. Johnson would do a series of three in a row as high as anyone’s first one during the 70s. His background also included boxing, where he was a sparring partner for both Muhammad Ali and George Foreman. He was also involved in one of the most memorable angles in Memphis wrestling history in 1976, in a feud with Jerry Lawler, and from that angle was always a headliner in that territory when he’d come back. The angle was built around the Ali vs. Antonio Inoki feud. It’s an angle that you could have never done today. With all the Ali vs. Inoki hype going on, Jarrett came up with the idea of having Lawler, then a heel and his top star, facing a pro boxer. So Johnson was brought into Memphis and the claim was that he was a pro boxer, who had never wrestled, a knockout artist ranked top ten in the world. I’ve seen the clips of the local sports shows putting over the angle and claiming Lawler was facing a top ten heavyweight, which is amazing. By 1976, Johnson was a huge star in pro wrestling, and this also goes to show how little the magazines meant in a place like Memphis since they pushed Johnson wasn’t a pro wrestler, but he’d been all over the magazines since the late 60s, and in particular on January 16, 1970, when he, on the same night, both won the annual Los Angeles Battle Royal, which was the biggest Battle Royal in the world and got tons of coverage, and also won the Americas’ title from Great Kojika (the same Kojika who still wrestles in Japan) on the same night. By this point Johnson had been a major star all over the world in some of the biggest territories, held the U.S. title in San Francisco, the world tag team title on the West Coast five times, as well as been a top singles champion in Florida, Georgia and Texas. He is generally considered one of the biggest stars in the history of Roy Shire’s promotion. But the angle drew sellouts early and they later evolved the storyline into them training Johnson to be a wrestler and he was champion there. But it tells you about communications when they were able to get both local media and an angle over as if Johnson wasn’t a wrestler but a ranked heavyweight boxer. His boxing hand speed and Ali shuffle was part of his pro wrestling gimmick, and made it work at the level of drawing sellouts. The reality is that Lawler vs. Johnson in Memphis was bigger locally than Ali vs. Inoki really was in most U.S. markets. There is also talk of the book being made into a movie
  616.  
  617. Mike Johnson reported that one of the counts in the Scott Colton (Colt Cabana) lawsuit against Phil Brooks (C.M. Punk), was thrown out but another remains. Judge Daniel J. Kubasiak ruled that a text sent by Brooks to Colton that he would be 100 percent covered when it comes to legal expenses in the suit brought by WWE’s Dr. Christopher Amann against both of them was not definitive or certain enough to constitute an offer that would be considered an enforceable contract. However, Kubasiak ruled an e-mail from Brooks’ attorney to Colton offering to continue representing him is strong enough to legally be considered an agreement. One of Brooks’ lawyers wrote to Colton, “Despite your unwillingness to contribute to your legal fees, I am still prepared to represent you, and Phil is prepared to have me represent you and cover your legal fees going forward, as long as there is no conflict between you and Phil that prevents me from fairly and ethically representing you. At this time, I don’t believe any such conflict exists.” The judge ruled the case will continue based on that e-mail. On 4/8, Brooks’ attorney filed a response to the lawsuit where he claims that Colton claimed he asked Colton to do his podcast while Brooks would only admit he was interviewed by Colton, and aid it was Colton who had wanted to interview him and had repeatedly asked to do so as it would benefit Colton to promote and benefit from the show while Brooks was never compensated for doing the show. Brooks’ lawyer also wrote publicly which he’d been saying from the start, that he believed Amann’s letter demanding the podcast be taken down was a retaliatory measure by WWE. Brooks also denied Colton’s charge that the letter by Amann’s lawyer would likely lead to WWE litigation against Brooks. Brooks denied any offer was made to cover all of Colton’s legal costs in the suit, but did say that he had spent enormous sums of his own money to defend Colton as an act of friendship and generosity only to have Colton sue him in an attempt to get even more money. Brooks denied he ever agreed to fully indemnify Colton in the lawsuit. Brooks claimed that the hundreds of thousands he spent to cover Colton’s legal expenses was out of friendship that Brooks later learned was entirely misguided
  618.  
  619. Punk, using his real name, quietly competed in a novice BJJ tournament recently and placed third in a 199.9 weight class division that had three competitors
  620.  
  621. The Micro Wrestling Federation had three of its wrestlers arrested on drug possession charges. The crew was working at the Boot Hill Legendary Night Club & Sports Bar in Gillette, WY, on 4/11. Police were tipped off and searched their hotel room and found both anabolic steroids and marijuana. The Gillette Police Department K-9 unit brought dogs in to sniff at the Days Inn, where the troupe was staying. They dogs went to two rooms that were registered to three of the performers and got a search warrant and found 343.9 grams of the steroid Stanazolol and 1.5 grams of marijuana. Police went to the club where they were performing, allowed them to finish the show, and then arrested the three men that the rooms were registered to. They did not release the names, only listing them as a 50-year-old, a 32-year-old and a 22-year old. The 50-year old said that the Stanazolol belonged to him. The 32-year-old said the marijuana belonged to him and the 22-year-old admitted that he had been using marijuana. The 32-year-old and 22-year old were charged with misdemeanor possession of marijuana while the 50-year-old was charged with felony possession of a controlled substance in liquid form
  622.  
  623. AAW ran 4/12 in Merrionette Park, IL before 605 fans. Adam Brooks made his debut, losing to David Starr. Starr is calling his finishing move, a power bomb dropped on the knees, the Kaepernick. Kris Statlander and Shazza McKenzie also debuted. Dezmond Xavier formed a tag team with Matt Cross, and kept calling him “Zach” after usual partner Zachary Wentz. Mance Warner clocked Jackson with a chair shot and then called out Jimmy Jacobs. Warner and Jacobs beat on each other with kendo sticks. Jacobs did a dive off the bar and they ended up in the balcony where a bachelorette party was being held. Jacobs fell off the balcony. LAX retained their tag titles beating Penta 0M & Gringo Loco. Loco, a Chicago-area Lucha Libre style wrestler, replaced Fenix. Jacob Fatu, managed by Armando Estrada, beat Larry D after a moonsault. Darby Allin pinned Sammy Guevara. After the match, Fatu attacked and laid out Allin with a Samoan drop and springboard moonsault. MJF beat DJZ to win the Heritage title since DJZ starts with WWE soon. MJF won with a piledriver. DJZ then gave a farewell speech thanking AAW for helping make him the wrestler he is today, thanking the fans for pushing him to work his hardest and noted that he’s now got the biggest opportunity of his career. He said that five years ago he made the impulsive decision to move to Chicago and that while he’s not originally from Chicago, Chicago is the city that made him. He said he would be moving to Orlando in three weeks, which is probably more than you’re supposed to say, and starting his next journey, but said when he gets there, they will be announcing him as from Chicago. The main event was billed as a Bourbon Street fight with Davey Vega & Mat Fitchett & Jessicka Havok over Eddie Kingston & Curt Stallion & Jake Something when Vega pinned Stallion after a brainbuster on a chair. Something pressed and threw Fitchett off the balcony and Havok speared Kingston through table. The next show is 5/11 in Chicago at Logan Square Auditorium with TJP and Team Tremendous as well as the usual regulars
  624.  
  625. Miranda Gordy, the daughter of Terry Gordy, worked as a manager over a weekend show in Springfield, MO for Mid States Wrestling.
  626.  
  627. EUROPE: wXw on 6/1 has a show called Superstars of Wrestling with Bobby Gunns defending their world title against Joey Janela, plus Ken Shamrock, Brian Cage and Walter appear
  628.  
  629. The world premiere of the documentary “You May Be Pretty, But I am Beautiful: The Adrian Street Story,” will be on 5/16 at the Market Hall Cinemas in Brynmawr, Wales. Street, 78, was among the most famous pro wrestlers ever to come from Wales. He played an effeminate character, very much where the Goldust character evolved from. He started as Kid Tarzan Jonathan because he idolized Don Leo Jonathan, and later as The Nature Boy, copying Buddy Rogers, but hit it big as Exotic Adrian Street, a character that evolved by accident. He was a major 60s and 70s star in the U.K., with that character before coming to Stampede Wrestling in 1981. He didn’t come to the U.S. until 1982 in Los Angeles at 41 years old but was a star in a number of territories through 1987 when the territories died. He settled in Gulf Breeze, FL, on the Gulf Coast, and lived there until 2018 when he returned to Wales with wife Linda, who was part of his act.
  630.  
  631. MLW: They are pushing the 5/4 television show as being produced by Salina de la Renta, who they are heavily pushing as one of the faces of the company. They are billing it as the first time a latina will be the executive producer of a national pro wrestling television show
  632.  
  633. They are teasing an MLW title program with Tom Lawlor vs. Davey Boy Smith Jr. Lawlor is currently in Europe on a family vacation
  634.  
  635. Matt Farmer, a former wrestler who helps run Defy out of Seattle, and is one of pro wrestling’s leading historians, has been added to the MLW staff as a Senior Coordinator.
  636.  
  637. ROH: Fightful reported this week of a power switch of sorts to where Bully Ray and Joey Mercury have gained in power and Hunter Johnston (Delirious), who is still head booker, has less control. The MSG show was the first where the signs of that were evident. As noted, there were decisions made with the idea of needing to reach a wider fan base and doing the supposed shoot thing with Enzo & Cass for attention that was divisive within the company. We haven’t heard any negativity from the New Japan side over the MSG show, but the fact four of their wrestlers were in the match and that angle was kept from them is notable
  638.  
  639. The next PPV show will be the Best in the World show on 6/28 in Baltimore. They will also be taping TV in Philadelphia at the 2300 Arena the next day
  640.  
  641. Some announcements were made for the War of the Worlds tour which will be 5/8 in Buffalo, 5/9 in Toronto, 5/11 in Grand Rapids and 5/12 in Villa Park, IL (just outside Chicago). The belief is that some of the talent will work Toronto, fly to Los Angeles for PWG on 5/10 (it’s mystery Vortekz so no lineup, nor list of wrestlers appearing will be advertised), and then fly back for the Grand Rapids show. The only New Japan wrestlers announced thus far for the tour are Satoshi Kojima, Yuji Nagata, Evil, Sanada, Hirooki Goto,. Hikuleo and ROH/IWGP tag champions Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa. On social media, Tonga & Loa and the Briscoes have gone at it. I think it started with Tonga legit mad about the Enzo & Cass angle given they were in the match and not told about it. Speaking of that, Enzo & Cass were not at either ROH show this weekend, nor are they booked on anything announced going forward. They have been given no future dates and right now are not factored into anything. There were key people very upset with that segment internally and as noted before, internal divisiveness whether to do it. The idea of why was explained last week, but not everyone bought that. The original idea was to do a very quick bit that would take place in the corner by the guard rails. Enzo was to grab Mark Briscoe and Mark was to shove Enzo and that would be it. It would be so quick so as not to sound the alarms. People on TV may or may not see it, but people would hear about it. I guess the idea, since Enzo did interrupt a WWE show legit, was to play off that. Security was to then take Enzo away to make it look real. The idea is that if there was a buzz, maybe they’d follow up, but if nobody cared, it was so short that people would just assume it was real. It got out of control and right now there are no plans to bring them back, but there are also different people with different viewpoints involved with creative and it’s not clear how the wind will blow
  642.  
  643. Tonga & Loa made fun of the Briscoes having regular jobs at their chicken farm, cleaning up after the chickens. But that’s probably being saved for the next PPV. ROH announced Matt Taven defending the ROH title against PCO on 5/9 in Toronto stemming from PCO pinning Taven to win a six-man tag on 4/14 in Columbus, OH. Tonga & Loa defend the ROH tag titles but not the IWGP belts against Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham in Buffalo, which stems from Lethal & Gresham winning a 30:00 Iron man match for that title shot over Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams on 4/14
  644.  
  645. ROH announced a deal with Figures Toy Company for action figures for almost everyone on the current roster. The figures will have the likeness of the performer, t-shirts or entrance gear, and trademark weapons associated with the character
  646.  
  647. The company announced a recruitment combine on 5/4 and 5/5 at their dojo in Baltimore. They have opened up 20 spots in particular for women. The coaches will be Delirious, Will Ferrara, Joey Mercury, Jonathan Gresham, Kelly Klein, Ian Riccaboni and referee Todd Sinclair
  648.  
  649. They ran two weekend shows, which were a TV taping on 4/13 in Pittsburgh and a house show on 4/14 in Columbus, OH. Both shows drew about 500 fans, which is well down from usual in those markets. For the TV tapings, they opened with Jenny Rose over Lady Frost. Gresham beat Silas Young via DQ. P.J. Black beat Eli Isom. Kelly Klein retained her WOH title over Rae Lyn. The Allure, of Mandy Leon, Velvet Sky and Angelina Love all beat down Klein after the match. Dalton Castle continued his heel turn getting rid of The Boys. He told them that he never needed them, beat them up, took off their masks and left them laying. Haskins & Williams of Lifeblood beat Vinny Marseglia & T.K. O’Ryan. Bandido pinned Shane Taylor. After the match, the Sons of Savagery, Bishop Khan & Malcolm Moses, attacked Bandido. They are being renamed the Soldiers of Savagery. Haskins and Williams made the save. I believe Sons of Savagery are graduates from the ROH school getting their first real exposure. They’ve done some dark matches. Marty Scurll came out for an interview. He wanted an NWA title match with Nick Aldis now, before their 4/27 date in Concord, NC, which is a joint ROH/NWA show. Aldis came out and refused the match. Scurll ended up doing the finger breaking spot. Two wrestlers who were unknowns, Eric Martin and Manny Soriano, came into the ring and started a brief match. The Briscoes came out and destroyed them. The Bouncers, Beer City Bruiser & Brawler Milonas, won a three-way over Cheeseburger & Ryan Nova and Coast 2 Coast. Josh Woods beat Flex Simmons. The advertised main event saw Marty Scurll & PCO & Brody King retain the trios titles over Lethal & Jeff Cobb & Rush. After the match, Kenny King attacked Lethal to build up a future Lethal vs. King ROH title match stemming from King winning the Honor Rumble at Madison Square Garden. Mark & Jay Briscoe beat Caristico & Soberano Jr. The other main event saw Taven retain the ROH title over Flip Gordon
  650.  
  651. The 4/14 show in Columbus, OH, called Masters of the Craft, opened with Cobb over Rhett Titus in a non-title match with the tour of the islands. Jenny Rose beat Holidead with a uranage. During the match, Leon, Love and Sky came out and distracted Rose with selfie sticks and sat at ringside. Shane Taylor & Silas Young & Briscoes beat Coast 2 Coast & Bruiser & Milonas. Taylor pinned LSG with Greetings from 216, which is a thunder driver type move. Match was said to be good. Aldis and Cabana were doing commentary and exchanging words. Aldis kept goading Cabana with the idea that he beat him in a match in China (which did happen, unlike pro wrestling historical fiction where you hear that and think it’s BS). Cabana at this point in the show challenged Aldis to a title match. Aldis accepted and said he’s stretch him, and then went to the back. Rush beat Soberano Jr. with the low dropkick into the corner in a short and somewhat one-sided match. Ian Riccaboni in commentary mentioned Soberano being the son of Euforia, which is true, and not a secret, but usually nothing pushed. Bandido won a four-way over Black, Caristico and Gordon. There were some botches but overall people were raving about this match, and in the spot that seemed to be the most talked about of the weekend, Gordon did a springboard flip dive over the barrier into the crowd. Bandido used his unique slingshot German suplex on Black and Gordon and pinned Gordon. The crowd loved this. Gresham & Lethal earned the tag title shot beating Haskins & Williams 2-1 in a 30:00 Iron Man match. Haskins won the first fall in about 20:00 with a sharpshooter. Gresham pinned Williams to even it up with a few minutes left. Gresham rolled up Haskins when he attempted the sharpshooter in the third fall. Haskins kept going for submissions on Gresham in the closing minutes. Said to be very good and it was paced well and kept interesting and the 30:00 flew by. Cabana beat Aldis via DQ in the NWA title match. Cabana was doing well when Scurll came out and stole the NWA belt. Kamille, the tall fitness woman who accompanies Aldis, got in Scurll’s face and Aldis blindsided him. Cabana dropkicked Aldis into Scurll. Scurll and Cabana started arguing and then went at it. As Scurll attacked Cabana, the ref called for the DQ on Aldis for outside interference. Scurll then hit Aldis with a belt shot. Castle came out and fans cheered him even though he did a heel turn at the PPV. He walked around, teased like he was going to cut a promo, but refused to talk, smirked and went to the back. This was supposed to get the fans to turn on him but fans actually were chanting his name. Main event saw Scurll & Brody King & PCO beat Taven & Marseglia & O’Ryan to retain the six-man titles. Scurll asked for it to be changed to a street fight match. King & PCO then opened the match doing running flip dives. Taven went to hit Scurll with a belt shot when PCO, who had been given a low blow, popped up and got the belt and hit Taven with it. PCO then pinned Taven with a moonsault t retain. They pushed the finish big doing the basic announcing of all but telling you PCO was getting a title match for pinning the champion
  652.  
  653. Klein got to throw out the first pitch at the 4/11 Cincinnati Reds vs. Miami Marlins baseball game at Cincinnati’s Riverfront Stadium. Klein is from the area and a baseball fan, who has attended games in the stadium in the past, so it was a big deal to her.
  654.  
  655. IMPACT: Impact has shown interest in Flamita after he and Rich Swann had a great match over Mania week. It is kind of surprising in this rush to sign talent that Flamita still doesn’t have a contract with any organization
  656.  
  657. They are taping 5/3 and 5/4 in Philadelphia at the 2300 Arena which will include Rob Van Dam’s return to the building. Van Dam got a great reaction on the recent Mania week show where he and Sabu faced Pentagon & Fenix
  658.  
  659. Amanpreeet Singh Randhawa, 28, formerly known and probably to be known again as Mahabali Shera has signed to return after being cut by WWE. He was in and out here from 2011 to 2017, and then went to WWE. All I can say is this. If you’ve got a good physique and size, and you’re from India, and WWE cuts you, there’s either something that went really bad or they must think you’re hopeless. He got pushed in TNA largely because it kept their Indian television partners happy, because he’s been around for years and never improved past a certain level. The only explanation for bringing him back is the same thing, to keep their Indian television partners happy
  660.  
  661. In an interesting political move, Impact Wrestling is partnering with Reality of Wrestling for a Twitch show on 7/6 at the Booker T World Gym Arena. The idea is Impact is running a joint show with Booker T, who works for WWE. That could have never happened a few years ago and it kind of shows that WWE no longer viewers Impact as a significant force. The show, called Deep Impact, will be based around Impact stars facing ROW wrestlers. The card will be announced in May
  662.  
  663. Gursinder Singh posted that he’s asked for his release.
  664.  
  665. AEW: Cima was announced as the newest member of the roster and they announced he’s signed a full-time contract. For a number of reasons, expect Cima to get a significant push, and in fact, he’s main eventing the 7/13 Jacksonville show against Kenny Omega. Besides the idea he’s got a good mind for wrestling, he opens the door for AEW to get the top Chinese wrestlers he trains and relations with OWE open up China with a local promotional partner, which WWE doesn’t have
  666.  
  667. The Young Bucks noted that Cima gave them their first break after meeting them at the 2007 Battle of Los Angeles tournament and then booking them to Dragon Gate, where they learned a ton, and also mentioned they worked with Cima at a show in Philadelphia which really helped them in the U.S. indie scene. Cima signed a full-time AEW contract but he will still remain based in China for now teaching the wrestlers in China. At some point, probably when the schedule gets more regular, he’s expected to move to the U.S., at which point he probably won’t be in China as much
  668.  
  669. Three of the OWE wrestlers, Cima being one, are booked against SCU on the 5/25 show in Las Vegas
  670.  
  671. Regarding television, there is nothing new to report this week other than it seemed a lock a few weeks ago what day the show would air, and now the day of the week is no longer a lock. But the two hours live weekly in prime time looks likely
  672.  
  673. The 7/13 Jacksonville show will be a significant event since Chris Jericho is not going to be on every show, but he will be on this one. The show will be at Daily’s Place Amphitheater, which is next to TIAA Bank Field, where the Jacksonville Jaguars play and they are looking at Jacksonville as something of their home market. The Khan family has a hand in running that arena, which holds 5,500 but with stage and all, would probably be set up for closer to 4,000. This comes two weeks after Daytona Beach and the two markets are about 90 miles apart. The show is a benefit show for the Jacksonville Victims Assistance Advisory Council. The gruop coordinates social, criminal justice, mental health and other services to crime victims and families of crime victims, such as those impacted in the five mass shootings over the last year plus in that city. Brandi Rhodes, who won’t be wrestling at Double or Nothing, will face Allie on this show. The storyline is Brandi is acting like she’s good friends and they are just going to have a friendly match, but she’s contacted a secret person to show up and have her back and double-cross Allie. They have a 4/18 pre-sale and 4/19 tickets go on sale to the public. Because Jacksonville isn’t a tourist place like Las Vegas and they still don’t have television, this will be a real test for the company as it’s not the novelty of a first show or a show that is likely to be a big traveling show, and Jacksonville isn’t a major wrestling market
  674.  
  675. Cody vs. Darby Allin was added to the 6/29 show in Daytona Beach. Allin is the latest signee
  676.  
  677. For Double or Nothing, they announced Glacier (Ray Lloyd) for the Battle Royal. Lloyd, 54, is a good friend of Cody’s and was in his entourage for the All In match with Nick Aldis. Glacier was a WCW gimmick that was pushed like crazy forever and then became the punch line of a joke because they pushed him hard forever and then didn’t do much with the gimmick once he started. It’s just a spot in the Battle Royal. They also teased Brian Pillman Jr. for the Battle Royal. Pillman Jr. and Ace Romero, both of who are under contract to MLW, are in the Battle Royal as a deal with MLW. Also added to the Battle Royal this week is MJF, which puts him out of contention for the bout with Cody, plus Dylan Frymyer, who works as Sonny Daze on Georgia indies. It’s another Cody connection. Framer is a guy who has known DDP since the age of 15 and was a huge fan who trained t be a wrestler and has been doing area indies for 11 years. He’s battled depression and was suicidal at one point
  678.  
  679. On this week’s BTE, there was a skit where they made fun of themselves. The portrayal is that Cody is the worst businessman as he offered a guy who he picked as the Librarian first a $1 million contract, and then when a few people, including Scorpio Sky and Frankie Kazarian told them it was outrageous and made fun of his business sense, he upped it to $1.5 million and then $2 million. Kazarian said about the $2 million per year deal, “that’s Christopher Daniels money.” Kazarian also noted Cody shouldn’t be making those offers without going through the other 11 Executive Vice Presidents and named Cody, Matt, Nick, Kenny, Marsha, Jan, Bobby and the rest of the kids from the 70s Brady Bunch TV show. The new skits seem to be that everyone has changed since coming to AEW and they are pretending to be what the people knocking them on Twitter claim they are, from being greedy, forgetting about their fans, being in way over their heads and all that. SCU was shown being total dicks to fans at the merch table and talking about inflated prices for autographs to pay for more cars and all kinds of expenses (which is kind of a spoof on the really big name who do charge such high prices for autograph sessions). Then they showed Joey Ryan at the merch table at a show and one person after another goes to him, “Whatever happened to that blond girl?” This included cameos of D-Lo Brown, Tenille Dashwood and Mick Foley, all asking that question, while Ryan is all sad looking at a Candice LeRae action figure. Ryan is featured way too heavily for him not to be involved with AEW in some form. I think it’s been made very clear in a few places that AEW would love to have LeRae, but she’d under contract with WWE obviously. It’s good for her, because there are a ton of women competing for less than a ton of main roster spots, but she’s got one edge which is that they know she can walk into a good main roster spot where she’d probably make a lot more than in WWE, unless she was brought to the main roster and given a push, so they know she can easily leave. Even though you can point to the positive of her husband being in WWE as well (and quite frankly, when his contract comes due, he’ll have more leverage than most as well), the AEW schedule isn’t going to be that insane like if WWE had husband and wife on different brands and they’d have limited time together. MJF was being obnoxious to a referee and to Sammy Guevara, claiming he was Cody’s best friend which makes him a Junior Assistant Executive Vice President. MJF put a “kick” me thing on Guevara’s back and then you heard him scream like somebody kicked him. MJF then hugged Darby Allin to do the same thing but he was too smart for it, pulled the paper off and started chewing it and spitting it in his face. It came off like MJF vs. Allin is a direction. Then Matt Jackson was talking to Daniels about Kenny has blown the budget already on the Daytona Beach show. He also said all the Librarian videos suck and it’s a terrible idea. They started arguing about watching the videos as Matt said Daniels headed talent relations and ordered Daniels to head up The Librarian project and Daniels said Matt was in creative and his job was contracts and visas. They were yelling at each other when Peter Avalon, a Southern California indie guy ran in and told them to be quiet and then both Daniels and Matt had this look like they’ve found the guy to be The Librarian. The show ended with Matt & Nick looking for tag teams and on their phone Nick found a team and Matt said they were one of their greatest rivals but they keep hiring great teams like it’s going to hurt them. Nick just said that if you think we’re still the best tag team in the world we’ll hire them. There are people saying this may end up as the Super Smash Brothers, who the Young Bucks last year tried to get a deal with for ROH
  680.  
  681. Pac had an injury scare on 4/13 at a WrestleZone show in Aberdeen, Scotland. There was a botched huracanrana spot where his opponent, Zack Dynamite, failed to be there for him. He landed on his head. They finished the match but Pac was concerned after the match. The word we were given was that he was okay
  682.  
  683. Cody was shown training in the ring with Anthony Ogogo, a boxer who won a bronze medal at the 2012 Olympics in the middleweight division. Ogogo, 30, is looking to get into pro wrestling and the fact they featured him shows there is interest. He’s been trained by Ricky Knight and done one match for his group. After winning the bronze medal, Ogogo turned pro and went 11-1 in a career from 2013 to 2016. He suffered a broken orbital bone in his last fight and the injury was bad enough that eye specialists told him to retire. He’s had surgeries on the eye, which has improved and he’s talked about boxing again.
  684.  
  685. UFC : UFC held a press conference on 4/12 in Atlanta. The biggest news was Dana White claiming there was no Brock Lesnar vs. Daniel Cormier fight in the works, and saying he hasn’t even talked to Lesnar. The issue here is when it comes to these type of things, including Lesnar on multiple occasions, what White says and what happens are the opposite far too often to even put any credence in what he says. That’s not to say it is or isn’t happening, but if Ariel Helwani reports something at that magnitude and Dana White denies it, and you believe White, you’re going to be wrong 95 times out of 100. White said that they were looking at Cormier vs. Stipe Miocic, and that when Lesnar wants to fight, he can call him. He also said there is no date for Cormier because he went to the gym for the first time about two weeks ago (he’s been bothered by back problems) and he was still hurting. Ben Askren stole the press conference with his quick wit. Jon Jones was in Atlanta, and didn’t come, which Holly Holm (his teammate) claimed was food poisoning. White actually said that he figured nobody would believe Jones and he wouldn’t either, but said that Holm wouldn’t lie. Anthony Smith cut a very serious promo on wanting to face Luke Rockhold, to the point you’d want t make that fight no matter what the result is of Rockhold vs. Jan Blachowicz or Smith vs. Alexander Gustafsson, which is each man’s next fight
  686.  
  687. With the new ESPN deal which guarantees the PPV money according to a financial report regarding the company’s bonds, they have gone from 40 percent of revenue guaranteed to 70 percent. The higher figure is key given the reports of Endeavor wanting to go public
  688.  
  689. B.J. Penn’s team released a statement regarding his ex-girlfriend, Shelean Uaiwa, and mother of his children, having filed a restraining order against him. In the restraining order, Uaiwa claimed Penn had verbally, physically and sexually abused her for years. The statement was: “B.J. is in a highly-contested child custody case involving his two young daughters. The order of protection has made serious allegations against B.J. The allegations are so misleading, hurtful and false that any further comment by B.J. or about B.J. would cause more damage to the well-being of his children and potentially further inflame the pending custody proceedings. B.J. and his family ask that you respect their privacy at this very difficult time.” Uaiwa currently has full custody of both daughters and Penn is only allowed to see them under supervised visits. Uaiwa accused Penn of striking her on several occasions, threatening her mother and threatening to kill her brother and her entire family
  690.  
  691. Those close to Conor McGregor are really wanting him to fight now. Some figured he has so much money, why bother, but now the feeling is if he signs to fight, he’ll go into camp, concentrate on it and stay out of trouble and without that priority he’s going to continue to get into trouble
  692.  
  693. Henry Cejudo has said he will never give T.J. Dillashaw a rematch or fight him again since Dillashaw was suspended for usage of EPO. EPO is very difficult to catch because it is something I can recall openly talking to UFC fighters about in the past with the idea use was significant, yet only three fighters I’m aware of, Dillashaw, Chael Sonnen and Ali Bagautinov, have ever tested positive for it. There may be others but those are the only ones I can recall and the only names I’ve seen brought up since Dillashaw tested positive
  694.  
  695. This week’s show is a Saturday morning/afternoon show n 4/20 from St. Petersburg, Russia. The show will air from about 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. with the entire show on ESPN+. The card has Magomed Mustafaev (13-2) vs. Rafael Fiziev (6-0), Michal Oleksiejczuk (13-2) vs. Gadzhimurad Antigulov (2-5), Marcin Tybura (17-4) vs. Shamil Abdurakhmov (19-4), Alexander Yakovlev (23-8-1) vs. Teemu Packalen (8-2), Keita Nakamura (34-9-2) vs. Sultan Aliev (14-3), Muin Gafurov (18-2) vs. Movar Evloev (10-0), Krzysztof Jotko (19-4) vs. Alen Amedovski (8-0), Antonina Shevchenko (7-0) vs. Roxanne Modaferri (22-15), Ivan Shtyrkov (15-0-1) vs. Devin Clark (9-3), Sergei Pavlovich (12-1) vs. Marcelo Golm (6-2), Arman Tsarukyan (13-1) vs. Islam Makhachev (16-1) and headlined by Aleksei Oleinik (57-11-1) vs. Alistair Overeem (44-17)
  696.  
  697. 4/27 will be a head-to-head UFC vs. Bellator battle. Originally the UFC show was to be on ESPN, while Bellator is on DAZN exclusively. But things have changed and the UFC show will air at 5-7 p.m. Eastern on ESPN 2, 7-9 p.m. on ESPN and the main card, originally for ESPN, is now listed for ESPN+. However, at press time, both the UFC and ESPN web site list the main card still on ESPN. On this past weekend’s show, the main card was listed for ESPN+ and we’ve been told that is accurate. The main card’s top bouts are Ronaldo Jacare Souza vs. Jack Hermansson, Greg Hardy (second UFC fight, again put in the semi-main event as apparently they believe he’s a big draw as an ex-NFL star) vs. Dmitrii Smoliakov as well as Alex Oliveira vs. Mike Perry and Glover Teixeira vs. Ion Cutelaba. Bellator on DAZN is headlined by Rory MacDonald vs. Jon Fitch for the welterweight title and a welterweight tournament first round fight, Ilima-lei Macfarlane defends her women’s flyweight title against Veta Arteaga, Phil Davis vs. Liam McGeary and Benson Henderson vs. Adam Piccolotti
  698.  
  699. Mairbek Taisumov was suspended for six months by USADA for failing a test on 9/15 for the steroid Stanazolol at the time of a fight in Moscow, Russia, with Desmond Green. The reason the suspension was for only six months is because a dietary supplement he declared and was using shows traces of the drug. Since the six months is now over, he is eligible to fight again. Taisumov defeated Green. There is no word on whether that result will be overturned but because he had the drug in his system at the time of the fight, it’s pretty hard to justify not overturning it.
  700.  
  701. OTHER MMA: Angela Magana, 35, a former UFC fighter who was part of the original strawweight tournament, who is now fighting for Combate Americas, was in a coma at press time at University Hospital in San Juan, where she lives. She had emergency surgery on 4/16 and she did not wake up from the anesthesia. At last word she was listed in intensive care but the reports are that they do expect her to wake up. Magana was experiencing back pain when training for a fight after her back went out on 4/7 when she was taken down. An MRI revealed a herniated disc in her lower back. Magana tried to train through it and not cancel her scheduled 4/26 fight in Los Angeles with Kyra Batara. She had a nerve block done on 4/15 and ended up in worse shape. She was diagnosed with cauda equina syndrome. Cauda Equina Syndrome is when the bundle of nerves below the end of he spinal cord are damaged. It causes low back pain that radiates down the legs, numbness around the butt and loss of bowel or bladder control She needed emergency surgery the next day. The surgery itself went fine but she never woke up from it. Magana had claimed that an aunt had died from anesthesia and was very concerned about it going into surgery
  702.  
  703. Dulce “Sexy” Garcia, the wrestler Sexy Star, made her MMA debut on 4/12 in her home city of Monterrey on a show that aired live in both the U.S. and Mexico for Combate Americas, airing on Univision and DAZN in the U.S. Her fight got more MMA media attention and sports attention in Mexico than anything else on the show. Garcia, 36. won a decision via straight 30-27 scores over Mariana Ruiz, who was also making her debut. Garcia was 5-0 as a boxer and is married to a famous Mexican boxer, Jhonny Gonzalez. She was in control most of the way, often landing on top as Ruiz would attempt takedowns. She did some showboating late as she cruised to the decision win, but didn’t look that great in doing so, but it was her first MMA rules fight, and on the C.M. Punk scale she did great. She then made all kinds of friends when she claimed that her winning the Lucha Underground championship is what started the WWE women’s revolution
  704.  
  705. Alberto Rodriguez, better known as Alberto Del Rio/El Patron, has said he’s training for his comeback fight with Combate Americas. Alberto, who turns 42 next month, hasn’t fought since early 2010 and had a 9-5 record when he signed with WWE and stopped fighting. He’s now targeting late October or early November for his return
  706.  
  707. Lodune Sincaid, who was a cast member of the first season of The Ultimate Fighter in 2005, passed away on 4/7 at the age of 45. There are no details regarding his death. Sincaid fought from 2001 to 2010, compiling a 15-9 record, and briefly held the WEC middleweight championship before that promotion was on national television. Sincaid was picked as a cast member in the first season, which started the careers of people like Forrest Griffin, Stephan Bonnar, Kenny Florian, Diego Sanchez, Mike Swick, Nate Quarry, Josh Koscheck and Chris Leben among others. He lost in the tournament to Bobby Southworth and only fought once in UFC, in a prelim fight on the April 9, 2005, show that featured the famous Griffin vs. Bonnar fight. Sincaid lost to Quarry via first round knockout.
  708.  
  709. WWE: The situation with Undertaker and the Between the Ropes shows got strange this past week. Undertaker was to do talk shows and do a meet and greet at the end of the month in Manchester, London and Glasgow. Tickets were very high because Undertaker is such a unique star and he’d never done anything like that in Europe. So this is now what is official. The Manchester date was moved from 5/2 to 4/29. This was done some time ago because after agreeing to the tour, Undertaker agreed to do the 5/3 show in Saudi Arabia. Of course that’s a moot point now since the show is scheduled for 6/7, although it’s still not announced and as best we know, the California main roster house show that weekend haven’t been canceled. Then this past week it was announced that Undertaker would still be coming, but he would not be doing the talk show, and Mick Foley will be replacing him. They had booked some bigger buildings for the shows including York Hall in London. While Foley no doubt would do a more entertaining show, Foley has been doing this for a long time and there is more interest in the uniqueness of Undertaker than the more polished and likely better performance of Foley. The story behind this isn’t clear but likely can be traced back to Starrcast. Undertaker had started booking dates for autograph sessions and this and was able to get $20,000 to $25,000 per hour for these events in the U.S. I can imagine the price for several days in the U.K. and adding talk shows, which is why the prices were so high (for an autograph, a photo and the show combined ticket would be $393 U.S.). When Undertaker was announced for Starrcast, things changed greatly. Whatever deal he had that allowed that, WWE brought him back, whether it’s a new contract to wrestle or what it is isn’t clear, but WWE didn’t want him doing any of these things. Because he had contracts, even though those in WWE at first were saying there’s no way he’s doing Starrcast, he is and probably had to. For the U.K. appearances, what we know is Undertaker pushed hard to be able to do it, and I guess the compromise was he could come, but they didn’t want him doing the show. But it was actually Undertaker pushing to make sure he still came for at least the signings. The basic gist is something approximating this. Undertaker thought his career was over after the match in Australia and started lining up outside paydays. After the Starrcast thing went public, Vince got mad and when things calmed down between the two, WWE made him an offer he couldn’t refuse financially and part of the contract was an agreement he could no longer do those type of dates. Of course, he still would have to do the ones he had contractually agreed to. For Conrad Thompson, evidently the deal was strong enough that there was no legal way to get him out of it. For Inside the Ropes in the U.K., they didn’t have the kind of legal resources to fight WWE on it so the deal was that if didn’t come, they’d have to refund everything and it could destroy them as far as attempting to do anything going forward. Undertaker didn’t want to do that, so proposed the compromise that he’d do the meet and greet, and Inside the Ropes got Foley to come in and do shows every night where he’d talk about Undertaker and his experiences working with him. The feeling is that WWE thought Undertaker would never do dates with people they didn’t want him doing dates with, and WWE didn’t realize the amount of money some promoters would offer Undertaker to do these events. One person involved in that business said that the $150 per person price to get photos and autographs with Undertaker was actually charging too little, noting when Steve Austin signed with Wrestlecon last year in New Orleans, they charged $316 for the VIP package and got so many requests at that price that they were overwhelmed and had to cut them off and the feeling is Undertaker could have had similar demand this year at WrestleMania. Undertaker was approached by people, including WrestleCon, but by that point had an agreement to do Raw and decided against it
  710.  
  711. Rousey had surgery on her right little finger on 4/14. Rousey has also said that she is on an “inpregnation vacation” to explain her time away. As noted before, while she has two years left on her contract, there is no timetable for her to return and no guarantee she will. The writing team was told going into Mania (even though most of the Rousey stuff was Vince McMahon, Rousey and Paul Heyman) to treat this like WrestleMania is Rousey’s last match. The expectation is she will return, probably for a Cena or Lesnar like schedule at some point, and the idea right now is to do a singles match with Lynch, but if and when can’t possibly be planned for right now given all the different factors that are unpredictable, at play. If she does get pregnant this year, given the timetable, and having to work back into shape, next year’s Mania would be far from a given
  712.  
  713. Regarding Banks, it should be noted that the decision to put the women’s tag titles on The Iiconics was not a last minute decision and many people knew about it in the company. However, Banks & Bayley weren’t told until the day of the show. They were also told at the time that the company was going to drop them as a tag team. I don’t know if they were told about being put on different brands, because WWE keeps that stuff secret from the talent (there may be exceptions for bigger names, but for the most part nobody knows) but they were aware they weren’t going to team up any longer. So it was the combination of not getting the title run they expected to establish the belts as meaningful and not joke belts, and splitting up their team so quickly that got both of them upset. Bayley was upset but didn’t quit or anything. Banks was given a few weeks off when she tried to quit with the idea of them sorting things out and time off would lead her to wanting to come back. Despite rumors to the contrary, she was never booked for television this week, at least since WrestleMania. They are hopeful she’ll be back over the next few weeks and she is tentatively booked for the 5/19 Money in the Bank show in Hartford, but nothing is concrete as far as her status. If she returns, she’s scheduled for Raw, because the reason for the split-up is that Bayley was always scheduled to move to Smackdown, a decision that has been the plan for some time even though kept secret until probably whenever they told Bayley she had to stay the extra day in Montreal this week
  714.  
  715. Harper (Jonathan Huber, 39), asked for his release on 4/16. He wrote, “As of this evening, I have requested a release from WWE. The past six years have been a simply amazing journey around the world and back with lifelong friends and family. I am proud of it all and proud to say I shared the ring with my co-workers. This decision, as difficult as it was, feels right for myself and WWE. My goal in the future is to continue to grow as a performer and person and continue to make my family proud. Thank you. From the top to the bottom of WWE. Thank you to the fans for your undying support. Thank you everyone.” Harper, who started wrestling in 2003, joined WWE with NXT in 2012. He and Rowan held the NXT and the Smackdown tag title, the latter as the Bludgeon Brothers, a run that started out strong, but fizzled when Rowan suffered a torn biceps in August shortly after they had begun their tag title run. Harper decided to get surgery on his wrist since it was clear they had no plans for him as a single. It took longer than expected for him to be cleared. He started back on 3/9 and had worked seven matches. His contract expires toward the end of the year, I believe around November. He was one of the guys, really similar to The Revival, where they really want to go out and make names for themselves by having good matches and being the best they can be rather than just having a well paying job and taking the money. You can argue both sides, but the reality is that there are options to make money elsewhere and he’s got the talent and name to where he can probably to go AEW, New Japan or ROH as soon as he’s contractually able to and would have more of an opportunity certainly in AEW or ROH to be featured, and probably in New Japan at least as far as having the kind of matches he would want to have. At this point, Huber has asked for his release. It had not been granted as of press time. He took the strategy of Tye Dillinger and Jack Swagger, who both publicly asked for their release. Dillinger’s was granted although given a non-compete period. Swagger was held up and also given a non-compete period. On the flip side, those who asked privately, like Mike Kanellis, The Revival and Banks were not given releases. Gallows & Anderson haven’t said a word but wouldn’t sign and are being buried. Kanellis and The Revival were given minor pushes to try and keep them happy. The Usos were given the tag belts when they made noise about not signing. If Harper’s release request was granted, it would send a message to talent that wants to leave, to go public with it, and that’s the last thing WWE wants. But it does put pressure on them, because if they don’t, unless he is convinced to post that he didn’t mean it or was working the Internet, or that he was wrong or something, it comes across as them holding him against his will, which is also a perception WWE doesn’t want, particularly because of classifying wrestlers as independent contractors
  716.  
  717. Toni Storm is being allowed to work Stardom from 5/3 to 5/16. She was pushed as the top foreign star with the promotion prior to signing with WWE. Stardom has been told they can use anyone on the NXT U.K. roster, which is why Xia Brookside was part of their draft. WWE allowing her to go there signifies some of a relationship with Stardom
  718.  
  719. Kingston told TMZ that the New Day would never break up
  720.  
  721. Styles’ hip injury was a sprained SI joint. That led to pinched nerve endings and a lot of pain. Styles said the injury was nothing too severe and he just has to have his muscles ease up and then treat a sprain like a sprain, and hopefully it won’t take too long to heal. Right now he doesn’t know the degree of the sprain. He was back wrestling eight nights later on Raw. They didn’t have him in the ring a lot during the six-man tag, and you could see if you looked closely the way he moved that he wasn’t 100 percent, but he did his trademark spots and what he did looked good
  722.  
  723. Jax (Savelina Fanene, 34), had delayed her surgery with two torn ACL’s until after WrestleMania. So she’ll be out for a while with surgery on both of her knees
  724.  
  725. Sheamus and Bryan are also out of action. Sheamus suffered a concussion, believed to be on the 4/9 Smackdown show in the New Day vs. Sheamus & Cesaro & McIntyre. That was his last match, so if it took place during that match, it would mean he and Big E were injured in the same match as E’s knee buckled, requiring surgery
  726.  
  727. The Lacey Evans character looks to have been inspired by Liberty Belle from GLOW on Netflix
  728.  
  729. Kevin Gilbride, 68, who was an assistant coach with the New York Giants from 2004 to 2013, was named head coach and General Manager of the XFL’s New York team that will be playing at Met Life Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ, this coming season. Gilbride was offensive coordinator on two teams that went to the Super Bowl. His only NFL head coaching experience was in 1997 and 1998 with the San Diego Chargers. He has not worked in football since 2013 with the Giants. After that season ended, Gilbride announced his retirement. The XFL has been spending big money on coaches. This is a far more expensive undertaking than the first rendition of the league with the more expensive coaches and quarterbacks. Sports Business Journal reported this week that before their first and only season started, that Charlie Ebersol had approached Vince McMahon to look for a merger and McMahon turned him down. The big story of the AAF is that they simply didn’t have the money to do the league, unlike McMahon who has invested several hundred million dollars. They made the decision to rush into the league immediately because they wanted to beat McMahon to the punch when they realized Vince was going to run against them after he decided to do the league after turning down a $50 million offer from them for the rights to the XFL name. How they expected to pay $50 million to use a failed name when they had no money to start the league is beyond me. According to the story, the AAF was already out of money by mid-December, while having plans to start the league in February. At that point, Reggie Fowler invested $28 million, which was enough to start the season, but when they started, they only had enough money for one week of the season. According to Alex Fairly, who they contracted about insurance, he got the exact amount of capital they had at the start of the season and said it wasn’t even five percent of what they needed to do a season. Tom Dundon then bought the league after the first week since they were out of money, and, with losses of about $10 million per week, after he’d lost $70 million, shut the league down. With them generating very little revenue, Dundon didn’t see anything changing,. Fairly, who now works for the XFL, noted that the XFL has liability insurance and workmen’s compensation, which the AAF didn’t have the money to afford. Fairly said AAF rushed into the league without having the money because of the feeling they had to beat McMahon to the punch. The AAF averaged 556,000 viewers per game, although that number skews high because of the strong first week. It’s logical to assume the XFL will have a big first week and then its numbers depend on what stations it’s on, but getting television itself doesn’t appear to be that difficult since the AAF got CBS, TNT and the NFL Network, the latter of which the XFL almost surely won’t get
  730.  
  731. The AAF officially filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, listing $11.3 million in assets and owing $48.3 million, to Tom Dundon shut it down while leaving $48.3 million in outstanding debt. We were told the players were paid until the last week, but a lot of the vendors hadn’t been paid. The league’s account had $536,160.88 in it when the league was shut down. Those who started the league were against closing it down, but they had lot control to Dundon, who had pledged a $250 million investment to gain control, but obviously gave it up long before losing that kind of money, feeling it was a money pit and there was no turnaround looming
  732.  
  733. NXT U.K. will be doing tapes on 4/19 and 4/20 at the Intu Braehead in Glasgow, Scotland this weekend. It wasn’t announced which night, but they did announce a Walter vs. Pete Dunne U.K. title rematch will be taped
  734.  
  735. Variety reported Cena being up for a role in the sequel to the movie “Suicide Squad” that Warner Brothers is behind and James Gunn is directing. Gunn, who is tight with Dave Bautista from them working together on “Guardians of the Galaxy,” had Bautista in mind for a super hero role and Bautista reportedty pulled out which led to Cena being considered
  736.  
  737. Time magazine named Dwayne Johnson one of the 100 most influential people in he world in this week’s issue
  738.  
  739. A lot of talent went on vacation because they had the weekend off. Bayley ended up in New Zealand during the week where her fiancé is wrestling out of the Bad Luck Fale dojo
  740.  
  741. For an update on FOX and Friday night, the 4/12 night averaged 2,274,000 viewers for FOX, but the key was that both of the popular shows, Last Man Standing and Cool Kids, aired rerun episodes. The shows do skew older than Smackdown, which is a benefit. The shows did 56 percent women in 18-49s the prior two weeks was 64.7 percent and 63.8 percent male. A regular TV show is going to get far better ad rates than wrestling. If we figure that Smackdown is at 2.1 million most weeks and falling, let’s be nice and say it won’t drop much more before October and it’s at 2 million viewers in September. Historically, when Smackdown moved from Thursday to Friday, it dropped 20 percent, so now we’re at 1.6 million, which sounds terrible. However, FOX is in around 115 million homes and USA is in 89 million, so that should be a 29 percent jump to 2.06 million. That’s theoretical because as homes drop on cable, wrestling’s viewers per home increase, which is because families that watch wrestling are keeping cable at a far higher rate than the population at large. Basically, if you are a WWE fan, you are much more likely to be in the 89 million who get USA than the 26 million who get FOX but not USA. But let’s go with 2.06 million. The key unknown factor is this. How much does improving to a stronger station help ratings? What we’ve seen with UFC moving from FS 1 to ESPN, which is a much bigger jump as far as station popularity from USA to FOX, is that the benefit is a strong lead-in and all the promotion. It’s made a difference, although the ratings of the last two UFC television events are actually about the same as they were doing last year on FS 1. FOX will also be promoting Smackdown hard during its live sports, particularly during football season. Plus WWE will load up early, and no doubt try and put PPV quality matches on the first few weeks and bring back guys from the past, no doubt the attempt will be made t get Dwayne Johnson. I expect very good early numbers and then it’ll settle down. If predictions were 3.3 million viewers at the time of the deal, the settling in number looks now to maybe be at 2.5 million, which is barely more than the station is now getting with reruns, let alone first run. Nobody from FOX has said anything, nor will they, but one has to be concerned about putting a Tuesday night show on Friday that is already dropping double digits since the signing of the deal. Then again, you can say all those things about UFC and ESPN, and that’s been considered a huge success, although more because of UFC’s part in establishing ESPN+, a dynamic that the FOX/WWE deal doesn’t have
  742.  
  743. A lot of people have commented that the costs listed for expenses on the road for WWE talent were listed very high. While the estimates for rental cars was actually low, as noted, very often people share cars. Couples on the road also share rooms so total room costs would be a little bit lower. Plus, if WWE was handling it themselves, they would be able to get discounts. One person who is an accountant for a company that handles a lot of travel noted that WWE could open an account with Hilton as their official hotel and probably get costs down very low with deals that include parking, breakfast and gym access. In addition it was noted that a lot of wrestlers have gym memberships to chains, so that in most cities they can find a gym of that chain and it’s just part of their annual dues. That isn’t always the case. IRS guidelines are $71 per day per diems for workers on the road in most cities and $104 in major expensive cities like a New York or a San Francisco, although you can get that figure down if you have a hotel deal that provides for free breakfasts. The point being that one accountant who deals with this said even a $20 million estimate on costs to WWE for making talent employees would be insanely high
  744.  
  745. The agents for the Takeover matches were: War Raiders vs. Ricochet & Black was Terry Taylor. Velveteen Dream vs. Matt Riddle was Matt Bloom. Pete Dunne vs. Walter was Johnny Moss. The women’s match was Sara Amato. The Johnny Gargano vs. Adam Cole main event was Michael Hayes
  746.  
  747. Kingston noted that his uncle who lives in the small village of Techiman in Ghana, which is where his family came from, had a big gathering at his house to watch WrestleMania. Kingston hasn’t been back there in 25 years but said he would like to return
  748.  
  749. As noted a few weeks back that a settlement was imminent, the Riki Johnson lawsuit against Ashley (Charlotte) & Richard (Ric Flair) Fliehr, as well as author Brian Shields and WWE, has been officially settled out of court. The settlement was official on 4/4. Johnson, the first husband of Ashley dating back to when they were in college, had claimed that there was libelous information on him in the book “Second Nature” which Shields, Ashley and Ric were listed as authors of, regarding drug use causing him to lose jobs and that he was sterile (which he denied after noting he had children after the two broke up)
  750.  
  751. Ricochet (Trevor Mann) has started a Go Fund Me for his mother, whose home burned to the ground on 4/15. Nobody was hurt but the house he grew up in was destroyed along with all of the families memories. He found out before Monday night’s show that he performed on. Donations as of Wednesday night were at $6,803 with Ricochet donating $2,000. Most donations listed were anonymous but Natalya, Trevor Lee and Jessamyn Duke donated
  752.  
  753. Johnny Loquasto, a standup comedian who has appeared on AXS TV’s standup comedy show AXS Live, has been signed by WWE, presumably as an announcer. This actually took place a few weeks ago. He of late had been announcing with David Marquez’s Championship Wrestling from Hollywood promotion. He also worked for Maria Menounos’ Afterbuzz network and the joke is that if you want to work for WWE, go to work for Afterbuzz. Besides Loquasto, also coming from that network is Cathy Kelly, Ryan Katz (a producer for NXT), Sonya Deville and there’s one other person
  754.  
  755. The WWE Network is going to air a one-match special from the 4/21 house show in Moline, IL, which would be The Shield’s final match (it is right now scheduled as Ambrose’s last match with the company) which presumably is against McIntyre & Corbin & Lashley, although that can change
  756.  
  757. Dakota Kai ran this past week for the first time since her knee surgery
  758.  
  759. The company unveiled a Roddy Piper statue at Fan Axxess that is now housed at the company’s Stamford headquarters
  760.  
  761. O’Neil, real name Thaddeus Bullard, has his autobiography released on 8/6. The book is called, “There’s No Such Thing As A Bad Kid: How I Went From Stereotype to Prototype.” The story is that he grew up with people constantly saying he was a bad kid, only to be told by an adult that there’s no such thing as a bad kid. He then turned his life around to become a high school All-American football player, student body Vice President at Florida and was the first person in his family to graduate college
  762.  
  763. There was a listing sent to Sports Business Journal, which did a story on the Performance Center, where Luis Martinez, better known as Punishment Martinez, was shown with the name Damian Priest, so that would be his new name. It looks like they are back on the kick of giving people new names after the run with Matt Riddle, Ricochet, Adam Cole, EC 3, Kyle O’Reilly, etc. where guys came in using their names they had used in other companies. ACH and Jonah Rock were given new names and while Trevor Lee wasn’t, he hasn’t been brought to TV yet and that’s often when they do the name change
  764.  
  765. An untalked about casualty of the draft is Woods’ popular Up Up Down Down video game streaming show. Among his closest friends who were in the show weekly were Vega, Miz, Styles and the Usos. He posted a video on his thoughts and while he was doing it jokingly with the idea he’s just doing comedy, there was evidently some seriousness do that
  766.  
  767. Humberto Garza III, better known as Garza Jr., is now in Orlando. Garza was at one point scheduled to be a surprise wrestler on the 3/16 AAA Rey de Reyes show but WWE wanted him to start and didn’t want him doing that date
  768.  
  769. “Fighting With My Family” will be released on 4/30 on digital and 5/14 on Blu-ray, DVD and on Demand
  770.  
  771. Kassius Ohno and Adam Cole are scheduled for the Evolve shows on 5/10 in Livonia, MI and 5/11 in Indianapolis
  772.  
  773. DJZ is doing farewell matches across the indies before his imminent start here
  774.  
  775. The stock closed the week at press time on 4/17 at $96.11 per share giving the company a market value of $7.501 billion. To me, everything looks strong until October and the FOX rating. My feeling is as long as the ratings are good enough to stay on the main network the stock is in good shape. If, for some reasons, the ratings dictate a change, it’s possible the price will fall. A lot of the value is based not just on the money from FOX, which is guaranteed through late 2024, but the mentality that being on the network will lead to an increase in popularity that will help all aspects of the company by making the product hot again. There’s also no way to know what the rating threshold is, in the sense how low can it go before FOX deems it as not network caliber. Keep in mind some of the Saturday night boxing numbers have been much lower than wrestling is doing, granted at not nearly the cost, but there is no movement to stop airing boxing. The standards of ratings for how low live sports go, because of the feeling live sports is a big part of the future of FOX, is that they’ll accept number far lower than the level that would get scripted programming canceled
  776.  
  777. For some of the Raw people who were moved to Smackdown and introduced on the show, as a way to keep them from knowing for sure, they were actually told to say in town as they were needed for promotional work, and then on Tuesday were told they were switching brands.
  778.  
  779. The ten most watched shows for the past week on WWE Network were: 1. WrestleMania; 2. WWE Chronicles: Roman Reigns Part two; 3. World’s Collide NXT vs. NXT alumni from 4/14; 4. NXT from 4/10; 5. WWE Hall of Fame; 6. NXT Takeover New York; 7. 205 Live from 4/9; 8. Table for 3 with Gargano, Adam Cole and Ricochet; 9. WWE U.K. from 4/10; 10. WrestleMania kickoff show
  780.  
  781. Notes from the 4/15 Raw show in Montreal. This was the Superstar Shakeup show for Raw. The show drew 10,500 fans. Main Event opened with Dana Brooke pinning Tamina. The crowd was hot for this match. Then Heavy Machinery beat Bo Dallas & Curtis Axel. Raw opened with Stephanie out. She then gave Shane a big introduction. So they are friends this week. There was no draft. No explanations. No HHH. Not Vince. Just a guy would show up and the announcers would get all excited that he was on Raw. She called Shane the best in the world. Shane didn’t sell his injuries from Mania like last week, and was back to dancing around like usual. Fans booed Shane loudly. Shane played it up and asked ring announcer Mike Rome to give him a big intro. Fans were chanting “C.M. Punk” at him because I guess they still think C.M. Punk is the best in the world, although I have no idea at what. Then Miz’s music played. Miz attacked Shane from behind. So even though he has every reason to do so, and guys from other brands were on the show last week, this attack constituted that Miz is now on Raw. I have no idea what it means since Miz and Shane are feuding and Shane has more been on Smackdown. It’s notable that Miz on Raw means he can’t plug Miz & Mrs., which directly follows Smackdown, on the same day. Not that those plugs make that much of a difference in the ratings. Maybe they’ll even argue Miz talking about the show before the larger Monday audience is more beneficial. They brawled until Miz chased Shane away with two chair shots. But not until Miz’s face was all bloody due to Shane potatoing him with his punches. Ricochet came out and Michael Cole did his fake sounding excitement about how Ricochet must be on Raw. The guy has been on Raw for weeks already. Then Black’s music played and Cole did the same thing. Then, later in the match, Cole had to correct himself and say that it wasn’t a sure thing. Then the War Raiders came out, now called The Viking Experience, Ivar (Hanson) & Eric (Rowe). They were acknowledged as NXT tag team champions but they didn’t bring the belts out. The Viking Experience & The Revival beat Ricochet & Black & Hawkins & Ryder in 13:14. Good match. There was an NXT chant. The finish saw Eric hit a knee on Ryder and then Experience did the fallout on Ryder for the pin. So they debuted the Experience and put them over the tag champs, so that should lead to a title match. This seems like a late call since the War Raiders didn’t drop the NXT tag titles at the last tapings. They announced Cedric Alexander to Raw. Andrade & Vega debuted, with Andrade beating Balor in a non-title match in 10:29. Vega came out and said Andrade is a multi-linguist. That means he speaks many languages even if the way she said made it sound like he performs multiple sex acts. She said Andrade would talk in French. He said a few words in French, then switched to Spanish. Then he got the “what” treatment. I think with the benefit of hindsight that “what” stuff was one of the dumbest ideas in history. It’s 20 years of crowds trying to ruin live interviews. There must have been blood in this match since the ref put on gloves. This was a good match. Balor was selling his knee so he couldn’t climb to the top fast enough for the coup de gras and once he finally made it to the top, Andrade swept his legs. Vega distracted Balor. Balor then did a flip dive over Vega and hit Andrade. Vega gave Balor a huracanrana on the floor and then Andrade pinned Balor after a hammerlock DDT. It looked like a new IC title program but Balor switched brands. They showed footage of Cena and Elias from WrestleMania. They continue to push Cena as the greatest of all-time and the Babe Ruth of wrestling. It’s so forced. It’s wrestling and it’s entertainment but you can’t make a case for Cena as the best of anything except the biggest star of the last 15 years, but he can’t rank above tons of people as the greatest let alone as the Babe Ruth. They also teased Undertaker vs. Elias coming off last week’s angle. Elias came out and said that his music was so powerful that it had Cena interrupting him at Mania for the second straight year. He said his music also brought Undertaker back from the dead. I thought that was Starrcast. Fans chanted for Undertaker. Elias then made fun of the Montreal Canadiens not making the playoffs. He got booed like crazy. Mysterio came out. They are now calling Mysterio the greatest masked wrestler of all-time. The world didn’t start until in 1992. Mysterio slipped on the ropes and they botched a spot bad but he’s Mysterio and he recovered and took out Elias. Out came Lars Sullivan. Sullivan chased Mysterio around and Mysterio took out his knees and was evading him until Sullivan finally caught him and hit the freak accident. Sullivan then power bombed him. We’ll see, but perhaps that power bomb is a replacement for the diving head-butt spot. It’s not that he shouldn’t do the move at all, but at his size, he needs to save it for special occasions rather than every night, because he’ll wear out his neck otherwise. Usos showed up and beat Roode & Gable in 5:21 with a double splash on Gable. Another good match while it lasted. Bliss came out and brought out Zayn. Zayn was great here. He was so clearly being a heel doing an exaggerated version of his dance over and over until he was blown up and the place was going crazy for him. He was clearly making fun of the crowd but they were still going crazy for him. He started plugging places all over Montreal and said “I love this city.” They cheered him even more even though it was an obvious set up. And then he hit the big line, “This city is great but the people I can’t stand.” Then they turned on him, like they couldn’t see this coming. He said the low point of his week would be right now. I think a lot of people say that during the third hour of Raw. He said it was like being in a room with all these people. The fans started chanting for Owens. Zayn said that the fans project their unaddressed issues on him. Then he noted that he doesn’t even live here anymore. He said he lives in Orlando, and chose to leave Montreal. Then he said, “See you in hell,” and left. They showed a video of Kay & Royce making fun of Bayley for Banks not being there. Bayley said she’d find herself a new partner. Bayley & Naomi beat Royce & Kay in a non-title match in 1:56. If you’re counting, that’s three champions losing on one TV show. And people wonder why only a small percentage of the audience cares about titles. Naomi pinned Kay after a moonsault. So the champs lose a non-title match to a team that isn’t even being kept together. EC 3 was to face Strowman next. Strowman destroyed him. The match didn’t even start. Strowman threw him into the LED boards and choke slammed him off the stage onto a crash pad. They showed a graphic of people who have come to Raw. The Viking Experience wasn’t in the graphic, but Eric Young was, so I guess he’s out of Sanity. Lynch beat Riott in a non-title mach in 4:26. At least there’s a champion who wins. Logan and Morgan were interfering so Lynch took them out with a crossbody off the apron and went back in the ring and put her submission move on Riott. Charly Caruso was backstage with Lashley, McIntyre, Corbin and Lio Rush. She must be tiny since Rush is like 5-foot-2 and he was several inches taller than she was, unless they gimmicked it. Corbin and McIntyre looked like NBA centers next to her. Lynch was still in the ring when Natalya came out. Natalya said that she dreamed her whole life about main eventing WrestleMania. She said she’s proud of Lynch, Flair and Rousey for doing so, and proud of Lynch being the first person to pin Rousey and the first woman to win both belts. She then said she’s the best there is, the best there was and the best there ever will be. Did Horace Hogan ever do promos talking about 24 inch pythons? Natalya said that she wanted a Raw title shot, establishing that the belts are separate. Lynch said that for a long time she was overlooked and underappreciated just like Natalya, and she knew once she won the titles and the overlooked women would hunt her down just like she hunted down that weirdo Ronnie and Flair. She said how they both traveled the world as teenagers just to get our foot in the door in WWE “and look at us now.” Evans came out and called Natalya a classless has-been. Later, when Cole said Evans called Natalya a classless has-been, Renee Young came back and said, “She’s not classless.” Great comeback. Evans said that she’s now on Raw. Fans booed. She wanted a shot at the Raw women’s title. She also said that she knows how to get favors from men and she’s facing Natalya right now with the winner getting a shot at Lynch. Evans beat Natalya for the title shot in 8:31. Natalya got the sharpshooter on in the middle, but Evans struggled to the ropes. Evans won with the women’s right and then did a moonsault, where she landed her knees into Natalya’s gut. That wasn’t how it was supposed to go. Caruso was with Reigns and Rollins. They said she had to wait like everyone else to see their surprise partner. There was a vignette for Wyatt’s return. There was a toy house, stuffed animals, a rocking horse a rocking chair with a woman (Sister Abigail?). Reigns & Rollins & Styles beat Corbin & McIntyre & Lashley in 12:41. There wasn’t much reaction to Reigns. He wasn’t booed at all, but they didn’t cheer him much either. McIntyre laid out Styles with the Claymore kick. Rollins hit McIntyre with a superkick. Reigns hit a Superman punch on McIntyre and a drive by on Corbin. Lashley gave Styles a turnover slam but Rollins hit Lashley with a curb stomp, Reigns speared him and Styles pinned Lashley with the phenomenal forearm. Ambrose was brought out again after Raw went off the air. He talked about how great it is to come to Canada and it’s because of the great fans that they come so often. He mentioned he came out with the idea he wasn’t supposed to, even though obviously he was, and that he married a Canadian. The term used for his leaving was retirement for whatever that is worth. Rollins & Reigns came out and they ended the show
  782.  
  783. Notes from the second night of the draft on 4/16 in Montreal. The second night of tapings drew 6,750 fans. That is with a big walk-up because the day of the show they pushed hard locally that Owens would be on the show. That’s why they knew Owens would get the huge reaction and had the show scripted for that because he was pushed hard. Another key is that Raw is on television locally in French, the main language, and Smackdown isn’t. In particular, there were way more kids and teenagers at Raw. The show opened with Heavy Machinery over Gallows & Anderson in a dark match. Machinery won with the compactor. Smackdown opened with Owens out,. He got a gigantic reaction, the likes of which you almost never see. That’s the one thing about Montreal for wrestling or MMA is that they have some of the loudest crowds, even when the crowd isn’t that large in a big building. Owens spoke in French. He said in French that it’s good to be home, talked about his family being in the front row, and said that this was his WrestleMania (since he was one of the few guys not on Mania). He said that later, Vince would reveal the biggest acquisition in the history of Smackdown. This was promoted all day and throughout the show as a way to build the rating. Owens then said the biggest star on Smackdown is me. He then called out Kingston. Kingston & Woods came out. Kingston was throwing pancakes into the crowd. To say it seemed weird that the world champion was doing that would be an understatement. He got a good reaction, but with him throwing the pancakes he came across like a mid-card comedy guy. Owens put Kingston over and got the crowd to give Kingston a standing ovation. They brought up Big E being injured. Woods then complained, which was a half-shoot, about how all of the guys on his UpUp DownDown show were moved to Raw. He pushed that he was hopeful he could at least get Breeze onto Smackdown. He couldn’t even get that. Owens said that with E out, he wanted to join the New Day. They said he has to be able to do video games, throw pancakes and swivel his hips. So he did the swivel hips stuff. They put the headband with the unicorn deal on him and then gave him a T-shirt that was about three sizes too small that he could barely get on. I think it was T-shirt in Kingston-size. They called him an honorary member of the New Day, calling him Big O. Backstage, Nakamura & Rusev were there and talked about having a match with New Day. Cesaro showed up and noted that there are now three members of New Day and said they need a third member and he’s there. They agreed to it. Balor beat Ali in 10:14 in a non-title match. The action was good. Ali did a Frankensteiner off the top but missed a 450. Balor used the Woo dropkick and got the pin with the coup de gras. Backstage, there was this giant plate with pancakes upon pancakes. The idea was that Owens had to eat all the pancakes in less than 5:37, which was Big E’s record. Owens said he never had eaten a pancake and started eating. R-Truth and Carmella came out. There was another Wyatt vignette. Backstage, Owens supposedly ate all the pancakes in 5:20 which makes him an official member of the New Day. The idea right now is to market Owens like he’s your fat friend who is a good guy, and somehow give him Austin’s stunner finisher. Owens teased like he was going to throw up because he’d eaten the pancakes so fast, but then he didn’t and showed that he was really fine. Flair beat Carmella in 7:26 with the figure eight. Flair made sure she was the heel right away by saying that she hated Canada. Carmella did a crossbody off the barricade. After the match, Sullivan came out. After being announced the night before for Raw, now he’s on Smackdown. R-Truth tried to save Carmella and attacked Sullivan. Sullivan sold nothing and laughed at him. Sullivan laid out R-Truth with the freak accident. He then started stalking Carmella. So the idea is he’s got the hots for her but she’s scared to death of him, kind of a Kane/Lita remake. She was able to get out of the ring and run to the back while he laughed. He then gave R-Truth a running power bomb, so it’s pretty clear the diving head-butt has been dropped. Lynch came out for a promo. Moon came out and it was noted she’s on Smackdown. She was called the War Goddess and the Shenom. Both names come across forced and awkward. She challenged Lynch for the title. Next out was Bayley. The crowd, which cheered her the night before, booed her loudly here. Nobody expected that. She clearly didn’t. I was told it wasn’t so much that they didn’t like Bayley but that they were expecting Lynch vs. Moon and Bayley coming out got in the way of that. But Bayley was booed later during her mach whenever she tagged in. Bayley said she was here as a singles competitor. Then, of course, she was put in an eight-person match. The Iiconics came out. They talked about how they had two belts, just like Lynch. Paige then came out to announce her new tag team. Rose & Deville came out. They talked about it being the reunion of Absolution to no reaction. Paige said that wasn’t in and introduced Asuka & Sane as her team. Asuka is probably the second most popular woman wrestler in the company and has the submission win over Lynch, and thus should be a natural challenger. Instead she’s being put in a team. The one good thing is that the crowd reacted big to Sane. In most cities the crowds don’t react big for the debuts on NXT talent. Then everyone started fighting. But nobody attacked Lynch. They were all fighting without touching Lynch and Lynch left the ring. This turned into a match with Moon & Bayley & Sane & Asuka beating Kay & Royce & Rose & Deville in 8:13. Sane got a good reaction every time she got in. Moon did a crossbody off the top to the floor on everyone. Sane pinned Royce with the insane elbow. So the tag champs lost two straight nights on television to different teams. I’m guessing with Sane up and Bayley being on her brand that Bayley may not be doing the Savage elbow. The funny part of that story is that when Sane was signed and they found out the elbow off the top was her finisher, she was told to get a new finisher because that was Bayley’s move. Then they changed their minds and let Sane keep it. The Hardys did a promo about being the greatest tag team in space and time. I think they want to use the word Ghost regarding them with the G for greatest and s and t for space and time. Owens, as Big O, did the Big E New Day intro. Buddy Murphy noted he was coming to Smackdown. Kingston & Woods & Owens beat Nakamura & Rusev & Cesaro in 12:17. Owens got a good reaction. The crowd picked up big in the last few minutes with Cesaro doing a ten rep giant
  784.  
  785. swing but the fans booed him when he put on the sharpshooter. Everyone was doing their finishing moves. Kingston did a dive over the top onto everyone. Kingston hit Rusev with the Trouble in Paradise and then Owens hit the stunner on Rusev for the pin. The final segment saw Vince’s announcement regarding the biggest acquisition in Smackdown history. Fans booed Vince a lot. He said that the guy is the future of WWE, the greatest acquisition in Smackdown history, tough, talented, and exudes charisma. Everyone was pretty much expecting Reigns and probably would have booed him. This was a good job of manipulating the audience. It was Elias who came out. Vince is now like the guys in AEW, playing the role on television of being incompetent because that’s what people say about him on social media. Elias noted Vince said he was the greatest acquisition in Smackdown history and this shows Vince has his finger on the pulse of the public. Then he insulted Montreal and insulted the fans for speaking French. So the crowd was waiting for someone to shut him up, and then Reigns came out. Reigns hit a Superman punch on Elias. Then he hit one on Vince, who did take a bump and sold it. That was an easy pop and it at least got Reigns a big reaction first night in. Reigns then speared Elias to end the show. After Smackdown ended, Orton came out and said he would face Reigns. They did this to keep the crowd from leaving. The estimate was that about 3,300 to 4,000 people stayed for 205 Live and for the promised Reigns vs. Orton match. 205 Live opened with Nese saying he’s a fighting champion. They announced it would be Alexander’s last match on the show, facing Lorcan. Drake Maverick thanked Alexander for everything he’s done on 205 Live. The Lucha House Party came out for a match where Gran Metalik, Ariya Daivari, Mike Kanellis and Akira Tozawa wrestled for a title shot at Nese. Kanellis hit crossroads on Tozawa. Metalik did the ropewalk elbow on Tozawa. Kanellis threw Metalik out of the ring to steal the pin, but this time it was Daivari who threw Kanellis out of the ring and double stole the pin on Tozawa. Lorcan pinned Alexander with a lariat and a half nelson German suplex in. The show ended with the fans cheering for Alexander in his farewell to the show. After 205 Live ended, Reigns came out for the main event. Orton attacked him before the bell and beat on him for a few minutes. The bell never rang. Orton went for the RKO, Reigns escaped, hit two Superman punches and a spear and then Orton ran to the back to end the show. So no actual match happened
  786.  
  787. The first WWE show since Mania week was 4/12 in Largo, FL, the NXT brand, doing 350 fans. Nick Comoroto pinned Sam Shaw, the former Impact wrestler who is just starting out here. Comoroto calls himself “Freakbeast” and does a Mojo Rawley gimmick that got over good with the live crowd. Vanessa Borne & Aliyah beat Lacey Lane & Kacy Catanzaro. Fans loved the faces. Danny Burch beat Brendan Vink via submission with a crossface. Vink was very green. They did a British style match but Vink was out of position a lot. Jermaine Haley, the former Jonah Rock, got his first win with Court Moore (Stokely Hathaway) as manager beating Eric Bugenhagen with a splash off the top rope in 30 seconds. Babatunde Aiyegbusi & Jeff Parker & Matt Lee beat Mansoor Al-Shehail & Rinku Singh & Saurav Gurjar. Aiyegbusi was the star of the match and he won with the spinning Bossman slam. He’s improving greatly. Albert Hardie Jr., the former ACH, got a first win over Kona Reeves with a roll-up. Even though he’s announced as Albert Hardie, every night fans chant ACH at him. Reeves snap mared Hardie into the ropes and he fell awkwardly. The match stopped as he was being checked on. He sold a leg injury for a long time and ended up winning with a small package. Marcel Barthel & Fabian Aichner beat Raul Mendoza & Humberto Carrillo. Real good match. The face team did cool high flying moves and the heel team worked well as heels. Reina Gonzalez pinned Rachael Evers after a lariat. Evers got over good with the crowd. Main event saw Velveteen Dream retain the North American title in a three-way over Adam Cole and Matt Riddle. Riddle had Cole pinned but Dream threw Riddle out of the ring and stole the win with a Death Valley bomb on Cole. I think this and the guy who hides out and shows up for the finish in a Battle Royal are two tropes they probably should slow down on in 2019. Said to be one of the better NXT matches in Florida that you’ll ever see. Riddle and Cole exchanged ridiculously hard chops
  788.  
  789. The 4/13 show in Sanford, FL, had a big surprise main event with Matt Riddle & Kushida vs. Adam Cole & Kyle O’Reilly. The show drew 350 fans. Brennan Williams pinned Jeet Rama in the opener. Reina Gonzalez pinned Kavita Davi. Riddick Moss & Luke Menzies & Sam Shaw, managed by Robert Strauss, beat Jeff Parker & Matt Lee & Albert Hardie Jr. Punishment Martinez pinned Trevor Lee. Shayna Baszler & Jessamyn Duke beat Candice LeRae & M.J. Jenkins. Velveteen Dream retained the North American title over Dan Matha. Riddle & Kushida beat Cole & O’Reilly. Kushida had his New Japan gimmick and worked the same type of style, with the arm working and hoverboard lock teases.
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