ACTION Wrestling Boogie Nights 5/14/21
Wes Barkley vs. Bobby Flaco
ER: Happy to see Maserati Wes in ACTION, but the match itself was a bit of an under-delivery. It really felt like they kept cycling through the same kind of moments, with the match resetting every couple of minutes so Flaco could slowly climb to the top while Barkley killed time, before Flaco was either knocked off the top of missed his flying spot, to then be hit with a nice Barkley driver or something. It built to Flaco hitting a nice crossbody but the build felt a bit stilted. I like both guys, so it's natural that there were things I did like, but it's odd that Barkley came off like the faster guy here. I was expecting Flaco to out quick him, but it felt like Barkley had to keep waiting around for Flaco, and Flaco's offense didn't always look like it would move Barkley the way Barkley moved. Still, I liked Barkley's driver and rolling clothesline, liked Flaco's corner elbows and loved Flaco hitting a double Fuerza dropkick on Barkley and Bishop (with Bishop taking a wonderful bump into the front row fans), and I can see them matching up better next time.
Robert Martyr vs. Ashton Starr
ER: Super fun match, one that really felt like the match that should open a wrestling show. I think there were a couple too many kickouts, but I liked a lot of their ideas and came away impressed with both (in different ways). Starr is one of the only guys in wrestling to wear a Pimpi/Cassandro singlet, and that will always make me like a guy more. I don't love all of Starr's offense, think his strikes are weak, doesn't really have the strength to pull off some of his more complicated spots (like his pop up German, which, if it can't look good against a 140 lb. guy then maybe you should trim your moveset a bit), but he's great at taking offense and takes steps that a lot of guys don't. Starr is really good at whipping his face into the mat on moves, showing the damaged a move could cause. I loved how he made it look like he took Martyr's drop toehold right on his chin, how he snapped himself over the ropes on a neckbreaker, and it makes sense that his quebradora would look good (as he has the magic of the Pimpi singlet). Martyr has been a standout on Paradigm's UWFI shows, and he carried that over easily on pro style shows. He does little things like plant his knee on Starr's forehead during a pin, was great at taking all of Starr's runs of offense, throws a surprise kick at Starr's chest while Starr was getting to his feet, takes a nice Starr springboard dropkick right under the chin, and breaks out an awesome Tiger Driver that I thought should have ended the match. A bit of editing wouldn't have been a bad thing, but overall we got a good thing.
Brandon Williams vs. Damyan Tangra
ER: I was excited for this on paper and they gave me exactly what I wanted. It's really easy to picture both of these guys being very good in a year, as both are fairly new but already do so many things that keep their floor very high. Williams had some really sticky grappling and Tangra had no problem being glued to him and waiting for submission openings. Dylan Hales did a really great job of point out small details in both of their games, talking up Tangra's "true double wristlock", explaining different grips and talking about the advantages of those grips. The first few minutes felt like a cool gym exhibition that kept getting a bit more heated, both guys getting nice subs that got quickly broken, getting in each others' head. Williams moves past the grappling with a tornado chop that should have been silly but hit like a firecracker, and when we move into a few throws and suplexes I dug how both stayed glued to their opponent. Williams hit an awesome fisherman's buster and held onto the arm, rolling it into a nice Fujiwara. Tangra had a strike combo that could have been tighter, and he took a bit too long getting Tangra into a rear naked with body vice, but the finish was fun as hell. I loved Tangra fighting for his STF while Williams wanted his ankle lock, and Williams might have the best looking ankle lock since who knows when. That's a move that's been about as dead and buried as you can get - once Angle was letting every referee he locked it on do the exact same forward roll reversal - but Williams' looked like one that should finish a match. Tangra getting him in the STF and then grabbing Williams' arm reaching for the ropes, and using that arm to strangle him, was a great way to finish. Very cool match.
PAS: This felt a bit like a early version of those Thatcher/Gulak/Busick matches at the beginning of the 2010s, a pair of indy guys who were going to go out there and show what they could do with pure grappling. Williams is a guy I hadn't seen before, but I was impressed with how tight all of his holds looked. I am a guy with a high standard for Fujiwara armbars, and that was a great Fujiwara armbar. I also loved the finish, that was a nice looking STF, and I always love when someone shifts the application of a hold to stave off a rope break. We are in the middle of a grappling renaissance on the indies and I want to see these guys in there with the Makowski's, Garrini's and Makabe's of the world.
Liam Gray vs. King Garuda
ER: One of ACTION's strengths is how their cards are laid out, rarely giving us back to back version of the same kind of match. Two hour shows with good flow? That's why I watch full ACTION shows instead of cherry picking the stuff that sounds good on paper. Garuda is really new, this is his first singles match, and having a fun "rookie keeps a cocky heel off balance" match was a nice change of pace after our grappling and submission based match right before it. Skulk are a great tag act, and I loved Adrian Alanis at ringside interfering and getting into it with fans (like when Gray took his shirt off and threw it at a fan, and Alanis went over and played tug o war with the fan to get it back), and their entrance heat is fantastic. Gimme a heel tag team who can dance while cutting up kids' signs and I'm a happy man. Garuda hits Skulk with a plancha while they're getting into it with fans, and I immediately become a huge Liam Gray fan as he keeps flopping and slipping on the floor when Garuda tries to throw him into the ring. I like the match type where a rookie starts a match getting a near 3 count and then gets punished for it. Garuda didn't really get punished, as the story of the match wound up being "he would have won if not for Alanis at ringside!" but it's still a fun way to start a match. I wasn't expecting Garuda to take so much of the short match, but I liked his pescado, liked his wrist clutch suplex, thought it was great when Gray kicked him low from behind (thanks to Alanis distraction) to hit his cobra clutch backbreaker.
Merrik Donovan vs. Jack Cujo
ER: I enjoy ACTION's honest approach to getting rookies onto shows. These guys impressed on a tryout show, weren't supposed to be on this show, ACTION realized they had time, so we get a bonus match. There's no phony hype around it, just an honest explanation explaining why these two were here. I'm always down to see rookies get 3:30 to show what they can show. They almost always show a bit too much, but hey, shoot your shot. Cujo has good charisma and a ton of confidence, and that will carry him a long way if he keeps at it. Do we have many indy guys working Second Line Dancer gimmicks? Donovan misses way high on all his missed strikes, but he gets a TON of power behind the strikes that are supposed to hit. He lands an elbow and standing lariat in the corner that looked like it shook Cujo to his core, and he had some ground and pound that he was intentionally throwing high to graze off Cujo's head, but he threw those grounded elbows with impressive force. Some guys have body language on strikes, others do not, and Donovan's body language looked like he was murdering a guy even when he wasn't connecting. I also liked how Donovan sold on his feet, leaving Cujo a lot of openings to hit his flash, staggering and leaning on the ropes. Cujo's missile dropkick landed flush, though some of his offense doesn't seem like the kind of thing that should work against larger opponents. His air raid crash over his own knee finisher feels a bit too 2006 indy wrestling, but I loved how Donovan sold it (even doing a bit of a kickout several seconds after losing).
Orion Bishop vs. Alex Kane
ER: This was the match I was excited for when I looked at the card, and while it didn't live up to my own expectations it still gave me plenty of moments that got me excited for it in the first place. Kane has been a real standout on the Paradigm UWFI shows, and Bishop looked like a cross between Dr. Death and Donald Gibb and obviously I'm going to be into a guy like that. The match was all about Kane being unable to use his strength on Bishop, with Bishop staying on his feet and refusing to be thrown around. Bishop blocks a belly to belly and hiptoss, then catches a Kane avalanche and tosses him with a fallaway slam. Bishop is good at shutting down Kane, and he hits him with a spear hard enough that I would have bought it as a surprise early finish. Kane has a really cool transition as he grabs an ankle pick while on the ground and it was a cool reminder that Bishop could be caught at any time, even while in control. But Bishop is too much of a wrecking ball and escapes, then hits an exploder and Vader bomb.
I can't decide how I feel about Kane's big opening in the match, as Gibson runs him across the ring with a buckle bomb, but when he charges back in that's when Kane hits him with a nasty overhead belly to belly into the corner. The suplex looked mean as hell, and Bishop's body got all hung in the ropes in a cool way, and I get that Kane was finally able to suplex him by using Bishop's momentum against him...but it doesn't quite sit right. Bishop was delivering too much of a beating, and Kane was acting too out of it. Kane is a much more compelling offense guy than a selling guy, and that corner suplex basically turned the rest of the match into a Big Moves Exchange. It doesn't go long after that suplex, an F5 from Bishop, Angle Slams from Kane, but it felt weak to have Bishop go down so quickly after all the damage he did. It didn't feel like the finish, build felt off, but the pairing itself was an absolute blast so it's kind of a wash.
PAS: I liked both guys, liked their performance in the match, but agree that the pacing was a bit off. Kane gets steamrolled for 90% of this match, and two suplexes seem like an insufficient price to pay to win the match. I think we needed a couple of more moments for Kane, maybe a hot start, or one more big hope spot, instead it is all Bishop until he loses. I do love the way Kane pops his hips on suplexes though, really makes every throw look awesome.
Logan Easton Laroux vs. Kevin Ku
ER: This kept building into something I was more and more interested in, peaking with the best combo of their styles and both men crossing each other up and taking sequences in unexpected directions...and then shot past the peak for a few minutes and turned into something I did not like. At minimum, you knew this was going to feature a lot of Ku hitting Laroux in ways that Laroux wasn't going to like, so we had a nice burn with Ku throwing his hard chops, bruising up Laroux's chest, following him out to the floor any time he'd try to get away. We get our compelling Laroux opening when he's able to kick out Ku's legs, and I got really into what they were doing. They started doing some trading, but it was great because they kept switching things up, finishing an exchange with tricks to fake each other out. Ku starts throwing kicks and then fakes a chop, locking in a standing guillotine when Laroux flinches. Laroux lands some kicks and when he sees that Ku is inviting him to kick him in the chest, Laroux fakes the kick and then dives in with an eye rake instead. Laroux baits Ku into lobbing a kick at his chest and snaps off a dragon screw, and I am into this kind of back and forth! They even turn a Laroux trip into a more interesting spot, as Laroux stumbles while locking in a crab, commentary deftly covers by saying Ku scrambled to reverse, Laroux recovers nicely by making it look like a Ku reversal, throws some hammer fists at Ku's leg, and locks on a different submission.
But before long it turns into one of those "I kick your knee and that makes you spin around and kick me and that makes me walk backwards into the ropes and then spring forward with a clothesline but you ignore that clothesline and then I superplex you but that superplex just makes you roll through and hit a fisherman buster" and I just can't focus on that shit. Nothing takes me out of a match faster. Once they started with all of that, I guaranteed that Ku was going to do some big move on his worked over knee, so when the finish of the match was a backcracker (with Ku shaking his leg out after) they completed my own personal modern indy bingo.
17. Dominic Garrini vs. Arik Royal
PAS: Big time main event title match which had some really special moments. Adored all of the early matwork, with Garrini sucking Royal into his world and finding really nifty ways to attack, shifting from kimuras to triangle chokes to some sort of leg stretch. Royal was able to use his size and power to counter out of a lot of it, and had some cool flurries of his own. Royal has such cool unique offense, like a nasty top wrist lock leg sweep, diving tackle to the ribs and some punches to the thighs. He also really unloaded with some cool combos of uppercuts and body shots. I also really liked how nasty he landed on throws. Instead of doing the big man thing of jumping into suplexes, Royal made Garrini lift him, and the landing went poorly in a very cool way. There was a section where they were trading snapmare back kicks which I didn't care for, and I am not sure if the finish really felt like a finish. Still I was really digging the chemistry between these two, and I would love to see Dom get another shot.
ER: Royal and Garrini are both guys who know how to up the atmosphere for a main event, and that's what they did here. They had a ton of ideas and built to them well, maybe with a few distractions along the way, but a great build nevertheless. I had no idea what direction this was going to go and thought each guy could have taken this at any point of the 15 minute runtime. I wonder wondering if it would mostly stay on the mat, and they were so damn good at the mat grappling that I think it just made me *want* to see them work a full grappling match. Royal is careful but still goes into the lion's den, showing that he isn't a sitting duck on the mat and using his size to force a couple of cool counters. This starts to feel a lot like the incredible match Garrini had with Eddie Kingston a couple weeks prior.
It doesn't quite reach that point that there were detours with slap exchanges and the snapmare kicks that Phil mentioned (and while I didn't love them I did unexpectedly find myself enjoying how nice both of their snapmares were), but these two were knocking the crap out of each other and that was the primary focus. Royal has some super impact on shoulderblocks, a flying tackle, and an even nastier tackle into the front of Dom's knee. Dom is great at absorbing punches and brutal uppercuts and throwing his own right back (his corner chops/punches looked and sounded devastating) and it was great seeing if he'd be able to catch and tap the Ace. Instead, though, he straight up crunches Royal with a muscle buster, and I loved the callback of Royal using his size to force counters when he dropped back onto Garrini during a rear naked and forced him to break or be pinned. Garrini wanted this on the mat, but Royal was too good there for Dom to stay the whole time, forcing this thing into a strike battle, and the combo of both was awesome.
Labels: 2021 MOTY, Action Wrestling, Alex Kane, Arik Royal, Ashton Starr, Brandon Williams, Damyan Tangra, Dominic Garrini, Kevin Ku, Liam Gray, Logan Easton Laroux, Merrik Donovan, Orion Bishop, Robert Martyr
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