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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 5, 2018 18:49:31 GMT -5
63. Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Kota Ibushi – NJPW G1 Climax 8/1/17
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| In the G1 Climax two years ago, Hiroshi Tanahashi and Kota Ibushi had a banger of a match that saw Tanahashi pick up the victory. This time, Ibushi was in his hometown and had the crowd firmly behind him. That reaction opened the door for heel Tanahashi, which I love. Instead of giving clean breaks, he’d throw in cheap shots. He’d spend time talking smack or stopping to play some air guitar. It was as if he felt Ibushi, who never committed to NJPW, was beneath him. Each time Ibushi got something going, the fans ate it up. Tanahashi targeted the leg and neck, vigorously going after them at every turn. Ibushi finally got going and hit his deadlift German suplex, which looked like it nearly killed Tanahashi. The desperation Ibushi showed when he went for the pin was magnificent. Not only would a win over Tanahashi mean a ton, but a loss would mathematically eliminate Ibushi from the G1. The Last Ride got him a great near fall, before a brutal knee got him the win at 20:40, which set him up for a shot at Tanahashi’s Intercontinental Title a few months later. They told a compelling story to give us one of the better G1 main events. [****¼]
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 5, 2018 20:11:05 GMT -5
62. Ben-K, Big R Shimizu and Kotoka vs. Eita, Kaito Ishida and Takehiro Yamamura – Dragon Gate Scandal Gate 8/8/17
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| Since 2007, Dragon Gate ran the Summer Adventure Tag League in the summer. However, that tournament wasn’t always a bright spot. This year, it was replaced with the 5 Unit Survival Race League, where the five major DG factions (Jimmyz, VerserK, Over Generation, Tribe Vanguard and MaxiMuM) competed in a series of matches. The two teams that did the worst would meet and that loser would be forced to disband. This match was part of the tournament, with Over Generation (Eita’s team) against MaxiMuM. Dragon Gate has mastered the multi-man tag and this was the best of the year. Though it only ran 11:53, there was more action than most 30+ minute outings. We got some great callbacks to the awesome Shimizu/Yamamura match from February. An incredible pace saw so many moving parts, yet everything working so fluidly. Eita, a favorite of mine in the company, picked up the win for his guys by making Kotoka tap after a furious final few minutes. The best part was knowing that these hungry young guns were killing it. The oldest guy in the match was a mere 27 years old. The future of Dragon Gate is in great hands. [****¼]
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*This is the final appearance of everyone involved. *It is the final Dragon Gate match.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 5, 2018 21:25:43 GMT -5
61. AJ Styles vs. Brock Lesnar – WWE Survivor Series 11/19/17
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| It’s hard to get excited about Brock Lesnar matches these days. He tends to give little to no effort. So, when AJ Styles won the WWE Title and got put in Jinder Mahal’s place for this match, I was concerned. I expected a short, underwhelming outing. Luckily, Brock decided to bring the effort. He dominated Styles for a big early chunk of this 15:19 match. It was reminiscent of the Brock squashes we’ve gotten in recent years. AJ bumped like a madman, making Brock’s already brutal offense look even better. When AJ started his comeback, it felt earned. It was realistic. He didn’t just power up and turn things around. He continued to sell, while hitting his offense out of desperation. It led to the fans totally biting on a Phenomenal Forearm near fall. AJ went for a second, only to get caught in an F5 that finished him off. The starting run wasn’t exciting, but it did a masterful job in building the sympathy for Styles. Other than a horribly botched DDT spot, everything clicked in this match. I loved it. [****¼]
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*This is the final match from Survivor Series.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 6, 2018 0:26:09 GMT -5
60. New Japan Cup Semi-Finals: Katsuyori Shibata vs. Tomohiro Ishii – NJPW New Japan Cup 3/17/17
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| It’s the only pairing in wrestling that I’ve given ***** (G1 Climax 23), ****¾ (WK10), ****½ (New Beginning 2016) and ****¼ (KOPW 2013), without going any lower (Tanahashi/Okada is close, but have a match under four stars). This latest encounter saw a trip to the New Japan Cup Finals on the line. Usually, they go right at each other, but it was more subdued early on. They knew each other well enough to not make the first mistake. But by subdued start, I meant the hard hits took about three minutes to kick in, so it wasn’t like this was slow in any way. In between the strikes, Shibata threw in some submission attempts, just like he did in their New Beginning match last year. The strikes were as vicious as ever, with some close ups really accentuating how violent this was. At one point, they just sat down and slapped each other. Knowing it would take more than usual to beat Ishii, Shibata hit the PK and went back to the sleeper. Ishii fought his hardest, but eventually passed out after 22:34. When these two get together, you can expect a war and they always deliver. If this year was the last we ever see of Shibata in the ring, I’m glad we got one final chapter in this storied rivalry. [****¼]
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*This is the final match from the New Japan Cup.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 6, 2018 7:46:53 GMT -5
59. WWN Championship: Matt Riddle [c] vs. Keith Lee vs. Tracy Williams vs. WALTER – Evolve 91 8/12/17
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| Matt Riddle won the WWN Championship in April and defended it across the globe. This may have been his toughest test considering his opponents. There was Tracy Williams, his former stablemate turned rival. Keith Lee, a friend who nearly beat him in June. And WALTER, who took the PROGRESS Atlas Title from him. They wisely teased the BIG BOY battle between WALTER and Lee and when it finally happened, it was awesome. However, they didn’t give away too much to spoil a possible singles match down the line. I enjoyed seeing Williams and Riddle putting their differences aside to try and combat their larger opponents. This went 15:49 and almost never slowed down. Lots of action and so many brutal chops. All four men had chests that were beet red by the end. Riddle wisely used elbows on both WALTER and Lee to wear them down, but Tracy snuck in and hit him with a piledriver. It looked like Tracy would steal it, but Riddle kicked out. He went for a crossface, only to have Riddle counter into the Bromission to retain. Great match that was one of the best Evolve outings all year. [****¼]
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*This is the final match from the Evolve 91. *It is the final appearance of Tracy Williams.
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Post by punksnotdead on Jan 6, 2018 8:59:59 GMT -5
I've heard about Sami Callihan for years. And I was excited for him to debut with NXT. And to be honest, he never really impressed me while there. Now I hear good things again, so maybe it was just an oil & water sort of thing. He had a ton of good matches in NXT. Unfortunately, none of them really made TV. His live event matches were always off the charts. I never really saw the same magic when he was on the actual show. Whether that be time constraints or just the way they posititioned him as really just a jobber, I don’t know, but he was always one of my favorites at the live events. He had insane chemistry with Itami. I think the hacker thing killed him out of the gate. CJ Parker was in the same boat. Guy was really good doing his gimmick and working on live shows when he was given the time. His tree hugger, self righteous hippy, gimmick was one of the best in NXT but we never saw a ton of it on TV, either. It’s not just the main roster that can’t find time to get everyone over. Sometimes it just doesn’t click with HHH or the timing is off. Chris Hero is a perfect example. You can literally be one of the best wrestlers on the planet and it’s just not what WWE thinks is money. I think Sami had some of those issues too where they weren’t seeing it with him. So he could definitely be back.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 6, 2018 9:09:50 GMT -5
58. IWGP Intercontinental Championship: Tetsuya Naito [c] vs. Juice Robinson – NJPW Wrestling Toyonokuni 4/29/17
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| In 2015, Juice Robinson left a cozy little spot in NXT as CJ Parker to bet on himself in NJPW. He spent a little over a year working in multi-man tags on the undercard. He showed fire, but didn’t seem like he was in line for anything big. 2017 was a banner year that changed all that. He had a singles match in the Tokyo Dome, shots at the NEVER, Intercontinental and US Titles, main evented two shows and pinned guys like Kenny Omega, Hirooki Goto and Tetsuya Naito. By virtue of that last win, he got a shot at Naito’s IC Title on this night, and with it, his first main event. The battle went outside early on, where Naito just destroyed Juice’s knee. The knee became the story of the match. Naito relentlessly went after it, while Juice sold the hell out of it. He slipped on the selling once or twice, but mostly excelled at it. Juice’s struggle in the knee bar was great. The fans totally sympathized with him. He came close to victory a few times, but fell to Destino at 26:42. A simple, but effective story that hammered home how great of a plucky underdog Juice is. He didn’t win, though it accomplished the goal of solidifying Juice as a star. [****¼]
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*This is the final appearance of Juice Robinson.
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Post by marino13 on Jan 6, 2018 10:03:06 GMT -5
I've never been much of a Juice Robinson/CJ Parker fan. I know he can go, but there is something about him I just don't like.
But I will say, I've been very impressed with Naito in the limited matches of his I've seen. And that documentary I watched really sold me on him.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 6, 2018 10:16:15 GMT -5
57. Dragon Lee vs. Hiromu Takahashi – NJPW Best of the Super Juniors 5/17/17
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| It’s one of the best rivalries in all of wrestling. Hiromu Takahashi and Dragon Lee waged war after war during Hiromu’s excursion in CMLL. Their previous two meetings in Japan both got ****½ from me. Hiromu entered this match on a major hot streak. He had dethroned KUSHIDA of the Jr. Heavyweight Title, beaten Dragon Lee a month later, beat Ricochet and Ryusuke Taguchi, before squashing KUSHIDA in their rematch. There was a big fight feel and they opened by just chopping the crap out of each other. Hiromu went after Lee’s mask, which helped him win last time. Lee learned from those previous outings, having counters ready for almost everything. At one point, he avoided Hiromu’s apron sunset flip and retaliated with one of his own. It was awesome. Hiromu went after the mask again and it nearly cost him when he got rolled up. He came close on a Destroyer and it led to some great near falls from both men. Lee managed to hand Hiromu his first loss of the year with the Phoenix Plex at 18:56. It wasn’t quite as good as their earlier battles thanks to a few sloppy moments, but also played off them very well. They hit their signature stuff and gave us the next chapter in their story. [****¼]
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Post by marino13 on Jan 6, 2018 11:45:16 GMT -5
I really like what I've seen from that Dragon Lee kid. And though I haven't seen a whole lot of NJPW, I did see Lee vs Takahashi and was impressed with both guys.
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Post by A-Rob on Jan 6, 2018 14:19:57 GMT -5
I really like what I've seen from that Dragon Lee kid. And though I haven't seen a whole lot of NJPW, I did see Lee vs Takahashi and was impressed with both guys. Dragon Lee II will be the top guy in Mexico one day, he's that good.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 6, 2018 15:52:03 GMT -5
56. Hell in a Cell: Kevin Owens vs. Shane McMahon – WWE Hell in a Cell 10/8/17
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| Kevin Owens attacking Vince McMahon was one of the best segments all year. It led to Shane McMahon taking on Owens inside Hell in a Cell. Shane jumped Owens during his entrance, which made me think they’d go the Seth/Dean or Taker/Foley route and climb to the top early. Instead, the match moved inside. Owens was a phenomenal heel, beating up Shane in front of his kids and taunting them. Though the segment in the ring took a long time, there were some cool moments. Shane’s SSP, Owens hitting the frog splash he used on Vince and Shane countering a Popup Powerbomb into a triangle choke were all great. And that was before Owens went through a table and Shane did the Coast to Coast dropkick. The fight went back outside, where Owens teased leaping off the cell, but he couldn’t bring himself to do what Shane is famous for. Shane followed him to the roof, where things got incredibly tense. Each move done there seemed like it would cause the roof to cave in. Owens took a table bump from about halfway up the cell. Shane probably could’ve won there, but wanted to inflict more damage. He climbed back up and went for the big elbow off the cell, only for Owens to be pulled to safety by SAMI ZAYN! Sami shoved EMTs and placed Owens on Shane for the finish at 38:43. It was long, but the drama and tension worked so well. Both men played their roles perfectly and the fight atop the cell made for some true nail biting moments. This felt like something that belonged in this environment and the surprise Sami turn was a great ending. [****¼]
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*This is the final appearance of both Kevin Owens and Shane McMahon.
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Post by Evil Abed on Jan 6, 2018 16:30:02 GMT -5
I see theres a NJPW marathon of sorts going on right now on AXS. Currently watching Ishii and Naito, interested to see these guys for the first time because of this list.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 6, 2018 17:00:41 GMT -5
55. Tetsuya Naito vs. Tomohiro Ishii – NJPW King of Pro Wrestling 10/9/17
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| Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. It’s the best possible match combo in wrestling right now. In the US Title Tournament and G1 Climax, Tomohiro Ishii beat Tetsuya Naito. Naito still went on to win the G1 Climax and had to defend the right to challenge for the IWGP Heavyweight Title at the Tokyo Dome. Ishii was wise to Naito’s usual schtick, so when Naito did his trademark taunt, Ishii was quick to interrupt it. He proceeded to beat the hell out Naito with strikes. Naito gave no craps, remaining disrespectful and spitting at Ishii. When they fully got going, Naito’s target was the leg. Seeing him attack it to block Ishii’s superplex was great. The crowd was whipped into a frenzy when these two began trading big offense. Naito came close with a super rana, while Ishii got a near fall on a dragon suplex. Ishii survived the knee bar and countered Destino into a Brainbuster that the fans bought as the finish. Naito got the next counter, hitting Destino and adding a second to secure his first Tokyo Dome main event after 23:56. Another great match in the series between these two and my favorite of the year. We all knew the outcome going in, but Ishii’s so unbelievably good in his role, that he had fans buying into it. Their chemistry is always top notch. Naito had two of the best trilogies in wrestling this year and this was one of them. [****¼]
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*This is the final match from King of Pro Wrestling.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 6, 2018 18:28:47 GMT -5
54. Io Shirai vs. Toni Storm – Stardom 5STAR Grand Prix 8/20/17
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| With so many streaming services, I was unable to get Stardom World for the entire year. I did catch it for the round robin Grand Prix tournament. These two had history, with Io beating Toni to crown the first SWA Champion in Stardom, while Toni dethroned her. More importantly, Io missed several months after a piledriver from Toni put her on the shelf. In the opening seconds of this match, Storm went for the piledriver. Io blocked it, but it set a tone. Storm consistently went after the neck, even making sure that her usual hip attacks targeted it. Io had to fight from behind, with Toni in complete control for most of the match. Each time Io seemed to gain momentum, Toni stopped her by attacking the neck again. Once Io got going, the pace picked up and she eventually nailed a great super rana. They started trading offense, with Toni delivering some vicious suplexes. Io had great counters, including rolling through a piledriver and hitting a double stomp. The finish was the best part, with Toni finally hitting the piledriver just as time expired, bringing this to a 15:00 draw. A great blend of storytelling, psychology and action. [****¼]
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*This is the final match from Stardom. *It is the final appearance of both Toni Storm and Io Shirai.
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Post by Evil Abed on Jan 6, 2018 18:32:44 GMT -5
55. Tetsuya Naito vs. Tomohiro Ishii – NJPW King of Pro Wrestling 10/9/17
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| Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. It’s the best possible match combo in wrestling right now. In the US Title Tournament and G1 Climax, Tomohiro Ishii beat Tetsuya Naito. Naito still went on to win the G1 Climax and had to defend the right to challenge for the IWGP Heavyweight Title at the Tokyo Dome. Ishii was wise to Naito’s usual schtick, so when Naito did his trademark taunt, Ishii was quick to interrupt it. He proceeded to beat the hell out Naito with strikes. Naito gave no craps, remaining disrespectful and spitting at Ishii. When they fully got going, Naito’s target was the leg. Seeing him attack it to block Ishii’s superplex was great. The crowd was whipped into a frenzy when these two began trading big offense. Naito came close with a super rana, while Ishii got a near fall on a dragon suplex. Ishii survived the knee bar and countered Destino into a Brainbuster that the fans bought as the finish. Naito got the next counter, hitting Destino and adding a second to secure his first Tokyo Dome main event after 23:56. Another great match in the series between these two and my favorite of the year. We all knew the outcome going in, but Ishii’s so unbelievably good in his role, that he had fans buying into it. Their chemistry is always top notch. Naito had two of the best trilogies in wrestling this year and this was one of them. [****¼]
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*This is the final match from King of Pro Wrestling.
Just watched this about 2 hours ago lol. Loved the throat chops from Ishii and the slap from Naito to the back of Ishii's head, just great storytelling.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 6, 2018 18:37:01 GMT -5
55. Tetsuya Naito vs. Tomohiro Ishii – NJPW King of Pro Wrestling 10/9/17
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| Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. It’s the best possible match combo in wrestling right now. In the US Title Tournament and G1 Climax, Tomohiro Ishii beat Tetsuya Naito. Naito still went on to win the G1 Climax and had to defend the right to challenge for the IWGP Heavyweight Title at the Tokyo Dome. Ishii was wise to Naito’s usual schtick, so when Naito did his trademark taunt, Ishii was quick to interrupt it. He proceeded to beat the hell out Naito with strikes. Naito gave no craps, remaining disrespectful and spitting at Ishii. When they fully got going, Naito’s target was the leg. Seeing him attack it to block Ishii’s superplex was great. The crowd was whipped into a frenzy when these two began trading big offense. Naito came close with a super rana, while Ishii got a near fall on a dragon suplex. Ishii survived the knee bar and countered Destino into a Brainbuster that the fans bought as the finish. Naito got the next counter, hitting Destino and adding a second to secure his first Tokyo Dome main event after 23:56. Another great match in the series between these two and my favorite of the year. We all knew the outcome going in, but Ishii’s so unbelievably good in his role, that he had fans buying into it. Their chemistry is always top notch. Naito had two of the best trilogies in wrestling this year and this was one of them. [****¼]
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*This is the final match from King of Pro Wrestling.
Just watched this about 2 hours ago lol. Loved the throat chops from Ishii and the slap from Naito to the back of Ishii's head, just great storytelling. I did think it was great timing that you mentioned that match just before it came up on the list. Those two always click.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 6, 2018 19:34:50 GMT -5
53. WWE Raw Tag Team Championship: Dean Ambrose and Seth Rollins [c] vs. Cesaro and Sheamus – WWE No Mercy 9/24/17
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| At SummerSlam, these teams nearly stole the show in an awesome match that saw Seth Rollins and Dean Ambrose capture the titles. On that night, they managed to surprise Sheamus and Cesaro, but the element of surprise was gone this time around. The challengers had a plan, bullying their opponents. Cesaro swinging Dean into the ring steps was a great spot, even with Dean’s delayed selling. Ambrose got isolated, until hitting a slingshot that saw Cesaro land face first on the ring post. It was so brutal that it pushed his front teeth 4mm up into his gums. But Cesaro’s a tough bastard and didn’t miss a beat. Both Dean and Seth took heat segments, leading to one of the best near falls in years. They teased doing the finish from SummerSlam again, but Cesaro and Sheamus had it scouted. Sheamus hit White Noise on Dean, before Cesaro super powerbombed Seth onto Dean. Once the champs survived that, they retained with a ripcord knee into Dirty Deeds at 15:55. This was even better than their SummerSlam outing. The Bar were positioned as the better team, but Dean was resilient and Seth got to bust out his high octane offense to combat them. The hot crowd, callbacks to past matches and Cesaro’s injury all added a lot to this. [****¼]
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*This is the final match from No Mercy. *It is the final appearance of both Sheamus and Cesaro.
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Post by marino13 on Jan 6, 2018 21:36:29 GMT -5
Toni Storm give me the tingles in the nether regions.
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Post by The Kevstaaa on Jan 6, 2018 22:19:59 GMT -5
52. Best Friends vs. Leaders of the New School – PWG Nice Boys Don’t Play Rock n’ Roll 3/18/17
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| For those unaware, the Best Friends are Chuck Taylor and Trent Baretta, while LDRS are PWG Champion Zack Sabre Jr. and Marty Scurll. This started as a brawl, with LDRS in control. Even after the Best Friends took over for a bit, it was LDRS using chairs to regain the upper hand. Trent played the face in peril, which was the best way to go. Not enough people talked about it, but Trent was a great babyface everywhere in 2017. From PWG to NJPW to Evolve and everywhere he stopped in between. LDRS were on a near Revival level of tag work in this one. Their tandem offense and the way they cut the ring off were so well done. It truly felt earned when Chuck finally got the hot tag. His run gave us “serious” Chuck. LDRS utilized stereo submissions on two separate occasions, with Chuck breaking up the second by powerbombing Sabre onto his own partner. As the match neared its conclusion, Chuck battled Marty to the back. Left alone with Trent, Sabre got overconfident. Trent took advantage with a cradle piledriver to pin the PWG Champion in 23:21! The pop for the outcome was crazy. Old school tag formula infused with current day offense. Heat segments can sometimes be boring, but this one was excellent, as was the entire match. [****¼]
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*This is the final match from PWG. *It is the final appearance of Chuck Taylor, Trent Beretta, and Marty Scurll.
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