PCW Review - April
27th, 2003
By Justin Crast
Arrived at around 6:15. There was
about 15 fans there. By the time the show started, Id peg
attendence at around 50. A very disappointing turn out for the
first ever Super Dragon vs. Messiah match. Poor advertising plus
a disadvantageous date running against a WWF PPV. Also a poor
venue (parking lot). Its tough to get a grungier venue than
the Anaheim Marketplace, but any parking lot will do.
Maximum Title Tournament Matches
(Round 1)
: Scott Lost over Foob Dog
I heard Foob Dog wasnt much
good, but this match was passable. They did a standard big
guy vs. little guy match, with Lost trying to use his quickness
while Dog used his size. They didnt do any stupid Low
Ki vs. Samoa Joe spots where the little guy wallops the
big guy with strikes, so I smiled like this :). After a few reversals,
Lost hit a diamond cutter/ace crusher for the win. Bo Cooper came
out and attacked both guys, but mostly just hit Dog with his cane.
Coopers Rude, Crude, and Tattooed catch phrase
has potential to get over, provided he gets over as well. The
match was, like I said, passable. No blown spots, straight forward
storyline, and the right man won. *3/4
: Joey Ryan over Dante
Dantes a crazy little guy,
with a Mohawk, but really long bangs coming out the front. He
also screams in a very high pitched voice, which naturally brings
catcalls from the crowd. This was basically clean cut cutey-pie
Joey Ryan vs. Evil Dante. The match was a sprint, with things
going back and forth. Near the end, Dante reeled off a series
of nice moves, including a great drop kick and an even greater
standing shooting star press for a near fall. Ryan transitioned
back to offense and finished things off with his top rope swinging
neck breaker. A nice sprint, but nothing special. Ryan mugged
for the crowd a lot during the match. Dantes athleticism
impressed me. **
I should point out that there was
a baby (maybe 2 years old) in the crowd that rocked, literally.
When they had Godsmack playing, this kid was rocking out. He also
was cheering like a crazy baby during the show, running around
like a
crazy baby. At one point, he took off out of the
parking lot, only to be tugged back in by his older brother. His
father (I presume), then calmed him down with a cigarette.
Maximum Title Tournament Match
(Round 2)
: B-Boy over Mike Vega
This match started off kinda pedestrian
but really picked up. Vega went to the top rope and B-Boy pushed
him off, sending Vega flying into the second row of chairs. Completely
psychotic bump that took my attention off the baby with a holy
shit. Vega got mangled in the ring after this, with some
brutal kicks to his back and B-Boys usual running drop kick
in the corner. Vega came back with some offense but the end was
all B-Boy with a brutal backdrop driver (which Vega took right
on his head), followed by a shining wizard. I think following
a brutal head bump with a shining wizard is a little stupid, sicne
one looks horrible while one may look cool but ultimately doesnt
look very hurtful. The only matches where Mutos Wizard really
came off like a real finisher was against Kawada, where he used
about a dozen and Kawada sold every one like death. Using one
to finish a match, as B-Boy did here, just looks weak. But anyways,
another nice match. Vega shows great effort and a desire to destroy
himself for the fans. B-Boy is great at carrying lesser experienced
guys and this match flowed nicely. **1/4
: Lil' Cholo & Mace over
Stepfather & Red Headed Step Child
This was the worst match of the
night but it wasnt too bad. Stepfather and Step Child have
a funny gimmick. Father is your stereotypical redneck in wife
beater, using a belt to whip his kid, who wear sa Santo mask with
red hair coming out of it. Its pretty bizarre but their
interactions are real funny, classic disgruntled family. This
was my first time seeing everyone here except for Cholo. Maybe
it was their comedy gimmick, but the family didnt
seem as good as Cholo or Mace. Since it was a comedy match, it
was tough to gauge everyones skill level. Decent entertainment,
nothing special. *1/2
: Lucky over UK Kid
This was the best Lucky singles
match I have ever seen. They were working at a million miles per
hour. I seriously didnt know Lucky could go that fast so
seamlessly. I heard good things about UK Kid before, particularly
his match against Joey Ryan, and he followed up here. He has a
good smug charisma that fits his foreign heel gimmick. He is also
a very smooth wrestler. They did some nice chain wrestling and
reversals. They got up on the top rope where Lucky got crotched.
He must have been legit hurt, cause he rolled off whilst Kid tried
setting him up for a suplex. After some stalling, Kid put him
back up and hit a really great looking top rope vertical suplex.
They traded reversals with Lucky hitting a reverse DDT for the
win. There wasnt much selling as they just sprinted the
whole time, making it very much like a 90s NJPW Jrs match. Post
match, Lucky rolled up Kid twice more for pinfalls, just to rub
it in. Very nice match to end his tenure in SoCal. They worked
great together. **1/2
Maximum Title Tournament Match
(Round 2)
: Joey Ryan over Scott Lost
This was like brother vs.
brother. I cant count how many reversals there were.
In fact, they may have played up the I know your every move
facet of the storyline too much, as it became predictable towards
the end. I knew there was no way either guy would string together
more than one move, because they would always be able to reverse
the next one. Because of this, neither guy established much momentum,
and while it was dazzling to see them move a million miles per
hour and pull out nifty reversals, in the end, it didnt
mean much and didnt establish a strong emotional connection
with anyone in the audience. That doesnt mean it was a bad
match, because it took a lot of skill to do the complicated stuff
they did without flubbing. It reminds me of a Super Dragon vs.
Excalibur match from June 2001. They did so many reversals and
we know each other spots that the match lost its sense
of competition and resembled a choreographed dance more than a
fight. This was similar. After Ryan won with a roll up (I think?),
the Philly Connection attacked both guys, injuring Ryans
neck with two B-Boy pile drivers. As a result, the Joey Ryan vs.
B-Boy final to the Maximum Title tournament will be next month.
Thatll be a good match. This match was nifty and both guys
displayed a lot of skill but it could have been better. **1/2
: Ian Knox over Bo Cooper
Ive never seen Knox before
but he entertained me quite a bit. He does a smug drunk gimmick.
Hes also quite an athlete and incredibly strong for his
size. He picked Cooper up and did an overhead slam ala Scott Hall
or Bradshaw. They did some standard American-style wrestling,
no blown spots, good execution. Cooper has good charisma and seems
to have good execution in the ring. Promotions seem to be using
him as a lone monster, but I think hed do well
in a heel tag team with a smaller wrestler. I havent seen
him in a long match which makes me think he probably doesnt
have the stamina to wrestle twenty minutes without getting blown.
Pair him up with a decent heel manager like Schwag, Vanderpyle,
or Bennets and a smaller wrestler to log some time in the ring
like Primetime Peterson or TARO, and youd have a great tag
team. Post match, Cooper and Dog battled with a chain and agreed
to a chain match next show. Cooper bladed, but in the darkness
the blood was lost on the audience. *3/4
: Damage Inc. (Matrix & Preston
Scott) over Off Da Hook (Shawn Riddik & Supa Badd) to become
#1 contenders for the PCW Tag Titles
These guys work very well together.
This was a good match but the one they had at WCWA was better.
They were rushing this, probably because it was becoming impossible
to see in the dark. PCW must not have been paying attention last
year when GSCW ran outside in the spring and ended up having a
main event take place in the dark. Damage Inc. are great heels
while Off Da Hook are great baby faces. Riddik could display a
little more emotion in the ring, though. Execution was near flawless.
Manager Jason Bennets is one of the best with interaction during
the match. His antics dont take away from whats in
the ring and his stuff only adds to what is going on. After a
clusterfuck of stuff at the end, the heels hit a double team move
for the win. Like I said, good execution and smooth work, but
rushed. **
: Messiah over Super Dragon to
retain the PCW Championship
This was match of the night and
also a match of the year contender. Its too bad only 50
people saw it live and any video of it will be impossible to follow
since it happened in the dark. Since it was for so few people
and it was hard to see, they kept things confined to the ring.
Very little high flying and a lot of limb work on Messiahs
knee. Dragon worked it relentlessly, whenever Messiah would make
a comeback, Dragon would hit a low drop kick to stall it. He hit
a second rope footstomp that Messiah sold like death. He also
did an MMA-like knee bar for a nice near submission. Probably
the sickest thing was a twisting, gruesome looking dragon screw
leg whip. He tried it a second time, but Messiah countered with
an ensigurie. Throughout all of this, Messiah sold his leg well.
He limped on offense and on transitions, not just when it was
being worked on. It was very convincing and showed me he definitely
knows more than how to fall through tables. One thing I found
odd was his penchant to duck out of Dragons strikes, rarely
taking any near full force. Youd think a guy thats
gone through tables, fallen on thousands of thumb tacks, and had
light tubes busted on his head wouldnt be afraid of a forearm,
but that looked to be the case. Dragon really took it too him
in the corner a few times, although Messiah never really retaliated
with the same viciousness. Somewhere, the Cubanitos frowned like
this :(.
Anyways, the match built really
well. After the initial back and forth, the second period was
all about Messiahs knee, which he sold throughout. Messiahs
strategy was to hammer Dragons neck, which he did with some
cool moves, including a DVD onto his knee. They did a prolonged
finishing sequence with near falls. Some seemed masturbatory (included
for no reason other than to do a kick out), but others were awesome.
In one sequence, Dragon attempted a brain buster but Messiah continually
fought out. Dragon hammered him to the ground and finally picked
him up for the brain buster and a dramatic two count. That kind
of build just to one move is what made a simple power bomb mean
so much in a Kobashi or Kawada match. Dragon tried to finish it
with a Psycho Driver but Messiah reversed it into a running Burning
Hammer for the win. It was the right move for Messiah to win with,
as his spinning godsmack kept getting avoided by Dragon, and it
is nowhere near as deadly looking as the running Hammer, especially
with a guy like Dragon that can make a head bump look spectacular.
Even though it was the right move, it came off flat. IT came after
a string of dramatic offense by Dragon, and I think it should
have taken Messiah more than one move to put him away. A kick
out of the spinning Godsmack followed by the more impressive Hammer
would have been a great finish. The knee work didnt figure
into the last move either, which is a nit pick, but still true
none the less.
The match was still very good. Every
Dragon match builds superbly and both guys worked well together.
The match was more like a face vs. face match with neither guy
pulling any heel antics, which I liked, it made it more like competition.
The Philly Connection was surrounding the ring making noise which
also made the match seem important. If only this match had been
in a better venue in front of more people, the atmosphere could
have made this a MOTY. Best Messiah match Ive ever seen;
both guys very impressive. ***¼
I give the show a slight thumbs
up. There were no bad matches which is incredible for an indy,
so youd think itd be an easy thumbs up. But the venue
was terrible. The lack of light made the last few matches frustrating
to watch. Also the atmosphere was dead. I like the angle development
in PCW and the match making, but there are things to improve on.
This was my first time at PCW, and I liked it. Hopefully they
continue to grow and put on more great matches.
Justin
IM - neojmc