The Wrestling Estate‘s David Gibb and our own Nick Bond are here with their off-cycle supplement to the pleasantly in-depth discussion on what makes professional wrestling, well, professional wrestling (and,…
Shinsuke Nakamura
These reviews were once called “Bang for Your Buck,” but because of the Network, the value of an individual show is less based on “getting…
These reviews were once called “Bang for Your Buck,” but because of the Network, the value of an individual show is less based on “getting…
An even longer time ago in a galaxy quite far away, we used to ask “What’s the Worst That Could Happen?” before every PPV. But,…
As is required by the notoriously stringent Louisiana Athletic Commission, WrestleMania XXXIV was lit AF. But was it WrestleMania X-Seven or just WrestleMania X-8? Read…
An even longer time ago in a galaxy quite far away, we used to ask “What’s the Worst That Could Happen?” before every PPV. But,…
The absence of guys like John Cena and Randy Orton has some WWE fans calling for main events, featuring the stars of yesterday. But that’d be a huge mistake; a missed opportunity at building new stars in favor of recycled nostalgia.
Here’s a card that makes the most of the roster, highlights fresh faces, and invests in the future of the WWE.
Many many things are considered the WrestleMania of ____, but perhaps (outside of the Super Bowl) nothing actually lives up to that description more than New Japan Pro Wrestling’s Wrestle Kingdom, now in its ninth iteration kicking off the year in style at the Tokyo Dome. Was this year able to reach that standard for the first time as an English language simulcast? And more importantly, was it enough to keep my NJPW World subscription? (Spoiler alert: abso-fucking-lutely.)