Monday, July 8, 2019

ROH Wrestling Episode #407 Recap/Review: 7/8/19


After taking some time off, we're back to covering ROH week to week (probably). Tonight should prove to be a good show as Matt Taven defends his ROH World Championship against Tracy Williams in the main event. We'll have lots of hopefully great content coming our way, so let's not waste any more time and get right into it.

The Kingdom (TK O'Ryan & Vinny Marseglia) vs. The Bouncers (Brian Milonas & Beer City Bruiser)

The match starts out with Milonas pummeling O'Ryan, dishing out plenty of heavy-duty punishment. O'Ryan tries to wear Milonas down by running the ropes, but's it all for naught. Bruiser and Marseglia are tagged in and Marseglia immediately tries to cut down his larger opponents with a series of well-placed knees and bicycle kicks. They little to no effect, however, as The Bouncers go to work on their opponents with some tag-team offense, culminating with a Bruiser cannonball to the outside.

Bruiser tries to get Marseglia back in the ring, but Marseglia counters and tosses Bruiser into the ring post, then the barricade. Back in the ring, Marseglia grounds Bruiser and taunts him for a bit before hitting him with a series of running elbow strikes, then a spinning shiranui off the second rope. Bruiser blocks a double flapjack attempt then connects with a double sidewalk slam. Milonas gets the hot tag and makes quick work of O'Ryan & Marseglia. Milonas attempts a second-rope superplex, but Marseglia sneaks around to push Milonas' legs out from under him. O'Ryan lands on top to get the pin and secure the W.

A decent way to kick off the show with an interesting finish. Both teams played their roles well (The Bouncers being lovable hosses and The Kingdom being opportunistic heels), and played off each other well, creating some pretty good sequences. I love that Bruiser and Milonas are getting over with the crowd, and I especially love how they're being booked (despite other objections I have with ROH's booking, but that's another story for another time). Both teams looked strong (both in-ring and character-wise), and the finish added the proverbial cherry on top of the overall story being told. Not too much more to say here.

Brian Johnson vs. Josh "The Goods" Woods

Johnson puts up a surprising fight against Woods, using trickery in an effort to halt the momentum of Woods, who's been absolutely dominant as of late. After a quick clothesline, Johnson manages to ground Woods and works the left arm. Woods fights back with a bevvy of forearms, then a jumping corner knee strike followed up by an overhead belly-to-belly suplex. Countering a snapmare, Woods hits Johnson with a running knee strike, then his Seismic Toss finisher to pick up the victory.

Surprisingly longer than most Woods matches as of late. About the same quality, though. A fun squash and I like Woods' finisher. That's about it.

Tracy Williams vs. Matt Taven (c), ROH World Championship match

It's a battle for leverage from the beginning as Taven and Williams exchange a series of holds and counters, with Taven taunting Williams throughout. Williams manages to get the early advantage with a combination of holds, throws and strikes. Taven attempts a comeback, but Williams answers back with a corner 619, then a wrecking ball dropkick. Williams works Taven over for a bit on the outside, then tries to get him back in the ring, only for Taven to respond by tossing him into the ring post, then the barricade (holy deja vu, Batman).

Taven tries to leave the match but Williams refuses, throwing more hard strikes before delivering a jumping elbow smash off the entrance ramp. Back in the ring, Williams attempts some top-rope offense; Taven counters and delivers a super russian legsweep to Williams, then a wrecking ball dropkick of his own. Taven tries some trickery back in the ring as he removes the padding from the corner. Williams attempts a top-rope double stomp and Taven dodges, cinching in a sleeper hold attempt.

Williams fights out and answers back with a attempt of his own. He ascends to the top rope once again, only for Taven to hit him with an enzuguiri. Taven attempts a backpack stunner, only for Williams to wriggle out and go to the top rope again. Taven connects with another enzuguiri, then perches Williams up on the top rope before delivering a stiff chop. Williams counters a superplex attempt with a single-arm DDT on the turnbuckle, then follows up with a diving DDT.

Taven then counters a sunset flip attempt with a running knee. After a brief rest, the two go right back at it as Taven hits Williams with a step-up enzuguiri and Williams answers back with a discus clothesline, transitioning into a crossface shortly after. Taven tries to get to the ropes as Williams tries to pull him back with an ankle lock then an STF attempt. The two men exchange sunset flip and finisher counters, then Williams dodges another Taven knee strike. Taven manages to connect with his Climax finisher, only for Williams to kick out.

Taven goes to the top rope for a frog splash attempt, only for Williams to block then hit Taven with a one-armed piledriver. After a referee distraction, Taven tosses Williams into the exposed turnbuckle, then plants him the Climax to retain his title.

A great match and an excellent way to end a show. Both men gave it their all from bell to bell, trying and succeeding at giving us a great title match. The styles presented from both men (Taven's flashy flamboyance with Williams' no-nonsense ring dedication) blended smoothly, giving us superb chemistry and well-executed sequences and counters throughout. Both men looked strong throughout this whole match, and got in their fair share of offense. As far as I'm concerned, this is a win-win from both sides. Taven gets another worthy challenger and Williams proves his worth with another excellent in-ring performance. Both wrestler's stock rises as performers, and we as an audience get treated to an excellent main event. Needless to say, this was a damn good match.

Given that I've missed the past two weeks of ROH TV, I'm probably not as good of a judge as I could be. But given what I've recently seen, this is probably one of their better episodes. The matches were good (if not great) and the booking was intelligent (which is surprising, given the BITW results). I'd definitely recommend giving this a watch ASAP.

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