Dynamite – March 3, 2021: They Did This Really Well

Dynamite
Date: March 3, 2021
Location: Daily’s Place, Jacksonville, Florida
Commentators: Tony Schiavone, Jim Ross, Excalibur

It’s an extra big night around here as it’s time for the Shaquille O’Neal match. That could go in a variety of directions but the quality of the match means absolutely nothing. The idea here is that the match needs to be anything resembling passable and everything will be fine. I’m not sure what else is on the card and I don’t think it really matters. Let’s get to it.

Here are last week’s results if you need a recap.

Opening sequence.

Quick recap of the mixed tag, still without a reason for the whole thing to start.

Cody Rhodes/Red Velvet vs. Shaquille O’Neal/Jade Cargill

Cargill has never wrestled before and O’Neal has only been in a battle royal. Cody and Shaq start and O’Neal just dwarfs him. A wristlock is shoved away and Cody takes him into a corner for some chops. That’s broken up and Shaq hits his own chop, which has Cody down on his knee. Another chop has Cody rocked and it’s off to the women, with Jade throwing her into the corner.

Velvet fires off some kicks, one of which seemed to miss and had to be covered with a camera cut. Cargill throws her down again and mocks the stirring the pot deal, but Velvet hits a high crossbody. That’s countered into a fall away slam for two, with Cody running over to knee Shaq off the apron. Billy Gunn’s kids and QT Marshall try to interfere but get beaten down by Shaq.

Velvet moonsaults down onto Arn Anderson, Cody and Jade, none of whom seemed to be expecting her. Back in and Cargill puts on the figure four (making sure to throw in a mocking wave) with Velvet breaking that up in a hurry. It’s table time, with everyone seemingly confused by Jade pulling one out. Velvet breaks that up and throws Cargill back inside before setting up her own table next to it. An enziguri rocks Jade again so it’s back to the men, with Shaq wanting a test of strength.

Cody’s kick to the leg doesn’t do much good as Shaq grabs a powerbomb for two. Back up and Cody hits a slam, which isn’t treated as quite the big idea. It’s back to the women to slug it out and Cargill manages a spinebuster (but doesn’t look at Arn) for two, drawing Cody in again. This time it’s a poke to Shaq’s eye and a running crossbody drives him through the tables. Cargill is stunned and walks into…..well commentary says a spear but the camera cut to the floor, making me wonder how bad it was. Jade hits a Glam Slam for the pin at 12:03.

Rating: B-. This could have been far, far worse and that’s all it needed to be. The best thing to say here is that they didn’t have any terrible botches and while there were a ton of camera cuts, they managed to hide all of the problems well enough. This was a perfectly fine celebrity match and the table spot/powerbomb both looked good. Cargill looks very green in the ring but she has the charisma and mannerisms down, which is a good sign for her future. All in all, not too bad here.

Post break, Shaq is loaded into an ambulance. Tony Schiavone goes to ask someone a question but Shaq has disappeared.

Rey Fenix/Pac vs. John Skyler/D3

Skyler gets kicked in the head a lot to start and D3 is kicked out to the floor. Pac nails the running flip dive and it’s a 450 to crush Skyler. The over the shoulder piledriver finishes Skyler at 1:08. Now THAT was a good looking squash.

Here is the Inner Circle for Chris Jericho/MJF’s press conference. We can’t hear the first question, but Jericho clarifies that it was about what the Tag Team Titles mean to the two of them. Jericho lost the World Title a year ago but then he has won seven Tag Team Titles in his career. He has teamed with Dwayne Johnson and Paul Wight, but none of them compare to MJF. Next up is Conrad Thompson (how in the world did it take him so long to get on this show) who asks if Sammy Guevara can be back in the team.

MJF and Jericho refuse to answer and throw Thompson out so we can get on to the next question. They don’t want to hear about Papa Buck either because he got blood on MJF’s custom suit. He doesn’t shop at Target (cue the TARGET chant) and if you thought what he did to Papa Buck was bad, wait until he gets skinny Matt and balding Nick on Sunday. Santana tells the Bucks to do better….and now Eric Bischoff is up to ask a question.

Bischoff asks if they know anything about Papa Buck’s condition and wants to know how smart it is to motivate the Young Bucks like that. Jericho tells him to shut up but here are the Young Bucks to interrupt. They talk about how great of a father they have and everything he taught them over the years. He did everything that MJF and Jericho’s fathers failed at, like building them a wrestling ring when he couldn’t send them to college. That’s the kind of work ethic that made the two of them and this company.

If not for them, MJF would be living at home and waiting for the Rosie O’Donnell Show to call and Jericho would be jerking the curtain at the Performance Center. Some superkicks put the Inner Circle down and Brandon Cutler comes out to help with the fight. Cue the Good Brothers with a table on the stage with Nick splashing Ortiz while Matt dives onto Santana on a table at ringside. Some of the verbal jabs were awesome (the Performance Center one made my mouth pop open) but the Bucks trying to be intimidating or serious is still really not their forte.

Video on the exploding barbed wire deathmatch, with various people talking about it, capped off by Atsushi Onita making a cameo to talk about how great it is. JR explains the idea and we see Kenny Omega hammering on the Moxley Extermination Chamber. Thankfully Excalibur does explain who Onita is after the video is over.

FTR/Tully Blanchard vs. Jurassic Express

JJ Dillon is here with FTR/Tully (all wearing old NWA title belts). A bit of shoving sets up a six way staredown before Jungle Boy comes in to dropkick FTR. Tully (in what looks like a bowler’s attire) teases coming in but thinks better of it, leaving Sax to get pulled into the Snare Trap. That’s broken up in a hurry so Boy grabs it on Cash on the floor. Cash taps but the distraction lets Dillon slip Dax the shoe (!) to knock Boy silly for two. Tully comes in and teases a dive but stops to strut instead.

We take a break and come back with Cash breaking up Boy’s hot tag attempt but a Vader Bomb hits raised boots. The hot tag brings in Luchasaurus to clean house on FTR so Tully comes in….and goes right back out. Marko gets tossed into Blanchard to knock him down but FTR kicks Luchasaurus down. Luchasaurus suplexes both of them at once and Boy hurricanranas Dax into a powerslam from Luchasaurus.

A heck of a tornado DDT takes Luchasaurus down on the floor and it’s a PowerPlex for two on Boy. Cash hits a German suplex for the same but it’s Tully with the slingshot suplex to Stunt. Luchasaurus Tail Whips Tully down and Boy loads up a dive but a masked man in a hoodie breaks it up. Whoever it is nails Luchasaurus with something and the spike piledriver is enough for Tully to get the pin at 11:24.

Rating: B-. This could have been a heck of a lot worse and Tully still knows how to play to a crowd like the old school master that he is. Seeing the slingshot suplex was great too and while they had a few too many things going on here, it was nice to have a bit of a Horsemen reunion without going too far with it. Nice enough here and seeing Stunt get beaten up is always fun.

Post match….it’s Shawn Spears under the mask. Everyone poses together and here’s Arn Anderson to give them the Horsemen sign, with Dillon and Tully returning it.

Schiavone brings out Paul Wight for his official Dynamite debut. Wight says raise your hand if you saw this coming. He’s glad to be here and is glad to come back to TNT after all this time. Wight puts over Elevation and talks about how much he’s ready to watch some amazing talent. With an arm on Schiavone’s shoulders, Wight promises that AEW is signing a Hall of Fame worthy talent this Sunday. Tune in to find out who it is.

Women’s Eliminator Tournament Final: Nyla Rose vs. Ryo Mizunami

Vickie Guerrero is here with Nyla and the winner gets Hikaru Shida, also at ringside, for the title at Revolution. Rose drives her into the ropes to start but gets forearmed in the head. Some more forearms rock Rose, who is back with a hard shoulder to take her down. A backdrop breaks up the Beast Bomb and it’s time for some pantomime, followed by a running elbow getting two on Rose.

Rose is back with a running flip dive for her own two and a powerslam is good for the same. Back from a break with Mizunami avoiding a Swanton which would have barely grazed her if she hadn’t moved an inch. A running shoulder to the ribs knocks Rose off the apron and the guillotine legdrop on the apron crushes her again. Rose dives back in at nine so Mizunami hits a quick middle rope legdrop.

Back up and Rose forearms her in the head and nails a Death Valley Driver for two. Mizunami gets draped over the top rope and a knee to the head gets two more. An exploder suplex gives Mizunami two but Rose catches her on top with a superplex. It’s Mizunami up first with a spear and the guillotine legdrop finishes Rose at 12:48.

Rating: B-. Not a bad power match with Mizunami getting the win, thereby giving us one thing that we know about her. The tournament was quite the way to set up a #1 contender for a champion who has held the title WAY too long, but I’ll take someone new over Riho or Rose again. Now just change the title already, as it is long overdue.

Post match Shida comes in for a handshake but they wind up slugging it out, with Shida getting the better of things.

Tony Schiavone brings out Sting for a chat. Sting talks about how the powerbomb from Brian Cage didn’t tickle but it shook the rust off. Now he’s ready for a street fight but here’s Ricky Starks to interrupt. Starks respects him and then slaps him, meaning it’s time for Sting to hammer away. The Stinger Splash into the Scorpion Deathlock is on but here are Hook and Powerhouse Hobbs to jump Sting.

That’s broken up but Brian Cage comes down and loads up another powerbomb, only to have Darby Allin make the save (why Cage stopped to load up the powerbomb when Allin’s music hit isn’t clear). House is cleaned (with Cage making sure to look over his shoulder for the Stinger Splash) with Sting and Allin standing tall.

Face Of The Revolution Qualifying Match: 10 vs. Max Caster

Scorpio Sky is on commentary and Caster raps his way to the ring. 10 grabs a headlock to start and hits a crossbody for two. The right hands in the corner set up a running clothesline to the floor but Caster manages to post him for a breather. We take a break and come back with 10 hammering away, including a spinebuster. The slingshot spear gives 10 two more but Caster is back with a quick brainbuster. A top rope elbow misses for Caster but here’s Jack Evans with a boom box to the head to give Caster the pin at 8:47.

Rating: C-. This wasn’t exactly thrilling stuff as it felt like a quick way to get someone into the ladder match. The Acclaimed haven’t done much for me but maybe having Caster in there can be his big breakout moment. I’m not sure who is going to win the thing but at least there are some interesting options.

Post match here’s Matt Hardy to give Evans $4,200 for taking out part of the Dark Order.

Miro says Chuck Taylor has made him do this and on Sunday, it’s GAME OVER.

We run down the Revolution card.

Matt Hardy/Marq Quen vs. John Silver/Hangman Page

Page thinks we need to go to Adampagewrestling.com, which takes you to two hours of relaxing guitar music and shots of horses. Silver headlocks Matt to start but it’s quickly off to Page, who sends Hardy running. We take a break and come back with Hardy getting two on Silver and grabbing a chinlock. That’s broken up and Page gets the hot tag, sending Hardy bailing to the floor.

This time Page gets his hands on him so Hardy uses Quen as the sacrificial lamb. Back in and Quen dropkicks Page’s knee out, allowing Matt to come in with a neckbreaker. Page isn’t having that and brings Silver back in to clean house in a hurry. A spear sets up Page’s Buckshot Lariat to finish Quen at 11:03.

Rating: C. Well that happened. It’s pretty weird for AEW to have such a lame main event as this felt like it should have been somewhere in the middle of the show. It wasn’t a bad match or anything but it’s the kind of match that really didn’t feel like it belonged in the main event slot. Matt Hardy continues to be one of those guys that makes me sigh when he is in a match. I know whey he is on TV so much but that doesn’t make it much better.

Post match Hardy jumps Page with the microphone and promises to win. Cue the Dark Order, plus all of the other teams in the battle royal. Death Triangle comes out to join the fray to end the show.

Overall Rating: B. This is a show where the total absolutely does not equal the sum of its parts. The first hour or so of this was one of the most energized things I’ve seen in wrestling in a long time as it just felt important. Starting with the Shaq match was an interesting way to go and following it up with the hot squash kept my attention. I liked this show quite a bit and while the second hour wasn’t as strong, it certainly wasn’t terrible. Very good show here with some especially great energy.

Results
Jade Cargill/Shaquille O’Neal b. Cody Rhodes/Red Velvet – Glam Slam to Velvet
Rey Fenix/Pac b. D3/John Skyler – Over the shoulder piledriver to Skyler
FTR/Tully Blanchard b. Jurassic Express – Spike piledriver to Luchasaurus
Ryo Mizunami b. Nyla Rose – Guillotine legdrop
Max Caster b. 10 – Boom box to the head
Hangman Page/John Silver b. Matt Hardy/Marq Quen – Buckshot lariat to Quen

 

 

 

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20 Responses

  1. Caleb John Undahl says:

    I think people need to realize you can like wrestling in general and it’s ok to like multiple companies it’s annoying to see people crap all over one company purely based on bias (I’m thinking of a “prestigious” newsletter) and worship another at their alter I watch wrestling to see how they do based on their last effort not what the “other guys” are doing but I don’t complain just to complain so I must not be a “real fan” right

    KB sorry for the rant on your review like I said you’re awesome and you’re reviews really reflect my views and a huge inspiration

  2. Mike M. says:

    The mixed tag could have been much worse. If Cargill gets enough training, there’s some potential. I didn’t get Shaq disappearing. The whole FTR segment popped me, even with Spears being involved. They’ve had some odd choices for a main event the last few weeks. Looking forward to Revolution.

    • Caleb John Undahl says:

      I usually don’t buy PPVs but man this one was too intriguing to pass up but I’m a mark for ladder matches and battle royals and the death match is always something I’ve wanted to check out at least once in my life plus I’m a life long sting fan and the two regular rules title bouts are also promising

  3. Sebastian Howard says:

    Where tf is jay h to bitch about how “bad” this show is and how great wwe is?

    • Jay H says:

      You really want me to comment on this Show because i did watch it. Mainly to see if Shaq and Jade would embarrass themselves. They didn’t totally but it was still pretty nonsensical especially the Table spot.

      Also what was that “joke” the Young Bucks suppose to be? They are a couple of useless twits.

  4. Sebastian Howard says:

    Good review, I liked the first hour a lot too but once it got to Nyla/japanese chick I just zoned tf out and changed to nxt. I like hangman page but I couldn’t care less about his angle with Matt Hardy and nxt def had the better main event.

  5. Stormy says:

    So. The bucks think Chris Jericho would be an opener for NXT? That’s what they insinuated with the Performance Center line. Chris Jericho Main evened WrestleMania. He’s not an NXT curtain jerker. The joke sucked because of that. Also, if their inaugural World Champion and biggest star is only good enough to be a curtain jerker elsewhere what does that say about your company? To me it says your company is second rate compared to the competition.

    The 4 horsemen thing was cool, Shaq was ok. Liked the cameos during the press conference. Surprised they closed the show with the Tag Teams. Figured Sting/Darby or the World Title match would get the closing segment.

    • Guy Incognito says:

      Couldn’t agree with your first paragraph more.
      Bucks are really bad at being faces.

      • Caleb John Undahl says:

        Matt’s promos hurt cause he tries way to hard most of the time. It’s amazing how much more tolerable they’ve been when Jericho is involved. Really shows how far he pushes people to be great. That’s what I love about Jericho. He’s almost like Bret in that sense, pushing everybody he’s around to be better.

  6. Jimmyglass says:

    This was my 1st time watching a live dynamite & not just clips afterwards. I liked the content but i thought it was a badly put together show.

    It was like ADHD wrestling, moving on to the next thing so quickly with no replays, recaps or allowing time for anything to breath.

    The individual elements were good but they need to chill out with how much they cram in

  7. BestSportsEntertainer says:

    The first hour was awesome. Second hour was fine. Overall great show and I’m excited for the PPV, though I’m still not paying for it.

  8. Roy W Leader says:

    great reviews but there is a mistake in your post match hardy/quen tag match you have hardy jumped hardy

  9. Caleb John Undahl says:

    I could feel your heart warm up with the slingshot on Stunt.

    I think we can pencil PAC and Fenix for the winners of the battle royal, but there are some great teams in there so it should be entertaining.

    If anyone can get something passable out of Matt at this stage, it’s Page. Man I’m a poet and didn’t even know it. Sorry bad joke.

    Sky showing his arrogant side was cool, as he was just an athletic guy in tights with a funny catchphrase for awhile. Love to see character development like that.

    The hoss fight is a nice change for the women. I don’t wanna see Shida lose, but she’s been full as champion. Ryo would be a good change of pace.

    I said on AEWs instagram that Shaq and Jade could surprise us, and boy do I love being right!!! It’s nice to see one of the executives knows how to sell.

    Revolution is gonna be entertaining if nothing else. There’s only one match on the main show that doesn’t either have something up for grabs or a special stipulation, and I like that it’s giving multiple chances, ending stories and setting up for the future with the multiman contenders matches. I also love having the ladder match as it makes the TNT title seem prestigious, and it’s nice to see a midcard title mean something.

    Also, KB, do you think we’ll get two debuts on Sunday? Maybe a top indy star in the ladder match and a mainstream superstar as Wights surprise? I’d just love to hear your thoughts on that

    Also, as always, love your reviews. Keep up the good work.

    • Thomas Hall says:

      I’m not sure on the indy name in the ladder match. AEW’s roster is already bloated half to death in the first place and they really don’t need to bring in another name.

      As for the Hall of Fame worthy guy, my instinct was Christian for some reason. Van Dam or Angle wouldn’t surprise me either.

      • Caleb John Undahl says:

        Yeah it was a long shot for the ladder match, just thinking of ideas for it.

        I’ve seen some speculation on RVD, so maybe there’s something to that. Nothing major or any sites, but it seems very likely.

        Also, the Bucks surprised me tonight. Aside from the WWE shit, Matt had a really fired up promo that didn’t seem horribly forced. Bischoff- makes me chuckle whenever I see him. You can tell he still loves wrestling. I saw him at an indy show, and we popped hard for him. Granted I’m from Minnesota though. MJF and Jericho are just… MJF and Jericho.

      • Caleb John Undahl says:

        Also as someone who’s read your NWA reviews, I’m sure you lived JJ Dillon tonight

      • Caleb John Undahl says:

        And Jericho and Johnson did have a tag title reign back in 01

        • Jimmy Pledger says:

          Predicting Angle for Big Show’s surprise & Joe Hennig or Shawn Spears as the mystery man in the Ladder match.

          • Caleb John Undahl says:

            Angle is a pretty safe bet and Hennig is an interesting option if they let him use his talent and charisma and not bog him down with managers he’ll never get over with and endless comedy angles he could be a solid midcard talent I could also see Spears getting in too so it’ll be interesting

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