History of the ROH Championship | Part 1 | Book It, Gabe

I feel like ROH is an ex girlfriend that I was obsessed with for a few years and now everytime I see her posts on social media I am both sad for what has become of her life and embarrassed that I used to focus so much of my energy on her. It’s not a clean analogy, but the point I’m trying to make is that I used to be superfan. Let’s dive right in with ROH’s fifth show, when they still seemed cutting edge visionary in a post-ECW/Attitude wrestling landscape. Basically, the philosophy behind ROH was blending Japanese-style wrestling, both heavyweight and light heavyweight, with old school American wrestling storylines. Basically what New Japan became a decade later. 

July 27, 2002 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Low Ki def. Christopher Daniels, Doug Williams, and Spanky {ROH Championship Four Way Iron Man Match}
From Crowning a Champion. On the show before this, ROH ran a 16-man single elimination tournament. Rather than hold a semifinal round, the four would-be semifinalists were thrown into this match on this show. The Iron Man gimmick helped get buzz behind the title right out of the gate, and the four way format was a huge boon for the quality of the match; it assured that nobody would get blown up in the hot building. The point system, where one would get two points for winning a fall and lose a point for losing a fall, created interesting storylines within the match. But the big story was that Ki hated Daniels, so Daniels would hit him and run. American Dragon was also part of the feud, but he was upset by Williams in the tournament in a cool twist. Don’t worry, he wound up doing okay for himself. The commentators were way too shouty and monotone to listen to for a full hour. Donnie B especially sucked. This match however, did not suck. It really holds up. There isn’t a single lull in the action for sixty minutes. The way the falls played out made for a compelling comeback story for Ki. Williams got to look like a monster. Ki won by getting falls over Spanky and Williams, giving him a 3-2 win over Daniels (who had pinned Ki). Even the finish was dramatic, as Daniels came very close to beating Ki in the final minute. Honestly, aside from the commentary my only complaint was that they got sloppy with the tag rules in the last 15 minutes. This should have set up a big title match for Daniels as Ki won without beating him, but they went a different, weird way. ****¾ 

September 21, 2002 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Xavier def. Low Ki {ROH Championship Match}
From Unscripted. Rather than have Daniels challenge Ki, he won the tag titles with Donovan Morgan later on this show. Meanwhile, Ki gave Xavier a title shot despite Xavier not really doing anything to earn it because Xavier pestered him a couple times backstage. That was the actual angle, I’m not playing down something interesting. The commentators tried to sell Ki having a hurt ankle after his first tour of Japan, but Ki didn’t sell that at all. Well, that is until after 20 minutes of second gear wrestling when Daniels came out to distract Ki and Xavier chop blocked the ankle. Then Xavier hit a cinder block and pole into Ki’s chest with a chair. A referee watched all of this and didn’t disqualify Xavier. Ki took a lifetime to get back to the ring and then got pinned at 25:41 after a 450 Splash. The first ten minutes of this were pretty good, but then both guys started looking bored and the finish was really bad. Xavier joined Daniels’ Prophecy faction and held the title for six months. Then the Prophecy started falling apart, as Samoa Joe (their hired gun) quit the group, Xavier and Daniels dropped the tag titles to AJ Styles and Amazing Red, and Joe won the Number One Contender Trophy. **¾ 

March 22, 2003 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Samoa Joe def. Xavier {ROH Championship Match}
From Night of the Champions. They were clearly going for an ECW vibe here, as Daniels was taken out by Michael Shane before the match and CW Anderson beat up Allison Danger. Gotta have man-on-woman violence so you can be like Papa Paul E. I guess Joe had formed a stable with those two called the Group, which is such a bad name that I can’t believe people don’t make fun of it more to this day. Joe’s long tights are so weird. This would have been more satisfying if it had been an all out squash, but Xavier’s comebacks gave us Joe getting frustrated and dropping F-bombs, which was fun. Even back then Joe was the most expressive guy on the roster. Weird stuff before the match and too much offense for the heel getting his comeuppance aside, this was pretty good for a short transition to the monster champion. 11:56. During his 21-month title reign, Joe defended the title in England. That was enough of an excuse for ROH to start calling it the ROH World Championship. ***¼ 

The rest of the matches in this post come from my reviews back when the shows happened. I’ve got a lot of title changes for a lot of titles to get to, so those reviews are what you’re getting here. Many of these reviews aren’t online anywhere anymore anyway, so I’m happy to have an excuse to post them somewhere. 

December 26, 2004 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Austin Aries def. Samoa Joe {ROH World Championship Match}
From Final Battle. Slow middle portion aside, this was an amazing match that not only could stand on its own because of the great action, but also played off of the matches both men had coming into this match. Aries hit a 450 Splash for the win at 17:29. After the match, Joe told Aries to treat the belt with respect and honor and then strapped the belt around his waist. The crowd reaction to all of this, especially chanting “thank you, Joe,” made this feel like a fitting end to his amazing title reign. ****¼ 

June 18, 2005 – Morristown, New Jersey

CM Punk def. Austin Aries {ROH World Championship Match}
From Death Before Dishonor III. Well, if you ever want to feel like you were watching wrestling in the ‘80s, then this match is for you. The crowd was Punk’s corner man here, making him pretty much invincible and firing him up when the finishers started flying. This was very exciting and action packed throughout, and a great way for Punk to go out of the company (the angle was that he’d already signed with WWE so having the title meant he could continue to torment ROH as long as he was champion). Punk hit the Pepsi Plunge for the win at 30:26. ****

August 2, 2005 – Dayton, Ohio

James Gibson def. CM Punk, Samoa Joe, and Christopher Daniels {ROH World Championship Elimination Match}
From Redemption. Hey, I was at this match live! There were so many stories told so well in this match. You had Joe and Daniels and their quiet dissension. You had Punk trying to run out the clock and Gibson trying frantically to not let it happen. You had Punk being reluctant to fight Daniels and terrified to fight Joe while being comfortable fighting Gibson because he’d actually beaten him in the past. Even the little touches, like Joe quickly blocking Punk’s headlock, Punk thinking he’d beaten ROH once and for all by finally pinning Joe, and Gibson finally hitting the tiger driver off the top to win at 50:39 made this match seem like a reward for those of us who have paid attention during Punk’s reign. I want to rate this even higher but there were definite lulls in the action. Spanky came out and congratulated his best friend to really make the moment feel special. He was followed out by all of the babyface wrestlers and Gibson’s wife. ****½ 

September 17, 2005 – Syosset, New York

Bryan Danielson def. James Gibson {ROH World Championship Match}
From Glory by Honor IV. My original review of this match was a giant cloud of play-by-play. I’ll spare you. Danielson put on the crossface chicken wing at 32:23 for the win. That was one hell of a match, and I have to say that Danielson’s title win here is on par with Gibson’s title win from Redemption. It told a great story and was paced perfectly. Also it made James Gibson not the champion anymore, which wasn’t great news from a quality standpoint but was great news from a I just don’t care for the guy standpoint. ****¼ 

December 23, 2006 – New York, New York

Homicide def. Bryan Danielson {ROH World Championship Match}
From Final Battle. This was pretty much a loser leaves town match as both men had said they were going to leave ROH if they lost. Danielson said he’d only leave to heal up his injury so the winner was never really in doubt. Both men had bad shoulders. The crowd was all the way behind Homicide. After a bit of fighting, Adam Pearce and Shane Hagadorn ran down and draw a disqualification. Todd Sinclair stopped Bobby Cruise from announcing the decision and restarted the match, promising the match wouldn’t end in a disqualification. This was the ultimate blend of WWE showmanship and Danielson’s mat based and high impact style. He pulled out every trick he had but ROH refused to let Homicide get screwed again. The psychology got a little silly at the end but there was so much adrenaline in the match that it really didn’t matter. Danielson blocked a lariat but Homicide fired up and connected with another one for the win and the title at 30:36. The babyface roster looked genuinely happy for Homicide as they came out to congratulate him. ****

February 17, 2007 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Takeshi Morishima def. Homicide {ROH World Championship Match}
From Fifth Year Festival: Philly. Morishima hit a backdrop driver for the win and the title at 16:55. That was the only time the crowd reacted to this match. For my own satisfaction I’m going to imagine that the storyline was that Morishima was infuriated that he lost to Joe in his debut so he decided to be a complete prick and thus unlocked what he needed to be unbeatable. Like the night before I’d have enjoyed this more if Morishima had demolished Homicide on his way to winning the belt, but at least he got the win here. Note: I wrote all that back in 2007, and some of its context is lost to me 13 years later. ***

October 6 2007 – Edison, New Jersey

Nigel McGuinness def. Takeshi Morishima {ROH World Championship Match}
From Undeniable. A lot of ROH show names are dumb. The match did a great job of building sympathy for McGuinness. By the end the crowd was dying for him to win. The finish was a little weak, as Morishima hit a butt butt and then stood around like an idiot for McGuinness to hit him with the Jawbreaker Lariat and take his title at 14:24. You like strong style? This is for you. I’ll chalk the finish up to Morishima being dazed from all the lariats and say that this ranks somewhere between their other two title matches. ***¾ 

McGuiness held the title for a year and a half. During his reign, ROH booker Gabe Sapolsky was fired and I stopped watching ROH. The two things were unrelated. Well, maybe not completely unrelated. While I became less interested in ROH and wrestling in general after moving from Michigan to New York in 2008, I also couldn’t really be bothered to be interested in Jerry Lynn of all people getting a last glory run with the title at the age of 46. But I can’t avoid it anymore, and I’ll see how it began and ended at least in the next bit.